EXAMINATION GUIDE 3-89
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE TRADEMARK LAW REVISION ACT OF 1988
AND THE AMENDED RULES OF PRACTICE IN TRADEMARK CASES
Trademark Examining Operation
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
October 11, 1989 (OG)
[p.1]
Preface
On November 16, 1988, the President signed The Trademark Law Revision Act of 1988
into law, Public Law 100-667, 102 Stat. 3935 (the 1988 amendments). The 1988
amendments, which take effect on November 16, 1989, represent the most significant
reform in United States trademark law since the enactment of The Trademark Act of
1946, 15 U.S.C. Section 1051 et seq. (the Act). The principal purpose of this
examination guide is to provide a comprehensive statement of revisions to Office
policy and procedure associated with the 1988 amendments.
The Rules of Practice in Trademark Cases, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.1 et seq., have also
been revised effective November 16, 1989, principally to incoporate the provisions
of the 1988 amendments. The rules were also revised to update Office policy in other
respects. These additional revisions bring the rules into conformity with current
Office practice in several areas and reflect changes in practice dictated by
decisions such as the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board decision in Crocker National
Bank v. Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, 223 USPQ 909 (TTAB 1984). This guide
will also set forth these additional revisions to Office policy and procedure
reflected in the rules. The revisions discussed here were published in final form on
September 11, 1989, with the exception of the revisions to Trademark Rules 2.42 and
2.186, 37 C.F.R. Sections 2.42 and 2.186, which were published in final form on
August 22, 1989, in conjunction with other revisions related to proceedings before
the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board. All revisions published on both dates take
effect on November 16, 1989. References in this guide to the rules relate to the
rules as amended on November 16, 1989.
The most significant amendment to the Act is a provision permitting the filing of
applications to register marks on the Principal Register based on a bona fide
intention to use a mark in commerce, before actual use (intent-to-use applications).
The examination guide will discuss the administration of this provision in detail.
However, intent to use and other provisions of the 1988 amendments required
revisions in policies and procedures affecting virtually all applications and all
aspects of processing. Please read the entire guide carefully to become familiar
with all of the provisions.
The first major section of the guide presents the requirements, policies and
procedures related to intent-to-use applications. The second major section addresses
provisions affecting all applications. The next two sections address [p.2]
provisions related to other specific types of applications, and the final section
addresses multiple bases and changes in the basis for registration.
The policies set forth in this guide apply to all applications, affidavits and
renewals filed on or after November 16, 1989, unless specifically indicated
otherwise. The stated policies also apply to any action taken on or after November
16, 1989, with respect to applications filed before that date, unless specifically
indicated otherwise. To the extent that the policies and procedures set forth in
this examination guide conflict with policies or procedures set forth in the
Trademark Manual of Examining Procedure (TMEP) or other statements of Office policy,
the provisions of this examination guide are controlling. Note especially the
discussion below concerning the application of the rule restricting amendments to
the identification of goods and services to pending applications.
/s/
James T. Walsh
Administrator for Trademark Policy and Procedure
/s/
David E. Bucher
Director
Trademark Examining Operation
[p.3]Table of Contents
A. Intent-to-Use Applications
1. General Overview
a.Summary of Application Flow
b.Constructive Use Priority
c.Application Requirements
d.Applications Not Accepted Until Effective Date
e.Good Faith
2. Filing-Date Requirements
3. Application Requirements - Initial Examination
a.Drawings
b.Statutory Averments and the Identification of Goods or Services
c.Examination for Use as a Trademark or Service Mark
d.Examination under Sections 1, 2(a), 2(b), 2(c) and 2(e)
e.Examination under Section 2(d)
f.Claims of Acquired Distinctiveness under Section 2(f)
g.Intent-to-Use Applications and the Supplemental Register
4. Amendments to Allege Use under Section 1(c) of the Act
a.Form and Permissible Time Period for Filing an Amendment to Allege Use under
Section 1(c) of the Act
b.Necessary Elements in a Complete Amendment to Allege Use under Section 1(c)
of the Act
c.Minimum Requirements for an Amendment to Allege Use under Section 1(c) of the
Act
d.Examination of the Amendment to Allege Use by the Examining Attorney
i. Ownership and Proper Execution
ii. The Verified Statement and the Identification of Goods and Services
iii. The Specimens
iv. The Drawing
e.Issuance of Actions by the Examining Attorney Related to the Amendment to
Allege Use [p.4]
f.Amendment and Withdrawal of the Amendment to Allege Use
g.Final Acceptance of the Amendment to Allege Use After Examination
5. Publication for Opposition and Issuance of the Notice of Allowance
6. Amendments Between Issuance of the Notice of Allowance and Submission of the
Statement of Use
7. Requests for Extensions of Time to File the Statement of Use
a.Requirements Related to the First Six-Month Extension
b.Requirements Related to Extensions Beyond the First Six-Month Extension -
Good Cause Extensions
c.Identifying the Goods and Services in the Request for an Extension of Time
d.Filing a Request for an Extension of Time in Conjunction with a Statement of
Use
e.Processing of the Request for an Extension of Time
8. Submission of the Statement of Use under Section 1(d) of the Act
a.Form and Permissible Time Period for Filing a Statement of Use under Section
1(d) of the Act
b.Necessary Elements in a Complete Statement of Use under Section 1(d) of the
Act
c.Minimum Requirements for a Statement of Use under Section 1(d) of the Act
9. Examination of the Statement of Use
a.Procedures Governing Examination of the Statement of Use
i. Complying with Minimum Requirements within the Time Permitted
ii. Correcting Defects
iii. Withdrawal of the Statement of Use Prohibited
b.The "Clear-Error" Standard in Examination of the Statement of Use
c.Examination of the Verified Statement of Use
d.The Identification of Goods and Services in the Examination of the Statement
of Use
e.Examination of the Statement of Use Related to the Drawing
f.Consideration of the Specimens of Use in the Examination of the Statement of
Use [p.5]
10. Revival of Abandoned Intent-to-Use Applications
11. Assignment of Intent-to-Use Applications
12. Mailing Procedures and Fees Related to Intent-to-Use Applications
a.Use of the "Box ITU" Designation
b.The Certificate-of-Mailing Procedure
c.Fees Related to Intent-to-Use Applications
Provisions Affecting All Applications
1. Filing-Date Requirements
a.Applicant's Signature
b.Drawing Size
2. Identifying the Applicant and Applicant's Address
3. Drawings
4. Specimens - Requirements
5. Specimens - Examination
6. Identifications of Goods and Services
a.Limiting the Identification of Goods and Services
b.Clarifying the Identification of Goods and Services
7. Claims of Acquired Distinctiveness
8. Supplemental Register
9. Affidavits of Use under Section 8
10. Term and Renewal
11. Assignments
a.Content of Assignment Documents
b.Issuance of Registration in Current Owner's Name
c.Assignment Fees
12. Establishing Ownership of Applications or Ragistrations
13. Revival of Abandoned Applications
14. Concurrent Use [p.6]
15. Requests to Divide an Application
a.Processing Requests to Divide
b.Division of Registration Not Permitted
16. Correspondence with Applicants Not Domiciled in the United States
17. Preferred Size for Application Papers
Provisions Affecting Applications under Section 44 of the Act
1. Filing-Date Requirements
a.Statement of a Bona Fide Intention to Use the Mark In Commerce
b.Priority Claim or Certified Copy of a Foreign Registration
2. Statement of Dates of Use and Method of Use and Specimens Not Required
3. The Basis for Registration in Applications Claiming the Benefits of Section
44(d)
Provisions Affecting Applications Based on Use in Commerce Only
Filing on More Than One Basis and Changing the Basis of the Application [p.7]
A. Intent-to-Use Applications
1. General Overview
a. Summary of Application Flow
The 1988 amendments revise Section 1 of the Act to permit filig of an application
to register a mark on the Principal Register based on a statement of a bona fide
intention to use the mark in commerce. Trademark Act Section 1(b), 15 U.S.C. Section
1051(b). The Act, as amended, further requires that such an applicant use the mark
in commerce before issuance of the registration. The Act thus requires that the
applicant file either an amendment to allege use or a statement of use before, and
as a precondition to, the issuance of the registration. Trademark Act Sections 1(c)
and 1(d), 15 U.S.C. Sections 1051(c) and (d).
The principal difference between the amendment to allege use and the statement of
use is the time of filing. The amendment to allege use may be filed during initial
examination, that is, after filing of the application but before either approval of
the mark for publication or the expiration of the response period after issuance of
a final action. Trademark Rule 2.76(a), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.76(a). If the amendment
to allege use is acceptable and the application is otherwise in condition for
publication, the mark will be published for opposition. After publication, the
application will be processed in the same manner as an application based on use. If
the application is not opposed, or if the applicant prevails in all oppositions
filed, the application will proceed to registration.
If the applicant does not file an acceptable amendment to allege use during
initial examination or if it is withdrawn, and the application is otherwise in
condition for publication, the mark will be published for opposition. If the
application is not opposed, or if the applicant prevails in all oppositions filed,
the Office will issue a notice of allowance under Trademark Act Section 13(b)(2), 15
U.S.C. Section 1063(b)(2). The applicant must file a statement of use within six
months of the issuance of the notice of allowance or within an extension of time
granted for filing of the statement of use. Trademark Act Section 1(d), 15 U.S.C.
Section 1051(d). The applicant may not file the statement of use before issuance of
the notice of allowance. Trademark Rule 2.88(a), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(a). This
period after approval for publication and before issuance of the notice of allowance
during which the statement of use may not be filed is referred to [p.8] as the
blackout period. The statement of use will be examined as discussed below.
The applicant may request extensions of time for filing the statement of use under
Trademark Act Section 1(d), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(d). The applicant may request one
six-month extension without a showing of good cause and four additional six-month
extensions with a showing of good cause. Trademark Rule 2.89, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89
. Extensions of time are discussed below in detail ( A.7.).
Please note that any reference to "initial examination" refers to examination of
an intent-to-use application before approval for publication. The examination after
filing of the statement of use will be referred to as "examination of the statement
of use." Also, please note that the "notice of allowance" refers to a new document
required under the 1988 amendments.To avoid confusion, the term "allowance" will be
used only in reference to this document and this phase of processing intent-to-use
applications. Therefore, this guide will use the term "approval for publication"
rather than "allowance for publication" to avoid any confusion with the notice of
allowance.
As discussed in more detail below, the examining attorney must raise and dispose
of all possible issues in the application during the initial examination. During
examination of the statement of use, the examining attorney may not issue
requirements or refusals which could or should have been presented in the initial
examination unless the failure to do so initially was a clear error as defined below
( A.9.b.).
The Office has established a special intent-to-use unit (ITU Unit) to process
certain papers. Paralegals in the ITU Unit will review all statements of use to
determine whether they meet the minimum requirements to be forwarded for examination
on the merits, in the same way that the Application Section reviews the initial
application for compliance with filing requirements. If the statement of use meets
the minimum requirements, it will be referred to the examining attorney in the law
office for examination on the merits. The paralegals in the ITU Unit will also
review and act on all requests for extensions of time to file statements of use.
b. Constructive Use Priority
Trademark Act Section 7 has also been amended to provide that the filing at any
application for registration on the Principal Register, including an intent-to-use
application, constitutes constructive use of the mark, provided the application
matures into a registration. Trademark Act Section 7(c), 15 U.S.C. Section 1057(c).
Upon registration, filing thus affords the applicant nationwide priority over others
except parties who had [p.9] used the mark before the applicant's filing date,
parties who had filed in the Office before the applicant or parties who are entitled
to an earlier priority filing date based on the filing of a foreign application
under Trademark Act Section 44(d), 15 U.S.C. Section 1126(d).
The Office will not amend the filing date of any application filed before November
16, 1989, to a date on or after November 16, 1989, for the purpose of affording the
applicant whatever benefit the constructive use date may provide.
c. Application Requirements
Intent-to-use applications must comply with all of the requirements of the Act and
relevant regulations in all respects except as specifically noted in this guide. For
example, the provisions of Sections 2(e)(1), 2(e)(2) and 2(e)(3) apply to
intent-to-use applications as well as to other applications. This section of the
guide will focus on those requirements, policies and procedures related to
intent-to-use applications which differ from those related to the filing and
processing of other applications.
d. Applications Not Accepted Until Effective Date
The Office will not accept any intent-to-use applications filed before Novemer 16,
1989. If any such application is received before that date, the Office will return
the application. If an intent-to-use application filed before the effective date
reaches the examining attorney in error, the examining attorney should return the
case to the Application Section for appropriate action. However, if the examining
attorney has already issued an action, the examining attorney should issue a new
action refusing registration because the application was void as filed.
Intent-to-use applications executed before the effective date, but filed on or
before the effective date, will be accepted. However, the examining attorney will
determine whether the time between execution and filing is within Office guidelines
for all applications. See TMEP section 803.04. The applicant may re- execute the
declaration verifying its statement of a bona fide intention to use the mark in
commerce if the examining attorney determinesthat the delay between execution and
filing was unreasonable.
All intent-to-use and Section 44 applicants must file the application within a
reasonable time after execution to ensure the statement of intent is valid at the
time of filing. The guidelines governing the reasonableness of the lapse of time are
the same as those which apply to use applicants. [p.10]
e. Good Faith
The Act specifies that an applicant may file an application based on a bona fide
intention to use a mark in commerce "...under circumstances showing the good faith
of such person." Trademark Act Section 1(b), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(b). The Office
will not evaluate the good faith of an applicant in the ex parte examination of
applications. The applicant's sworn statement of a bona fide intention to use the
mark in commerce will always be sufficient evidence of good faith in the ex parte
context. Consideration of issues related to good faith is appropriate in an inter
partes proceeding.
2. Filing-Date Requirements
Trademark Rule 2.21, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.21, sets forth the minimum requirements
for receiving a filing date for an intent-to-use application as well as other types
of applications. These minimum formal requirements do not include all of the
requirements which may ultimately apply for registration of the mark, but merely
those requirements which must be met to receive a filing date. Please note the
discussion below of those requirements for receiving a filing date which apply to
all applications, in particular, the requirement that the application include a
declaration or verification signed by the applicant to receive a filing date (
B.1.).
With specific reference to intent-to-use applications, the application must
include the following elements to receive a filing date: the name of the applicant;
the name and address to which communications can be directed; a drawing of the mark
substantially meeting all of the requirements of Trademark Rule 2.52, 37 C.F.R.
Section 5.52; an identification of goods or services; a claim of a bona fide
intention to use the mark in commerce; a verification or declaration under Trademark
Rule 2.33(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.33(b), signed by the applicant; and the required
filing fee for at least one class of goods or services.
In the case of an intent-to-use application, as in the case of all applications,
if the application lacks any of the elements specified as necessary to receive a
filing date, the application will be denied a filing date and all papers returned to
the applicant with an explanation as to the deficiency. TMEP section 704. If an
application which lacks one or more of the elements required for receiving a filing
date is referred to the law office for examination in error, the examining attorney
should return the case to the Application Section for appropriate handling. If the
examining attorney discovers that an element was lacking after taking an action in
the case, the examining attorney should issue a refusal on the ground that the
application was not eligible to receive a filing date. TMEP section 705.02. [p.11]
The fee for filing an intent-to-use application is the same as the filing fee for
any other application, $175.00 per class.
3. Application Requirements - Initial Examination
In an intent-to-use application, the examining attorney will potentially examine
both the application and a statement of use. After receipt of the application, the
Office will perform the initial examination of the application to determine whether
the mark is eligible for registration, but for the lack of use. If it is found to be
eligible, the mark will be approved for publication and published for opposition. If
the applicant has not submitted an amendment to allege use before publication, and
the application is not opposed or survives all oppositions filed, the Office will
issue a notice of allowance. Trademark Act Section 13(b), 15 U.S.C. Section 1063(b);
Trademark Rule 2.81, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.81. In such a case, the applicant must
submit a statement of use. Trademark Act Section 1(d)(1), 15 U.S.C. Section
1051(d)(1); Trademark Rule 2.88, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88. If an amendment to allege
use is filed and accepted, the application will be processed in the same manner as a
use application from that point forward.
This section addresses examination before publication only; a later section will
discuss the filing and examination of the statement of use after issuance of the
notice of allowance.
The examining attorney must examine and act on all possible issues in the initial
examination of the application. The intent-to-use application is subject to the same
requirements and examination procedures as all other applications, except as
specifically noted.
a. Drawings
The examination of the drawing in initial examination, before submission of any
amendment to allege use and specimens, will focus primarily on the form of the
drawing and compliance with Trademark Rule 2.52, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.52. The
examination of the drawing after submission of an amendment to allege use is
discussed below ( A.4.d.iv.). As in any other application, the applicant may not
amend the mark in a drawing if the amendment constitutes a material alteration of
the mark. In re The Wine Society of America, Inc., Serial No. 662,515 (TTAB, April
6, 1989). The applicant may not add or delete matter if the amendment would alter
the character of the mark.
Please note the discussion below concerning the requirement in all applications
that special-form drawings not exceed four inches by four inches to receive a filing
date ( B.1.b.). [p.12]
b. Statutory Averments and the Identification of Goods and Services
The application must include a statement that the applicant has a bona fide
intention to use the mark in commerce with respect to specific goods and services as
well as the other averments specified in Trademark Act Section 1(b), 15 U.S.C.
Section 1051(b). Trademark Rule 2.33(b)(2), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.33(b)(2). If the
application does not include the averments, the examining attorney must require a
new verification including all necessary averments.
The general requirements related to identification of goods and services discussed
below apply to intent-to-use applications as well as to all other applications.
Under Trademark Rule 2.71(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.71(b), "the identification of
goods or services may be amended to clarify or limit the identification, but
additions will not be permitted." The policies governing the application of this
revised rule are discussed in detail below ( B.6.) with examples and merit special
attention.
Furthermore, under long-standing Office policy, the identification of goods and
services must be specific and definite. Cf. In re Societe General des Eaux
Minerales de Vittel S.A., 1 USPQ2d 1296 (TTAB 1986), rev'd on other grounds, 824
F.2d 957, 3 USPQ2d 1450 (Fed. Cir. 1987).
As noted above, the Office will not examine the applicant's good faith in relation
to the identification of goods or services or otherwise. Consideration of this issue
is more appropriate in an inter partes proceeding.
In suggesting identifications, examining attorneys should not be overly
restrictive. See In re Sentry Chemical Company, 230 USPQ 556 (TTAB 1986).
Because applicants may only limit or clarify the goods and services, the examining
attorney should provide appropriate cautions to the applicant in requiring amendment
to the identification of goods and services. When appropriate, the examining
attorney should advise the applicant that goods or services explicitly deleted by
amendment may not be reinserted at a later point in prosecution. Examining attorneys
should take particular attention in the case of pro se applicants to ensure that
they are aware of the restrictions related to amendments to the identification of
goods and services.
c. Examination for Use as a Trademark or Service Mark
The Office will not examine the issue of use as a trademark or service mark in the
initial examination of an intent-to-use application unless the applicant has
submitted specimens of use in conjunction with an amendment to allege use under
Section 1(c). However, as noted below ( A.4.d.), if the applicant withdraws an
[p.13] amendment to allege use, the specimens remain of record, but the examining
attorney may not consider or act on any such specimens in relation to the issue of
use.
d. Examination under Sections 1, 2(a), 2(b), 2(c) and 2(e)
To the fullest extent possible, the examining attorney will examine the
intent-to-use application for registrability under Trademark Act Sections 1, 2(a),
2(b), 2(c) and 2(e), 15 U.S.C. Sections 1051, 1052(a), (b), (c) and (e), according
to the same procedures and standards which apply to any other application. The
examining attorney should investigate all possible issues regarding registrability
under these sections through all available sources. If appropriate, the examining
attorney should request that the applicant provide literature or explanation
concerning these issues under Trademark Rule 2.61(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.61(b). The
examining attorney should request such information relevant to the types of goods or
services or the trade, in general, or similar general information. The examining
attorney should not request information regarding use of the specific mark in
relation to the goods or services.
First and foremost, the examining attorney must develop evidence during the
initial examination from sources other than the applicant. The examining attorney
may not make any inquiry or request any information premised on use of the mark
before the applicant files an amendment to allege use. If the applicant submits an
amendment to allege use during the initial examination, the examining attorney may
then obtain relevant information from the applicant in the same manner as would
apply in any application based on use unless the amendment to allege use is
withdrawn.
The examining attorney must raise all possible issues under these sections in the
initial examination of the application. As discussed more fully below ( A.9.),
Office policy precludes the issuance of a requirement or refusal during examination
of the statement of use if the issue could or should have been treated in the
initial examination, unless the failure to do so in initial examination constitutes
a clear error. "Clear error" means an error which, if not corrected, would result
in issuance of a registration in violation of the Act. The meaning and application
of this standard are discussed in detail below ( A.9.b.).
e. Examination under Section 2(d)
The examining attorney will perform a search and will issue refusals, as
appropriate, under Trademark Act Section 2(d), 15 U.S.C. Section 1052(d), in the
case of an intent-to-use application. The determination of likelihood of confusion
under Section 2(d) in an intent-to-use application does not differ from the
determination in any other type of application. The examining attorney should
consider questions concerning the scope of the goods and services and related goods
and services in determining likelihood of confusion under the standards which have
[p.14] historically governed in applications based on use or based on a foreign
application or registration.
For the purpose of determining priority among pending applications, the
intent-to-use application will be treated in the same manner as any other
application. For purposes of publication for opposition, an intent-to-use
application will receive priority over any application which has an effective filing
date later than the intent- to-use application.
For the purpose of determining priority between two applications which have the
same filing date, the application with the earlier date or execution will be
accorded priority for purposes or publication for opposition. Trademark Rule
2.83(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.83(b). This would apply whether one or both of the
applications are intent-to-use applications.
Also, an intent-to-use application, like any other application, cannot serve as
the basis for a formal refusal under Section 2(d) until the application has matured
into a registration.
f. Claims of Acquired Distinctiveness under Section 2(f)
An intent-to-use applicant may not assert that a nondistinctive designation has
acquired distinctiveness under Trademark Act Section 2(f), 15 U.S.C. Section 1052(f)
, until the applicant has submitted an amendment to allege use or a statement of
use. A claim of acquired distinctiveness, by definition, requires prior use. Section
2(f) is limited by its terms to "a mark used by the applicant." Therefore, the
examining attorney should reject any claim of acquired distinctiveness filed before
submission of an acceptable amendment to allege use or statement of use. The
examining attorney should consider and act on any claim of acquired distinctiveness
filed after such time in the same manner and according to the same standards which
would apply to any other application.
Please note the discussion below of the revision regarding five- year claims of
acquired distinctiveness ( B.7.).
g. Intent-to-Use Applications and the Supplemental Register
An intent-to-use applicant may not seek registration on the Supplemental Register
until the applicant has submitted either an acceptable amendment to allege use or
statement of use. Trademark Rule 2.75(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.75(b). Only
applications under Trademark Act Section 44, 15 U.S.C. Section 1126, are excepted
from the use requirement in seeking registration on the Supplemental Register.
Trademark Act Section 44(e), 15 U.S.C. Section 1126(e).
If an applicant submits an application for the Supplemental Register based on
intent to use, the Office will reject the application because it was void as filed
and will return all [p.15] papers to the applicant with any fees submitted. If any
such application reaches an examining attorney in error, the examining attorney
should return the papers to the Application Section for appropriate action.
If an intent-to-use applicant does file an acceptable amendment to allege use or
statement of use and an acceptable amendment to the Supplemental Register, the
Office will change the effective filing date of application to the date of the
filing of the amendment to allege use or the statement of use. Trademark Rule
2.75(b), 37 C.F.R Section 2.75(b). The examining attorney must ensure that the
effective filing date has been changed.
The amendment to allege use or statement of use should be examined before any
action is taken on an amendment to the Supplemental Register.
4. Amendments to Allege Use under Section 1(c) of the Act
As stated earlier, an intent-to-use applicant must file either an amendment to
allege use under Trademark Act Section 1(c), 15 U.S.C. 1051(c), or a statement of
use under Trademark Act Section 1(d), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(d), as a precondition
to issuance of the registration. This section will discuss amendments to allege use
only; the statement of use will bediscussed below ( A.8.and 9.).
a. Form and Permissible Time Period for Filing an Amendment to Allege Use
under Section 1(c) of the Act
Any paper which includes an amendment to allege use under Section 1(c) of the Act
should be entitled "Amendment to Allege Use" whether or not it includes other
amendments. This title should appear at the top of the first page. Trademark Rule
2.76(d), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.76(d). This practice is recommended, not required. It
will assist in the prompt and orderly processing of papers. The Office will not take
any action to require a proper title.
An applicant may file an amendment to allege use under Section 1(c) of the Act at
any time after filing the application and before the date the examining attorney
approves the mark for publication or before the expiration of the six- month
response period after issuance of a final action. Trademark Rule 2.76(a), 37 C.F.R.
Section 2.76(a). If the applicant files an amendment to allege use after the time
indicated, and before the permissible period for filing a statement of use, the
review and amendment clerk will return the amendment to allege use and any fees to
the applicant. The applicant may resubmit the amendment to allege use as a statement
of use after issuance of the notice of allowance.
If the applicant submits a late amendment to allege use on the same paper with
other amendments, the review and amendment clerk will retain the papers for
appropriate processing of the [p.16] other amendments and will advise the applicant
that the amendment to allege use is late and must be resubmitted as a statement of
use after issuance of the notice of allowance. The review and amendment clerk will
arrange a refund of any fees in conjunction with this notification.
If the amendment to allege use is filed within the time permitted and complies
with the minimum requirements to be referred for examination on the merits, but the
application was approved for publication before the amendment to allege use was
associated with the file, the examining attorney should withdraw the application
from publication and examine the amendment to allege use.
If the applicant files the amendment to allege use in conjunction with a notice of
appeal, the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board will institute the appeal, suspend
action on the appeal and remand the case to the examining attorney to examine the
amendment to allege use. The examining attorney should continue examination
according to standard examining procedures until final resolution of all new issues
arising in the examination of the amendment to allege use.
If the application becomes abandoned in the course of the examination of the
amendment to allege use, the examining attorney will advise the Trademark Trial and
Appeal Board. If the application is not abandoned in the course of the examination
of the amendment to allege use, that is all issues are resolved or made the subject
of a final action, the examining attorney should return the application to the
Trademark Trial and Appeal Board for resumption of the appeal or other action, as
appropriate. Trademark Rule 2.142(f)(3), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.142(f)(3).
The Office will not accept an amendment to allege use during the pendency of an ex
parte appeal unless the amendment to allege use was filed within the six- month
response period after issuance of the final action from which the appeal was taken.
The applicant may file the amendment to allege use only after the applicant has
made use of the mark on or in connection with all goods or services for which the
applicant will ultimately seek registration in the application, unless the applicant
specifically requests that the application be divided. Trademark Rule 2.76(c), 37
C.F.R. Section 2.76(c). Trademark Rule 2.87, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.87, permits an
applicant to divide the application into two or more separate applications. While an
applicant can request division for any reason, the purpose of dividing the
application in this case would be to effect publication or issuance of a
registration for goods or services on or in connection with which the applicant had
already made use while maintaining an active application for the remaining goods or
services. The requirements attendant to submission of a request to divide an
application are discussed more fully below ( B.15.). [p.17]
The filing of an amendment to allege use does not relieve the applicant of the
duty to file a response to an outstanding Office action or to take any other action
required in the case, including the filing of a notice of appeal. As noted, in the
case of an appeal, the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board will remand the case for
examination of the amendment to allege use.
b. Necessary Elements in a Complete Amendment to Allege Use under Section
1(c) of the Act
The amendment to allege use must include the following elements:
i. a verified statement that the applicant is believed to be the owner of the mark
and that the mark is in use in commerce, specifying the date of the applicant's
first use of the mark and first use of the mark in commerce, the type of commerce,
those goods or services specified in the application on or in connection with which
the mark is in use in commerce and the mode or manner in which the mark is used;
ii. three specimens or facsimiles of the mark as used in commerce conforming to
the requirements of Trademark Rules 2.56, 2.57 and 2.58, 37 C.F.R. Sections 2.56,
2.57 and 2.58; and
iii. the prescribed fee.
Trademark Rule 2.76(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.76(b).
The fee for filing an amendment to allege use is $100.00 per class.
c. Mininum Requirements for an Amendment to Allege Use under Section 1(c) of
the Act
The amendment to allege use must include the following minimum elements to be
referred to the examining attorney for examination on the merits:
i. the prescribed fee;
ii. at least one specimen or facsimile of the mark as used in commerce; and
iii. a verification or declaration signed by the applicant stating that the mark
is in use in commerce.
Trademark Rule 2.76(e), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.76(e).
The review and amendment clerk will conduct a preliminary review of the amendment
to allege use to determine whether it is timely and complies with the minimum
requirements. This preliminary review is similar to the review in the Application
Section for filing-date requirements in a new application. If the [p.18] amendment
to allege use is timely and does comply with those requirements, the review and
amendment clerk will refer the application to the responsible examining attorney for
examination of the amendment to allege use on the merits.
If the amendment to allege use is untimely, the review and amendment clerk will
return it to the applicant. If the applicant has submitted other amendments on the
same paper with an untimely amendment to allege use, the review and amendment clerk
will notify the applicant that the amendment to allege use is untimely and will not
be considered and will process the other amendments, as appropriate, without
consideration of the amendment to allege use. If a fee has been submitted, the
review and amendment clerk will process the refund of the fee. The applicant may
resubmit the amendment to allege use as a statement of use after issuance of the
notice of allowance. Trademark Rule 2.76(f), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.76(f).
If the amendment to allege use is timely, but does not comply with the minimum
requirements specified above, the review and amendment clerk will advise the
applicant of the deficiency. The applicant may correct the deficiencies, provided
the applicant does so before the mark has been approved for publication or the
expiration of the response period after issuance of a final refusal. Trademark Rule
2.76(a), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.76(a). The review and amendment clerk should place the
informal amendment to allege use in the file with copies of the relevant action
advising the applicant of the deficiencies. If the applicant does not correct the
deficiencies before approval of the mark for publication or before the expiration of
the response period for a final refusal, the amendment to allege use will not be
examined. In such a case, if the applicant has submitted the fee, the fee will not
be refunded. If the mark is published for opposition, the applicant may file a
statement of use after issuance of the notice of allowance.
If the amendment to allege use is not signed, the review and amendment clerk will
hold it not in compliance with the minimum requirements and will require that the
applicant submit a properly signed amendment to allege use. The review and amendment
clerk will not inquire into the authority of the person who signed. The examining
attorney will examine this issue if and when the amendment to allege use is referred
for examination on the merits.
After the review and amendment clerk has taken appropriate action with respect to
any deficient amendment to allege use, the review and amendment clerk will process
any other amendments filed with the amendment to allege use and will refer the case
to the responsible examining attorney for appropriate action on those other
amendments.
As noted previously, the filing of an amendment to allege use does not constitute
a response to any outstanding Office action in the case. The applicant must respond
to any such action within [p.19] the time provided to avoid and abandonment of the
application. Trademark Rule 2.76(g), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.76(g).
If the review and amendment clerk has issue an action holding the proposed
amendment to allege use not in compliance with the minimum requirements, the
examining attorney will act on any other amendments in the case without
consideration of the amendment to allege use. The examining attorney should issue
requirements or refusals in nonfinal or final form according to standard examination
procedure without consideration of the amendment to allege use. Any specimens
submitted, as in the case of specimens related to an amendment to allege use which
is withdrawn, become part of the record and may be relied on in relation to issues
unrelated to use.
If the examining attorney determines that the review and amendment clerk erred in
holding that the amendment to allege use did not meet the minimum requirements to be
referred for examination on the merits, the examining attorney should telephone to
advise the applicant that the amendment to allege use will be examined on the merits
and to disregard the review and amendment clerk's action citing deficiencies.
d. Examination of the Amendment to Allege Use by the Examining Attorney
The examining attorney must examine the amendment to allege use for compliance
with all relevant sections of the Act. If the examination of the amendment to allege
use raises any issues necessitating the issuance of requirements or refusals, the
examining attorney must take appropriate action, as discussed below. The following
sections present examples of issues which should be examined in relation to the
amendment to allege use. These sections do not exhaust all possibilities, but
present a general framework governing the areas for examination.
i. Ownership and Proper Execution
The examining attorney must confirm that the proper party has executed the
amendment to allege use. The party submitting the amendment to allege use must be
the same as the applicant or a valid assignee under Trademark Act Section 10, 15
U.S.C. Section 1060.
The person who executes the amendment to allege use must be entitled to do so on
behalf of the applicant. The same persons identified as possessing the authority to
sign the original application under Trademark Act Section 1, 15 U.S.C. Section 1051,
are the only persons possessing the authority to sign the amendment to allege use.
That is, only the individual owner can sign for an individual applicant, only a
general partner can sign for a partnership and only an officer can sign for a
corporation or association. If the amendment to allege use is not signed by one of
[p.20]these persons, the examining attorney must require that the applicant submit a
substitute amendment to allege use signed by a proper person, or that a proper
person execute an affidavit or declaration verifying the facts as set forth in the
amendment to allege use.
The color of authority provision of Trademark Rule 2.71(c), 37 C.F.R. Section
2.71(c), does apply to amendments to allege use. However, the applicant need not
demonstrate that the person who signed originally had color of authority because the
applicant may submit a substitute declaration within the response period set in the
examining attorney's action, whether or not the person who signed originally had
color of authority. The specific date on which the applicant submits the amendment
to allege use does not have the same importance as the filing date for the
application or the statement of use, since the amendment to allege use can be
submitted up to the expiration of the six-month response period following a final
action, including a final action requiring execution by a proper person.
ii. The Verified Statement and the Identification of Goods and Services
The examining attorney must examine the verified statement to ensure that the
statement includes the necessary averments, that the dates are properly stated, that
the type of commerce is indicated and that the mode of use is set forth. If the
statement is defective, the examining attorney must require appropriate amendment.
The examining attorney must also examine the identification of goods and services
to ensure that it conforms to the goods and services specified in the application.
The applicant may limit or clarify the goods and services, but the applicant cannot
add to or otherwise expand the identification of goods or services specified in the
application.
If goods or services identified in the application are omitted from the amendment
to allege use, but the applicant has not specifically indicated an intention to
delete those goods or services from the application, the examining attorney should
confirm that the applicant intends to delete the omitted goods or services. The
applicant may amend the application to reinsert goods or services which have been
omitted from the amendment to allege use, provided the applicant did not expressly
delete the goods or services by amendment and provided the applicant verifies that
it has used the mark in commerce on or in connection with the goods or services in
an affidavit or declaration under Trademark Rule 2.20, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.20.
Omission of goods or services in an amendment to allege use or statement of use is
the only instance in which an applicant may reinsert goods or services. The general
rule is that goods and services once deleted by express amendment or omitted from
the identification of goods and [p.21] services in a request for an extension of
time to file a statement of use may not be reinserted in a later amendment.
iii. The Specimens
The examining attorney must review the specimens for compliance with all relevant
requirements. The examining attorney must confirm that the designation is used as a
mark on the specimens. The examining attorney must determine whether the specimens
indicate descriptive or generic use of the mark. The examining attorney must examine
the specimens to determine whether any issue concerning ownership of the mark is
presented.
The clear-error standard which limits the issues that may be raised in examination
of the statement of use does not apply to the examination of the amendment to allege
use. However, the examining attorney must raise all possible issues, such as
descriptiveness issues, in the initial examination without regard to whether the
applicant will file an amendment to allege use or a statement of use. The applicant
may do either, and the examining attorney may be precluded from raising an issue
under the clear-error standard if the applicant files a statement of use.
If the applicant submits substitute specimens in conjunction with an amendment to
allege use, the applicant need not verify that the substitute specimens were in use
as of any specific date, but merely that the substitute specimens were used in
commerce in connection with the goods or services.
iv. The Drawing
Trademark Rule 2.51, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.51, specifies that the drawing in an
intent-to-use application must be a substantially exact representation of the mark
as intended to be used and as actually used upon filing of the amendment to allege
use before publication or the statement of use after issuance of the notice of
allowance. Trademark Rule 2.88(j), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(j). An applicant may not
amend the mark in a drawing if the amendment constitutes a material alteration of
the mark. Also, the mark in the drawing must agree with the mark as used on the
specimens. The same standards which apply to use applications in determining whether
specimens support use of the mark and in determining whether amendments can be
permitted apply in the examination of the amendment to allege use.
Therefore, in an intent-to-use application, the examining attorney must require
amendment to the mark or the submission of new specimens if the mark in the drawing
is not a substantially exact representation of the mark as used on the specimens.
Trademark Rule 2.72(c), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.72(c). However, if amendment of the mark
would constitute a material alteration of the mark, the examining attorney must
require substitute specimens only. The same standards applied in use applications in
determining whether the specimens support use of the applied-for [p.22] mark apply
to specimens in intent-to-use applications. See Examination Guide 2-89. Cf. United
Rum Merchants Ltd. v. Distillers Corp. (S.A.) Ltd., 9 USPQ2d 1481 (TTAB 1988).
e. Issuance of Actions by the Examining Attorney Related to the Amendment to
Allege Use
If, upon examination, the examining attorney determines that the amendment to
allege use is not acceptable, or that it raises new issues in the case, the
examining attorney will issue an action stating all refusals and requirements
arising in the examination of the amendment to allege use and incorporating all
unresolved issues from any outstanding Office action in the case. The action related
to the amendment to allege use thus supersedes any outstanding Office action, and
the applicant's response on all issues is due six months from the date of the new
action. The new action will be a nonfinal action since at least those issues arising
from the examination of the amendment to allege use will have been raised for the
first time.
If the amendment to allege use is received before any examination of the
application, the review and amendment clerk will review the amendment to allege use
to determine whether it complies with the minimum requirements and will take
appropriate action. The review and amendment clerk will return the case to the new
case docket after taking appropriate action. When the case is reached for
examination, the examining attorney will examine the application as a whole,
including the amendment to allege use, and will issue a first action addressing all
issues in the case.
If the review and amendment clerk reviews the amendment to allege use and refers
it to the examining attorney for examination on the merits, the examining attorney
should examine the amendment to allege use regardless of the status of the
application. If the application is in suspended status, the examining attorney
should examine the amendment to allege use, and if any action is required, the
examining attorney should remove the application from suspension and take
appropriate action.
If the amendment to allege use is submitted at the same time as a response and it
is referred for examination on the merits, the examining attorney should consider
both the response and the amendment to allege use. If the examining attorney must
take any action with respect to the amendment to allege use, the examining attorney
should issue a nonfinal action incorporating any refusals or requirements which
remain outstanding after the applicant's response. If the amendment to allege use is
acceptable in all respects, the examining attorney should act on the response
independent of the amendment to allege use. The examining attorney should proceed in
the same manner if the amendment to allege use reaches the examining attorney when
the case is in the examining attorney's amended docket after receipt of a
response.[p.23]
f. Amendment and Withdrawal of the Amendment to Allege Use
The applicant may amend the amendment to allege use to correct deficiencies, to
overcome a refusal, to comply with a requirement or for any other purpose. Cf.
Trademark Act Section 1(d)(3), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(d)(3).
The applicant may withdraw amendment to allege use. The applicant or the
applicant's attorney may authorize withdrawal in an examiner's amendment. The
applicant may do so at any time after submission of the amendment to allege use and
before approval of the application for publication. The Office will not refund the
fee for filing the amendment to allege use if it is withdrawn by the applicant.
If the applicant withdraws the amendment to allege use, the application will be
processed as an intent-to-use application subject to publication, issuance of a
notice of allowance and submission of a statement of use after issuance of the
notice of allowance.
If the applicant wishes to request withdrawal of an amendment to allege use during
an ex parte appeal, the applicant should direct the request to the Trademark Trial
and Appeal Board for a determination by the Board on the request.
If the applicant withdraws the amendment to allege use, the examining attorney
will withdraw any requirements or refusals specifically related to use of the mark,
such as objections related to the form of the verified statement itself, objections
related to the agreement of the mark as used with the drawing or objections related
to use of the applied-for designation as a trademark or service mark on the
specimens. The examining attorney should also withdraw any requirement or refusal
related to the execution of the amendment to allege use. The examining attorney
should maintain any requirement or refusal arising from the amendment to allege use
not specifically related to the dates of use or use of the mark, such as ownership
questions or refusals or requirements related to Sections 2(e)(1), 2(e)(2) or
2(e)(3) of the Act. The specimens or any other submission related to the amendment
to allege use will remain part of the record for the purpose of determinations under
these sections. Issues related to use include functionality, ornamentation and
configuration issues.
If the applicant withdraws the amendment to allege use after issuance of the
notice of final acceptance of the amendment to allege use, the examining attorney
must withdraw the acceptance on the TRAM system.[p.24]
g. Final Acceptance of the Amendment to Allege Use After Examination
If the amendment to allege use is acceptable in all respects, the Office will
notify the applicant of its acceptance. The examining attorney will ensure that the
computer-generated notice is issued. The examining attorney must also sign the file
to indicate acceptance of the amendment to allege use. As noted above, after an
amendment to allege use is accepted, the intent-to-use application will be processed
in the same manner as a use application under Trademark Act Section 1(a), 15 U.S.C.
Section 1051(a). The notification must be sent regardless of the status of the case,
whether there is an outstanding Office action or not. Examination should continue on
other issues in the case after the acceptance of the amendment to allege use.
5. Publication for Opposition and Issuance of the Notice of Allowance
In the case of an intent-to-use application, if the examining attorney determines
that the mark is entitled to registration, but for the submission of a statement of
use, that is, no amendment to allege use has been accepted, the examining attorney
will approve the mark for publication and the mark will be published for opposition.
In the case of an intent-to-use application where an amendment to allege use has
been submitted and accepted, the application will be processed thereafter in the
same manner as a use application. If the application is not opposed or survives all
oppositions filed, the mark will proceed to registration.
In the case of an intent-to-use application where no amendment to allege use has
been filed or where the applicant has withdrawn the amendment to allege use, the
Office will issue a notice of allowance, provided the mark clears the opposition
period or survives all oppositions. Trademark Act Section 13(b)(2), 15 U.S.C.
Section 1063(b)(2); Trademark Rule 2.81(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.81(b).
The notice of allowance in an intent-to-use application will issue on the same
date that a registration would issue in a use application. The Office will not
publish any notice that a notice of allowance has been issued in the Official
Gazette.
The notice of allowance will state the serial number of the application, the name
of the applicant, the correspondence address, the mark, the identification of goods
or services, and the date of issuance of the notice of allowance. The notice of
allowance is a key document because the issuance date establishes the due date for
submission of the statement of use required prior to registration. The information
stated on the notice of allowance is also important. If the notice of allowance
includes any errors, the applicant should notify the Office immediately.[p.25]
6. Amendments between Issuance of the Notice of Allowance and Submission of the
Statement of Use
The only amendment permitted between the issuance of the notice of allowance and
the submission of the statement of use is an amendment to delete goods or services.
Trademark Rule 2.77, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.77. "Deletion" means the elimination of an
existing item in an identification of goods and services in its entirety. Deletion
is distinct from other types of amendments to limit, such as amendments to limit the
goods as to types, channels of trade or class of purchasers or to restrict an
existing item in scope by the introduction of some qualifying language or the
substitution of specific for more general terms. The Office will not consider any
other amendment to the application during this period. If the applicant submits any
other amendments during this period, the Office will place the amendments in the
file for consideration at the time of examination of the statement of use. The ITU
paralegal will advise the applicant of receipt of any such amendment and that the
amendment will not be considered until the examination of the statement of use.
The Office will process any change of address or change of attorney at any time
during the prosecution of an application, even during the period between issuance of
the notice of allowance and the filing of the statement of use.
7. Requests for Extensions of Time to File the Statement of Use
Trademark Act Section 1(d)(2), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(d)(2), permits the Office to
extend the time for filing a statement of use upon a written request from the
applicant. Trademark Rule 2.89, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89, sets forth Office policy and
procedure governing the filing and processing of such requests. Essentially, an
applicant may request one six-month extension without a showing of good cause and up
to four additional six-month extensions with a showing of good cause. Thus, the time
available for filing the statement of use may not be extended beyond thirty-six
months from the issuance of the notice of allowance.
The six-month period following issuance of the notice of allowance will not be cut
short by the grant of an extension. The extension will begin to run from the
expiration of the six-month period following the notice of allowance. Likewise, an
applicant will receive the full benefit of each extension before a subsequent
extension will begin to run. No extension will be granted for more than six months.
Trademark Rule 2.89(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89(b).
The only amendment which is permitted in connection with the filing of a request
for an extension of time is an amendment to delete goods or services. If any other
amendment is submitted in conjunction with a request for an extension of time, the
Office will place the amendment in the application file for consideration [p.26] at
the time of examination of the statement of use. The Office will process any change
of address or change of attorney at any time during the prosecution of an
application, even if filed in conjunction with a request for an extension of time.
Any request for an extension of time must be filed by the entity which owns the
mark at the time the request is filed and must be executed by an individual
possessing statutory authority to do so on behalf of the specific type of applicant
entity. The individual must sign for an individual applicant, a general partner must
sign for a partnership and an officer must sign for a corporation or association. If
the party filing is different from the owner of record, the request should include
the reel and frame number of any relevant assignment recorded in the Assignment
Branch of the Office or other evidence that the party filing is the owner of the
application in accordance with Trademark Rule 2.186, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.186. If the
request does not include such evidence the ITU Unit will deny the request. The
applicant may establish ownership within the time provided in the action advising
the applicant of the denial, even if the time permitted for filing the statement of
use has expired. However, the applicant must file another request for an extension
of time before the time period related to the request which is under consideration
expires to avoid abandonment.
As noted above ( A.7.), only those individuals who possess statutory authority to
sign the original application are permitted to sign the request for an extension of
time. If the request is signed by any other person, the request for an extension of
time will be denied. Because the request must include a statement of a continued
bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce, only the applicant can execute the
request under the Act. In the case of a request for an extension of time, the
request cannot be re-executed by one with proper authority after the expiration of
the time permitted for filing the statement of use. The "color of authority"
provision of Trademark Rule 2.71(c), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.71(c), does not apply to
the filing of requests for extensions of time.
a. Requirements Related to the First Six-Month Extension
The applicant may request an initial six-month extension of time to file the
statement of use by filing a request for such an extension before the expiration of
the six-month period following the issuance of the notice of allowance. The request
must include the prescribed fee of $100.00 per class and a verified statement signed
by the applicant that the applicant has a continued bona fide intention to use the
mark in commerce. The statement must specify those goods or services specified in
the notice of allowance on or in connection with which the applicant has a continued
bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce. Trademark Rule 2.89(a), 37 C.F.R.
Section 2.89(a). The applicant may incorporate the goods and services specified in
the notice of allowance by reference.[p.27]
b. Requirements Related to Extensions Beyond the First Six-Month Extension -
Good Cause Extensions
The applicant may request up to a maximum of four six-month extensions to file the
statement of use in addition to the first six- month extension. Each request for
such an extension must be filed before the expiration of the previously granted
extension. The request must include the prescribed fee of $100.00 and a verified
statement signed by the applicant that the applicant has a continued bona fide
intention to use the mark in commerce. The statement must specify those goods or
services specified in the notice of allowance on or in connection with which the
applicant has a continued bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce. In
addition, each such request must include a showing of good cause. Trademark Rule
2.89(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89(b).
The showing of good cause must include an allegation that the applicant has not
yet made use of the mark in commerce on or in connection with all of the goods or
services specified in the notice of allowance for which the applicant has a
continued bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce. The showing must also
include a statement of applicant's ongoing efforts to use the mark in commerce on or
in connection with the goods or services specified as those for which the applicant
has a continued bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce. Trademark Rule
2.89(d), 15 U.S.C. Section 2.89(d).
Efforts to use the mark in commerce may include "...without limitation, product or
service research or development, market research, manufacturing activities,
promotional activities, steps to acquire distributors, steps to obtain required
governmental approval, or other similar activities." Trademark Rule 2.89(d)(2), 37
C.F.R. Section 2.89(d)(2). In the alternative, the applicant must submit a
satisfactory explanation for the failure to make such efforts. The applicant's
statement concerning good cause need only refer to the appropriate types of
activities listed in the rule or similar types of activities. The applicant need not
provide an explanation or evidence providing details as to specific activities
related to the types delineated. For instance, the applicant may simply state that
it is engaged in manufacturing activities and promotional activities.
Any request for an extension of time, including the showing of good cause, will
become a part of the permanent Office record and open to the public as such. As
noted, the showing of good cause need only provide general statements identifying
the types of efforts the applicant has undertaken as stated in the rule. The showing
need not state specific facts which would disclose confidential business information
or other proprietary information. The Office will not require any evidence or
explanation in a showing of good cause.[p.28]
c. Identifying the Goods and Services in the Request for an Extension of Time
The goods and services identified in the request for an extension of time must
conform to the goods and services identified in the notice of allowance. If
appropriate, the applicant may incorporate the specification of goods and services
in the notice of allowance by reference. If goods or services are to be deleted, the
applicant should clearly specify those goods and services to be deleted.
If the applicant lists the goods and services specifically in the request for an
extension of time, and omits any goods or services which were listed in the notice
of allowance, the Office will delete those goods or services from the application
and will not grant the request as to the omitted items. Likewise, if the applicant
lists the goods and services specifically, and the wording in the listing of the
goods and services in the request does not conform to the wording of the
specification of goods and services in the notice of allowance, the Office will
delete from the application any wording not expressly included in the request in
conforming language and will not grant the request as to the deleted items. The
applicant cannot amend application later to reinsert the deleted goods or services
once they have been so deleted. Trademark Rule 2.89(f), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89(f).
The paralegal in the ITU Unit will examine the identification of goods and
services specified in the extension request to determine whether the goods and
services specified conform to the goods and services specified in the notice of
allowance. The paralegal will delete any items from the identification of goods and
services in the application which are not either incorporated by reference or
specified in the extension request in conforming language.
As noted above, applicants may incorporate goods and services by reference in the
request for an extension of time. It is advisable to do so, if appropriate, to avoid
the possibility that goods or services will be deleted unintentionally. Thus, the
applicant may specify the goods or services by stating "those goods or services
identified in the notice of allowance" or "those goods or services identified in the
notice of allowance except..." followed by an identification of goods or services to
be deleted.
The only amendment permitted between issuance of the notice of allowance and
filing of the statement of use is an amendment to delete goods or services.
Trademark Rule 2.77, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.77. "Deletion" means the elimination of an
item from the identification of goods and services in its entirety as distinct from
other types of amendments to limit, such as amendments to limit the goods as to
types, channels of trade or class of purchasers or to restrict an existing item in
scope by the introduction of some qualifying language or the substitution of
specific for more general terms. The ITU paralegal will not [p.29] process any
proposed amendments filed with the request for an extension of time, other than
deletions, and will place other amendments in the file for consideration at the time
of examination of the statement of use. The paralegal will act on the extension
request, apart from any such proposed amendment, as specified above.
d. Filing a Request for an Extension of Time in Conjunction with a Statement
of Use
An applicant may file one final request for an extension of time at the time of
filing the statement of use or during any time remaining in the existing six-month
period in which a statement of use is filed. However, such a request is not
permitted if the grant of such an extension would extend the time for filing more
than thirty-six months beyond the issuance of the notice of allowance. Trademark
Rule 2.89(e), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89(e). The applicant may not request any further
extensions of time after this request.
The purpose of such a request would be to secure additional time to correct any
deficiency in the statement of use which is of a type which must be corrected before
the expiration of the time permitted for filing the statement of use. Because the
statement of use may not be withdrawn, the applicant must correct any such
deficiency within the time provided to file the statement of use or the application
will become abandoned.
The request must conform to all relevant requirements including payment of the
applicable fee. If the request is not the first request for an extension of time,
and thus a showing of good cause is required with the request for an extension of
time filed with or after the statement of use, the applicant may satisfy the
requirement for a showing of good cause by asserting that applicant believes that it
has made valid use of the mark in commerce, as evidenced by the submitted statement
of use, but that if the statement of use is found to be fatally defective, the
applicant will need additional time to file a statement of use. Trademark Rule
2.89(e)(2), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89(e)(2).
If the applicant files a final request for an extension of time in conjunction
with a statement of use, and the applicant submits fees sufficient for one, but not
both, the Office will apply the fees to the extension of time to avoid abandonment
of the application.
e. Processing of the Request for an Extension of Time
The Office will notify the applicant of the grant or denial of the request for an
extension of time. Trademark Rule 2.89(g), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89(g). Any denial
will specify the reasons for the denial. The Office's failure to notify the
applicant of the grant or denial of the extension before the expiration of the
[p.30] existing period to file the statement of use or before the expiration of the
period requested does not relieve the applicant of the responsibility to file the
statement of use or a request for an extension of time within the relevant period.
If the applicant fails to file the statement of use or a request for an extension of
time within the time permitted, the application will become abandoned. Trademark Act
Section 1(d)(4), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(d)(4).
If the Office denies the request for an extension of time but time remains in the
applicant's existing period for filing the statement of use, the applicant may file
the statement of use or another request for an extension of time to file the
statement of use. Otherwise, the applicant's only recourse after denial of the
request for an extension of time is a petition to the Commissioner. A petition from
the denial of a request for an extension must be filed within one month from the
mailing date of the denial of the extension of time. Trademark Rule 2.89(g), 37
C.F.R. Section 2.89(g). The ITU Unit will not accept any request to reconsider a
denial of a request for an extension of time. The ITU Unit will be responsible for
processing all requests for extensions of time to file statements of use.
8. Submission of the Statement of Use under Section 1(d) of the Act
As noted earlier ( A.1.a.), an intent-to-use applicant must file either an
amendment to allege use under Trademark Act Section 1(c), 15 U.S.C. 1051(c), or a
statement of use under Trademark Act Section 1(d), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(d), as a
precondition to issuance of the registration. This section will discuss statements
of use only; the amendment to allege use is discussed above ( A.4.).
a. Form and Permissible Time Period for Filing a Statement of Use under
Section 1(d) of the Act
The statement of use should be entitled, "Statement of Use under Section 2.88."
Trademark Rule 2.88(d), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(d). The title should be placed at the
top of the first page. The mailing address should specify "Box ITU" also. Proper
identification of the statement of use will expedite handling, but the Office will
not take any action for failure to comply with these recommendations. The applicant
may submit other amendments related to the application with the statement of use.
The statement of use must be filed within six months of the issuance date of the
notice of allowance or within an extension of time for filing the statement of use
granted under Trademark Rule 2.89, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89. For purposes of
establishing a date of receipt, the statement of use is not subject to the
certificate-of-mailing procedure under Rule 1.8, 37 C.F.R. Section 1.8. The
statement of use will be considered received on the date [p.31] it is actually
received or on the Express-Mail date under Rule 1.10, 37 C.F.R. Section 1.10.
Any statement of use filed before mailing of the notice of allowance is premature
and will not be considered. In such a case, the ITU Unit will return the statement
of use and refund the fee to the applicant. Trademark Rule 2.88(a), 37 C.F.R.
Section 2.88(a). If the statement of use is not filed or is filed later than
required, the application will be considered abandoned. Trademark Act Section
1(d)(4), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(d)(4); Trademark Rule 2.88(h), 37 C.F.R. Section
2.88(h). A late statement of use will not be considered. The ITU Unit will return
the late statement of use to the applicant with any fees paid.
The applicant may file the statement of use only after the applicant has made use
of the mark on or in connection with all goods or services for which the applicant
will ultimately seek registration in the application, unless the applicant
specifically requests that the application be divided. Trademark Rule 2.88(c), 37
C.F.R. Section 2.88(c). Trademark Rule 2.87, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.87, permits an
applicant to divide the application as filed into two or more separate applications.
The purpose of filing a request to divide an application in conjunction with the
filing of a statement of use would be to effect issuance of a registration for goods
or services on or in connection with which the applicant has already made use while
maintaining an active application for the remaining goods or services. After the
division all applications retain the original filing date. The requirements
attendant to submission of a request to divide an application are discussed below (
B.15.).
b. Necessary Elements in a Complete Statement of Use under Section 1(d) of
the Act
The statement of use must include the following elements:
i. a verified statement that the applicant is believed to be the owner of the mark
and that the mark is in use in commerce, specifying the date of the applicant's
first use of the mark and first use of the mark in commerce, the type of ccmmerce,
those goods or services specified in the notice of allowance on or in connection
with which the mark is in use in commerce and the mode or manner in which the mark
is used;
ii. three specimens or facsimiles of the mark as used in commerce; and
iii. the prescribed fee.
Trademark Rule 2.88(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(b).
The filing fee for a statement of use is $100.00 per class. [p.32]
c. Minimum Requirements for a Statement of Use under Section 1(d) of the Act
The statement of use must include the following minimum elements to be referred to
the examining attorney for examination on the merits:
i. the prescribed fee;
ii. at least one specimen or facsimile of the mark as used in commerce; and
iii. a verification or declaration signed by the applicant stating that the mark
is in use in commerce.
Trademark Rule 2.88(e), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(e).
The ITU Unit will review the statement of use to determine whether it is timely
and whether it complies with the minimum requirements. As noted above ( A.8.a.), if
the statement of use is untimely, either because it is premature or late, the ITU
Unit will return the statement of use with any fees to the applicant.
If the statement of use is timely, but does not comply with one or more of the
minimum requirements, the ITU Unit will advise the applicant of the deficiency. The
applicant may correct the deficiency provided the time permitted for filing the
statement of use has not expired. Trademark Rule 2.88(g), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(g).
If the applicant does not correct the deficiency before the expiration of the
relevant time period, the statement of use will not be examined and the application
will be declared abandoned. In such a case, if the applicant has submitted the fee,
the ITU Unit will not refund the fee.
The applicant may not withdraw the statement of use and return to the previous
status of awaiting filing of the statement of use, even if the statement of use as
filed fails to meet the minimum requirements. Trademark Rule 2.88(g), 37 C.F.R.
Section 2.88(g). The applicant may request extensions of time to file the statement
of use in accordance with Trademark Rule 2.89, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89, as discussed
above ( A.7.e.), including a final request for an extension filed with a statement
of use or during the time remaining in the existing period in which the statement of
use is filed.
The Office will not issue a filing receipt to acknowledge receipt of a statement
of use.
If an applicant files a statement of use and a request to divide the application
at the same time, and the fees submitted are insufficient for both, the fees will be
applied to the statement of use first and the applicant will be notified of the
deficiency. [p.33]
9. Examination of the Statement of Use
If the statement of use is timely and complies with the minimum requirements, the
ITU Unit will refer the entire application with the statement of use to the
responsible examining attorney for examination on the merits. The same examining
attorney who examined the application initially will examine the statement of use
unless the examining attorney has left the Office or assumed other duties.
a. Procedures Governing Examination of the Statement of Use
Examination of the statement of use follows the same procedural course as the
initial examination of the application under Trademark Rule 2.61 et seq., 37 C.F.R.
Section 2.61 et seq. The examining attorney should issue actions, as appropriate,
stating requirements and refusals and culminating in final action or acceptance of
the statement of use. The examining attorney may issue examiner's amendments or
priority actions, as appropriate. The applicant must respond to actions within six
months under routine Office procedure. If the examining attorney ultimately finds
the statement of use acceptable in all respects, the Office will notify the
applicant of its acceptance. The Office will then publish notice of the registration
of the mark and will issue the registration to the applicant. The application is not
once again subject to opposition. Trademark Rule 2.151, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.151.
If the examining attorney issues any requirements or refusals, the applicant may
respond under standard examination procedure. The applicant may appeal or petition
matters in the same manner and subject to the same procedures which would apply in
the initial examination of the application.
The applicant may amend or otherwise correct the statement of use during
examination, provided the applicant had complied with the minimum requirements
attendant to the statement of use before the expiration of the time permitted to
file the statement of use.
i. Complying with Minimum Requirements within the Time Permitted
The applicant must make valid use of the mark in commerce and must file a
statement of use meeting the minimum requirements, including at least one specimen,
before the expiration of the time permitted to file the statement of use. Trademark
Rule 2.71(d)(3), 37 C.F.R Section 2.71(d)(3). The applicant can provide substitute
specimens, during examination, after the expiration of the time permitted to file
the statement of use. However, the applicant must verify that the specimens were in
use before the expiration of the time permitted for filing the statement of use. If
the applicant attempts to amend the dates of use to state a date of first use in
commerce which is later than the time permitted for filing the statement of use, the
examining [p.34] attorney must refuse registration because the applicant failed to
make use within the time permitted and, as a result, the application is abandoned.
The examining attorney must refuse registration on the same grounds if the applicant
cannot provide an acceptable specimen which was in use in commerce before the
expiration of the time permitted for filing the statement of use.
Likewise, the party filing the statement of use must be the owner of the mark at
the time of filing. However, even after the expiration of the time permitted for
filing the statement of use, the applicant can provide information to establish that
the party who filed was the owner at the time the statement of use was filed through
a chain of title. Trademark Rule 2.186, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.186. The applicant must
do so within the specified response period. However, if the party which did file was
not the owner at the time of filing the statement of use, the applicant cannot
provide a substitute statement of use or the equivalent to correct this error after
the expiration of the time permitted for filing the statement of use. If the time
permitted for filing the statement of use has not yet expired, the applicant may
file a substitute statement of use in the name of the true owner.
Therefore, if the party filing the statement of use is not the owner of the mark
at the time of filing the statement of use, the examining attorney must reject the
statement of use. If no time remains within the time permitted for filing the
statement of use, the examining attorney must refuse registration because the
application is abandoned for failure to file the statement of use within the time
permitted.
Also, the person who signs the statement of use must have the authority to do so
under the Act. Only those persons who are authorized to sign the original
application have authority to sign the statement of use: the individual for an
individual applicant, a general partner for a partnership and an officer for a
corporation or association. As in the case of the original application, the person
who signs must have at least color of authority to sign in order for the statement
of use to be considered received in the Office.
If the person who signed the statement of use lacked even color of authority to do
so, the applicant cannot provide a statement of use or the equivalent, signed by a
proper person, after the expiration of the time permitted to file the statement of
use. If the person who signed the statement of use possessed at least color of
authority, as discussed below ( B.1.a.), the applicant can provide a substitute
statement of use or an affidavit or declaration signed by the proper person
verifying the facts as set forth in the statement of use after the expiration of the
time permitted for filing the statement of use. Trademark Rule 2.71(c), 37 C.F.R.
Section 2.71(c). The principles which govern the determination as to whether a
person possesses color of authority are discussed below ( B.1.a.) in relation to the
[p.35] signature requirements attendant to the filing of the original application.
If the person who signed the statement of use lacked even color of authority to so
do, and the time permitted for filing the statement of use has expired, the
examining attorney must refuse registration because the application is, therefore,
abandoned for failure to file the statement of use within the time permitted.
ii. Correcting Defects
The applicant may correct defects in the statement of use after the expiration of
the time permitted for filing the statement of use when compliance within the time
permitted for filing the statement of use is not required by the Act. However, the
applicant must respond to requirements related to these defects within the response
periods established under standard examination procedure to avoid abandonment of the
application.
As noted above ( A.9.a.i.), the applicant may provide substitute specimens after
the expiration of the time permitted for filing the statement of use. However, the
applicant must verify that the substitute specimens were in use in commerce before
the expiration of the time permitted for filing the statement of use.
As noted above ( A.9.a.i.), the applicant may establish chain of title during
examination, after the expiration of the time permitted for filing the statement of
use. The applicant may establish color of authority of the person who signed the
statement of use and provide a substitute statement of use signed by a proper person
during examination after the expiration of the time for filing the statement of use.
The applicant may correct the dates of use, subject to the limitations provided in
Trademark Rule 2.71(d), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.71(d), or the method of use clause after
the expiration of the time permitted for filing the statement of use. The applicant
may amend the identification of goods and services, subject to the general
restrictions governing such amendments under Trademark Rules 2.71(b) and 2.88(i)(1),
37 C.F.R. Sections 2.71(b) and 2.88(i)(1), after the expiration of the time
permitted for filing the statement of use. The applicant may amend the drawing,
subject to the restrictions generally governing amendments to drawings under
Trademark Rule 2.72, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.72, during examination after the expiration
of the time permitted for filing the statement of use.
iii. Withdrawal of the Statement of Use Prohibited
Once the applicant has filed the statement of use, the applicant may not withdraw
the statement of use and return to the previous status of awaiting submission of the
statement of use. Trademark Rule 2.88(g), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(g). The applicant
may not do so, even if the Office determines that the statement of use does not
comply with the minimum requirements. However, the [p.36] applicant may amend the
statement of use or file a substitute statement of use to correct even fatal defects
within the time permitted for filing the statement of use.
b. The "Clear-Error" Standard in Examination of the Statement of Use
For the purpose of examination of the statement of use, the Office will issue
requirements or refusals concerning matters specifically related to the statement of
use only. The Office will not issue any requirements or refusals concerning matters
which could have or should have been raised during initial examination, unless the
failure to do so in initial examination constitutes a clear error. "Clear error"
refers to an error which, if not corrected, would result in issuance of a
registration in violation of the Act. Cf. Century 21 Real Estate Corp. v. Century
Life of America, 10 USPQ2d 2034 (TTAB 1989); Granny's Submarine Sandwiches, Inc. v.
Granny's Kitchen, Inc., 199 USPQ 564 (TTAB 1978).
The examining attorney must act on all new issues in the examination of the
statement of use. Examples of such issues are presented below ( A.9.b.) in the
discussion of various areas of examination related to the statement of use. For
example, the examining attorney must issue an appropriate refusal if the specimens
fail to show use of the designation as a mark. However, the examining attorney may
not issue a refusal under Trademark Act Section 2(e)(1), 15 U.S.C. Section
1052(e)(1), unless the refusal is dictated by changed circumstances from the time of
initial examination or the failure to issue such a refusal would constitute clear
error.
If a significant length of time has elapsed since the initial examination, in some
unusual circumstances, the mark may have become descriptive or even generic as
applied to the goods or services. In such a case, the evidence of the descriptive or
generic use would not have been available during initial examination.
However, if evidence that the mark is merely descriptive was available during
initial examination, and thus the refusal could or should have been issued in
initial examination, the examining attorney cannot issue the refusal unless clear
error is present. That is, the evidence of descriptiveness must be substantial and
unequivocal. The examining attorney should not issue such a refusal on the basis of
information that was available during the initial examination unless clear error
exists.
Likewise, the examining attorney must not issue requirements or refusals related
to informalities which could or should have been addressed during the initial
examination. For example, if the examining attorney determines that the initial
declaration in support of the application was defective, the examining attorney
should not issue a requirement for a new declaration. [p.37]
If the goods or services were classified incorrectly and published for opposition
in the wrong class, the examining attorney should require correction of the
classification. In the case of any change of class after issuance of the notice of
allowance, the mark must be republished for opposition unless the Petitions and
Classification Attorney determines that republication is not necessary.
If a disclaimer could or should have been required during the initial examination,
the examining attorney should not require a disclaimer during the examination of the
statement of use unless there is clear error. For example, a disclaimer of all of
the wording in a mark may be required under the clear- error standard where the mark
consists of merely descriptive wording and distinctive design elements. Issuance of
a registration without such a disclaimer would violate the Act by affording the
applicant rights beyond those to which the applicant is entitled. In other cases
where the requirement for a disclaimer is subject to greater discretion, the
clear-error standard would not permit a disclaimer requirement when it could or
should have been stated in initial examination. The determination that a term is
descriptive or generic related to the requirement for a disclaimer is subject to the
substantial-and- unequivocal-evidence standard stated above.
Generally, the Office will not conduct any search for conflicting marks, or issue
any refusals on that basis, in the examination of the statement of use. However, if
the examining attorney determines that a second search is necessary, due to an
amendment of the mark or an amendment of the goods or services, the examining
attorney will conduct a second search and take action, as appropriate. Likewise, the
Office may discover a clear error under Trademark Act Section 2(d), 15 U.S.C.
Section 1052(d), in the course of internal Office quality review or through a letter
of protest. The Office will not issue any refusal under Section 2(d) in the
examination of the statement of use unless the failure to do so constitutes a clear
error. For the purposes of Section 2(d), the conflict between the application and
registration at issue must be such that reasonable minds could not differ as to the
necessity for the refusal, that is, failure to issue the refusal would result in
issuance of a registration in violation of the Act.
In the case of an intent-to-use application, as in all applications, the Office
will deny as untimely letters of protest which are filed more than thirty days after
publication of a mark. In re Pohn, 3 USPQ2d 1700 (Comm'r Pats. 1987).
c. Examination of the Verified Statement of Use
The examining attorney should review the statement of use itself to confirm that
the statement conforms to the requirements of the Act and the rules. As noted above
( A.8.a.), the statement must include an averment that the applicant is the owner of
the [p.38] mark, the dates of use, an identification of the goods and services and
the method of use. The statement must be verified. Trademark Act Section 1(d), 15
U.S.C. Section 1051(d); Trademark Rule 2.88(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(b).
The averment of ownership and use in commerce are essential elements of the
statement. If the averment of ownership is omitted, the examining attorney must
require the applicant to submit a verified statement including this averment.
If the statement of use was executed before the stated dates of use, the examining
attorney must require that the statement be re-executed. The dates of use may not be
amended to a date later than the expiration of the time permitted for filing of the
statement of use. The applicant must verify amendments to the dates of use in the
statement of use as in the application itself. Trademark Rule 2.71(d), 37 C.F.R.
Section 2.71(d).
The date of first use in commerce must be no earlier than the date of first use
anywhere. Office policies governing the correction of dates which do not conform to
this requirement in use applications apply to statements of use also. TMEP section
806.03. The applicant must state dates of use for each class. The dates of first use
for each class must apply to at least one item in the class but need not apply to
more than one item. However, the applicant must have used the mark on all items
covered by the statement of use before execution of the statement unless the
applicant requests to divide the application under Trademark Rule 2.87, 37 C.F.R
Section 2.87.
The applicant must identify the type of commerce according to the same standards
which govern use applications. TMEP section 806.05.
The applicant must indicate the method of use. Office policies governing this
requirement relative to use applications apply to the statement of use as well. TMEP
section 808.09. If the method of use indicated in the statement of use is
inconsistent with the intended method of use stated in the initial application, the
examining attorney should assume that the later statement is controlling and should
not raise this inconsistency as an issue in examination.
d. The Identification of Goods and Services in the Examination of the
Statement of Use
"The goods or services specified in a statement of use must conform to those goods
or services identified in the notice of allowance." Trademark Rule 2.88(i)(1), 37
C.F.R. Section [p.39] 2.88(i)(1). The referenced rule further recommends that, in
appropriate cases, applicants specify the goods or services by stating "those goods
or services identified in the notice of allowance" or "those goods or services
identified in the notice of allowance except..." followed by an identification of
the goods or services to be deleted.
The rules preclude additions to the identification of goods or services in all
applications, as noted below. Trademark Rule 2.71(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.71(b). If
the applicant proposes to add to the identification of goods or services in
conjunction with the statement of use, the examining attorney must reject the
amendment.
If the applicant omits any goods or services specified in the notice of allowance
from the identification of goods or services in the statement of use, and the
applicant has not expressed a clear intention to delete those goods or services, the
examining attorney must inquire as to the discrepancy. The examining attorney will
permit the applicant to amend the statement of use to reinsert any omitted goods or
services, provided the applicant did not delete the goods or services expressly in
an amendment and provided the applicant verifies that the mark was in use in
commerce with those goods or services before the expiration of the time permitted to
file the statement of use. Trademark Rule 2.88(i)(2), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(i)(2).
The applicant may amend to delete items or to limit the identification of goods
and services. For example, the applicant may amend to limit the goods as to types,
channels of trade or class of purchasers or to restrict an existing item in scope by
the introduction of some qualifying language or thesubstitution of specific for more
general terms. The applicant may clarify the identification of goods or services,
provided the amendment does not exceed the scope of goods or services specified in
the notice of allowance. The principles which govern amendments to delete, limit or
clarify in general also apply in the examination of the statement of use. If, due to
any amendment to the identification of goods and services, the international class
must be amended, the application must be republished for opposition unless the
Petitions and Classification Attorney determines that republication is not
necessary.
e. Examination of the Statement of Use Related to the Drawing
Trademark Rule 2.51, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.51, specifies that the drawing in an
intent-to-use application must be a substantially exact representation of the mark
as intended to be used and as actually used upon filing of the amendment to allege
use before publication or the statement of use after issuance of the notice of
allowance. Trademark Rule 2.88(j), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.88(j). An applicant may not
amend the mark in a drawing if the amendment constitutes a material alteration of
the mark. Also, the mark in the drawing must agree with the mark as used on [p.40]
the specimens. The same standards which apply to use applications in determining
whether specimens support use of the mark and in determining whether amendments can
be permitted apply in the examination of the statement of use.
Therefore, in an intent-to-use application, the examining attorney must require
amendment to the mark or the submission of new specimens if the mark in the drawing
is not a substantially exact representation of the mark as used on the specimens.
Trademark Rule 2.72(c), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.72(c). However, if amendment of the mark
would constitute a material alteration of the mark in such a case, the examining
attorney must require substitute specimens only. The same standards applied in use
applications in determining whether the specimens support use of the applied-for
mark apply to specimens in intent-to-use applications. See Examination Guide 2-89.
Cf. United Rum Merchants Ltd. v. Distillers Corp. (S.A.) Ltd., 9 USPQ2d 1481 (TTAB
1988).
If the applicant submits substitute specimens in conjunction with a statement of
use, the applicant must verify that the substitute specimens were in use in commerce
before the expiration of the time permitted to file the statement of use. Trademark
Rule 2.59(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.59(b). If the dates of first use change as a
result of the submission of new specimens, the applicant must also amend the dates
of first use in the statement of use with a supporting affidavit or declaration.
f. Consideration of the Specimens of Use in the Examination of the Statement
of Use
Apart from the statement of use itself, the primary focus of examination of the
statement of use is the specimens of use. The examining attorney must evaluate the
specimens to confirm that the specimens exhibit appropriate use. Trademark Act
Section 45, 15 U.S.C. Section 1127. The examining attorney must also examine the
specimens to confirm that the specimens show use of the subject matter as a
trademark or service mark on or in connection with the goods or services identified
in the statement of use. The examining attorney will also consider any questions
regarding ownership or control of the mark arising in the examination of the
specimens. These issues are typical of those which are appropriate for action in
examination of the statement of use. The examining attorney should issue
requirements and refusals, as appropriate, based on the examination of the
specimens, subject to the same standards which govern the examination of specimens
in any other phase of examination. TMEP section 808.
10. Revival of Abandoned Intent-to-Use Applications
As noted below ( B.13.), petitions to revive all abandoned applications must be
filed promptly. Trademark Rule 2.66(d), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.66(d). Generally, a
petition to revive should be filed within two months of abandonment. In any petition
to revive an abandoned application, the applicant must show that the delay [p.41] in
responding was unavoidable. Delays due to circumstances which could have been
avoided with the exercise of a modicum of care and attention will not be considered
unavoidable delays.
In addition to the requirements which apply to all petitions to revive, a petition
to revive an intent-to-use application, abandoned due to the failure to file the
statement of use within the time allowed, is subject to additional requirements. The
petition must include a fee equal to the required fees for the number of requests
for extensions of time to file the statement of use which should have been filed if
the application had not been abandoned and either a statement of use or a request
for an extension of time. Trademark Rule 2.66(c), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.66(c).
The referenced fees are in addition to the standard petition and any statement of
use fees. If an applicant has already filed a statement of use, the applicant need
not file another statement of use with the petition. If a response to an outstanding
Office action is due, the applicant must include that response with the petition.
However, the Office will not grant a petition to revive an intent-to- use
application if the grant of the petition would extend the period for filing the
statement of use beyond thirty-six months after issuance of the notice of allowance.
Trademark Rule 2.66(d), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.66(d).
11. Assignment of Intent-to-Use Applications
The 1988 amendments to the Act provide as follows:
However, no application to register a mark under section 1(b) shall be assignable
prior to the filing of the verified statement of use under section 1(d), except to a
successor to the business of the applicant, or portion thereof, to which the mark
pertains, if that business is ongoing and existing.
Trademark Act Section 10, 15 U.S.C. Section 1060.
The Office will not examine proposed assignments to determine compliance with this
provision as a general rule. However, the examining attorney will inquire to
determine whether an assignment conforms to the requirements of this provision if
the question is raised by the information of record. If the examining attorney
issues an inquiry as to compliance, the applicant's response that the assignment was
in compliance with the law is sufficient to resolve the issue.
As discussed in detail below ( B.11.b.), the applicant bears the burden of
recording and notifying appropriate Office personnel of assignments or changes of
name to ensure that the registration [p.42] issues in the name of a new owner.
Trademark Rule 2.187, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.187.
12. Mailing Procedures and Fees Related to Intent-to-Use Applications
a. Use of the "Box ITU" Designation
Applicants are encouraged to include "Box ITU" in the address when submitting the
following:
i. statements of use under Section 1(d) of the Act, Trademark Rule 2.88, 37
C.F.R. Section 2.88, and
ii. requests for extensions of time to file statements of use under Trademark Rule
2.89, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89.
Rule 1.1(h), 37 C.F.R. Section 1.1(h). Applicants should not use the "Box ITU"
designation when filing the intent-to-use application itself, amendments to allege
use or when filing routine responses to Office actions in intent-to- use
applications because it may delay processing.
b. The Certificate-of-Mailing Procedure
The following intent-to-use papers are specifically excepted from the
certificate-or-mailing procure:
i. statements of use under Section 1(d) of the Act,
ii. requests for extensions of time to file statements of use under Trademark Rule
2.89, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.89, and
iii. amendments to allege use under Section 1(c) of the Act.
Rule 1.8(a), 37 C.F.R. Section 1.8(a). Also, the initial filing of all trademark
applications, including intent-to-use applications, is excepted from this procedure.
Thus, any of these papers will be considered filed on the date actually received or
on the date specified under Rule 1.10, 37 C.F.R. Section 1.10, concerning the use of
"Express Mail."
c. Fees Related to Intent-to-Use Applications
The filing fee for an intent-to-use application itself is $175.00 per class. The
fee for filing an amendment to allege use, a statement of use or a request for an
extension of time is $100.00 per class. Trademark Rule 2.6, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.6.
[p.43]
B. Provisions Affecting All Applications
Certain changes in Office policy and procedure associated with the 1988 amendments
and revisions to the rules affect all applications, that is, use applications under
Trademark Act Section 1(a), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(a), intent-to-use applications
under Trademark Act Section 1(b), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(b), as well as applications
filed under Trademark Act Section 44, 15 U.S.C. Section 1126. Those changes will be
set forth in this section.
1. Filing-Date Requirements
Trademark Rule 2.21, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.21, sets forth the minimum requirements
for receiving a filing date for all types of applications. These minimum
requirements do not include all of the requirements which may ultimately apply for
registration of the mark, but merely those formal requirements which must be met to
receive a filing date.
a. Applicant's Signature
Under the rule, as revised, all applicants are required to provide a declaration
or verification signed by the applicant to receive a filing date. Because the filing
of an application for the Principal Register now establishes a constructive date of
use, contingent on issuance of a registration, under Trademark Act Section 7(c), 15
U.S.C. Section 1057(c), the rule now imposes this requirement.
If an application is submitted unsigned, the Application Section will not grant a
filing date and will return the papers to the applicant. If an unsigned application
reaches the examining attorney in error, the examining attorney should return the
application to the Application Section for appropriate action.
Under Trademark Act Section 1, 15 U.S.C. Section 1051, only the following persons
have statutory authority to sign: the individual in an application filed by an
individual, a general partner in a partnership application or an officer in an
application filed by a corporation or association.
If the applicant submits a signed declaration or verification, the examining
attorney will determine whether the person who signed had authority to sign for the
applicant under the Act. If the person did not, the applicant may submit a
substitute declaration and retain the filing date, provided the person who signed
initially possessed color of authority to sign. Persons having color of authority
are those who have firsthand knowledge [p.44] of the truth of the statements in the
application and who also have actual or implied authority to act on behalf of the
applicant. Trademark Rule 2.71(c), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.71(c).
For example, in the case of a corporate applicant, a nonofficer, such as a
manager, who had the requisite knowledge of the facts relevant to the application
and actual or implied authority to act on behalf of the applicant, would possess
color of authority, though not proper authority under the Act. In such a case, a
substitute declaration could be submitted during prosecution of the application to
correct this defect. An attorney who is an employee of a corporation might also
satisfy the criteria.
On the other hand, the applicant's private attorney would not ordinarily be
regarded as possessing color of authority to sign on behalf of an applicant. Private
attorneys do not usually have firsthand knowledge of a client's business or the
authority to act on behalf of a client, other than as legal representative. Here,
the defect could not be corrected by filing a substitute verification or
declaration, confirming the facts in the application, signed by an appropriate
person. If the person who signed the application lacked even color of authority to
sign on behalf of the applicant, the examining attorney must refuse registration
because the application did not meet the requirements of Trademark Rule 2.21, 37
C.F.R Section 2.21, for receiving a filing date.
If the examining attorney determines that the person who signed for the applicant
lacked the requisite authority, but the person possessed at least color of
authority, the examining attorney will require a substitute declaration or
verification.
The Office will accept copies of signed applications for the purpose of granting a
filing date. Applicants cannot send copies of applications by fax directly to the
Office, but the Office will accept copies which have been produced by fax in the
same manner as any other copy. However, if a copy is filed, the applicant must
provide the signed original copy of the application during prosecution. If the
applicant has not done so earlier, the examining attorney will require that the
applicant do as in the first action in the case. In no case will anything other than
a certificate or certified copy of a foreign registration be accepted for purposes
of granting a filing date in an application based on Trademark Act Section 44(e), 15
U.S.C. Section 1126(e).
b. Drawing Size
Effective July 3, 1989, the Office requires that drawings conform to the size
requirements specified in Trademark Rule 2.52(c), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.52(c), to
receive a filing date. If the mark in a special-form drawing is displayed in an area
larger than four inches by four inches, it will be regarded as not being in
substantial conformity with the rule and the application will be denied a filing
date and returned to the applicant. If an [p.45] examining attorney discovers an
application with a drawing which does not conform to this requirement, the examining
attorney should return the application to the Trademark Services Division for
appropriate handling. It should not be examined.
Other changes relating to the minimum requirements for receiving a filing date
which relate to specific types of applications are noted under the discussion of
those specific types of applications.
2. Identifying the Applicant and Applicant's Address
Trademark Rule 2.33(a)(1)(ii), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.33(a)(1)(ii), has been revised
to state the requirements related to identifying a partnership. The rule now
specifies that the application must identify "the state or nation under the laws of
which the partnership is organized." This revision merely reflects long-standing
Office practice. The applicant must also provide the names of all general partners
and their state or nation or incorporation or their citizenship, as appropriate.
Also, an individual applicant may provide either a business or residence address.
Both addresses are no longer required.
3. Drawings
Trademark Rule 2.51(d), 37 C.F.R Section 2.51(d), has been added to provide
guidance concerning the nature of drawings in the case of certain unusual types of
marks. The rule provides as follows:
(d) Broken lines should be used in the drawing of a mark to show placement of the
mark on the goods, or on the packaging, or to show matter not claimed as part of the
mark, or both, as appropriate. In an application to register a mark with
three-dimensional features, the drawing shall depict the mark in perspective in a
single rendition.
This provision is intended to provide guidance to applicants wishing to register
certain types of marks, such as configurations of goods or configurations of
packaging for goods and similar marks. The provision brings the rules into
conformity with current practice. The drawing should clearly define the matter the
applicant claim as its mark. See In re Famous Foods, Inc., 217 USPQ 177 (TTAB 1983)
. If the mark is three-dimensional, the drawing should present the mark in three
dimensions. In re Schaefer Marine, Inc., 223 USPQ 170 (TTAB 1984).
Trademark Rule 2.52(e), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.52(e), has been revised to simplify
the color linings used to identify the colors orange and yellow or gold in drawings
of marks. If an applicant employs the color linings formerly designated for these
colors, [p.46] the examining attorney should not require a new drawing. The revised
rule has been adopted for the convenience of applicants, and the Office will allow a
reasonable time for applicants to adjust to the new coding.
Trademark Rule 2.52(d), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.52(d), has been amended to modify the
content of the drawing heading. Specifically, it now requires that an applicant
claiming the benefit of a foreign application under Trademark Act Section 44(d), 15
U.S.C. Section 1126(d), specify the priority date in the drawing heading. It also
recommends that applicants provide, as a part of the heading, a description of the
essential elements of the mark in the case of a special-form drawing.
4. Specimens - Requirements
Trademark Rules 2.56 and 2.57, 37 C.F.R. Sections 2.56 and 2.57, have been revised
to reduce the number of specimens or facsimiles required in an application from five
to three. In view or this rule, the public may remove only two surplus copies of
specimens from the file permanently. At least one original of each type of specimen
submitted must be retained in the file to ensure a complete record of the case. In
the case of applications filed before November 16, 1989, the Office will not require
more than three specimens per class in any action taken on or after that date.
The referenced rules have also been revised to reflect the provisions of the 1988
amendments revising Trademark Act Section 45, 15 U.S.C. Section 1127. Specifically,
the definition of "use in commerce" has been revised to provide that when the nature
of the goods makes placement of the mark on the goods, containers, tags, labels or
displays associated with the goods impracticable, then placement of the mark on
documents associated with the goods or their sale constitutes use in commerce. The
referenced rules have been amended to reflect this change. See In re E.A. Miller &
Sons Packing Co., 225 USPQ 592 (TTAB 1985). Therefore, the examining attorney should
accept documents associated with the goods or their sale, in the case of goods sold
in bulk or in similar cases, where placement of the mark on the goods themselves is
impracticable.
The referenced rules regarding specimens or facsimiles have also been revised to
establish 8.5 by 11 inches as the maximum size permitted for such items. This
revision brings the rule into conformity with the preferred size indicated for all
filings and standards prevailing in federal practice in general.
5. Specimens - Examination
The 1988 amendments also revise the definition of "use in commerce" to adopt a
stricter standard. The Act now states, "The term 'use in commerce' means the bona
fide use of a mark in the ordinary course of trade, and not merely to reserve a
right in a [p.47] mark." Trademark Act Section 45, 15 U.S.C. Section 1127. This
stricter definition of "use in commerce" applies to all applications, affidavits of
use and renewals filed on or after November 16, 1989. Cf. Ralston Purina Company v.
On-Cor Frozen Foods Inc., 746 F.2d 801, 223 USPQ 979 (Fed. Cir. 1984).
The Office will not inquire into the sufficiency of an applicant's or registrant's
use in the examination of applications, amendments to allege use, statements of use,
affidavits of use or renewals unless the specimens or other evidence of record
clearly raise a question concerning the applicant's or registrant's use. The
consideration of whether a particular use satisfies the statutory definition is more
appropriate in an inter partes proceeding. The examining attorney should require new
specimens generally under the same circumstances where the examining attorney would
have required new specimens prior to the 1988 amendments. If the specimens appear to
be temporary in nature, the examining attorney may require specimens of a more
permanent nature.
Example - If an applicant seeks to register a mark suggesting a Christmas theme
for greeting cards and submits as specimens birthday cards with an additional pasted
label displaying the mark, the specimens could not be regarded as exhibiting "use in
commerce." The examining attorney should refuse registration and require substitute
specimens exhibiting use in commerce or an explanation to establish use in commerce.
When action is necessary, in appropriate cases, the examining attorney should
require additional product or sales literature concerning the use of the mark to
permit full consideration of the issue. Trademark Rule 2.61(b), 37 C.F.R. Section
2.61(b).
6. Identifications of Goods and Services
Trademark Rule 2.71, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.71, restricts amendments to the
identification of goods or services as follows, "The identification of goods or
services may be amended to clarify or limit the identification, but additions will
not be permitted." Trademark Rule 2.71(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.71(b).
This rule applies to applications filed on or after November 16, 1989. The rule
also applies to applications filed before November 16, 1989, for the purposes of any
action taken on or after that date. However, if the Office issued a requirement or
suggested an amendment in an action prior to that date, and the applicant submits an
amendment substantially complying with the requirement or suggestion on or after the
effective date, the examining attorney should accept the amendment, even though it
does not comply with the new rule, if it is otherwise proper. [p.48]
As noted previously, Trademark Act Section 7(c), 15 U.S.C. Section 1057(c),
provides that the filing of any application for registration on the Principal
Register establishes constructive use and nationwide priority contingent on issuance
of the registration. The identification of goods and services in an application,
therefore, defines the scope of those rights established by the filing of an
application for the Principal Register. The following sections discuss
identifications of goods and services in general; additional information relevant to
the identification of goods and services in an intent- to-use application is
presented above with the specific discussion of such applications.
a. Limiting the Identification of Goods and Services
As indicated above, the rules permit amendments to limit the identification of
goods and services. The rules also refer to "deletion" in relation to the
identification of goods and services. See, e.g., Trademark Rule 2.74, 37 C.F.R.
Section 2.74. "Deletion" means the elimination of an existing item in an
identification of goods and services in its entirety. Deletion is distinct from
other types of amendments to limit, such as amendments to limit the goods as to
types, channels of trade or class of purchasers or to restrict an existing item in
scope by the introduction of some qualifying language or the substitution of
specific for more general terms.
Deletions from the identification of goods and services are permitted. If the
applicant wishes to amend the identification of goods and services to delete one or
more items, the examining attorney should accept the amendment, provided it is
timely and otherwise proper. However, once the applicant has expressly amended the
identification of goods and services to delete an item it may not be reinserted in a
later amendment.
If an applicant wishes to amend the identification of goods and services to insert
an item which is equivalent to or logically encompassed by an item already included
in the identification of goods and services, the examining attorney should permit
the amendment, provided it is timely and otherwise proper.
If the applicant wishes to amend the identification of goods and services to
restrict one or more of the items by inserting qualifying language or substituting
more specific language, the examining attorney should accept the amendment, provided
it is timely and otherwise proper.
Example - If the applicant initially identifies the goods as "publications," the
applicant may amend to substitute one or more terms which fall under the definition
of publications. Likewise, if an applicant identifies its goods as "pamphlets," the
applicant may amend to indicate brochures or [p.49] both because these terms are
generally equivalent and interchangeable. In either case, the applicant must specify
the subject matter.
Example - If the Applicant initially identifies the goods as "football uniforms,"
the applicant may amend to indicate football uniforms in Class 25 and football
helmets and shoulder pads in Class 28. These goods are logically included within the
initial identification. Footballs, however, could not be added; this would add an
item not logically included within the original identification.
Example - If the applicant initially identifies the services as "prepaid medical
services" and wishes to amend to underwriting prepaid medical plans and health care
services in the nature of a health maintenance organization, the amendment should be
permitted. Both specific services are logically included under prepaid medical
services.
On the other hand, an applicant may not amend an identification of goods or
services to add or substitute a term which is not logically included within the
scope of the terms originally stated or which is otherwise qualitatively different
from the goods and services as originally stated.
Example - If the applicant identifies the goods as "computer programs," the
applicant may not add or substitute computers or other types of computer hardware to
the listing.
Example - If the applicant initially identifies the goods as "hats," the applicant
may not add or substitute scarfs in the identification of goods. Likewise, the
applicant may not add or substitute shirts for slacks.
Example - If the applicant identifies its services as "ophthalmologist's services"
and proposes to amend the identification to medical services, the amendment should
not be permitted. The amendment would expand the identification to include services
beyond the scope of those identified initially.
The scope of the goods and services, as originally identified or as amended by an
express amendment, establishes the outer limit for any later amendments. [p.50]
Because the rule precludes additions to the identification of goods and services,
examining attorneys should not require or suggest unduly restrictive identifications
of goods and services. See In re Sentry Chemical Company, 230 USPQ 556 (TTAB 1986).
0nce the identification has been limited, it cannot be expanded later. Also, in
requiring amendments to the identification of goods and services, examining
attorneys should generally advise applicants that additions to the identification of
goods and services are not permitted. This subject is discussed in greater detail
above in conjunction with intent-to-use applications.
b. Clarifying the Identification of Goods and Services
Under the rule, an applicant may amend "to clarify" the identification of goods
and services. The applicant may clarify an identification of goods and services
which is indefinite or overly broad to identify goods or services which are within
the scope of the goods and services as identified initially. As noted, the filing of
an application for registration on the Principal Register establishes a constructive
date of first use in commerce, contingent on issuance of the registration. Trademark
Act Section 7, 15 U.S.C. Section 1057. Accordingly, the applicant may not expand
those riqhts through amendment of the identification of goods and services.
Thus the applicant may amend from the more general to the specific, but the
applicant may not amend the specific to the more general. The scope of the goods and
services identified initially, or as limited by an express amendment, establishes
the outer limit for permissible amendments. Classification may provide some guidance
in determining whether an amendment exceeds the scope of the goods and services
identified initially, but it is not controlling. The examining attorney may suggest
and may permit amendments to the identification of goods and services resulting in a
change of class, provided the amended identification does not exceed the scope of
the original identification.
Example - If an applicant has erroneously identified its goods and services as
"menus," but in fact, the applicant intends to register the mark for restaurant
services, the applicant may not amend the identification of goods to "restaurant
services." In such a case, the original identification, which is specific and narrow
in scope, may not be expanded to services beyond the scope of that identification.
Example - If an applicant has erroneously identified its goods and services as
"packaging and labels," but in fact, the applicant intends to register the mark for
toys, the applicant may not amend to correct the [p.51] identification. The initial
identification failed to indicate the nature of the applicant's goods and services
in any form, and therefore, the examining attorney must reject the amendment to
insert an identification of goods and services beyond the scope of those stated
initially.
Example - If an applicant has identified its goods and services as "advertising
and business" the applicant may not amend to specific goods or to services other
than those within the scope of these terms, generally those services included in
International Class 35.
7. Claim of Acquired Distinctiveness
The 1988 amendments revise Trademark Act Section 2(f), 15 U.S.C. Section 1052(f),
to permit the filing of a prima facie showing of acquired distinctiveness based on
five years use running up to the date the claim is made. The Act now states:
The Commissioner may accept as prima facie evidence that the mark has become
distinctive, as used on or in connection with the applicant's goods in commerce,
proof of substantially exclusive and continuous use thereof as a mark by the
applicant in commerce for the five years before the date on which the claim of
distinctiveness is made.
Trademark Act Section 2(f), 15 U.S.C. Section 1052(f).
The Act previously required that the relevant five-year period precede the filing
date of the application. Under the new provision, therefore, any five- year claim
submitted on or after November 16, 1989, is subject to the new time period. This
will apply even if the application was filed before November 16, 1989. See Trademark
Rule 2.41(b), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.41(b). Note the discussion above concerning claims
of acquired distinctiveness in intent-to-use applications ( A.3.f.).
8. Supplemental Register
The 1988 amendments eliminate the one-year-lawful-use requirement for eligibility
for the Supplemental Register. Therefore, on or after November 16, 1989, an
applicant may apply for registration on the Supplemental Register at any time after
commencing use of the mark. Likewise, on or after November 16, 1989, an applicant
may amend a pending application to seek registration on the Supplemental Register at
any time after use of the mark has commenced. The applicant may do so even if the
original application for the Principal Register was filed before [p.52] November 16,
1989. See Trademark Rule 2.47, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.47. However, if the application
was filed before November 16, 1989, and the applicant had not used the mark in
commerce for one year before the filing date, and the applicant amends to the
Supplemental Register on or after November 16, 1989, the date of the amendment to
the Supplemental Register becomes the effective filing date of the application.
As noted above ( A.3.g.), an intent-to-use applicant may file an amendment to the
Supplemental Register only after use has commenced and after the filing of an
acceptable amendment to allege use or a statement of use. In such a case, the
effective filing date of the application will be changed to the date on which the
applicant filed the amendment to allege use under Section 1(c) of the Act or the
statement of use under Section 1(d) of the Act.
In requesting registration on the Supplemental Register in either the original
application or in an amendment to the Supplemental Register, the applicant need not
include an additional statement as to lawful use. Although Section 23 still includes
an explicit reference to lawful use, any use which is the basis for an application
on either the Principal or the Supplemental Register must be lawful. It need not be
stated explicitly.
In an application under Section 44 of the Act, the applicant may seek registration
on the Supplemental Register without alleging lawful use in commerce and without
alleging use anywhere in the world. Trademark Rule 2.47(b), 37 C.F.R. Section
2.47(b).
The 1988 amendments also add the following language to Trademark Act Section 27,
15 U.S.C. Section 1095, "Registration of a mark on the Supplemental Register shall
not constitute an admission that the mark has not acquired distinctiveness."
Examining attorneys, therefore, should note this provision in presenting any
refusals or requirements related to the nondistinctive character of a mark
previously registered on the Supplemental Register.
9. Affidavits of Use under Section 8
The 1988 amendments modify the requirements for the content of an affidavit of use
which must be filed between the fifth and sixth anniversaries of registration.
Trademark Act Section 8, 15 U.S.C. Section 1058. Under the new provision, the
registrant must identify the specific goods or services on or in connection with
which the mark is in use in commerce. Similarly, if the registrant elects to present
an explanation of excusable nonuse, this explanation must also relate to specific
goods or services.
Formerly, the allegation of use in commerce related to one or more classes with no
requirement to specify the goods or services within a class on or in connection with
which the mark was in use. If the registrant fails to provide an allegation of use
or a [p.53] satisfactory explanation as to nonuse as to any goods or services in the
registration,those goods or services will be cancelled from the registration. If the
original affidavit of use fails to specify the goods and services, the registrant
may not amend the affidavit to correct this omission after the expiration of the
period during which the affidavit is due. The registrant may incorporate the goods
and services by reference. For example, the registrant may state, "those goods and
services specified in the registration" or "those goods and services specified in
the registration except..." specifying any goods or services to be deleted.
The new provision also explicitly requires specimens of use to support the
affidavit. Formerly, the Act required a "showing" and the Trademark Rules of
Practice required as follows, "The statement must be supported by evidence which
shows that the mark is in use, and normally such evidence consists of a specimen or
a facsimile specimen which is currently in use, or a statement of facts concerning
use." In view of the 1988 amendments, the rules have been revised to specify that
specimens or facsimiles are required. Trademark Rules 2.161 and 2.162, 37 C.F.R.
Sections 2.161 and 2.162.
Specimens of use must be provided before the expiration of the sixth year
following registration. If the registrant fails to do so, the registration will be
cancelled. If the registrant does provide specimens, but the Office determines that
those specimens are unacceptable, the Office will require substitute specimens. In
such a case, the registrant must provide specimens of use within the time provided.
Substitute specimens may be filed after the expiration of the sixth year. If the
registrant fails to do so, the registration will be cancelled. The registrant must
also verify in an affidavit or a declaration under Trademark Rule 2.20, 37 C.F.R.
Section 2.20, that the substitute specimens were in use in commerce before the
expiration of the sixth year following registration.
Registrants filing affidavits under Section 8 should also note the revised rule
concerning the establishment of ownership. Trademark Rule 2.186, 37 C.F.R. Section
2.186, permits a registrant to establish ownership either by recording an assignment
in the Assignment Branch of the Office or by submitting proof of the assignment
without recording.
10. Term and Renewal
The 1988 amendments reduce the registration and renewal term from twenty to ten
years. Trademark Act Sections 8 (a) and 9, 15 U.S.C. Sections 1058(a) and 1059.
Accordingly, registrations issued on or after November 16, 1989, will be issued for
ten-year periods and subject to renewal for ten-year periods. Registrations issued
prior to that date remain in force for their existing term of twenty years, but are
subject to renewal for ten-year periods. Trademark Rule 2.181, 37 C.F.R. Section
2.181. For the [p.54] purpose of determining the relevant renewal period, the Office
will adhere to the following policy during the transition.
i. If the registration expires on or after November 16, 1989, the registration
will be renewed for ten years. The Office will not take final action to grant any
such renewal until November 16, 1989.
ii. If the registration expires before November 16, 1989, and the Office takes
final action to grant the renewal before that date, the registration will be renewed
for twenty years.
iii. If the registration expires before November 16, 1989, and the Office takes
final action to grant the renewal on or after November 16, 1989, the registration
will be renewed for ten years.
All renewal terms run from the expiration date of the previous term.
Note Trademark Rule 2.186, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.186, regarding requirements related
to the establishment of ownership of the registration for the purpose of renewals
which permits a registrant to establish ownership either by recording an assignment
in the Assignments Branch of the Office or by submitting proof of the assignment
without recording.
11. Assignments
a. Content of Assignment Documents
Office policy governing trademark assignments provides that an assignment relating
to an application or registration will be recorded, even if the assignment document
itself does not identify the relevant application or registration numbers, provided
certain conditions are met. Specifically, the policy requires as follows with
respect to the identification of the properties assigned in such a case:
(i) The mark and the goods and services are identified in the assignment document
(or the assignment is of all registrations and/or applications owned by the
assignor), and the application or registration is identified by number and date in a
transmittal letter or attachment to the assignment document, in which case, such
letter or attachment shall become part of the record of the assignment; or
(ii) An assignment is executed concurrently with or subsequent to the filing of an
application but before its serial number and [p.55] filing date are ascertained, and
the application is identified by its date of execution, name of the applicant, mark
and goods or services.
b. Issuance of Registration in Current Owner's Name
Trademark Rule 2.187, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.187, has also been revised to clarify
office policy concerning issuance of registrations in the name of assignees or in a
new name of the applicant. The rule provides as follows:
The certificate of registration may be issued to the assignee of the applicant, or
in a new name of applicant, provided that the party makes a written request in the
application record, by the time the application is being prepared for issuance of
the certificate of registration, and an appropriate document is of record in the
Assignment Searh Room of the Patent and Trademark Office. If the assignment or name
change document is not of record in the Assignment Search Room, then the written
request must state that the document has been filed for recordation. The address of
the assignee must be made of record in the application file and in the recorded
document.
Trademark Rule 2.187, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.187.
Any application where such a request has been submitted should be forwarded to the
assigned examining attorney. The assigned examining attorney will ensure that the
assignment or change of name is entered in the file after recording and will then
return the application to processing.
If a party other than the applicant of record attempts to take any action in a
case, the examining attorney must confirm that the new party is the owner in
accordance with Trademark Rule 2.186, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.186. That is, the
applicant must provide the reel and frame number of an assignment, or the applicant
must submit other evidence of ownership.
c. Assignment Fees
Applicants should note that, effective April 17, 1989, the fee for recording
assignments of trademarks is $8.00 per application or registration assigned.
Trademark Rule 2.6, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.6. [p.56]
12. Establishing Ownership of Applications or Registrations
Trademark Rule 2.186, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.186, as amended, provides:
Any action with respect to an assigned application or registration which may or
must be taken by an applicant or registrant may be taken by the assignee provided
that the assignment has been recorded or that proof of the assignment has been
submitted.
The previous rule required recording of an assignment in a case where the
applicant/assignee or registrant/assignee was required to take an action, such as
filing a response to an Office action, filing an affidavit of use under Trademark
Act Section 8 or filing a renewal. While it may be advisable for an applicant or
registrant to record an assignment of an application or registration in view of the
provisions of Trademark Act Section 10, 15 U.S.C. Section 1060, concerning
subsequent purchasers, neither the Act nor the rules require recordation.
However, if the party taking the relevant action with respect to the application
or registration is different from the applicant or registrant of record and the
filing party has not recorded an assignment, the party taking the action must
establish that it is the owner of the application or registration through
appropriate evidence. This evidence may consist of a copy of a document transferring
ownership from one party to another or an explanation in an affidavit or supported
by a declaration under Trademark Rule 2.20, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.20, that a valid
transfer of legal title has occurred.
13. Revival of Abandoned Applications
Trademark Rule 2.66, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.66, concerning petitions to revive
abandoned applications, requires that all such petitions be filed "promptly." The
Office will continue to consider each petition on the merits according to the
circumstances of the case, but, as a general rule, all such petitions should be
filed within two months of the abandonment date. The standard for granting a
petition to revive continues to be "unavoidable delay," Please note the discussion
above (A. 10.) with specific reference to petitions to revive intent-to-use
applications.
14. Concurrent Use
The 1988 amendments insert the following language in Trademark Act Section 2(d),
15 U.S.C. Section 1052(d), governing concurrent use applications which are subject
to concurrent use proceedings in the Patent and Trademark Office: [p.57]
Use prior to the filing date of any pending application or a registration shall
not be required when the owner of such application or registration consents to the
grant of a concurrent registration to the applicant.
The statute now provides greater flexibility to applicants seeking concurrent use
registrations. Therefore, if the applicant is not entitled to a concurrent use
registration on the basis of the jurisdictional requirement of use of its mark prior
to the earliest filing date of any relevant pending application or registration, but
the relevant prior applicant or registrant has consented to the applicant's
concurrent use application, the examining attorney should approve the mark for
publication, subject to a concurrent use proceeding, provided it is otherwise
eligible.
Also, Trademark Rule 2.42, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.42, no longer requires that the
stated exceptions in a concurrent use application be inserted in the verification or
declaration. The exceptions need only be provided in the statement portion of the
application.
15. Requests to Divide an Application
Trademark Rule 2.87, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.87, establishes procedures for dividing
one application into two separate applications. The rule provides as follows:
(a) An application may be physically divided into two or more separate
applications upon submission by the applicant of a request therefor, in accordance
with paragraph (c) of this section. In the case of a request to divide out some, but
not all, of the goods or services in a class, a fee for each new separate
application to be created by the division must be submitted. Any outstanding time
period for action by the applicant in the original application at the time of the
division will be applicable to each new separate application created by the
division.
(b) A request to divide an application may be filed at any time between the filing
of the application and the date the Trademark Examining Attorney approves the mark
for publication or the date of expiration of the six-month response period after
issuance of a final action; or during an opposition, upon motion granted by the
Trademark Trial and Appeal Board. Additionally, a request to divide an application
under section 1(b) of the Act may be filed with a statement of use [p.58] under
section 2.88 or at any time between the filing of a statement of use and the date
the Trademark Examining Attorney approves the mark for registration or the date of
expiration of the six-month response period after issuance of a final action.
(c) A request to divide an application should be made in a separate paper from any
other amendment or response in the application. The title "Request to divide
application." should appear at the top of the first page of the paper.
By dividing the application, the applicant preserves the filing date, and thus the
potential constructive use date, as to all of the goods and services covered by the
application.
Under the rule, the applicant may request that certain goods or services in a
single class be divided, that is, that a separate application with the same filing
date be created to cover those goods or services. The applicant may also request
that an entire class or several classes be divided, that is, that one or more
separate applications with the same filing date be created to cover certain classes.
An applicant may request division of an application for any reason. For example,
in an intent-to-use application, the applicant may wish to proceed to publication or
registration with certain goods and services on or in connection with which it has
used the mark in commerce and retain an active application for any remaining goods
or services. The applicant can do so by requesting division of the application.
If the applicant requests that the goods or services in a single class be divided
into one or more separate applications, the applicant must submit an application fee
for each new application to be created. The fee is the same as the fee for the
filing of a new single-class application, $175.00. If an entire class is to be
divided out from a multiple class application, there is no fee. Trademark Rule
2.87(a), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.87(a). There is no fee for the request to divide
itself.
a. Processing Requests to Divide
Specially designated personnel in the ITU Unit will process all requests to
divide. All requests to divide will be given priority in processing over any other
paper in the case. All requests to divide should be forwarded to the ITU Unit
immediately for processing. However, if the application is the subject of a
proceeding before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, the request should first be
forwarded to the Board for appropriate action. The ITU Unit will process the request
as promptly as possible and will return the application or applications to [p.59]
regular processing after completing action on the request to divide.
If the request to divide does not include a necessary fee or is otherwise
deficient, the ITU Unit will notify the applicant of the deficiency. The applicant
must correct any such deficiency within thirty days or, if the division is a
necessary component of a statement of use, within the time permitted for filing the
statement of use, whichever is shorter. If the applicant fails to correct the
deficiency within the time provided, the request will be considered abandoned and
the application will be processed without regard to the request. The ITU Unit will
advise the applicant of any such action and will refund any fees paid in conjunction
with the request to divide.
If the applicant submits a request to divide along with a statement of use and a
request for an extension of time, and the fees are insufficient to cover all three,
the fees will be applied first to the request for an extension of time, second to
the statement of use and lastly to the request to divide.
If the applicant submits a request to divide along with a statement of use and a
request for an extension of time, and the fees are sufficient for the statement of
use only, and no time remains for filing additional fees, the applicant will be
given the opportunity to amend the statement of use to include all goods or services
in the application. The applicant must establish that the applicant used the mark in
commerce on or in connection with all such goods or services within the time
permitted for filing the statement of use. If time does remain in the existing
period for filing the statement of use, the applicant will be permitted to submit
the additional fees within that time period.
Filing a request to divide an application does not relieve an applicant of the
duty to respond to any outstanding Office action or to take any other required
action.
Likewise, the applicant should note that any outstanding time period for action by
the applicant in effect at the time the application is divided applies not only to
the original application, but also to each new application created in the division
of the application. Therefore, if a response to an Office action is due in a case,
the response is due likewise in each new application created through the division of
the application.
Similarly, if a statement of use is due, the period for filing the statement of
use relevant to the original application is likewise relevant to each new
application created through the division.
If a request to divide an application is received at any time other than those
specified, it will be returned to the applicant with any fees submitted for that
purpose and the application will not be divided. [p.60]
The Office will not consider a request to merge two separate applications into a
single application once again after a proper request to divide has been granted.
b. Division of Registration Not Permitted
A registration cannot be divided into one or more separate registrations.
16. Correspondence with Applicants Not Domiciled in the United States
Trademark Rule 2.18, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.18, has been revised to clarify Office
policy with respect to correspondence with applicants not domiciled in the United
States. In such a case, the Office will send correspondence to the applicant's
domestic representative unless the applicant has authorized an attorney or another
qualified person to prosecute the application. If the applicant has authorized an
attorney or other qualified person to prosecute the application, the Office will
send correspondence to that authorized person.
17. Preferred Size for Application Papers
Trademark Rule 2.31, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.31, now specifies that the preferred size
for application papers is letter size. This policy applies to all submissions
related to all applications.
C. Provisions Affecting Applications under Section 44 of the Act
The 1988 amendments introduce relatively few changes affecting applications filed
under Trademark Act Section 44, 15 U.S.C. Section 1126. The amended Rules of
Practice incorporate changes dictated by decisions in the area and clarify Office
policy related to the administration of Section 44 in other respects. The provisions
are summarized in this section.
1. Filing-Date Requirements
As noted above ( A.1.a.), the amended Rules of Practice institute a number of
changes related to receipt of a filing date which affect all applications. This
section addresses only those changes which relate specifically to applications under
Section 44. Trademark Rule 2.21, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.21, sets forth the minimum
formal requirements to receive a filing date for the various types of applications.
These minimum requirements do not [p.61] include all of the requirements which may
apply to qualify for registration.
a. Statement of a Bona Fide Intention to Use the Mark in Commerce
The 1988 amendments require all applicants under Section 44 of the Act to allege a
bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce, although use in commerce is not
required as a condition to registration. Any application under either Section 44 (d)
or 44(e) of the Act must include such a statement to receive a filing date.
Trademark rule 2.21(a)(5)(ii) and (iii), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.21(a)(5)(ii) and (iii).
The Office will not presume that an application under Section 44 is also based on
intent to use under Trademark Act Section 1(b), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(b). If the
applicant wishes to assert both bases, the applicant must indicate so specifically.
If the applicant indicates that Section 44 is the basis, and nothing more, and the
applicant fails to comply with the relevant Section 44 filing-date requirements, the
applicant will be denied a filing date, even if the application includes a statement
of a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce.
b. Priority Claim or Certified Copy of a Foreign Registration
In the case of an application claiming the benefits of Section 44(d), the
application must be filed in the U.S. within six months of the relevant foreign
filing and must include a claim of the benefit of a prior foreign application to
receive a filing date. Trademark Rule 2.21(a)(5)(iii), 37 C.F.R. Section
2.21(a)(5)(iii). Trademark Rule 2.39, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.39, sets forth the
required content of such a claim, essentially, the filing date and country of the
first regularly filed foreign application. The applicant should also indicate the
serial number of that application, if it is available. The serial number is not
required to receive a filing date, however.
In the case of an application under Section 44(e), the application must include a
certification or certified copy of the foreign registration on which the United
States application is based to receive a filing date. Trademark Rule 2.21(a)(5)(ii),
37 C.F.R. Section 2.21(a)(5)(ii). If the applicant submits any type of copy other
than an original of a certified copy, the Office will not grant a filing date.
2. Statement of Dates of Use and Method of Use and Specimens Not Reguired
In any application under Section 44, the applicant need not state a date of first
use anywhere, nor a date of first use in commerce, nor the method of use. Also, the
applicant need not provide specimens of use. Crocker National Bank v. Canadian
Imperial Bank of Commerce, 223 USPQ 909 (TTAB 1984). [p.62] Trademark Rules 2.21 and
2.33, 37 C.F.R Sections 2.21 and 2.33, have been amended to reflect this change. In
such a case, the mark need not be in use anywhere for the purposes of the U.S.
application.
3. The Basis for Registration in Applications Claiming the Benefits of Section
44(d)
In In re Daiwa Seiko, Inc., 230 USPQ 794 (Comm'r Pats. 1983), the Commissioner
clarified the distinction between Sections 44(d) and (e) of the Act. The
Commissioner held that Section 44(d) only provides a basis for receiving a priority
filing date but does not provide a basis for registration. Therefore, an application
claiming the benefit of a foreign application under Section 44(d) must include a
basis for registration also. In most cases, the basis for registration will be the
foreign registration which will issue from the foreign application relied upon for
priority. The Office will presume that this is the basis for registration in any
application under Section 44(d) unless the applicant indicates otherwise.
Furthermore, the assertion of a different basis for registration more than six
months after the filing of the foreign application, including reliance on a
different foreign registration under Section 44(e), will result in the loss of the
priority filing date under Section 44(d) of the Act. In such a case, the Office will
change the filing date in the United States to the date on which the applicant
perfects the new basis for registration by providing either a proper statement of
dates of use in commerce, a proper assertion of an intent to use in commerce under
Section 1(b) of the Act or a certificate or certified copy of a foreign
registration. See TMEP section 706 and Chapter 1000.
In an application filed under Section 44 before November 16, 1989, the applicant
may amend to add Section 1(b) as a basis for registration on or after that date.
However, if the applicant has claimed priority under Section 44(d) in such a case,
and the applicant drops the original basis for registration to rely on Section 1(b)
only, the applicant may not retain the priority date unless the amendment asserting
Section 1(b) as a basis for registration was made within six months of the filing of
the foreign application relied on for priority. If the amendment was made later and
the applicant drops the original basis for registration, the effective filing date
of the application is the date of the amendment to assert Section 1(b) as a basis
for registration.
D. Provisions Affecting Applications Based on Use in Commerce Only [p.63]
The 1988 amendments and the amended Rules of Practice do not provide any changes,
as such, related specifically to applications based on use in commerce under
Trademark Act Section 1(a), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(a), other than those noted above
(Section B) affecting all applications. In one instance, noted here, the amended
Rules of Practice merely set forth long-standing Office policy in the rules for the
first time.
Trademark Rule 2.59(a), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.59(a), provides as follows:
In an application under section 1(a) of the Act, the applicant may submit
substitute specimens of the mark as used on or in connection with the goods, or in
the sale or advertising of the services, provided that any substitute specimens
submitted are supported by applicant's affidavit or declaration in accordance with
Section 2.20 (37 C.F.R. Section 2.20) verifying that the substitute specimens were
in use in commerce at least as early as the filing date of the application. The
verification requirement shall not apply if the specimens are duplicates or
facsimiles, such as photographs, of specimens already of record in the application.
As noted, this provision merely states long-standing policy in the regulations for
the first time.
E. Filing on More Than One Basis and Changing the Basis of the Application
Trademark Rule 2.33(d), 37 C.F.R. Section 2.33(d), precludes the filing of an
application based on both use in commerce under Trademark Act Section 1(a), 15
U.S.C. Section 1051(a), and a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce under
Trademark Act Section 1(b), 15 U.S.C. Section 1051(b). This prohibition precludes
applications in a single class alleging both use in commerce and intent to use as to
either the same goods and services or different goods or services. Likewise, the
prohibition precludes applications in more than one class alleging both use in
commerce and intent to use. If an applicant submits an application asserting both
Section 1(a) and 1(b) bases for registration, [p.64] the Office will not grant a
filing date and will return the papers to the applicant.
The rule also precludes amendments in applications initially based on use in
commerce under Section 1(a) to change the basis to intent to use under Section 1(b).
In an application under Section 1(b) of the Act, an applicant may assert dates of
first use which are earlier than the filing date of the application in an amendment
to allege use or a statement of use.
Applicants may allege Section 44 as an additional basis for registration in
conjunction with either use in commerce under Section 1(a) or intent to use under
Section 1(b). In such a case, an applicant may also allege different bases for the
application as to specific goods or services within a class. If an applicant asserts
more than one basis for registration, the applicant must satisfy all of the
requirements for registration which apply to each basis asserted. The applicant must
indicate clearly that it asserts two bases for registration.
If an applicant asserts both intent to use and Section 44(e) as the bases for
registration, the Office will not approve the mark for publication until the
applicant submits a certificate or certified copy of the foreign registration.
In an application filed under Section 44 before November 16, 1989, the applicant
may amend to add Section 1(b) as a basis for registration on or after that date.
However, if the applicant has claimed priority under Section 44(d) in such a case,
and the applicant drops the original basis for registration to rely on Section 1(b)
only, the applicant may not retain the priority date unless the amendment asserting
Section 1(b) as a basis for registration was made within six months of the filing of
the foreign application relied on for priority. If the amendment was made later and
the applicant drops the original basis for registration, the effective filing date
of the application is the date of the amendment to assert Section 1(b) as a basis
for registration.
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