Monday, September 11, 2000
Volume 36, Issue 36; ISSN: 0511-4187
Message to the Senate transmitting the protocol to the Madrid agreement on
international registration of marks with documentations
William J Clinton
� September 5, 2000
� To the Senate of the United States:
� I transmit herewith, for the advice and consent of the Senate to
accession, the Protocol Relating to the Madrid Agreement Concerning
the International Registration of Marks adopted at Madrid June 27,
1989, which entered into force December 1, 1995. Also transmitted
for the information of the Senate are the report of the Department
of State with respect to the Protocol and a February 2, 2000, letter
from the Council of the European Union regarding voting within the
Assembly established under the Protocol.
� The Protocol will offer several major advantages to U.S. trademark
owners. First, registration of trademarks internationally will be
possible without obtaining a local agent and without filing an
application in each Contracting Party. If the United States accedes
to the Protocol, the Protocol will provide a trademark registration
filing system that will permit a U.S. trademark owner to file for
registration in any number of Contracting Parties by filing a single
standardized application in English, and with a single payment in
dollars, at the United States Patent and Trademark Office (PTO). The
PTO will forward the application to the International Bureau of the
World Intellectual Property Organization (respectively, the
"International Bureau" and "WIPO"), which administers the Protocol.
Second, under the Protocol, renewal of a trademark registration in
each Contracting Party may be made by filing a single request with a
single payment. These two advantages should make access to
international protection of trademarks more readily available to
both large and small U.S. businesses.
� Third, the Protocol will facilitate the recording internationally
of a change of ownership of a mark with a single filing. United
States businesses experience difficulties effecting valid
assignments of their marks internationally due to burdensome
administrative requirements for recordation of an assignment in many
countries. These difficulties can hinder the normal transfer of
business assets. The Protocol will permit the holder of an
international registration to record the assignment of a trademark
in all designated Contracting Parties upon the filing of a single
request with the International Bureau, accompanied by a single
payment. To carry out the provisions of the Protocol, identical
implementing legislation, which is supported by my Administration,
was passed by the House of Representatives and introduced in the
Senate.
� Accession to the Protocol is in the best interests of the United
States. Therefore, I recommend the Senate give early and favorable
consideration to the Protocol and give its advice and consent to
accession, subject to the declarations described in the accompanying
report of the Department of State.
� William J. Clinton
� The White House,
� September 5,2000.