Trademarks in the People's Republic of China
A
General Overview
Obtaining
exclusive rights to the use of a trademark in the PRC requires
registration of the mark. The exception is that unregistered
famous marks may block the registration of similar marks in
the PRC in accordance with China's revised Trademark Law and
obligations under the Paris Convention and the 1995 U.S. - China
Intellectual Property Protection Agreement ("IP Action
Plan"), provided that the owner of the famous mark can
prove that the mark was well-known in the PRC before the filing
date of the similar mark. China grants trademark protection
to foreign nationals based on an international treaty. U.S.
trademark owners are eligible for trademark registration in
the PRC. China is a signatory to the WTO and the Paris Convention,
Madrid Convention, Nice Convention, Vienna Convention, Trademark
Law Treaty and Agreement on Trade-Related Intellectual Property
Rights. Owners of unregistered famous mark may bring oppositions
or cancellations for previously registered marks, based on Articles
13, 30 and 41 of the Trademark Law.
Trademark owners must apply separately for registration of a
mark in each class in which it is to be used.
I. Registration Procedure
A trademark applicant must file an application
with the PRC Trademark Office. Normally, the Trademark Office
renders a decision within 18 months after it receives all supporting
documents. If the application is approved, the mark will be
published in the PRC Trademark Gazette. After the mark is published,
there will then be a three-month opposition period. If no opposition
is filed within that period, the application will mature into
registration. The certificate will then be issued and the mark
will be published in the Trademark Gazette again as a registered
mark.
II. Term of Protection
The term of protection is ten years from the
date the registration is granted. The trademark may be renewed
for an additional ten year term within 6 months before the expiration
date of the mark's present term. Where no such application could
be filed within the said period, a grace period of 6 months
may be allowed. If no renewal is filed within the grace period,
the registered trademark shall be canceled. Any renewal of registration
shall be published after approval. Proof of use of the trademark
prior to renewal is not currently required.
III. Types of Trademarks
- Principal
Mark - Including trademarks for goods and service
marks.
- Collective
Mark
- A mark registered on behalf of an organization, association
or other entity to be used by members of the association in
business activities to indicate their membership in the association.
- Certification
Mark
- A mark controlled by an association which is capable of
monitoring a particular good or service, but is licensed to
anyone with respect to qualifying goods or services to prove
geographical origin, raw material, mode of manufacture, quality,
or other specific characteristics.
IV.
Priority
The Trademark Office accepts applications claiming
priority based on applications in other Paris Convention, or bilateral
treaty nations. Where a foreign party files an application for
the registration of a trademark in a foreign country, it may enjoy
priority rights if the applicant files an application for registration
of the same trademark with the same goods in China within six
months from the date of application, in certain foreign countries.
Similarly, the applicant of a trademark may enjoy priority rights
within six months from the date on which the trademark is exhibited
on goods for the first time at an international exhibition held
or recognized by the Chinese government. To pursue a priority
claim, the applicant must provide a copy of the foreign application
upon which the claim is based.
V. Registrable Marks
Any visual sign, or combinations of thereof, capable
of distinguishing the goods or services of a natural person, legal
person, or organization, from the goods of others, including words,
figures, letters, numerals, three-dimensional signs, and combinations
of colors, are eligible for registration as a trademark.
Several
types of trademarks are not granted registration in the PRC.
Among these are marks that are identical with or similar to
the name of any nation, national flag, national emblem, military
flag, or symbols of China, or international organizations and
other nations or identical with or similar to other registered
marks for the same or similar merchandise, marks that are likely
to lead the public into misidentification or misconception in
respect of the characteristics, quality, or place of origin
of the merchandise, marks that are descriptive of the merchandise
to which they are applied, and marks which are not distinctive.
Suggestive marks are generally considered to be "descriptive"
by Trademark Office examiners. For more specific information
on marks barred from registration, please contact our office.
VI. Use of Trademarks
Use of a trademark by the registrant or his registered
licensee is mandatory. Three years of continuous failure to use
a mark will make it subject to cancellation. The owner of a registered
trademark may indicate the words "registered mark" or
the "R" symbol. Evidence such as invoices, advertisements,
sales records, or Customs declarations indicating use of the registered
mark will establish use of the mark. Use by a recorded licensee
and use of the registered mark in advertisements or exhibitions
in China will also satisfy the use requirement.
VII. Licensing and Assignment
The license must be recorded within three months
from conclusion of the license contract whenever the registered
mark is licensed. The licensee shall identify on the goods or
services marked with the licensed mark the name of the licensor
and the production location of the goods.
An
assignment agreement is required for a registered trademark
assignment. Both parties shall jointly file an application with
the Trademark Office. The assignee shall guarantee the quality
of the goods in respect of which the registered trademark is
used.
VIII. Famous Marks
The
Trademark Law explicitly provides protection for foreign famous
marks. A mark copying, imitating or translating an unregistered
foreign famous mark on identical or similar goods or services
with likelihood to cause confusion will not be granted registration
or will be prohibited from being used. In addition, a registered
famous foreign mark will receive cross-class protection. A mark
copying, imitating or translating a registered foreign famous
mark on goods or services not identical or similar to those covered
by the registered famous mark, causing confusion to the public
and possibly causing damage to the trademark holder, will not
be granted registration or will be prohibited from being used.
The elements for determining whether a mark is famous or not include:
1) Knowledge of the mark in the relevant sector of the public;
2) Length of continuous use;
3) Length, extent and geographic area for marketing the trademark;
4) recording of protection as a famous mark with local AICs; and
other factors.
IX. Actions to Prevent or Revoke Registration of Similar
Marks
- Oppositions
- Filed during a trademark application's three-month opposition
period, usually on the grounds that the mark is similar to
either another registered mark for the same or similar merchandise,
or to a mark that is well known in China.
-
Invalidations
- Filed after a mark has been granted registration, on substantially
the same grounds as for oppositions, but not where the same
arguments have previously failed in an opposition for the
same mark.
- Cancellations
- Filed after a mark has been granted registration, on the
grounds that the trademark owner violated certain trademark
regulations following registration. Such violations may include
any of the following: 1) lack of use of the mark for three
consecutive years; 2) alteration of, or addition to, the mark;
3) unrecorded assignment of the mark; or 4) the trademark
infringes on another person's copyright, new design patent,
well-known trademark, other's prior rights, etc., and the
infringement has been confirmed by a final judgment.
IX.
Paths of Appeal
In the event that the Trademark Office returns
an unfavorable decision in an application, opposition, invalidation,
or cancellation action, an appeal can be filed with the Trademark
Review and Adjudication Board for adjudication within 15 days.
If the interested party is dissatisfied with the decision of
the Board, it may, within thirty days from receipt of the decision,
institute legal proceedings to a People's Court. This new remedy
satisfies one of China's new obligations under the WTO and TRIPs.
XI. Protection of Trademark Rights
Without
authorization from the trademark owner, no one may use a mark
identical or similar to the registered mark on identical or
similar goods as the registered mark. Violators will be subject
to administrative, civil or criminal punishment. The damages
awarded to the trademark owner will be calculated upon the illegal
profits of the infringer and actual losses to the rights owner.
In the event that the damages from infringement are difficult
to calculate, the statutory maximum compensation will be RMB
500,000 (about US $61,000), which may be a real deterrent in
some cases. In addition, the trademark owner may apply to a
competent court for preliminary injunction against ongoing or
threatened trademark infringement before a lawsuit is initiated.
For more specific information on protection of patent rights,
visit our Enforcement Page.
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Wang & Wang. It is for informational purposes only. It should
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