Introduction
to the
The Madrid System
is based on the Madrid Agreement of 1891 and seeks to streamline the process
for obtaining and registering international trademarks. The Madrid Protocol
which is based on the original Madrid Agreement serves numerous purposes which
ultimately allow an applicant to file an international application in one of
three languages (English, Spanish, or French) and pay a single set of fees for
protection in up to 112 countries and territories.
Any citizen or
legal entity which has established residency or a domicile in a country which
is a Contracting Party of the protocol may use the system to file international
trademark applications.
Brief
Summary of the Application Process
Prior to the
filing of the international application, the applicant must have registered or
filed an application in the Intellectual Property or trademark office of their
home country (often referred to as the goffice of originh). This registration
or application is referred to as the gbasic markh. The applicant may then
submit an international application through the Intellectual Property offices
of their home country which will send the international application to the
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). Unless further restricted by
the office of origin, the applications are to be filed in English, Spanish, or
French.
The WIPO will
conduct a formal examination of the international application which includes whether
the classification and the goods and services can be readily understood. If the
application is approved, the mark will be recorded in the International
Register and thereafter published in the WIPO Gazette of International Marks. The
applicant and each of the Contracting Parties will also receive notification thereof
and the applicant will receive a certificate of the international registration
of their mark. The WIPO will then inform all the IP Offices of the countries and
territories in which the applicant is seeking protection, so that each of the
designated IP offices may begin their own examination of the international
trademark application.
A Contracting Party may be
designated either under the Madrid Agreement or the Madrid Protocol which are
parallel and independent treaties. If both Contracting Parties are parties to
the Agreement, then the designation is based on the Agreement. If both Contracting
Parties are parties to both the Agreement and the Protocol, then the Protocol
has priority in the designation.
Each of the IP
Offices of the countries and territories in which the applicant is seeking
protection will determine within 12 to 18 months whether the applicantfs mark
may be protected, partially denied protection, or wholly denied protection,
based on whether the applicantfs mark is too similar to a previously registered
mark at that specific Contracting Partyfs IP office. The applicant will be
notified by the WIPO after the WIPO receives the decision from any of the IP
offices designated by the applicant. The granting or the refusal (total or
partial) of protection by one IP office does not impart an influence upon any
of the other IP offices designated by the applicant.
Refusals may be
contested by the applicant, although the procedures for contesting a refusal
differ depending on the IP office which issued the refusal. Should an IP office
decide to protect the applicantfs mark, a statement of grant of protection will
be notified to the applicant. As with all trademarks, the granted mark is valid
for 10 years and is renewable by contacting the WIPO and paying fees before the
end of each 10-year period.
As stated above,
there are numerous advantages associated with using the Madrid System for
filing international trademark applications.
1) Separate applications do
not need to be filed for each country in which trademark protection is sought.
2) While some differences do
exist among each Contracting Party, the examination systems, procedural rules,
and regulations are relatively similar.
3) One set of fees is
required.
4) Applications may be filed
in English, Spanish, or French.
5) The renewal of a
registration is simplified and should aspects of an international registration
be changed, such as an address, or should the registered trademark be assigned
to a third party, the processes for recording this are streamlined for all
designated Contracting Parties.
An international trademark
application designating
There are aspects
regarding how the Japan Patent Office (JPO) handles international trademark
application designating Japan under the Madrid Protocol that are somewhat
different than in other countries.
1)
Second Portion of Individual Fee
The individual fee is split
into two separate payments, the former payment essentially being the application
fee, and the latter payment which must be made only if the JPO deems that the
mark in question is eligible for protection. Accompanying the Statement of
Grant of Protection, a notification regarding the date and amount due will be
provided by the JPO to the International Bureau of the WIPO who will notify the
applicant of such, and payment is made to the International Bureau of the WIPO by
the applicant. Failure to pay the second portion of the individual fee will
result in cancellation of the International Registration in the International
Register.
The second portion of the
individual fee must be paid within three (3) months from the date that the Statement
of Grant of Protection was issued. There is no late payment system by which
payment of the second portion of the individual fee may be delayed. Failure to
pay the second portion of the individual fee within the designated time period
will irrevocably result in cancellation of the applicantfs international
trademark registration with respect to
2)
Indication of goods and/or services
Some of the class
headings listed in the Nice Agreement are not accepted by the JPO. The
following are a list of terms of the Class Headings (NICE Classifications) for
the following classes not accepted by the JPO: https://www.jpo.go.jp/e/system/trademark/madrid/japan_under_the_madrid_protocol.html,and links to The International Classification of Goods and Services, 11th
edition, version 2019 and the List of Goods in Alphabetical Order (from Class 1
to Class 34), in English and Japanese Translation with Similar Group Code: https://www.jpo.go.jp/e/system/trademark/gaiyo/bunrui/kokusai/kokusai_bunrui_11-2019.html.
While the JPO
does not require verification of the guseh or the gintent to useh of the trademark
in question, it does require that a Statement of Use or Declaration of
Intent-to-Use be submitted with the trademark application in the case when the
application designates retail goods and/or services for 8 or more similar goods
in the same class. A Statement of Use or Declaration of Intent-to-Use may help overcome
a Provisional Rejection in which the JPO has stated that the scope of the
indications is too broad.
Detailed information such as
the Notification of Provisional Refusal such as all international marks
recorded under the WIPO's Madrid System may be obtained at http://www.wipo.int/romarin/.
For applicants
who do not have a residence or domicile in
The following
link contains further information regarding
https://www.jpo.go.jp/e/faq/yokuaru/madrid.html
Brief
Overview for Responding to a Notification of Provisional Refusal
An amendment
which changes the designated goods or services should be submitted to overcome
the reasons for refusal stated in the Notification of Provisional Refusal, or a
request to limit the good or services using Form MM6 should be filed with the
WIPO. Note that, failure to respond to the Notification of Provisional Refusal
will result in the trademark application being refused and a Decision to Refuse
a Trademark Registration will be issued by the JPO.
The deadline to respond to a
Provisional Refusal is three (3) months from the issuance of the Provisional
Refusal. A one (1) month extension may be requested; however the time to
respond to the Provisional Refusal may not be extended beyond four (4) months.
An appeal trial
against the Decision to Refuse a Trademark Registration may be demanded within
three (3) months of the issuance of the Decision to Refuse a Trademark
Registration. Should the applicant choose not to appeal the decision or the
appeal trial examiners uphold the Decision to Refuse a Trademark Registration, the
International Bureau of the WIPO will receive a Confirmation of Total
Provisional Refusal from the JPO which will be forwarded to the applicant. In
the case when the applicant does not have a residence or domicile in
Other useful links
WIPO
http://www.wipo.int/madrid/en/
WIPO
Gazette of International Marks: http://www.wipo.int/madrid/gazette/
List
of Members of the