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With a view to modernizing the current trademark law, to ensuring its
compliance with the international norms, especially to the provisions
of the TRIPS Agreement, to simplifying the registration procedures
for trademark applications and to providing wider protection for the
trademark owners, the new Hong Kong trademark law - the Hong Kong
Trade Mark Ordinance - adopted by the Hong Kong Legislative Council,
was promulgated on 15 June, 2000.
The major revisions and additions of the Trade Mark Ordinance are as
follows:
I. The registration systems A and B under the current Trade Mark
Ordinance are replaced with a single uniform trademark registration
system.
II. The scope of trademark protection is widened. In the new
Ordinance trademark is defined as any sign which is capable of
distinguishing the goods or services of one undertaking from those of
other undertakings and which is capable of being represented
graphically. A trademark may be made up of words (including personal
names), indications, designs, letters, characters, numerals,
figurative elements, colours, smells, or shape of goods or their
packaging and any combination of such signs. Trademarks as referred
to in the Ordinance include certification marks, collective marks and
defensive trademarks.
III. The duration of protection for a registered trademark is 10
years, starting from the date of registration (the filing date). When
it expires, the registrant may apply for renewal for another 10 years
each time. The application for renewal should be filed before the
expiration of the registration, and a 6- month grace period is
provided for the renewal application.
IV. With regard to priority right, it is provided in the Ordinance
that, within six months after filing an application for registration of a trademark in
a member state of the Paris Convention or in a member state of the
World Trade Organization, any applicant who applies for registration
of the same trademark in Hong Kong may enjoy priority right.
V. Anyone may file a request to cancel or to invalidate a trademark
once it is registered. Such request can be filed either with the
registrar of the Trademark Registry, or with the court. Moreover, if
the registrar of the Registry believes that a trademark is improperly
registered or registered in bad faith, he may apply to the court for
invalidation of the registration. The grounds for the cancellation of
a trademark registration mainly include:
non- use in three consecutive years (instead of five years under
the existing or old Trade Mark Ordinance);
that the trademark consists of a sign that, by consequence of the
acts or the inactivity of the owner, has become the generic name in
the trade for goods or services for which the trademark is
registered; and
The trademark in use has misled the public as to the nature,
quality, geographical origin, etc. of the goods or service.
VI. Special provisions have been set forth for the protection of well
- known trademarks, defensive marks, collective marks and
certification marks, and provisions on associated trademarks have
been annulled. Well-known trademarks will be decided by the
trademark registrar or the court.
VII. Once a trademark application is accepted, the Trademark Registry
will publish the application. During the prescribed publication
period, anyone may file with the Registry a written opposition
against the trademark. In filing such opposition, the applicant for
opposition should present his the grounds for opposition to the
Registry for examination.
VIII. With regard to acts infringing the exclusive rights of
trademarks registered by another person, it is provided in the
Ordinance that the infringee may obtain civil remedy. Once his right
is infringed, the proprietor of a registered trademark may institute
a court proceeding, requesting the court to order the infringer to
compensate for damages or to hand over his accounts, to issue
injunctions, an order for delivery up (to order the infringer to
deliver the infringing goods, materials or articles to the proprietor
of the registered trademark or other persons the court may
designate), or an order for disposal (to order the destruction of the
infringing goods, materials and articles or the disposal of them by
any other method the court deems appropriate).
The new Ordinance is expected to enter into force in 2001. The exact
effective date is to be decided upon by the Hong Kong SAR Government.
The Government will also promulgate the implementing rules under the
new Trade Mark Ordinance.
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