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I. Procedure for Registering a
Trademark
1. Overview
Trademarks, and service(Trademark hereinafter) marks may be
protected in the Republic of Korea under the Trademark Act; and
for such protection, marks should be registered with the Korean
Intellectual Property Office ("KIPO"). The use of a trademark is
not a prerequisite for filing an application for the
registration of a trademark. Unregistered marks are not
protected under the Trademark Act, although the owner of a
well-known or famous mark is given some protection under the
Trademark Act by way of preventing others from obtaining a
trademark registration for an identical or similar mark. There
is no course of action against infringement of a well-known or
famous unregistered trademark under the Trademark Act, but an
action may be brought under the Unfair Competition Prevention
Act.
The Korean Trademark Law is characterized by :
¥¡) First-to-File Rule ;
¥¢) Substantial Examination
¥£) Pre-grant Opposition
2. Filing an Application
¥¡) Applicant
Any person who uses or intends to use a trademark in the
Republic of Korea may file an application for the registration
of a trademark. Although the Korean Trademark Act adopts a
registration system, not a use system, the applicant of a
trademark application should have a bona fide intent to use his
trademark in the Republic of Korea. Nonetheless, trademarks
which will not actually be used are also registered. Such
trademarks, however, will be subject to cancellation if they
remain unused for three or more consecutive years after their
registration.
¥¢) Document Required
For a trademark application, the following documents should be
submitted to KIPO:
(a) an application stating the following: the name and address
of the applicant (including the name of an executive officer, if
the applicant is a juristic person); the trademark; the
designated goods and class thereof; the date of submission; and
the country and filing date of the priority application, if the
right of priority is claimed;
(b) 10 specimens of the trademark (7cm x 7cm or smaller in
size);
(c) if the right of priority is claimed, the priority document;
and
(d) a power of attorney, if necessary.
Only document (a) must be submitted at the time of filing the
trademark application. The name of an executive officer of the
applicant may be added later on the applicant's own initiative
or in response to a notice of amendment issued from KIPO.
If the applicant fails to submit specimens of the trademark or
power of attorney at the time of filing the trademark
application, KIPO will issue a notice of amendment requesting
the applicant to submit them, designating a time limit therefor.
The priority document must be submitted within 3 months from the
filing date in the Republic of Korea of the trademark
application. This time limit cannot be extended
¥£) Designation of Goods/Services: Nice Classification
A person who desires to file a trademark application must
designate goods/services on which the trademark is to be used in
accordance with the Nice Classification of Goods or Services for
the Purpose of Registration of Marks. The Republic of Korea
adopted the Nice Classification as of March 1, 1998.
A trademark application may be filed for the registration of
trademark for goods or services which fall under several classes
in accordance with the Nice Classification. In this case, the
applicant has to pay additional fees for each classification.
¥¤) Claim of Priority
The right of priority can be claimed in a trademark application
for a applicant whose country of origin is a party to the Paris
Convention or under a bilateral agreement between two relevant
governments or on a reciprocal basis. In order to enjoy the
priority right, an application should be filed in the Republic
of Korea within 6 months from the filing date of the priority
application. The priority document should be submitted to KIPO
within 3 months from the filing date of his/her application.
3. Formality Examination
According to Article 2(1) of the Enforcement Regulation of the
Trademark Act, the application will be returned to the submitter
without any application number being assigned thereto and will
be treated as if it had never been submitted in any of the
following circumstances:
(¥¡) where the kind of the application is not clear;
(¥¢) where the name or address of a person (or juristic person)
who takes the procedure(i.e. the applicant) is not described;
(¥£) where the application is not written in Korean;
(¥¤) where a specimen of the trademark is not attached to the
application paper;
(¥¥) where the designated goods/services are not described in the
application paper; or
(¥¦) where the application is submitted, by a person who has no
address or place of business in the Republic of Korea, without
coming through a patent agent in the Republic of Korea.
Once the application has satisfied such requirements, KIPO
assigns an application number and examines as to whether or not
other formality requirements under the Trademark Act have been
met. If anything is found missing or wrong, the Commissioner of
KIPO will issue a notice of amendment requesting the applicant
to supplement the missing data or amend it, and within specified
a time limit. If the applicant does not comply with such
request, the trademark application will be nullified.
4. Substantial Examination
¥¡) Initiation of ExaminationUnlike patent or utility model
applications, trademark applications are automatically examined
in order of their filing date. No request for examination is
needed for the initiation of substantial examination.
Furthermore, the Trademark Act does not provide for the
expedited examination system which is available for patent,
utility model and design applications. The examination of a
trademark application generally takes about 1 year from its
filing date
¥¢) Requirement for Registration For a trademark to be registered
under the Trademark Act, it should meet the following
requirements:
(a) It should fall under the definition of a trademark
prescribed in the Trademark Act:
(b) It should be distinctive so as to serve as an indication of
goods or services or, if it is not inherently distinctive, it
should have acquired a secondary meaning;
(c) It should not fall into any of the categories of
unregistrable trademark prescribed in the Trademark Act.
In addition to the reason for rejection, an opposition against
the application can be filed by the owner of a trademark
registered in the territory of a member country of a treaty to
which the Republic of Korea has acceded, if both the trademark
and the designated goods of the application are identical with,
or similar to, those of the foreign trademark registration and
if the application is filed by a person who is, or used to be,
an agent or a representative of the owner of the registered
trademark within 1 year prior to the filing date of the
application concerned without obtaining the authorization or
consent from the owner of the registered trademark.
5. Publication and Pre-Grant Opposition
If the examiner finds no ground for rejection of a trademark
application, or he considers that the rejection has been
overcome by the applicant's response (argument and/or
amendment), he shall render a decision to publish the trademark
application.
Once a trademark application is published in the official
gazette, called the "Trademark Publication Gazette," any person
may file an opposition within 30 days from the publication date.
The thirty-day period cannot be extended. A notice of opposition
containing a brief statement on the grounds for opposition must
be submitted within the thirty-day period. Then, the opponent
may amend, add or supplement the grounds for opposition within
30 days after the expiration of the thirty-day period.
6. Rejection, Registration, Appeal and Trial
Rejection, Registration, Appeal and Trial procedure is same with
those of patent.
7. Renewal
The duration of the protection of a trademark right is 10 years
from the date of registration of the trademark, which may be
renewed every 10 years. For the renewal of a trademark
registration, an application for the renewal should be filed
with KIPO.
Once a renewal application has been duly filed, the trademark
registration is deemed to have been renewed on the expiration
date of the original registration.
II. Protection of Foreign
well-known Trademarks in Korea
(1) Regardless of whether or not they are registered under the
Trademark Act, well-known or famous marks are protected by way
of barring the registration of a mark which is identical with,
or similar to, such marks. An application for the registration
of such mark filed by a person other than the owner of the
famous mark will be rejected; and, if the registration is
erroneously granted, it will be subject to invalidation.
(2) Even if goods and/or service concerning a trademark
application are not identical with or similar to those of a
well-known trademark, the application shall be refused due to
the possibility of misleading the consumers about the origin of
goods or services. Furthermore, an interested party may request
a trial or invalidation of registration of such a trademark if
it has been registered.
(3) It is prescribed in the revised Trademark Act which became
effective as of March 1, 1998 that the registration of a
trademark shall be refused when the application is made for
unfair purposes, such as the aim of free-riding on the
reputation of the marks which are well-known in the Republic of
Korea.
(4) In addition to the Korean Trademark Law, the Unfair
Competition Prevention Act also provide the protection of
well-known trademarks. Any person who is, or is likely to be,
injured by acts of unfair competition such as acts causing
confusion with another person's goods or business facilities by
using an indication identical with or similar to another
person's name, tradename or marks, including well-known
trademarks, may bring a civil action before the court seeking an
injunctive relief, monetary damage and/or restoration of injured
business reputation or goodwill. Furthermore, the Law also set
forth criminal provisions.
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