From: Jane Wald [janeswald@---.com] Sent: Monday, March 20, 2006 4:57
PM To: AB56Comments Cc: Rogers, Gerard
Subject: Comments on
Proposed Rules: "Miscellaneous Changes to Trademark Trial and Appeal Board
Rules" 71 Federal Register 2498 (January 17, 2006)
The Honorable
John Dudas Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual
Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark
Office Box Comments P.O.Box 1450 Alexandria, VA
22313-1450
Attn: Hon. Gerard F. Rogers Administrative
Trademark Judge Trademark Trial and Appeal Board P.O. Box
1451 Alexandria, VA 22313-1451
Re: Comments on Proposed
Rules: "Miscellaneous Ch ages to Trademark Trial and Appeal Board Rules" 71
Federal Register 2498 (January 17, 2006)
Dear Under Secretary
Dudas:
Thank you for the opportunity to offer comments regarding
the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office ("PTO") proposed rules directed to changes
to the practice before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board ("the Board")
published at 71 Fed. Reg. 10, p. 2498 (January 17, 2006).
I am a
partner with a Southern California law firm. I write this on my own behalf to
express my personal views as a lawyer who has practiced before the Board for
nearly 30 years.
There has been recent, and fervent, dialogue in
the trademark legal community with respect to these rules changes. It is clear
from emailed and other communications within this community that a considerable
number of practitioners, including in-house counsel, were not aware until
recently of the overwhelming changes these rules would present. For this reason,
I believe it would be advisable to hold the public comment period open for
another 30 days to permit further dialogue.
At a minimum, with
proposed changes this significant, I believe that a public hearing is vitally
important to protect the public, including applicants and registrants of United
States trademarks.
The rules changes proposed by the PTO are
dramatic. If implemented, they will impose onerous burdens upon the parties --
in some cases, burdens more onerous than those found in the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure -- but without the benefit to the parties of the right to seek
injunction or monetary relief available to parties litigating in the Federal
courts.
Board practice has been a viable and, on balance, much
less costly alternative to Federal court litigation. Indeed, filing an
opposition often leads to an opportunity for a very prompt settlement of
registration and use issues. The present rules and timing of Board practice
permit the parties to resolve the vast majority of cases long before trial, and
often before discovery, by "trading" use restrictions for registration benefits,
to name just one frequent settlement approach.
By making Board
practice look and feel and cost more like Federal court litigation, the new
rules may increasingly drive those with resources to commence their actions in
Federal court as trademark litigations, where the facts permit. On the other
hand, those who need to oppose ITU's, where the facts may not be ripe for a
trademark infringement lawsuit, may find themselves having to disclose a
mountain of information -- much of it sensitive -- to a small entity that,
itself needs to provide very little, and may not even retain counsel.
The idea that the substantial early disclosures proposed, with
aspects that exceed those found in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, will
facilitate settlement is counter-intuitive. If the party has had to "front-load"
its executive time and legal fees, the drive to go forward with the case to
benefit from these expended resources will be stronger.
As a
practitioner who has encountered pro se small-business adversaries in Board
proceedings, I am also concerned that represented parties, including my clients,
will suffer for following the complicated new rules, while non-represented
parties will not follow them because they don't understand them (and may also
suffer as a result). Will counsel be expending client resources in repeatedly
moving for relief from pro se misunderstanding of these complex rules? Will this
truly lead to the goal of Board efficiency? With respect to the proposed
Protective Order changes, where substantial sensitive material must now be
disclosed early on, how can a pro se entity truly understand the obligations
without the buffer of counsel? Business entities should be represented by
counsel before the Board.
I have read the comments of Oblon,
Spivak, McClelland, Maier & Neustadt submitted March 20, 2006, and the
comments of the American Intellectual Property Law Association of March 16,
2006. I agree with and adopt those comments (and insofar as there is any small
differing view as between them, each is preferable by far to the present
proposed rules).
Sincerely,
Jane Shay
Wald 2307 Sunset Plaza Drive Los Angeles, CA 90069 (310)
277-1010 janeswald@---.com
Morgan & Finnegan, L.L.P. 's Comments on Proposed Rules
Download morgan_finnegan_comments.pdf
03:07 PM in Practitioners' Comments to PTO | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)