Granting Trademark under startup India
The Department for Promotion of Industry & Internal Trade
(DPIIT), in order to facilitate trademarks for Startups, provides 50% concession
in statutory fees for filing trademarks applications. Also, under the startup facilitation
scheme, a list of facilitators is provided at Trade Marks Offices’ website (www.ipindia.nic.in) whose services may be availed by the startups
for application for registration of trademark and the professional charges of such
facilitators is reimbursed by the government.
A trademark application is processed in accordance
with The Trade Marks Act, 1999 and The Trade Marks Rules, 2017. The brief steps/stages
for granting a trademark are as under:
1.
Application can be submitted
offline or electronically through comprehensive e-filing module,
2.
After receipt of the application,
the application is queued for examination,
3.
During the examination,
applications are examined and an examination report is issued to the applicant with
or without objections as per law. Presently examination is being done in about one
month’s time from the date of filing.
4.
If no objection is noted
as per law, the application moves to publication. After publication of the application
details in Trade Mark Journal, any person may file opposition against the published
mark within 4 months.
5.
If any objections are noted,
the applicant is required to submit his response within one month from the receipt
of examination report.
6.
If response is received, the same is considered
by the authorised officer and the application is accepted
or refused after providing due opportunity of hearing to the applicant.
7.
After acceptance and publication
of the application in Trade Mark Journal, if no opposition is received within the
prescribed period of 4 months from the date of publication, registration certificate
is issued to the applicant within three weeks from the expiration of 4 months’ statutory
period.
8.
However, if the application
is opposed by any person within 4 months of publication of the application, the
opposition is required to be disposed in accordance with due process of law, which
is a quasi-judicial proceeding.
The registration certificate for trademark is normally granted
to the applicant within seven months from the date of filing of application, if
no office objections are noted in examination and no opposition is received after
publication of the trademarks application in the Trade Marks Journal. However, examination
is being done in around one month time from the date of filing of the trademarks
application.
There is no strict time limit for granting a trademark, since
the procedure for trademark registration is a quasi-judicial process as per the
Trade Marks Act, 1999. Internal guidelines are issued from time to time for quick
disposal of applications, and, if any deliberate dereliction of duty is found on
the part of any officer, appropriate action is taken as per the CCS Rules.
This information was given by the Union Minister of Commerce
and Industry, Piyush Goyal,
in a written reply in the Lok Sabha on 21 September
2020.