For many years, Mexico was one of the few countries that did not have an opposition system, as such, for trademark applications. That is about to end very soon.
On April 28, 2016, the Chamber of Representatives informed that it passed a bill that will amend the Mexican Industrial Property Law and insert an opposition system for trademark applications. The bill was approved by the Senate a few months ago, so all it takes is the publication by the President, which should happen soon. The amendment will be effective 90 calendar days after the publication in the Official Journal of the Federation.
(Update June 7, 2016: The amendments to the Industrial Property Law that introduced the opposition to trademark applications were published in the Official Journal of the Federation on June 1, 2016. The amendments and the opposition system will become effective on August 30, 2016)
The lack of an opposition system did not mean that trademark applications were not examined. The Mexican Patent and Trademark Office (MPTO) conducted the substantive examination ex-officio. If the examiner found obstacles, such as lack if distinctiveness, an identical or confusingly similar earlier registered or applied trademark covering the same or similar goods or services, or a well-known non-registered trademark, he issued an office action and allowed the applicant to answer and argue against the alleged lack of distinctiveness or similarities.
Further, if a third party believed that the approval of the trademark application could harm its rights, it could file an informal opposition. The informal opposition was a more or less short brief, calling the examiner’s attention to the existence of certain rights that could be harmed or infringed if the trademark application was approved. If the informal opposition was filed early in the examination proceeding, it had a good chance of being considered by the examiner and even cause the abandonment or final refusal of the opposed application.
The informal opposition was particularly effective to inform the examiner about the existence of a trademark application with a priority claim that predated the filing date of the examined application. It was not so effective when the ground of the opposition was earlier use in Mexico or abroad of an identical or confusingly similar trademark. If the MPTO approved an application for a trademark that was confusingly similar to another trademark used by a third party in Mexico or abroad to distinguish the same or similar goods or services, such third party could file an invalidation action, provided that it could prove that the use was earlier and continuous.
There has been an actual formal opposition (that has never been called like that) that takes place when a trademark application is subject of a final refusal because of the existence of an earlier registered or applied trademark in Mexico and the applicant files an appeal with the Federal Court of Tax and Administrative Affairs (FCTAA). In those cases, the court would serve a copy of the appeal to the owner of the anticipation, allowing it oppose the appeal by defending the legality of the final refusal, and even filing a final appeal (amparo) if the FCTAA’s decision were against the MPTO (see my earlier post Oppositions to trademark applications in Mexico).
Under the new opposition system, trademark applications will be published within ten business days after the filing date, regardless if formal requirements were meet. Third parties would have a one-month term to file an opposition.
The possible grounds for opposition will be broad, but limited to the substantive causes of non-registrability provided in sections 4 and 90 of the Mexican Industrial Property Law. For example, possible grounds of opposition would be descriptiveness of the trademark, illegal reproduction of the name or pseudonymous of an actual person, or the existence of an earlier identical or confusingly similar trademark registration or application in Mexico to identify the same or similar services.
On the other hand, earlier and continuous use (in Mexico or abroad) of an identical or confusingly similar trademark registration or application in Mexico to identify the same or similar services may not provide grounds for an opposition. Bad faith of the applicant because it was the licensee, representative, distributor or agent of a foreign trademark owner may not be a valid cause of opposition either. In these cases, the only available remedy has been and would be an invalidation action against the Mexican trademark registration.
There will be a government fee for opposing a trademark application. I do not know how much it will cost, but the reason behind the government fee is discouraging frivolous oppositions, thus I would expect it to be around US$150.00.
Oppositions would be published, and the applicant will have one month to answer the opposition and file arguments and evidence to support the application.
The Mexican opposition system intends to be simple and avoid becoming a burdensome time-consuming proceeding, as it happens in some South American countries. The opposition will be more a source of information for the examiner than a contentious proceeding (somehow similar to the ‘Letter of Protest’ in the United States) .
After the MPTO decides issuing the trademark registration or the final refusal of the application, the opposing party will receive a written communication informing about the success of the opposition or the approval of the trademark application. If the opposition were not successful, the opposing part may file an invalidation action.
Would the new opposition system significantly change the state of things in Mexico? I don’t think so.
In my opinion, the new opposition system provides rules and terms to an existing practice, without actually changing it. Trademark applications will continue being examined in the same way they used to. Further, the opposition and the result would not prejudice about third party’s rights or the intrinsic legality of the trademark registration, and the causes of invalidation will be available regardless if there was as opposition.
The lawmakers that supported the bill stated that the adoption of the Madrid Protocol encouraged the creation of the opposition system (I do not see the connection). According to the lawmakers, the opposition will help to reduce the number of invalidation actions, improve the quality of trademark examinations and provide right-holders –especially owners of earlier Mexican trademark registrations and applications- with a very cost-effective tool to protect their rights.