8 min

Brand Security: Exclusive Rights and Protection Provided by Trademark Registration IP Mastery for Entrepreneurs with Julie King: Trademarks, Patents, and More

    • Entrepreneurship

https://youtu.be/xW0mph7iYzo






This is the second in a series about the essential benefits of having your trademark registered. One of the most compelling reasons to register a trademark is the group of exclusive rights it confers upon the owner. 


Common Law Rights

Without registration, there are some trademark rights that are called “common law” trademark rights, but those rights are limited.


They can be limited to a small geographic area.

You can't use them to bring a lawsuit for infringement in federal court and often not in state court. 

U.S. Customs and Border Protection can't use them to stop importation of infringing goods.

You can't use that ® symbol with them; you can only use the TM symbol. 

It's not as easy for others to find records of your use, so conflicting use of others is more likely.

There's no legal presumption you are the proper owner of the trademark rights. 


State Registration

What about state business registration?  The registered organizational documents for a corporation limited liability company, partnership or other entity don't protect your business name as a trademark. That's right. They do not offer any trademark protection. Most states don't check their own trademark registry, let alone the federal registry, when registering a business formation. They may reject a name because it's identical or too similar to a business already registered in the state, but that's only in their list of existing businesses, not even in their own list of registered trademarks.  For example, Illinois might register an LLC with the name Apple, but that wouldn't give the owner any trademark rights and would obviously be an infringing name under many circumstances.  


What about state trademark registration?  It's a good tool, and under certain circumstances, it's the only kind of trademark registration available. Usually state registered trademarks provide the right to sue in state courts regarding infringement and allow a victorious party to receive certain financial damage awards in addition to forcing the other party to stop infringing, including attorney's fees most of the time. Suing for infringement without registration doesn't allow the extra financial recovery and is much harder to prove. 


State registration of trademarks only confers the benefits of registration in the state in which the trademark is registered.  Sometimes it doesn't even confer those benefits throughout the entire state if the mark is only used in a certain part of the state. For example, in Illinois, if a mark is in use in Chicago, that doesn't necessarily give the owner rights down in Southern Illinois near Carbondale, and vice versa. 


If you're engaged in regional or national business using your trademarks, that local, regional, or state level of protection is insufficient, and it's cumbersome to register and maintain trademarks in multiple states.  Also, states don't usually search the federal register of trademarks, so they can and do grant registrations that infringe on a national brand.


State registration is appropriate, though, if you are using your trademark only within a particular state. In fact, if you aren't using it outside of that state at all, you can't get federal registration. However, There are many ways your mark may be used in what's called “interstate commerce” despite your business being located only in one state. It’s important to consult an attorney about whether your use qualifies for federal registration.  It's also a really good idea, even if you're only applying for state registration, to have your attorney do that thorough federal search, to make sure that your state registration doesn't end up being essentially useless because there's already a mark registered federally that's similar or identical to yours for similar identical goods and services.  


Federal Registration

All of this leads us t

https://youtu.be/xW0mph7iYzo






This is the second in a series about the essential benefits of having your trademark registered. One of the most compelling reasons to register a trademark is the group of exclusive rights it confers upon the owner. 


Common Law Rights

Without registration, there are some trademark rights that are called “common law” trademark rights, but those rights are limited.


They can be limited to a small geographic area.

You can't use them to bring a lawsuit for infringement in federal court and often not in state court. 

U.S. Customs and Border Protection can't use them to stop importation of infringing goods.

You can't use that ® symbol with them; you can only use the TM symbol. 

It's not as easy for others to find records of your use, so conflicting use of others is more likely.

There's no legal presumption you are the proper owner of the trademark rights. 


State Registration

What about state business registration?  The registered organizational documents for a corporation limited liability company, partnership or other entity don't protect your business name as a trademark. That's right. They do not offer any trademark protection. Most states don't check their own trademark registry, let alone the federal registry, when registering a business formation. They may reject a name because it's identical or too similar to a business already registered in the state, but that's only in their list of existing businesses, not even in their own list of registered trademarks.  For example, Illinois might register an LLC with the name Apple, but that wouldn't give the owner any trademark rights and would obviously be an infringing name under many circumstances.  


What about state trademark registration?  It's a good tool, and under certain circumstances, it's the only kind of trademark registration available. Usually state registered trademarks provide the right to sue in state courts regarding infringement and allow a victorious party to receive certain financial damage awards in addition to forcing the other party to stop infringing, including attorney's fees most of the time. Suing for infringement without registration doesn't allow the extra financial recovery and is much harder to prove. 


State registration of trademarks only confers the benefits of registration in the state in which the trademark is registered.  Sometimes it doesn't even confer those benefits throughout the entire state if the mark is only used in a certain part of the state. For example, in Illinois, if a mark is in use in Chicago, that doesn't necessarily give the owner rights down in Southern Illinois near Carbondale, and vice versa. 


If you're engaged in regional or national business using your trademarks, that local, regional, or state level of protection is insufficient, and it's cumbersome to register and maintain trademarks in multiple states.  Also, states don't usually search the federal register of trademarks, so they can and do grant registrations that infringe on a national brand.


State registration is appropriate, though, if you are using your trademark only within a particular state. In fact, if you aren't using it outside of that state at all, you can't get federal registration. However, There are many ways your mark may be used in what's called “interstate commerce” despite your business being located only in one state. It’s important to consult an attorney about whether your use qualifies for federal registration.  It's also a really good idea, even if you're only applying for state registration, to have your attorney do that thorough federal search, to make sure that your state registration doesn't end up being essentially useless because there's already a mark registered federally that's similar or identical to yours for similar identical goods and services.  


Federal Registration

All of this leads us t

8 min