Laws & Regulations
Trademark Law of the People's Republic of China
(Adopted at the 24th Session of the Standing Committee of the
Fifth National People's Congress on 23 August 1982; revised for the first
time according to the Decision on the Amendment of the Trademark Law of
the People's Republic of China adopted at the 30th Session of the Standing
Committee of the Seventh National People's Congress, on 22 February 1993;
and revised for the second time according to the Decision on the Amendment
of the Trademark Law of the People's Republic of China adopted at the
24th Session of the Standing Committee of the Ninth National People's
Congress on 27 October 2001)
Chapter I.
General Provisions Article
1. This Law is enacted for the purposes of improving
the administration of trademarks, protecting the exclusive
right to use trademarks, and of encouraging producers
and operators to guarantee the quality of their goods
and services and maintaining the reputation of their
trademarks, with a view to protecting the interests
of consumers, producers and operators and to promoting
the development of the socialist market economy.
Article 2. The Trademark
Office of the administrative authority for industry
and commerce under the State Council shall be responsible
for the registration and administration of trademarks
throughout the country.
The Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board, established under the administrative authority
for industry and commerce under the State Council, shall
be responsible for handling matters of trademark disputes.
Article 3. Registered trademarks
mean trademarks that have been approved and registered
by the Trademark Office, including trademarks, service
marks, collective marks and certification marks; the
trademark registrants shall enjoy the exclusive right
to use the trademarks, and be protected by law.
Said collective marks mean sings
which are registered in the name of bodies, associations
or other organisations to be used by the members thereof
in their commercial activities to indicate their membership
of the organisations.
Said certification marks mean
signs which are controlled by organisations capable
of supervising some goods or services and used by entities
or individual persons outside the organisation for their
goods or services to certify the origin, material, mode
of manufacture, quality or other characteristics of
the goods or services.
Regulations for the particular
matters of registration and administration of collective
and certification marks shall be established by the
administrative authority for industry and commerce under
the State Council.
Article 4. Any natural
person, legal entity or other organisation intending
to acquire the exclusive right to use a trademark for
the goods produced, manufactured, processed, selected
or marketed by it or him, shall file an application
for the registration of the trademark with the Trademark
Office.
Any natural person, legal entity
or other organisation intending to acquire the exclusive
right to use a service mark for the service provided
by it or him, shall file an application for the registration
of the service mark with the Trademark Office.
The provisions set forth in this
Law concerning trademarks shall apply to service marks.
Article 5. Two or more
natural persons, legal entities or other organisations
may jointly file an application for the registration
for the same trademark with the Trademark Office, and
jointly enjoy and exercise the exclusive right to use
the trademark.
Article 6. As for any of
such goods, as prescribed by the State, that must bear
a registered trademark, a trademark registration must
be applied for. Where no trademark registration has
been granted, such goods cannot be marketed.
Article 7. Any user of
a trademark shall be responsible for the quality of
the goods in respect of which the trademark is used.
The administrative authorities for industry and commerce
at different levels shall, through the administration
of trademarks, stop any practice that deceives consumers.
Article 8. In respect of
any visual sign capable of distinguishing the goods
or service of one natural person, legal entity or any
other organisation from that of others, including any
word, design, letters of an alphabet, numerals, three-dimensional
symbol, combinations of colours, and their combination,
an application may be filed for registration.
Article 9. Any trademark
in respect of which an application for registration
is filed shall be so distinctive as to be distinguishable,
and shall not conflict with any prior right acquired
by another person.
A trademark registrant has the
right to use the words of "registered trademark" or
a symbol to indicate that his trademark is registered.
Article 10. The following
signs shall not be used as trademarks:
(1) those identical with or similar
to the State name, national flag, national emblem, military
flag, or decorations, of the People's Republic of China,
with names of the places where the Central and State
organs are located,or with the names and designs of
landmark buildings;
(2) those identical with or similar
to the State names, national flags, national emblems
or military flags of foreign countries, except that
the foreign state government agrees otherwise on the
use;
(3) those identical with or similar
to the names, flags or emblems or names, of international
intergovernmental organisations, except that the organisations
agree otherwise on the use or that it is not easy for
the use to mislead the public;
(4) those identical with or similar
to official signs and hallmarks, showing official control
or warranty by them, except that the use thereof is
otherwise authorised;
(5) those identical with or similar
to the symbols, or names, of the Red Cross or the Red
Crescent;
(6) those having the nature of
discrimination against any nationality;
(7) those having the nature of
exaggeration and fraud in advertising goods; and
(8) those detrimental to socialist
morals or customs, or having other unhealthy influences.
The geographical names as the
administrative divisions at or above the county level
and the foreign geographical names well known to the
public shall not be used as trademarks, but such geographical
terms as have otherwise meanings or are a part of collective
marks/or a certification marks shall be exclusive. Where
a trademark using any of the above-mentioned geographical
names has been approved and registered, it shall continue
to be valid.
Article 11. The following
signs shall not be registered as trademarks:
(1) those only comprising generic
names, designs or models of the goods in respect of
which the trademarks are used;
(2) those having direct reference
to the quality, main raw materials, function, use, weight,
quantity or other features of the goods in respect of
which the trademarks are used; and
(3) those lacking distinctive
features.
The signs under the preceding
paragraphs may be registered as trademarks where they
have acquired the distinctive features through use and
become readily identifiable.
Article 12. Where an application
is filed for registration of a three-dimensional sign
as a trademark, any shape derived from the goods itself,
required for obtaining the technical effect, or giving
the goods substantive value, shall not be registered.
Article 13. Where a trademark
in respect of which the application for registration
is filed for use for identical or similar goods is a
reproduction, imitation or translation of another person's
well-known trademark not registered in China and likely
to cause confusion, it shall be rejected for registration
and prohibited from use.
Where a trademark in respect of
which the application for registration is filed for
use for non-identical or dissimilar goods is a reproduction,
imitation or translation of the well-known mark of another
person that has been registered in China, misleads the
public and is likely to create prejudice to the interests
of the well-known mark registrant, it shall be rejected
for registration and prohibited from use.
Article 14. Account shall
be taken of the following factors in establishment of
a well-known mark:
(1) reputation of the mark to
the relevant public;
(2) time for continued use of
the mark;
(3) consecutive time, extent and
geographical area of advertisement of the mark;
(4) records of protection of the
mark as a well-known mark; and
(5) any other factors relevant
to the reputation of the mark.
Article 15. Where any agent
or representative registers, in its or his own name,
the trademark of a person for whom it or he acts as
the agent or representative without authorisation therefrom,
and the latter raises opposition, the trademark shall
be rejected for registration and prohibited from use.
Article 16. Where a trademark
contains a geographic indication of the goods in respect
of which the trademark is used, the goods is not from
the region indicated therein and it misleads the public,
it shall be rejected for registration and prohibited
from use; however, any trademark that has been registered
in good faith shall remain valid.
The geographic indications mentioned
in the preceding paragraph refer to the signs that signify
the place of origin of the goods in respect of which
the signs are used, their specific quality, reputation
or other features as mainly decided by the natural or
cultural factors of the regions.
Article 17. Any foreign
person or foreign enterprise intending to apply for
the registration of a trademark in China shall file
an application in accordance with any agreement concluded
between the People's Republic of China and the country
to which the applicant belongs, or according to the
international treaty to which both countries are parties,
or on the basis of the principles of reciprocity.
Article 18. Any foreign
person or foreign enterprise intending to apply for
the registration of a trademark or for any other matters
concerning a trademark in China shall appoint any of
such organisations as designated by the State to act
as its or his agent.
Chapter II. Application for
Trademark Registration
Article 19. An applicant
for the registration of a trademark shall, in a form,
indicate, in accordance with the prescribed classification
of goods, the class of the goods and the designation
of the goods in respect of which the trademark is to
be used.
Article 20. Where any applicant
for registration of a trademark intends to use the same
trademark for goods in different classes, an application
for registration shall be filed in respect of each class
of the prescribed classification of goods.
Article 21. Where a registered
trademark is to be used in respect of other goods of
the same class, a new application for registration shall
be filed.
Article 22. Where the sign
of a registered trademark is to be altered, a new registration
shall be applied for.
Article 23. Where, after
the registration of a trademark, the name, address or
other registered matters concerning the registrant change,
an application regarding the change shall be filed.
Article 24. Any applicant
for the registration of a trademark who files an application
for registration of the same trademark for identical
goods in China within six months from the date of filing
the first application for the trademark registration
overseas may enjoy the right of priority in accordance
with any agreement concluded between the People's Republic
of China and the country to which the applicant belongs,
or according to the international treaty to which both
countries are parties, or on the basis of the principle
whereby each acknowledges the right of priority of the
other.
Anyone claiming the right of priority
according to the preceding paragraph shall make a statement
in writing when it or he files the application for the
trademark registration, and submit, within three months,
a copy of the application documents it or he first filed
for the registration of the trademark; where the applicant
fails to make the claim in writing or submit the copy
of the application documents within the time limit,
the claim shall be deemed not to have been made for
the right of priority.
Article 25. Where a trademark
is first used for goods in an international exhibition
sponsored or recognised by the Chinese Government, the
applicant for the registration of the trademark may
enjoy the right of priority within six months from the
date of exhibition of the goods.
Anyone claiming the right of priority
according to the preceding paragraph shall make a claim
in writing when it or he files the application for the
registration of the trademark, and submit, within three
months, documents showing the title of the exhibition
in which its or his goods was displayed, proof that
the trademark was used for the goods exhibited, and
the date of exhibition; where the claim is not made
in writing, or the proof documents not submitted within
the time limit, the claim shall be deemed not to have
been made for the right of priority.
Article 26. The matters
reported and materials submitted in the application
for trademark registration shall be true, accurate and
complete.
Chapter III. Examination for
and Approval of Trademark Registration
Article 27. Where a trademark
the registration of which has been applied for is in
conformity with the relevant provisions of this Law,
the Trademark Office shall, after examination, preliminarily
approve the trademark and publish it.
Article 28. Where a trademark
the registration of which has been applied for is not
in conformity with the relevant provisions of this Law,
or it is identical with or similar to the trademark
of another person that has, in respect of the same or
similar goods, been registered or, after examination,
preliminarily approved, the Trademark Office shall refuse
the application and shall not publish the said trademark.
Article 29. Where two or
more applicants apply for the registration of identical
or similar trademarks for the same or similar goods,
the preliminary approval, after examination, and the
publication shall be made for the trademark which was
first filed. Where applications are filed on the same
day, the preliminary approval, after examination, and
the publication shall be made for the trademark which
was the earliest used, and the applications of the others
shall be refused and their trademarks shall not be published.
Article 30. Any person
may, within three months from the date of the publication,
file an opposition against the trademark that has, after
examination, been preliminarily approved. If no opposition
has been filed after the expiration of the time limit
from the publication, the registration shall be approved,
a certificate of trademark registration shall be issued
and the trademark shall be published.
Article 31. An application
for the registration of a trademark shall not create
any prejudice to the prior right of another person,
nor unfair means be used to pre-emptively register the
trademark of some reputation another person has used.
Article 32. Where the application
for registration of a trademark is refused and no publication
of the trademark is made, the Trademark Office shall
notify the applicant of the same in writing. Where the
applicant is dissatisfied, he may, within fifteen days
from receipt of the notice, file an application with
the Trademark Review and Adjudication Board for a review.
The Trademark Review and Adjudication Board shall make
a decision and notify the applicant in writing.
Any interested party who is not
satisfied with the decision made by the Trademark Review
and Adjudication Board may, within thirty days from
receipt of the notice, institute legal proceedings in
the People's Court.
Article 33. Where an opposition
is filed against the trademark that has, after examination,
been preliminarily approved and published, the Trademark
Office shall hear both the opponent and applicant state
facts and grounds, and shall, after investigation and
verification, make a decision. Where any party is dissatisfied,
it or he may, within fifteen days from receipt of the
notification, apply for a reexamination, and the Trademark
Review and Adjudication Board shall make a decision
and notify both the opponent and applicant in writing.
Any interested party who is not
satisfied with the decision made by the Trademark Review
and Adjudication Board within thirty days from the date
of receipt of the notice, may institute legal proceedings
in the People's Court. The People's Court shall notify
the other party to the trademark reexamination proceeding
to be a third party to the litigation.
Article 34. Where the interested
party does not, within the statutory time limit, apply
for the reexamination of the adjudication by the Trademark
Office or does not institute legal proceedings in respect
of the adjudication by the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board, the adjudication takes effect.
Where the opposition cannot be
established upon adjudication, the registration shall
be approved, a certificate of trademark registration
shall be issued and the trademark shall be published;
where the opposition is established upon adjudication,
the registration shall not be approved.
Where the opposition cannot be
established upon adjudication, but the registration
is approved, the time of the exclusive right the trademark
registration applicant has obtained to use the trademark
is counted from the date on which the three months expires
from the publication of the preliminary examination.
Article 35. Any application
for trademark registration and trademark reexamination
shall be examined in due course.
Article 36. Where any trademark
registration applicant or registrant finds any obvious
errors in the trademark registration documents or application
documents, it or he may apply for correction thereof.
The Trademark Office shall ex officio make the correction
according to law and notify the interested party of
the correction.
The error correction mentioned
in the preceding paragraph shall not relate to the substance
of the trademark registration documents or application
documents.
Article 37. The period
of validity of a registered trademark shall be ten years,
counted from the date of approval of the registration.
Chapter IV. Renewal, Assignment
and Licensing of Registered Trademarks
Article 38. Where the registrant
intends to continue to use the registered trademark
beyond the expiration of the period of validity, an
application for renewal of the registration shall be
made within six months before the said expiration. Where
no application therefor has been filed within the said
period, a grace period of six months may be allowed.
If no application has been filed at the expiration of
the grace period, the registered trademark shall be
cancelled.
The period of validity of each
renewal of registration shall be ten years.
Any renewal of registration shall
be published after it has been approved.
Article 39. Where a registered
trademark is assigned, the assignor and assignee shall
conclude a contract for the assignment, and jointly
file an application with the Trademark Office. The assignee
shall guarantee the quality of the goods in respect
of which the registered trademark is used.
The assignment of a registered
trademark shall be published after it has been approved,
and the assignee enjoys the exclusive right to use the
trademark from the date of publication.
Article 40. Any trademark
registrant may, by signing a trademark license contract,
authorise other persons to use his registered trademark.
The licensor shall supervise the quality of the goods
in respect of which the licensee uses his registered
trademark, and the licensee shall guarantee the quality
of the goods in respect of which the registered trademark
is used.
Where any party is authorised
to use a registered trademark of another person, the
name of the licensee and the origin of the goods must
be indicated on the goods that bear the registered trademark.
The trademark license contract
shall be submitted to the Trademark Office for record.
Chapter V. Adjudication of
Disputes Concerning Registered Trademarks
Article 41. Where a registered
trademark stands in violation of the provisions of Articles
10, 11 and 12 of this Law, or the registration of a
trademark was acquired by fraud or any other unfair
means, the Trademark Office shall cancel the registered
trademark in question; and any other organisation or
individual may request the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board to make an adjudication to cancel such a registered
trademark.
Where a registered trademark stands
in violation of the provisions of Articles 13, 15, 16
and 31 of this Law, any other trademark owner concerned
or interested party may, within five years from the
date of the registration of the trademark, file a request
with the Trademark Review and Adjudication Board for
adjudication to cancel the registered trademark. Where
a well-known mark is registered in bad faith, the genuine
owner thereof shall not be restricted by the five-year
limitation.
In addition to those cases as
provided for in the preceding two paragraphs, any person
disputing a registered trademark may, within five years
from the date of approval of the trademark registration,
apply to the Trademark Review and Adjudication Board
for adjudication.
The Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board shall, after receipt of the application for adjudication,
notify the interested parties and request them to respond
with arguments within a specified period.
Article 42. Where a trademark,
before its being approved for registration, has been
the object of opposition and decision, no application
for adjudication may be filed based on the same facts
and grounds.
Article 43. After the Trademark
Review and Adjudication Board has made an adjudication
either to maintain or to cancel a registered trademark,
it shall notify the interested parties of the same in
writing.
Any interested party who is dissatisfied
with the adjudication made by the Trademark Review and
Adjudication Board may, within thirty days from the
date of receipt of the notice, institute legal proceedings
in the People's Court. The People's Court shall notify
the other party of the trademark adjudication proceeding
to be a third party to the legal proceedings.
Chapter VI. Administration
of the Use of Trademarks
Article 44. Where any person
who uses a registered trademark has committed any of
the following, the Trademark Office shall order him
to rectify the situation within a specified period or
even cancel the registered trademark:
(1) where a registered trademark
is altered unilaterally (that is, without the required
registration);
(2) where the name, address or
other registered matters concerning the registrant of
a registered trademark are changed unilaterally (that
is, without the required application);
(3) where the registered trademark
is assigned unilaterally (that is, without the required
approval); or
(4) where the use of the registered
trademark has ceased for three consecutive years.
Article 45. Where a registered
trademark is used in respect of the goods that have
been roughly or poorly manufactured, or whose superior
quality has been replaced by inferior quality, so that
consumers are deceived, the administrative authorities
for industry and commerce at different levels shall,
according to the circumstances, order rectification
of the situation within a specified period, and may,
in addition, circulate a notice of criticism or impose
a fine, and the Trademark Office may even cancel the
registered trademark.
Article 46. Where a registered
trademark has been cancelled or has not been renewed
at the expiration, the Trademark Office shall, during
one year from the date of the cancellation or removal
thereof, approve no application for the registration
of a trademark that is identical with or similar to
the said trademark.
Article 47. Where any person
violates the provisions of Article 6 of this Law, the
local administrative authority for industry and commerce
shall order him to file an application for the registration
within a specified period, and may, in addition, impose
a fine.
Article 48. Where any person
who uses an unregistered trademark has committed any
of the following, the local administrative authority
for industry and commerce shall stop the use of the
trademark, order him to rectify the situation within
a specified period, and may, in addition, circulate
a notice of criticism or impose a fine:
(1) where the trademark is falsely
represented as registered;
(2) where any provision of Article
10 of this Law is violated; or
(3) where the manufacture is of
rough or poor quality, or where superior quality is
replaced by inferior quality, so that consumers are
deceived.
Article 49. Any party dissatisfied
with the decision of the Trademark Office to cancel
a registered trademark may, within fifteen days from
receipt of the corresponding notice, apply for a review.
The Trademark Review and Adjudication Board shall make
a decision and notify the applicant in writing.
Any interested party dissatisfied
with the decision by the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board may, within thirty days from the date of receipt
of the notice, institute legal proceedings in the People's
Court.
Article 50. Any party dissatisfied
with the decision of the administrative authority for
industry and commerce to impose a fine under the provisions
of Article 45, Article 47 or Article 48 may, within
fifteen days from receipt of the corresponding notice,
institute legal proceedings with the People's Court.
If there have been instituted no legal proceedings or
made no performance of the decision at the expiration
of the said period, the administrative authority for
industry and commerce may request the People's Court
for compulsory execution thereof.
Chapter VII. Protection of
the Exclusive Rights to Use Registered Trademarks
Article 51. The exclusive
right to use a registered trademark is limited to the
trademark which has been approved for registration and
to the goods in respect of which the use of the trademark
has been approved.
Article 52. Any of the
following acts shall be an infringement of the exclusive
right to use a registered trademark:
(1) to use a trademark that is
identical with or similar to a registered trademark
in respect of the identical or similar goods without
the authorisation from the trademark registrant;
(2) to sell goods that he knows
bear a counterfeited registered trademark;
(3) to counterfeit, or to make,
without authorisation, representations of a registered
trademark of another person, or to sell such representations
of a registered trademark as were counterfeited, or
made without authorisation;
(4) to replace, without the consent
of the trademark registrant, its or his registered trademark
and market again the goods bearing the replaced trademark;
or
(5) to cause, in other respects,
prejudice to the exclusive right of another person to
use a registered trademark.
Article 53. Where any party
has committed any of such acts to infringe the exclusive
right to use a registered trademark as provided for
in Article 52 of this Law and has caused a dispute,
the interested parties shall resolve the dispute through
consulation; where they are reluctant to resolve the
matter through consulation or the consultation fails,
the trademark registrant or interested party may institute
legal proceedings in the People's Court or request the
administrative authority for industry and commerce for
actions. Where it is established that the infringing
act is constituted in its handling the matter, the administrative
authority for industry and commerce handling the matter
shall order the infringer to immediately stop the infringing
act, confiscate and destroy the infringing goods and
tools specially used for the manufacture of the infringing
goods and for counterfeiting the representations of
the registered trademark, and impose a fine. Where any
interested party is dissatisfied with decesion on handling
the matter, it or he may, within fifteen days from the
date of receipt of the notice, institute legal proceedings
in the People's Court according to the Administrative
Procedure Law of the People's Republic of China. If
there have been instituted no legal proceedings or made
on performance of the decision at the expiration of
the said period, the administrative authority for industry
and commerce shall request the People's Court for compulsory
execution thereof. The administrative authority for
industry and commerce handling the matter may, upon
the request of the interested party, medicate on the
amount of compensation for the infringement of the exclusive
right to use the trademark; where the medication fails,
the interested party may institute legal proceedings
in the People's Court according to the Civil Procedure
Law of the People's Republic of China.
Article 54. The administrative
authority for industry and commerce has the power to
investigate and handle any act of infringement of the
exclusive right to use a registered trademark according
to law; where the case is so serious as to constitute
a crime, it shall be transferred to the judicial authority
for handling.
Article 55. When investigating
and handling an act suspected of infringement of a registered
trademark, the administrative authority for industry
and commerce at or above the county level may, according
to the obtained evidence of the suspected violation
of law or informed offence, exercise the following functions
and authorities:
(1) to inquire of the interested
parties involved, and to investigate the relevant events
of the infringement of the exclusive right to use the
trademark;
(2) to read and make copy of the
contract, receipts, account books and other relevant
materials of the interested parties relating to the
infringement;
(3) to inspect the site where
the interested party committed the alleged infringement
of the exclusive right to use the trademark; and
(4) to inspect any articles relevant
to the infringement; any articles that prove to have
been used for the infringement of another person's exclusive
right to use the trademark may be sealed up or seized.
When the administrative authority
for industry and commerce exercises the preceding functions
and authorities, the interested party shall cooperate
and help, and shall not refuse to do so or stand in
the way.
Article 56. The amount
of damages shall be the profit that the infringer has
earned because of the infringement in the period of
the infringement or the injury that the infringee has
suffered from the infringement in the period of the
infringement, including the appropriate expenses of
the infringee for stopping the infringement.
Where it is difficult to determine
the profit that the infringer has earned because of
the infringement in the period of the infringement or
the injury that the infringee has suffered from the
infringement in the period of the infringement, the
People's Court shall impose an amount of damages of
no more than RMB 500,000 yuan according to the circumstances
of the infringement.
Anyone who sells a goods that
it or he does not know has infringed the exclusive right
to use a registered trademark, and is able to prove
that it or he has obtained the goods legitimately and
indicates the supplier thereof shall not bear the liability
for damages.
Article 57. Where a trademark
registrant or interested party who has evidence to show
that another person is committing or will commit an
infringement of the right to use its or his registered
trademark, and that failure to promptly stop the infringement
will cause irreparable damages to its or his legitimate
rights and interests, it or he may file an application
with the People's Court to order cessation of the relevant
act and to take measures for property preservation before
instituting legal proceedings in the People's Court.
The People's Court handling the
application under the preceding paragraph shall apply
the provisions of Articles 93 to 96 and 99 of the Civil
Procedure Law of the People's Republic of China.
Article 58. In order to
stop an infringing act, any trademark registrant or
interested party may file an application with the People's
Court for preservation of the evidence before instituting
legal proceedings in the People's Court where the evidence
will possibly be destroyed or lost or difficult to be
obtained again in the future.
The People's Court must make adjudication
within forty-eight hours after receipt of the application;
where it is decided to take the preservative measures,
the measures shall be executed immediately.
The People's Court may order the
applicant to place guaranty; where the applicant fails
to place the guaranty, the application shall be rejected.
Where the applicant institutes
no legal proceedings within fifteen days after the People's
Court takes the preservative measures, the People's
Court shall release the measures taken for the preservation.
Article 59. Where any party
uses, without the authorisation from the trademark registrant,
a trademark identical with a registered trademark, and
the case is so serious as to constitute a crime, he
shall be prosecuted, according to law, for his criminal
liabilities in addition to his compensation for the
damages suffered by the infringee.
Where any party counterfeits,
or makes, without authorisation, representations of
a registered trademark of another person, or sells such
representations of a registered trademark as were counterfeited,
or made without authorisation, and the case is so serious
as to constitute a crime, he shall be prosecuted, according
to law, for his criminal liabilities in addition to
his compensation for the damages suffered by the infringee.
Where any party sells goods that
he knows bear a counterfeited registered trademark,
and the case is so serious as to constitute a crime,
he shall be prosecuted, according to law, for his criminal
liabilities in addition to his compensation for the
damages suffered by the infringee.
Article 60. The State functionaries
for the registration, administration and reexamination
of trademarks must handle cases according to law, be
incorruptable and disciplined, devoted to their duties
and courteous and honest in their provision of service.
The State functionaries of the
Trademark Office and the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board and those working for the registration, administration
and reexamination of trademarks shall not practice as
trademark agent and engage in any activity to manufacture
and market goods.
Article 61. The administrative
authority for industry and commerce shall establish
and amplify its internal supervision system to supervise
and inspect the State functionaries for the registration,
administration and reexamination of trademarks in their
implementation of the laws and administrative regulations
and in their observation of the discipline.
Article 62. Where any State
functionary for the registration, administration and
reexamination of trademarks neglects his duty, abuses
his power, engages in malpractice for personal gain,
handles the registration, administration and reexamination
of trademarks in violation of law, accepts money or
material wealth from any interested party or seeks illicit
interest, which constitutes a crime, he or she shall
be prosecuted for his or her criminal liability. If
the case is not serious enough to constitute a crime,
he or she shall be given disciplinary sanction according
to law.
Chapter VIII. Supplementary
Provisions
Article 63. Any application
for a trademark registration and for other matters concerning
a trademark shall be subject to payment of the fees
as prescribed. The schedule of fees shall be prescribed
separately.
Article 64. This Law shall
enter into force on March 1, 1983. The "Regulations
Governing Trademarks" promulgated by the State Council
on April 10, 1963 shall be abrogated on the same date,
and any other provisions concerning trademarks contrary
to this Law shall cease to be effective at the same
time.
Trademarks registered before this
Law enters into force shall continue to be valid.
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