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New USPTO Guide Clarifying Examination Evidentiary Standard for Marks Refused as Generic
The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) issued a new guide clarifying the examination evidentiary standard for marks refused for genericness.[1] The new guide lowers an Examining Attorneyโs evidentiary burden for supporting a genericness refusal from a โclear evidenceโ standard to a โreasonable basisโ standard.[2]
The USPTO lowered an Examining Attorneyโs evidentiary burden to resolve confusion within the Federal Circuit about the meaning of โclear evidence.โ[3] The Federal Circuit first adopted the โclear evidenceโ standard for a genericness refusal in In re Merril Lynch, Pierce, Fenner, and Smith, Inc.[4] In that case, the Court reasoned that ยง 1305.04 of the Trademark Manual of Examining Procedure (TMEP) โrequired a showing based on โclear evidence of generic use.โโ[5] The Federal Circuit continued enforcing this higher evidentiary burden for Examining Attorneys despite there being a lower โstandard for a third party to remove a presumptively valid registered mark from the registerโ based on genericness.[6]
The USPTO, in lowering the Examinerโs evidentiary burden, argued that โthe term โclearโ was meant to convey the ordinary meaning of the term, not an evidentiary burden, [and] was not intended by the TMEP.โ[7] Further, the USPTO pointed out that the Federal Circuit has consistently required only a rational basis standard for other types of refusals by Examining Attorneys.[8] Thus, to be consistent, the โclear evidenceโ standard will no longer be used for genericness refusals issued by Examining Attorneys.
The USPTOโs decision to lower the examination evidentiary standard for generic marks comes after the recent Booking.com decision.[9] In that case, the Supreme Court of the United States rejected the USPTOโs rule โthat โgeneric.comโ terms are generic names.โ[10] Instead, the Court held that whether any given โgeneric.comโ term is generic depends on consumer perception of the term, finding that Booking.com indicated source origin and was, therefore, not generic.[11]
While the Booking.com decision may perhaps have opened the doors for possible registration of more โgeneric.comโ marks, the USPTOโs new guidance may just shut many of those doors. Lowering an Examining Attorneyโs burden for supporting a genericness refusal may lead to an increase in genericness refusals, including โgeneric.comโ mark refusals, since it is now easier for Examiners to reject generic marks. But if an applicant can show evidence of consumer perception of a purportedly generic designation as an indicator of source origin, as was held in the Booking.com case, they may just be able to keep those doors open. Time will tell.
[1] See Examination Guide 1-22 โClarification of Examination Evidentiary Standard for Marks Refused as Generic,โ USPTO (May 2022).
[2] Id. at 1.
[3] Id.
[4] Id. at 2.
[5] Id.
[6] Id. n.11.
[7] Id. at 2.
[8] Id.
[9] See USPTO v. Booking.com B.V., 140 S. Ct. 2298 (2020).
[10] Id. at 2307.
[11] Id.