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(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 maintain the reputation
of their trademarks, with a view to protecting
the interests of consumers, producers and traders
and to promoting the development of 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 administrative authority for industry and
commerce under the State Council shall establish
a Trademark Review and Adjudication Board which
shall be responsible for handling matters of trademark
disputes.
Article 3.
A registered trademark, include a trademark for
goods, a service mark, a collective mark and a
certification mark, refers to a trademarks that
have been approved and registered by the Trademark
Office. The trademark registrants shall enjoy
the exclusive right to use the marks, which shall
be protected by law.
In this law, a collective mark refers to a mark
which is registered in the name of a group, an
association or any other organization and to be
used by its members in their commercial activities
to indicate their membership.
In this law, a certification mark refers to a
mark which is controlled by an organization capable
of supervision a particular type of goods or service
which is used in respect of goods or services
by other organizations or individuals who do not
belong to the said organization, with a view to
certifying the origin, raw material, mode of manufacture
of goods or performance of services, quality or
other characteristics of the goods or services.
Rules for the particular matters of registration
and administration of collective and certification
marks shall be promulgated by the administrative
authority for industry and commerce under the
State Council.
Article 4.
Any natural person, legal person or other organization,
intending to acquire the exclusive right to use
a trademark for the goods produced, manufactured,
processed, selected or marketed by him or it,
shall file an application for the registration
of the trademark with the Trademark Office.
Any natural person, legal person or other organization,
intending to acquire the exclusive right to use
a service mark for the service provided by him
or it, shall file an application for the registration
of the service mark with the Trademark Office.
Provisions made in this law concerning trademarks
shall apply to service marks.
Article 5. Two
or more natural persons, legal entities or other
organizations 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. The
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. Any
visual sign capable of distinguishing the goods
or service of one natural person, legal person
or any other organization from those of others,
including words, devices, letters of numerals,
three-dimensional symbols, combinations of colors
or any combination of the above elements may be
applied for the registration of a trademark.
Article 9. Where
a trademark is applied for registration, it shall
be so distinctive as to be distinguishable and
it shall not conflict with any other legal rights
acquired earlier by others.
The registrant of a trademark has the right to
use the words of "registered trademark"
or other registration sign to indicate that his
or its trademark is registered.
Article 10. The
following words or devices 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; and those identical with the names of
particular venues where the Central State government
organizations are located, or with the names or
graphs of the symbolic buildings or the Central
State government organizations;
(2) those identical with or similar to the State
names, national flags, national emblems or military
flags of foreign countries, except that consent
has been given by the relevant country’s government;
(3) those identical with or similar to the names,
flags or emblems or names, of international intergovernmental
organizations, except that the organizations 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 indicating control and warranty,
except that the use thereof is otherwise authorized;
(5) those identical with or similar to the names
or symbols 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 or services;
(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 names as
have otherwise meanings or as an element of a
collective mark or a certification mark 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 a trademark:
(1) those which consist exclusively of generic
names, designs or models of the goods in respect
of which the trademark is used;
(2) those which consist exclusively of signs or
indications that have direct reference to the
quality, main raw materials, function, intended
purpose, weight, quantity or other characteristics
of goods or services;
(3) those which are devoid of any distinctive
character.
Where trademarks under the preceding paragraphs
have acquired distinctiveness through use and
become easily distinguishable, they may be registered
as trademarks.
Article 12. Where
a three-dimensional sign is applied for the registration
of a trademark, it shall not be registered if
it consists exclusively of the shape which results
from the nature of the goods themselves, the shape
of goods which is necessary to obtain a technical
result, or the shape which gives substantial value
to the goods.
Article 13. A
trademark that is applied for registration in
identical or similar goods shall not be registered
and its use shall be prohibited, if it is a reproduction,
an imitation or a translation, of another party’s
well-known mark that is not registered in China
and it is liable to create confusion.
A trademark that is applied for registration in
non-identical or dissimilar goods shall not be
registered and its use shall be prohibited, if
it is a reproduction, an imitation or a translation,
of a well-known mark which is registered in China,
misleads the public, and the interests of the
registrant of the well-known mark are likely to
be damaged by such use.
Article 14. In
determining whether a mark is well-known or not,
the following factors shall be considered:
(1) the degree of knowledge of the relative public;
(2) the duration of use;
(3) the duration of time, degree and geographical
range of any publicity of the mark;
(4) any record of the mark being protected as
a well-known mark;
(5) other factors which makes the mark well-known.
Article 15.
Where the agent or representative of a person
who is the owner of a mark applies, without such
owner’s authorization, for the registration of
the mark in his own name, if the owner opposes
the registration applied for, the application
shall be refused and the use of the mark shall
be prohibited.
Article 16. Where a trademark
contains or consists of a geographic indication
which respect to goods not originating in the
place indicated, misleading the public as to the
true place of origin, the application for registration
shall be refused and the use of the mark shall
be prohibited. But for those marks that have obtained
registration in good faith shall continue to be
valid.
Geographical indications mentioned in the preceding
paragraph are indications that identify a particular
good as origination in a region, where a given
quality, reputation or other characteristic of
the goods is essentially attributable to its natural
or human factors.
Article 17. Any
foreigner 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
foreigner or foreign enterprise intending to apply
for the registration of a trademark or for any
other matters concerning a trademark in China
shall entrust any of such organizations as recognized
to be qualified for trademark agency by the State
to act as his or its 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 apply 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 mark in China
who has previously duly filed an application to
register the same mark in connection with the
same goods in a foreign country may enjoy the
right of priority in accordance with any agreement
concluded between the PRC and the foreign country
concerned, or with the international treaty to
which both countries are parties, or on the basis
of the principle of reciprocity, provided that
the application in China is filed within six months
from the date on which the application was first
filed in the foreign country.
Anyone claiming the right of priority according
to the preceding paragraph shall so state in writing
at the time of filing the application and shall
submit, within three months, a copy of the original
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
an application uses a trademark for the first
time on goods displayed at an international exhibition
sponsored or recognized by the Chinese government,
he or it may claim the right of priority, provided
he or it files an application for the registration
of the mark within six moths from the date of
the exhibition.
Anyone claiming the right of priority in accordance
with the provision in the preceding paragraph
shall so state in writing at the time of filing
the application, and shall submit, within three
months, the name of the exhibition, evidence certifying
the use of the mark on the goods displayed, and
documents validation the date of the exhibition.
An applicant who fails to claim in writing or
to submit the documents required within the specified
period shall be deemed as not having claimed the
right of priority.
Article 26. Matters
declared and documents provided for the purpose
of the application for the registration of a trademark
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 party 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 at the expiration of the expiration of the
specified period, the registration shall be approved,
a certificate of trademark registration shall
be issued and the trademark shall be published.
Article 31. No
trademark application shall infringe upon another
party’s existing prior rights. Nor shall an applicant
register in an unfair means a mark that is already
in use by another party and has certain influence.
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 or it may, within fifteen
days from receipt of the notification, apply for
a review to the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board, which shall make a decision and notify
the applicant of the same in writing.
Where any party concerned is dissatisfied with
the decision of the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board, he or it may within 30 days from receipt
of the corresponding notice, institute legal proceedings
with 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 the opposed state facts
and grounds, and shall, after investigation and
verification, make a ruling. Where any party is
dissatisfied, he or it may, within fifteen days
from receipt of the notification, apply for a
review to the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board, which shall make a ruling and notify both
the opponent and the opposed in writing.
Where any interested party is dissatisfied with
the ruling of the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board, he or it may, within 30 days from the receipt
of the notice, institute legal proceedings with
the people’s court. The People's Court shall notify
the other party in the trademark review proceedings
to be a third party to the ligigation.
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.
If it is decided that the opposition is not justified,
the registration shall be approved, a certificate
of trademark registration shall be issued and
the trademark shall be published. If it is decided
that the opposition is justified, no registration
shall be approved.
Where it is decided that the opposition is not
justified and the mark shall be registered, the
date on which the applicant acquires the mark’s
exclusive right of use shall be counted from the
day three months after it’s preliminary publication.
Article 35. Application
for trademark registration and trademark registration
review shall be examined without delay.
Article 36. Where
a trademark applicant or trademark registrant
finds an obvious error in the documents of application
or registration, he or it may apply to have it
corrected. The Trademark Office shall ex officio
make corrections in accordance with law and notify
the party concerned.
The correction of errors provided in the preceding
paragraph shall not involve substantive matters
in the application or registration documents.
Chapter IV. Renewal,
Assignment and Licensing of Registered Trademarks
Article 37. The
period of validity of a registered trademark shall
be ten years, counted from the date of approval
of the registration.
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 sign an agreement 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. The assignee
shall enjoy the exclusive right to use the mark
from the date of publication.
Article 40. Any
trademark registrant may, by signing a trademark
license contract, authorize other persons to use
his or its 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 authorized to use a registered
trademark of another party, 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 organization 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, the owner of the mark or any interested
party may, within five years from the date of
registration, request the Trademark Review and
Adjudication Board to make an adjudication to
cancel such a registered trademark.
Where a registration was obtained in bad faith,
the owner of a well-known trademark shall not
be bound by the five-year limitation.
In addition to those cases as provided in the
preceding two paragraphs, a prior registrant 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 parties concerned 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 parties concerned of the same in writing.
Where any party concerned is dissatisfied with
the decision of the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board, he or it may, within thirty days from receipt
of the notice, institute legal proceedings in
the People's Court. The People's Court shall notify
the other party in the trademark adjudication
proceeding to be a third party to the litigation.
Chapter VI. Administration
of the Use of Trademarks
Article 44. Where
any person who uses a registered trademark has
committed any of the following acts, 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);
(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;
(3) where the manufacture is of rough or poor,
or where superior quality is replaced by inferior
quality, so that consumers are deceived.
Article 49.
Any party concerned 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
with the Trademark Review and Adjudication Board,
which shall make a decision and notify the applicant
in writing.
Where any interested party dissatisfied with the
decision of the Trademark Review and Adjudication
Board, he or it may, within 30 days from receipt
of the notice, institute legal proceedings in
the People's Court.
Article 50. Any
interested 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 no performance of the decision
has been made 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) using a trademark that is identical with or
similar to a registered trademark in respect of
the same or similar goods without the authorization
from the trademark registrant;
(2) selling goods that infringe the exclusive
right to use a registered trademark;
(3) counterfeiting, or making, without authorization,
representations of a registered trademark of another
person, or selling such representations of a registered
trademark as were counterfeited, or made without
authorization;
(4) replacing another party’s registered trademark,
without authorization, and selling goods bearing
such a replaced trademark;
(5) causing, in other respects, prejudice to the
exclusive right of another person to use a registered
trademark.
Article 53. Where
a dispute arises after a party commits any of
such acts to infringe the exclusive right to use
a registered trademark as provided for in Article
52 of this Law, the parties involved shall settle
the dispute through consultation. Where the parties
refuse to pursue consultation or where consultation
has failed, the trademark registrant or interested
party may institute legal proceedings with the
People's Court, or request the administrative
authority for industry and commerce for actions.
The administrative authority for industry and
commerce shall, upon determining the trademark
infringement has taken place, order the infringer
to immediately stop the infringing act, confiscate
and destroy the infringing goods and any instruments
specifically used to manufacture the infringing
goods and counterfeit representations of the registered
trademarks, and even impose a fine. Where any
interested party is dissatisfied with the decision
of the administrative authority for industry and
commerce, he or it may, within 15 days from the
date of receipt of the notification, institute
legal proceedings with the people’s court in accordance
with the Administrative Procedural Law of the
People's Republic of China. If there are no legal
proceedings instituted or 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. Where a party so requests,
the administrative authority for industry and
commerce handling a dispute may mediate in settling
the amount of damages. Where mediation fails,
a party may institute legal proceedings with the
People's Court in accordance with the Civil Procedural
Law of the People's Republic of China.
Article 54.
The administrative authority for industry and
commerce has the power to investigate and handle
by law any conduct infringing upon the exclusive
right to use a registered trademark. Where a crime
is suspected to have been committed, the case
shall be promptly transferred to the judicial
authority to be dealt with in accordance with
law.
Article 55. When
investigating activities suspected of having infringed
upon another party’s exclusive right to use a
registered trademark, the administrative authority
for industry and commerce at or above the county
level may, based on the obtained evidences suspected
of illegal conduct or information supplied by
a member of the public, exercise the following
functions and authorities;
(1) to inquire of the interested about the case;
to investigate into such circumstances as involved
infringement upon other parties’ exclusive right
to use a registered trademark;
(2) to examine or reproduce the interested party’s
contracts, invoices and account books and other
materials as involved infringement upon other
parties’ exclusive right to use a registered trademark;
(3) to conduct an on-site inspection of the premises
where the party has carried out acts allegedly
infringing upon another party’s exclusive right
to use a registered trademark;
(4) to check up such articles as relate to the
infringing act and may seal or take into custody
articles which are proven to have infringed upon
another party’s exclusive right to use a registered
trademark.
When the administrative authority for industry
and commerce exercises such functions and powers
as enumerated in the preceding paragraph, the
interested parties shall assist and cooperate
and shall not refuse or obstruct to do so.
Article 56. The
amount of damages for infringement of the exclusive
right to use a registered trademark shall be the
profit that the infringer has earned through the
infringement during the period of the infringement
or the losses that the period of the infringee
has suffered through the infringement during the
period of the infringement, including any reasonable
expenses the infringee has incurred in his or
its efforts to stop the infringement.
Where the profit earned because by the infringer
or losses suffered by the infringee through the
infringement referred to in the preceding paragraph
can not be determined, the people’s court shall
decide an amount of damages not more than 500,000
yuan RMB, depending on the circumstances of the
infringing acts.
Where a party unknowingly sells goods that infringe
upon another party’s exclusive right to use a
registered trademark but is able to prove that
he or it has obtained the goods lawfully and is
able to identify the supplier, he or it shall
not be held liable for damages.
Article 57.
Where a trademark registrant or any interested
submits evidence proving that another party is
engaged in or will soon engage in actions that
infringe upon the former’s exclusive right to
use his or its registered trademark and that,
unless they are stopped promptly, it will cause
irreparable damages to its legitimate rights and
interests, he or it may, before filing a lawsuit,
apply to the people’s court for the granting of
an injunction prohibition the relevant acts and
taking measures for property preservation.
The People's Court handling the application under
the preceding paragraph shall apply the provisions
of Articles 93 to Article 96 and Article 99 of
the Civil Procedural Law of the People's Republic
of China.
Article 58.
With a view to prohibiting trademark infringing
acts and where evidences may be destroyed or lost
or become unobtainable in the future,a trademark
registrant or interested party may file an application
with the people's court for preservation of the
evidence before instituting legal proceedings
to the people's court.
The People's Court shall make a decision within
48 hours after receipt of the application. Where
the people’s court decides to provide preservative
measures, the decision shall be enforced immediately.
The People's Court may order the applicant to
provide guaranty. Where no guaranty provided,
the people’s court shall reject the application.
Where the applicant fails to institute legal proceedings
within 15 days after the people's court grants
the preservative measures, the people's court
shall rescind the said measures.
Article 59. Where
any party, without the authorization from the
trademark registrant, uses a trademark that is
identical with a registered trademark in respect
of the same goods, if it constitutes a crime,
the party shall be prosecuted, according to lae,
for its criminal liabilities in addition to compensating
the losses the infringee suffers.
Where any party counterfeits, or makes, without
authorization, representations of a registered
trademark of another party, or sells such representations
of a registered trademark as were counterfeited,
or made without authorization, if it constitutes
a crime, the party shall be prosecuted, according
to law, for its criminal liabilities.
Where any party sells goods that he knows bear
a counterfeited registered trademark, if it constitute
a crime, the party shall be prosecuted, according
to law, for its criminal liabilities in addition
to compensating the losses the infringee suffers.
Article 60. State
functionaries engaged in trademark registration,
administration and review shall be impartial in
implementing the law, incorruptible and self-disciplined,
devoted to their duties and shall be courteous
and honest in thjeir delivery of service.
State functionaries of the Trademark Office and
the Trademark Review and Adjudication Board and
other personnel engaged in trademark registration,
administration and review shall not be involved
in trademark agency services or in any activity
of manufacturing and trading goods.
Article 61. Administrative
authorities for industry and commerce shall establish
and perfect an internal supervisory system to
supervise and inspect the way state functionaries
responsible for trademark registration, administration
and review implement laws and administrative regulations
and observe disciplines.
Article 62.
Where state functionary engaged in trademark registration,
administration and review are derelict of duty,
abuse their power, and practice fraud for personal
gains; where they handle trademark registration,
administration and review matters in violation
of the law. Where they accept money or properties
from a party in a trademark matter; where they
seek improper gains; and where the case is so
serious as to constitute a crime. They shall be
prosecuted, according to law, for their criminal
liabilities. Where the case does not constitute
a crime, the person involved shall be subject
to administrative disciplinary measures 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.
(Translation by the Tradedemark Office of the
State Administration for Industry and Commerce
of the People’s Republic of China)
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