The legal basis for filing an application for registration of a
mark.
The
Trademark Act sets out five filing bases, and an applicant must specify and
meet the requirements of one or more bases before the mark will be approved for publication for opposition or registration on the
Supplemental Register. The five bases are: (1)
use of a mark in commerce under §1(a) of
the Act; (2) bona fide
intention to use a mark in commerce under §1(b) of the Act; (3) a claim of priority, based on an earlier-filed foreign application under §44(d) of the Act; (4) registration of a mark in the applicant’s country of origin under §44(e) of the Act;
and (5) extension of protection of an international registration to the United States, under §66(a)
of the Act and the
Madrid Protocol.
The requirements for the bases are set forth in
Trademark Rule 2.34.
-- see
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If no basis is set forth in the original
application for registration, the examining attorney will issue an
Office action requiring the applicant to specify a basis and meet all requirements for the basis. In applications under §§1 and 44, the applicant may claim more than one basis, and/or may add or substitute a basis after filing the application.
Context: Trademark