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I R A N C H A M B E R O F C O M M E R C E , I N D U S T R I E S & M I N E S |
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Iranian law regarding intellectual property recognizes the exclusive right of the use of a trademark only for the person who has registered the mark. The point is clear: if you, whether as a national or a foreigner, wish to have legal protection in the Iranian market and safeguard your firm's name, the registration of your trademark is a must. It helps to prevent the fraudulent marketing of your products or services. Let us now go into details to see how trademark rights are acquired in the Islamic Republic of Iran. How is a trademark defined
according to Iranian law? The Law of Registration of Marks and Patents, stipulates that a trademark is any type of logo, design, picture, number, letter, word, seal, wrapper, etc., adopted to identify and distinguish goods and services. Various types of marks which are chosen for identifying industrial, commercial, or agricultural products and goods can be registered. Service marks are also registerable. The essential requirement is that the mark presented for registration should be distinctive. Yes, there are. Article 4 of
the Law of Registration of Marks and Patents states that none of the following marks can
be registered in Iran: All Iranian or foreign nationals who are engaged in economic, commercial and service activities in the Islamic Republic of Iran can apply to register their marks. Persons who have enterprises outside Iran, can also benefit from the Law and register their marks provided the country to which the enterprise belongs, reciprocates the protection of Iranian trademarks by virtue of its domestic regulations or bilateral conventions. The applicant is required to specify the category of goods under which he wishes to register his trademark. There are 36 such classifications, divided into seven chapters, in Iranian law. Class 35 is for service marks, and class 36 covers goods not defined in other areas. A trademark shall be registered only in respect of particular goods in particular classes. Generally speaking, the registration of trademarks in the Islamic Republic of Iran is optional. But, according to a specially devised act, pharmaceutical products used in medicine or veterinary, canned or packaged foodstuffs, beverages, and cosmetics, whether produced in Iran or imported, must bear a registered trademark. Samples, and products imported for personal consumption are excluded from this regulation. Applicants desiring to register a trademark should refer in person or through an attorney to the Registration Office for Industrial Property, located in the city of Tehran, and file their request for obtaining a certificate of trademark registration. Applications are published in the Official Gazette; so that interested parties may inspect and, if needed, contest them. The applications are examined for format, content, and consistency in compliance with the relevant rules of registration. If the registrar rejects an application, the applicant may appeal to the court. According to Article 9 of the
Law, the registrar is authorized to reject the application if he realizes that: Any trademark, whether already registered or being presented for registration, may be contested by the person who claims that it belongs to him, or that the resemblance is so close that it may mislead the ordinary consumer. Any opposition to the registration of a trademark on the grounds of prior use or close resemblance, and/or claims relating to the infringement of a registered trademark may be filed with the General Courts of Tehran. The right to contest a trademark is in force for a period of three years starting from the actual date of its registration. After the lapse of this specific period of time, the registered mark becomes incontestable. As stated in Article 14 of the Law, a trademark's registration will be effective for a period of ten years from the date of filing the application form and may be renewed by the owner for similar periods. If, without a justifiable reason, a trademark has not been used commercially, either in Iran or in a foreign country, by the proprietor or his agent, within a period of three years commencing from the registration date, any interested party may apply for its cancellation. The proprietor of a trademark has the legal right to change the mark itself or the classification it refers to. However, in order to guarantee continued legal protection, such changes and modifications should be formally registered. Trademarks may be transferred either voluntarily by assignment or license, or involuntarily by death, bankruptcy or liquidation. For taking legal effect, the assignment and licensing of the trademark should be registered and recorded. The registration of a trademark gives the owner of the mark the exclusive right to its use in relation to the goods and services for which it is registered. The proprietor is entitled to take civil legal actions and/or lodge complaints involving legal penalties to prevent third parties from infringing his right of ownership. Remedies may include damages, costs, and an injunction preventing further violations. According to Article 529 and 530 of the Islamic Penal Code (Taazirat), commission of forgery or unauthorized use of registered trademarks shall incur civil liabilities and imprisonment of up to two years. punishment for the forgery of trademarks of governmental and municipal companies and establishment as well as using such forged trademarks varies from three to fifteen years and from six months to three years of imprisonment respectively. The Islamic Republic of Iran is a member of the International Convention for Protection of Industrial Property (also known as the Paris Convention).Parties to this agreement undertake to grant each other's nationals trademark and patent rights identical to those of their own nationals. Under the terms of the convention, if a foreign national makes an application for a trademark in his own country and within six months makes a similar application in another convention signatory country (as an example, Iran), the filing date shall be considered the same as that of the original application. This right of priority, in addition to the equality of treatment, is one of the primary benefits of the Paris Convention. |
[Laws]
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