Legal Question in Intellectual Property in New York

Domain v. Trademark

Here is the fact pattern.

A business associate owns a domain name for 10 years. I want to now trademark the name. Both business purposes are the same. Can he assert that he owns the commerical rights to the name even if I trademark it now or may I own the rights to it. Again, both businesses are the same.


Asked on 5/12/08, 12:05 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

John Friedman Law Office of John K. Friedman

Re: Domain v. Trademark

by using the domain name for 10 years on the Internet, your associate has created a common law trademark in the name and you cannot trademark it effectively. That's not to say that you can't file and receive the trademark if a particularly lazy examiner receives the file. But, if you try to enforce it, your associate (or any third-party) can raise as a defense that you are not the owner of a valid registered trademark. Moreover, if you try to enforce it against your associate -- knowing full well that s/he has been using the name for 10 years in interstate commerce (i.e. on the 'net) then you open yourself to possible sanctions and his/her legal fees as well as liability for trademark infringement by the associate who is the rightful owner of the trademark.

Better luck next time.

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Answered on 5/12/08, 12:13 pm
Kristen Browde Browde Law, P.C.

Re: Domain v. Trademark

The facts you've provided do not offer sufficient information to determine trademark rights. The primary question in trademark is first use in interstate commerce, modified by whether the mark has developed identification as an indicator of a particular source of origin for a product or goods.

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Answered on 5/12/08, 12:25 pm


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