When a trademark application is suspended by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”), the applicant should understand both the basis for the suspension and whether a response at that stage is advisable. This articles outlines the principal legal and strategic considerations.
A suspension inquiry commonly arises where a prior-filed application may present a likelihood of confusion under Section 2(d) of the Trademark Act. As reflected in a typical suspension notice, the USPTO may suspend examination due to a previously filed application with an earlier priority date; if that application registers, it may support a refusal; and examination is deferred until the earlier-filed application either registers or abandons. No response is required during suspension, although a voluntary submission is permitted.
In practice, suspension inquiries often function as an administrative mechanism. Examining attorneys frequently use suspension to defer substantive analysis until the status of earlier-filed applications is resolved. Accordingly, a suspension should not be interpreted as a final determination on likelihood of confusion.
Although a response is optional, the decision warrants careful evaluation.
Deferral and monitoring may be appropriate where the prior-filed application appears likely to abandon, the cited application has identifiable weaknesses (for example, limited use or narrow scope), or timing considerations favor delay over early argument. This approach may conserve resources and allow the issue to resolve without intervention.
A substantive response may be advantageous where there are strong arguments against likelihood of confusion, the marks differ materially in commercial impression, goods or services, or trade channels, or shared elements are demonstrably weak or commonly used. A well-supported submission at this stage can position the application favorably once examination resumes.
Direct communication with the examining attorney is an underutilized but often effective strategy. A telephone discussion can clarify issues and test arguments in advance; reasoned, evidence-based positions are frequently given meaningful consideration; and, in appropriate cases, examiners may reconsider or narrow their concerns. Such engagement can improve efficiency and, in some instances, outcome. Additionally, it is important to let the Examiner know if litigation is pending or being considered as that may “nudge” the examiner to take a closer look at the rejection.
Suspension is generally procedural rather than dispositive. A response is optional but may be strategically beneficial. The decision to respond should be based on a case-specific assessment. Examiner communication can be a valuable component of strategy.
A suspension inquiry represents a temporary pause, not a final barrier. The appropriate course depends on whether immediate action will advance the applicant’s position or whether deferral is more advantageous. A tailored evaluation of the cited application and the applicant’s mark remains essential to determining the optimal strategy.
To learn more about Derek Fahey, Esq., the author of this article, click HERE.
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