CALL US: 206.533.3854
CALL US  206.533.3854
AEON Law logo full color transparent

Trademark Office Tells Chinese Firm to Stop Breaking US Filing Rules

USPTO
Threatens Chinese company
For trademark filings

The US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has issued an Order to Show Cause (OSC) against Yusha Zhang and the Shenzhen Huanyee Intellectual Property Co., Ltd. as to why Zhang and her company’s employees should not be sanctioned for engaging in unauthorized practice before the USPTO.

As we explained in a previous blog,

the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) recently issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking announcing that foreign applicants will no longer be able to represent themselves before the USPTO and Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB).

Under the new rule, 37 C.F.R. § 11.14(c)(2), “Individuals who are not attorneys are not recognized to practice before the Office in trademark and other non-patent matters…”

Also,

only attorneys admitted to practice before the bar of the highest court of a U.S. state or jurisdiction may practice before the USPTO in trademark matters on behalf of others.

As we explained,

this rule change came about because of the boom in foreign trademark filings – from 19% in 2015 to 26% in 2017. 44% of those filings in 2017 were by foreign applicants who filed pro se (without a lawyer), and many filings were of low quality, with missing or erroneous information, swamping the resources of the USPTO and clogging up the system.

The OSC letter to Zhang says that,

you and your employees are believed to be engaging in unauthorized practice before the USPTO in trademark matters, providing false information to the USPTO by means of entering the signatures of thousands of third parties on trademark submissions, and providing false, fictitious, or fraudulent information in trademark submissions with the intent to circumvent the USPTO Rules.

According to the USPTO,

Huanyee is a China-based organization that describes itself as specializing in registering trademarks in China. However, the company also boasts on the Huanyee website that it has filed more than 30,000 foreign trademark applications, including in the United States. While the Huanyee website also includes photographs of people identified as “Nyxia” and “Gaulle,” identifying them as “U.S. attorneys,” the USPTO is unaware of any U.S. trademark application or registration listing an email address associated with Huanyee that includes attorney information for any such persons. Indeed, the USPTO could not locate any information to suggest that you or any of your employees are attorneys qualified to practice before the USPTO in trademark matters.

The OSC includes an attachment with more than 100 pages of U.S. Trademark Serial Numbers believed to include submissions made by Zhang and her employees.

The USPTO threatened to sanction Zhang and her employees by:

1. Permanently precluding her and her employees from submitting trademark-related documents on behalf of themselves or others;

2. Striking or otherwise giving no weight to all trademark-related documents submitted by her or her employees;

3. Removing correspondence information associated with her and her employees from the USPTO’s database in all applications and/or registrations;

4. Directing the USPTO’s Office of the Chief Information Officer to permanently deactivate any USPTO accounts in which contact information related to her or her employees appears, and to take all reasonable efforts to prevent her or her employees from creating or activating further accounts;

5. Terminating all ongoing proceedings containing submissions filed by her or her employees, specifically, abandoning all trademark applications filed via MyUSPTO accounts registered to her or her employees, as the applications were apparently filed for improper purposes; and

6. Continuing to strike documents, remove information, deactivate accounts, and terminate proceedings containing submissions later found to have been filed by her or her employees.

As this situation shows, foreign business entities looking to register their trademarks in the US would be wise to work with a law firm actually based in the US.


Just like the haiku above, we like to keep our posts short and sweet. Hopefully, you found this bite-sized information helpful. If you would like more information, please do not hesitate to contact us here.

Related Articles

Federal Circuit Finds No Motive to Combine in Laser Projector Patent Case

The Federal Circuit has reversed a finding by the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB or Board) that certain challenged claims of a patent for ...
Read More

Federal Circuit Affirms Blockchain Gem Patent Is Invalid

The Federal Circuit has affirmed a lower court’s decision finding the claims of a patent for preventing gemstone counterfeiting invalid. The case is Rady v. ...
Read More

Tennessee Passes Law Against AI Voice Copies

The state of Tennessee has passed a law against the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to copy a person’s voice. The law, signed on March ...
Read More

Let's work together.

Contact us to set up a meeting with an attorney or team member.

Stay Informed

Sign up to receive Patent Poetry—a monthly roundup of key IP issues in our signature haiku format. Four articles (only 68 syllables); zero hassle.

SECTORS

HIGH
TECHNOLOGY

Artificial Intelligence

Blockchain & Cryptocurrency

Computer Technology & Software

Consumer Electronics

Electrical Devices

MECHANICAL
& PRODUCTS​

Cleantech

Mechanical Devices

Consumer & Retail Products

Hardware & Tools

Toys & Games

LIFE SCIENCES
& CHEMISTRY​

Biotechnology

Chemical Compounds

Digital Health

Healthcare Products

Pharmaceuticals

BRANDING
& CREATIVE​

Books & Publications

Brand Creation

Luxury Products

Photography & Video

Product Design

SERVICES

PROTECT

DEAL

DEFEND