In
United States trademark law, the Supplemental Register is the secondary register of
trademarks maintained by the
United States Patent and Trademark Office. It was established in 1946 by Subchapter II of the
Lanham Act, to allow the domestic registration of trademarks that do not meet all the requirements for registration on the
Principal Register, so that the holder(s) of such a mark could register it in another country. This was necessary because under the
Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property foreign registration was not permitted in the absence of domestic registration, and the trademark laws of countries outside the U.S. often have less stringent registration requirements for marks.
The only requirement for registration on the Supplemental Register is that a mark be ''capable'' of distinguishing goods or services, not that it ''actually serve'' such a function.
Owners of the registrations on the Supplemental Register are still permitted to sue for
trademark infringement in federal court based upon their statutory rights created by owning a federal registration, but must prove that the registered term actually functions as mark. Unlike a mark registered on the
Principal Register, the Supplemental Registration provides no evidence of trademark rights in the registered term in a court proceeding.
The supplemental registration is contestable, i.e., it may be cancelled if a third party proves earlier use or superior rights.
A Supplemental Register listing does not in itself provide evidence that the listed mark is actually a trademark for purposes of the
Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP).
References
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External links
Explanation of the Supplemental Register from QuizLawFrom the
Legal Information Institute
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