Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks
Patent and Trademark Office (P.T.O.)
RE: TRADEMARK APPLICATION OF LEGENDARY, INC.
92-203
September, 30, 1992
*1 Petition Filed: July 16, 1992
For: $UCCESS
Serial No. 74/179614
Filing Date: June 25, 1991
Attorney for Petitioner
William D. Breneman
Breneman & Georges
Jeffrey M. Samuels
Assistant Commissioner for Trademarks
On Petition
Legendary, Inc., through
its attorney, William D. Breneman, has petitioned the Commissioner to reverse
the Examining Attorney's action holding the above application to be abandoned
for failure to file a proper response to an Office action. Counsel further
requests reconsideration of the Managing Attorney's refusal of his request to
withdraw as attorney of record. Trademark Rule 2.146(a)(3) provides authority
for the requested review.
Facts
Applicant filed this
application on June 25, 1991, with a power of attorney appointing Mr. Breneman
to prosecute the application. An Office action was mailed November 7, 1991.
Pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Trademark Act, a response was due on or before
May 7, 1992.
On May 7, 1992, counsel
filed a "Response to November 7, 1991 Office Action," in which he
stated that he was concurrently filing a request to withdraw as counsel; that he
had tried numerous times to contact applicant to receive instructions regarding
a response to the Office action; that applicant had not contacted him since December of 1991; and that
consequently he had not been able to obtain the authorization and instructions
necessary to respond to the Office action. Counsel requested that a further
Office action be issued and sent directly to applicant.
Concurrently, on May 7,
1992, counsel filed a Request to Withdraw as Counsel, in which he stated that
due to a breakdown in communications with applicant it was necessary to
withdraw as counsel; that he had attempted to contact applicant by telephone
and by mail since January 21, 1992; that his telephone calls were not returned;
that no response to written correspondence was received; and that he had
received no instructions for responding to the Office action.
In an Office action
mailed June 17, 1992, the Examining Attorney notified applicant that the
response filed May 7, 1992 was deemed incomplete, because it did not respond to
the issues raised in the Office action, and that the application was abandoned,
pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 2.65.
In another letter dated
June 17, 1992, the Managing Attorney denied counsel's request to withdraw as
attorney of record, because (1) the request to withdraw did not include a
statement that the applicant had been given due notice of the withdrawal from
employment; (2) the request did not include a statement that all papers and
property in the attorney's file concerning the prosecution of the application
had been delivered to the applicant; and (3) there was insufficient time before the expiration date of
the response period for the applicant to obtain other representation.
*2 This petition
was filed July 16, 1992. Petitioner contends that the response filed May 7,
1992 is complete because it provides counsel's reason for withdrawing and
responds to the Office action to the best of counsel's ability. Counsel asserts
that applicant would not return his phone calls due to a complete breakdown in
communications; that applicant would not indicate which amendments should be
made to the application; and that counsel had no alternative but to file a
response which was "as complete as possible under the circumstances,"
and to request withdrawal as attorney of record.
Counsel further requests
reconsideration of his request to withdraw as attorney of record. In a document
entitled "Supplement to Withdraw as Counsel," he asserts that copies
of all papers were supplied to the applicant soon after they were filed or
received from the Office, and that copies of all papers and property concerning
the prosecution of the application were again made and delivered to applicant
by Federal Express on June 24, 1992.
Decision
Trademark Rule 2.146(a)(3)
permits the Commissioner to invoke his supervisory authority in appropriate
circumstances. However, the Commissioner will reverse the action of an Examining Attorney only where
there has been a clear error or abuse of discretion. In re Richards-Wilcox
Manufacturing Co., 181 USPQ 735 (Comm'r Pats.1974); Ex parte Peerless
Confection Co., 142 USPQ 278 (Comm'r Pats.1964). No clear error or abuse of
discretion has occurred in the instant case.
Pursuant to Section 12 of
the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1062, an
applicant must respond to an Office action within six months of the mailing
date in order to avoid abandonment. Under Rule 2.65(a), 37 C.F.R. § 2.65(a), an application is deemed abandoned
when an applicant's response, although received within the six months' response
period, is incomplete or insufficient, and thus not responsive to the Office
action. Trademark Manual of Examining Procedure (TMEP) § 1112.02(a).
In its response filed May
7, 1992, petitioner addressed none of the issues raised in the Office action.
It merely detailed a "breakdown in communications" between applicant
and its attorney, and requested issuance of a new Office action. This is not a
proper response to an Office action. The Examining Attorney correctly concluded
that the response was incomplete, pursuant to Trademark Rule 2.65(a).
The denial of counsel's
request to withdraw as attorney of record was also proper. Pursuant to
Trademark Rule 2.19(b), 37 C.F.R. §
2.19(b), an individual authorized to represent an applicant in a
trademark case may withdraw upon application
to and approval by the Commissioner. However, Rule 10.40(a), 37 C.F.R. § 10.40(a), provides that a practitioner shall
not withdraw from employment until the practitioner has taken reasonable steps
to avoid forseeable prejudice to the rights of the applicant. Therefore, any
request to withdraw as counsel must be accompanied by (1) a statement of the
reasons for the request for withdrawal; (2) a statement that the attorney has
given the applicant due notice of the withdrawal from employment; and (3) a
statement that the attorney has delivered to the applicant all papers and
property in the attorney's file concerning the prosecution of the application.
To avoid prejudice to the applicant, the Office normally denies any request for
withdrawal if there is less than 30 days remaining in the period for response
to an outstanding Office action, so the applicant will have sufficient time to
obtain new counsel. TMEP § 602.03(a).
*3 In this case,
the request to withdraw was not filed until the last day of the period for
response to the Office action, and counsel stated neither that the applicant
was given due notice of counsel's withdrawal from employment, nor that he had
delivered to the applicant all papers and property in his file concerning the
prosecution of the application. The request for withdrawal was properly denied.
It would be patently unfair to applicant to permit counsel to cure the defects
in his request for withdrawal after the abandonment of the application.
The petition is denied. The application was properly abandoned.
26 U.S.P.Q.2d 1478
END OF DOCUMENT