Friday 28 October 2016

Registering El Chapo™

It was widely reported last month that the Mexican Institute of Industrial Property (“IMPI”) had recently denied an application by wanted drug kingpin Joaquin “Chapo” Guzman to trademark his name. According to reports, the IMPI had also denied two applications for the marks “Joaquin El Chapo Guzman” and “El Chapo Guzman” in 2011.

As of February 10, 2016, there are no Canadian trademark applications pending for “El Chapo”, while the United States Trademark Database does have two pending applications and one registration in association with graphic T-shirts. A key distinction is that the owners of these marks do not appear to be related to Mr. Guzman.

Under Canadian trademark law, there is a good possibility that the proposed marks “Joaquin El Chapo Guzman” and “El Chapo Guzman” would also have been denied on the basis that the marks are “primarily merely the name or the surname of an individual who is living or has died within the preceding thirty years” regardless of whether the applicant is related to Mr. Guzman. It is unlikely however that a similar objection to the proposed mark “El Chapo” would be made based on the Canadian Trademark Office’s current practices.

Although Canada’s Trademarks Act does include a provision at Paragraph 9.1(j) prohibiting the registration of any “scandalous, obscene or immoral word or device”, it is unlikely this prohibition would be raised during examination based on the prior jurisprudence. The threshold on whether a mark is scandalous, obscene or immoral appears to be fairly high, based on the Registrar’s decision in 2014 to issue a Notice of Approval for the design mark F CANCER & Design.[1]

It remains to be seen whether “El Chapo” can be registered as a trademark in Canada, although the Canadian registration for BILLY THE KID is consistent with the U.S. position that such marks are registerable.




[1] Note: this application was successfully opposed by an individual who was able to asset superior common law rights to the mark