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  1. 3 de feb. de 2010 · Specifically, the Plaintiff will have a 30-day period to present its case in chief, after this, the defendant will have 30-days to present its case and the plaintiff will finally have 15 days to present any rebuttal evidence. There is a 30-day interval between each testimony period.

  2. Instead, an opposition trial is conducted through “testimony periods” as follows: (1) the opposer has a 30-day testimony period in which to submit its trial evidence; (2) the applicant then has a 30-day testimony period to submit its evidence; and (3) the opposer has a 15-day to submit rebuttal evidence.

  3. Here’s how testimony periods work: First, the Opposer has a 30-day testimony period to submit evidence. Then, the Applicant has a 30-day testimony period to submit evidence, after which, the Opposer has 15 days to submit rebuttal evidence.

  4. (b)(1) The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board will schedule a testimony period for the plaintiff to present its case in chief, a testimony period for the defendant to present its case and to meet the case of the plaintiff, and a testimony period for the plaintiff to present evidence in rebuttal.

  5. Testimony period: Dissimilar to trademark litigation, the TTAB testimony period involves alternating periods where both sides will present their evidence. The party opposing the trademark submits all evidence over a 30-day period.

  6. 12 de ene. de 2017 · Testimony Period. Currently, testimony submitted during the testimony period requires parties to take oral depositions of their witnesses, and the opposing party has the right to a live cross-examination. Parties can offer testimony by declaration only by stipulation.

  7. 2 de dic. de 2021 · Testimony period – This is where both parties have an opportunity to present their evidence. The opposing party gets a 30-day period, followed by the applicant’s 30-period, followed by the opposing parties 15-day period to rebut.