(b) The applicant shall provide any additional  pertinent  information
requested  by the secretary including a description of a design mark and
may make, or authorize the secretary to make,  such  amendments  to  the
application as may be reasonably requested by the secretary or deemed by
the applicant to be advisable to respond to any rejection or objection.
  (c)   The   secretary   may  require  the  applicant  to  disclaim  an
unregistrable  component  of  a  mark  otherwise  registrable,  and   an
applicant  may  voluntarily  disclaim a component of a mark sought to be
registered. No disclaimer shall prejudice or affect the  applicant's  or
registrant's   rights   then  existing  or  thereafter  arising  in  the
disclaimed  matter,  or  the  applicant's  or  registrant's  rights   of
registration on another application if the disclaimed matter be or shall
have  become  distinctive  of  the  applicant's or registrant's goods or
services.
  (d) Amendments may be made  by  the  secretary  upon  the  application
submitted  by  the  applicant  upon  applicant's  agreement;  or a fresh
application may be required to be submitted.
  (e) If the applicant is found not to be entitled to registration,  the
secretary  shall  advise  the  applicant  thereof  and  of  the  reasons
therefor. The applicant shall have a reasonable period of time specified
by the secretary in which to reply or to amend the application, in which
event the application shall then be reexamined.  This procedure  may  be
repeated  until  (1)  the  secretary finally refuses registration of the
mark or (2) the applicant fails to reply or amend within  the  specified
period,   whereupon  the  application  shall  be  deemed  to  have  been
abandoned.
  (f) If the secretary finally refuses registration  of  the  mark,  the
applicant may commence a proceeding pursuant to article seventy-eight of
the   civil  practice  law  and  rules  for  an  order  to  compel  such
registration.   Such writ may be  granted,  but  without  costs  to  the
secretary,  on proof that all the statements in the application are true
and that the mark is otherwise entitled to registration.
  (g) In the instance of applications concurrently  being  processed  by
the  secretary  seeking  registration of the same or confusingly similar
marks for the same or related goods or  services,  the  secretary  shall
grant priority to the applications in order of filing.  If a prior-filed
application   is  granted  a  registration,  the  other  application  or
applications shall then be rejected. Any rejected applicant may bring an
action for cancellation of the registration upon  grounds  of  prior  or
superior  rights  to the mark, in accordance with the provisions of this
article.
Structure New York Laws
360-B - Application for Registration.
360-C - Filing of Applications.
360-D - Certificate of Registration.
360-F - Assignments, Changes of Name and Other Instruments.
360-J - Fraudulent Registration.
360-L - Injury to Business Reputation; Dilution.
360-N - Forum for Actions Regarding Registration; Service on Out of State Registrants.