Intellectual Property · Service

Legal IP

Legal IP covers the contractual and contentious dimension of intellectual property: licensing, assignment, enforcement and litigation. This is the practice that converts registered rights into commercial value and that defends those rights when they are infringed.

Licensing & assignment
Across all IP rights
Enforcement
C&D · customs · takedown
Litigation
Spanish courts & coordinated
Trade secrets
Confidential information
What we handle

Scope of work

Licensing

Intellectual property licensing across all categories of rights: trademark licensing, patent licensing, copyright licensing, software licensing, technology transfer and franchising structures.

Assignment

Assignment of intellectual property rights in standalone transactions and within corporate acquisitions, restructurings and intra-group transfers.

Coexistence & settlement

Coexistence agreements, settlement agreements and trademark delimitation arrangements.

Enforcement

Enforcement of intellectual property rights: cease and desist actions, customs detention measures, takedown procedures, and coordination of enforcement strategies across multiple jurisdictions.

Litigation

Intellectual property litigation before Spanish courts and coordination of litigation in other jurisdictions through specialised local litigation counsel.

Mediation & ADR

Mediation and alternative dispute resolution in intellectual property matters.

Trade secrets

Protection of trade secrets and confidential business information, and representation in disputes involving collective rights management organisations where required.

Registered rights generate value through contracts and defence. Legal IP is where that happens.

Typical situations

When to engage us

Contract or settlement

A party negotiating, drafting or reviewing an intellectual property licence, assignment or settlement.

Enforcing against infringement

A rights holder seeking to enforce intellectual property against an infringer across one or several jurisdictions.

Defending litigation

A defendant in intellectual property litigation requiring coordinated defence strategy.

Where we act

Jurisdictions

Spanish courts and Spanish customs authorities. Coordinated enforcement and litigation across European, Latin American and African jurisdictions through correspondent counsel and local litigators.

Spain
Litigation before Spanish courts and enforcement through the Spanish customs authorities.
Europe
Coordinated enforcement and litigation across European jurisdictions through local litigators.
Latin America & Africa
Coordinated enforcement and litigation through correspondent counsel across the region.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between licensing and assigning intellectual property?
A licence authorises someone to use a right while ownership stays with you; it can be exclusive or non-exclusive, limited in time, territory and scope. An assignment transfers ownership of the right itself to the other party. The choice has lasting commercial and tax consequences, so it should be deliberate. We draft and negotiate both, and record them with the relevant registries where that is needed to be effective against third parties.
How do I enforce my intellectual property against an infringer?
Enforcement usually starts with a cease and desist letter, and can move through takedown requests to online platforms and customs detention of infringing goods, up to court proceedings seeking injunctions and damages. The right level depends on the infringer, the harm and where they operate. We design the strategy and act, or instruct local litigators, coordinating it across the jurisdictions involved.
Where is intellectual property litigated in Spain?
Intellectual property disputes in Spain are generally heard by the commercial courts (Juzgados de lo Mercantil), with certain courts designated as EU trade mark and Community design courts for those rights. Specialised courts and panels handle patents. We conduct litigation before the Spanish courts and coordinate parallel proceedings in other jurisdictions through local litigators.
How are trade secrets protected if they are not registered?
Trade secrets are protected without any registration, under the EU Trade Secrets Directive and Spain’s implementing law, provided the information is secret, has commercial value because it is secret, and is subject to reasonable steps to keep it confidential. That last requirement is where cases are won or lost, so protection is largely about contracts and internal measures — NDAs, access controls and policies. We put those measures in place and act when a secret is misused.
What is a coexistence agreement and when do I need one?
A coexistence agreement is a contract between owners of similar marks setting out how each can use its mark — by goods, territory or presentation — so they can operate without conflict. It is often the practical way to resolve or avoid an opposition or dispute when neither side wants to litigate. We negotiate coexistence, delimitation and settlement agreements that hold up over time.
Can customs help stop counterfeit goods?
Yes. Rights holders can file an application for customs action so that authorities detain suspected infringing goods at the border, which is often faster and cheaper than pursuing each shipment in court. It works best as part of a broader enforcement plan combined with takedowns and, where needed, litigation. We prepare customs applications and coordinate the follow-up once goods are detained.
Should I litigate, or settle and mediate?
It depends on what you want and what the dispute is worth. Litigation is the right tool where you need a binding decision, an injunction or damages, or where the other side will not engage; mediation and other alternative dispute resolution can be faster, cheaper and more flexible, and can preserve a commercial relationship. We advise honestly on which is proportionate and run both, rather than defaulting to court.
Can you coordinate enforcement and litigation across multiple jurisdictions?
Yes — that is the point of the practice. We litigate before the Spanish courts and act with the Spanish customs authorities directly, and coordinate enforcement and litigation across European, Latin American and African jurisdictions through correspondent counsel and local litigators. You keep one strategy and a single point of contact for the whole corridor.