Introduction: The interplay between judicial discretion and adjudication in the context of temporary injunctions is a cornerstone of civil litigation, particularly in intellectual property disputes. The case of UTO Nederland B.V. v. Tilaknagar Industries Ltd., decided by a Larger Bench of the Bombay High Court on April 28, 2025, under Chief Justice Alok Aradhe, Justices M.S. Karnik, and Shyam C. Chandak, addresses a critical conflict in judicial interpretations regarding the nature of orders on temporary injunction applications and the scope of appellate review. Stemming from a trademark dispute over “Mansion House” and “Savoy Club,” this reference case clarifies whether such orders are exercises of discretion or prima facie adjudications and delineates the appellate court’s role in reviewing them. By resolving conflicting Division Bench decisions, the court reinforces the discretionary nature of injunction orders and limits appellate interference to cases of arbitrary or perverse exercise of discretion. This case study provides a comprehensive analysis of the factual and procedural background, the issues at stake, the parties’ submissions, the judicial reasoning, and the legal principles established, offering insights into the procedural nuances of injunction appeals in India.
Detailed Factual Background: UTO Nederland B.V. and its affiliate, major Dutch producers and distributors of spirits and liquors, including scotch whiskey, gin, vodka, rum, liqueurs, and cognac, claimed proprietorship over the trademarks “Mansion House” and “Savoy Club.” UTO Nederland asserted registration of “Mansion House” and continuous use of “Savoy Club” since 1947. Tilaknagar Industries Ltd., an Indian company engaged in manufacturing and marketing industrial alcohol, spirits, Indian-made foreign liquor, and sugar cubes, approached UTO in 1982 to explore collaboration for selling UTO’s products in India. On July 7, 1983, UTO entered into a license agreement permitting Tilaknagar to use the “Mansion House” and “Savoy Club” trademarks for alcoholic beverages like whisky, gin, brandy, and rum.
UTO alleged that Tilaknagar, with mala fide intent, applied for registration of these trademarks in India, including the “Herman Jensen” logo used by UTO’s affiliate since 1947. Claiming infringement of copyright and passing off, UTO filed a suit in the Bombay High Court, accompanied by a Notice of Motion seeking a temporary injunction to restrain Tilaknagar’s use of the trademarks. On December 22, 2011, the Single Judge rejected the injunction, prompting UTO to file Appeal No. 66 of 2012. During the appeal, a Division Bench identified conflicting precedents on the nature of injunction orders and the scope of appellate review, leading to a reference to a Larger Bench on December 15, 2014, to resolve the discord between decisions like Colgate Palmolive v. Anchor Health and Parksons Cartamundi v. Suresh Kumar.
Detailed Procedural Background: The dispute originated when UTO filed a suit for trademark infringement and passing off, along with Notice of Motion No. 993 of 2009, seeking a temporary injunction. The Single Judge’s rejection of the injunction on December 22, 2011, led to UTO’s Appeal No. 66 of 2012. Related proceedings included Cross Objection No. 3 of 2012, Notice of Motion No. 445 of 2012, Notice of Motion No. 740 of 2013, Notice of Motion No. 1427 of 2014, and Interim Application No. 2979 of 2024 by Allied Blender and Distillers Ltd., all linked to the main appeal. During the appeal’s hearing, the Division Bench noted irreconcilable views in prior Bombay High Court decisions—Colgate Palmolive (2005), Parksons Cartamundi (2012), and Goldmines Telefilms (2014)—on whether injunction orders are discretionary or adjudicatory and the extent of appellate scrutiny.
On December 15, 2014, the Division Bench referred two questions to a Larger Bench: whether Colgate Palmolive, holding injunction orders as discretionary, or Parksons Cartamundi and Goldmines Telefilms, treating them as prima facie adjudications, set out the correct law, and what is the scope of an appeal from an injunction order. The Larger Bench, comprising Chief Justice Alok Aradhe, Justices M.S. Karnik, and Shyam C. Chandak, heard arguments from counsel L.M. Jenkins for UTO, Ashish Kamat for Allied Blender, and senior advocates Ravi Kadam and Venkatesh Dhond for Tilaknagar. The judgment, reserved on April 21, 2025, and pronounced on April 28, 2025, answered the reference, directing the appeal’s listing before the appropriate bench for further orders.
The Larger Bench addressed two referred questions: Whether the decision in Colgate Palmolive v. Anchor Health, holding that a temporary injunction order is discretionary despite a finding on prima facie case, or the decisions in Parksons Cartamundi v. Suresh Kumar and Goldmines Telefilms v. Reliance Big Entertainment, treating such orders as prima facie adjudications, represents the correct legal position? What is the scope and ambit of an appeal from an order passed by a trial judge on an interlocutory injunction application pending suit disposal?
Detailed Submission of Parties: UTO Nederland argued that the Single Judge’s order denying the injunction involved a prima facie adjudication of the parties’ rights, particularly on trademark infringement and passing off. They contended that the appellate court’s scope was not limited to checking for perversity or errors apparent but extended to a comprehensive review of all aspects of the order. UTO asserted that the court could substitute the trial judge’s conclusions with its own findings, especially given allegations of trademark assignment, abandonment, or acquiescence. They relied on Hiralal Parbhudas v. Ganesh Trading to argue that adjudication, not discretion, characterized the Single Judge’s decision, necessitating broader appellate scrutiny.
Tilaknagar Industries countered that injunction decisions are discretionary, guided by the trinity test of prima facie case, balance of convenience, and irreparable injury. They argued that the Single Judge’s order was an exercise of discretion to maintain status quo, not an adjudication on merits. Tilaknagar submitted that appellate review is confined to assessing whether the discretion was exercised arbitrarily, capriciously, or perversely, or ignored settled principles, as established in Wander Ltd. v. Antox India. They contended that Hiralal Parbhudas, dealing with a statutory order under the 1958 Act, was inapplicable to CPC-based injunctions, and Parksons Cartamundi erred in relying on it. Tilaknagar cited Gujarat Bottling Co. v. Coca Cola, Shyam Sel v. Shyam Steel, and Ramakant Choksi v. Harish Choksi to reinforce the discretionary nature of injunction orders and limited appellate interference.
Detailed Discussion on Judgments Cited by Parties and Their Context: The Larger Bench analyzed a robust array of precedents to resolve the conflict and define the scope of injunction appeals:
Colgate Palmolive Company v. Anchor Health and Beauty Care Pvt. Ltd., 2005 (1) Mh.L.J. 613: Cited by the court, this Bombay High Court Division Bench decision held that a temporary injunction order remains discretionary, even if the judge finds no prima facie case, and does not involve merits adjudication. It distinguished Hiralal Parbhudas and National Chemicals, which dealt with statutory orders, as irrelevant to CPC-based injunctions. The court upheld this as the correct principle, aligning with Supreme Court precedents.
Parksons Cartamundi Pvt. Ltd. v. Suresh Kumar Jasraj Burad, 2012 SCC OnLine Bom 438: Cited by the court, this Division Bench treated an injunction order as a prima facie adjudication, relying on Hiralal Parbhudas to argue that no discretion was exercised when the judge found no deceptive similarity. The Larger Bench found this view erroneous, as it ignored Colgate Palmolive and misapplied Hiralal Parbhudas to CPC contexts.
Goldmines Telefilms Pvt. Ltd. v. Reliance Big Entertainment Pvt. Ltd., Appeal (L) No. 458/2014 in NM/452/2014 in Suit/194/2014, Bombay High Court, decided on September 24, 2014: Cited by the court, this Division Bench followed Parksons Cartamundi, treating injunction orders as adjudicatory. The Larger Bench criticized its failure to consider Colgate Palmolive and its reliance on Hiralal Parbhudas and National Chemicals, rendering it inconsistent with Supreme Court guidelines.
Hiralal Parbhudas v. Ganesh Trading Company, AIR 1984 Bom 218: Cited by UTO and Tilaknagar, this Bombay High Court decision distinguished discretion from adjudication in the context of a Registrar’s order under Section 56(1) of the 1958 Act. It held that rejecting a rectification application based on non-deceptive similarity was adjudication, not discretion. The Larger Bench clarified its irrelevance to CPC-based injunctions, limiting its applicability to statutory contexts.
Wander Ltd. v. Antox India Pvt. Ltd., 1990 Supp SCC 727: Cited by Tilaknagar and the court, this Supreme Court three-judge bench decision is a locus classicus, holding that appellate courts should not interfere with a trial court’s discretionary injunction order unless it is arbitrary, capricious, perverse, or ignores settled principles. The Larger Bench endorsed this as the guiding principle for appellate review.
Gujarat Bottling Co. Ltd. v. Coca Cola Co., (1995) 5 SCC 545: Cited by Tilaknagar, this Supreme Court case defined prima facie case as a serious question requiring trial, emphasizing the discretionary nature of injunctions based on the trinity test. The Larger Bench relied on it to affirm the discretionary framework.
Shyam Sel and Power Ltd. v. Shyam Steel Industries Ltd., (2023) 1 SCC 634: Cited by Tilaknagar, this Supreme Court decision reaffirmed Wander, limiting appellate interference to cases of perverse or arbitrary discretion. The Larger Bench used it to reinforce the restricted scope of appeal.
Ramakant Ambalal Choksi v. Harish Ambalal Choksi, 2024 SCC OnLine SC 3538: Cited by Tilaknagar, this Supreme Court case approved Wander, clarifying that appellate courts examine discretion’s propriety and may adjudicate facts within limited contours. The Larger Bench adopted its principles to define appellate scope.
American Cynamid Co. v. Ethicon Ltd., [1975] 1 All ER 504 (House of Lords): Cited by the court, this seminal UK case defined prima facie case as a serious question to be tried, avoiding merits resolution at the interlocutory stage. The Larger Bench used it to clarify the trinity test’s application.
Garden Cottage Foods Ltd. v. Milk Marketing Board, [1983] 2 All ER 770: Cited by the court, this UK case reiterated American Cynamid, emphasizing the discretionary nature of injunctions. The Larger Bench referenced it to support the trinity test framework.
Martin Burn Ltd. v. R.N. Banerjee, AIR 1958 SC 79: Cited by the court, this Supreme Court case defined prima facie case as one established if evidence is believed, not requiring proof to the hilt. The Larger Bench used it to elucidate the standard for injunction applications.
Dalpat Kumar v. Prahlad Singh, (1992) 1 SCC 719: Cited by the court, this Supreme Court case clarified that prima facie case involves a bona fide substantial question, not a title to be proved at trial. The Larger Bench relied on it to define the trinity test’s scope.
Anand Prasad Agarwal v. Tarkeshwar Prasad, (2001) 5 SCC 568: Cited by the court, this Supreme Court case reinforced that prima facie case requires a serious question, not full proof. The Larger Bench used it to support the discretionary framework.
State of Kerala v. Union of India, (2024) 7 SCC 183: Cited by the court, this Supreme Court case reiterated the prima facie case standard, aligning with Gujarat Bottling. The Larger Bench referenced it to affirm the trinity test.
Fellowes & Son v. Fisher, [1975] 2 All ER 829: Cited by the court, this UK case outlined the balance of convenience as weighing plaintiff’s and defendant’s injury risks. The Larger Bench used it to clarify the trinity test’s second prong.
Halsbury’s Laws of England, Fourth Edition, Vol. 24, para 856: Cited by the court, this legal treatise supported the balance of convenience test, emphasizing protection against uncompensated injury. The Larger Bench referenced it to frame the trinity test.
Shiv Kumar Chadha v. Municipal Corporation of Delhi, 1993 SCC (3) 161: Cited by the court, this Supreme Court case held that injunctions are discretionary, requiring the trinity test and clean hands. The Larger Bench used it to affirm the equitable nature of relief.
Seema Arshad Zaheer v. Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai, (2006) 5 SCC 282: Cited by the court, this Supreme Court case emphasized that injunctions require clean hands, reinforcing their discretionary nature. The Larger Bench referenced it to highlight equitable considerations.
Printers (Mysore) Pvt. Ltd. v. Pothan Joseph, (1960) 3 SCR 713, AIR 1960 SC 1156: Cited indirectly via Wander, this Supreme Court case outlined appellate restraint in discretionary orders, quoted by Gajendragadkar, J. The Larger Bench used it to support limited appellate interference.
Charles Osenton & Co. v. Johnston, [1942] AC 130 (House of Lords): Cited indirectly via Wander, this UK case, per Viscount Simon L.C., established appellate restraint unless discretion is perverse. The Larger Bench relied on it to define appellate scope.
Moffett v. Gough, (1878) 1 LR Ir 331: Cited by the court, this case defined a perverse verdict as against all evidence, supporting the Larger Bench’s criteria for appellate interference.
Godfrey v. Godfrey, 106 NW 814: Cited by the court, this US case defined “perverse” as deviating from what is right, aiding the Larger Bench’s interpretation of perversity.
Damodar Lal v. Sohan Devi, (2016) 3 SCC 78: Cited by the court, this Supreme Court case held that perversity requires a conclusion impossible on evidence, not mere inadequacy. The Larger Bench used it to clarify appellate review standards.
Government of West Bengal v. Tarun K. Roy, (2004) 1 SCC 347: Cited by the court, this Supreme Court case held that an earlier decision prevails over a conflicting later one if the former addresses the issue specifically. The Larger Bench applied this to favor Colgate Palmolive over Parksons Cartamundi and Goldmines Telefilms.
Detailed Reasoning and Analysis of Judge: Chief Justice’s reasoning centered on resolving the conflict between Colgate Palmolive and the Parksons Cartamundi-Goldmines Telefilms line of decisions, grounding the analysis in Supreme Court precedents and common law principles. The court began by outlining the equitable roots of injunctions, which prevent future injury through discretionary relief, guided by the trinity test: prima facie case, balance of convenience, and irreparable injury. Drawing on American Cynamid and Gujarat Bottling, the court clarified that a prima facie case requires a serious question to be tried, not a merits adjudication, ensuring the trial court avoids resolving contested facts or complex legal issues prematurely.
The court then addressed the nature of injunction orders, affirming that they are discretionary, as per Wander, Shyam Sel, and Ramakant Choksi. Wander’s locus classicus status was emphasized, limiting appellate interference to cases where the trial court’s discretion is arbitrary, capricious, perverse, or ignores settled principles. The court defined perversity, citing Moffett, Godfrey, and Damodar Lal, as a conclusion impossible on evidence, not merely a different interpretation. This framework underscored that appellate courts should not substitute their discretion unless the trial court’s order is fundamentally flawed.
Examining the conflicting Bombay High Court decisions, the court upheld Colgate Palmolive, which correctly held that injunction orders remain discretionary, even if no prima facie case is found, and do not adjudicate merits. Colgate Palmolive’s reliance on Dalpat Kumar and its distinction of Hiralal Parbhudas and National Chemicals as irrelevant to CPC-based injunctions was endorsed. In contrast, Parksons Cartamundi and Goldmines Telefilms were deemed erroneous for treating injunction orders as adjudicatory, misapplying Hiralal Parbhudas (a 1958 Act case) to Order XXXIX CPC contexts, and ignoring Colgate Palmolive and Supreme Court precedents like Wander.
The court invoked Government of West Bengal v. Tarun Roy to resolve the conflict, holding that Colgate Palmolive, as the earlier decision specifically addressing injunction appeals, prevailed over the later Parksons Cartamundi and Goldmines Telefilms, which failed to engage with its principles. The distinction between statutory orders under Section 56(1) of the 1958 Act (adjudicatory, as in Hiralal Parbhudas) and CPC-based injunctions (discretionary) was pivotal, ensuring clarity in appellate scope.
On the second question, the court delineated appellate review as examining the propriety of discretion, not reassessing evidence de novo, unless the trial court’s findings are perverse or ignore the trinity test. Ramakant Choksi’s allowance for limited factual adjudication was acknowledged, but within Wander’s contours. The court’s answers reaffirmed the discretionary nature of injunction orders and a restrained appellate role, aligning with equitable and statutory frameworks.
Final Decision: On April 28, 2025, the Bombay High Court’s Larger Bench answered the reference, holding that Colgate Palmolive correctly states the law: a temporary injunction order is discretionary, not an adjudicatory, even if no prima facie case is found. The court clarified that appellate review is limited to assessing arbitrary, capricious, or perverse discretion or disregard of settled principles, as per Wander, Shyam Sel, and Ramakant Choksi. The decisions in Parksons Cartamundi and Goldmines Telefilms were overruled as incorrect for treating injunction orders as adjudicatory. The reference was answered, and the appeal was directed to be listed before the appropriate bench for further orders.
Law Settled in This Case: The decision established several principles under the CPC and trademark law: A temporary injunction order is an exercise of discretion, not a prima facie adjudication, even if the trial judge finds no prima facie case. The trinity test—prima facie case, balance of convenience, and irreparable injury—guides discretionary injunction decisions, with prima facie case meaning a serious question to be tried, not merits resolution.Appellate review of injunction orders is limited to examining whether the trial court’s discretion was exercised arbitrarily, capriciously, perversely, or ignored settled principles, as per Wander Ltd. v. Antox India.Perversity in an injunction order requires a conclusion impossible on evidence, not merely inadequate evidence or a different interpretation.Decisions under statutory provisions like Section 56(1) of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, involving adjudication, are distinct from CPC-based injunction orders, rendering cases like Hiralal Parbhudas inapplicable to the latter.When conflicting Division Bench decisions exist, the earlier decision specifically addressing the issue prevails, as per Government of West Bengal v. Tarun Roy.Appellate courts may adjudicate facts in injunction appeals but within the limited contours of assessing discretion’s propriety, not substituting their own findings unless the trial court’s order is perverse.
Case Title: UTO Nederland B.V. & Anr. Vs. Tilaknagar Industries Ltd.: Date of Order: April 28, 2025: Case No.: Appeal No. 66 of 2012: Neutral Citation: 2025:BHC-OS:7110-DB: Name of Court: High Court of Judicature at Bombay, Ordinary Original Civil Jurisdiction: Name of Hon'ble Judge: Alok Aradhe (Chief Justice), M.S. Karnik, Shyam C. Chandak
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Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi