Saturday, June 13, 2026

SC-Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Vs TOSIBA Appliances Co.

TOSHIBA vs TOSIBA: When a Famous International Trademark Loses Its Ground for Non-Use — Supreme Court Reverses Rectification Order


Introduction

The world of trademark law rests on a delicate balance between two competing interests. On one side stands the trademark owner who has built a global reputation under a particular name and wishes to protect it even in markets where the goods may not yet be actively sold. On the other side stands the domestic trader who has been using a similar name in actual trade for years and feels threatened by the looming presence of a foreign giant's registered mark. When does non-use of a registered trademark justify removing it from the register? Who can ask for such removal, and under what circumstances should a court or registry exercise its discretion to grant or refuse rectification? These were the profound and practically significant questions that came before the Supreme Court of India in the landmark case of Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba versus TOSIBA Appliances Co. and Ors., decided on 16th May 2008. The judgment, delivered by a Bench of Justices S.B. Sinha and L.S. Panta, overturned concurrent findings of the Deputy Registrar of Trade Marks and two levels of the Calcutta High Court, and laid down important principles on the interpretation of Sections 46 and 56 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, particularly concerning non-use, bona fide intention, and the concept of a "person aggrieved."


Factual and Procedural Background

The appellant, Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba, is a Japanese corporation of considerable historical and industrial significance. Its origins go back to 1857 when it began operations as Shibaura Engineering Works. In 1890, a company called Hakunetshu-Sha and Company Ltd. established Japan's first plant for electric incandescent lamps. This company was later renamed Tokyo Electric Company in 1899. Eventually, Shibaura Engineering Works Company Ltd. merged with Tokyo Electric Company to form Tokyo Shibaura Electric Company in the year 1939. The name "TOSHIBA" is itself derived from this corporate history — the syllable "TO" was taken from "Tokyo" and "SHIBA" was taken from "Shibaura." In 1984, the company was formally renamed Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba, or Toshiba Corporation, and this change was duly reflected in the Indian trademark register as well.

The appellant had been building its trademark presence in India for many decades and had acquired approximately 35 trademark registrations in India. Specifically relevant to this dispute, it had obtained registration of the trademark "TOSHIBA" in Class 7 — which covers machines and machine tools including motors, electric washing machines, compressors, spin dryers and similar goods — under Trade Mark No. 273758, registered on 26th July 1971. It had also obtained registrations in Class 9 covering various electronics and electrical goods (registration number 273759) and in Class 11 covering lamps, ovens, water heaters, fans, toasters and similar goods (registration number 273760), both also registered on 26th July 1971. Additionally, logo-based registrations numbered 160442 and 160443 dated 5th September 1953 existed in Classes 9 and 11 respectively. Under Section 32 of the Act, after the expiry of seven years from registration, a mark becomes conclusive as to its validity. The appellant's Class 7 registration had crossed this seven-year threshold by 1978 and had been renewed continuously, with its validity extended up to 2016.

The respondent, TOSIBA Appliances Co., is an Indian company which had been in the business of making and selling domestic electrical appliances such as auto irons, toasters, extension cords, table lamps, ovens, and similar goods under the brand name "TOSIBA" since the year 1975. It is important to notice the visual and phonetic similarity between the two marks — TOSHIBA and TOSIBA — which differs only by the absence of the letter "H" in the respondent's version.

The dispute had been brewing for some years before it formally erupted. In April 1989, the appellant sent a strongly worded legal notice to the respondent demanding that it stop using the mark "TOSIBA" in relation to electrical goods including electric irons. The notice described the TOSHIBA mark as one of the most well-known trademarks globally and stated that the respondent's mark was phonetically and visually deceptive. The respondent did not reply to this notice. Instead of complying or responding, the respondent took an aggressive legal step by filing an application before the Registrar of Trade Marks, Calcutta, being Application No. CAL 573, under Sections 46 and 56 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 read with Rule 94 of the Rules. The application sought rectification of the appellant's registered trade mark No. 273758 in Class 7 by having it removed from the register on the ground of non-use. Two other similar applications were also filed regarding the Class 9 and Class 11 registrations, though they were not the central focus of the Supreme Court proceedings.

The respondent in its rectification application alleged that it had been using the mark "TOSIBA" in respect of domestic electrical appliances since 1975, that the appellant's registered mark was not distinctive of the appellant's goods on the date of commencement of the proceedings, and that the mark offended certain provisions of the Act. The respondent also stated that the threats issued by the appellant via the legal notice were unjustified and that the appellant had no real business in India.

The appellant countered this by placing on record evidence relating to India's Import and Export Policy for the years 1985 to 1992, showing that electric motors, compressors, generators, and washing machines were restricted or limited permissible items for which import required a licence from the Government of India. This was a crucial piece of evidence as it explained why the appellant had not been actively selling washing machines and spin dryers in India despite holding a registration for them.

By an order dated 12th May 1992, the Deputy Registrar of Trade Marks partially allowed the respondent's rectification application and directed that the goods "washing machines" and "spin dryers" be deleted from Trade Mark No. 273758 in Class 7. Rectification was also directed in the connected applications.

The appellant challenged this before the Calcutta High Court under Section 109 of the Act. By order dated 28th September 1993, a learned Single Judge of the Calcutta High Court upheld the Deputy Registrar's order insofar as it related to Section 46(1)(a) of the Act — concerning lack of bona fide intention to use the mark at the time of registration — but rejected the respondent's plea under Section 46(1)(b), which concerns continuous non-use for a period of five years. The Single Judge made notable observations to the effect that the respondent had never manufactured or sold washing machines or spin dryers at all and had no finalised plans to do so, going so far as to say that any claim to the contrary made before the Deputy Registrar "was a misstatement." However, the Single Judge still upheld the rectification on the ground that the appellant, given the government restrictions on imports prevailing in 1971, could not have had a bona fide intention to use the mark for washing machines and spin dryers in India at that time.

The appellant then preferred an intra-court appeal before the Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court, which dismissed the appeal by a judgment and order dated 8th December 2005. The Division Bench upheld the Single Judge's findings regarding the respondent's status as a "person aggrieved" and affirmed the rectification under Section 46(1)(a). The respondent also filed cross-objections in that appeal seeking rectification under Section 46(1)(b) as well, but the Division Bench declined to examine this question in detail, holding that the case under Section 46(1)(a) was so clear that it did not need to address the cross-objection. The appellant then approached the Supreme Court of India by way of a Special Leave Petition, which was converted into Civil Appeal No. 3639 of 2008.

Meanwhile, separately, the appellant had also filed a suit in the Delhi High Court against the respondent seeking a permanent injunction restraining the respondent from using the mark "TOSIBA" or any deceptively similar mark in respect of electrical goods. That suit was still pending at the time this matter was heard by the Supreme Court.


The Dispute

The dispute before the Supreme Court essentially had three interlocking dimensions. The first was whether the respondent — an Indian company using the mark "TOSIBA" for domestic electrical appliances but admittedly never having manufactured or sold washing machines or spin dryers — could be considered a "person aggrieved" within the meaning of Section 46 of the Act so as to have the legal standing to file a rectification application. The second was whether the conditions required under Section 46(1)(a) of the Act — namely, absence of bona fide intention to use the mark at the time of registration and actual non-use — were truly satisfied in the facts of this case. The third was whether the Registrar and the High Court had correctly exercised their discretionary jurisdiction in ordering rectification, or whether special circumstances — specifically, the government-imposed restrictions on imports of washing machines — and the broader equities of the case should have led to a different outcome.

The appellant's senior counsel, the eminent Fali S. Nariman, argued that since the respondent had never been in the business of manufacturing or selling washing machines or spin dryers, it was not a "person aggrieved" and therefore had no locus standi to seek rectification of the appellant's mark in respect of those goods. He further argued that the mark "TOSHIBA" being a globally famous and invented word, the spirit of Section 47 — which provides for defensive registration of well-known trade marks — should have been considered. He contended that the fact that the appellant had no intention to abandon the mark should have been taken into account, and that if non-abandonment was established, the Section 46(3) defence — which excuses non-use attributable to special circumstances in trade rather than any intention to abandon — should logically have been applied even to Section 46(1)(a) and not merely to Section 46(1)(b).

The respondent's counsel countered that since the application was filed as a composite petition under both Sections 46 and 56, the respondent had locus standi as a "person aggrieved" under the wider definition applicable to Section 56, which serves public interest. He also argued that having been served with a legal notice threatening action, the respondent plainly had a legitimate grievance and therefore qualified as an aggrieved party. He further urged that since no injunction had been obtained against the respondent for over seventeen years, the appellant's commitment to the matter was questionable.


Reasoning and Analysis of the Court — Including Judgments and Their Context

The Supreme Court began its analysis by carefully examining the relevant statutory provisions. Section 46(1) of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 allows for the removal of a registered trademark from the register on an application made by any person aggrieved. This removal can be ordered on either of two grounds mentioned in Clause (a) and Clause (b) of the section. Clause (a) requires proof that there was no bona fide intention to use the mark at the time of registration and that there has, in fact, been no bona fide use of the mark thereafter. Clause (b) deals with a simpler situation — a continuous period of five years or longer during which the registered mark was not used in bona fide commerce. Section 46(3) provides a saving clause for the Clause (b) scenario — if the non-use was due to special circumstances in the trade and not due to any intention to abandon the mark, such non-use will not be treated as non-use for the purpose of Clause (b).

The Court was categorical in its analysis that Clauses (a) and (b) operate in entirely different fields and that Sub-section (3) of Section 46, which provides the special circumstances defence, applies exclusively to cases falling under Clause (b) and not to cases under Clause (a). The Court rejected the appellant's contention that since Clause (a) and Clause (b) both use the language of "no intention to abandon," Sub-section (3) should apply to both. The Court observed that if this interpretation were accepted, no meaningful distinction would exist between the two clauses at all, which could not have been the legislative intent. The Court further noted that the two clauses are disjunctive and not cumulative — both can be invoked independently, and a combined application under both Sections 46 and 56 is permissible.

The Court relied on the earlier Supreme Court decision in American Home Products Corporation versus Mac Laboratories Pvt. Ltd. and Anr., reported as MANU/SC/0204/1985 and also as AIR 1986 SC 137, which had made the exact distinction between Clauses (a) and (b) with great clarity. That judgment had held that under Clause (b), if the prescribed period of five years of non-use has elapsed, the fact that the registered proprietor had a bona fide intention to use the mark at the time of registration becomes irrelevant — the mark becomes liable to removal unless protected by Section 46(3). Under Clause (a), however, bona fide intention at the time of registration is central — if such intention existed, the mere fact that the mark was not used for a period shorter than five years will not result in removal. The Court in the present case embraced this analysis and declined to extend Sub-section (3) beyond its textual scope of application to Clause (b).

The Court also relied upon several decisions on the question of intermittent use and special circumstances. It referred to Plaza Chemical Industries versus Kohinoor Chemicals Co. Ltd., reported as MANU/MH/0136/1975 and AIR 1975 Bom 191; Express Bottlers Services Pvt. Ltd. versus Pepsico Inc and Ors., reported in 1988 (1) CLJ 337; Bali Trade Mark Rectification before the Chancery Division, reported in 1966 (16) RPC 387; Bali Trade Mark Rectification before the Court of Appeal, reported in 1968 (14) RPC 426; and the BULOVA Trade Mark Rectification before the Chancery Division, reported in 1967 (9) RPC 229. These cases collectively established the principle that where use has been intermittent rather than totally absent, Clause (b) of Section 46(1) does not apply. The Court noted this to explain why Clause (b) stood on a different footing and why its associated saving provision under Sub-section (3) had a specific and limited purpose.

On the critical question of who qualifies as a "person aggrieved," the Court engaged in a thorough discussion. It drew upon the authoritative Supreme Court decision in Hardie Trading Ltd. and Anr. versus Addisons Paint and Chemicals Ltd., reported as MANU/SC/0705/2003 and also as 2003(27)PTC241(SC). That case had held that the concept of "person aggrieved" under Section 46 concerns a private interest, while under Section 56 it serves a broader public interest. As a consequence, the standard for locus standi under Section 56 is more liberal than under Section 46. The Court in Hardie Trading had explained that under Section 46, the test is whether the person filing for rectification would, in some practical and not merely fanciful sense, be damaged or injured if the trademark were allowed to remain on the register. The Hardie Trading decision had also quoted from a much older English authority — the matter of Trade Mark No. 70,078 of Wright, Crossley and Co., from 1898, reported in 15 RPC 131 — to the effect that a person claiming to be aggrieved must show that in some possible practical way they may be damaged or injured if the mark is allowed to stand, and not merely a fantastic or theoretical possibility of injury.

The Supreme Court found that this was the precise aspect that had been overlooked by both the learned Single Judge and the Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court. The Single Judge had himself specifically found that the respondent had never manufactured or sold washing machines or spin dryers and did not even have any finalised plan to do so. He had characterised the respondent's contrary claim before the Deputy Registrar as a misstatement. Yet, he and the Division Bench proceeded to treat the respondent as a "person aggrieved" in relation to the deletion of washing machines and spin dryers from the appellant's Class 7 registration. The Supreme Court found this to be an error. If the respondent had never been in the business of washing machines or spin dryers and had no concrete intention to enter that business, it could not be said to suffer any practical injury from the appellant's registration of those goods. The respondent was, in the words of the 1898 English precedent, not demonstrating a "possible in a practical sense" injury but rather a "fantastic" and theoretical one.

The Court noted that while the respondent had faced a legal notice and an actual lawsuit from the appellant — which gave it legitimate grievance in some respects — those facts did not translate into locus standi to seek deletion of goods from the appellant's registration when it had never dealt in or intended to deal in those goods. The Court also took note of the equities from the appellant's side. Although the appellant had not been commercially selling washing machines or spin dryers in India, it had been maintaining service centres in multiple Indian cities — New Delhi, Bombay, Madras, Calcutta, Baroda, Bhopal, Cochin, and Bangalore — for repairing and servicing washing machines, among other products, belonging to those who had imported such machines. The appellant had also issued an advertisement in the Indian Express, New Delhi, on 27th August 1985, mentioning washing machines and their service centres. The Single Judge had found this single advertisement insufficient to constitute "use" of the mark under Section 2(2) of the Act, as there were no goods physically present in India for sale. The Supreme Court did not directly overturn this finding on use, but it factored the context into the overall discretionary calculus.

The Court observed that the balancing act between a registered proprietor's non-use and the equities of a third party should be guided by whether either party would actually be injured. Here, the respondent was freely using its mark "TOSIBA" in relation to its actual products — electric irons, fans, toasters and similar goods — and had never been injuncted against doing so. The respondent had suffered no commercial injury from the appellant's registration remaining on the register for washing machines and spin dryers, since the respondent had no business in those goods whatsoever. On the other hand, the Single Judge himself had acknowledged that "TOSIBA" is so similar to "TOSHIBA" as to give the appellant an indisputable right to demand that the respondent cease using that mark in relation to goods for which the appellant is registered, provided the registration could be maintained on the register.

The Supreme Court further disposed of the respondent's argument that it was entitled to urge the applicability of Section 46(1)(b) even without having filed a proper cross-appeal, on the principle analogous to Order XLI Rule 33 of the Code of Civil Procedure, relying on Ravinder Kumar Sharma versus State of Assam and Ors., reported as MANU/SC/0561/1999 and AIR 1999 SC 3571. The Court rejected this contention, holding that Clauses (a) and (b) of Section 46(1) are in two different watertight compartments, involving separate causes of action, separate ingredients and separate remedies. Since the causes of action are distinct, the analogy with Order XLI Rule 33 — which allows an appellate court to give relief to a party who has not appealed — was inapplicable. If the respondent wished to challenge the rejection of its case under Section 46(1)(b), it was required to file a proper appeal against that specific finding, which it had not done through the correct legal channel.


Final Decision of the Court

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal filed by the appellant and set aside the impugned judgment of the Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court dated 8th December 2005. The key ground for allowing the appeal was that the respondent was not truly a "person aggrieved" in relation to the goods of washing machines and spin dryers, given the undisputed finding that the respondent had never dealt in those goods and had no practical intention to do so. The Registrar and both levels of the High Court had missed this crucial aspect of the matter and had proceeded to order rectification without properly considering whether the respondent would suffer any practical injury. The Court made no order as to costs. Additionally, the Court requested the Delhi High Court — where the appellant's infringement suit against the respondent was still pending — to consider disposing of that suit as expeditiously as possible, given the long pendency of the controversy between the parties.


Point of Law Settled in the Case

The Supreme Court settled several important points of law through this judgment. It confirmed that Clauses (a) and (b) of Section 46(1) of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 are disjunctive and independent of each other, covering entirely different fact situations. It also confirmed that the saving provision in Section 46(3) — which excuses non-use due to special circumstances in trade — applies only to cases under Clause (b) and not to those under Clause (a). The Court further settled that a combined application for rectification under both Sections 46 and 56 of the Act is permissible in law. Most significantly, the Court clarified that the phrase "person aggrieved" under Section 46, which concerns a private interest, requires a practical and tangible possibility of injury to the applicant — a merely theoretical or fanciful possibility is not enough. A person who has never manufactured or sold the specific goods covered by a trademark registration, and who has no concrete plans to do so, cannot claim to be a "person aggrieved" in relation to the removal of those specific goods from the register. The Court also held that since Clauses (a) and (b) involve separate causes of action, a party that fails to separately appeal the rejection of its claim under one clause cannot ask the appellate court to consider it afresh under the principle of Order XLI Rule 33 of the Code of Civil Procedure.


Case Details

Title: Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Vs TOSIBA Appliances Co. and Ors.

Date of Order: 16th May 2008

Case Number: Civil Appeal No. 3639 of 2008 (Arising out of SLP (C) No. 5542 of 2006)

Neutral Citation: MANU/SC/2223/2008

Equivalent Citations: AIR 2009 SC 892; (2008) 10 SCC 766; 2008 (37) PTC 394 (SC); 2008 (8) SCALE 354; MIPR 2008 (2) 195

Name of Court: Supreme Court of India

Name of Hon'ble Judges: Justice S.B. Sinha and Justice L.S. Panta


Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as a substitute for legal advice as it may contain errors in perception, interpretation, and presentation.

Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi


Suggested SEO Titles

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  2. Trademark Non-Use and Rectification Under Section 46: Supreme Court's Landmark Ruling in Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Case
  3. Can a Person Who Never Sold the Goods Seek Trademark Rectification? Supreme Court Answers in Toshiba Case 2008
  4. Section 46 Trade Marks Act — Bona Fide Intention, Non-Use and Person Aggrieved: Lessons from Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba vs TOSIBA
  5. Famous Foreign Trademark vs Indian Domestic User: The TOSHIBA-TOSIBA Battle and What Supreme Court Decided
  6. Trademark Rectification India: How Special Circumstances, Non-Use and Locus Standi Were Interpreted by Supreme Court in Toshiba Case

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Headnote

Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba versus TOSIBA Appliances Co. and Ors. — Supreme Court of India — Civil Appeal No. 3639 of 2008 — Decided on 16th May 2008

Held: Clauses (a) and (b) of Section 46(1) of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 are disjunctive and independent, covering different situations. Section 46(3), which excuses non-use due to special circumstances in trade so as to save the mark from removal, applies exclusively to cases under Clause (b) and not to Clause (a). A combined application for rectification under both Sections 46 and 56 of the Act is permissible. The term "person aggrieved" under Section 46 refers to private interest and requires a practical — not fanciful or theoretical — possibility of injury to the applicant. A person who has admittedly never manufactured or sold the specific goods covered by a registered trademark, and who has no concrete intention to enter that trade, cannot qualify as a "person aggrieved" in relation to those goods for the purpose of seeking rectification. Since the respondent had never dealt in washing machines or spin dryers and had no plans to do so, it had no locus standi to seek removal of those goods from the appellant's Class 7 trademark registration. Principles analogous to Order XLI Rule 33 CPC cannot be invoked to raise a separate and distinct ground under Section 46(1)(b) without filing a proper appeal against the rejection of that ground. Appeal allowed; impugned judgment set aside.

Acts referred: Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 — Sections 2(2), 6, 11, 12, 29, 32, 45, 46, 46(1), 46(3), 47, 47(1), 48, 56, 56(2), 56(3), 57, 57(2), 69, 109, 109(2), 109(5), 109(6); Code of Civil Procedure — Order XLI, Rule 33.

Cases referred: American Home Products Corporation v. Mac Laboratories Pvt. Ltd. and Anr., MANU/SC/0204/1985, AIR 1986 SC 137; Hardie Trading Ltd. and Anr. v. Addisons Paint and Chemicals Ltd., MANU/SC/0705/2003, 2003(27)PTC241(SC); Ravinder Kumar Sharma v. State of Assam and Ors., MANU/SC/0561/1999, AIR 1999 SC 3571; Plaza Chemical Industries v. Kohinoor Chemicals Co. Ltd., MANU/MH/0136/1975, AIR 1975 Bom 191; Express Bottlers Services Pvt. Ltd. v. Pepsico Inc and Ors., 1988 (1) CLJ 337; Bali Trade Mark (Rectification Ch.D.), 1966 (16) RPC 387; Bali Trade Mark (Rectification C.A.), 1968 (14) RPC 426; BULOVA Trade Mark (Rectification Ch.D.), 1967 (9) RPC 229; The Trade Mark No. 70,078 of Wright, Crossley and Co., (1898) 15 RPC 131.

Cases overruled: Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba (Toshiba Corporation) vs. Toshiba Appliances Co. and Ors., MANU/WB/0414/2005 (Calcutta High Court).

Friday, June 12, 2026

SC-Exphar SA and Another Vs. Eupharma Laboratories Ltd

Exphar SA v. Eupharma Laboratories Ltd.: Jurisdiction Under Section 62(2) of the Copyright Act, 1957 — The Supreme Court Settles the Law


Introduction

In the realm of intellectual property litigation in India, one of the most practically significant questions has always been: which court has the power to hear a copyright infringement case? The answer to this question determines not just legal strategy but also the very ability of a copyright owner to enforce their rights without being compelled to travel to a distant court. The Supreme Court of India, in its landmark decision in Exphar SA and Another v. Eupharma Laboratories Ltd. and Another, rendered on February 20, 2004, addressed this precise issue with far-reaching consequences. The judgment, delivered by a Bench of Justices Ruma Pal and P. Venkatarama Reddi, settled an important point of law concerning the scope and interpretation of Section 62(2) of the Copyright Act, 1957 — the provision that determines jurisdictional competence of courts in copyright suits. The case also touched upon the legal character of a "cease-and-desist" notice in copyright matters and the manner in which a demurrer on jurisdiction must be adjudicated.


Factual and Procedural Background

The story of this case begins with a pharmaceutical product — a malaria treatment medicine sold under the trade mark "Maloxine" — manufactured and marketed by Exphar SA, the first appellant, a foreign company. The medicine was sold in distinctive packaging with a unique get-up, layout, and design, and Exphar SA claimed ownership of the copyright in the trade mark "Maloxine" and the artistic work comprised in the "Maloxine" carton. The second appellant, M/s Shreechem Laboratories, was a company that carried on business within the jurisdiction of the Delhi High Court and had a registered office in New Delhi.

The commercial arrangement was structured as follows: Exphar SA had entered into a manufacturing/agency agreement with the second appellant, Shreechem Laboratories, authorizing it to manufacture tablets under the "Maloxine" trade mark for sale in the world apart from Nigeria. For the Nigerian market, Exphar SA had a separate arrangement with M/s Shreechem Laboratories. Importantly, a prior agreement had existed with Eupharma Laboratories — the second respondent — but that agreement was terminated.

The trouble began when Respondent 2, despite the termination of its manufacturing arrangement with Exphar SA, allegedly continued to manufacture "Maloxine" tablets and was exporting them, among other places, to M/s Moore Associates Ltd. It was also claimed that the respondents were planning to launch "Maloxine" in the Indian market. As early as November 5, 1993 and again on May 19, 1998, the second respondent wrote letters to the second appellant and to Shreechem Laboratories, calling upon them to cease and desist from manufacturing pharmaceutical preparations under the trade mark "Maloxine." In 1996, Exphar SA had independently filed a civil suit before the Federal High Court of Nigeria against M/s Moore Associates Ltd. and the second respondent, alleging passing off of its "Maloxine" trade mark. That suit remained pending.

The appellants then filed a suit before the Delhi High Court seeking, among other reliefs, an injunction to restrain the respondents from passing off the trade mark "Maloxine" or adopting the distinctive get-up of the "Maloxine" carton, and to restrain infringement of the copyright in the artistic work comprising the "Maloxine" carton. The basis for invoking the Delhi High Court's jurisdiction was two-fold: first, the copyright in the "Maloxine" carton was being infringed by the respondents; second, the appellants (particularly the second appellant) carried on business in Delhi and one of them had a registered office in New Delhi. It was also stated that the defendants themselves carried on business for profit in New Delhi.

On October 26, 1998, a learned Single Judge of the Delhi High Court passed an ex parte interim order in favour of the appellants, which was confirmed on September 28, 1999. The interim arrangement allowed the defendants to continue using the name "MALOXINE" but in a colour combination different from that approved by Exphar SA in 1991, required bold mention of Defendant 2's name and address on all packaging, restrained the use of a deceptively similar colour combination, and required the defendants to maintain quarterly accounts and undertake to pay 10% of sale proceeds as estimated damages in the event the plaintiff succeeded.

Both the appellants and the respondents preferred appeals before a Division Bench of the Delhi High Court. The respondents had not questioned the territorial jurisdiction of the Delhi High Court in their memorandum of appeal. Nonetheless, the Division Bench, acting suo motu on the question of territorial jurisdiction, not only allowed the respondents' appeal but also directed that the appellants' plaint be returned for presentation before the appropriate court, concluding that the Delhi High Court had no territorial jurisdiction. As a consequence, the appellants' own appeal was also dismissed. It is this judgment of the Division Bench that was brought before the Supreme Court by way of Civil Appeals Nos. 1189-90 of 2004, arising out of Special Leave Petitions filed by the appellants.


The Dispute

The central dispute before the Supreme Court was narrow but legally vital. The question was whether the Delhi High Court had jurisdiction under Section 62(2) of the Copyright Act, 1957 to entertain the suit filed by the appellants. The Division Bench of the Delhi High Court had answered this question in the negative, directing the return of the plaint. The appellants challenged this conclusion on multiple grounds. They argued that the Division Bench had gone beyond the pleadings of the parties; that the issue of jurisdiction was never raised in the respondents' memorandum of appeal; that the Division Bench had relied upon facts asserted in the respondents' written statement rather than facts pleaded in the plaint, which was procedurally impermissible when deciding a demurrer; and that the Division Bench had misconstrued Section 62(2) of the Copyright Act, 1957.

There was also a subsidiary but legally interesting question: whether the "cease-and-desist" notices sent by the second respondent to the second appellant at its New Delhi office constituted a sufficient basis for the Delhi High Court to entertain the suit — particularly in light of Section 60 of the Copyright Act, 1957, which provides a remedy to the recipient of a groundless threat of copyright infringement proceedings.


Reasoning and Analysis of the Judge

Justice Ruma Pal, who delivered the judgment of the court, began by identifying two procedural infirmities in the approach of the Division Bench.

The first infirmity was that there had been no application filed by the respondents under Order 7 Rules 11 and 10 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 for rejection or return of the plaint. The Division Bench had gone beyond the scope of the appeals before it by directing the return of the plaint on a ground — lack of territorial jurisdiction — that the respondents themselves had not raised in their memorandum of appeal. This was wholly outside the scope of the pending appeals, and the court noted this with evident disapproval.

The second and more substantive infirmity concerned the manner in which the Division Bench had approached the question of jurisdiction. The Supreme Court explained a fundamental principle: when an objection to jurisdiction is raised by way of demurrer — that is, as a preliminary objection at the threshold rather than at trial — the court must proceed on the assumption that all the facts as pleaded by the initiator of the proceedings are correct. The objecting party, in order to succeed, must show that even granting those pleaded facts as true, the court has no jurisdiction as a matter of law. This is because at the demurrer stage, no evidence is led and no finding of fact is returned. The Division Bench had, however, examined the written statement filed by the respondents — which claimed that the goods were not sold within the territorial jurisdiction of the Delhi High Court and that the second respondent did not carry on business there — and had relied on these assertions to conclude that the court lacked jurisdiction. The Division Bench had even observed that "admittedly" the goods were traded outside India and therefore there was no infringement of the trade mark within the territorial limits of any Indian court, let alone Delhi. The Supreme Court found this observation to be an ex facie contradiction within the Division Bench's own judgment and a fundamental error in methodology.

The court then turned to the substantive question: the proper construction of Section 62(2) of the Copyright Act, 1957. Section 62 of the Act deals with jurisdiction of courts in copyright matters. Sub-section (1) provides that every suit or civil proceeding arising under Chapter 12 of the Act — which deals with civil remedies — in respect of infringement of copyright or any other right conferred by the Act, shall be instituted in the District Court having jurisdiction. Sub-section (2) then adds: for the purposes of sub-section (1), a District Court having jurisdiction shall, notwithstanding anything in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, or any other law for the time being in force, include a District Court within the local limits of whose jurisdiction, at the time of institution, the person instituting the suit or proceeding, or where there are more than one such persons, any of them, actually and voluntarily resides or carries on business or personally works for gain.

Justice Ruma Pal drew attention to the word "include" in Section 62(2). She held that this word is significant — it demonstrates that the jurisdiction prescribed under Section 62 is wider than, and not merely co-extensive with, the jurisdiction of the court as prescribed under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. The normal rule under Section 20 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 permits a suit to be instituted where the defendant resides or where the cause of action arises. Section 62(2) prescribes an additional ground — over and above the "normal" grounds — by enabling the plaintiff to institute a suit in the court within whose jurisdiction the plaintiff himself resides or carries on business. This provision was not meant to restrict owners of copyright from exercising their rights; rather, its purpose was to remove impediments from their doing so.

To support this reasoning, the court referred to the report of the Joint Parliamentary Committee published in the Gazette of India on November 23, 1956, which had preceded and provided the foundation for Section 62(2). The report stated clearly that many authors were being deterred from instituting infringement proceedings because the court in which such proceedings were to be filed was situated at a considerable distance from their place of ordinary residence. The Committee felt this impediment should be removed and the new sub-clause (2) was accordingly introduced to permit infringement proceedings to be instituted in the District Court within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the person instituting the proceedings ordinarily resides or carries on business. This legislative history reinforced the court's interpretation that Section 62(2) is an enabling, not a restricting, provision.

The Division Bench had, however, held that Appellant 2 (Shreechem Laboratories) was not a "person instituting the suit" under Section 62(2) because it had not claimed ownership of the copyright in the trade mark, infringement of which was the subject matter of the suit. The Supreme Court rejected this interpretation emphatically. Justice Ruma Pal held that it was evident not just from the cause title but also from the body of the plaint that Appellant 2 carried on business within the jurisdiction of the Delhi High Court. Appellant 2 was plainly "a person instituting the suit." The fact that Appellant 2 might ultimately not be entitled to the relief claimed in the suit — because it had not claimed ownership of the copyright — was an entirely different matter going to the merits. That did not mean it was not a person who had instituted the suit within the meaning of Section 62(2). To deprive a co-plaintiff of the status of "person instituting the suit" merely because their claim might fail on merits was to go beyond the express words of the statute and undermine the jurisdictional framework in a manner not warranted by the law.

The court then addressed the second legal question regarding the "cease-and-desist" notices. The appellants' plaint stated that the cease-and-desist notice was sent by the second respondent to Appellant 2 at its New Delhi office and alleged that Appellant 2 had infringed the copyright of the second respondent in the "Maloxine" trade mark. The court explained that a cease-and-desist notice in a copyright context is not a mere notice. It is a threat — it alleges infringement and puts the recipient on notice that they are liable to institution of civil and/or criminal proceedings. The plaint asserted that this threat was received within the jurisdiction of the Delhi High Court, which was itself sufficient to invoke that court's jurisdiction. Crucially, the court drew a distinction between the cases cited by the respondents — Oil and Natural Gas Commission v. Utpal Kumar Basu, (1994) 4 SCC 711 and Union of India v. Adani Exports Ltd., (2002) 1 SCC 567 — which held that service of a mere notice may not be sufficient to found jurisdiction unless it formed an integral part of the cause of action. The Supreme Court distinguished these cases by holding that a cease-and-desist notice in a copyright action cannot be termed a "mere" notice, particularly in view of Section 60 of the Copyright Act, 1957. Section 60 specifically provides that a person who has received such a threat has a cause of action to institute a suit to counter that threat and to seek relief on the ground that the alleged infringement was not in fact an infringement of any legal right of the person making the threat. Therefore, the receipt of such a notice within the court's territorial jurisdiction was a legally relevant event that could itself ground jurisdiction, and was not comparable to the ordinary notices considered in the ONGC and Adani Exports cases.

The court also noted with approval the decision in Ciba Geigy Ltd. v. Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, (1997) 17 PTC 364, which had been cited in the matter.

The Supreme Court concluded that the Division Bench had disposed of the appeals purely on the question of jurisdiction and its conclusion was unsustainable. The matter was remanded to the Division Bench for disposal of the appeals on merits. Pending the Division Bench's decision, the earlier order passed by the learned Single Judge — which had allowed the defendants to use the "MALOXINE" mark subject to conditions including a different colour scheme and the requirement to maintain accounts and deposit 10% of sale proceeds — was directed to continue.


Final Decision of the Court

The Supreme Court allowed both Civil Appeals with costs. The impugned judgment and order of the Division Bench of the Delhi High Court was set aside. The matter was remanded to the Division Bench for fresh disposal of the appeals filed by the respondents and the appellants on merits. The interim order passed by the learned Single Judge was restored and directed to continue pending the decision of the Division Bench.


Point of Law Settled

This case settled the following important points of law. First, the word "include" in Section 62(2) of the Copyright Act, 1957 demonstrates that the jurisdiction conferred under that provision is wider than the ordinary jurisdiction prescribed under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. Section 62(2) provides an additional ground of jurisdiction — over and above those under Section 20 of the Code — by enabling the plaintiff to sue in the court within whose local limits they reside or carry on business. This provision was designed to facilitate copyright owners in accessing justice, not to restrict them. Second, where a preliminary objection to jurisdiction is taken by way of demurrer and not at trial, the court must proceed on the basis that all facts pleaded by the party initiating the proceedings are correct, without examining the written statement of the opposing party. Third, a co-plaintiff who carries on business within the jurisdiction of a court qualifies as a "person instituting the suit" under Section 62(2) even if that co-plaintiff has not claimed ownership of the infringed copyright and may ultimately not be entitled to relief. Entitlement to relief is a matter of merits, not of standing to institute proceedings. Fourth, a cease-and-desist notice in a copyright case is not a "mere" notice — it is a threat of civil and/or criminal proceedings, and its receipt within a court's territorial limits can constitute a sufficient cause of action to invoke that court's jurisdiction, particularly in view of Section 60 of the Copyright Act, 1957.


Case Details

Title: Exphar SA and Another Vs. Eupharma Laboratories Ltd. and Another

Date of Order: February 20, 2004

Case Number: Civil Appeals Nos. 1189-90 of 2004 (arising out of SLPs (C) Nos. 3551-52 of 2003)

Neutral Citation: (2004) 3 SCC 688

Name of Court: Supreme Court of India

Name of Hon'ble Judges: Justice Ruma Pal and Justice P. Venkatarama Reddi


Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as a substitute for legal advice as it may contain errors in perception, interpretation, and presentation.

Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi


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  4. Cease-and-Desist Notice as Cause of Action in Copyright Suits: Exphar SA v. Eupharma Laboratories
  5. Copyright Jurisdiction and the "Person Instituting the Suit": Supreme Court's Ruling in Exphar SA Case
  6. How Section 62(2) of the Copyright Act Protects Copyright Owners' Right to Choose Their Forum

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Headnote

The Supreme Court of India, in Exphar SA and Another v. Eupharma Laboratories Ltd. and Another, (2004) 3 SCC 688, decided on February 20, 2004 by a Bench of Justice Ruma Pal and Justice P. Venkatarama Reddi, settled the law on the scope of Section 62(2) of the Copyright Act, 1957. The court held that the jurisdiction conferred by Section 62(2) is wider than the ordinary jurisdiction under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, and provides an additional ground of jurisdiction enabling copyright owners to institute suits in courts within whose jurisdiction they reside or carry on business. A co-plaintiff who carries on business within a court's jurisdiction qualifies as a "person instituting the suit" under Section 62(2) regardless of whether that co-plaintiff has claimed ownership of the infringed copyright. The court also held that when jurisdiction is challenged by way of demurrer, the court must proceed solely on the basis of the facts pleaded in the plaint and cannot rely on averments in the defendant's written statement. Further, a cease-and-desist notice in a copyright case constitutes a legal threat — not a mere notice — and its receipt within a court's territorial jurisdiction can ground that court's jurisdiction, particularly in view of Section 60 of the Copyright Act, 1957. The appeals were allowed, the Division Bench's order was set aside, and the matter was remanded for disposal on merits.

SC-Cadila Health Care Ltd. Vs. Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

When a Name Can Kill: The Supreme Court's Landmark Ruling on Deceptive Similarity in Pharmaceutical Trademarks


Passing Off Action and Medicinal Products in India:Cadila Health Care Ltd. Versus Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd Judgment by Supreme Court

Introduction

Of all the areas where trademark law intersects with public welfare, none is more critical than the pharmaceutical industry. A mistaken purchase of a wrongly labeled soap or beverage may cause financial inconvenience. A mistaken dispensing of the wrong medicine can cause death. It is against this backdrop that the Supreme Court of India, in its landmark judgment of 26th March 2001, laid down a comprehensive set of principles governing the test of deceptive similarity specifically in the context of medicinal products. The case of Cadila Health Care Ltd. Versus Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd. is not merely a trademark dispute between two pharmaceutical giants , it is a seminal contribution to the jurisprudence of intellectual property law in India, one that overruled a previous Supreme Court decision, synthesised decades of Indian and international case law, and set down a framework that courts continue to apply to this day. The judgment is remarkable for its sensitivity to Indian ground realities, particularly the vast linguistic diversity and widespread illiteracy among the Indian population, and for its insistence that a stricter standard of scrutiny must be applied when the goods in question are medicines rather than ordinary consumer products.

Factual and Procedural Background

The two parties to the dispute, Cadila Health Care Ltd. and Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd., were both pharmaceutical companies that had emerged from the restructuring of the erstwhile Cadila Group. Under the scheme of restructuring approved under Sections 391 and 394 of the Companies Act, 1956, both companies had been permitted to use the name "Cadila" as their corporate name. This shared corporate identity formed the backdrop to a deeper rivalry between the two entities.

The appellant, Cadila Health Care Ltd., developed and marketed a drug under the brand name "Falcigo." This drug contained Artesunate and was meant for the treatment of cerebral malaria, specifically the strain known as Falciparum Malaria, a severe and potentially fatal form of the disease. On 20th August 1996, the appellant applied for registration of the trade mark "Falcigo" with the Trade Marks Registry at Ahmedabad in Part A, Class 5 under the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1938. On 7th October 1996, the Drugs Controller General of India granted permission to the appellant to market the drug under this trade mark, and from October 1996 onwards, the appellant claimed to have been manufacturing and selling "Falcigo" across India.

The respondent, Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd., obtained permission from the Drugs Controller General of India on 10th April 1997 to manufacture a different drug containing Mefloquine Hydrochloride. This drug was also used for the treatment of Falciparum Malaria, but its composition was entirely different from the appellant's drug. Crucially, the two drugs had different side effects and were in fact contraindicated in certain respects, meaning that what one drug was suited for, the other may be entirely unsuitable or even harmful. The respondent chose to sell this drug under the brand name "Falcitab."

In April 1998, the appellant came to know that the respondent had begun selling "Falcitab" in the market. Alarmed by the similarity between the names "Falcigo" and "Falcitab," particularly given that both drugs treated the same disease, the appellant filed a suit for injunction in the District Court at Vadodara, seeking to restrain the respondent from using the mark "Falcitab" on the ground that it was deceptively similar to "Falcigo" and was likely to cause confusion and deception among buyers.

The Extra Assistant Judge at Vadodara dismissed the application for interim injunction on 30th May 1998, holding that the two drugs differed in appearance, formulation, and price, and that since both were Schedule L drugs sold exclusively to hospitals and institutions and not across the counter, there was no real chance of deception or confusion. The appellant's appeal to the High Court was also unsuccessful. The High Court, after examining the packaging and cartoons of both products and surveying various case law, concluded that there was little chance of the two products being confused by an unwary consumer, and that passing off of one product for the other was not likely. It was against this order that the appellant approached the Supreme Court by way of a Special Leave Petition.

The Dispute Before the Supreme Court

The core question before the Supreme Court was whether the brand names "Falcigo" and "Falcitab" were deceptively similar to each other, and whether the respondent should be restrained from using the mark "Falcitab." But the Court, conscious that the case raised issues of broader significance, chose to go beyond the immediate facts and lay down the governing principles for determining deceptive similarity, especially in relation to pharmaceutical products. In doing so, the Court also had to grapple with whether the fact that these were Schedule L drugs sold only to hospitals and clinics, and not to the general public over the counter, provided a sufficient safeguard against confusion. The Court also found it necessary to overrule certain observations made in the more recent decision of S.M. Dyechem Ltd. v. Cadbury (India) Ltd., reported as 2000ECR1(SC), which it found to be inconsistent with settled legal principles.

Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

The Supreme Court began by tracing the legal framework governing both registered and unregistered trade marks. Under Section 28 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1938, registration in Part A or B of the register confers an exclusive right to use the trade mark. For unregistered marks, Section 27(1) bars proceedings for infringement, but Section 27(2) preserves the right to bring a passing-off action. Passing off, the Court explained, is grounded in the principle that no person should represent his goods as those of another. The Court referred to Lord Diplock's formulation in Erwen Warnink BV v. J Townend and Sons, reported as 1979 (2) AER 927, which identified five elements of the modern tort of passing off: a misrepresentation made by a trader in the course of trade, to prospective customers or ultimate consumers, which is calculated to injure the goodwill of another trader, and which causes or is likely to cause actual damage to that trader's business or goodwill.

The Court then conducted a thorough survey of its own earlier decisions, building towards a holistic and coherent framework.

In National Sewing Thread Co. Ltd. v. James Chadwick and Bros Ltd., reported as [1953]4SCR1028, the Court had examined Section 8 of the Trade Marks Act, which bars registration of marks likely to deceive or cause confusion. The principle established was that the real question is how an average man of ordinary intelligence would react to a particular trade mark and what association he would form on seeing it.

In Corn Products Refining Co. v. Shangrila Food Products Ltd., reported as [1960]1SCR968, the Court had reinforced that in deciding the question of similarity between two marks, the marks must be considered as a whole, not dissected into component parts. The case involved the marks "Glucovita" and "Gluvita," and the Court agreed with the minority view that the two marks were similar enough to cause confusion among the Indian public, for whom these English words were essentially foreign and phonetically similar.

In Amritdhara Pharmacy v. Satya Deo, reported as [1963]2SCR484, the Court dealt with the marks "Amritdhara" and "Lakshmandhara" used on similar medicinal preparations. This case became the bedrock of the judgment in the Cadila case. The Court quoted extensively from Amritdhara, where it had been observed that medicines would be purchased by villagers and townsfolk alike, literate and illiterate, and that the question must be approached from the point of view of a man of average intelligence and imperfect recollection. Such a person, the Court reasoned, would not dissect the names etymologically. He would go by the overall structural and phonetic similarity. It was also observed, drawing on the reasoning of Lord Parker in Re Pianotist Co.'s Application, reported as (1906) 23 RPC 774, that the court must take the two words, judge them both by look and by sound, consider the goods to which they are applied, the nature and kind of customer likely to buy those goods, and all surrounding circumstances.

In Durga Dutt Sharma v. N.P. Laboratories, reported as [1965]1SCR737, the Court had drawn the important distinction between an action for passing off and an action for infringement. In a passing-off action, the use of the plaintiff's exact trade mark is not necessary , what matters is whether the defendant's conduct is likely to deceive. However, in an infringement action, it is a sine qua non that the defendant has used the plaintiff's registered mark or something so similar as to constitute a colourable imitation. Importantly, the Court also held that where the similarity between two marks is so close , whether visually, phonetically, or otherwise , that the court concludes there is an imitation, no further evidence is needed to establish that the plaintiff's rights have been violated.

In F. Hoffmann-La Roche and Co. Ltd. v. Geoffrey Manner and Co. Pvt. Ltd., reported as [1970]2SCR213, the Court had applied both visual and phonetic tests to compare the drug names "Protovit" and "Dropovit" and concluded that they were dissimilar enough to avoid confusion. The judgment had extensively quoted the celebrated test formulated by Lord Parker in Re Pianotist, which had by then become the gold standard for comparing two word marks.

After building this doctrinal foundation, the Supreme Court turned its critical attention to S.M. Dyechem Ltd. v. Cadbury (India) Ltd., decided in 2000, which had compared the marks "Piknik" and "Picnic" for chocolates. The Dyechem case had introduced a different approach, suggesting that in cases of composite or device marks, differences in essential features should be given more importance than similarities. It had also suggested that the relevant consumer was one who knew the distinguishing characteristics of the plaintiff's goods and had sufficient intelligence to tell them apart. The Supreme Court in the Cadila case firmly rejected both these propositions. It held that the stress in Indian law has always been on common features rather than differences, and that the phonetic similarity test, firmly established in Amritdhara, cannot simply be discarded because the marks are written differently. More critically, the Court found the Dyechem approach to the standard of the relevant consumer to be inconsistent with Indian ground realities. Equating the Indian purchaser with a well-informed and careful English consumer was inappropriate in a country where a large section of the population is illiterate, where multiple languages are spoken, and where English words are essentially foreign sounds. Accordingly, the Court expressly overruled the decision on merits in Dyechem's case.

The Court then addressed the specific and weighty issue of pharmaceutical products. It drew extensively on American jurisprudence, noting that even for prescription drugs, confusion in marks can have catastrophic consequences. From American Cyanamid Corporation v. Connaught Laboratories Inc., reported as 231 USPQ 128 (2nd Cir. 1986), the Court drew the principle that exacting judicial scrutiny is required if there is a possibility of confusion over marks on medicinal products, because the potential harm is far more serious than in ordinary consumer goods. From Blansett Pharmaceuticals Co. v. Carmick Laboratories Inc., reported as 25 USPQ 2nd 1473 (TTAB 1993), it drew the principle that confusion is likely even for prescription drugs, where the marks look alike and sound alike. From Glenwood Laboratories Inc. v. American Home Products Corp., reported as 173 USPQ 19 (1972) 455 F. Reports 2d 1384, it adopted the principle that where one product is contraindicated for the disease for which the other is indicated, confusion in filling a prescription can produce harmful effects. The Court also relied on R.J. Strasenburgh Co. v. Kenwood Laboratories Inc., reported as 106 USPQ 379, and on the celebrated text McCarthy on Trade Marks, for the proposition that physicians and pharmacists, although trained professionals, are not immune from confusion or mistake, particularly where prescriptions are telephoned to pharmacists or where handwriting is illegible.

The Court was emphatic on the point that merely because a drug is classified as a Schedule L drug sold only to hospitals and clinics, it does not follow that confusion is impossible. India's linguistic, urban, semi-urban and rural diversity, combined with the possibility of even accidental negligence by professionals, means that strict measures must be taken to prevent confusion among pharmaceutical marks. The stakes are simply too high. The Court quoted from McCarthy on Trade Marks that a lesser quantum of proof of confusing similarity should be required when the goods are medicinal products, and that if there is any possibility of confusion in the case of medicines, public policy requires that the confusingly similar name be restrained.

The Court also took note of Section 17B of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, which treats as a spurious drug any drug bearing a name or mark that imitates or resembles another drug in a manner likely to deceive. Drawing on this provision, the Court directed that before any authority grants permission to manufacture a drug under a brand name, it must satisfy itself that the name will not cause confusion or deception in the market. The Court suggested that drug regulatory authorities should consider requiring applicants to submit an official search report from the Trade Marks Office before approval is granted, so that the drug authority can make a properly informed decision.

Having surveyed all these principles, the Court synthesised them into a comprehensive list of factors to be considered when determining deceptive similarity in a passing-off action based on an unregistered trade mark. These factors are the nature of the marks, whether they are word marks or label marks or composite marks; the degree of resemblance between the marks, including phonetic similarity; the nature of the goods in respect of which the marks are used; the similarity in the nature, character, and performance of the goods of the competing traders; the class of purchasers likely to buy the goods, their education and intelligence, and the degree of care they are likely to exercise; the mode of purchasing the goods or placing orders; and any other surrounding circumstances relevant to the degree of dissimilarity between the competing marks. The Court was careful to note that no fixed weightage can be assigned to any one factor, and that each case must be decided on its own facts.

Final Decision of the Court

Despite the elaborate principles laid down, the Supreme Court did not itself decide the question of deceptive similarity between "Falcigo" and "Falcitab" on the merits. The Court took the view that a detailed examination of evidence might be required and that it would not be advisable to express a final opinion at that stage. Accordingly, the matter was remitted back to the Trial Court at Vadodara with a direction to decide the suit afresh, keeping in mind all the principles and observations laid down in the judgment. No order as to costs was made. The appeal was accordingly disposed of.

Points of Law Settled in the Case

This judgment settled several significant points of law that have shaped intellectual property jurisprudence in India ever since. First, it overruled the decision on merits in S.M. Dyechem Ltd. v. Cadbury (India) Ltd. and reaffirmed that in passing-off actions, the test of similarity focuses on the overall resemblance between marks, with particular emphasis on phonetic similarity, rather than on differences in essential features. Second, it firmly established that the standard of the relevant consumer in India must be calibrated to Indian conditions, accounting for illiteracy, linguistic diversity, and imperfect recollection, and cannot simply be transplanted from English law. Third, it held that a stricter standard of deceptive similarity applies to pharmaceutical products, given the potential for serious, even fatal, consequences from confusion between medicines. Fourth, it held that the fact that a drug is sold only to hospitals and clinics and not over the counter does not by itself provide sufficient protection against confusion, since even trained professionals can make mistakes. Fifth, it laid down a comprehensive seven-factor test for assessing deceptive similarity in passing-off actions, which has since become the standard framework applied by Indian courts in trademark disputes. Sixth, it flagged the need for coordination between drug regulatory authorities and trade mark offices to prevent confusingly similar names from entering the pharmaceutical market.

Case Details

Title: Cadila Health Care Ltd. Vs. Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

Date of Order: 26th March 2001

Case Number: Appeal (civil) 2372 of 2001

Citation: AIR 2001 SC 1952; (2001) 5 SCC 73; 2001 (3) SCALE 98; [2001] 2 SCR 743

Name of Court: Supreme Court of India

Names of Hon'ble Judges: Justice Doraiswamy Raju, and Justice Brijesh Kumar


Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as a substitute for legal advice as it may contain errors in perception, interpretation, and presentation.

Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi


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  3. Seven-Factor Test for Deceptive Similarity in India: A Deep Analysis of the Cadila Pharmaceuticals Judgment
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Headnote

Cadila Health Care Ltd. v. Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd., Supreme Court of India, decided on 26 March 2001. Appeal by special leave against the orders of the trial court and the High Court refusing interim injunction in a passing off action concerning alleged deceptive similarity between pharmaceutical trade marks “Falcigo” (appellant) and “Falcitab” (respondent). The appellant sought restraint on use of the respondent’s mark on the ground of likelihood of confusion in medicinal products. The Supreme Court declined to interfere with the concurrent orders refusing interim injunction, holding that no case for interference at that interlocutory stage was made out. The appeal was accordingly disposed of without granting relief. However, the Court laid down detailed guiding principles for assessing deceptive similarity in pharmaceutical trade marks, emphasizing a stricter standard due to potential public health risks, and directed the trial court to decide the suit expeditiously on merits.

SC-Brihan Karan Sugar Syndicate Private Limited Vs. Yashwantrao Mohite Krushna Sahakari Sakhar Karkhana

When a Winner Loses: How Acquiescence and Unproved Goodwill Stayed a Copyright and Passing-Off Decree

Copyright Infringement, Goodwill and Passing Off Action:Brihan Karan Sugar Syndicate Private Limited Vs. Yashwantrao Mohite Krushna Sahakari Sakhar Karkhana Judgement by Supreme Court

Introduction

In the world of intellectual property disputes, winning a full trial is often considered the hardest part. Yet, as this Supreme Court case demonstrates, even a decree passed after a complete trial is not immune from being stayed by a higher court. This case presents a fascinating intersection of copyright law, passing-off actions, and the doctrine of acquiescence, all arising from a dispute over labels on country liquor bottles. Beyond the intellectual property issues, the Supreme Court also took the opportunity to comment on the professional conduct of advocates during trial proceedings, making this judgment instructive on multiple levels. The case serves as an important reminder that winning on the merits at trial does not automatically translate into enforcement of the decree if the appellate court finds a good reason to pause its operation.

Factual and Procedural Background

Brihan Karan Sugar Syndicate Private Limited, the appellant, was in the business of selling country liquor under the label "Tango Punch." The respondent, Yashwantrao Mohite Krushna Sahakari Sakhar Karkhana, also sold country liquor but used the label "Two Punch Premium." The appellant claimed to own a registered copyright in the artistic label displayed on its bottles and contended that the respondent's label was deceptively similar to its own.

The appellant filed a suit before the District Judge-1, Osmanabad, seeking two main reliefs. The first was a permanent injunction restraining the respondent from infringing the copyright in the appellant's artistic label by reproducing it or any substantial part of it. The second was an injunction restraining the respondent from passing off its country liquor as that of the appellant by using a deceptively similar trademark label.

During the pendency of this suit, the appellant applied for a temporary injunction, which was denied by the Trial Court on 12th April 2019. This refusal was confirmed by the High Court on 7th January 2020. This meant that throughout the trial, there was no court order stopping the respondent from using its labels.

Despite this, after a complete trial on merits, the District Judge passed a decree on 24th May 2021 decisively in favour of the appellant. The decree included a permanent injunction against copyright infringement, a permanent injunction against passing off, damages of Rs. 1,00,000 to the appellant, and an order directing the respondent to hand over all infringing labels, wrappers, dies, and printing material for destruction within one month.

The respondent, aggrieved by this decree, filed an appeal before the High Court of Judicature at Bombay, Aurangabad Bench. By an order dated 23rd June 2021, a learned Single Judge of the High Court stayed the execution and operation of the entire decree pending the final disposal of the appeal. It is this stay order that was challenged by the appellant before the Supreme Court in Civil Appeal No. 2768 of 2023.

The Dispute Before the Supreme Court

The core question before the Supreme Court was whether the High Court was justified in staying a decree that had been passed after a complete and full-fledged trial. The appellant argued strongly that once a trial court has examined all evidence and passed a reasoned decree, it should not be suspended by the appellate court merely because an appeal has been filed. The respondent, on the other hand, defended the stay by pointing to specific weaknesses in the appellant's case, particularly regarding the failure to prove goodwill and reputation, and the admitted act of withdrawing objections which, the respondent argued, amounted to acquiescence.

A key factual element was that in March 2016, the respondent had applied to the Commissioner of State Excise for approval to use the "Two Punch Premium" labels. The appellant had raised formal written objections to this application. However, in April 2016, the appellant withdrew those objections by submitting letters of withdrawal. Although one of the appellant's witnesses claimed during cross-examination that the withdrawal was conditional, he was unable to point to anything in the letters themselves that said so. The suit was ultimately filed by the appellant only on 4th October 2017, nearly one and a half years after withdrawing the objections.

Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

The Supreme Court approached the matter with careful nuance. The Court began by acknowledging that it was dealing with an interim order passed during a pending appeal, not a final decision on the merits. It clarified that the High Court was not required to conduct a deep or exhaustive analysis of the merits of the appeal while deciding whether to stay a decree. Only a prima facie examination was needed.

On the Question of Passing-Off

The Court turned to the law on passing-off actions and referred extensively to the Supreme Court's own decision in Satyam Infoway Ltd. v. Sifynet Solutions (P) Ltd., reported as (2004) 6 SCC 145. This judgment had laid down that a passing-off action requires three elements to be established by the plaintiff: first, that the plaintiff had acquired a reputation or goodwill connected with its goods; second, that the defendant made a misrepresentation to the public; and third, that the plaintiff suffered or was likely to suffer loss. Importantly, the Satyam Infoway case had clarified that it is not essential for the plaintiff to prove long use, and that the question of reputation depends on the volume of sales and extent of advertisement.

The Court also referred to Toyota Jidosha Kabushiki Kaisha v. Prius Auto Industries Ltd. and Others, reported as (2018) 2 SCC 1. This decision approved the view in S. Syed Mohideen v. P. Sulochana Bai, reported as (2016) 2 SCC 683, that a passing-off action premised on the rights of the prior user generating goodwill shall remain unaffected by any registration. The Toyota case had endorsed the triple test laid down by the House of Lords in Reckitt and Colman Products Ltd. v. Borden Inc. and Others, reported as (1990) 1 WLR 491, one element of which was that the plaintiff must prove acquisition of reputation or goodwill in connection with the goods. The Toyota decision further held, in paragraph 40, that if goodwill or reputation in a particular jurisdiction is not established, no other issue needs examination to determine the extent of the plaintiff's right in a passing-off action.

Applying these principles to the facts, the Court found that the appellant had examined only two witnesses. The first was Mr. K.K. Kalani and the second was Mr. Sudhir Pokhale, who was examined only on the issue of label approval. Exhibits 73 and 73.1 to 73.4 were statements of sales and advertisement expenses certified by a Chartered Accountant named Mr. Natesh. However, the Chartered Accountant was never examined as a witness to prove these statements. The witness Kalani had only quoted figures of sales and marketing expenses in his examination-in-chief without the underlying documents being proved in the manner known to law. The Court noted an important distinction between the standard applicable at a temporary injunction stage and at the final hearing. At the stage of a temporary injunction, certified accounts might suffice to make out a prima facie case. But at the final hearing of the suit, figures of sales and advertisement expenses must be proved through proper legal evidence. Since this was not done, the Court found that the appellant had prima facie failed to establish the goodwill and reputation necessary for the passing-off action. This finding, the Court held, justified the High Court's decision to stay that part of the decree relating to passing-off.

On the Question of Copyright Infringement and Acquiescence

The Court then turned to copyright infringement. It acknowledged that acquiescence is a well-recognised defence in copyright infringement actions. It referred to  Power Control Appliances and Others v. Sumeet Machines Pvt. Ltd., reported as 1994 (2) SCC 448, which had discussed the concept of acquiescence at length. That case had held that if acquiescence in infringement amounts to consent, it will be a complete defence. Acquiescence is a course of conduct inconsistent with the claim for exclusive rights, and it applies to positive acts, not merely silence or inaction as in cases of latches. Mere negligence is not sufficient for acquiescence.

Applying this to the facts, the Court found a very significant positive act on the part of the appellant. When the respondent had applied for permission to use the impugned labels, the appellant had raised written objections. It then took the affirmative step of withdrawing those objections in writing. The letters of withdrawal did not contain any condition or reservation, even though the witness Kalani claimed orally that the withdrawal was conditional. When confronted with the actual letters, he admitted there was nothing written to suggest the withdrawal was conditional. Moreover, the suit was filed nearly one and a half years after this withdrawal. The Court held that this withdrawal amounted to a prima facie case of acquiescence, supporting the stay of the copyright infringement part of the decree as well.

The Court also noted that the fact that temporary injunction had been refused during the pendency of the suit was a relevant consideration. Since no prohibitory order had operated during the entire period of the trial, the situation of the respondent's business had developed without any court-imposed restriction.

On Lawyers' Conduct During Trial

The Court also took note of a deeply concerning aspect of the trial proceedings. The Trial Judge had recorded observations that the advocate appearing for the appellant had persistently raised objections to almost every question asked during cross-examination. The Trial Court noted that the frequency of objections had become so excessive that it was required to record a substantial part of the cross-examination in question-and-answer form, consuming considerable court time. The Supreme Court, in paragraphs 19 and beyond, noted this with concern in the context of the massive judicial pendency reflected in the National Judicial Data Grid for Maharashtra. It observed that advocates, as officers of the court, are expected to act fairly and reasonably during trials. It stated that fairness is a hallmark of great advocacy, and that persistent objections to every question in cross-examination not only delay individual trials but contribute to the systemic problem of arrears.

Final Decision of the Court

The Supreme Court dismissed the civil appeal filed by the appellant. It upheld the High Court's order staying the execution and operation of the decree passed by the District Judge-1, Osmanabad, pending the final disposal of the respondent's appeal before the High Court. The stay was to continue until the High Court disposed of the substantive appeal on merits.

Points of Law Settled in the Case

This judgment contributes meaningfully to several areas of law. On passing-off, it reaffirms that while long user is not essential to establish reputation, evidence of sales volume and advertisement expenditure must be properly proved through legal evidence at the final hearing stage. Certified accounts alone, without the certifying Chartered Accountant being examined as a witness, are insufficient to prove goodwill and reputation at trial.

On acquiescence in copyright matters, the judgment reaffirms that acquiescence requires a positive act, not mere silence or inaction. However, a written withdrawal of formal objections, especially without any recorded condition or reservation, constitutes such a positive act and can make out a prima facie case of acquiescence, even if the party later claims the withdrawal was conditional.

On the power to stay decrees, the judgment clarifies that an appellate court is not required to conduct a detailed examination of the merits while deciding whether to stay a trial court decree. A prima facie examination suffices. The fact that temporary injunction was refused during the pendency of the trial is a legitimate and relevant consideration when deciding whether to stay the eventual decree.

On professional responsibility, the Court's observations remind the Bar that excessive and unwarranted objections during cross-examination are inconsistent with an advocate's role as an officer of the court and contribute to the delay in the administration of justice.

Case Title: Brihan Karan Sugar Syndicate Private Limited Vs. Yashwantrao Mohite Krushna Sahakari Sakhar Karkhana

Date of Order: September 14, 2023

Case Number: Civil Appeal No. 2768 of 2023

Neutral Citation: 2023 INSC 831

Name of Court: Supreme Court of India, Civil Appellate Jurisdiction

Name of Hon'ble Judge: Justice Abhay S. Oka (with Justice Rajesh Bindal)

Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as a substitute for legal advice as it may contain errors in perception, interpretation, and presentation.

Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi

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  2. Acquiescence as Defence in Copyright Law: How Withdrawal of Objections Cost a Decree Holder in Supreme Court
  3. Proving Goodwill in Passing-Off Actions: Supreme Court's Landmark Guidance on Evidence Standards
  4. When a Trial Court Victory Gets Stayed: Supreme Court on Acquiescence, Goodwill, and Appellate Powers
  5. Tango Punch vs Two Punch: Supreme Court Explains Copyright Acquiescence and Passing-Off Proof Standards

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Headnote

The appellant-plaintiff obtained a decree from the District Judge, Osmanabad, granting permanent injunction, damages, and other reliefs for copyright infringement and passing off. The respondent appealed, and the Bombay High Court (Aurangabad Bench) stayed the execution and operation of the decree pending disposal of the appeal. The plaintiff challenged the stay order before the Supreme Court.The Supreme Court upheld the High Court’s interim stay and dismissed the appeal. The Court held that a prima facie case existed regarding lack of proof of goodwill in the passing-off claim and acquiescence in the copyright claim, justifying continuation of the stay pending disposal of the first appeal. The High Court was directed to decide the appeal on its own merits, uninfluenced by observations in either judgment.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Kanpur Flowercycling Private Limited Vs Sarathi International Inc.

Kanpur Flowercycling Private Limited Vs Sarathi International Inc. 04.06.2026 : Writ Petition No.30565 of 2025 (IPR) : 2026:KHC:26391 : Karnataka HC : Tara Vitasta Ganju

The court considered a dispute concerning the pecuniary jurisdiction of a Commercial Court in a trademark infringement suit relating to the mark "TULASI". The case arose from allegations that the respondent/plaintiff, after initially asserting that the specified value of the suit exceeded Rs.3,00,000/- (resulting in the matter being transferred to the Commercial Court), later filed an application contending the value was below Rs.3,00,000/- and sought return of the plaint to the Civil Court, relying on an order in a separate suit involving a different defendant. The principal question before the Court was whether the Commercial Court's order returning the plaint, passed without independently determining the "specified value" under Section 12(1)(d) of the Commercial Courts Act, 2015, warranted interference under Article 227 of the Constitution.

After examining the material on record and the submissions of the parties, including the petitioner/defendant, respondent/plaintiff, and the Amicus Curiae, Justice Ganju observed that a writ petition under Article 227 is maintainable against orders of Commercial Courts despite the bar under Section 8 of the CC Act, but such jurisdiction must be exercised sparingly and only in cases of patent jurisdictional error or manifest injustice. The Court held that the Commercial Court had failed to undertake any independent examination of the "specified value" as required under Section 12(1)(d), and had erroneously relied on an order in another suit (involving a different defendant) which itself was based on the wrong provision (Section 12(1)(c) instead of 12(1)(d)), emphasizing that while a plaintiff is dominus litis, a bona fide and reasoned valuation must still be demonstrated, especially where mala fides are alleged.

Accordingly, the Court allowed the petition, set aside the impugned order dated 02.08.2025, and directed the Commercial Court to examine the "specified value" claimed by the respondent/plaintiff afresh and pass orders in accordance with law, keeping the rights and contentions of both parties open.

[Disclaimer: Readers are advised not treat this as a substitute for legal advise as it is based on limited information and is intended solely for general informational purposes.]

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Karnataka High Court Examines Scope of Article 227 Jurisdiction Over Commercial Court Orders: A Case Study on Valuation Disputes in Trademark Litigation

Determination of Specified Value in Commercial IPR Dispute is Essential

Introduction

When a business approaches a court seeking protection of its trademark, one of the first hurdles it must cross is establishing that the court has the authority to hear the case. This authority, known as jurisdiction, often depends on something as seemingly mundane as the monetary value assigned to the dispute. Yet, as this judgment from the Karnataka High Court demonstrates, valuation disputes can become surprisingly complex, especially when a litigant changes its position midway through proceedings.

This case is significant for multiple reasons. First, it addresses a long-debated question about whether the High Court can intervene under its supervisory powers when a Commercial Court passes an interlocutory order, particularly given the restrictions imposed by the Commercial Courts Act, 2015. Second, it deals with the practical problem of how courts should value "intangible rights" such as trademarks for the purpose of deciding whether a case belongs before a Commercial Court or an ordinary Civil Court. Third, and perhaps most importantly for litigants and practitioners, it cautions against parties taking inconsistent positions on valuation to suit their convenience, a practice sometimes described as forum shopping.

For businesses engaged in intellectual property disputes, lawyers handling commercial litigation, and even courts grappling with similar valuation questions, this judgment offers valuable clarity on how such issues ought to be approached.

Factual and Procedural Background

The dispute traces back to a suit filed by the respondent, a partnership firm, against the petitioner company, alleging infringement of its registered trademark "TULASI". The respondent had approached the Civil Court seeking a permanent injunction and managed to obtain an ex parte temporary injunction in its favour shortly after filing the suit.

Once the petitioner appeared before the Civil Court and raised objections regarding maintainability, the Civil Court directed the respondent to disclose the specified value of the suit as required under Section 12 of the Commercial Courts Act, 2015. In response, the respondent filed a memo stating that the specified value of the suit exceeded Rs.3,00,000. Based on this declaration, the Civil Court returned the plaint for presentation before the Commercial Court, since disputes involving registered trademarks valued above this threshold fall within the domain of Commercial Courts under the Act.

The plaint was accordingly re-registered before the Commercial Court. The respondent then went a step further and sought an amendment to its plaint, adding a fresh paragraph specifically asserting that the market value of the "TULASI" trademark, as estimated by the plaintiff, exceeded Rs.3,00,000, thereby justifying the Commercial Court's jurisdiction.

However, the story took an unexpected turn. The respondent subsequently filed an application under Order VII Rule 10 of the Code of Civil Procedure, this time contending that the specified value of the suit was actually below Rs.3,00,000, and therefore the matter should be sent back to the ordinary Civil Court. This reversal was based on an order passed in a separate suit filed by the same respondent against a different defendant, where another Commercial Court had observed that the value of the respondent's rights in the same trademark was below the threshold.

The petitioner opposed this application, arguing that the respondent could not be allowed to take such a contradictory stand after having earlier invoked the Commercial Court's jurisdiction on its own assertion. Despite this objection, the Commercial Court allowed the respondent's application and directed that the plaint be returned to the Civil Court. This order, passed on a date corresponding to August 2025, became the subject matter of challenge before the High Court.

Following the impugned order, the respondent refiled the suit before the Civil Court, where it was registered as a fresh proceeding. The High Court, while examining this petition, also stayed further proceedings in both the Commercial Court suit and the subsequently filed Civil Court suit.

Interestingly, this petition was heard alongside a batch of other petitions raising a common question: whether interim or interlocutory orders passed by Commercial Courts are amenable to challenge under Article 227 of the Constitution, given the restrictions contained in Section 8 of the Commercial Courts Act. An Amicus Curiae was appointed to assist the Court on this larger question, and arguments on both the maintainability issue and the merits of the present case were heard together.

Dispute Before the Court

At its core, this case presented two intertwined questions, one procedural and one substantive.

The procedural question was whether a petition filed under Article 227 of the Constitution challenging an order of a Commercial Court is maintainable at all, given that Section 8 of the Commercial Courts Act bars civil revision applications or petitions against interlocutory orders of such courts. If maintainable, the Court also had to determine the extent to which it should interfere with such orders, particularly keeping in mind the legislative intent behind the Commercial Courts Act to ensure speedy resolution of commercial disputes.

The substantive question revolved around the conduct of the respondent in changing its stance on the valuation of the suit. The petitioner argued that having once asserted, through a formal memo and an amendment application, that the value of its trademark rights exceeded Rs.3,00,000 (and having obtained the benefit of this assertion by getting the matter transferred to the Commercial Court), the respondent could not be permitted to reverse this position simply because it suited a different litigation strategy. According to the petitioner, this amounted to forum shopping and an abuse of the legal process, forcing the petitioner to chase the case across different courts.

The respondent, on the other hand, contended that as the "dominus litis" (master of the suit), it had the right to value its own claim, and that this valuation could be revised based on subsequent developments, particularly the observations made by another Commercial Court in a separate suit involving the same trademark. The respondent also pointed to earlier proceedings involving the same mark where courts had accepted a lower valuation.

The Amicus Curiae, appointed specifically to address the broader question of Article 227's applicability to Commercial Court orders, argued that while this supervisory power is a constitutional safeguard that cannot be taken away by any statute, it must be exercised with extreme caution, particularly in commercial matters where speed of disposal is a legislative priority.

Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

The Court's analysis proceeded in a structured manner, first addressing the question of maintainability and the scope of Article 227, before turning to the specific facts of the valuation dispute.

On the question of maintainability, the Court extensively relied on the foundational principle laid down by the Supreme Court in L. Chandra Kumar v. Union of India, (1997) 3 SCC 261, which held that the power of judicial review and superintendence vested in High Courts under Articles 226 and 227 forms part of the basic structure of the Constitution and cannot be excluded by any legislative enactment. This meant that no matter what restrictions the Commercial Courts Act imposes through Section 8, the constitutional power under Article 227 remains intact.

The Court then turned to Surya Dev Rai v. Ram Chander Rai, (2003) 6 SCC 675, where the Supreme Court clarified that even interlocutory orders, against which statutory revision has been barred, remain open to challenge under the High Court's supervisory jurisdiction. However, this jurisdiction is to be exercised only where the subordinate court has acted without jurisdiction, in excess of jurisdiction, or in a manner causing grave injustice, and not merely to correct errors of fact or law where two views are reasonably possible.

The Court further discussed Shalini Shyam Shetty v. Rajendra Shankar Patil, (2010) 8 SCC 329, which reiterated that the power under Article 227 is meant to keep subordinate courts within the bounds of their authority and is not to be exercised as an appellate remedy. The Supreme Court in that case had cautioned that this power, though unfettered, is subject to a high degree of judicial discipline and should be used sparingly.

On the specific question of how Article 227 interacts with the Commercial Courts Act, the Court examined the Delhi High Court's Division Bench ruling in M/s. C.P. Rama Rao Sole Proprietor v. National Highways Authority of India, 2024 SCC OnLine Del 7342, and the earlier decision in Black Diamond Trackparts Pvt. Ltd. v. Black Diamond Motors Pvt. Ltd., 2021 SCC OnLine Del 3946 (a decision whose correctness was later affirmed by the Supreme Court when a challenge to it was dismissed). These cases held that the word "petition" in Section 8 of the Commercial Courts Act refers only to revision petitions and not to petitions under Article 227, and therefore the statutory bar does not extend to constitutional remedies. Similar reasoning was found in the Gujarat High Court's decision in State of Gujarat v. Union of India, 2018 SCC OnLine Guj 1515, and the Bombay High Court's ruling in Pravinchandra v. Hemant Kumar, 2023:BHC-NAG:16159.

At the same time, the Court drew guidance from how the Supreme Court has approached similar tensions in the context of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. In Deep Industries Ltd. v. ONGC, (2020) 15 SCC 706, and Bhaven Construction v. Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam Ltd., (2022) 1 SCC 75, the Supreme Court held that while Article 227 remains available even against orders passed under self-contained statutory codes, High Courts should be extremely circumspect in interfering, restricting intervention to situations where a party is left remediless or where bad faith is clearly demonstrated. The Karnataka High Court found this reasoning equally applicable to the Commercial Courts Act, which similarly aims at speedy and efficient disposal of commercial disputes through Sections 8 and 13.

Turning to the substantive valuation issue, the Court examined Section 12 of the Commercial Courts Act in detail. While Section 12(1)(a) to (c) deal with valuation for money claims, movable property, and immovable property respectively, Section 12(1)(d) specifically governs "any other intangible right" and states that the market value as estimated by the plaintiff shall be taken into account. The Court also noted Section 2(1)(c)(xvii), which classifies disputes relating to registered and unregistered trademarks as commercial disputes, and Section 2(1)(i), which defines "specified value" as the value determined under Section 12, which cannot be less than Rs.3,00,000.

The Court examined the petitioner's reliance on Kirloskar AAF Limited v. M/s. American Air Filters, RFA 1/2015, where a Coordinate Bench had observed that the value of a trademark infringement dispute involving a company could "safely" be taken as exceeding Rs.3,00,000, even without specific evidence. However, the Court distinguished this case on facts, noting that the present matter was at a different procedural stage where the respondent had already made specific assertions about valuation, which were later contradicted.

The Court also discussed the Bangalore Blues Entertainment India Pvt. Ltd. v. One Ikigai Edutech Pvt. Ltd, 2023 SCC OnLine Kar 177, and Gangadharappa Munindra Kumar v. M/s Eaglesight Media Pvt. Ltd., 2022 SCC OnLine Kar 1859, observing that these dealt with situations where the specified value had not been mentioned in the plaint at all, a stage already crossed in the present case. The Court noted that the reasoning in Bangalore Blues had relied on a Delhi High Court single-judge decision in Vishal Pipes Limited v. Bhavya Pipe Industry, which had since been substantially overruled by a Division Bench in Pankaj Ravjibhai Patel trading as Rakesh Pharmaceuticals v. SSS Pharmachem Pvt. Ltd., 2023 SCC Online Del 7013.

The discussion of the Pankaj Ravjibhai Patel case proved particularly significant. The Delhi High Court Division Bench had clarified that it would be incorrect to assume that intellectual property disputes are necessarily valued above Rs.3,00,000, just as it would be incorrect to assume that valuations below this threshold are automatically the result of bad faith. Instead, where a dispute arises about whether a valuation has been deliberately understated, the competent court hearing the matter itself can examine this issue and, if satisfied that the valuation was incorrect or actuated by ulterior motives, direct amendment of the plaint and payment of additional court fees. Importantly, this examination need not be transferred to a separate Commercial Court merely for this purpose.

Applying this framework to the facts, the Court observed that the respondent had indeed asserted contradictory valuations for the same intangible right, the trademark "TULASI", at different points in the litigation. However, no material had actually been placed before the Commercial Court to support either valuation, and crucially, the Commercial Court itself had not undertaken any independent examination of the specified value. Instead, it had simply relied on an order passed in a different suit involving a different defendant, where the earlier Commercial Court had itself relied on Section 12(1)(c), the provision dealing with immovable property, rather than the correct provision, Section 12(1)(d), applicable to intangible rights like trademarks.

The Court found this approach problematic. Given that the petitioner had specifically raised an allegation of mala fide conduct and forum shopping against the respondent, the Commercial Court was obligated to examine this allegation and independently determine the specified value in accordance with Section 12(1)(d), rather than mechanically adopting a determination made in an unrelated proceeding based on an incorrect statutory provision.

On the question of whether an alternative remedy of appeal was available, the Court examined Order XLIII Rule 1(a) of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides for an appeal against orders returning a plaint under Order VII Rule 10, except where the procedure under Order VII Rule 10A has been followed. Since the Commercial Court had followed the Order VII Rule 10A procedure (fixing a date for appearance before the transferee court), and since Order VII Rule 10A(5) expressly bars an appeal where the plaintiff's own application for return of plaint has been allowed, the Court found that no appellate remedy was available to the petitioner. This made the case an appropriate one for invoking Article 227.

Final Decision of the Court

The High Court allowed the writ petition and set aside the order of the Commercial Court that had directed the return of the plaint to the Civil Court. The matter was remanded back to the Commercial Court with a specific direction to conduct a proper examination of the "specified value" as claimed by the respondent, taking into account the allegations of inconsistent positions and mala fides raised by the petitioner, and to pass a fresh order in accordance with law. The rights and contentions of both parties on this aspect were left open for consideration by the Commercial Court.

Given that the matter had already been pending for a considerable period, the Court requested the Commercial Court to conduct this examination at the earliest opportunity. The Court also directed that the matter be placed before the Chief Justice for appropriate administrative directions, particularly regarding the suggestion that a separate roster or procedural mechanism be considered for handling Article 227 petitions arising from commercial disputes, so as to further the speedy disposal objectives of the Commercial Courts Act.

Point of Law Settled

This judgment makes several important contributions to the law surrounding commercial litigation and supervisory jurisdiction.

First, it reaffirms that a petition under Article 227 of the Constitution remains maintainable against orders, including interlocutory orders, passed by Commercial Courts, notwithstanding the bar contained in Section 8 of the Commercial Courts Act, 2015. This is because the word "petition" in that section refers only to revision petitions under the Code of Civil Procedure and not to constitutional remedies, which cannot be curtailed by ordinary legislation.

Second, and equally important, the judgment emphasizes that this constitutional remedy must be exercised with considerable restraint in commercial matters. Drawing parallels with how courts approach the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, the judgment suggests that interference should be limited to situations involving patent jurisdictional errors, manifest injustice, or where a party would otherwise be left without any remedy, so that the legislative goal of speedy disposal of commercial disputes is not defeated by routine recourse to writ jurisdiction.

Third, on the substantive question of valuation, the judgment clarifies that for disputes involving intangible rights such as trademarks, Section 12(1)(d) of the Commercial Courts Act is the governing provision, requiring the court to consider the market value as estimated by the plaintiff. However, this does not mean such estimation is beyond scrutiny. Where a party raises a specific allegation that the valuation has been manipulated for forum shopping or is otherwise actuated by mala fides, particularly where the same litigant has taken inconsistent positions on the value of the same intellectual property right in different proceedings, the court hearing the matter must independently examine this question rather than mechanically relying on determinations made in unrelated proceedings, especially where those determinations were themselves based on an incorrect statutory provision.

Finally, the judgment also serves as a reminder that courts cannot simply transplant findings on valuation from one suit to another involving different parties without independent verification, particularly when the correctness of the underlying reasoning itself is in question.

Case Title: Kanpur Flowercycling Private Limited Vs. Sarathi International Inc.
Date of Judgment/Order: 04.06.2026
Case Number: Writ Petition No.30565 of 2025 (IPR)
Neutral Citation: 2026:KHC:26391
Name of Court: High Court of Karnataka at Bengaluru
Name of Hon'ble Judge: Justice Tara Vitasta Ganju

Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi

Disclaimer: Images used herein do not reflect actual images used in Judgement and that the same are for illustrative purpose only. Readers are advised not to treat this as substitute for legal advice as it may contain errors in perception, interpretation, and presentation.

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  3. Karnataka High Court on Section 12(1)(d) of Commercial Courts Act: How Should Intangible Rights Be Valued?
  4. Forum Shopping in Commercial Disputes: Karnataka High Court's Take on Inconsistent Valuation Claims
  5. Supervisory Jurisdiction Under Article 227 and Commercial Courts: Lessons from the TULASI Trademark Case
  6. When Can High Courts Interfere With Commercial Court Orders? Karnataka High Court Sets the Boundaries
  7. Trademark Valuation Disputes: Karnataka High Court Remands TULASI Case for Fresh Determination
  8. Dominus Litis and Its Limits: Karnataka High Court on Plaintiff's Right to Value Intellectual Property Suits
  9. Pecuniary Jurisdiction in IP Suits: Karnataka High Court Analyses Commercial Courts Act Provisions
  10. Article 227 Petitions in Commercial Litigation: Karnataka High Court's Guidance for Faster Disposal

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Headnote of the Judgment:
In Kanpur Flowercycling Private Limited Vs Sarathi International Inc. (2026:KHC:26391), the Karnataka High Court, in WP No.30565/2025 (IPR), examined a writ petition under Articles 226 and 227 challenging an order of the Commercial Court returning a trademark infringement plaint to the Civil Court for alleged lack of pecuniary jurisdiction. The Court held that Article 227 petitions remain maintainable against Commercial Court orders despite Section 8 of the Commercial Courts Act, though to be exercised sparingly. Finding that the Commercial Court had not independently examined the "specified value" under Section 12(1)(d) despite allegations of inconsistent valuation by the plaintiff, the Court allowed the petition, set aside the impugned order, and remanded the matter for fresh determination.

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