Thursday, June 11, 2026

SC-Bishwanath Prasad Radhey Shyam Vs. Hindustan Metal Industries

When Old Methods Don't Make New Patents: The Supreme Court's Landmark Ruling on Inventive Step in Bishwanath Prasad Radhey Shyam Vs. Hindustan Metal Industries

The Test of Inventive Step and Novelty for Invention: Bishwanath Prasad Radhey Shyam Vs. Hindustan Metal Industries Judgement by Supreme Court

Introduction

Patent law exists to reward genuine creativity. It gives an inventor a temporary monopoly over his creation in exchange for sharing that creation with the world. But this bargain only works if the law is strict about what qualifies as an invention. If courts allow patents over things that were already known, already used, or merely obvious to any skilled worker, the system turns from a reward for innovation into a tool for monopolizing common knowledge. This is precisely the concern at the heart of the Supreme Court's landmark 1978 judgment in Bishwanath Prasad Radhey Shyam Vs. Hindustan Metal Industries. Decided on December 13, 1978, this case remains one of the most important Indian judicial pronouncements on what it truly means for something to be "new" and "inventive" under patent law. The judgment not only settled a specific commercial dispute between two utensil manufacturers in Mirzapur but laid down enduring principles about novelty, inventive step, and the standard by which courts should evaluate the validity of a patent.

Factual and Procedural Background

The story begins in the utensil manufacturing industry of Mirzapur, Uttar Pradesh, a town with a long tradition of producing brass and German silver utensils. The old method of manufacturing shallow dishes and plates involved turning and polishing them on a machine called a headstock, without a tailstock. The utensils were either fixed to the headstock using a thermoplastic adhesive like lac or shellac, or held in the jaws of a chuck attached to the headstock. The problem with this method was a serious safety hazard: the utensils would frequently fly off the headstock during the turning process, causing injuries to workers. This risk apparently became serious enough that the work of manufacturing plates and dishes was suspended at Mirzapur for several years before 1951.

In 1951, Purshottam Dass, one of the partners of Hindustan Metal Industries (the plaintiff-respondent), claimed to have invented a new device and method to address this problem. His solution involved mounting metallic utensils on a lathe using an adapter on the headstock and applying independent pressure through a pressure spindle or tailstock to hold the utensil firmly in place during the turning operation. This, he claimed, eliminated the danger of utensils flying off and made the manufacturing process safer, faster, and more efficient. On the strength of this claimed invention, the plaintiff firm filed the necessary specifications and claims at the Patent Office and obtained Patent No. 46368-51 on May 6, 1953, with effect from December 13, 1951, under the Indian Patent and Designs Act, 1911.

In September 1952, the plaintiff discovered that Biswanath Prasad Radhey Shyam (the defendant-appellant), another concern in the utensil manufacturing business in Mirzapur, was using substantially the same device and method. The plaintiff served a notice on September 9, 1952, demanding that the defendant stop using the patented method, but the defendant did not comply. On August 8, 1953, the plaintiff filed a suit for permanent injunction and damages of Rs. 3,000 in the Court of the District Judge, Allahabad.

The defendant contested the suit vigorously. He argued that his firm had been in the metal ware manufacturing business for a long time, and that the method described in the patent, namely using a lathe with a headstock, an adapter, and a tailstock, had been publicly known and in common commercial use all over the country for several decades before the plaintiff's patent. He further argued that the alleged invention was not, at the date of the patent, a manner of new manufacture or improvement, nor did it involve any inventive step. The defendant also filed a counter-claim for revocation of the patent, and on October 13, 1953, he along with three other business concerns filed a formal petition under Section 26 of the Indian Patent and Designs Act, 1911, for revocation of the patent on the same grounds.

The plaintiff's suit and the revocation petition were transferred to the High Court of Allahabad under Section 29 of the Act, consolidated, and tried together . The defendant examined 9 witnesses to establish that the method had been publicly known and in use long before 1951, while the plaintiff examined 4 witnesses to prove that the patented machine was a genuine improvement over the crude machines previously in use.

The learned Single Judge, after careful examination of all the evidence and the machines produced before him (marked Exhibit CC, which was the plaintiff's patented machine, and Exhibit XVI, alleged to be an imitation), ruled against the plaintiff on all the key issues. He found that the patent did not involve any inventive step having regard to what was known or used prior to its date, that the alleged invention was not a manner of new manufacture or improvement, that the defendant had publicly manufactured goods before the patent date substantially according to the same method, and that the patent was liable to be revoked. He accordingly dismissed the plaintiff's infringement suit and allowed the petition for revocation, revoking Patent No. 46368-51.

The plaintiff challenged this decision before a Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court in two Special Appeals. The Division Bench took a different view. It found that formerly, plates and dishes were attached to the headstock using adhesive like lac or shellac and used to fly off causing injuries, leading to the suspension of manufacturing at Mirzapur for about 5 or 6 years. It found that the plaintiff had invented the method of mounting in 1951, after which the work restarted successfully. The Division Bench accepted that lathes with headstock and tailstock were well known, and that known uses of a tailstock included centering the article, holding long work by pivoting with a pointed tailstock, and holding articles in metal spinning by pressure of a pad. However, it went on to find that "the method of holding an article by the pressure of a point of a pointed tailstock was neither used nor known." On this basis, the Division Bench concluded that the method of mounting patented by the plaintiff did involve an inventive step and was a manner of new manufacture and improvement. It allowed the appeals, set aside the trial court judgment, and decreed the plaintiff's suit with costs. Aggrieved, the defendant brought the matter before the Supreme Court of India.

The Dispute

At the Supreme Court, the central controversy narrowed into two essential questions. First, whether the patented method was, at the date of the patent on December 13, 1951, a manner of new manufacture or improvement under Section 26(1)(d) of the Indian Patent and Designs Act, 1911. Second, whether the invention involved any inventive step having regard to what was known or used prior to the date of the patent under Section 26(1)(e) of the same Act. If either answer was no, the patent was liable to be revoked.

The defendant-appellant argued that the method and means claimed in the patent involved no inventive step or novelty whatsoever. He specifically pointed out that the Division Bench had committed a serious error by locating the novelty of the invention in the use of a pointed tailstock, when the complete specification itself expressly stated that the pressure spindle could be "pointed or blunt." The claims in the patent, he argued, made no assertion of novelty for a pointed tailstock. Therefore, the Division Bench had gone beyond the scope of what the patentee himself had claimed and had essentially invented a case for the plaintiff that had never been pleaded. He also highlighted the damaging fact that Purshottam Dass, stated to be the actual inventor, had not appeared in the witness box to explain in what way the invention was novel or what research or experiments had led to it. This failure, the appellant argued, should give rise to an adverse inference.

The plaintiff-respondent countered that the question of whether a process involves a manner of new manufacture or improvement is purely one of fact, and factual findings, especially concurrent ones, should not be disturbed by the Supreme Court. He further argued that a patent is granted by the Controller only after due inquiry and publication, and should therefore be presumed valid unless the contrary is proved. He also urged that since both the trial court and the Division Bench had concurrently found that the invention had utility, the patent should be sustained on that ground alone.

Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

The Supreme Court, in a judgment authored by  began by setting out the foundational principles of patent law before applying them to the facts. This approach gave the judgment its lasting significance, as the principles articulated go well beyond the specific dispute between two utensil manufacturers in Mirzapur.

The Court explained that the object of patent law is to encourage scientific research, new technology and industrial progress by granting an exclusive privilege to own, use or sell a patented method or product for a limited period. The price of this monopoly is the disclosure of the invention, which after the expiry of the monopoly period passes into the public domain. The Court then stated the fundamental principle with great clarity: a patent is granted only for an invention that must be new and useful. It must have novelty and utility. It must be the inventor's own discovery, as opposed to mere verification of what was already known before the date of the patent.

The Court noted that under Section 2(8) of the Indian Patent and Designs Act, 1911, "invention" means any manner of new manufacture and includes an improvement and an allied invention. "Manufacture" under Section 2(11) includes any art, process or manner of providing, preparing or making an article, as well as any article prepared or produced. Unlike the Patents Act, 1970, the 1911 Act does not expressly require an invention to be "useful" in its definition, but courts have always required utility, reading it from Section 26(1)(f) which lists lack of utility as a ground for revocation.

On the crucial question of what qualifies as patentable, the Court drew an important distinction. It emphasized that in order to be patentable, an improvement on something already known, or a combination of different matters already known, must be something more than a mere workshop improvement. It must independently satisfy the test of invention, meaning it must involve an inventive step. The improvement or combination must produce a new result, a new article, or a better or cheaper article than before. The Court noted that a mere collocation of more than one known integers or things, without any exercise of inventive faculty, does not qualify for a patent.

To illustrate this principle, the Court quoted Lord Davey from Rickmann v. Thierry (1896) 14 Pat. Ca. 105, to the effect that it is not enough that the purpose is new or that there is novelty in the application; there must be novelty in the mode of application itself, meaning that in adapting an old contrivance to a new purpose, there must be difficulties to be overcome that require what is called invention, or there must be some ingenuity in the mode of making the adaptation. Cotton L.J.'s formulation from Blackey v. Latham (1888) 6 Pat. Ca. 184 was also cited: that to be new in the patent sense, the novelty must show invention.

The Court then set out the tests for determining whether a claimed invention involves novelty and an inventive step. It observed that this is a mixed question of law and fact, depending largely on the circumstances of the case. One important criterion is whether the manner of manufacture patented was publicly known, used and practised in the country before or at the date of the patent. Prior public knowledge, whether by word of mouth or through published books and other media, would negate novelty. The Court quoted from Hindmarch on Patents, as approved in Humpherson v. Syer 4 R.P.C. 407, that once the public becomes possessed of an invention by any means whatsoever, no subsequent patent for it can be granted, because the public cannot be deprived of the right to use what it already possesses.

The Court then discussed the concept of "obviousness," noting that the expression "does not involve any inventive step" in Section 26(1)(a) of the Act and its equivalent word "obvious" have acquired special significance in patent law terminology, and that obviousness must be strictly and objectively judged. The Court quoted the test formulated by Salmond L.J. in Rado v. John Tye & Son Ltd. (1967) R.P.C. 297: whether the alleged discovery lies so much out of the track of what was known before as not naturally to suggest itself to a person thinking on the subject. The discovery must not be the obvious or natural suggestion of what was previously known.

Another test articulated by the Court, drawn from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, asked: if the prior art document had been placed in the hands of a competent craftsman endowed with common general knowledge at the priority date, who was faced with the problem the patentee sought to solve, would he have said "this gives me what I want"? A further formulation from Halsbury's Laws of England, 3rd Edition, Volume 29, referred to by Vimadalal J. of the Bombay High Court in Farbwerke Hoechst & B. Corporation v. Untchan Laboratories AIR 1969 Bom 255, asked: was it practically obvious to a skilled worker in the field, in the state of knowledge existing at the date of the patent as found in the literature then available, that he would or should make the invention the subject of the claim concerned?

The Court also firmly rejected the respondent's argument that there is a presumption in favour of the validity of a patent once granted. It pointed out that the grant and sealing of a patent, or a decision in favour of grant by the Controller in opposition proceedings, does not guarantee the validity of the patent, which can always be challenged before the High Court in revocation or infringement proceedings. This position is now expressly stated in Section 13(4) of the Patents Act, 1970. The argument for a presumption of validity was therefore untenable.

Turning to the facts, the Supreme Court conducted its own examination of the evidence and the machines placed before it. It found that the trial court had established the following on the basis of evidence: the manufacture of utensils is an old industry at Mirzapur and across India; the lathe is a well-known mechanism used for spinning and various other processes; adapters of various sizes and shapes were in use for holding plates and dishes before 1951; the tailstock was probably also used in this industry before 1951; no bracket or angle exactly like the one used in the plaintiff's machine (Ex. CC) appeared to have been used before 1951; and that work on plates and dishes was suspended at Mirzapur for a few years before 1951. The trial court had found that the mere addition of a bracket did not amount to a novelty, and that the suspension of work was a neutral circumstance that could just as well have been caused by labour trouble rather than any defect in the then-existing contrivance.

The Supreme Court agreed completely with the trial court's analysis. It found that the patented machine was merely an application of an old invention, known for decades before 1951, to the traditional purpose of scraping and turning utensils, with only a slight change in the mode of application. This was no more than a "workshop improvement," a normal development of an existing manner of manufacture, not involving anything novel that would be outside the probable capacity of a skilled craftsman. The alleged discovery did not lie outside the track of what was known before.

The Court was particularly scathing about the Division Bench's reasoning. The Division Bench had located the novelty of the invention in "the method of holding an article by the pressure of a point of a pointed tailstock" which it said was neither used nor known. The Supreme Court pointed out that this finding was directly contradicted by the Division Bench's own earlier findings, in which it had acknowledged that lathes with headstock and tailstock were well known, and that uses of the tailstock included holding articles by the pressure of a pad. More importantly, the finding about the pointed tailstock directly contradicted the patent specification itself. The complete specification expressly stated that "the pressure spindle may be pointed or blunt," and Claim No. 4 in the patent similarly stated that the pressing end of the pressure spindle could be "pointed or blunt." There was thus no assertion of novelty for the pointed tailstock in the patent itself. The Division Bench had gone beyond the scope of the specifications and claims made by the patentee and had essentially made out a new case for the plaintiff that had never been alleged in the patent or in the pleadings.

The Court also found that the Division Bench's finding was contradicted by admissions made by Sotam Singh (D.W. 3), the representative of the patentee firm, in cross-examination. Sotam Singh had admitted that he did not know whether Purshottam Dass had made any research or experiments before obtaining the patent, and another witness Lakshmi Dass (D.W. 1) had admitted that machines like Ex. XVI were in use even before 1951-52. The Court quoted the rule from Arnold v. Bradbury (1871) 6 Ch. A. 706 that the proper way to construe a patent specification is to first read the full description of the invention before reading the claims, because the patentee cannot claim more than he desires to patent. The specification and claims must be read together, as stated by Lord Esher M.R. in Parkinson v. Simon (1894) 11 R.P.C. 483.

The Court also referred to the House of Lords decision in Harwood v. Great Northern Railway Co. (1864) 11 H.L.C. 654, a factually analogous case where a person had patented a groove in a fish-plate used to connect railway rails. The House of Lords held the patent invalid because it involved merely applying an old contrivance in the old way to an analogous subject, without any novelty or invention in the mode of application. Blackburn L.J. had stated that in order to bring the subject matter of a patent within patentable territory, there must be invention so applied as to produce a practical result, and a mere application of an old contrivance in the old way to an analogous subject, without novelty or invention in the mode of applying it, is not a valid subject matter of a patent. The Supreme Court found this principle squarely applicable to the facts before it.

On the respondent's final argument that utility alone should sustain the patent, the Court firmly held that utility is not the crucial test. Even if an invention has utility, it must separately satisfy the tests of novelty and inventive step. The crucial test is whether the invention involves novelty and an inventive step, and that test went against the patentee in this case.

Final Decision of the Court

The Supreme Court allowed both appeals. It set aside the judgment of the Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court dated January 18, 1966, and restored the judgment of the learned Single Judge. The patent (No. 46368-51) stood revoked on the grounds mentioned in Clauses (d) and (e) of Section 26(1) of the Indian Patent and Designs Act, 1911, namely that the invention was not, at the date of the patent, a manner of new manufacture or improvement, and that the invention did not involve any inventive step having regard to what was known or used prior to the date of the patent. 

Point of Law Settled in the Case

This judgment settled several foundational points of Indian patent law that continue to be cited by courts and practitioners.

The most important principle is the standard for patentability: a patent is valid only if the claimed invention is new and involves a genuine inventive step. Novelty alone is not sufficient if the claimed novelty does not rise above the level of what any skilled craftsman would have done. Utility alone is also not sufficient to sustain a patent, even if concurrently found by multiple courts.

The Court clarified that an improvement on existing technology, or a combination of existing elements, is patentable only if it produces a new result or a better result and goes beyond what could be called a "workshop improvement." The combination of old known integers, without any novelty in their interaction or result, does not qualify for a patent. Mere collocation of existing elements without any inventive faculty is not patentable.

The Court firmly established that there is no presumption of validity in favour of a patent merely because the Controller granted it after due examination. The grant of a patent does not guarantee its validity.

The Court also laid down the correct approach to construing patent specifications and claims: the description of the invention must be read first, followed by the claims, and both must be read together. The patentee cannot claim more than what is described in the specification. Courts cannot go beyond the scope of the specifications and claims to find novelty that the patentee himself never asserted.

The tests for "obviousness" were clearly articulated: whether the discovery lies so much outside the track of existing knowledge that it would not naturally suggest itself to a person thinking on the subject, and whether a competent craftsman endowed with general knowledge at the priority date, faced with the same problem, would have arrived at the same solution from the prior art.

Case Title: Bishwanath Prasad Radhey Shyam Vs. Hindustan Metal Industries

Date of Order: December 13, 1978

Case Number: Civil Appeal Nos. 1630-1631 of 1969

Citation: AIR 1982 SC 1444; (1979) 2 SCC 511; [1979] 2 SCR 757

Name of Court: Supreme Court of India

Hon'ble Judges: A.N. Sen, J.; R.S. Sarkaria, J.; V.D. Tulzapurkar, J.

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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Headnote

Bishwanath Prasad Radhey Shyam Vs. Hindustan Metal Industries ,  The dispute concerned the validity of a patent relating to a method of mounting metallic utensils on a lathe. The patent holder sued for infringement, while the defendant sought revocation on grounds of lack of novelty and inventive step. The Supreme Court held that the claimed invention was merely a workshop improvement based on existing knowledge and did not constitute a “manner of new manufacture.” Accordingly, the patent was revoked and the appeal was allowed. This Judgement is one of the foundational Judgement in Patent Law in India explaining The Test of Inventive Step and Novelty for Invention.


Wednesday, June 10, 2026

SC-Diyora and Bhanderi Corporation and Others Vs. Sarine Technologies Limited

Diyora and Bhanderi Corporation v. Sarine Technologies Ltd.: Software Copyright, Expert Comparison, and the Boundaries of Judicial Scope in IP Disputes


Introduction

When a company accuses another of stealing its computer software, one of the most critical and technically challenging questions that arises in court is: how does one actually prove that software has been copied? Unlike a physical product where similarities can be seen with the naked eye, software operates through invisible lines of coded instructions. The only meaningful way to compare two software programs and determine whether one has been copied from the other is to examine their underlying source code and object code — the internal programming that makes the software work.

The case of Diyora and Bhanderi Corporation and Others versus Sarine Technologies Limited, decided by the Supreme Court of India on 30 July 2018, arose in the context of exactly this challenge. The dispute involved a cutting-edge software used in the diamond and precious stone industry and raised important questions about how courts should manage the process of expert comparison of software in intellectual property litigation. The Supreme Court was called upon to decide two focused but practically significant questions: first, whether the appointment of a foreign expert to compare the competing software programs was proper; and second, whether the scope of comparison should be limited to only the registered version of the software or could extend to all previous and unregistered versions as well. Though procedural in nature, the Court's resolution of these questions carries important lessons about the integrity of judicial processes in technology-related intellectual property disputes.


Factual and Procedural Background

Sarine Technologies Limited, the plaintiff and respondent before the Supreme Court, is a company that had developed and owned a software product called Advisor™. This software uses a three-dimensional representation to help analyze how a raw precious stone can best be cut and polished so as to yield the best quality diamonds and gemstones. In essence, it is a sophisticated tool designed for the diamond processing industry to maximize the quality and value extracted from rough stones.

The plaintiff claimed that it had a validly subsisting copyright in the Advisor™ software both in Israel and in the United States of America. Specifically, it had obtained copyright registration in the USA for version 6.0 (also referred to as the 6th version) of the Advisor™ software, bearing the registration number TX8-252-522. The plaintiff also asserted that by virtue of the International Copyright Order, 1999, and India being a member country of the Berne Copyright Union, this copyright protection extended to India in the same manner as if the software had originally been published in India.

The defendants — Diyora and Bhanderi Corporation and others, who are the appellants before the Supreme Court — were also engaged in the business of the diamond industry. The plaintiff alleged that these defendants had infringed the copyright in the Advisor™ software.

On this basis, the plaintiff filed Commercial Trade Mark Suit No. 8 of 2017 before the Court of District Judge at Surat. Along with the main suit, the plaintiff also filed an application for interim injunction (marked as Exhibit 5 in court) seeking an emergency order restraining the defendants from using, distributing, or selling any services that infringed its Advisor™ software copyright, covering both the registered version 6.0 as well as any future machines or devices incorporating the copyrighted software.

The trial court, by its order dated 22 September 2017, dismissed the plaintiff's application for interim injunction. The plaintiff challenged this dismissal before the Gujarat High Court. The High Court, by its order dated 21 December 2017, set aside the trial court's order and remitted the matter back to the trial court for fresh consideration. The High Court's key observation was that the central question — whether the source code or object code of the defendants' software was the same as or copied from the plaintiff's software — had not been properly examined. The High Court directed that both parties should submit their respective source codes and object codes to the court so that these could be sent to an impartial and independent expert for comparison. This remand order of the Gujarat High Court was itself challenged by the defendants before the Supreme Court, but the Supreme Court did not find any ground to interfere, and the Special Leave Petition was dismissed on 16 March 2018.

With the matter thus sent back for a fresh hearing at the trial court level, a series of procedural orders followed. On 12 February 2018, the trial court appointed a Local Commissioner and directed both parties to submit their respective source codes and object codes in sealed covers by 21 February 2018. The parties were also asked to suggest names of experts who could carry out the technical comparison. On 28 February 2018, the trial court directed the plaintiff to confirm on affidavit that it had submitted the source code and object code of the software exactly as registered.

On 16 March 2018, the trial court appointed Mr. Robert "Bob" Zeidman, whose name was proposed by the plaintiff, as the technical expert to compare the software of both parties and to report to the court as to whether the defendants' source code and object code had infringed the copyright of the plaintiff. The defendants had proposed the names of three well-regarded Indian institutions — the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC), the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at IIT Bombay, and the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at IIT Madras. These suggestions were, however, objected to by the plaintiff on the ground that one of the defendants' advocates had been associated with these institutions, raising a concern about impartiality. The trial court rejected this objection, rightly observing that an advocate having studied at an institution does not mean the institution could be influenced. However, the trial court found that the profiles of the professors attached to the application did not demonstrate that they could conduct the specific task of comparing source and object codes, and therefore appointed Mr. Zeidman as the most competent person for the task.

The defendants challenged the appointment of Mr. Zeidman before the Gujarat High Court in Special Civil Application No. 4468 of 2018. One of their main objections was that sharing proprietary software with a foreign expert could cause them serious prejudice, as the court's processes would not be able to hold a foreign expert accountable if the confidential data were later misused. The Gujarat High Court dismissed this application on 1 May 2018, finding the appointment proper.

After this, the trial court issued another order on 4 May 2018, clarifying that the comparison would be confined only to the source code and object code of the registered version of the plaintiff's software — i.e., version 6.0 with copyright registration No. TX8-252-522. Any additional material furnished by the plaintiff beyond this registered version was specifically excluded.

However, the controversy was not over. On 1 June 2018, the trial court passed another order while considering logistical arrangements for the expert's work, this time directing that the expert could compare the defendants' source and object code with the plaintiff's Advisor™ software across all previous and existing versions, whether registered or not. This significantly expanded the scope of comparison beyond what had been settled in the 4 May 2018 order.

The defendants again went to the Gujarat High Court in Special Civil Application No. 9010 of 2018, challenging this expanded scope. The defendants also raised a challenge to the constitutional validity of Section 8 of the Commercial Courts, Commercial Division and Commercial Appellate Division of High Courts Act, 2015. The High Court dismissed this challenge on 4 July 2018, holding that while exercising its supervisory power under Article 227 of the Constitution of India, it could not act as a court of appeal and interfere with the trial court's order. Since no arguments were advanced on the constitutional validity of Section 8, the High Court did not go into that question.

Both the High Court orders of 1 May 2018 and 4 July 2018 were then challenged by the defendants before the Supreme Court by filing Special Leave Petitions No. 17685-17686 of 2018 on 10 July 2018. When the matter came up before the Supreme Court on 16 July 2018, counsel for the plaintiff on caveat submitted that Mr. Zeidman had already arrived in India to conduct the comparison and that suspending his work would cause the plaintiff great prejudice. The Supreme Court accordingly directed the parties to maintain status quo and also directed that the travel expenses of Mr. Zeidman would initially be borne by the plaintiff, but would be reimbursed by the defendants if their challenge ultimately failed. Leave was thereafter granted and the matter was heard on 30 July 2018.


The Dispute

The case presented the Supreme Court with two focused and specific issues. The first was whether the appointment of Mr. Robert "Bob" Zeidman, a foreign expert, to compare the software of the two parties was proper and should be allowed to stand, particularly given the defendants' objections about the security of their confidential source code and the fact that Indian institutions of adequate standing had been available. The second issue was more significant in terms of principle: once the trial court had already settled by its order dated 4 May 2018 that the comparison would be restricted to only the registered version 6.0 of the plaintiff's software, could the trial court then expand that scope by a subsequent order dated 1 June 2018 to include all previous and existing versions of the Advisor™ software, whether registered under copyright or not?


Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

Justice U.U. Lalit, writing for the bench of two judges (the other being Justice Abhay Manohar Sapre), addressed both issues in a clear and measured manner.

On the first question regarding the appointment of Mr. Zeidman as the expert, the Supreme Court was candid that it did not approve of the manner in which the plaintiff had objected to the three reputed Indian institutions suggested by the defendants. The Court noted that C-DAC, IIT Bombay, and IIT Madras are institutions of great repute and standing. The mere fact that one of the defendants' advocates had studied at those institutions was, as the Court observed, no ground to have any apprehension about the impartiality and integrity of those institutions. The professors suggested from these institutions were acknowledged to be experts in their field, particularly in computer software and software decoding. The Court found no reason why they could be said to lack the requisite experience for comparing the two software programs. The Court made clear that this observation was not a comment on Mr. Zeidman's competence, which was not disputed — the point was that the Indian professors were equally qualified and ought not to have been dismissed by the plaintiff on such a flimsy ground.

However, having noted this, the Court took into account an important practical reality: by the time the matter came before the Supreme Court, the defendants had already accepted Mr. Zeidman's appointment through their own conduct. Various emails and correspondence placed on record demonstrated that after the appointment was made, the defendants were themselves actively in touch with Mr. Zeidman — asking him about his willingness to visit India, discussing logistics, and enquiring about his fees. This conduct showed, as the Court found, that the defendants had not merely accepted but had clearly acquiesced in the arrangement. The Senior Advocate for the plaintiff, Mr. Gopal Jain, correctly submitted that at this stage, having practically cooperated with and acquiesced in Mr. Zeidman's appointment, there was no justification for the defendants to turn around and contest it. The Supreme Court, therefore, rejected the defendants' challenge to the appointment of Mr. Zeidman and affirmed it.

On the security concern raised by the defendants — that sharing their proprietary source code with a foreign expert posed a risk of data compromise — the Court found this concern addressed by the practical arrangements described by the plaintiff's counsel. The comparison exercise was to be carried out using a separate laptop with no internet connection, which would always remain in the custody of the Local Commissioner. After each day's work, all the material on the laptop would be erased. The Court found these precautionary steps adequate to ensure the safety and security of the data shared by both parties. The objection on grounds of data security was therefore rejected.

The Court also made an important clarificatory observation at this juncture: the task entrusted to the expert, Mr. Zeidman, was only to compare the respective software programs and prepare a report. The question of whether the defendants' software actually infringed the plaintiff's copyright was not for the expert to decide — that would remain entirely for the court to determine after examining the expert's report along with all other evidence. This clarification was important to ensure that the expert's role was understood correctly as that of a technical assistant to the court, and not as an adjudicator.

On the second and more legally significant question — the scope of comparison — the Court's reasoning was direct and principled. The plaintiff had brought its claim based on two foundations: first, its registered copyright in version 6.0 of the Advisor™ software (registration No. TX8-252-522 in the USA); and second, rights under common law in respect of all earlier and unregistered versions of the software. When the interim injunction application was considered at the earlier stage, the court had proceeded primarily on the basis of the registered copyright. The plaintiff had never sought, at the interim stage, to rely on its common law rights in earlier unregistered versions to establish a prima facie case.

Given this background, the trial court had passed the order dated 4 May 2018 specifically confining the comparison exercise to the source code and object code of the registered version only. That order had never been challenged by the plaintiff — the plaintiff accepted it without any objection. Once a party accepts an order without challenge, it cannot later seek to go behind that order and expand what it had already agreed to. The trial court's subsequent order dated 1 June 2018, which expanded the scope to all previous and existing versions of the software — whether registered or not — was, in the Supreme Court's view, an error. The trial court had no occasion or reason to expand the scope once the parties had accepted the restriction, and particularly when the plaintiff had not challenged the 4 May 2018 order. The Supreme Court therefore accepted the defendants' argument on this point, set aside the expanded scope directed by the order of 1 June 2018, and directed that the comparison shall be restricted to the source code and object code in respect of the registered version 6.0 of the plaintiff's software.

On the question of costs, the Court recalled its earlier direction of 16 July 2018 that all travel expenses of Mr. Zeidman would be reimbursed by the defendants if their challenge failed. Since the defendants' challenge succeeded on one of the two issues — namely, the scope of comparison — the Court took a balanced approach and directed that only one half of the travel expenses borne by the plaintiff should be reimbursed by the defendants, rather than the entire amount.


Final Decision of the Court

The Supreme Court disposed of Civil Appeal Nos. 7304-7305 of 2018 with the following directions. On the first issue, the appointment of Mr. Robert "Bob" Zeidman as the technical expert was affirmed. His engagement was upheld as proper given the defendants' acquiescence, and the safety arrangements for protecting the confidential source codes were found to be adequate. On the second issue, the Court accepted the defendants' submission and directed that the scope of the comparison exercise shall be confined only to the source code and object code of the registered version 6.0 of the plaintiff's Advisor™ software, setting aside the expanded direction given by the trial court on 1 June 2018. On costs, the defendants were directed to pay one half of the plaintiff's expenditure on Mr. Zeidman's travel, within 7 days of the plaintiff disclosing the amount spent, which was to be disclosed within 3 days of the judgment. No other costs were awarded. The Court expressly clarified that it had not gone into the factual merits of the dispute, and the trial court was to proceed to determine the matter afresh on its own merits, uninfluenced by any observations in the Supreme Court's judgment.


Point of Law Settled

This judgment settles two practically important procedural principles in the context of software copyright litigation. First, when a party has accepted a court order and has demonstrated acquiescence in an arrangement through its own subsequent conduct — such as corresponding with an appointed expert and facilitating the engagement — it cannot at a later stage challenge or seek to reverse that arrangement. The principle of acquiescence operates as a significant bar. Second, and more importantly, the scope of an expert comparison exercise ordered by a court in an intellectual property dispute must be kept within the boundaries actually litigated at the relevant stage. At the interim injunction stage, where the court has proceeded on the basis of registered copyright rights, the scope of the expert comparison directed to assist that inquiry cannot be unilaterally expanded by the court to include unregistered or common law rights unless those rights were actually placed in issue and contested at that stage. An order settling the scope of such comparison, once accepted by all parties without challenge, acquires a binding character that the same court cannot unilaterally revise without proper cause.


Case Details

Title: Diyora and Bhanderi Corporation and Others Vs. Sarine Technologies Limited

Date of Order: 30 July 2018

Case Number: Civil Appeal Nos. 7304-7305 of 2018 (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) Nos. 17685-86 of 2018)

Neutral Citation: MANU/SC/0791/2018

Equivalent Citations: (2018) 8 SCC 804; 2018 (9) SCALE 423; 2018 (3) RCR (Civil) 983

Court: Supreme Court of India

Hon'ble Judges: Justice Abhay Manohar Sapre and Justice U.U. Lalit


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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Headnote

Held: In a suit for copyright infringement of software, where the trial court has by a prior order — accepted by all parties without challenge — confined the scope of expert comparison to the source code and object code of the registered version of the plaintiff's software, the trial court cannot subsequently expand that scope by a fresh order to include all previous and existing versions whether registered or otherwise, especially when at the interim stage the matter proceeded only on the basis of the registered copyright and the plaintiff's common law rights in unregistered versions were not placed in issue. Once a party accepts such an order without challenge, it cannot seek an expansion of scope through a subsequent application. The expert's role is confined to comparing the respective software and reporting to the court; the question of whether the comparison establishes copyright infringement is for the court alone to determine. Further, a party that has itself cooperated with and acquiesced in the appointment of a court-appointed expert through its own subsequent conduct cannot at a later stage challenge that appointment. The objection that an advocate's educational association with an institution makes that institution partial is without merit and deserves rejection.

V.V.V. & Sons Edible Oils Ltd. Vs. Meenakshi Overseas LLC

V.V.V. & Sons Edible Oils Ltd. Vs. Meenakshi Overseas LLC :05.06.2026:O.S.A. Nos. 63 & 64 of 2019, O.S.A. (CAD) No. 23 of 2022 and O.S.A. Nos. 139 & 140 of 2025:Madras HC:Hon'ble Judges: Justice P. Velmurugan and Justice K. Govindarajan Thilakavadi

The Court considered a dispute concerning trademark infringement and passing off involving the mark “IDHAYAM” used on products manufactured in India and exported to the United States. The case arose from allegations that the respondents had affixed the plaintiff’s registered mark on goods intended for export under arrangements with an entity holding registration of the same mark in the United States.

The principal question before the Court was whether the plaints and connected suit could be rejected at the threshold on grounds of absence of cause of action, suppression of facts, res judicata, non-joinder of parties and the existence of foreign trademark registrations.

After examining the material on record and the submissions of the parties, the Division Bench observed that while dealing with an application under Order VII Rule 11 CPC, the Court must confine itself to the averments in the plaint and cannot decide disputed questions of fact or rely upon the defendants’ defence. The Court held that issues relating to suppression, res judicata, Order II Rule 2 CPC, and the effect of foreign trademark registrations required a full-fledged trial, emphasizing that rejection of a plaint is permissible only when the bar is apparent from the plaint itself. The Court further observed that even if a party is necessary for effective adjudication, the proper course is to direct its impleadment rather than dismiss the suit.

Accordingly, the Court allowed all the appeals, set aside the orders rejecting the plaints and the judgment dismissing the suit, restored the suits to file, and directed that the connected matters be tried afresh on merits after affording the parties an opportunity to adduce evidence.

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

===

Only contents of the Plaint are to be seen while deciding Application under Order 7 Rule 11 CPC

Introduction

The judgment delivered by the Madras High Court in M/s V.V.V. & Sons Edible Oils Ltd. v. M/s Meenakshi Overseas LLC & Connected Matters is an important decision at the intersection of trademark law and civil procedure. The dispute revolved around the well-known “Idhayam” trademark and allegations that goods bearing the mark were being manufactured and exported from India for sale in the United States under arrangements involving entities claiming rights over the mark abroad.

The case raised significant questions regarding the territorial nature of trademark rights, the effect of foreign trademark registrations, the maintainability of infringement suits involving export activities, and, most importantly, the limited scope of rejection of plaints under Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908.

The judgment is particularly relevant for trademark proprietors, exporters, manufacturers engaged in international trade, intellectual property practitioners, and litigants facing objections based on res judicata, suppression of facts, abuse of process, or non-joinder of parties. The decision reiterates that disputed questions of fact and law ordinarily cannot be decided at the threshold stage by rejecting a plaint and must instead be adjudicated through a full-fledged trial.

Factual and Procedural Background

M/s V.V.V. & Sons Edible Oils Limited is a well-known Indian manufacturer and marketer of sesame oil sold under the trademark “Idhayam.” The company asserted that the mark had been registered in India since 1986 and had acquired considerable goodwill and reputation both domestically and internationally.

According to the plaintiff, M/s Meenakshi Overseas LLC, a company based in the United States, had obtained registration of the mark “Idhayam” in the United States. The plaintiff alleged that this registration had been obtained through misrepresentation and that the foreign entity had also registered trademarks associated with other well-known Indian brands. The plaintiff further claimed that Indian entities, including Shivaraja Impex Company and Damodar Foods, were affixing the mark “Idhayam” or similar marks on goods in India and exporting them to the United States.

Several proceedings arose from these allegations.

In C.S. No. 726 of 2017, the plaintiff sought relief against Meenakshi Overseas LLC, Shivaraja Impex Company, and Damodar Foods. The plaint was subsequently rejected under Order VII Rule 11 CPC on the ground that it did not disclose a valid cause of action and that the plaintiff had suppressed material facts concerning earlier proceedings in the United States.

In C.S. No. 434 of 2017, Damodar Foods was sued for alleged infringement and passing off. Following a full trial, the suit was dismissed. The Single Judge held that the suit suffered from non-joinder of Meenakshi Overseas LLC, which held the U.S. registration, and further concluded that the goods were intended exclusively for export and that the plaintiff could not restrain such activities in the circumstances of the case.

The plaintiff also instituted C.S. No. 987 of 2017 and C.S. No. 235 of 2020 seeking injunctions and damages. These suits too were rejected under Order VII Rule 11 CPC on the grounds of res judicata and Order II Rule 2 CPC, the courts holding that the plaintiff was attempting to re-litigate matters already adjudicated.

Aggrieved by these orders and judgments, the plaintiff filed a batch of appeals, namely O.S.A. Nos. 63 and 64 of 2019, O.S.A. (CAD) No. 23 of 2022, and O.S.A. Nos. 139 and 140 of 2025 before the Division Bench of the Madras High Court.

Dispute Before the Court

The central issue before the Division Bench was whether the various orders rejecting the plaints and dismissing the suit were legally sustainable.

The plaintiff argued that its registered trademark rights under Indian law were independent of any proceedings or registrations in the United States. It contended that the defendants were affixing the disputed mark in India and exporting goods bearing that mark, thereby committing infringement within India. The plaintiff further argued that foreign litigation could not extinguish rights conferred by Indian trademark registrations and that each export transaction constituted a fresh cause of action.

The defendants, on the other hand, maintained that the plaintiff had already challenged the U.S. registration abroad and failed. They contended that the Indian proceedings amounted to suppression of material facts, re-litigation, abuse of process, and were barred by res judicata and Order II Rule 2 CPC. They also argued that Meenakshi Overseas LLC was a necessary party and that exports undertaken under a valid foreign trademark registration could not be restrained.

Thus, the Court was required to determine whether these objections justified rejection of the plaints at the threshold stage and whether dismissal of the suit on grounds of non-joinder and related procedural objections was legally justified.

Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

The Division Bench undertook a detailed examination of the principles governing Order VII Rule 11 CPC.

The Court reiterated the settled principle that while considering an application under Order VII Rule 11 CPC, the Court must confine itself to the averments contained in the plaint and the documents relied upon by the plaintiff. The defence set up by the defendant cannot ordinarily be considered at that stage.

Examining the plaint in C.S. No. 726 of 2017, the Court found that it clearly contained material facts constituting a cause of action. The plaintiff had specifically alleged that Indian entities were affixing the impugned trademark within India and exporting goods bearing that mark. These allegations, if proved, could potentially give rise to a valid claim under Indian trademark law. Consequently, the Court held that rejection of the plaint on the ground of absence of cause of action was unjustified.

The Court further observed that the foreign proceedings in the United States were not, by themselves, determinative of the plaintiff’s rights under Indian trademark law. The suits before the Indian courts were not directed at restraining sales in the United States but were based upon alleged acts of affixation and export occurring within India. Whether those acts amounted to infringement was a matter requiring evidence and trial.

The Division Bench also considered the allegations of suppression of material facts and abuse of process. Referring to the Supreme Court’s decision in K.K. Modi v. K.N. Modi (1998) 3 SCC 573, which deals with abuse of judicial process and re-litigation, the Court held that the precedent could not be mechanically applied. Whether suppression had occurred and whether it was sufficient to non-suit the plaintiff were issues requiring proper adjudication and could not ordinarily be conclusively determined at the Order VII Rule 11 stage.

With respect to the rejection of the plaints in C.S. Nos. 987 of 2017 and 235 of 2020 on grounds of res judicata and Order II Rule 2 CPC, the Court found that the earlier suit relied upon for invoking these bars had not been finally decided when the later suits were instituted. Since final adjudication is an essential requirement for attracting Section 11 CPC, the bar of res judicata was not apparent from the plaint itself.

The Court referred to Section 10 CPC, which deals with stay of suits where substantially similar issues are pending in an earlier suit. It noted that questions regarding identity of causes of action, continuing wrongs, and applicability of Order II Rule 2 CPC involved mixed questions of fact and law that could not be decided summarily without evidence.

Another important aspect of the judgment concerned non-joinder of parties. In C.S. No. 434 of 2017, the suit had been dismissed largely because Meenakshi Overseas LLC had not been impleaded. The Division Bench referred to Order I Rule 9 CPC and Order I Rule 10(2) CPC and held that even if Meenakshi Overseas LLC was a necessary party, the appropriate course was to direct its impleadment rather than dismiss the suit outright.

The Court emphasized that the key issues concerning the effect of foreign trademark registrations, alleged infringement through export activities, and the interpretation of Sections 29(6), 30(2)(b), and 56 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999 were common to all the connected suits. Since these issues had not been comprehensively adjudicated with participation of all necessary parties, the interests of justice required a fresh and consolidated examination.

The Court also discussed and considered several authorities cited by the parties, including Crompton Greaves Ltd. v. Salzer Electronics Ltd.  [2011 (6) CTC 157] , Mahendra & Mahendra Paper Mills Ltd. v. Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. [ AIR(2002)SC117 ], Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd. v. Madley Laboratories [(2011)SCC OnLine Bom 484], Kamala v. K.T. Eshwara Sa, Alpana Gupta v. APG Towers Pvt. Ltd. [AIR(2008) SC 3174], and Kum. Geetha v. Nanjundaswamy [AIR(2023) SC 5516]. However, the Court primarily focused on the procedural question of whether the disputes could be terminated at the threshold stage and concluded that a full trial was necessary.

Final Decision of the Court

The Division Bench allowed all the appeals.

The orders rejecting the plaint in C.S. No. 726 of 2017 were set aside and the suit was restored for fresh consideration on merits.The orders rejecting the plaints in C.S. No. 987 of 2017 and C.S. No. 235 of 2020 were also set aside, and those suits were restored to the file of the Single Judge for trial and adjudication on merits.The judgment and decree dated 23 August 2021 in C.S. No. 434 of 2017 were likewise set aside and the matter was remanded for fresh adjudication.The Court granted liberty to the plaintiff to implead Meenakshi Overseas LLC in the connected suits .

Point of Law Settled

The judgment reinforces several important legal principles:

A plaint can be rejected under Order VII Rule 11 CPC only when the absence of a cause of action or the legal bar to the suit is apparent from the plaint itself. Courts cannot evaluate disputed facts or rely on the defendant’s version while exercising powers under Order VII Rule 11 CPC.

Questions relating to suppression of facts, abuse of process, res judicata, continuing cause of action, and applicability of Order II Rule 2 CPC often involve mixed questions of fact and law and ordinarily require evidence before they can be conclusively decided.

Where a court considers a party necessary for effective adjudication, the preferred course is ordinarily to direct impleadment under Order I Rule 10 CPC rather than dismissing the suit altogether.

The judgment also underscores that disputes concerning alleged trademark infringement through activities occurring within India cannot be summarily dismissed merely because related trademark proceedings or registrations exist in a foreign jurisdiction.

Title of the Case:  V.V.V. & Sons Edible Oils Ltd. Vs Meenakshi Overseas LLC & Ors. 

Date of Judgment/Order: 05 June 2026

Case Number: O.S.A. No. 63 of 2019, O.S.A. No. 64 of 2019, O.S.A. (CAD) No. 23 of 2022, O.S.A. No. 139 of 2025 and O.S.A. No. 140 of 2025

Name of Court: High Court of Judicature at Madras

Name of Hon'ble Judge: Hon'ble Mr. Justice P. Velmurugan and Hon'ble Mrs. Justice K. Govindarajan Thilakavadi

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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Headnote of the Judgment:

The plaintiff, proprietor of the well-known “Idhayam” trademark in India, filed multiple suits alleging that the defendants were affixing the mark in India and exporting goods to the United States, thereby infringing its trademark rights. Certain suits were dismissed or had their plaints rejected under Order VII Rule 11 CPC on grounds including absence of cause of action, suppression of material facts, res judicata, Order II Rule 2 CPC, and non-joinder of a necessary party. The Madras High Court held that while deciding an application under Order VII Rule 11 CPC, the Court must confine itself to the plaint and cannot adjudicate disputed factual issues or rely upon the defendant’s defence. The Court further held that questions relating to suppression, res judicata, continuing cause of action, and Order II Rule 2 CPC involved mixed questions of fact and law requiring trial. It also observed that if a party is necessary for adjudication, the proper course is generally to direct impleadment rather than dismiss the suit. Consequently, all appeals were allowed, the orders rejecting the plaints and the judgment dismissing the suit were set aside, and the matters were remanded for fresh adjudication on merits.

Anil Srichand Kundnani Vs Pruthvi Ishwar

Anil Srichand Kundnani Vs Pruthvi Ishwar Patel:08.06.2026:Commercial IP Suit No. 434 of 2025:2026:BHC-OS:12554:Bombay HC:Hon'ble Judge Sharmila U. Deshmukh

The Court considered a dispute concerning copyright infringement and passing off in relation to the artistic label and trade dress of packaged tea products. The case arose from allegations that the defendants had adopted the label mark “UTSAHA”, which was alleged to be a slavish reproduction of the plaintiff’s “UMANG” label and artwork.

The principal question before the Court was whether the defendants’ label and packaging infringed the plaintiff’s copyright in its artistic work and amounted to passing off, notwithstanding objections regarding the validity of the plaintiff’s copyright registration and trademark applications.

After examining the material on record and the submissions of the parties, Justice Sharmila U. Deshmukh observed that the rival labels were deceptively similar in their overall get-up, colour scheme, arrangement of features and stylized presentation, and that the defendants had failed to establish independent creation of the impugned artwork. The Court held that copyright protection extends to the expression of an idea embodied in the artistic work and that substantial similarity, judged from the perspective of a lay observer, constitutes infringement. The Court further emphasized that the proviso to Section 45(1) of the Copyright Act is concerned with similarity of artistic works and not with conflicting word marks.

Accordingly, the Court allowed the interim application and confirmed the ad-interim injunction, restraining the defendants from infringing the plaintiff’s original artwork and from passing off their products as those of the plaintiff.

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

====

Slavish Reproduction of Packaging Artwork and Passing Off

Bombay High Court Protects “UMANG” Tea Packaging: Copyright and Passing Off Action Succeeds Against Alleged Imitation of Trade Dress

Introduction

The protection of packaging, labels, and overall trade dress has become increasingly important in modern commerce, particularly in the food and consumer goods industry where visual appearance significantly influences consumer choice. The decision of the Bombay High Court in Anil Srichand Kundnani, Proprietor of Bhagyalaxmi Tea Centre v. Pruthvi Ishwar Patel, Proprietor of Maa Bahucharaji Sales & Anr. is an important ruling dealing with copyright in artistic labels and the law of passing off.

The case involved allegations that the defendants had copied the overall packaging and artistic features of the plaintiff's well-known “UMANG” tea products and marketed their own tea under the label “UTSAHA”. Apart from issues relating to copyright infringement and passing off, the dispute also raised interesting questions concerning the interplay between the Copyright Act, 1957 and the Trade Marks Act, 1999, the effect of refusal of trademark applications, ownership of artistic works, and the relevance of copyright registrations obtained by rival parties.

The judgment is significant for businesses dealing with packaged goods, intellectual property practitioners, and brand owners because it reiterates that copyright protection extends not merely to ideas but to the manner in which those ideas are expressed through distinctive artistic arrangements and trade dress.

Factual and Procedural Background

The plaintiff, proprietor of Bhagyalaxmi Tea Centre, claimed to have adopted the mark “UMANG” in 2009 for manufacturing and marketing premium packaged tea and related products. Over the years, several trademark registrations and applications relating to “UMANG”, “UMANGAM”, and associated device marks were obtained. The plaintiff also secured copyright registration in respect of one of the artistic labels.

According to the plaintiff, the label and artwork had been conceived and created by him and had acquired substantial goodwill through continuous use and extensive sales. Sales turnover for the period from 2021 to 2024 was stated to be approximately ₹19.58 crores.

In January 2024, the plaintiff allegedly discovered tea products marketed under the label “UTSAHA”. A complaint was lodged and a cease-and-desist notice dated 15 February 2024 was issued to the defendants. Investigation revealed that the first defendant had applied for registration of the “UTSAHA” device mark on 27 June 2023.

Commercial IP Suit No. 434 of 2025 was instituted before the Commercial Division of the Bombay High Court seeking reliefs for copyright infringement and passing off. On 14 June 2024, the Court granted ex parte ad interim protection restraining the defendants from using the impugned label and directed disclosure by the defendants.

The defendants thereafter filed affidavits opposing continuation of the interim order. They alleged suppression of material facts by the plaintiff and contended that the plaintiff's copyright registration itself was invalid.

Dispute Before the Court

The principal issue before the Court was whether the defendants had copied the plaintiff's original artistic work embodied in the “UMANG” tea label and whether such copying amounted to copyright infringement and passing off.

The plaintiff contended that the impugned “UTSAHA” packaging was a slavish reproduction of its own label and that the overall colour combination, arrangement of features, depiction of tea cups and cardamom, stylized fonts and trade dress had been copied.

The defendants argued that the plaintiff had concealed material facts, including refusal of an earlier trademark application. They further submitted that the plaintiff was not the owner of copyright because the registration certificate mentioned another person as the author of the artistic work and no assignment deed had been produced.

It was also argued that the plaintiff's copyright registration was invalid in view of Section 45 of the Copyright Act, 1957. According to the defendants, the common features such as green colour, tea cups and cardamom were generic elements ordinarily used in tea packaging and therefore no monopoly could be claimed over them.

Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

Upon comparing the rival products, the Court found striking similarities between the competing labels. It observed that the background consisting of shaded green colour, the bed of cardamoms, placement of the tea cup, stylized font, colour arrangement and positioning of various elements were almost identical. The Court concluded that the dispute was not confined merely to common features such as tea cups or cardamom but involved copying of the entire trade dress.

The Court held that copyright protects the expression of an idea and not the idea itself. While the concept of depicting tea and cardamom may be common, the particular manner in which those elements had been arranged and expressed constituted protectable artistic expression.

An important circumstance noticed by the Court was that the defendants themselves had opposed registration of the plaintiff's “UMANGAM” label by alleging deceptive similarity with their own label. According to the Court, such opposition amounted to an implicit admission that the rival artworks were deceptively similar.

The defendants had argued that the copyright certificate showed a third party as the author and no assignment deed had been produced. The Court rejected this argument on the ground that such a defence had not been pleaded in the affidavits and could not be raised for the first time during oral arguments. Since ownership pleaded by the plaintiff had never been specifically denied, the defendants could not advance an entirely new case at the hearing stage.

The Court referred to Rule 70(3) of the Copyright Rules, 2013, which permits an owner of copyright to seek registration upon furnishing a No Objection Certificate from the author. Since registration had been granted, the Court presumed, at the interlocutory stage, that all necessary documents had been produced before the Registrar.

Interestingly, the Court noticed that the defendants' own copyright certificate also showed a third party as author and no assignment deed had been placed on record. Therefore, the same objection raised against the plaintiff would equally affect the defendants.

The Court then examined Section 45(1) of the Copyright Act, 1957, which requires a certificate from the Registrar of Trade Marks certifying that no identical or deceptively similar trademark application has been made by a third party. The Court held that the purpose of the proviso is to avoid conflict between competing claims over identical artistic works.

According to the Court, the expression used in Section 45 focuses on similarity of artistic works and applications made by third parties. Since the trademark applications in question had been filed by the plaintiff itself and the objection raised by the Trade Marks Registry concerned the word mark “UMANG” under Section 11(1) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, the copyright registration could not be regarded as invalid.

The Court emphasized that copyright infringement is determined by applying the substantial similarity test. A lay observer examining both products would immediately notice the resemblance between them. The Court held that the defendants had failed to explain how such extensive similarities had arisen.

The Court also observed that the defendants had obtained copyright registration only in respect of a cropped version of the artwork and not for the entire packaging actually used by them. Several features appearing on the actual packaging and resembling the plaintiff's artwork were absent from the registered artwork. The absence of any explanation for this discrepancy persuaded the Court to infer dishonest conduct.

The Court further held that the plaintiff had established goodwill and reputation in the market since 2009 and had demonstrated substantial sales figures. Consequently, use of deceptively similar artwork by the defendants constituted misrepresentation likely to cause damage to the plaintiff's business.

While considering authorities cited by the parties, the Court referred to Sanjay Soya Private Limited v. Narayani Trading Company, IA (L) No. 5011 of 2020 decided on 9 March 2021; Hiralal Prabhudas v. Ganesh Trading Co., 1983 SCC OnLine Bom 284; ITC Limited v. Britannia Industries Limited, 2023 SCC OnLine Mad 6972; Colgate Palmolive Company v. Anchor Health and Beauty Care Pvt. Ltd., 2003 SCC OnLine Del 1005; Xotik Frujus Pvt. Ltd. v. Bubalus Beverages; Marico Ltd. v. Zee Hygiene Products Pvt. Ltd.IA(L) No. 24055 of 2021 decided on 25th November, 2022 by Bombay High Court.; Hugo Boss Trademark Management GmbH v. Sandeep Arora, 2023:DHC:8930; Jagdish Gopal Kamath v. Lime & Chilli Hospitality Services Pvt. Ltd., MANU/MH/0384/2015; Corn Products Refining Co. v. Shangrila Food Products Ltd., AIR 1960 SC 142 and Hygienic Research Institute Pvt. Ltd. v. Chandan and Shah Trading LLP, (2025) 1 HCC (Bom) 25.

The defendants had relied upon Abdul Cadur Allibhoy v. Mahomedally Hyderally, Vol. III Bombay Law Reporter 218. The Court held that the principles laid down therein were not applicable to the facts of the present case.

Final Decision of the Court

The Bombay High Court held that the plaintiff had established a strong prima facie case of copyright infringement and passing off. It found that the impugned “UTSAHA” label constituted a substantial and slavish reproduction of the plaintiff's original “UMANG” artwork.

The Court confirmed the ad interim injunction granted on 14 June 2024 and made the interim application absolute in terms of prayer clauses (a), (b) and (c). Consequently, the defendants were restrained from using the impugned label and from infringing the plaintiff's artistic work and passing off their products as those of the plaintiff.

Point of Law Settled

The judgment reiterates that copyright protects the expression of an idea rather than the underlying idea itself. Common elements may individually be incapable of protection, but their distinctive arrangement and overall trade dress can constitute protectable artistic expression.

The decision also clarifies that refusal of a trademark application does not automatically invalidate copyright registration under Section 45 of the Copyright Act, 1957. The proviso to Section 45 is concerned with conflicting claims by third parties and not with applications filed by the same applicant.

The ruling further emphasizes the importance of the substantial similarity test and the perspective of an ordinary observer in determining copyright infringement. It reinforces that dishonest imitation of overall packaging and trade dress can give rise to both copyright infringement and passing off even where individual features are commonly used in the trade.

Case Details

Title of the Case: Anil Srichand Kundnani v. Pruthvi Ishwar Patel & Anr.

Date of Judgment/Order: 08 June 2026

Case Number: Interim Application (L) No. 13908 of 2024 in Commercial IP Suit No. 434 of 2025, along with Interim Application No. 5393 of 2025

Neutral Citation: 2026:BHC-OS:12554

Name of Court: High Court of Judicature at Bombay

Name of Hon'ble Judge: Justice Sharmila U. Deshmukh

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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Headnote of the Judgment

The Plaintiff, proprietor of the “UMANG” tea brand, instituted a suit alleging copyright infringement and passing off against the Defendants for using the “UTSAHA” tea packaging, which allegedly copied the Plaintiff’s artistic label and trade dress. The Defendants challenged the Plaintiff’s copyright ownership and validity of registration under Section 45 of the Copyright Act, 1957. The Bombay High Court held that the Defendant’s packaging was a slavish reproduction of the Plaintiff’s original artistic work, exhibiting substantial similarity in colour scheme, arrangement, design elements, and overall trade dress. The Court further held that refusal of a trademark application based on an identical word mark did not invalidate copyright registration in the artistic work. Finding a strong prima facie case of copyright infringement and passing off, the Court confirmed the ad-interim injunction and restrained the Defendants from using the impugned artwork and label mark.

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Alkem Laboratories Ltd. Vs. Numen Pharma Private Limited

Alkem Laboratories Ltd. Vs. Numen Pharma Private Limited:08 June 2026 :Commercial IP Suit No. 679 of 2025 :BombHC: Hon'ble Judge: Justice Sharmila U. Deshmukh

The Court considered a dispute concerning trademark infringement and passing off in relation to pharmaceutical products marketed under the marks “ALCIPRO” and “ACIPROX”. The case arose from allegations that the defendant had adopted the mark “ACIPROX”, which the plaintiff contended was deceptively similar to its long-standing registered trademark “ALCIPRO”.

The principal question before the Court was whether the defendant’s mark “ACIPROX” was phonetically similar to the plaintiff’s registered mark “ALCIPRO” so as to give rise to a likelihood of confusion, particularly in the case of medicinal preparations.

After examining the material on record and the submissions of the parties Court  observed that the rival marks must be compared as a whole and not dissected syllable by syllable. The Court found that “ALCIPRO” and “ACIPROX” were phonetically similar and that even a bare possibility of confusion in relation to medicinal products must be prevented. The Court held that a registered proprietor is entitled to restrain the use of an identical or deceptively similar mark, emphasizing that differences in packaging, colour schemes, or the fact that the products are Schedule ‘H’ drugs do not eliminate the likelihood of confusion.

Accordingly, the Court allowed the interim application and granted an injunction restraining the defendant from manufacturing, selling, marketing, or otherwise using the mark “ACIPROX” or any other mark deceptively similar to the plaintiff’s registered trademark “ALCIPRO” pending disposal of the suit.

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

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Differences in packaging, house marks and prescription-based sale in relation to medicinal product and Trademark Confusion


Alkem Laboratories Ltd. v. Numen Pharma Private Limited: Bombay High Court Protects Pharmaceutical Trademark “ALCIPRO” Against Use of “ACIPROX”

Introduction

Trademark disputes involving medicinal products are treated with exceptional seriousness because even a minor possibility of confusion between two pharmaceutical products can have grave consequences for public health. The Bombay High Court's decision in Alkem Laboratories Ltd. v. Numen Pharma Private Limited reiterates the settled principle that in the case of medicines, courts apply a stricter standard and seek to eliminate even the possibility of confusion.

The dispute involved the registered trademark "ALCIPRO", used by Alkem Laboratories for several decades, and the mark "ACIPROX" adopted by a comparatively recent entrant in the pharmaceutical market. The case raised important questions concerning phonetic similarity, the anti-dissection rule, the effect of International Non-Proprietary Names (INN), common-to-trade arguments, and the degree of protection available to medicinal trademarks.

The judgment is of considerable importance to pharmaceutical companies, trademark owners, medical practitioners, and intellectual property lawyers, as it reinforces the principle that public safety outweighs commercial convenience when deceptively similar medicinal marks are involved.

Factual and Procedural Background

Alkem Laboratories Ltd., a well-known pharmaceutical company, adopted the trademark "ALCIPRO" in 1990 and obtained registration in Class 5 on 4 April 1990. Subsequently, on 28 September 1998, it secured registration for the variant mark "ALCIPRO-TN". The products bearing the "ALCIPRO" mark contain Ciprofloxacin and are used for the treatment of bacterial infections, urinary tract infections, throat infections, skin infections and respiratory infections.

Over the years, Alkem introduced several variants of the "ALCIPRO" range and established extensive goodwill and reputation in the market. The plaintiff produced evidence of sales and promotional activities and demonstrated long and continuous use of the mark.

In December 2023, Alkem came across an application advertised in the Trade Marks Journal for registration of the mark "ACIPROX", filed by Numen Pharma Private Limited on 16 January 2023 on a proposed-to-be-used basis. Alkem filed an opposition to the application. In response, the defendant claimed use of the impugned mark since 2023.

Alkem instituted Commercial IP Suit No. 679 of 2025 before the Commercial Division of the Bombay High Court seeking reliefs for trademark infringement and passing off. On 8 October 2025, the Court granted ad-interim protection in favour of Alkem.

Numen Pharma filed an affidavit in reply dated 22 November 2025 and an additional affidavit dated 19 March 2026 opposing the interim application. After hearing the parties, the Court reserved the matter on 24 April 2026 and pronounced its order on 8 June 2026.

Dispute Before the Court

The principal question before the Court was whether the mark "ACIPROX" used by the defendant was deceptively similar to the plaintiff's registered mark "ALCIPRO" and whether such use amounted to infringement and passing off.

Alkem contended that "ALCIPRO" was an invented and distinctive mark which had acquired substantial reputation since 1990. It argued that the defendant's mark differed merely by deletion of the letter "L" and addition of the letter "X", creating a high likelihood of confusion. Since the products involved medicinal preparations with different compositions and therapeutic uses, even a slight possibility of confusion could produce dangerous consequences.

Numen Pharma argued that the expression "CIPRO" was descriptive and derived from the molecule Ciprofloxacin, which forms part of the International Non-Proprietary Name system. According to the defendant, the plaintiff could not claim monopoly over such a generic component. It further contended that the rival marks were visually and phonetically distinct, the packaging and trade dress were different, and the medicines were Schedule H drugs sold only on prescription, thereby eliminating the possibility of confusion.

The defendant also relied upon the existence of numerous trademarks containing the expression "CIPRO" and asserted that the impugned mark had been honestly adopted after conducting a search of the trademark registry.

Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

The Court observed that the plaintiff's product and the defendant's product contained entirely different active ingredients and were intended for treatment of different ailments. Consequently, substitution of one medicine for the other could have hazardous consequences.

The Court emphasized that in cases involving medicinal products, even the slightest possibility of confusion must be prevented. It noted that the dispute was essentially between "ALCIPRO" and "ACIPROX", where the defendant had merely omitted the letter "L" and added the letter "X". The Court rejected the defendant's attempt to compare the marks syllable by syllable and reaffirmed the anti-dissection rule, according to which marks must be considered as a whole.

The Court relied heavily upon the Division Bench decision in Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. v. Meghmani Lifesciences Ltd. & Anr., Comm. Order 08.04.2026 in Appeal (L) No.42382 of 2025, where the rival marks "RACIRAFT" and "ESIRAFT" were examined. The Division Bench had held that dissecting marks into individual syllables was impermissible and that phonetic similarity should be assessed by considering the marks in their entirety.

Applying this principle, the Court held that "ALCIPRO" and "ACIPROX" were phonetically similar. It observed that hurried pronunciation or mispronunciation could easily create confusion and that the terminal letter "X" was insufficient to distinguish the marks.

The Court reiterated that the possibility of confusion assumes greater significance in a multilingual country like India, where varying levels of literacy and pronunciation exist.

The Court relied extensively upon the landmark decision of the Supreme Court in Cadila Health Care Ltd. v. Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd., (2001) 5 SCC 73, which laid down that even prescription drugs are susceptible to confusion and that a higher standard of care is required for medicinal products. The Supreme Court had emphasized that doctors and pharmacists are not immune from mistakes and that linguistic diversity and varying standards of healthcare infrastructure necessitate strict measures against deceptively similar medicinal marks.

Reference was also made to Milmet Oftho Industries v. Allergan Inc., (2004) 12 SCC 624, where the Supreme Court stressed that confusion involving medicinal products demands exacting judicial scrutiny because the consequences may be far more serious than those involving ordinary consumer goods.

The Court rejected the defendant's argument that the medicines were Schedule H drugs and therefore confusion was unlikely. It held that prescriptions are often handwritten or communicated orally and mistakes are possible even among professionals.

On the issue of International Non-Proprietary Names, the Court held that the plaintiff was not seeking monopoly over "Ciprofloxacin" itself. The exclusivity claimed was in the distinctive combination embodied in the mark "ALCIPRO". The plaintiff's registration dated back to 1990 under the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, whereas the notification concerning INNs under Section 13 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999 came much later. Therefore, Section 13 did not invalidate or diminish the plaintiff's rights.

The Court also referred to Lupin Ltd. v. Eris Lifesciences (P) Ltd., 2015 SCC OnLine Bom 6807, observing that the defendant had not challenged the validity of the plaintiff's registration within the narrow window recognised in that decision. Under Section 31 of the Trade Marks Act, registration constitutes prima facie evidence of validity.

The defendant's reliance upon the existence of numerous marks containing "CIPRO" was rejected. The Court observed that mere entries on the register are insufficient to establish that a mark has become common to the trade. It relied on Jagdish Gopal Kamath v. Lime & Chilli Hospitality Services Pvt. Ltd., 2015 SCC OnLine Bom 531, where it had been held that extensive and widespread use must be demonstrated before a mark can be treated as common to the trade.

With respect to passing off, the Court examined Section 27(2) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999 and relied upon Laxmikant V. Patel v. Chetanbhai Shah, (2002) 3 SCC 65, where the Supreme Court held that likelihood of damage is sufficient and proof of actual fraud or actual damage is unnecessary.

The Court also relied upon Satyam Infoway Ltd. v. Siffynet Solutions (P) Ltd., (2004) 6 SCC 145, which explained that misrepresentation in passing off does not require proof of mala fide intention.

The Court distinguished the authorities cited by the defendant. It held that Sun Pharmaceutical Laboratories Ltd. v. Hetero Healthcare Ltd., 2022 SCC OnLine Del 2580, involved marks derived from the same generic drug and therefore turned on entirely different facts. Similarly, Aristo Pharmaceutical Pvt. Ltd. v. Healing Pharma India Pvt. Ltd., 2025 SCC OnLine Bom 4693, concerned an undisguised clipped version of a generic term without any distinctive addition. The Court found those decisions inapplicable.

The Supreme Court's decision in F. Hoffmann-La Roche & Co. Ltd. v. Geoffrey Manners & Co. Pvt. Ltd., (1969) 2 SCC 716, was also distinguished on facts, although the principle that marks must be compared as a whole was accepted.

After examining the evidence, the Court concluded that the plaintiff had established goodwill and reputation built over decades and that the defendant, being incorporated only in 2023, was a late entrant. The balance of convenience clearly favoured the plaintiff.

Final Decision of the Court

The Bombay High Court held that the plaintiff had established a strong prima facie case for trademark infringement and passing off.

The Court found that "ACIPROX" was deceptively similar to "ALCIPRO" and that continued use of the impugned mark was likely to create confusion with potentially serious consequences because the medicines treated different ailments.

Accordingly, the interim application was allowed and the earlier ad-interim protection was confirmed. The defendant, along with its directors, employees, distributors, agents and all persons acting on its behalf, was restrained from manufacturing, selling, advertising, marketing or otherwise using the mark "ACIPROX" or any other mark identical or deceptively similar to "ALCIPRO" pending disposal of the suit. The Court also granted relief in respect of passing off.

Point of Law Settled

The judgment reaffirms that in pharmaceutical trademark disputes, the test is not actual confusion but the possibility of confusion. Courts are required to apply a stricter standard because mistakes in dispensing medicines may endanger public health.

The decision reiterates the anti-dissection rule and confirms that rival marks must be compared as a whole rather than syllable by syllable. It further clarifies that differences in packaging, colour schemes, house marks or the fact that medicines are prescription drugs do not eliminate the likelihood of confusion.

The judgment also emphasizes that mere existence of similar marks on the register does not establish that a mark is common to the trade unless extensive and widespread use is proved. It additionally reinforces the evidentiary value of registration under Section 31 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999 and underscores that goodwill acquired through long-standing use will receive strong judicial protection against late entrants.


Case Details:

Title of the Case: Alkem Laboratories Ltd. v. Numen Pharma Private Limited

Date of Judgment/Order: 8 June 2026

Case Number: Interim Application No. 1606 of 2026 in Commercial IP Suit No. 679 of 2025

Name of Court: High Court of Judicature at Bombay, Ordinary Original Civil Jurisdiction, Commercial Division

Name of Hon'ble Judge: Justice Sharmila U. Deshmukh


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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Headnote of the Judgment:

Alkem Laboratories Ltd., proprietor of the registered trademark "ALCIPRO" since 1990 for pharmaceutical products containing Ciprofloxacin, instituted a suit for infringement and passing off against Numen Pharma Private Limited, which adopted the mark "ACIPROX" in 2023. The defendant contended that "CIPRO" was generic, that the marks were dissimilar, and that the medicines were Schedule H drugs sold only on prescription. The Bombay High Court held that medicinal products require a stricter standard of scrutiny and that even the possibility of confusion must be avoided. Applying the anti-dissection rule and relying upon Cadila Health Care Ltd. v. Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd., (2001) 5 SCC 73, and Milmet Oftho Industries v. Allergan Inc., (2004) 12 SCC 624, the Court found "ACIPROX" phonetically similar to "ALCIPRO". It rejected the defendant's reliance on differences in packaging, house marks and prescription-based sale. Holding that the plaintiff had established goodwill and a strong prima facie case of infringement and passing off, the Court granted an interim injunction restraining use of the mark "ACIPROX" and any deceptively similar mark pending disposal of the suit.

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