IP.ADJUTOR
Information on this blog is being shared only for the purpose of creating legal awareness in public at large, especially in the field of Intellectual Property Right. As there may be possibility of error, omission or mistake in legal interpretation on the contents of this blog, it should not be treated as substitute for legal advise.
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Abbott Products Operations AG Vs Ms. Aprajita Sushma
Daikin Industries Ltd. Vs. Assistant Controller of Patents
Monday, March 2, 2026
Britannia Industries Ltd Vs Desi Bites Snacks P Ltd
Britannia Industries Ltd filed a lawsuit against Desi Bites Snacks Pvt Ltd and others seeking a permanent injunction to stop them from using the 'GOOD DAY' trademark on confectionery like soan papdi, claiming they only became aware of this use in October 2024, and initially obtained a temporary court order halting the defendants' sales without notice, but this was later lifted by mutual agreement in February 2025 and the case was sent for mediation.
Later, Britannia applied to amend their complaint to include details of a prior 2018 rectification petition against a related 'GOOD DAY' registration for papad and to add Jai Food Products and its proprietor Roop Chand Agarwal as new defendants, arguing they were necessary for resolving the full dispute since Roop Chand held a 2005 trademark registration for 'GOOD DAY' on papad and was a director of Desi Bites.
In response, Desi Bites and another defendant filed an application accusing Britannia and its representative Omar Waziri of perjury for deliberately hiding prior knowledge of Roop Chand's mark and misrepresenting Desi Bites as a new entrant to create false urgency, pointing to errors in company details and addresses in the original filing.
The core dispute centered on whether Britannia's omissions were intentional lies warranting criminal perjury proceedings and if the court should allow the amendments and additions of parties.
The court reasoned that perjury requires clear evidence of deliberate falsehood for personal gain, but here the mistakes stemmed from genuine confusion over similar company names on product packaging versus official records, with no proof of intent to deceive, especially since Britannia's signer joined in 2021 unaware of the 2018 proceedings, and suppressing facts inadvertently did not justify perjury as it must be exceptional and based on unimpeachable evidence rather than suspicion.
On amendments, the court noted they should be liberally granted to address the real issues without procedural barriers unless mala fide, and here they clarified the dispute without prejudice.
Similarly, adding the new parties was essential as Roop Chand's registration and role made them key to fair adjudication. The court dismissed the perjury application, approved the plaint amendment and impleadment of the new defendants, directed filing of updated documents and responses, and set timelines for further steps.
Britannia Industries Ltd Vs Desi Bites Snacks P Ltd:28/02/2026:CS(COMM) 983/2024:2026:DHC:1826:Tejas Karia.
Vardhman Trusteeship Pvt Ltd Vs Smt Jyotsana Dubey
Vardhman Trusteeship Pvt Ltd, a company providing trusteeship services, acted as debenture trustee for loans totaling Rs.77 crores taken by Defendant No.2, a tech solutions firm, with Defendant No.1's New Delhi property mortgaged as security through deposit of title deeds after its purchase in 2006 following inheritance and conversion to freehold, and various agreements like debenture trust deeds, hypothecation, share pledges and personal guarantees were executed in 2023 and 2024, but breaches occurred leading to default notices in October 2025 demanding over Rs.40 crores with Defendant No.2 admitting liability via email in January 2026 without payment, prompting the Plaintiff to file a commercial suit in February 2026 seeking a mortgage decree for Rs.3.91 crores based on property valuation, sale of the property, permanent bar on redemption and costs, along with an application for exemption from pre-institution mediation under Section 12A of the Commercial Courts Act claiming urgency to prevent third-party interests, and another for interim injunction under Order XXXIX Rules 1 & 2 CPC to restrain alienation of the property.
The core dispute was whether the suit contemplated urgent interim relief to exempt it from mandatory pre-institution mediation. The court reasoned by referring to Supreme Court precedents like Patil Automation emphasizing the mandatory nature of Section 12A unless genuine urgency exists, Yamini Manohar requiring courts to scrutinize if urgency is not a disguise based on plaint averments, Novenco finding urgency in continuing IP infringements as each act is a fresh wrong, and Chandra Kishore stating urgency is determined by the plaintiff's pleadings, but found in this case the claims of urgency were vague and bald since the property was already mortgaged with no evidence of imminent third-party creation, distinguishing it from ongoing wrongs, thus no real urgency warranted exemption. The court dismissed the exemption application, returned the plaint with liberty to refile after mediation, and disposed of all pending applications.
Vardhman Trusteeship Pvt Ltd Vs Smt Jyotsana Dubey:24.02.2026: CS(COMM) 177/2026: Subramonium Prasad.
International Business Machines Corp Vs Tivoli Gardens
International Business Machines Corporation, known as IBM, a global tech company, acquired the 'TIVOLI' trademark in 1996 from Tivoli Systems Inc. and has used it for decades in IT management software, applying for its registration in India in 2003 under Class 42 for computer services. Tivoli Gardens, a hospitality business using 'TIVOLI' and 'TIVOLI GARDENS' marks since 1994, opposed this application in 2006, claiming prior use. IBM filed a counter-statement in 2011, which the Trade Marks Registry served on Tivoli Gardens in 2019, requiring them to submit evidence within two months or face abandonment of their opposition. Tivoli Gardens failed to do so until 2022, when they filed evidence late along with a petition to excuse the delay, blaming their former lawyer and COVID-19 disruptions. The Registrar allowed this petition in April 2025, reviving the opposition. IBM appealed to the Delhi High Court, arguing the rules set strict, non-extendable deadlines and the Registrar had no power to condone such a long delay. The core dispute was whether the Registrar could overlook the two-month evidence filing deadline under the Trade Marks Rules (either 2002 or 2017 versions, as both are mandatory). The court examined records showing proper service in 2019, ruled that the deadlines are absolute with no discretion for extension, noted Tivoli Gardens' pattern of delays in this and other cases, and held that blaming a lawyer isn't enough excuse without the party's own diligence. The court decided in IBM's favor, setting aside the Registrar's order, deeming the opposition abandoned, and allowing IBM's trademark application to proceed after over 22 years of wait.
International Business Machines Corp Vs Tivoli Gardens:28/02/2026, C.A.(COMM.IPD-TM) 45/2025 : 2026:DHC:1831: Tejas Karia.
FinTree Education Pvt. Ltd. Vs Fintree Finance Pvt. Ltd.,
FinTree Education Pvt Ltd, which runs finance education courses and registered the trademark “FINTREE” in 2012 for its services, sued Fintree Finance Pvt Ltd in 2019 for copying the same name on its finance business and asked for an immediate stop order.
The defendant opposed the injunction. In 2021 the plaintiffs added a passing-off claim by amending the plaint (allowed in 2023), but later realised some supporting documents and a clear prayer for passing off in the injunction motion were missing. In 2025 they filed this second amendment application to add fresh documents (updated registration, new invoices, client reviews, website screenshots, branch proofs) and clarify pleadings.
The defendant strongly opposed, arguing six years had passed, most documents were available earlier, the plaintiffs were careless, and the strict disclosure rules of the Commercial Courts Act do not allow late additions without strong reasons.
The judge examined the Commercial Courts Act rules on document disclosure, noted that some documents genuinely came into existence only after the suit or were needed to answer the defendant’s defence, while others were available earlier and could not be added now.
He held that at the pre-trial stage amendments to pleadings should be allowed liberally if they help decide the real dispute without changing its basic nature, and intellectual property cases deserve protection against ongoing infringement. On 20 February 2026 the Bombay High Court partly allowed the application: it permitted the new documents that came into existence later and the clarificatory pleadings/amendments in the plaint and injunction motion for passing off, but rejected the older documents that should have been filed earlier; no costs were awarded.
Title: FinTree Education Pvt. Ltd. Vs Fintree Finance Pvt. Ltd.: 20.02.2026:Commercial IP Suit No. 234 of 2021:2026:BHC:OS:5031:BombHC: Arif S. Doctor, H.J..
Disclaimer: Do not treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain subjective errors.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Glaxosmithkline Pharmaceuticals Ltd. Vs Zee Laboratories Ltd
GlaxoSmithKline, a big global healthcare company with over 100 years in India, sells antibiotic capsules called PHEXIN since 1985 under a registered trademark and distinctive green-and-white packaging to treat infections.
In 2025 it found Zee Laboratories selling skin ointments under very similar sounding names FEXIT, FEXIT-B and FEXIT-M with almost identical green-and-white boxes. GSK sent legal notices asking Zee to stop, but Zee ignored them, so GSK filed a suit in Delhi High Court and asked for an immediate order to stop the use.
Zee agreed in court to drop one name FEXIN straight away but fought the others, claiming the names are different, the products are totally different (capsules versus ointments), they have been selling since 2007 without any complaints, the prefix FEXI is common in the market, and there is no real confusion because doctors prescribe both.
GSK replied that in medicines even small sound-alike names are dangerous, the first part of the name matters most, doctors’ handwriting is often bad, pharmacists can mix them up, and delay does not matter when copying is dishonest.
The judge compared the names and packaging, noted they sound almost the same and look alike, said medicines need extra strict protection because mistakes can harm health, found GSK has strong reputation from long use and advertising, ruled the prefix is not proven common in actual trade, and held Zee gave no good reason for choosing such similar names. On 28 February 2026 the court granted the interim injunction, stopping Zee, its directors, dealers and everyone connected from using FEXIT, FEXIT-B, FEXIT-M or any similar mark or green-white packaging for ointments until the full trial, because GSK made a strong case, balance of convenience favoured GSK, and delay would harm its goodwill.
Title: Glaxosmithkline Pharmaceuticals Ltd. Vs Zee Laboratories Ltd.:28.02.2026:CS(COMM) 896/2025: 2026:DHC:1832:Tejas Karia, H.J..
Disclaimer: Do not treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain subjective errors.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Terix Computer Service India Pvt. Ltd. Vs TPM Guru Pvt. Ltd.
Terix Computer Service India Pvt Ltd runs an IT maintenance business across the world using its own special software and tools that it developed since 2002. In 2021 it noticed many clients suddenly stopping renewals and discovered that two of its own directors had secretly started a new company called TPM Guru Pvt Ltd, diverted over 115 client contracts worth more than ₹3.70 crore, used Terix staff and parts to serve those clients, copied Terix software, and even froze Terix bank accounts to force an “exit” deal. Terix filed a civil suit in Delhi High Court asking for an order to stop the copying and for damages. The new company and the directors filed an application saying two earlier written agreements (one from 2020 called Collaboration Agreement and one from 2021 called Exit Agreement) contained clear arbitration clauses that required all disputes to be decided by a private arbitrator in Noida instead of court. Terix objected, arguing the case was about copyright theft (which courts alone should decide), the agreements were invalid or already finished, and not every defendant had signed them. The judge carefully read the agreements, the plaint, and Supreme Court rulings like Vidya Drolia and Cox & Kings. He found that the heart of the fight arose directly from the business relationship created by those agreements, the copyright claims were tied to what happened under the contract and not purely a public right, and even non-signatories could be included because the whole matter formed one connected transaction. On 28 February 2026 the court allowed the application under Section 8 of the Arbitration Act, referred the entire dispute to arbitration, and the civil suit was sent to the arbitrator for final decision.
Title: Terix Computer Service India Pvt. Ltd. Vs TPM Guru Pvt. Ltd. , Order date: 28 February 2026, Case Number: CS(COMM) 783/2025, Neutral Citation: None assigned, Name of court: High Court of Delhi at New Delhi, Judge: Hon'ble Mr. Justice Tejas Karia.
Disclaimer: Do not treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain subjective errors.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Hindustan Lever Ltd. Vs Rakesh Goyal
Hindustan Lever (now Unilever) and Procter & Gamble are giant companies that make everyday products like Fair & Lovely cream, Sunsilk shampoo, Lux soap, Ponds, Ariel detergent, Head & Shoulders and many more, all sold with special packaging and famous brand names.
In 2002 and 2003 police raids at the shops of Rakesh Goyal and his family in Delhi caught them selling cheap fake copies of these exact products, packed in almost identical bottles and boxes.
Even after the raids the defendants kept making and selling the counterfeits, so the companies filed this lawsuit in 2018 asking the court to stop them forever, punish them and make them pay for the losses. The court quickly gave a stop order in 2005 that stayed till the end, framed issues, and later the defendants stopped coming to court and gave no evidence or reply.
The judge studied the trademark registrations, copyright in the packaging designs, raid seizure memos and the companies’ huge sales records, and found that the fakes were clearly copied to trick customers and ride on the real brands’ reputation.
On 28 February 2026 the court passed a final decree permanently stopping Rakesh Goyal, his family and anyone connected with them from making, selling or advertising any fake versions of these products, ordered them to jointly pay Rs 2,50,000 as damages within four weeks (with 9% interest if late) and also made them pay the companies’ full actual legal costs.
Title: Hindustan Lever Ltd. Vs Rakesh Goyal: 28.02.2026:CS(COMM) 256/2018: 2026:DHC:1821:Tejas Karia.
Disclaimer: Do not treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain subjective errors.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Novartis AG Vs Noviets Pharma
Novartis AG, a global pharmaceutical giant, has been using its famous trademark “NOVARTIS” in India since 1996 and built huge reputation through massive sales and advertising. In 2024 it discovered a Bihar-based group called Noviets Pharma selling medicines and veterinary products under the very similar name “NOVIETS” on websites like IndiaMart.
Novartis sent legal notices and opposed their trademark but received no proper reply, so it filed a suit in the Delhi High Court asking for an immediate order to stop the use. The defendants argued the court had no jurisdiction because their business is in Bihar, the marks look and sound different, and they only use “NOVIETS” as a company name, not a brand.
The judge first ruled that Delhi has jurisdiction because the defendants’ IndiaMart page lists a Delhi address and their online presence reaches customers here.
He then compared the two marks and found “NOVIETS” is so close to “NOVARTIS” in spelling, sound and look that ordinary buyers, especially with doctors’ handwriting, could easily mix them up — especially dangerous for medicines.
Novartis proved its strong goodwill with huge sales figures, while the defendants could not explain why they chose such a similar name and had even tried to register it themselves. The court said this was a clear case of trademark infringement and passing off, the balance of convenience favoured Novartis, and any delay would harm its reputation.
On 28 February 2026 the court granted the interim injunction, stopping the defendants and everyone connected with them from using “NOVIETS” or any similar mark for pharmaceutical or veterinary products until the full trial is over.
Title: Novartis AG Vs Noviets Pharma: 28.02.2026:CS(COMM) 218/2024:2026:DHC:1827:Tejas Karia, H.J..
Disclaimer: Do not treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain subjective errors.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Associated Broadcasting Company Limited Vs Google LLC
Associated Broadcasting Company Limited, which runs TV9 news channels, uploaded videos on YouTube about real events like hurricanes, heavy snow, floods, the Israel-Hamas war and a Chinese spy balloon, using very short clips of raw footage to explain the news to the public. Some American and Turkish media companies claimed copyright in those tiny clips and sent repeated strike notices to YouTube, threatening to shut down TV9 channels if the videos stayed up. TV9 said the clips were too small to matter, showed only plain facts of nature and current affairs that no one can own, and were used fairly just for honest news reporting. When TV9 tried to talk, the companies demanded secret business records and later filed a case in America but quietly dropped it against TV9’s channels. Google, as the platform owner, stayed neutral and only followed its rules. The companies never filed any reply or appeared in the Delhi High Court despite being served many times, so the court treated their claims as untrue. The judge looked at the videos and saw the clips lasted only seconds inside much longer news stories full of TV9’s own commentary, making the use fair and too tiny to harm anyone under Indian law. On 28 February 2026 the court gave summary judgment without needing a full trial, declared that TV9’s videos do not infringe any copyright, and permanently stopped the companies from sending any more groundless threats or strike notices against these videos.
Title: Associated Broadcasting Co Ltd. Vs Google LLC: 28.02.2026:CS(COMM) 9/2024:2026:DHC:1833:Tejas Karia, H.J.
Disclaimer: Do not treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain subjective errors.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Innovative Derma Care Vs Vardhman Sakincare Pvt. Ltd.
Innovative Derma Care sells skin care products under the trademark Clariwash and sued Vardhaman Skincare Private Limited and another company in 2018 after discovering they were selling face wash under the same name.
The commercial suit in the trial court at Tis Hazari dragged on for nearly six years with mediation attempts, framing of issues in February 2025, and the plaintiff first listing only its owner as a witness before successfully adding three more witnesses in March 2025. In April 2025 the plaintiff filed another application to add two extra witnesses — Mr Amit Chopra who had been unwell and Mr Gulshan Kumar who travels frequently for work — but the trial court rejected it, noting the case was already the oldest pending matter, the plaintiff had already increased its witnesses from one to four, and there was no strong reason why these two names could not have been included earlier.
The plaintiff then approached the High Court under Article 227 claiming the law allows parties to bring their own witnesses without prior permission if evidence is still open and citing a Supreme Court ruling that technical delays should not block important witnesses.
The High Court examined the records, found no medical proof or other documents to support the excuses of illness and travel, observed that the names could have been listed much earlier anyway, and agreed with the trial court that the plaintiff itself was causing the delay in a six-year-old case by repeatedly expanding its witness list.
Therefore on 28 February 2026 the High Court dismissed the petition, refused to interfere with the trial court’s order, and held that the two additional witnesses cannot be examined so the suit can proceed without further postponement.
Title: Innovative Derma Care Vs Vardhman Sakincare Pvt. Ltd.:28.02.2026:CM(M)-IPD 47/2025, 2026:DHC:1829: Tejas Karia, H.J..
Disclaimer: Do not treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain subjective errors.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Crystal Crop Protection Ltd. Vs Assistant Controller of Patent and Design
Crystal Crop Protection Ltd wanted a patent for a ready-to-use weed killer made by mixing two chemicals called halosulfuron-methyl and metribuzin in specific amounts to control weeds in crops like sugarcane. The patent office examined the application and rejected it after two opponents argued that the mixture was not a new invention, did not show any special extra power beyond what the two chemicals already do on their own, and was just an ordinary blend without real improvement.
The company appealed to the High Court of Delhi. During the appeal one opponent asked to add old public records from America and research papers showing very similar weed-killer mixes already existed years before. The court first allowed those extra papers because they were important for deciding the case fairly. After hearing everyone and studying the old records, the judge found that the company’s own test results only proved better weed control when more chemicals were used, not because the two worked together in a surprising new way. Experts in farming chemicals would have easily thought of this mix from what was already known, so there was no inventive step.
The mixture also fell under the rule that stops patents for simple combinations that just add up properties without synergy. The patent office order was clear, complete and correct, so the court saw no reason to change it.
Title: Crystal Crop Protection Ltd. Vs Assistant Controller of Patent and Design :28.02.2026: C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 19/2023:2026:DHC:1828, Tejas Karia, H.J..
Disclaimer: Do not treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain subjective errors.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Godrej Consumer Vs Reckitt Benckiser:DB
Friday, February 27, 2026
Mountain Valley Springs India Private Limited Vs Baby Forest Ayurveda Private Limited
Mountain Valley Springs India Private Limited, operating under the brand Forest Essentials, has been selling Ayurvedic products since 2000 with significant sales and registrations for the mark Forest Essentials across various classes, including baby care products under sub-marks like Forest Essentials Baby since 2006.
In June 2023, they discovered Baby Forest Ayurveda Private Limited using the marks Baby Forest and Baby Forest-Soham of Ayurveda for similar baby Ayurvedic products, alleging deceptive similarity, customer confusion evidenced by social media queries and Google suggestions, and malicious copying including rebranding and store location choices.
The respondents, formerly Landsmill Healthcare, registered Baby Forest in 2020 on a proposed use basis, started sales in 2022 with notable revenue, and argued no similarity, that Forest is a generic dictionary word with no monopoly, their focus is exclusively on baby products unlike the appellant's adult-targeted range, and trade dress plus logos differ.
Forest Essentials filed a commercial suit CS(COMM) 523/2023 for trademark infringement and passing off, seeking interim injunction under Order XXXIX Rules 1 and 2 CPC.
The single judge dismissed the applications on May 15, 2024, reasoning that the appellant failed to prove proprietorship over baby-specific sub-marks which were marketed under the main house mark, Forest is generic and not registered separately under Section 17(2) of the Trade Marks Act 1999, the composite mark Forest Essentials cannot be dissected for monopoly over Forest, no visual phonetic or structural similarity exists between the marks, trade dress packaging and tree logos are dissimilar, the respondents' concession to stop using Saundarya and Baby Essentials was a goodwill gesture not an admission, and evidence like isolated social media posts or Google predictions does not show widespread confusion.
The appellant appealed this denial in FAO(OS)(COMM) 111/2024. The division bench, after considering arguments, upheld the single judge's findings, emphasizing that without secondary meaning the common word Forest cannot be monopolized, the marks are distinct when viewed as wholes under the anti-dissection rule, no prima facie case for infringement or passing off, balance of convenience favors the registered user respondents, and no irreparable harm, thus refusing interim relief. The court dismissed the appeal, allowing the respondents to continue using the challenged marks pending trial.
Mountain Valley Springs India Pvt.Ltd. Vs. Baby Forest Ayurveda Pvt.Ltd. 27.02.2026, FAO(OS)(COMM) 111/2024, 2026:DHC:1756-DB: DHC, Navin Chawla , Madhu Jain .
Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as substitute for legal advise 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
#IPUpdate #IPCaselaw #IPCaseLaw #IPLaw #IPRNews #IPIndiaupdate #Trademark #Copyright #DesignLaw #PatentLaw #Law #Legal #IndianIPUpdate #AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman #IPAdjutor
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Reckitt Benckiser Vs Godrej Consumer Products Limited
Mangrol Oil Mill Vs Vikas Oil Industries
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Landmark Crafts Limited Vs. Romil Gupta
Introduction In a significant ruling that balances procedural fairness with practical realities of trademark registration, the Division Bench of the Delhi High Court has upheld the validity of a minor stylistic amendment to a device mark. The case involved a dispute over whether changing the placement of two small letters in a four-letter device mark amounted to a "substantial alteration" that would invalidate the registration. The Court not only affirmed the Single Judge’s decision to restore the trademark but also laid down clear guidance on how such amendments should be viewed under the Trade Marks Act, 1999. This judgment is particularly important for businesses and trademark practitioners because it shows that not every visual tweak to a mark requires restarting the entire registration process.
Factual Background The respondent, Romil Gupta trading as Sohan Lal Gupta, applied for registration of a device mark consisting of the letters S, D, H and P in a specific stylized form for self-tapping metal screws and drilling screws. The application claimed use of the mark since February 2013. During examination, the office raised certain objections. In response, the respondent sought a small correction, asking to adjust the positioning of the letters “S” and “D” from a horizontal to a vertical arrangement while keeping the overall letters, font sizes and general appearance the same. The Registry allowed this correction and the mark was eventually registered.
Later, the appellant, Landmark Crafts Limited, challenged the registration on the ground that the change was substantial and that proper user documents had not been filed for the amended mark. The core dispute was whether this stylistic adjustment was a minor clerical correction or a major change that required fresh examination and fresh proof of use.
Procedural Background After registration, the appellant filed a complaint before the Trade Marks Registry alleging irregularities in the amendment process. Acting on its own motion under Section 57(4) of the Act, the Deputy Registrar issued a notice and, after hearing the parties, cancelled the registration. The respondent appealed to the Single Judge of the Delhi High Court, who set aside the cancellation order on two main grounds: first, that the Deputy Registrar had not followed the mandatory one-month notice period prescribed under the Rules, and second, that on merits the change was not a substantial alteration. Aggrieved by this, the appellant approached the Division Bench through a Letters Patent Appeal. The Division Bench heard detailed arguments from senior counsel on both sides and delivered its judgment on 25 February 2026.
Reasoning and Decision of Court The Division Bench carefully examined both procedural and substantive aspects. On the procedural side, the Court held that the one-month notice requirement under Rule 100(1) is mandatory and cannot be waived even if the affected party does not immediately object. The Court emphasized that when the law prescribes a particular manner of doing something, it must be followed strictly. Since the Deputy Registrar had cancelled the registration without giving the full notice period, the order was liable to be set aside on this ground alone.
On the merits, the Bench agreed with the Single Judge that the change in the mark was not substantial. The Court observed that the four letters remained the same, the relative sizes stayed identical, and only the orientation of the two smaller letters was adjusted. Applying the ordinary meaning of “substantial” as something essential or of real importance, the judges found that this was a minor stylistic correction rather than a complete transformation of the mark. Because the alteration was not substantial, there was no need for the applicant to file a fresh user affidavit. The original claim of use continued to apply to the corrected mark.
The Court also noted that the rectification proceedings filed separately by the appellant remain unaffected, so the appellant’s rights to challenge the user claim or other aspects are fully preserved. In the end, the Division Bench dismissed the appeal and restored the registration, while reiterating that its observations would not influence the pending rectification petition.
Point of Law Settled in the Case This judgment settles two important principles in trademark law. First, the notice period for suo motu rectification by the Registrar is mandatory and its breach renders the order invalid, irrespective of whether prejudice is specifically pleaded. Second, a stylistic or positional change in a device mark that does not alter the essential identity or overall commercial impression of the mark does not amount to a “substantial alteration” under Rule 37. In such cases, no fresh statement of user is required, and the original user claim carries forward. The ruling provides much-needed clarity to applicants and examiners on what kinds of corrections are permissible without triggering a full re-examination, while still protecting the rights of genuine prior users through separate rectification proceedings.
Case Detail Title: Landmark Crafts Limited Vs. Romil Gupta Trading as Sohan Lal Gupta & Anr. Date of Order: 25 February 2026 Case Number: LPA 575/2025 (along with connected CM applications) Neutral Citation: 2026:DHC:1674-DB Name of Court: High Court of Delhi Name of Hon’ble Judges: Hon’ble Mr. Justice C. Hari Shankar & Hon’ble Mr. Justice Om Prakash Shukla
Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as substitute for legal advise 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 Titles for the Article
- Delhi High Court Holds Minor Stylistic Change in Device Mark is Not Substantial Alteration
- Landmark Ruling on Trademark Amendments: Clarity on “Substantial Alteration” under Rule 37
- No Fresh User Affidavit Needed for Minor Correction in Trademark: Delhi HC
- Procedural Fairness and Trademark Law: Delhi High Court Restores Registration after Cancellation on Technical Grounds
Suitable Tags Trademark Amendment, Substantial Alteration, Rule 37 Trade Marks Rules, Section 57 Rectification, Delhi High Court Judgment, Device Mark, User Affidavit, Trade Marks Act 1999, Letters Patent Appeal, Trademark Registration Procedure
Headnote of the Article In a well-reasoned judgment, the Division Bench of the Delhi High Court has clarified that a small positional change in the letters of a stylized device mark does not constitute “substantial alteration” under Rule 37 of the Trade Marks Rules, 2017. The Court also reiterated the mandatory nature of the one-month notice requirement in suo motu rectification proceedings. The ruling restores the trademark registration while preserving the appellant’s rights in parallel rectification proceedings, striking a practical balance between procedural safeguards and commercial realities.
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The respondent applied for registration of a stylized device mark for self-tapping screws claiming use since 2013. During examination, he sought a small correction in the positioning of two letters in the mark, which the Trade Marks Registry allowed and the mark was registered. The appellant challenged the registration alleging the change was substantial. Acting on its own motion, the Deputy Registrar cancelled the registration. The Single Judge set aside the cancellation order holding that mandatory notice period was not followed and that the change was not substantial. In Letters Patent Appeal, the Division Bench upheld the Single Judge’s decision, restored the registration and dismissed the appeal, while clarifying that the appellant’s separate rectification petition remains unaffected.
Points of Law Settled
- The one-month notice requirement prescribed under Rule 100(1) of the Trade Marks Rules, 2017 for suo motu rectification under Section 57(4) is mandatory; breach of this requirement renders the cancellation order invalid irrespective of prejudice or waiver. (Landmark Crafts Limited v. Romil Gupta Trading as Sohan Lal Gupta & Anr., LPA 575/2025, Paras 42-44)
- A minor stylistic or positional change in a device mark which does not alter its essential identity or overall commercial impression does not amount to “substantial alteration” under the proviso to Rule 37 of the Trade Marks Rules, 2017. (Landmark Crafts Limited v. Romil Gupta Trading as Sohan Lal Gupta & Anr., LPA 575/2025, Paras 50, 62)
- When an amendment to a trademark is not substantial, no fresh statement of user or affidavit is required; the original user claim continues to apply to the corrected mark. (Landmark Crafts Limited v. Romil Gupta Trading as Sohan Lal Gupta & Anr., LPA 575/2025, Paras 57-61)
Case Title: Landmark Crafts Limited v. Romil Gupta:25.02.2026:LPA 575/2025:2026:DHC:1674-DB:C. Hari Shankar & Om Prakash Shukla
Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as substitute for legal advise 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 #IPUpdate #IPCaselaw #IPCaseLaw #IPLaw #IPRNews #IPIndiaupdate #Trademark #Copyright #DesignLaw #PatentLaw #Law #Legal #IndianIPUpdate #AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman #IPAdjutor
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Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Sana Herbals Private Limited Vs Mohsin Dehlvi-DB
AR Rahman Vs Ustad Faiyaz Wasifuddin Sagar
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WHETHER THE REGISTRAR OF TRADEMARK IS REQUIRED TO BE SUMMONED IN A CIVIL SUIT TRIAL PROCEEDING
WHETHER THE REGISTRAR OF TRADEMARK IS REQUIRED TO BE SUMMONED IN A CIVIL SUIT TRIAL PROCEEDING IN ORDER TO PROVE THE TRADEMARK REGISTRA...
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A Party is not allowed to argue a case, what is not pleaded. Introduction: This case revolves around a fundamental principle of civil proce...
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Species patents following a Markush patent must demonstrate a distinct inventive step Introduction The AstraZeneca AB & Anr. Vs. Intas ...
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सुभाष - जिस वीर ने गुंजाया था “जय हिन्द” का आस, दहक रही थी उर में क्रांति ज्वाला-सा विश्वास? तुम खून दो आजादी दूंगा उनकी ऐसी भाषा , सुप्त पड़ी धूमिल नयनो...6 days ago
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IPL:Spice In, Nationality Out - I was sitting in my office. It was a hot afternoon. The fan was running slowly and making strange sounds like an old typewriter. Files were lying on my d...9 months ago
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