Can a Number Be a Trademark? The Supreme Court's Landmark Ruling on Numerals, Distinctiveness, and the Seven-Year Shield
Introduction
Among the many intriguing questions that trademark law throws up, few are as counterintuitive as this: can a plain number — say, "50" — be someone's exclusive trademark? Most people would instinctively say no. Numbers feel like they belong to everyone, like the letters of the alphabet or the days of the week. Yet Indian trademark law, as interpreted by the Supreme Court of India in its judgment dated March 18, 1970 in National Bell Co. and Gupta Industrial Corporation v. Metal Goods Mfg. Co. (P) Ltd. and Anr., firmly answered that question in the affirmative, at least in the circumstances of that case. The judgment is a foundational ruling in Indian intellectual property law on several counts: it clarified the legal meaning of "distinctiveness" as applied to numerals, it explained the difference between a mark that is simply not registerable and one that is positively prohibited from registration, it settled the interpretation of the powerful seven-year conclusiveness rule under Section 32 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, and it laid down the principle that mere neglect to prosecute every infringer does not amount to abandonment of a trademark. Decided at a time when India's organized cycle bell industry was finding its feet, the case has enduring relevance for anyone who wishes to understand what makes a trademark valid, how long it can be challenged, and under what circumstances it can be cancelled.
Factual and Procedural Background
The story begins in the cycle spare parts industry of mid-twentieth century India. Metal Goods Mfg. Co. (P) Ltd., the Respondent in these appeals, was a company that manufactured cycle bells and marketed them under the brand name "Asia." On November 20, 1953, it obtained registration of two trademarks: Registered Trade Mark No. 161543, being the numeral "50," and Registered Trade Mark No. 161544, being the word "Fifty." These two marks were registered in respect of the cycle bells manufactured by the company. For several years before the dispute arose, the company's "Asia 50" and "Asia Fifty" bells were being sold in the market, and the company's own sales statements showed a remarkable growth in business: from a value of Rs. 19,644 in the financial year 1949-50, the sales of bells under these marks climbed to Rs. 14.83 lacs by 1961-62, an extraordinary rise in business over a little more than a decade.
The two Appellants before the Supreme Court were National Bell Co. and Gupta Industrial Corporation, both based in Kapurthala in Punjab. National Bell Co. claimed to have been manufacturing cycle bells with numerals "33," "50," "51," and "40" inscribed on them since 1957. Gupta Industrial Corporation claimed to have been doing so with numerals "20," "50," and "60" inscribed on its bells since as far back as 1947. Both companies used the numeral "50" on their cycle bells and called their products "National 50" and "Gupta 50" respectively. The Respondent company filed suits against both these companies in the District Court at Lucknow for infringement of its registered trademarks, namely the numeral "50" and the word "Fifty." These suits were filed in the year 1959.
When the infringement suits were filed, the two Appellant companies adopted the strategy commonly used in trademark litigation: rather than simply defending the suits on their merits, they went on the offensive by challenging the very validity of the Respondent's registered trademarks. On April 24, 1961, the District Court at Lucknow stayed the infringement suits and gave the Appellant companies time to file rectification applications before the High Court under Section 111 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958. The Appellant companies accordingly filed two applications before the High Court seeking rectification of the register — in essence, asking the court to cancel the Respondent's registered trademarks.
The grounds urged by the Appellant companies in the rectification applications were threefold. First, they argued that the numeral "50" and the word "Fifty" were common to the trade at the time of original registration in 1953 and were never distinctive of the Respondent's goods. Second, they contended that many other manufacturers and dealers in the market were using the numeral "50" and the word "Fifty" on cycle bells, so that whatever distinctiveness those marks might once have had was now lost. Third, they alleged that the Respondent had not obtained registration with any bona fide intention of using the marks and had in fact not used them in any genuine sense before the date of the applications. They further alleged that the Respondent had made a fraudulent declaration at the time of registration by claiming to be the originator or proprietor of the marks "50" and "Fifty."
Both sides led extensive evidence before the learned Single Judge of the High Court, including oral testimony and documentary evidence such as price lists obtained from dealers in cycle spare parts. The learned Single Judge, after examining the evidence, made the following key findings: cycle bells with the numeral "50" inscribed on them had been in the Indian market before the Respondent obtained registration in 1953, and had continued in the market until about 1958, though from old imported stock rather than fresh imports since import of foreign cycle bells had been prohibited around 1952. He found no evidence of any fraud by the Respondent in obtaining the original registration. He found that the Appellant companies had not even alleged, let alone proved, that companies like Lucas or any other foreign manufacturer had obtained trademark registration for the numeral "50" or the word "Fifty." He held that Clause (a) of Section 32 — which deals with fraudulent registration — did not apply, and Clause (b) of Section 32 — which deals with contravention of Section 11 — also did not apply. However, on the question of Clause (c) of Section 32, he held that numerals are prima facie not distinctive, that the numeral "50" was being commonly used by several manufacturers and dealers after the registration, and that the mark "50" was therefore not distinctive at the commencement of the proceedings. He accordingly cancelled Trade Mark No. 161543 (the numeral "50"). As regards Trade Mark No. 161544 (the word "Fifty"), he held that there was no evidence of use by other parties and that since seven years had elapsed since registration, the mark could not be challenged on distinctiveness grounds, so he refused to cancel it.
Both the Appellant companies and the Respondent company filed appeals against this order before a Division Bench of the Punjab High Court in Letters Patent Appeal Nos. 38-D, 42-D, 39-D, and 43-D of 1963. The Division Bench, by its common judgment dated February 25, 1965, reversed the Single Judge's order cancelling the numeral "50" and upheld the validity of both registrations. The Division Bench found that while the numeral "50" had been used by foreign companies like Lucas on bells sold in India, those companies had used it merely as a type mark to distinguish one variety of bell from another, and not as a trademark at all. Import of such bells had stopped around 1952, and whatever sales continued until 1958 were from remaining old stocks. The Division Bench also noted the strong and sustained commercial performance of the Respondent's marks, with sales rising year on year, and held that on the facts, both marks remained distinctive at the relevant date of proceedings. The Appellant companies then appealed to the Supreme Court under certificate.
The Dispute
The central dispute before the Supreme Court was whether the two registered trademarks of the Respondent — the numeral "50" and the word "Fifty" — should be cancelled. More specifically, the Appellant companies pressed three arguments. They argued that since seven years had elapsed from the date of registration in 1953 by the time the rectification proceedings were launched in 1961, registration could still be challenged if the marks fell within the exceptions carved out in Section 32 of the Act. They contended that the marks were registered in contravention of Section 11 of the Act, which prohibits certain marks from being registered, including marks that would otherwise be "disentitled to protection in a court." They also argued that the marks were not distinctive at the commencement of the proceedings, bringing the case within Clause (c) of Section 32. The Respondent countered that Section 32 created a near-absolute shield after seven years, that the marks did not fall within any of the exceptions in Section 32, and that its consistent enforcement activity and rising sales demonstrated that the marks remained distinctive.
The legal questions were thus: what is the legal character of the seven-year shield under Section 32, what kinds of objections can still be raised after seven years have passed, what is the true meaning of Section 11(e)'s prohibition on marks "disentitled to protection in a court," and when can a mark be said to have lost its distinctiveness at the commencement of proceedings?
Reasoning and Analysis of the Judge
Justice J.M. Shelat, writing for a Bench composed of himself and Justice C.A. Vaidialingam, approached the matter methodically, working through the relevant provisions of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, before applying them to the facts.
The Court began by laying down the foundational concepts. Under Section 2(j) of the Act, a "mark" includes a word, letter, numeral, or any combination thereof. A "trade mark" under Section 2(v) is a mark used or proposed to be used in relation to goods to indicate a connection in the course of trade between the goods and some person having the right to use the mark. Under Section 9 of the Act, a trade mark can be registered in Part A of the register only if it contains or consists of at least one of the essential particulars listed in that section, one of which is "any other distinctive mark." Section 9(3) defines "distinctive" for the purposes of the entire Act as meaning "adapted to distinguish goods with which the proprietor of the trade mark is or may be connected in the course of trade from goods with which no such connection subsists." In determining distinctiveness, one must consider both whether the mark is inherently distinctive and whether by reason of its use it has in fact become distinctive.
The Court then explained the significance of Section 31 and Section 32 of the Act. Section 31 provides that registration is prima facie evidence of the validity of the trademark. This means that in any infringement suit or rectification proceeding, the registered proprietor does not have to prove his title from scratch — the certificate of registration itself does the job, placing the burden on the challenger. Section 32 goes a step further: it provides that after seven years have elapsed from the date of original registration, the registration shall be taken to be conclusively valid in all legal proceedings, including rectification applications under Section 56. This conclusiveness is absolute except in three limited situations: the original registration was obtained by fraud (Clause a), the trademark was registered in contravention of Section 11 or offends against Section 11 as of the date of proceedings (Clause b), or the trademark was not distinctive of the goods of the registered proprietor at the commencement of the proceedings (Clause c).
In the present case, the registration had taken place on November 20, 1953, and the rectification applications were filed in 1961, more than seven years later. The Court confirmed that no objection that the marks were not registerable under Section 9 at the time of original registration could be entertained at this stage. This meant the Appellants could not argue that numerals are inherently not distinctive and that the Respondent had failed to prove distinctiveness before the Registrar in 1953. That ship had sailed.
On the question of fraud under Clause (a) of Section 32, the Court agreed with both courts below that this ground was entirely unsupported. The Appellant companies had not even properly pleaded fraud, let alone proved it. This ground was accordingly set aside.
The most intellectually intricate part of the judgment dealt with the distinction between Section 9 (which sets out the requisites for registration) and Section 11 (which prohibits certain marks from being registered). The Appellants argued that since numerals are prima facie not distinctive, the marks "50" and "Fifty" were registered in contravention of Section 11(e), which prohibits marks that "would otherwise be disentitled to protection in a court." If this argument succeeded, the seven-year shield of Section 32 would not save the marks, since Clause (b) of Section 32 expressly keeps the Section 11 exception alive even after seven years.
The Court firmly rejected this argument. It drew a crucial distinction between a mark that is "not entitled to protection" and a mark that is "disentitled to protection." The former merely means a mark that did not qualify for registration because it lacked distinctiveness or some other requisite under Section 9. The latter means a mark that has some inherent legal disqualification — such as being likely to deceive, being contrary to law, being obscene, or being contrary to public morality — which makes it positively unfit to be protected by a court. The word "disentitled" carries with it the idea of an active disqualification, not merely the absence of a qualification.
In support of this interpretation, the Court relied upon the English case of Imperial Tobacco Co. Ltd. v. De Pasquali & Co. (35 R.P.C. 185), decided by the Court of Appeal in England, which had construed the equivalent provisions of the Trade Marks Act, 1905 (Sections 11 and 41 of that Act, corresponding to Sections 11 and 32 of the Indian Act). In that case, Swinfen Eady, M.R. had observed that Section 11 was a prohibition section — it dealt with what marks shall not be lawful to register, not with what marks satisfy the qualifications for registration. The mere fact that a mark did not comply with the requisites of Section 9 did not bring it within Section 11. The expression "disentitled to protection" was not equivalent to "not entitled to protection." A mark was "disentitled to protection" only if there was some illegal or inherent disqualification in the mark itself — such as the likelihood of deception, obscenity, illegality, or something similarly substantive — not merely because it failed to satisfy the distinctiveness test of Section 9. The Supreme Court adopted this reasoning as the correct interpretation of the Indian provision as well.
The practical consequence of this ruling was significant: the Appellants could not bring the trade marks within the Clause (b) exception to Section 32 merely by arguing that numerals are not inherently distinctive. Lack of distinctiveness, while it might prevent registration in the first place, does not make a mark "disentitled to protection in a court" in the sense of Section 11(e). The seven-year shield therefore remained intact against this line of attack.
On the question of whether numerals can at all be registered as trademarks, the Court noted that the 8th edition of Kerly on Trade Marks (a leading British text on trademark law) had stated that numerals are prima facie not distinctive and can be registered only upon proof of extensive use. However, the 9th edition of the same work departed from this position and noted that numerals are capable of registration and that marks consisting of numerals do in fact exist. The Court also noted that Rules 139 and 140 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Rules, 1959, permitted numerals to be registered as trademarks only in the case of textile goods, reflecting a long-standing practice in that particular trade. However, the Court held that it is not an inflexible rule that a numeral cannot be distinctive or registerable in other contexts, particularly if it has gained distinctiveness through extensive use. The Appellants' own counsel had conceded this point.
The most factually rich part of the analysis concerned Clause (c) of Section 32 — the question of whether the marks "50" and "Fifty" were distinctive of the Respondent's goods at the commencement of the proceedings. The Court noted that distinctiveness can be lost in several ways: if the goods can no longer be distinguished as those of the registered proprietor, if there is such extensive piracy that the marks have become public property, or if the proprietor has effectively abandoned the marks. The underlying principle is that a trademark has value only so long as it continues to connect the proprietor's goods in the minds of the public. Once that connection is broken, there is no justification for keeping the mark on the register.
The Court found on the facts that the marks had not lost their distinctiveness. The Respondent had been vigilant in enforcing its rights. When it found in 1954 that M/s. Indian Union Manufacturers Ltd. of Calcutta had begun inscribing the word "Fifty" on its bells, the Respondent promptly filed an infringement suit. That suit resulted in a compromise on February 5, 1955, under which the Indian Union company acknowledged the Respondent's exclusive rights to "Fifty," "Thirty," "50," and "30," while the Respondent in turn recognised the Indian Union company's right to "Thirty one," "Forty one," "Fifty one," "31," "41," and "51." Similarly, when the Respondent became aware of the mark "Five 50" being used by K.R. Berry & Co. of Jullundur, it gave notice and filed a suit, even though the suit had to be withdrawn later due to a jurisdictional defect in the Banaras court. Separately, the Respondent had filed opposition before the Registrar against an application by that company for registration of the mark "Five Fifty." The infringement suits against the two Appellant companies themselves were filed in 1959, as soon as the Respondent came to know of their use of the marks.
The Court also observed that the evidence of use of "50" by others in the market was neither extensive nor clearly established. The foreign cycle bells of Lucas and other companies with the numeral "50" inscribed on them had been used by those companies merely as type marks to distinguish one variety of bell from another, not as trademarks in the proper sense. Import of those bells had been prohibited around 1952, and whatever sales continued until 1958 were from old remaining stocks, which the Court characterised as "few and far between." There was no evidence at all of actual deception or confusion. Witnesses had testified that customers identified the Respondent's bells as "Asia bells" and in some cases as "Asia 50," suggesting that the numeral "50" had come to be associated with the Respondent's brand rather than functioning merely as a type descriptor.
The Court also addressed the Appellants' argument that the Respondent's failure to chase every infringer amounted to abandonment of the marks. Referring to the English case of Re. Farina (1879) 27 W.R. 456, the Court held that mere neglect to proceed against infringements does not necessarily constitute abandonment, particularly where those infringements are not of sufficient scale to affect the distinctiveness of the mark, even if the proprietor is aware of them. The Court further cited Rowland v. Mitchell (1897) 14 R.P.C. 37 for the proposition that in assessing whether a registered proprietor is barred by neglect to challenge infringements, one must consider the character and extent of the infringers' trade and their position in the market. The Appellants had not led evidence to show the extent of manufacture and sale of other bells with "50" inscribed on them, making it impossible to conclude that those infringements were of such a scale as to render the marks common property or to destroy their distinctive character.
Finally, the Court addressed the proper interpretation of the phrase "commencement of the proceedings" in Clause (c) of Section 32. It held that this phrase refers to the commencement of the proceedings in which the question of the conclusive character of the registration arises — which could be either the infringement suit or the rectification proceedings. In the present case, whether the crucial date was taken as 1959 (when the infringement suits were filed) or 1961 (when the rectification applications were filed), the result was the same: the marks had not ceased to be distinctive by either date.
Final Decision of the Court
The Supreme Court, by its judgment dated March 18, 1970, dismissed both civil appeals filed by National Bell Co. and Gupta Industrial Corporation. The appeals were dismissed with costs, with one hearing fee ordered. The Division Bench's judgment upholding both registered trademarks — the numeral "50" (Trade Mark No. 161543) and the word "Fifty" (Trade Mark No. 161544) — was confirmed. The Respondent's registrations were held to be valid and could not be cancelled on the grounds urged by the Appellant companies.
Points of Law Settled in the Case
This judgment settled a cluster of important principles of Indian trademark law that remain relevant to this day. The seven-year conclusiveness rule under Section 32 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 — now broadly replicated in the Trade Marks Act, 1999 — creates a near-absolute shield after seven years from the date of original registration. Once seven years pass, the validity of registration cannot be challenged on the ground that the mark was not distinctive at the date of its registration or that distinctiveness was not proven before the Registrar. The only grounds of challenge that survive after seven years are fraud in obtaining registration, contravention of Section 11, and absence of distinctiveness at the date of commencement of the proceedings in question.
Critically, the judgment settled that Section 11(e) — which prohibits marks that would be "disentitled to protection in a court" — is not the same as Section 9. A mark that is merely not registerable because it lacks distinctiveness does not automatically become "disentitled to protection in a court." The word "disentitled" implies an active, substantive legal disqualification inherent in the mark itself, such as deceptiveness, illegality, or obscenity, not merely the absence of distinctiveness. This distinction is fundamental to understanding how the seven-year shield works in practice.
The judgment also affirmed that numerals are capable of being registered as trademarks and of acquiring distinctiveness through use, and that there is no absolute rule excluding them from trademark protection simply because they are numbers. The Court further established the principle that mere neglect to prosecute every infringer is not equivalent to abandonment of a trademark, provided the infringements are not of such a scale and nature as to render the mark common property in the market, and provided the proprietor takes action against significant infringers when it becomes aware of them.
Case Details
Title: National Bell Co. and Gupta Industrial Corporation Vs. Metal Goods Mfg. Co. (P) Ltd. and Anr. Date of Order: March 18, 1970 Case Number: Civil Appeal Nos. 1952 and 1953 of 1966 Neutral Citation: MANU/SC/0369/1970 Equivalent Citations: AIR 1971 SC 898; (1970) 3 SCC 665; [1971] 1 SCR 70 Court: Supreme Court of India Hon'ble Judges: Justice C.A. Vaidialingam and Justice J.M. Shelat
Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as a substitute for legal advice as it may contain errors in perception, interpretation, and presentation.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Suggested SEO Titles
- Can a Number Be a Trademark? Supreme Court's Landmark Ruling on Numerals and Distinctiveness in India
- The Seven-Year Trademark Shield: Supreme Court Explains Section 32 of Trade and Merchandise Marks Act in National Bell Case
- National Bell Co. vs Metal Goods: When "50" Became a Valid Trademark — Supreme Court of India 1970
- Trademark Distinctiveness of Numerals: Lessons from India's Supreme Court in the Cycle Bell Case
- Trademark Cancellation After Seven Years: What Can and Cannot Be Challenged Under Indian Law
- Disentitled vs Not Entitled: The Critical Trademark Distinction Settled by India's Supreme Court in 1970
- Abandonment of Trademarks and the Conclusiveness Rule: Supreme Court's Analysis in the National Bell Case
SEO Tags
National Bell Co vs Metal Goods Mfg Co, numeral trademark India, trademark distinctiveness numerals, Section 32 Trade and Merchandise Marks Act 1958, seven year conclusiveness trademark India, trademark cancellation rectification India, Section 11 Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, disentitled to protection trademark, trademark abandonment India, cycle bell trademark case India, Supreme Court trademark judgment 1970, AIR 1971 SC 898, MANU SC 0369 1970, trademark registration numerals India, Section 56 Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, Justice JM Shelat trademark, trademark piracy public juris, honest use trademark India, trademark distinctiveness loss, Kerly on Trade Marks numerals, Imperial Tobacco Co v De Pasquali, commencement of proceedings trademark, Part A register trademark India, trademark infringement cycle bells, AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman, IPAdjutor
Headnote
National Bell Co. and Gupta Industrial Corporation v. Metal Goods Mfg. Co. (P) Ltd. and Anr., Civil Appeal Nos. 1952 and 1953 of 1966, decided March 18, 1970, Supreme Court of India (Justice C.A. Vaidialingam and Justice J.M. Shelat) — Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, Sections 2, 9, 9(3), 11, 28, 31, 32, 35, 46, 56, 56(2), 111; Trade and Merchandise Marks Rules, 1959, Rules 139 and 140; Trade Marks Act, 1905, Sections 11 and 41 — Rectification of Register — Numerals as Trademarks — Seven-Year Conclusiveness — Distinctiveness — The Respondent had obtained registered trademarks for the numeral "50" (No. 161543) and the word "Fifty" (No. 161544) in respect of cycle bells on November 20, 1953. The Appellants, manufacturers of cycle bells using the numeral "50" on their goods, filed rectification applications in 1961 seeking cancellation of the registrations on grounds of lack of distinctiveness, common use, and disentitlement to protection in court. Held: (i) After expiry of seven years from the date of registration, validity of a trade mark cannot be challenged on the ground that it was not distinctive at the date of registration or that distinctiveness was not proven before the Registrar; Section 32 creates a near-conclusive shield subject only to three exceptions. (ii) Section 11(e) — which prohibits marks "disentitled to protection in a court" — is distinct from Section 9 and refers only to marks having some inherent positive legal disqualification, such as deceptiveness or illegality; a mark that merely lacks distinctiveness is not thereby "disentitled to protection." (iii) Numerals are capable of being registered as trademarks and of acquiring distinctiveness by use; there is no absolute rule to the contrary. (iv) Distinctiveness of a registered mark under Section 32(c) must be assessed at the commencement of the relevant proceedings, not at the date of registration; a mark is not deprived of distinctiveness by sparse and unchallenged infringements, provided the proprietor takes reasonably prompt action against significant infringers. (v) Mere neglect to prosecute infringers does not constitute abandonment of a trademark unless the infringements are of such scale and character as to render the mark public property. (vi) The plea of common use requires proof of substantial use by others; isolated instances of use by competitors do not suffice. Appeals dismissed with costs.
No comments:
Post a Comment