Charminar Trademark: How the Supreme Court Struck Down Monopoly Over an Entire Class of Goods for Non-Use
Introduction
Trademark law exists to protect honest traders who build genuine goodwill in their marks and to prevent consumer confusion in the marketplace. It is not designed to hand one trader an indefinite monopoly over an entire category of goods simply because the broad classification under which those goods fall was mentioned in an old registration, even when that trader has never dealt in most of those goods and has no intention of ever doing so. The Supreme Court of India confronted this very problem in Vishnudas Trading as Vishnudas Kishandas v. Vazir Sultan Tobacco Co. Ltd., Hyderabad and another, decided on 9th July 1996. The case arose from a seemingly narrow dispute about whether the famous "Charminar" brand could be used on chewing tobacco products called quiwam and zarda, but its resolution required the Court to examine fundamental questions about the nature of trademark registration, the purpose of rectification proceedings, and the limits of the monopoly that a registered trademark confers. The judgment remains a landmark ruling on the proposition that a trademark registration must correspond to the actual commercial activities of the trader and cannot be used as a tool to block others from legitimate trade in genuinely distinct products.
Factual and Procedural Background
The Vazir Sultan Tobacco Company Ltd., based in Hyderabad, had been manufacturing cigarettes under the famous brand name "Charminar" for many decades. "Charminar" is the name of a celebrated 16th century architectural monument that stands as a landmark in the city of Hyderabad and is among the most recognised historical structures in India. The company had obtained two registrations of the "Charminar" trademark, the first in the year 1942 and the second in the year 1955, under the Trade Marks legislation then in force. Both registrations were made in respect of goods described as "manufactured tobacco" falling under Class 34 of the Fourth Schedule to the Trade Marks Rules. Crucially, the company had, throughout its entire history, manufactured only cigarettes. It had never manufactured any other form of tobacco product, and there was no evidence whatsoever that it ever intended to do so.
The Appellant, Vishnudas Trading carrying on business as Vishnudas Kishandas Zarda Factory, was a manufacturer of quiwam and zarda. Quiwam is a paste form of tobacco typically used as an ingredient in pan, and zarda consists of fine aromatic flakes also applied to pan. These are forms of chewing tobacco quite distinct from cigarettes in their form, character, manufacture, and mode of consumption. The Appellant had been manufacturing these products since 1973 and had been using the brand name "Charminar" on his bottles and boxes. Importantly, the device or artistic depiction of "Charminar" used by the Appellant on his packaging was entirely different from the depiction used by Vazir Sultan on its cigarette packets and cartons. The Appellant also held a duly registered copyright under the Copyright Act, 1957, in respect of the brand name and device as depicted by him.
When the Appellant applied for registration of the "Charminar" trademark in respect of quiwam and zarda under the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 and the Trade Marks Rules, 1959, the application ran into a wall. The Joint Registrar of Trade Marks observed in his minutes dated 24th September 1973 that while the Appellant had contended that the existing registrations were limited to cigarettes and quiwam and zarda were different goods that would not cause conflict, the existing registrations were formally in respect of "manufactured tobacco," a description broad enough to encompass quiwam and zarda within its scope. The objection of Vazir Sultan under Section 12(1) of the Trade Marks Act therefore could not be waived at that stage. The counsel for the Appellant, faced with this position, offered to apply for rectification of the Respondent's trade mark.
Accordingly, on 15th October 1973, the Appellant filed two applications under Section 46 read with Section 56 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 before the Registrar of Trade Marks, Madras, seeking rectification of the existing registrations held by Vazir Sultan. The primary ground was non-use of the "Charminar" trademark in respect of quiwam and zarda, which were goods entirely distinct from cigarettes though falling under the same broad classification. Proceedings before the Registrar continued from 1973 to 1976. Vazir Sultan contested the applications but was entirely unable to dispute or refute the factual assertion that the company had never manufactured any tobacco product other than cigarettes. The Assistant Registrar of Trade Marks, Madras, by order dated 31st August 1976, allowed the applications and directed that the entries in the Trade Marks Register in respect of registrations bearing numbers 9951 and 170427 be rectified so that the specification of goods would thereafter read as "cigarettes."
Vazir Sultan preferred two statutory appeals under Section 109(2) of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act before a learned Single Judge of the Madras High Court. By a common judgment dated 11th September 1980, the Single Judge allowed these appeals and set aside the rectification order of the Assistant Registrar. The Single Judge reasoned that the Assistant Registrar had effectively created a sub-classification of "manufactured tobacco" within Class 34, which was impermissible since the classification scheme did not provide for such sub-division. It was further held that rectification to cigarettes would enable the Appellant to pass off his goods as those manufactured by Vazir Sultan.
The Appellant then preferred two statutory appeals under Section 109(5) of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act before a Division Bench of the Madras High Court. By the impugned judgment dated 11th October 1990, the Division Bench dismissed these appeals and upheld the Single Judge. The Division Bench reasoned that Class 34 referred only to "manufactured tobacco" and there could be no separate registration for cigarettes within that class. It also held that since the Joint Registrar had already declined to register the Appellant's trademark under Section 12, the rectification applications were themselves not maintainable. The Division Bench further held that manufacture of cigarettes falls under "manufactured tobacco" and therefore the Respondent's trademark could not be curtailed on grounds of non-use with reference to quiwam and zarda even if those products had never been made by Vazir Sultan. The Appellant challenged this decision before the Supreme Court.
The Dispute
The central dispute between the parties was, in essence, whether a company that had manufactured nothing but cigarettes for over fifty years, and intended to manufacture nothing else, could use its trademark registration — made under the broad class description "manufactured tobacco" — as a permanent barrier preventing anyone else from registering a trademark for quiwam, zarda, snuff, or any other form of tobacco product. Vazir Sultan's position was that its registration covered the entire class of manufactured tobacco, and as long as that registration stood, no one else could obtain a trademark registration for any goods falling within that class. The Appellant's position was that "manufactured tobacco" was merely a broad genus that encompassed many fundamentally distinct products, that Vazir Sultan had never used its trademark in relation to any product other than cigarettes, and that it was unjust and contrary to the scheme of the Trade Marks Act for Vazir Sultan to enjoy an indefinite monopoly over goods it had never dealt in and would never deal in.
A secondary but important legal question was whether the Trade Marks Act permitted registration of a trademark in respect of a specific article such as "cigarettes" within a broader class such as "manufactured tobacco," or whether registration could only be made for the class as a whole, with no scope for specifying particular goods within it. Vazir Sultan argued that the language of Section 8 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, which referred to goods "comprised in prescribed class of goods," required registration to be made for the entire class and not for individual articles within it. The Appellant and the Registrar of Trade Marks disputed this reading and argued that both the Act and the Rules permitted, and indeed contemplated, registration in respect of specific identifiable goods within a broader class.
Reasoning and Analysis of the Judge — Including Judgments Cited and Their Context
The Supreme Court, in a judgment authored by Justice G.N. Ray (with Justice G.B. Patnaik concurring), carefully examined the scheme of the Trade Marks Act, the historical background of trademark classification, the purpose of rectification proceedings, and the case law cited by all parties. The following is a detailed account of the Court's reasoning.
On the Object of the Trade Marks Act and the Purpose of Rectification
The Court began by noting that the stated object of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, as set out in the Statement of Objects and Reasons, was "to enlarge the field of registrability." The Court accepted the Appellant's argument that this purpose was directly undermined if a broad registration made without any real intention to use the trademark across the full range of goods in a class could permanently block others from getting registration for genuinely distinct products. The Court noted that the purpose of the rectification proceedings under Sections 46 and 56 of the Act was to maintain the purity and precision of the Register, to secure advantage to the public, to establish bona fides in trademark registration, and to prevent monopolistic trends from developing through overreaching trademark registrations. These were principles the Court treated as foundational to the entire scheme.
On the Distinction Between "Goods" and "Class of Goods"
The Court carefully examined the statutory distinction between specific goods and the class of goods in which they fall. Section 8 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 deals with the classification of goods for the purpose of registration. The Court rejected Vazir Sultan's argument that the change in language from the 1940 Act (which referred to "particular goods") to the 1958 Act (which used the expression "comprised in prescribed class of goods") necessarily meant that registration could only be made for the entire class and not for specific articles within it. The Court held that this was an incorrect reading of Section 8 and of the Fourth Schedule to the 1959 Rules.
The Court noted that the Trade Marks Act itself drew a clear distinction in various provisions between "goods of the same description" — a phrase appearing in Sections 12, 34, and 46 — and "class of goods," which appears in Section 18 and in Rules 22 and 26 read with the Fourth Schedule. A single class in the Fourth Schedule could comprise a number of separately identifiable and vendible goods that were not goods of the same description in common trade understanding. "Manufactured tobacco" under Class 34 was precisely such a case: within that class, one could find cigarettes, cigars, cheroots, bidis, pipe tobacco, quiwam, zarda, gutka, and snuff — products that were manufactured from tobacco but were entirely distinct in their form, their mode of consumption, their market, and their consumer profile. The Court therefore held that it was not only permissible but also just and proper to register a trademark in respect of one or more specific articles within a class by specifically naming those articles while indicating the class under which they fall. Registration of "cigarettes" under Class 34 of the Fourth Schedule was therefore perfectly valid and not contrary to Section 8.
On the Locus Classicus — Edwards v. Dennis
The Court found great persuasive value in the judgment of the English Court of Appeal in Edwards v. Dennis reported as (1885) 30 Ch. D. 454, where Lord Justice Cotton, with Lindley and Fry LJJ concurring, had laid down the principle with admirable clarity. The English court had held that even if a trademark can be registered without being in actual use, it ought to be restricted to those goods in connection with which it is going to be used. A person registering a trademark for an entire class, but using it only for one article within that class, cannot claim exclusive rights over every article in the class. The Court approved and applied this reasoning to the facts before it. Vazir Sultan had registered for the entire class description "manufactured tobacco" but had only ever used the mark in relation to cigarettes. The principle of Edwards v. Dennis directly supported the rectification ordered by the Assistant Registrar.
On Rectification and Non-Use Under Sections 46 and 56
The Court examined Section 46 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, which deals with removal from the Register and imposition of limitations on grounds of non-use. Section 46(1) provides two distinct postulates: first, that a registration may be challenged where the trademark was registered without any bona fide intention to use it in relation to those goods and there has in fact been no bona fide use; and second, that where a continuous period of five years or longer has elapsed during which there was no bona fide use, the Tribunal may impose such limitations as it thinks proper to ensure that the registration ceases to extend to such use. The Court found that both postulates were clearly satisfied in the facts of the case. Vazir Sultan had never used the "Charminar" mark in relation to quiwam, zarda, snuff, or any other tobacco product other than cigarettes, and had not demonstrated any intention to do so.
The Court also noted that the statutory burden under Section 46 lay on the registered trademark holder to show that the non-use was due to special circumstances in the trade and not to an intention to abandon or not to use the mark in relation to the goods to which the rectification application relates. Vazir Sultan had not pleaded any such special circumstances and had not discharged this burden at all.
Section 56 of the Act, which empowers the Registrar or the High Court to cancel or vary a registration and to rectify the Register, was examined alongside Section 46. The Court held that the Assistant Registrar had properly exercised the discretionary power conferred by these provisions in ordering rectification. In this context, the Court referred to its own earlier decision in National Bell Co. v. Metal Goods Co. reported as MANU/SC/0369/1970 at [1971] 1 SCR 70, where it had been held that the power to rectify under Section 56 is undoubtedly discretionary and that a court of appeal would not interfere where such discretion has been properly exercised. The Court applied this principle to find that both the Single Judge and the Division Bench of the Madras High Court had erroneously interfered with the well-exercised discretion of the Assistant Registrar.
On Trafficking in Trademarks
The Court invoked and quoted from its own judgment in American Home Products Corporation v. Mac Laboratories Pvt. Ltd. reported as MANU/SC/0204/1985, where the Supreme Court had held that a person who does not genuinely intend to use a trademark himself cannot obtain registration and then, when faced with a rectification application, claim that he intended to use it through a registered user. Such conduct amounts to trafficking in a trademark. The Court in the present case applied this principle to the broader situation: if a trader obtains registration for an entire class of goods but deals only in one article within that class and has no genuine intention of dealing in others, allowing him to retain the registration in respect of all other articles amounts to permitting the very mischief of trademark trafficking. The rectification was therefore not only valid but necessary to prevent such trafficking.
On the Specific Nature of the Goods — Cigarettes, Quiwam, and Zarda
The Court undertook a factual analysis of the different tobacco products to satisfy itself that cigarettes, quiwam, and zarda were genuinely distinct articles and not merely variations of the same product. It accepted the Appellant's classification: tobacco consumed by smoking includes cigarettes, cigars, cheroots, bidis, and pipe tobacco; tobacco consumed by chewing and ingestion includes quiwam (paste applied to pan), zarda (aromatic flakes), and gutka; and tobacco consumed by inhalation includes snuff. Each of these categories involves products that are manufactured differently, marketed differently, consumed differently, and serve different consumer preferences and cultural practices. The Court found it required no imagination to conclude that snuff and quiwam were entirely distinct products from cigarettes and bidis, even though all were made from tobacco and fell within the broad genus of manufactured tobacco. Significantly, the Court also found that in common trade channels, these articles were not treated as the same goods but were held out and marketed as distinct and separate articles of use.
On the Arguments Rejected — Section 8 and Sub-Classification
The Court specifically rejected the argument of Vazir Sultan that the Madras High Court was correct in holding that Class 34 referred only to "manufactured tobacco" as a whole and could not be sub-divided. The Court held that the Fourth Schedule merely provided a broad classification for the purpose of enabling the Trade Marks Registry to determine into which class specified goods fall before granting registration. It was not a constraint requiring that all goods within a class be treated as identical or that registration must cover every article within a class without distinction. The Registrar's index, which alphabetically classified individual articles, and the practice of the Trade Marks Registry itself in identifying distinct goods within classes, gave recognition to the distinction between broad class headings and the specific articles within them. The Court also took note that the index was based on the International Classification of Goods and Services published by the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO), established by Convention at Stockholm on 14th July 1967, of which India was a member and signatory, lending further support to the principle that individual articles within a class could be separately identified and registered.
On Cases Cited by Vazir Sultan
The Respondent had cited several authorities in support of its contention that goods marketed through a common trade channel should be regarded as goods of the same description, and that registration in respect of a broad class entitled the holder to prevent use of the same mark on any goods within that class. These included the decisions in Rustom Ali v. Bata Shoe Company reported as MANU/WB/0037/1957 at AIR 1957 Cal 120, Sunder v. Caltex reported as MANU/MH/0063/1969 at AIR 1969 Bom 24, Nestle Products v. Milkmaid Corporation reported as MANU/DE/0199/1972 at AIR 1974 Delhi 40, and the English decision in Lever Brothers, Port Sunlight, Ltd. v. Sunniwite Products Ltd. reported as 66 RPC 84. The Respondent also relied on the Bombay High Court decision in 1988 PTC 133 regarding the "Bajaj" mark, and decisions in AIR 1986 Delhi 329 and in the Punjab and Haryana High Court reported in MANU/PH/0145/1983, all dealing with the common trade channel doctrine.
The Court declined to examine all these cases in detail. It expressly held that the controversy in these appeals was confined solely to the propriety and validity of the rectification order. Questions of infringement of trademark, passing off, and defensive registration were not before the Court and did not need to be decided. Consequently, all the decisions dealing with the likely prejudice to a registered trademark holder when a similar mark is allowed for goods marketed through common trade channels were not relevant to the determination of whether the rectification was correctly ordered. The Court took a clean, focused approach: since rectification was the only question, the analysis had to stay within the framework of Sections 46 and 56, the nature of the goods concerned, and the scheme of the Act.
Final Decision of the Court
The Supreme Court allowed both appeals and set aside the impugned judgments of the Division Bench and the Single Judge of the Madras High Court. The order of rectification passed by the Assistant Registrar of Trade Marks, Madras on 31st August 1976, was restored. This meant that the entries in the Trade Marks Register in respect of trademark registrations bearing numbers 9951 and 170427 would stand rectified so that the specification of goods would read as "cigarettes" rather than "manufactured tobacco." Vazir Sultan's registered trademark would henceforth be confined to cigarettes and could not be used as a barrier to prevent others from seeking registration for quiwam, zarda, snuff, or other distinct tobacco products.
The Court was careful to add a specific clarification to its judgment. It expressly stated that it had not expressed any opinion on the separate and distinct question of whether the Appellant, Vishnudas Trading, was itself entitled to registration of the "Charminar" trademark for quiwam and zarda. That question remained entirely open for determination in appropriate proceedings. No order as to costs was made.
Points of Law Settled in the Case
This judgment settled several important propositions of law in Indian trademark jurisprudence.
First, a trademark registration must correspond to the actual goods in which the trader deals or genuinely intends to deal. A trader who obtains registration under a broad class description but actually trades only in one specific article within that class cannot use the broad registration to preclude others from obtaining registration for genuinely distinct articles within the same class which the trader has never manufactured and does not intend to manufacture.
Second, the Fourth Schedule to the Trade Marks Rules, which sets out the classification of goods, is intended to provide a framework for determining into which class a given article falls. It does not require that registration be made for the entire class as an indivisible whole. It is both permissible and appropriate to register a trademark in respect of a specific identifiable article — such as "cigarettes" — within a broader class such as "manufactured tobacco," with the class description being mentioned as the applicable class.
Third, Section 46 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, which deals with removal of trademark registrations on grounds of non-use, applies not only where the entire registered mark has fallen into disuse but also where the registration covers a range of goods and the mark has been used in relation to only some of those goods. In such cases, the registration may be limited and confined to the goods in respect of which the mark has genuinely been used.
Fourth, allowing a trader to retain an overreaching registration in respect of goods he has never dealt in and does not intend to deal in amounts to permitting him to traffic in trademarks, which is contrary to the scheme and spirit of the Trade Marks Act.
Fifth, where a Registrar or Assistant Registrar has properly exercised the discretion conferred by Section 56 to order rectification of the Register, a court of appeal should not interfere with such exercise of discretion.
Case Details
Title: Vishnudas Trading as Vishnudas Kishandas v. Vazir Sultan Tobacco Co. Ltd., Hyderabad and another
Date of Order: 9th July 1996
Case Number: Civil Appeals Nos. 9094-95 of 1996
Neutral Citation: MANU/SC/0583/1996
Equivalent Citations: AIR 1996 SC 2275; 1996 (2) ARBLR 222 (SC); JT 1996 (6) SC 366; 1996 (16) PTC 512 (SC); 1996 (5) SCALE 267; (1997) 4 SCC 201; [1996] Supp 3 SCR 329
Court: Supreme Court of India
Hon'ble Judges: Justice G.N. Ray and Justice G.B. Patnaik
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 for Legal Journal Publication
- Charminar Trademark Case: Supreme Court Rules Against Monopoly Over Entire Class of Goods for Non-Use
- Trademark Rectification in India: Vishnudas v. Vazir Sultan and the Limits of Broad Class Registrations
- Can One Trademark Registration Block an Entire Product Category? India's Supreme Court Says No
- Non-Use and Rectification of Trademarks in India: Lessons from the Charminar Quiwam Zarda Case 1996
- Trademark Registration Must Match Actual Use: The Supreme Court's Landmark Ruling in Vishnudas v. Vazir Sultan
- Manufactured Tobacco, Cigarettes, and Quiwam: How the Supreme Court Ended a Trademark Monopoly
- Trafficking in Trademarks and Rectification Proceedings: The Charminar Brand Dispute Before India's Supreme Court
SEO Tags
Vishnudas v Vazir Sultan, Charminar trademark case, trademark rectification India, manufactured tobacco Class 34, non-use trademark India, trademark monopoly India, Section 46 Trade Marks Act, Section 56 Trade Marks Act, quiwam zarda trademark, trademark class of goods India, rectification of trademark register, Trade and Merchandise Marks Act 1958, specific goods versus class registration, trademark trafficking India, Supreme Court trademark 1996, Edwards v Dennis trademark, bona fide use trademark India, Fourth Schedule Trade Marks Rules, intellectual property India, trademark registration cigarettes, AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman, IPAdjutor
Headnote
Vishnudas Trading as Vishnudas Kishandas Vs. Vazir Sultan Tobacco Co. Ltd., Hyderabad and another — Civil Appeals Nos. 9094-95 of 1996 — Supreme Court of India — Decided on 9th July 1996 — Justices G.N. Ray and G.B. Patnaik — Trademark Rectification — Non-Use — Broad Class Registration — Specific Goods — Manufactured Tobacco — Cigarettes — Quiwam — Zarda — Section 46 and Section 56, Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 — Held: A trader who obtains registration of a trademark under the broad class description "manufactured tobacco" in Class 34 of the Fourth Schedule to the Trade Marks Rules, but who has manufactured only cigarettes throughout its entire history and has no bona fide intention to manufacture any other tobacco product, cannot use such registration to prevent other traders from obtaining trademark registration for genuinely distinct tobacco products such as quiwam and zarda. "Manufactured tobacco" is a broad genus encompassing distinctly identifiable goods — cigarettes, quiwam, zarda, snuff, bidis — that differ in form, mode of consumption, and marketing. Registration of a trademark need not and should not be made for an entire class where the trader deals only in one specific article; registration may be limited to the specific article actually dealt in. Allowing a trader to retain overreaching registration for goods in which he has never traded and does not intend to trade amounts to permitting trademark trafficking. The rectification ordered by the Assistant Registrar of Trade Marks limiting the registration to "cigarettes" was valid and the High Court erred in setting it aside. Appeals allowed. Order of rectification restored. No opinion expressed on whether the Appellant was independently entitled to registration of "Charminar" for quiwam and zarda.