BRIEF INTRODUCTORY HEAD NOTE SUMMARY OF CASE AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This case before the High Court of Delhi is a trademark and copyright dispute in the soap and detergent business. The plaintiff, a businessman named Sunil Niranjan Shah, claimed that his brand “COW BRAND” and its Hindi versions “GAAY CHHAP” and “GAAY CHHAP (COW BRAND)” have been used continuously in India since 1975. According to him, his previous owner (called predecessor in law) invented these names first and used them for detergent soaps, detergent cakes, and washing powder. In 2023, the previous owner transferred all rights in these brand names to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff also applied for registration before the Trade Mark Registry to protect these names under the Trade Marks Act, 1999.
The plaintiff also said that most of his earnings – around 70% of his business revenue – come from products under these brand names. His total sales in the financial year 2024–2025 were ₹39,66,43,930, and advertising spend was ₹17,25,710. He also registered copyright in one of his cow-based artistic labels in 2024 under the Copyright Act, 1957. The plaintiff alleged that the defendant, Vijay Bahadur, who is the father of another person already facing the plaintiff in a similar commercial dispute, filed applications for marks like “GOPAL GAI CHHAP” and the very same “COW BRAND” but claimed they were used since 1973. The plaintiff also said that the defendant copied the plaintiff’s tagline – “Hathon ki Raksha Chakachaundh Shakti Kapdo ki Suraksha” – on his cow label, making it look very similar and likely to confuse ordinary buyers.
The plaintiff admitted that the defendant might not have sold products actually under the disputed mark yet, but his agents were preparing to promote and take orders using the similar label, which itself, according to law, may create a legal reason to sue.
PROCEDURAL DETAILS
The lawsuit was filed as a commercial suit in 2025, numbered CS(COMM) 669/2025. The plaintiff filed an interim relief application being I.A. 15795/2025 under Order XXXIX Rules 1 and 2, Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, asking the court to immediately stop infringement, passing off (fraudulent selling by copying), to seize/deliver up illegal goods/labels, submit accounts (rendition of accounts), and compensate losses. The early hearings started in July 2025, where the defendant’s personal attendance was initially asked, then given exemption due to poor health, and his son attended. The suit was referred to special mediation drive but none from plaintiff appeared before the Joint Registrar, hence it returned to the judge for decision on injunction.
CORE DISPUTE
The legal dispute revolves around who used the cow-based mark first and whether the defendant has the right to oppose the plaintiff’s registrations or use similar cow marks. Under Indian trademark law, the first person to invent and use a brand in business gets better rights than even a registered owner. This principle is found under Section 34 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999. Also, a trademark cannot be described as “common in trade”, “descriptive”, or “generic” by a party who itself has applied for its registration. This rule prevents taking opposite arguments at different times, which the law calls “approbate and reprobate” – meaning a person cannot accept something in one place and reject it in another place.
The defendant argued that the Delhi High Court cannot hear this matter because neither party lives in Delhi. The defendant works only in districts like Basti, Gorakhpur, etc., Uttar Pradesh, and plaintiff is from Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh. The defendant alleged forgery in plaintiff’s copyright papers and suppression of facts, and also accused the plaintiff of forum shopping.
COURT’S DETAILED REASONING, DISCUSSION AND COMPLETE CITATIONS
The Hon’ble Court explained the question of territorial jurisdiction under Order VII Rules 10 and 11, CPC, which require the court to see only the statements (averments) of the plaintiff at face value, which is legally called “on demurrer”. The court relied on several Delhi precedents such as World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. v. Reshma Collection, 2014 SCC OnLine Del 2031; LT Foods Limited v. Heritage Foods (India) Limited, 2014 SCC OnLine Del 2918; Bhatia Industries v. Pandey Industries, 2011 SCC OnLine Del 238; Sonal Kanodia v. Shri Ram Gupta, FAO(COMM) 43/2023. These cases state that for deciding jurisdiction at interim stage, what plaintiff alleges is assumed correct without deep inquiry at that moment.
The court applied an internet jurisdiction test from Banyan Tree Holding (P) Ltd. v. Murali Krishna Reddy, 2009 SCC OnLine Del 3780, where it was held that jurisdiction exists if a defendant entered an interactive website intending to target customers there, which is “purposeful availment”. The defendant had a listing on IndiaMart – an interactive marketplace site available in Delhi – showing he was offering goods there. Hence Delhi buyers could be targeted, fulfilling “purposeful availment” test.
The court examined the defendant’s invoice proofs and said they appear doubtful because one invoice shows 1972, which is even earlier than his 1973 claim and another invoice uses mixed Hindi–English date २२/५/2007, raising suspicion. The court relied on Gandhi Scientific Co. v. Gulshan Kumar, 2009 SCC OnLine Del 820 and Kirorimal Kashiram Marketing v. Sita Chawal Udyog Mill, 2010 SCC OnLine Del 2933, where injunction was allowed because defendant’s documents appeared suspicious and not trustworthy.
The court further relied on S.P. Chengalvaraya Naidu v. Jagannath, AIR 1994 SC 853 and A.V. Papayya Sastry v. Govt. of A.P., (2007) 4 SCC 221, but clarified that these judgments do not help the defendant because the defendant failed to prove any actual suppression by plaintiff at this moment.
The court relied heavily on Century Traders v. Roshan Lal Duggar & Co., 1977 SCC OnLine Del 50, the leading Delhi High Court authority holding that prior user rights are stronger than registration rights. It also cited Automatic Electric Limited v. R.K. Dhawan, 1999 SCC OnLine Del 27 and Indian Hotels Company Ltd. v. Jiva Institute, 2008 SCC OnLine Del 1758 which say that once a party itself applied for a trademark, it cannot later claim it is merely descriptive or common.
The court finally held that the plaintiff has made a strong prima facie case because: the plaintiff showed continuous use since 1975; plaintiff owns registered cow marks including GAAY CHHAP; defendant failed to prove older honest use; defendant’s conduct appears dishonest because he, his son, and associates repeatedly applied for deceptively similar cow-based marks; taglines and labels are copied causing possibility of confusion. The court applied well known 3 tests for injunction: prima facie case, balance of convenience, and irreparable harm, holding all 3 tests favour the plaintiff because brand value, market confusion risk, and goodwill must be protected urgently.
DECISION
The court allowed the application, restrained the defendant, his partners, agents, heirs, distributors, and all persons working for him from using “COW BRAND”, “GOPAL GAI CHHAP” or any mark identical or deceptively similar to plaintiff’s cow marks, in detergent soaps, detergent cakes, washing powder etc., under Class 3, and also stopped him from copying the artistic cow labels and copied slogan, pending final trial.
CONCLUDING NOTE
This judgment reinforces one basic principle that is the backbone of trademark law in India – the first honest user gets better legal protection even if the other side tries to register first or oppose registration. It also tells sellers using marketplace websites that if their listings are interactive and target Delhi buyers, Delhi courts can step in. The decision gives comfort to law students and junior lawyers that suspicious documents, copied slogans, and repeated dishonest filings can tilt equity quickly. The court protected business goodwill, market honesty, and consumer trust without complicated technical discussion, making the decision aligned with real-world impact.
CONCLUDING NOTE SUMMARY FOR GENERAL READERS
In plain words, the court said: If you invented and sold under a name first, your rights win. If someone copies your design and slogan and cannot prove older honest business, the court can stop them right away to save your reputation and money, till the lawsuit ends.
SUITABLE TITLES SUGGESTED FOR PUBLICATION
“Prior Use Wins Over Registration: Protecting Common-Man Trust in the Delhi Cow Brand Detergent Dispute”
“Internet Listings and Delhi Court Jurisdiction: A Simple Explanation Through the Cow Brand Case”
“Equity, Honesty and First Adoption: Understanding Delhi High Court’s Reasoning in Trademark Injunction”
“Can a Seller Call a Mark ‘Common’ After Applying for its Registration? Lessons from the Cow Brand Case”
“Safeguarding Goodwill and Consumer Confidence: A Student-Friendly Analysis of the Delhi Trademark Order”
Case Title: Sunil Niranjan Shah Vs. Vijay Bahadur
Order Date: 24/11/2025
Case Number: CS(COMM) 669/2025
Neutral Citation: 2025:DHC:669
Name of Court: High Court of Delhi, New Delhi
Hon’ble Judge: Justice Tejas Karia
Disclaimer: The information shared here is intended to serve the public interest by offering insights and perspectives. However, readers are advised to exercise their own discretion when interpreting and applying this information. The content herein is subjective and may contain errors in perception, interpretation, and presentation.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
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Title: Sunil Niranjan Shah Vs. Vijay Bahadur
Order Date: 24 November 2025
Case Number: CS(COMM) 669/2025
Court: High Court of Delhi
Hon’ble Judge: Justice Tejas Karia
In a significant order on trademark protection, the High Court of Delhi, on 24 November 2025, held that it had territorial jurisdiction to hear a commercial intellectual property suit even when neither party resided in Delhi, since the defendant was operating through an interactive listing on IndiaMART that is accessible to Delhi consumers. The court passed an interim injunction under Order XXXIX Rules 1 and 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, restraining the defendant, Vijay Bahadur and those acting for him, from using the marks ‘GOPAL GAI CHHAP’, ‘COW BRAND’, or any mark identical or deceptively similar to the plaintiff’s registered and prior-used marks including ‘COW BRAND’, ‘GAAY CHHAP’, and ‘GAAY CHHAP (COW BRAND)’ in respect of detergent soaps, detergent cakes, and detergent washing powder under Class 3. The court also restrained the defendant from copying or using labels/artistic works similar to the plaintiff’s copyrighted cow-device label (Copyright Registration No. A-153025/2024) and from reproducing the plaintiff’s slogan ‘Hathon ki Raksha Chakachaundh Shakti Kapdo ki Suraksha’.
The court reiterated the settled principle that trademark rights of a prior user enjoy superiority even over prior registrants and that a defendant who himself seeks trademark registration cannot later claim that the mark is descriptive or common to trade, as that would amount to taking contradictory stands (approbate and reprobate). The order was passed after the court found the defendant’s invoice-based evidence of alleged use since 1973 to be doubtful and unsupported by any independent or public documents prior to April 2025. The plaintiff was held to have established a strong prima facie case of long use, acquired goodwill, and likelihood of consumer confusion.
Thus, balancing equity and market honesty, the High Court granted protection to the plaintiff’s brand identity, restrained infringement and passing off, and allowed the injunction application, pending the final trial.
Disclaimer:This is for general information only and should not be construed as legal advice as it may contain human errors in perception and presentation: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor (Patent & Trademark Attorney), High Court of Delhi.
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