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Sunday, November 30, 2025
ARQ Providores Vs. Schloss HMA Private Limited
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Classic Legends Pvt. Ltd. Vs. Tide Water Oil Co.
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Triom Hospitality Vs J.S. Hospitality Services Pvt. Ltd.
Brief Introductory Head Note Summary of case
In M/s Triom Hospitality v. M/s J.S. Hospitality Services Pvt. Ltd. (FAO (COMM) 174/2024), the Delhi High Court set aside the Commercial Court's order refusing reference to arbitration under Section 8 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, in a trademark infringement suit over "Pind Balluchi" restaurant name, holding that serious forgery allegations on the MOU dated 22.06.2022 (containing arbitration clause) require substantive examination by arbitral tribunal under Section 16, not mini-trial at referral stage. The court emphasized pro-arbitration policy post-2015 amendments, limiting referral courts to prima facie formal validity (in writing per Section 7), distinguishing from substantive issues like signature denial needing evidence/experts, amid pre-existing commercial ties via prior partnerships. Suit dismissed as barred; parties directed to arbitrate, reinforcing kompetenz-kompetenz and minimal judicial interference.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
Factual Background
Triom Hospitality, a family partnership firm (Sanjay Sharma 50%, sons/nephew 25% each, formed 12.12.2022), runs "Pind Balluchi" restaurant since 18.10.2023 at Dwarka, New Delhi. J.S. Hospitality, a company led by Jaspal Singh Chadha, claims proprietorship of "Pind Balluchi" trademark (Classes 16,29,30,32,43) with nationwide goodwill/awards, operating multiple Indian cuisine outlets. Prior dealings: 28.06.2021 partnership "Vatika Grand" (Sanjay Sharma, Arun Gupta, J.S. Hospitality); reconstituted 18.08.2022 post-J.S. exit (allegedly 31.07.2022). Disputed MOU (22.06.2022: Sanjay Sharma, Arun Gupta, J.S. via Chadha) allegedly grants Sanjay rights to "Pind Balluchi" in Dwarka, with arbitration clause; Chadha denies signing, alleges forgery. J.S. official spotted Dwarka outlet 18.07.2024, got invoice, filed CS(COMM) 392/2024 for injunction/passing off.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
Procedural Detail
Suit filed; ex parte injunction granted 16.08.2024 under Order XXXIX Rules 1-2 CPC restraining Triom's use. Triom applied 21.08.2024 under Section 8 Arbitration Act (with MOU copy, seeking original from J.S. per Clause 12 for "IPR registry") and Order XXXIX Rule 4 CPC. Commercial Court (Dwarka) dismissed Section 8 application 28.08.2024: prima facie MOU forged (Chadha affidavit, no company stamp unlike priors, inconsistencies in exit dates/references, police complaint 24.08.2024, no original), serious forgery needs forensic evidence (A. Ayyasamy v. A. Paramasivam, (2016) 10 SCC 386; Vidya Drolia v. Durga Trading Corpn., (2021) 2 SCC 1); even if genuine, Triom not party. Triom appealed under Section 37(1)(a) Arbitration Act r/w Section 13(1-A) Commercial Courts Act; reserved 11.08.2025, pronounced 24.11.2025.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
Core Dispute
Whether Commercial Court correctly refused Section 8 reference amid forgery denial of MOU (arbitration clause), rendering dispute non-arbitrable needing civil court trial, or must refer for arbitral tribunal to decide existence/validity under Section 16 per kompetenz-kompetenz, given prima facie arguable case from pre-existing ties, no signature mandate under Section 7(3), and 2015 amendments limiting referral scrutiny to formal validity/ex facie frivolity.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
Detailed Reasoning and Discussion by Court including on Judgement with Complete Citation Referred and Discussed for Reasoning
Court scrutinized Section 37 (appealable orders: refusing Section 8 reference) and Section 8 (mandatory referral unless prima facie no valid agreement; original/certified copy needed, proviso for petition if held by other). Post-2015 amendments (Law Commission 246th Report), referral courts conduct limited prima facie review on existence/validity to filter "deadwood"/frivolous cases, upholding minimal intervention/kompetenz-kompetenz (Section 16: tribunal rules on jurisdiction).
Reaffirmed Vidya Drolia v. Durga Trading Corpn., (2021) 2 SCC 1: Sections 8/11 complementary; prima facie review includes validity (formal, per Section 7: in writing, no signature/stamp needed); default referral if "plainly arguable", facts contested, summary insufficient; no mini-trial (para 154.4); screen ex facie non-arbitrable. SBI General Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Krish Spinning (2024 SCC OnLine SC 1754) interprets: filter meritless litigation; non-arbitrability (fraud etc.) prima facie reviewable but refer if arguable.
Cox and Kings Ltd. v. SAP India Pvt. Ltd., (2024) 4 SCC 1: referral court prima facie existence only; deeper to tribunal (para 166, citing Shin-Etsu Chemical Co. Ltd. v. Aksh Optifibre Ltd.). In Re: Interplay between Arbitration Agreements under Arbitration Act 1996 and Indian Stamp Act 1899, 2023 SCC OnLine SC 1666: Section 5 limits substantive validity to tribunal; formal only at referral (para 81,154). Pravin Electricals Pvt. Ltd. v. Galaxy Infra & Engg. Pvt. Ltd., (2021) 5 SCC 671: disputed signatures/forgery (CFSL inconclusive) to arbitrator for evidence/cross-exam (para 27); no conclusive finding.
K. Mangayarkarasi v. N.J. Sundaresan, 2024 SCC OnLine SC 1475: fraud allegations don't oust jurisdiction in civil/contractual disputes; court checks ouster, not own jurisdiction (paras 15-16). Glencore International AG v. Shree Ganesh Metals, 2025 SCC OnLine SC 1815: no signature invalidates if intent via conduct/documents.
Commercial Court erred: conducted mini-trial (8 reasons: no stamp, inconsistencies, no original, police FIR etc.), beyond prima facie; forgery needs extensive evidence (handwriting/forensic, Sections 24-27 empower tribunal); pre-existing ties (partnerships) make arguable, not ex facie frivolous; Section 8(2) compliance (copy filed, exemption sought) triable; Triom non-signatory irrelevant (Cox and Kings group companies, intent via conduct). Distinguished A. Ayyasamy (serious/complex fraud to court) as pre-amendments; post-Vidya Drolia, refer unless certain non-arbitrable.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
Decision
Impugned order set aside; Section 8 application allowed; parties referred to arbitration per MOU; CS(COMM) 392/2024 dismissed as barred; parties to constitute tribunal. No costs.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
Concluding Note
Judgment fortifies arbitration as preferred for commercial disputes, even with forgery claims: referral courts gatekeep only "deadwood", leaving substantive probes (signatures, intent) to tribunals equipped for evidence/experts, aligning with party autonomy/minimal interference. Signals stricter scrutiny of mini-trials at Section 8 stage, boosting efficiency amid rising IP-hospitality suits.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
Case Title: Triom Hospitality Vs J.S. Hospitality Services Pvt. Ltd.
Order date: 24 November 2025
Case Number: FAO (COMM) 174/2024
Neutral Citation: 2025:DHC:[Not specified in order]
Name of Court: High Court of Delhi
Name of Hon'ble Judge: Hon'ble Mr. Justice Om Prakash Shukla and Hon'ble Mr. Justice C. Hari ShankarTriom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
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
Suggested 5 Suitable Titles for this legal analytical article:
Forgery Allegations No Bar: Delhi High Court Mandates Arbitration Reference Despite MOU Signature Denial
Prima Facie or Mini-Trial? Kompetenz-Kompetenz Triumphs in Triom Hospitality v. J.S. Hospitality
Beyond Signatures: Formal Validity Threshold under Section 8 in Post-2015 Arbitration Jurisprudence
Deadwood Filtered: Setting Aside Refusal in "Pind Balluchi" Trademark Dispute for Tribunal Probe
Arbitration's Procrustean Bed: Limiting Referral Scrutiny to Ex Facie Frivolity in Forgery Claims
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Delhi High Court Orders Arbitration in "Pind Balluchi" Trademark Row, Overrides Forgery Claims
New Delhi, November 24, 2025: In M/s Triom Hospitality through its Partner Mr. Sanjay Sharma v. M/s J.S. Hospitality Services Pvt. Ltd. (FAO (COMM) 174/2024), the High Court of Delhi, presided over by Hon'ble Mr. Justice Om Prakash Shukla and Hon'ble Mr. Justice C. Hari Shankar, set aside the Commercial Court's refusal to refer parties to arbitration under Section 8 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, in a suit alleging infringement of "Pind Balluchi" trademark.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
J.S. Hospitality sued Triom Hospitality for unauthorized use of its registered "Pind Balluchi" mark at a Dwarka restaurant, securing ex parte injunction on 16.08.2024. Triom invoked a disputed MOU dated 22.06.2022 (granting rights, arbitration clause), denied as forged by J.S. MD Jaspal Singh Chadha. Commercial Court (28.08.2024) refused reference citing prima facie non-existence (no stamp/signatures match priors, inconsistencies in partnership deeds, no original per Section 8(2), police FIR), deeming forgery serious needing forensic evidence (A. Ayyasamy v. A. Paramasivam, (2016) 10 SCC 386; Vidya Drolia v. Durga Trading Corpn., (2021) 2 SCC 1); Triom not party.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
High Court held post-2015 amendments limit referral courts to prima facie formal validity (Section 7: in writing, no signature mandate; conduct/intent suffices per Cox and Kings Ltd. v. SAP India Pvt. Ltd., (2024) 4 SCC 1); substantive forgery (signatures) for tribunal under Section 16 (kompetenz-kompetenz). No mini-trial: Commercial Court overstepped with 8-point analysis beyond ex facie frivolity (Vidya Drolia paras 147-148; SBI General Insurance v. Krish Spinning, 2024 SCC OnLine SC 1754; Pravin Electricals Pvt. Ltd. v. Galaxy Infra, (2021) 5 SCC 671). Pre-existing ties arguable; suit dismissed, parties directed to arbitrate.Triom-Hospitality-Vs-J-S-Hospitality-Services-Pvt-Ltd.pdf
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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Trident Limited Vs. Controller of Patents
Brief Introductory Head Note Summary of case
In Trident Limited v. Controller of Patents (C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 162/2022), the Delhi High Court set aside the Patent Office's refusal of Indian Patent Application No. 1867/DEL/2010 for "Air Rich Yarn and Fabric and its Method of Manufacturing" under Section 15 of the Patents Act, 1970, remanding it for fresh consideration due to flawed inventive step analysis under Section 2(1)(ja). The invention creates yarns with pores homogeneously distributed across the radial cross-section by blending base fibres (like cotton) with 8-25% water-soluble PVA fibres, spinning, weaving/knitting, and dissolving PVA to form highly absorbent, quick-drying terry fabrics. The court found the Controller's reliance on prior arts D1-D4 (EP2172583B1, WO2009/098583A1, JPH05117966A, JPS60119247) deficient, lacking explanation of how they motivate the specific ratio and homogeneous pore outcome, ignoring specification examples and publications showing non-homogeneity as industry norm.Trident-Limited-Vs-Controller-of-Patents.pdf
Factual Background
Trident Limited, a Punjab-based manufacturer of yarn, linen, paper, and power, filed the Subject Application on 24.09.2010, claiming priority from its US/EPO counterparts (US 10,196,763B2; EP2434035). The invention addresses limitations in prior PVA-blended "low twist" yarns by achieving uniform radial pores via precise blending (8-25% PVA by yarn weight, homogeneous across slivers), countering PVA's natural outward migration. Fabrics absorb 75-100% water and dry 10-30% faster. Patent Office issued First Examination Report (FER) on 21.06.2018 citing lack of inventive step over D1-D4; Trident replied on 20.12.2018 with amended claims (Claim 1: woven/knitted fabric from yarn with homogeneously distributed through-pores formed post-PVA dissolution). Hearings on 10.07.2020 and 05.10.2020 led to Impugned Order (05.01.2021) refusing grant, deeming process routine (draw frame blending yields homogeneity) without special measures, equating outcomes despite differing ratios.Trident-Limited-Vs-Controller-of-Patents.pdf
Procedural Detail
Trident appealed the Impugned Order under Section 117A Patents Act. Arguments heard; judgment reserved 11.08.2025, delivered 24.11.2025 by Justice Tejas Karia. Appellant urged remand for hindsight bias (Controller assumed identical processes yield identical products sans evidence), no prior art disclosing 8-25% PVA for radial homogeneity (D1: 30-80% for ramie; D2: <80%, prefers 30-60%; D3/D4: varied non-overlapping), publications proving fibre migration causes unevenness. Respondent defended: Indian PSITA test differs from US/EPO (citing F. Hoffmann-La Roche v. Cipla Ltd., 2012 SCC OnLine Del 4709; KSR Int'l v. Teleflex, 2007 SCC OnLine US SC 33); no data validates homogeneity; claims unsupported by spec (focuses fibre blend, not pores).Trident-Limited-Vs-Controller-of-Patents.pdf
Core Dispute
Whether the Controller correctly refused patent under Section 2(1)(ja) for obviousness: Appellant claimed inventive step in homogeneous radial pores (not just fibres) via specific 8-25% PVA blending, special parameters (e.g., 6:1 cotton:PVA in finisher, machine settings in Tables 6-11), yielding superior absorbency/drying vs. prior "low twist" yarns with centralised pores. Prior arts lack this feature/ratio/motivation; industry expects unevenness (fine PVA migrates coreward). Controller erred conflating fibre homogeneity (routine) with pore outcome, ignoring examples, applying hindsight without "coherent thread" from D1-D4 to selection.Trident-Limited-Vs-Controller-of-Patents.pdf
Detailed Reasoning and Discussion by Court including on Judgement with Complete Citation Referred and Discussed for Reasoning
The court clarified patents protect inventions involving inventive step per Section 2(1)(ja): not obvious to PSITA from prior knowledge. Claim 1 recites fabric from yarn with homogeneously distributed through-pores across radial cross-section, formed by blending slivers (8-25% water-soluble by yarn weight, homogeneous radially), spinning roving, weaving/knitting, water-treating to dissolve PVA. Specification (paras on blending: "one or more draw frame passages for achieving blending homogeneity in radial direction... water soluble fibres uniformly distributed") and examples (Table 6: J34 cotton/PVA, finisher 6 cotton:1 PVA center, speeds/drafts/gauges) detail parameters countering PVA migration. Court rejected Controller's para 24 view ("no special measures apart from multiple passages; routine draw frame yields homogeneity") as ignoring examples; para 19 admits "uniform pores due to homogeneous PVA... desired result" yet concludes obviousness contradictorily.
Prior arts dissected: D1 (ramie/PVA blend, pre-draw/draw/roving/spinning, 30-80% PVA preferably 40-70%, uniform yarn post-dissolution) lacks 8-25%; D2 (humidify/mix slivers, recomb, spin/weave/dissolve, <80% PVA prefers 30-60%, even mix) no radial pores; D3 (e.g., 30% vinylon pineapple, 50:50-90:10) no steps; D4 (2-80% PVA) no homogeneity. No overlapping range motivates 8-25%; D2's ">20%" for high%, not low. Controller silent on selection rationale. Publications ("Technology of Short Staple Spinning: Blow Room to Ring Frame Basics", 12.04.2011, reproducing Reiter Manual 2008) evidence: blending yields unevenness (fines coreward, coarses peripheral; drafting de-blends), teaching away from homogeneity.
US/EPO grants persuasive but not binding (F. Hoffmann-La Roche supra: Indian PSITA adjusts parameters routinely; higher bar post-1970). Hindsight impermissible: Enercon (India) Ltd. v. Aloys Wobben, 2013 SCC OnLine IPAB 91 ("mere elements in prior art insufficient; needs coherent thread... not hindsight"); Pharmacyclics LLC v. Controller General, 2020 SCC OnLine IPAB 37 (combination failing claimed result = teaching away); Avery Dennison Corpn. v. Controller, 2022 SCC OnLine Del 3659. Impugned Order infirm: misreads spec (pores, not just fibres), ignores examples/data, assumes identical processes = identical products sans evidence, no para-specific mapping D1-D4 to claims. Remand needed for fresh hearing, auxiliary EPO claims, another Controller, within 6 months.Trident-Limited-Vs-Controller-of-Patents.pdf
Decision
Impugned Order set aside; remanded to Controller for fresh decision under Section 2(1)(ja)/15, affording hearing, considering auxiliary claims/examples/publications, uninfluenced by court observations. Copy to CGPDTM; appeal disposed.Trident-Limited-Vs-Controller-of-Patents.pdf
Concluding Note
This judgment stresses rigorous, evidence-based inventive step scrutiny: Controllers must map prior arts paragraph-wise to claims, address spec examples/data, avoid hindsight/unsupported assumptions of routine optimisation. Reinforces PSITA considers "teaching away" (e.g., fibre migration), coherent motivation for selections (e.g., 8-25% PVA), distinguishing fibre blend from pore outcome – bolstering textile innovations amid India’s spinning sector growth.Trident-Limited-Vs-Controller-of-Patents.pdf
Case Title: Trident Limited Vs. Controller of Patents
Order date: 24 November 2025
Case Number: C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 162/2022
Neutral Citation: 2025:DHC:[Not specified in order]
Name of Court: High Court of Delhi
Name of Hon'ble Judge: Mr. Justice Tejas KariaTrident-Limited-Vs-Controller-of-Patents.pdf
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
Suggested 5 Suitable Titles for this legal analytical article:
Pores of Invention: Delhi High Court Remands Trident's Air-Rich Yarn Patent for Inventive Step Recalibration
Beyond Routine Blends: Scrutinising Homogeneous Pores under Section 2(1)(ja) in Trident v. Controller
Teaching Away from Obviousness: Hindsight Bias and Textile Innovation in C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 162/2022
Radial Homogeneity Unravelled: Setting Aside Patent Refusal for Evidentiary Gaps in PVA Yarn Claims
Coherent Threads Missing: Enercon Principles Guide Remand in Trident's Porous Fabric Appeal
Delhi High Court Remands Trident Limited's Air-Rich Yarn Patent Refusal for Fresh Inventive Step Review
New Delhi, November 24, 2025: In Trident Limited v. Controller of Patents (C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 162/2022), the High Court of Delhi, presided over by Hon'ble Mr. Justice Tejas Karia, set aside the Patent Office's order dated 05.01.2021 refusing Indian Patent Application No. 1867/DEL/2010 under Section 15 of the Patents Act, 1970, and remanded it for re-consideration on inventive step under Section 2(1)(ja).
Trident claimed a process for "Air Rich Yarn and Fabric" yielding terry fabrics with homogeneously distributed radial pores (via 8-25% PVA blending, spinning, weaving, dissolution), absorbing 75-100% water and drying 10-30% faster; granted in US (10,196,763B2) and EPO (EP2434035). Controller refused post-FER (21.06.2018), hearings (2020), citing obviousness over D1 (EP2172583B1: ramie/PVA 30-80%), D2 (WO2009/098583A1: <80% PVA, even mix), D3/D4 (varied ratios), deeming draw-frame blending routine for homogeneity despite differing ratios/outcomes.
Court found flaws: no para-specific mapping of D1-D4 to claims (lacking 8-25% motivation, radial pores); ignored spec examples (Tables 6-11 parameters countering PVA migration), publications ("Technology of Short Staple Spinning", Reiter Manual) showing blending yields unevenness (fines coreward), teaching away. Hindsight bias per Enercon (India) Ltd. v. Aloys Wobben, 2013 SCC OnLine IPAB 91 ("coherent thread" needed, not mere elements); Pharmacyclics LLC v. Controller, 2020 SCC OnLine IPAB 37; Avery Dennison v. Controller, 2022 SCC OnLine Del 3659. US/EPO grants persuasive but Indian PSITA test stricter (F. Hoffmann-La Roche v. Cipla, 2012 SCC OnLine Del 4709).
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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