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.
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Sana Herbals Private Limited Vs Mohsin Dehlvi-DB
AR Rahman Vs Ustad Faiyaz Wasifuddin Sagar
Harshad Chiman Lal Modi Vs DLF Universal Limited
Boehringer Ingepheim GMBH Vs Controller of Patent
Monday, February 23, 2026
Fertin Pharma Vs Assistant Controller of Patent
Life Insurance Corporation of India Vs Sanjeev Builders
The Court clarified that Order 2 Rule 2 CPC, which bars a subsequent suit for a relief that could have been claimed earlier, has no application to an amendment sought in an already pending suit. It also held that the principle of constructive res judicata was not attracted because there was no earlier adjudication on merits.
Referring to the Specific Relief Act, the Court noted that the law itself contemplates amendment of the plaint at any stage to include a claim for compensation. The previous judgment of the Supreme Court between the same parties (on impleadment of an assignee) was distinguished on facts and held not applicable to the present case.
The Supreme Court ultimately dismissed LIC’s appeal, upheld the orders of the High Court permitting the amendment, and directed that the issue of limitation shall be decided during the trial on merits. The amendment was allowed so that the plaintiffs could claim enhanced damages without forcing them to file a fresh suit, thereby avoiding multiplicity of litigation.
- Courts must be extremely liberal in allowing amendments if they help in deciding the real dispute and no irreparable prejudice is caused to the other side.
- Delay by itself is not a ground to reject an amendment application, especially when the suit has not yet reached the stage of trial.
- Order 2 Rule 2 CPC does not apply to amendments sought in an existing suit.
- The provisos to Sections 21(5) and 22(2) of the Specific Relief Act expressly permit amendment of the plaint at any stage to include or enhance a claim for compensation.
- Even where a fresh suit on the amended claim might appear barred by limitation, the court can still allow the amendment if it serves the ends of justice, leaving the limitation issue to be decided at trial.
- An amendment relating only to the quantum of relief based on facts already pleaded in the plaint does not change the nature of the suit and should ordinarily be allowed.
- Where the amendment is sought before commencement of trial, the court should be more liberal because the opposite party will have full opportunity to meet the amended case.
- The court may direct that the amendment shall not relate back to the date of the original suit if it is necessary to protect any right accrued to the defendant by lapse of time.
Suggested Titles for the Article
- Supreme Court Allows Enhancement of Damages Claim in Specific Performance Suit After 31 Years
- Liberal Amendment of Pleadings: Key Principles Laid Down by Supreme Court in LIC Case
- Delay No Bar to Amendment: Supreme Court Permits Higher Damages Claim in Pending Suit
- Order 2 Rule 2 CPC Does Not Apply to Amendments – Landmark Supreme Court Ruling
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Sanjeev Builders filed a 1986 suit against LIC seeking specific performance of an agreement to sell property and claimed alternative damages. After many years of pendency, they applied to amend the plaint to substantially increase the damages amount citing rise in property value and delay in the case. The Single Judge allowed the amendment keeping the question of limitation open for trial and permitted LIC to file additional written statement. The Division Bench of the Bombay High Court affirmed the order. LIC challenged it before the Supreme Court on grounds of delay, limitation, Order 2 Rule 2 CPC and constructive res judicata. The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal and upheld the amendment.
• Order 2 Rule 2 CPC has no application to an amendment sought in an already pending suit. (Paras 51 & 71.1)
• Mere delay in filing amendment application is not a ground for rejection; the court may allow it and frame limitation as a separate issue for trial. (Paras 71.9 & 32)
• In a suit for specific performance, amendment to enhance the claim for compensation in addition to or in substitution of specific performance is permissible at any stage under the provisos to Sections 21(5) and 22(2) of the Specific Relief Act, 1963. (Paras 65-67)
• Amendment relating only to the quantum of relief based on facts already pleaded in the plaint does not change the nature of the suit and is ordinarily allowed. (Para 71.10)
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Flipkart India Vs Marc Enterprises
Suggested Titles for the Article
- Delhi High Court Allows Late Trademark Registration Documents in Appeal but Imposes Heavy Cost for Delay
- “MarQ” Dispute: Court Permits Flipkart to File Fresh Registrations After Judgment Reserved
- Additional Evidence in Trademark Appeal – Relevance Overrules Delay, Says Delhi HC
- Supervening Trademark Registrations Can Be Brought on Record Even After Arguments Concluded
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Flipkart challenged an interim injunction that restrained it from using the mark “MarQ”. While the appeal was pending and judgment had already been reserved, Flipkart obtained registration of two marks containing “MarQ” and filed an application to place the registration certificates on record as additional evidence. The single judge allowed the application, holding that the fresh registrations were directly relevant to decide the validity and sustainability of the injunction, but directed Flipkart to pay costs of ₹2 lakhs to the respondent for the unexplained delay in producing the documents.
• While admitting additional evidence at the appellate stage, the court may impose costs on the applicant for negligent or unexplained delay in producing the documents. (Paras 13-15)
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Sampath Kumar Vs Ayyakanu
The Court noted that amendments sought before the trial begins should normally be granted more liberally because the defendant gets full opportunity to meet the new case. Mere delay in moving the application is not a sufficient ground to reject it, especially when the suit has not yet reached the evidence stage. However, to protect the defendant from any prejudice, the Supreme Court directed that the new reliefs of declaration and possession would be treated as having been claimed only on the date the amendment application was filed. This prevented the new claim from relating back to the original date of the suit and safeguarded any right the defendant might have earned by passage of time. The Court also imposed a small cost on the plaintiff for the delay in seeking the amendment.
The appeal was allowed, the orders of the trial court and High Court were set aside, and the plaintiff was permitted to carry out the amendment on the above terms.
- Amendments to pleadings before commencement of trial should be allowed liberally if they do not alter the basic structure of the suit and are necessary to decide the real controversy between the parties.
- The mere fact that a long time has passed since filing of the suit is not a ground to reject an amendment application if the suit is still at the pre-trial stage.
- To avoid multiplicity of suits, courts should permit incorporation of a new relief that arises during pendency of the suit, rather than forcing the plaintiff to file a separate fresh suit.
- While an amendment normally relates back to the date of the original plaint, the court has power to direct that the amendment shall take effect only from the date of the application so as to protect any valuable right already accrued to the opposite party.
- In suitable cases, the court may impose costs as a condition for allowing the amendment to compensate the other side for the delay.
Suggested Titles for the Article
- Supreme Court Allows Conversion of Injunction Suit into Title Suit to Prevent Multiplicity
- Liberal Approach to Pre-Trial Amendments: Key Takeaways from Sampath Kumar Case
- When Can a Simple Injunction Suit Become a Possession Suit? Supreme Court Explains
- Amendment of Pleadings – Balancing Justice and Prejudice: Landmark Supreme Court Ruling
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The plaintiff filed a suit for permanent injunction claiming peaceful possession of agricultural land. During the pendency of the suit, he alleged that the defendant forcibly dispossessed him and therefore moved an application to amend the plaint to add prayers for declaration of title and recovery of possession. The trial court and High Court rejected the amendment, holding that the plaintiff should file a fresh suit. The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, permitted the amendment, and directed that the new reliefs would be treated as claimed only from the date of the amendment application so as to protect any right the defendant may have earned by passage of time. The plaintiff was also directed to pay a small cost for the delay.
• Courts should permit amendment to incorporate a new relief that arises during pendency of the suit in order to avoid multiplicity of litigation. (Paras 7 & 11; Sampath Kumar v. Ayyakanu, (2002) 7 SCC 559)
• Mere delay in moving an application for amendment is not a ground for rejection when the suit is still at the pre-trial stage. (Para 9; Sampath Kumar v. Ayyakanu, (2002) 7 SCC 559)
• An amendment normally relates back to the date of the suit, but the court has power to direct that the amendment shall take effect only from the date of the application so as to protect any valuable right already accrued to the opposite party. (Para 10; Sampath Kumar v. Ayyakanu, (2002) 7 SCC 559)
• The court may impose costs as a condition for allowing amendment where there has been delay by the party seeking amendment. (Para 13; Sampath Kumar v. Ayyakanu, (2002) 7 SCC 559)
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Sauss Home Products Vs Reckitt Benckiser
The bench also addressed other arguments raised by Sauss. It held that the mere existence of a parallel case in another city did not prevent the Delhi court from passing a temporary order. On the question of whether Delhi had the power to hear the case, the court observed that the availability of Sauss’s products through online business platforms accessible in Delhi was enough to create a connection with the city. On the core dispute, the judges agreed that the two bird logos were practically the same in appearance and used for identical goods, making confusion likely. Evidence showed Reckitt had built up significant market presence and goodwill with its flying bird design well before Sauss’s proven use. Even though both sides held registrations, the law still allows a passing off claim where one party is deceiving the public. The bench found no reason to interfere with the single judge’s careful exercise of discretion and therefore dismissed the appeal, keeping the temporary restraint in place.
Suggested Titles for the Article
- Clean Hands Doctrine Triumphs: Delhi High Court Dismisses Appeal Over Similar Bird Logos in Cleaning Products
- Fabricated Evidence Proves Costly: How Sauss Lost Its Fight Against Reckitt’s Flying Bird Mark
- Delhi HC Reiterates Honesty is Non-Negotiable in Trademark Interim Relief Cases
- Passing Off Wins Again: Court Upholds Injunction in Identical Bird Device Dispute
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Reckitt Benckiser sued Sauss Home Products for using a nearly identical flying bird logo on cleaning products, alleging passing off and copyright infringement. The single judge granted an interim injunction restraining Sauss. On appeal, Sauss claimed prior use based on an old newspaper clipping and challenged Delhi’s jurisdiction. The division bench dismissed the appeal, finding the newspaper clipping prima facie fabricated, which disentitled Sauss from equitable relief due to unclean hands. The court held the logos were deceptively similar for identical goods, Reckitt had prior goodwill, Delhi had jurisdiction through online availability of goods, and a parallel suit elsewhere did not bar the interim order. The injunction was upheld.
• Section 10 CPC stays only the trial of the suit and does not prohibit passing of interlocutory orders such as interim injunction. (Paras 58-60; Indian Bank v. Maharashtra State Cooperative Marketing Federation Ltd., (1998) 5 SCC 69)
• Availability of allegedly infringing goods on IndiaMart website is sufficient to confer territorial jurisdiction on Delhi High Court in trademark matters. (Paras 61-65; Kohinoor Seed Fields India Pvt Ltd v. Veda Seed Sciences Pvt Ltd, 2025 SCC OnLine Del 8727; Tata Sons (P) Ltd. v. Hakunamatata Tata Founders, 293 (2022) DLT 760)
• Appellate interference with a discretionary order granting interim injunction is permissible only where the discretion has been exercised arbitrarily, capriciously or perversely. (Paras 66-68; Wander India Ltd v. Antox India (P) Ltd (para 14); Pernod Ricard v. Karanveer Singh Chhabra, 2025 SCC OnLine SC 1701)
• Even when both parties hold registrations for identical marks, a suit for passing off is maintainable if prior goodwill and likelihood of confusion are established. (Para 69)
Case Detail
Case Title: Sauss Home Products Vs Reckitt Benckiser:07.02.2026:FAO(OS) (COMM) 145/2025:2026:DHC:1507-DBC. 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]
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Gillette Safety Razor Company Vs. Anglo-American Trading Company Ltd.
Introduction:The case of Gillette Safety Razor Company versus Anglo-American Trading Company stands as a classic illustration of how courts interpret patent specifications and distinguish true invention from mere imitation of existing ideas. Decided by the House of Lords in 1913, this dispute revolved around the famous Gillette safety razor and whether a rival product called the “Duplex” razor infringed the patent. The judgment remains relevant today because it explains two fundamental principles of patent law: first, that a patent is only valid if it shows real inventive merit over what was already known; and second, that even a valid patent is not infringed unless the accused product falls squarely within the scope of what the patentee actually claimed and described. The decision shows how the highest court carefully balanced the rights of the inventor with the right of the public to use ideas that were already in the public domain.
Factual Background: King Camp Gillette invented a safety razor that used a very thin, flexible blade instead of the thick, rigid blades common at the time. The blade was held in a special holder with a curved backing and a curved guard. When the parts were screwed together, the thin blade bent into a gentle curve. This bending gave the blade the stiffness needed for shaving and also allowed the user to adjust how close the cutting edge came to the guard. The inventor explained that this curvature was an important feature of his design.
The defendants sold a safety razor under the name “Duplex.” In their razor, the backing and guard were completely flat. There was no curvature, and the thin blade was simply clamped flat between the two flat surfaces. The blade was held firmly enough to shave, but it did not bend or offer the same kind of adjustment as the Gillette razor. The defendants argued that their product was different because it lacked the bending mechanism that Gillette had described as central to his invention.
Procedural Background:The Gillette company had earlier faced challenges to its patent in other cases, leading to an amendment of the specification to limit it strictly to safety razors. In the present action, the company sued the Anglo-American Trading Company and its manufacturer for infringement. At the trial before Mr Justice Parker, the court found the patent valid and held that the Duplex razor infringed it. The defendants appealed to the Court of Appeal, which reversed the decision and held that there was no infringement. The Gillette company then brought the matter to the House of Lords, where the final appeal was heard by Lords Kinnear, Atkinson, Shaw, and Moulton.
Reasoning and Decision of Court: The House of Lords carefully examined what Gillette had actually invented and what he had told the public in his specification. Lord Moulton delivered the leading speech. He first looked at an earlier American specification by John Butler, published before Gillette’s patent. Butler had shown a safety razor in which a blade was clamped between two flat cheeks at the end of a handle, with one cheek shaped to act as a guard. Lord Moulton explained that this was a simple and well-understood way of fixing a blade transversely to a handle.
The only real difference between Butler’s razor and the defendants’ Duplex razor was that the defendants used a thin blade while Butler had shown a thicker one. But thin blades for razors were already known from other earlier designs. Therefore, the defendants’ razor involved no new inventive step beyond what Butler had already made public.
Turning to Gillette’s patent, the court held that the patent was valid because it required the special curved holder that bent the thin blade. The words “substantially as described” in the main claim tied the invention to this bending feature. The defendants’ flat holder did not bend the blade in the way Gillette had described, so it did not infringe the patent. In short, the patent protected the clever idea of using curvature to give rigidity and adjustability to a thin blade, but it did not prevent anyone from making a safety razor that simply clamped a thin blade flat between two flat surfaces.
Point of Law Settled in the Case: This case settled an important principle that continues to guide patent law: if the accused product is, in substance, the same as something already described in a prior publication and differs only in non-inventive ways, then either the patent is invalid for lack of novelty or the product does not infringe. The court also reinforced that when a patentee says his invention is “substantially as described,” the claim must be read in the light of the whole specification, including the drawings and the features the inventor treated as important. Optional features may be ignored, but essential features that the inventor highlighted cannot be stripped away to widen the claim. The judgment reminds inventors that they must describe their invention clearly and cannot later argue for a broader monopoly than what they actually disclosed to the public.
Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain errors in perception, interpretation, and presentation]
Suggested Titles for the Article
- The Gillette Razor Case: How the House of Lords Drew the Line Between Invention and Imitation
- Classic Patent Judgment on Safety Razors: Gillette v. Anglo-American Trading Explained
- When a Thin Blade Is Not Enough: Lessons from the 1913 Gillette Patent Dispute
- Landmark House of Lords Ruling on Patent Construction and Prior Art – Gillette Safety Razor
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The Gillette Safety Razor Company patented a safety razor that used a thin flexible blade held in a curved holder, which bent the blade to give it the necessary stiffness for shaving and allowed easy adjustment.
The Anglo-American Trading Company sold the Duplex razor, which clamped a similar thin blade between completely flat surfaces without any bending.
The trial court found the patent valid and infringed, but the Court of Appeal reversed the infringement finding.
The House of Lords dismissed the final appeal, holding that the patent was valid because of the special curved bending feature but was not infringed by the defendants’ flat design, which was essentially the same as an earlier known method.
Points of Law Settled:
A patent claim using the words “substantially as described” must be read with the whole specification and is limited to the essential features the patentee treated as central to the invention, such as the curved bending of the blade. (Per Lord Moulton, (1913) 30 R.P.C. 465 at p. 482)
The public is entitled to make any product that follows a prior publication without inventive step; a later patent cannot monopolise such obvious equivalents. (Per Lord Moulton, (1913) 30 R.P.C. 465 at p. 480-481)
Case Title: Gillette Safety Razor Company Vs. Anglo-American Trading Company Ltd.:30 June 1913: Letters Patent No. 28,763 of 1902:(1913) 30 R.P.C. 465:House of Lords:Lord Moulton (leading judgment, with concurrence of Viscount Haldane L.C., Lord Shaw, Lord Kinnear and Lord Atkinson)
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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