Tuesday, June 16, 2026

SC-Renaissance Hotel Holdings Inc. Vs. B. Vijaya Sai

Renaissance Hotel Holdings Inc. v. B. Vijaya Sai: Adding a Religious Prefix to a Registered Trademark Does Not Save You from Infringement


Introduction

In the world of intellectual property law, one of the most frequently misunderstood questions is this: if a person uses only a part of someone else's registered trademark, combined with their own word or prefix, does that amount to an infringement? Many people assume that by adding a word before or after a famous trademark, they can escape legal liability. The Supreme Court of India emphatically put this misunderstanding to rest in its landmark judgment in Renaissance Hotel Holdings Inc. v. B. Vijaya Sai and Others, decided on 19th January, 2022. This judgment is a significant milestone in Indian trademark law because it clarifies, in considerable depth, the difference between an action for infringement of a registered trademark and an action for passing off, explains the correct scope of Sections 29 and 30 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, and establishes that when a defendant's mark is identical or similar to a registered trademark and is used for identical or similar goods or services, the court is bound by law to presume that confusion exists, and no further evidence of confusion or deception need be produced by the plaintiff. The judgment also sends a strong message that religious sentiment or honest personal reasons behind the adoption of an infringing mark are not a legal defence to an action for trademark infringement under the Trade Marks Act, 1999.


Factual and Procedural Background

Renaissance Hotel Holdings Inc., the Appellant-Plaintiff, is a company incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware, United States of America. The company is one of the world's largest and most celebrated chains of hotels and has been using the trademark "RENAISSANCE" for its hospitality business globally since the year 1981. It began using the mark in India from 1990 onwards and runs hotels and convention centres in Mumbai and in Goa. The company spends approximately US$ 14 million every year on worldwide advertisements and promotional activities and owns the domain name www.renaissancehotels.com. The mark "RENAISSANCE" is used not only in relation to hotel and restaurant services but also on a wide variety of goods found within its hotels such as bathrobes, slippers, shirts, hats, matchboxes, writing paper, and candies. The Appellant-Plaintiff holds two trademark registrations in India: Registration No. 610567 in Class 16 covering printed matter, periodicals, books, stationery, manuals, magazines, instructional and teaching materials, and office requisites, and Registration No. 1241271 in Class 42 covering hotel, restaurant, catering, bar and cocktail lounge services, provision of facilities for meetings, conferences and exhibitions, and reservation services for hotel accommodations.

While conducting its routine brand monitoring activities, the Appellant-Plaintiff came across a website at www.sairenaissance.com and discovered that the Respondents-Defendants, B. Vijaya Sai and others, were operating two hotels under the name "SAI RENAISSANCE," one at Kadugodi near Whitefield Railway Station in Bangalore, established in the year 2001, and another one at By-Pass Road, Puttaparthi. An investigation revealed that the Respondents-Defendants were not merely using a similar name but were also copying the Appellant-Plaintiff's stylised representation of the trademark "RENAISSANCE," along with its signage, business cards, and leaflets, in a manner designed to suggest an affiliation, association, or connection with the Appellant-Plaintiff's internationally famous hotel chain. The Appellant-Plaintiff pointed out that it had earlier successfully brought a similar suit at Ernakulam in Kerala, being C.S. No. 5 of 2005, before the District Court, and that suit had been decreed in its favour on 31st January, 2008.

The Appellant-Plaintiff accordingly filed a suit bearing O.S. No. 3 of 2009 before the Principal District Judge, Bangalore Rural District, Bangalore, seeking a decree of permanent injunction restraining the Respondents-Defendants from using the mark "SAI RENAISSANCE" or any other mark identical with or deceptively similar to the registered trademark "RENAISSANCE," from operating hotels or hospitality services under that name, from using the domain name www.sairenaissance.com, and for delivery of all goods, labels, and printed material bearing the infringing mark, along with a claim for damages of Rs. 3,50,000 for unauthorised use of the trademark.

The Respondents-Defendants resisted the suit vigorously. Their written statement raised several defences. They argued that the suit was liable to be dismissed on account of delay, laches, and acquiescence, since the first Respondent-Defendant claimed to have been running his hotel for fifteen years before the suit was filed. They further argued that the word "RENAISSANCE" is a commonly used dictionary word meaning "rebirth" and cannot be the subject of any exclusive claim. They claimed that the first Respondent-Defendant, named "Vijaya Sai" by his parents who were ardent devotees of Sri Sai Baba, adopted the name "SAI RENAISSANCE" to signify the belief that Sri Puttaparthi Sai Baba was the reincarnation of Sri Shirdi Sai Baba, and therefore, the name was adopted for bona fide religious reasons. They also argued that the class of customers they served was entirely different from those served by the Appellant-Plaintiff, that they served only vegetarian food and no alcoholic beverages, and that therefore there was no possibility of any confusion in the minds of consumers. They additionally submitted that the Appellant-Plaintiff's registration in Class 42 was subject to rectification proceedings and as such the Appellant-Plaintiff could not claim exclusive rights.

The trial court framed issues on registration, prior adoption and use, infringement, passing off, entitlement to damages, maintainability of the suit, and honest concurrent use by the Respondents-Defendants. The trial court answered the issues on registration, prior adoption and use, and infringement in the affirmative, holding that the Respondents-Defendants had infringed the Appellant-Plaintiff's registered trademark. However, the trial court found against the Appellant-Plaintiff on the questions of passing off, delivery of infringing materials, and award of damages. By its judgment and decree dated 21st June, 2012, the trial court partly decreed the suit by permanently restraining the Respondents-Defendants from using the mark "SAI RENAISSANCE" or any deceptively similar mark in relation to goods and services in Classes 16 and 42 and from operating hotels under any form of the "RENAISSANCE" mark.

The Respondents-Defendants appealed to the High Court of Karnataka at Bengaluru in Regular First Appeal No. 1462 of 2012. The Single Judge of the High Court, by judgment dated 12th April, 2019, allowed the appeal and set aside the trial court's decree. The High Court arrived at this conclusion by holding that the Appellant-Plaintiff had failed to show that its trademark had earned a trans-border reputation in India, that the Respondents-Defendants' hotel was not of the same class as the Appellant-Plaintiff's five-star hotel, that no evidence showed the Respondents-Defendants had taken unfair advantage of the trademark or caused detriment to its distinctive character, that the adoption of the name was honest and religiously motivated, and that the customer base of both parties was entirely different. The High Court also distinguished the earlier Kerala High Court judgment in The Renaissance, Cochin v. Renaissance Hotels Inc. Marriott, in which an injunction had been granted, observing that in the Kerala case a customer had been actually misled while in the present case no such customer complaint existed. Being aggrieved by this reversal, the Appellant-Plaintiff approached the Supreme Court by way of a Special Leave Petition which was converted into Civil Appeal No. 404 of 2022.


The Dispute

The dispute before the Supreme Court was not simply about whether one hotel owner had copied another's name. At its heart, the case raised a fundamental question about the correct legal framework for deciding a trademark infringement action. The High Court had applied what is known as the Section 29(4) test, which is designed for situations where an identical or similar mark is used for goods or services that are not similar to those for which the trademark is registered. Under that test, the Appellant-Plaintiff would need to show that its trademark had a reputation in India and that the Respondents-Defendants' use was detrimental to its distinctive character or took unfair advantage of it without due cause. The High Court found this test not satisfied and accordingly dismissed the suit.

The Appellant-Plaintiff's Senior Counsel, Shri K.V. Viswanathan, argued before the Supreme Court that the High Court had applied the entirely wrong section of the law. He submitted that the correct provisions were Section 29(2)(c) read with Section 29(3) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999 because both the marks and the goods and services involved were identical or similar. Under this test, the Court is required by law to presume confusion, and no further evidence of confusion is needed. He further submitted that since the Respondents-Defendants were using the Appellant-Plaintiff's registered trademark as a part of their trade name and business name, Section 29(5) was also independently applicable, and the High Court had completely ignored this. Additionally, he submitted that the High Court had applied the test of confusion applicable to a passing off action rather than an infringement action, which are two fundamentally different causes of action. The mere addition of the prefix "SAI" before the registered mark "RENAISSANCE" could not save the Respondents-Defendants. For this proposition, he relied on the judgments of the Supreme Court in Laxmikant V. Patel v. Chetanbhai Shah, reported in (2002) 3 SCC 65, Ruston and Hornsby Limited v. Zamindara Engineering Co., reported in (1969) 2 SCC 727, and Kaviraj Pandit Durga Dutt Sharma v. Navaratna Pharmaceutical Laboratories, reported in (1965) 1 SCR 737.

The Respondents-Defendants' counsel, Shri B.C. Sitarama Rao, defended the High Court's judgment and argued that "RENAISSANCE" is a generic English word, that the adoption was honest and religiously motivated, that the suit was barred by acquiescence and delay, and that the class of customers was entirely different. He relied on the Supreme Court judgments in Khoday Distilleries Limited v. Scotch Whisky Association, reported in (2008) 10 SCC 723, Nandhini Deluxe v. Karnataka Cooperative Milk Producers Federation Limited, reported in (2018) 9 SCC 183, Corn Products Refining Co. v. Shangrila Food Products Limited, reported in (1960) 1 SCR 968, and Neon Laboratories Limited v. Medical Technologies Limited, reported in (2016) 2 SCC 672.

During the hearing, Shri Viswanathan placed documents on record to show that the Respondents-Defendants had in the meantime discontinued using the term "RENAISSANCE" from their hotel's name and signage, which the Supreme Court treated as an acknowledgment by them that their use had indeed amounted to infringement.


Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

Justice B.R. Gavai, writing the judgment for a bench comprising Justices L. Nageswara Rao and B.V. Nagarathna, conducted a detailed and methodical examination of the evolution of Indian trademark legislation, the scheme of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, and the relevant precedents before arriving at its conclusions.

The Court began its analysis by tracing the history of trademark legislation in India. It noted that at the time of independence the governing law was the Trade Marks Act, 1940, Section 21 of which gave registered proprietors the exclusive right to use their mark in relation to the goods for which it was registered and declared that any use of an identical or deceptively similar mark in relation to those goods would amount to infringement. Thereafter, recognising that the 1940 Act was inadequate for a rapidly developing economy, the Parliament enacted the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958. Section 29 of the 1958 Act dealt with infringement and required that the defendant's use be likely to deceive or cause confusion. In 1999, with increasing globalization, the need for investment flows, and the requirement of simplification and harmonisation of trademark management systems, Parliament enacted the Trade Marks Act, 1999, which came into force on 15th September, 2003. Importantly, one of the stated objects of the 1999 Act was specifically to prohibit the use of someone else's trade mark as part of a corporate name or the name of a business concern.

The Court then set out in detail the provisions of Sections 28, 29, 30, and 31 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999 and analysed each sub-section with care. The Court noted that Section 28(1) gives the registered proprietor of a trademark the exclusive right to use the mark in relation to the goods or services for which it is registered and the right to sue for infringement. Section 29 contains multiple sub-sections dealing with different scenarios of infringement. The Court explained that Section 29(2) deals with three different eventualities: under clause (a), the defendant's mark is identical to the registered mark and the goods or services are similar; under clause (b), the defendant's mark is similar to the registered mark and the goods or services are identical or similar; and under clause (c), the defendant's mark is identical to the registered mark and the goods or services are also identical. The critical importance of Section 29(3) is that in any case falling under clause (c) of Section 29(2), the Court shall presume that confusion is likely. This presumption is mandatory; it is not discretionary. Critically, the Court pointed out that Section 29(2) uses the word "or" between clauses (a), (b), and (c), meaning that satisfaction of any one of the three conditions is sufficient to establish infringement.

Section 29(4), on the other hand, deals with a completely different situation, one where the defendant's mark is identical or similar to the registered mark but is used in relation to goods or services that are not similar to those covered by the registration. Only in such a case does the plaintiff need to additionally establish that the registered trademark has a reputation in India and that the defendant's use takes unfair advantage of or is detrimental to the distinctive character or repute of the registered mark. Crucially, the Court pointed out that Section 29(4) uses the word "and" between its clauses (a), (b), and (c), meaning that all three conditions must be satisfied together.

The Court identified the fundamental error of the High Court as having applied Section 29(4) to facts that were squarely covered by Section 29(2)(c) read with Section 29(3). Both the trial court and the High Court had themselves concurrently found that the Respondents-Defendants' mark "SAI RENAISSANCE" was identical or similar to the Appellant-Plaintiff's registered trademark "RENAISSANCE" and that both parties were operating in relation to goods and services in Class 16 and Class 42. Having made those findings, the High Court had no business going into the question of whether the Appellant-Plaintiff's mark had reputation in India, or whether the class of customers was different, or whether the Respondents-Defendants' adoption was honest. These considerations are relevant only under Section 29(4), which applies to dissimilar goods or services. They are entirely irrelevant when the marks and goods or services are identical or similar.

The Court placed extensive reliance on the classic judgment in Kaviraj Pandit Durga Dutt Sharma v. Navaratna Pharmaceutical Laboratories, reported in (1965) 1 SCR 737, in which the Supreme Court had explained with great clarity the fundamental difference between an action for passing off and an action for infringement of a registered trademark. Passing off is a common law remedy that is essentially an action for deceit, where a person passes off his goods as the goods of another. To succeed in passing off, the plaintiff must show that the get-up, packaging, visual appearance, and overall presentation of the defendant's goods are likely to cause confusion in the minds of ordinary consumers. The defendant in a passing off case can escape liability by showing that there are sufficient differences in the overall presentation to distinguish his goods from those of the plaintiff. An infringement action, by contrast, is a statutory remedy. The use by the defendant of the plaintiff's registered trademark, or any colourably similar mark in relation to similar goods, is the very essence of the cause of action. If the defendant has adopted the essential features of the plaintiff's registered mark, the fact that the overall get-up or presentation is different, or that the prices are different, or that the class of customers is different, is entirely irrelevant and immaterial to the question of infringement. In an infringement action, once the court finds that there is sufficient similarity amounting to imitation, no further evidence is required to establish that the plaintiff's statutory rights have been violated.

The Court also relied upon Ruston and Hornsby Limited v. Zamindara Engineering Co., reported in (1969) 2 SCC 727, where the Supreme Court had reiterated these principles and held that in an infringement action, even if the get-up of the defendant's goods was so different that there would be no probability of actual deception of the public, an injunction would still be issued as soon as it was proved that the defendant was improperly using the plaintiff's mark. No case of actual deception and no actual damage needed to be proved.

Beyond Section 29(2)(c) read with Section 29(3), the Court found two additional independent grounds for holding infringement established. Firstly, under Section 29(5) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, a registered trademark is infringed if a person uses it as a trade name or part of a trade name, or as the name of a business concern or part of the name of a business concern dealing in goods or services for which the trademark is registered. In the present case, the Respondents-Defendants were using the word "RENAISSANCE" as the name of their hotel, which was their trade name and business name, in relation to hotel and hospitality services covered by the Appellant-Plaintiff's registrations in Classes 16 and 42. This squarely attracted Section 29(5). Secondly, under Section 29(9) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, where the distinctive elements of a registered trademark consist of or include words, the trademark may be infringed by the spoken use of those words as well as by their visual representation. The words "RENAISSANCE" and "SAI RENAISSANCE" are both phonetically and visually similar, and therefore infringement was established under Section 29(9) as well.

The Court then addressed the High Court's erroneous reliance on Section 30(1)(b) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, which provides that a registered trademark is not infringed where a person uses it for the purpose of identifying goods or services as those of the proprietor, provided such use is not detrimental to the distinctive character or repute of the mark. The High Court had cited this provision to suggest that the Respondents-Defendants' use was not detrimental to the Appellant-Plaintiff's mark. The Supreme Court found this to be a glaring error because Section 30(1) contains two conditions joined by the word "and," not "or." The benefit of Section 30(1) is available only if both conditions are fulfilled: the use must be in accordance with honest practices in industrial or commercial matters, and the use must not take unfair advantage of or be detrimental to the distinctive character or repute of the trademark. The High Court had looked only at the second condition under Section 30(1)(b) and had completely ignored the first condition under Section 30(1)(a). The Court pointed out that to avail the benefit of Section 30(1), the Respondents-Defendants had to establish that their use was in accordance with honest practices in industrial or commercial matters. Merely claiming that the adoption was religiously motivated was not the same as establishing honest practices in industrial or commercial matters.

The Court then invoked two fundamental principles of statutory interpretation to underline the errors of the High Court. The first principle is that of textual and contextual interpretation. Relying on the well-known passage of Justice Chinnappa Reddy in Reserve Bank of India v. Peerless General Finance and Investment Co. Ltd., reported in (1987) 1 SCC 424, the Court held that a statute must be read as a whole, with each section, clause, phrase, and word understood in the context of the overall legislative scheme. The High Court had picked up isolated clauses from Sections 29(4) and 30(1) without reading them in the context of the entire legislative framework, leading to an erroneous conclusion that effectively defeated the purpose for which the 1999 Act was enacted, namely to protect registered trademark owners and prohibit the use of their marks as part of trade names or business names. The second principle is that a part of a section cannot be read in isolation. The Court cited the judgments in Balasinor Nagrik Cooperative Bank Ltd. v. Babubhai Shankerlal Pandya, reported in (1987) 1 SCC 606, and Kalawatibai v. Soiryabai, reported in (1991) 3 SCC 410, both of which hold that construction of a section must be made of all its parts together and no part of a statute can be omitted or construed in isolation.

The Court then dealt with the judgments relied upon by the Respondents-Defendants and distinguished each of them. Khoday Distilleries Limited v. Scotch Whisky Association, reported in (2008) 10 SCC 723, was concerned with a rectification application filed in 1986 in relation to events dating back to 1968, and the question of acquiescence arose because the applicants had waited over a decade after coming to know of the mark before seeking rectification. Moreover, that Court had specifically noted that the Trade Marks Act, 1999 had no application in that case. In the present case, the suit was one for infringement and the 1999 Act squarely applied, making the ratio of Khoday Distilleries inapplicable. The case of Nandhini Deluxe v. Karnataka Cooperative Milk Producers Federation Limited, reported in (2018) 9 SCC 183, involved the marks "Nandhini" and "Nandini," where the visual appearance was different and the products were also different. In the present case, the marks were visually and phonetically similar and the services were in identical classes. The Neon Laboratories case, reported in (2016) 2 SCC 672, arose from an application for temporary injunction and turned on the "first in the market" test, making it inapplicable to a final decree of injunction in an infringement action.

The Court also dealt with the High Court's reliance on Midas Hygiene Industries (P) Limited v. Sudhir Bhatia, reported in (2004) 3 SCC 90. The High Court had extracted the observation from that case to the effect that an injunction becomes necessary if it prima facie appears that the adoption of the mark was dishonest, and had reversed the injunction because it found the adoption by the Respondents-Defendants to be honest. The Supreme Court found that this observation had been taken entirely out of context. The Midas Hygiene case was one involving passing off or infringement of copyright, not trademark infringement in the strict sense. The key sentence the High Court had emphasised was only one part of the paragraph; the very same paragraph also contained the clear statement that in cases of infringement of a trade mark or copyright, normally an injunction must follow. The High Court had cherry-picked one sentence while ignoring the equally significant sentence that came before it.


Final Decision

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal. By its order dated 19th January, 2022, the Court set aside the judgment and order dated 12th April, 2019 of the Single Judge of the High Court of Karnataka at Bengaluru in Regular First Appeal No. 1462 of 2012 and restored the judgment and decree dated 21st June, 2012 of the Principal District Judge, Bangalore Rural District, Bangalore in O.S. No. 3 of 2009. The permanent injunction in favour of the Appellant-Plaintiff against the Respondents-Defendants was thus revived. No order as to costs was made.


Points of Law Settled

This judgment settled several important points of trademark law in India under the Trade Marks Act, 1999. The Court firmly established that when the defendant's mark is identical or similar to the plaintiff's registered trademark and the goods or services covered are identical or similar, the applicable provisions are Section 29(2)(c) read with Section 29(3), under which the Court is obligated to presume confusion and no further evidence of actual confusion or deception is required. Section 29(4), which requires proof of reputation in India and detriment or unfair advantage, applies only where the goods or services are not similar to those for which the trademark is registered. The Court also confirmed that using a registered trademark as part of a trade name or business name is independently actionable under Section 29(5), and that phonetic and visual similarity attracts liability under Section 29(9). The benefit of Section 30(1) requires satisfaction of both conditions, honest practices and non-detriment, joined by "and," and both must be established together. Adding a religious prefix to a registered trademark does not constitute an honest practice in industrial or commercial matters so as to attract the protection of Section 30(1). The fundamental distinction between an infringement action and a passing off action was also reaffirmed, specifically that questions of actual confusion, class of customers, and overall presentation of goods are irrelevant in an infringement action once imitation of the essential features of the registered mark is established.


Case Details

Title: Renaissance Hotel Holdings Inc. v. B. Vijaya Sai and Others

Date of Order: 19th January, 2022

Case Number: Civil Appeal No. 404 of 2022 (Arising out of SLP(C) No. 21428 of 2019)

Neutral Citation: 2022 SCC OnLine SC 61

Court: Supreme Court of India

Hon'ble Judges: Justice L. Nageswara Rao, Justice B.R. Gavai, and Justice B.V. Nagarathna (Judgment authored by Justice B.R. Gavai)


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

  1. SAI RENAISSANCE vs RENAISSANCE: Supreme Court Explains When Adding a Prefix Cannot Save You from Trademark Infringement
  2. Section 29 Trade Marks Act 1999 Explained: Supreme Court's Landmark Ruling in Renaissance Hotel Holdings v. B. Vijaya Sai
  3. Trademark Infringement vs Passing Off: Supreme Court Clarifies the Difference in Renaissance Hotels Case 2022
  4. When Is Proof of Confusion Not Required in a Trademark Infringement Suit? Supreme Court Explains Section 29(2)(c) and Section 29(3)
  5. Religious Motivation No Defence to Trademark Infringement: Renaissance Hotel Holdings Inc. v. B. Vijaya Sai Analysed
  6. Section 29(4) vs Section 29(2): How to Choose the Right Provision in a Trademark Infringement Case Under Trade Marks Act 1999
  7. Using a Registered Trademark as Trade Name Amounts to Infringement Under Section 29(5): Supreme Court 2022

SEO Tags

Renaissance Hotel Holdings v B Vijaya Sai, Section 29 Trade Marks Act 1999, trademark infringement India, Section 29(2)(c) presumption of confusion, Section 29(3) Trade Marks Act, Section 29(4) vs Section 29(2), Section 29(5) trade name infringement, Section 30(1) honest practices, passing off vs trademark infringement India, Supreme Court trademark 2022, Kaviraj Pandit Durga Dutt Sharma v Navaratna Pharmaceutical Laboratories, Ruston Hornsby v Zamindara Engineering, Midas Hygiene Industries v Sudhir Bhatia, hotel trademark infringement India, SAI RENAISSANCE RENAISSANCE trademark, registered trademark exclusive rights India, trans-border reputation trademark, Trade Marks Act 1999 scheme, statutory interpretation trademark law, AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman, IPAdjutor


Headnote

Renaissance Hotel Holdings Inc. Vs. B. Vijaya Sai and Others — 2022 SCC OnLine SC 61 — Supreme Court of India — Civil Appeal No. 404 of 2022 — Decided: 19.01.2022 — Bench: L. Nageswara Rao, B.R. Gavai and B.V. Nagarathna, JJ. (Judgment by B.R. Gavai, J.)

Trade Marks Act, 1999 — Section 29(2)(c) read with Section 29(3) — Trademark infringement — Mandatory presumption of confusion — Where defendant's mark is identical with plaintiff's registered trademark and the goods or services covered are identical or similar, Court is obligated to presume likelihood of confusion — No further evidence of actual confusion or deception required — High Court erred in applying test under Section 29(4) which applies only to cases where goods or services are not similar to those for which the trademark is registered — Kaviraj Pandit Durga Dutt Sharma v. Navaratna Pharmaceutical Laboratories, (1965) 1 SCR 737 and Ruston & Hornsby Limited v. Zamindara Engineering Co., (1969) 2 SCC 727 followed.

Section 29(4) — Scope and applicability — Deals exclusively with situations where impugned mark, though identical or similar to registered mark, is used for goods or services which are not similar to those for which the trademark is registered — All three conditions in clauses (a), (b) and (c) of Section 29(4), joined by the word "and," must be cumulatively satisfied — Questions of reputation in India, unfair advantage, and detriment to distinctive character are relevant only under this sub-section — Inapplicable where goods or services are identical or similar.

Section 29(5) — Use of registered trademark as trade name or business name — A registered trademark is infringed where a person uses it as part of his trade name or business concern dealing in goods or services for which the trademark is registered — Use of word "RENAISSANCE" as part of trade name "SAI RENAISSANCE" for hotel services squarely attracted this provision.

Section 29(9) — Phonetic and visual similarity — Infringement can be established by spoken use of the distinctive words constituting a registered trademark as well as by visual representation — "SAI RENAISSANCE" phonetically and visually similar to "RENAISSANCE" constitutes infringement.

Section 30(1) — Limits on effect of registered trademark — Exemption from infringement under this sub-section requires satisfaction of both conditions — (a) use in accordance with honest practices in industrial or commercial matters, and (b) use not detrimental to distinctive character or repute of the mark — Both conditions joined by "and" must be satisfied together — Religious motivation for adoption of impugned mark does not fulfil requirement of honest practices in industrial or commercial matters — High Court erred in considering only clause (b) in isolation.

Infringement action vs Passing off action — Fundamental distinction reiterated — Action for infringement is a statutory remedy conferred on registered proprietor — Once essential features of registered trademark are adopted, questions of actual confusion, different class of customers, different price range, or different overall presentation are immaterial — Action for passing off is a common law remedy essentially an action for deceit where overall presentation is relevant — Defendant who has adopted essential features of registered mark cannot escape infringement by pointing to differences in get-up or customer profile — Trade Marks Act, 1940 — Section 21 — Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 — Section 29 — Legislative history of infringement provisions surveyed.

Statutory Interpretation — Section must be read as a whole — No part may be construed in isolation — Textual interpretation must be matched with contextual interpretation — Reserve Bank of India v. Peerless General Finance and Investment Co. Ltd., (1987) 1 SCC 424; Balasinor Nagrik Cooperative Bank Ltd. v. Babubhai Shankerlal Pandya, (1987) 1 SCC 606; Kalawatibai v. Soiryabai, (1991) 3 SCC 410 — Applied.

Appeal allowed — Judgment and decree of trial court restored — Permanent injunction against Respondents-Defendants revived.

SC-Ramdev Food Products Private Limited Vs. State of Gujarat

Ramdev Food Products Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Gujarat: When Should a Magistrate Order Police Investigation Instead of a Preliminary Inquiry?


Introduction

The criminal justice system in India gives a Magistrate two distinct paths when a complaint is brought before him alleging the commission of an offence. The first path is to direct the police to register and investigate the case under Section 156(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973. The second path is to postpone the issuance of process and instead call for a preliminary inquiry or a report from the police under Section 202(1) of the same Code. These two provisions, though they both use the word "investigation," operate at entirely different stages and serve entirely different purposes. The confusion between these two paths has given rise to significant litigation across India, and the Supreme Court in Ramdev Food Products Private Limited v. State of Gujarat, decided on 16th March, 2015, took the opportunity to authoritatively settle the law on this question. The Court went further and also resolved a long-standing conflict among various High Courts on the connected question of whether the police, while conducting an inquiry under Section 202(1), has the power to arrest an accused person. The judgment, authored by Justice A.K. Goel for a three-judge Bench, is a landmark contribution to procedural criminal law and strikes a careful balance between the rights of a complainant seeking justice and the liberty of an accused who may not yet be found to have committed any offence.


Factual and Procedural Background

Ramdev Food Products Private Limited, the Appellant company, was in the business of manufacturing and selling food products and had built considerable goodwill around the trademark "Ramdev." In the year 1990, the company entered into a formal agreement permitting M/s. New Ramdev Masala Factory, a firm in which one Jasvantbhai Somabhai Patel was a partner, to use the trademark "Ramdev" for a period of seven years. However, M/s. New Ramdev Masala Factory was closed down on 30th May, 1994, and the arrangement came to an end. Despite the closure of the firm and the expiry of the arrangement, the Appellant company alleged that accused No. 1, Jasvantbhai Somabhai Patel, colluded with thirteen other accused persons and executed forged partnership documents. These alleged forgeries, the Appellant claimed, were designed to unlawfully continue using the trademark "Ramdev" and to usurp the valuable intellectual property of the complainant company.

The Appellant filed a complaint before the Judicial Magistrate, First Class, Sanand, alleging that the fourteen accused had committed offences punishable under several provisions of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, including Section 409 (criminal breach of trust by a public servant or banker), Section 420 (cheating), Section 406 (criminal breach of trust), Section 467 (forgery of valuable security), Section 468 (forgery for purpose of cheating), Section 471 (using as genuine a forged document), read with Section 120-B (criminal conspiracy) and Section 114 (abettor present when offence is committed). Along with the complaint, the Appellant specifically prayed for a direction under Section 156(3) of the Code requiring the police to register a formal case and investigate. The reasoning behind this prayer was that the allegedly forged documents and stamp papers were in the physical custody of the accused, and only through a formal police investigation involving the power of arrest and search could such documents be seized and examined.

The Magistrate, however, did not agree with the course suggested by the Appellant. By an Order dated 16th August, 2005, the Magistrate instead directed the Police Sub-Inspector, Sanand, to give a report to the Court within thirty days under Section 202(1) of the Code. The Magistrate gave several reasons for adopting this more cautious path. Firstly, the police had already refused to register a First Information Report in the matter. Secondly, the dispute appeared to be primarily civil in nature, and extensive civil litigation between the parties had already travelled up to the Supreme Court. Thirdly, the genuineness or otherwise of the disputed documents could potentially be ascertained even in civil proceedings through the examination of handwriting experts. Fourthly, the Appellant had suppressed the material fact of pending civil litigation, which itself justified a more cautious approach. The Magistrate was of the view that the scope of inquiry under Section 202 was limited but was the appropriate remedy at this stage to find out whether a case was made out at all for the issuance of process against the accused.

The Appellant challenged this Order before the High Court of Gujarat at Ahmedabad by filing Special Criminal Application No. 1821 of 2005. The High Court, by its judgment and Order dated 17th February, 2006, declined to interfere with the Magistrate's Order. It additionally noted that the Appellant had approached the High Court after a delay of four months from the date of the Magistrate's Order, and this delay itself disentitled the Appellant to seek a direction for investigation under Section 156(3). The High Court also observed that the Magistrate had given cogent reasons for his decision and had acted rightly in following the course under Section 202. Aggrieved by this, the Appellant preferred a Criminal Appeal before the Supreme Court, bearing Criminal Appeal No. 600 of 2007, by way of special leave.


The Dispute

The central dispute before the Supreme Court was not about whether the accused had actually committed the alleged offences. Those questions remained to be tried. The dispute was at a far more preliminary and procedural level, revolving around three interconnected questions that the Supreme Court formally framed when the matter came up for hearing on 11th April, 2007. The first question was whether the discretion of a Magistrate to call for a report under Section 202 instead of directing investigation under Section 156(3) is controlled by any defined and identifiable parameters. The second question was whether, in the course of an investigation carried out pursuant to a direction under Section 202, a police officer is entitled to arrest an accused person. The third question was specific to the facts of this case, namely whether the Magistrate had erred in seeking a report under Section 202 instead of directing investigation under Section 156(3) of the Code.

The Appellant's position, put broadly, was that the allegation of forgery of documents and stamp papers and the creation of backdated partnership deeds by forging the signatures of a deceased person necessarily required a formal investigation under Section 156(3). Since the allegedly forged documents were in the physical possession of the accused, they could only be recovered through the exercise of the power of arrest and discovery under Section 27 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872. The Appellant argued that proceeding under Section 202 was not only inadequate but was rendered effectively useless because the Gujarat High Court had previously held in Sankalchand Valjibhai Patel v. J.P. Chavda and Others, reported in (1979) 1 GLR 17, that the police have no power of arrest during an inquiry under Section 202(1). If that view was correct, the Appellant submitted that it was all the more reason why the Magistrate should have proceeded under Section 156(3). Alternatively, the Appellant argued that even if the matter had been correctly referred under Section 202, the police, while submitting their report under that provision, did retain the power of arrest because arrest was an integral component of investigation.

On the other side, the accused argued that the Magistrate had correctly exercised his discretion. The dispute, they submitted, was primarily civil in nature. The two powers under Sections 156(3) and 202 are qualitatively different, operate in different chapters of the Code, and the police operating under Section 202 do not have the same authority as the police investigating a registered criminal case under Chapter XII of the Code. The accused specifically pressed that a person should not be subjected to arrest and the consequent damage to his liberty and reputation when the Magistrate himself had not yet decided whether there was even sufficient ground to proceed with the complaint.


Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

Justice A.K. Goel, writing for the Bench comprising Justices T.S. Thakur and R. Banumathi, approached the questions with considerable care and scholarship, examining the text of the relevant provisions in detail, surveying a wide body of precedent, and drawing upon established principles of statutory interpretation.

The Court began its analysis by setting out the full text of the two crucial provisions side by side. Section 156(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 empowers any Magistrate who is competent under Section 190 to order a police investigation of a cognizable case. This provision falls in Chapter XII of the Code, which is titled "Information to the Police and their Powers to Investigate." Section 202(1), on the other hand, falls in Chapter XV, titled "Complaints to Magistrates," and is titled "Postponement of issue of process." It allows a Magistrate, upon receipt of a complaint of an offence, to postpone the issuance of process and either inquire into the case himself or direct a police officer or any other suitable person to investigate "for the purpose of deciding whether or not there is sufficient ground for proceeding."

The Court noted that though both provisions use the word "investigation," the placement of the two provisions in different chapters of the Code is not a mere legislative accident. The purposes served by the two provisions are fundamentally different. Section 156(3) is a pre-cognizance provision where the Magistrate, without taking cognizance, directs the police to investigate. In such a case, the full machinery of police investigation, including the power of arrest, the power to search, and the obligation to submit a charge sheet under Section 173, gets activated. Section 202, on the other hand, operates at a post-cognizance stage. By the time a Magistrate invokes Section 202, he has already taken cognizance of the offence but has not yet decided whether there is sufficient ground to issue process against the accused. The limited and specific purpose of the inquiry under Section 202 is to enable the Magistrate to take that decision.

On the first question regarding the parameters governing the choice between Section 156(3) and Section 202, the Court drew heavily from the Constitution Bench decision of this Court in Lalita Kumari v. Government of Uttar Pradesh, reported in (2014) 2 SCC 1. In that landmark judgment, the Supreme Court had held that while registration of an FIR under Section 154 of the Code is mandatory the moment information disclosing a cognizable offence is received by the police, this mandatory obligation does not mean that police must mechanically proceed to arrest in every case. The Court in Lalita Kumari had further identified specific categories of cases where a preliminary inquiry before registration of an FIR might be warranted. These categories included matrimonial and family disputes, commercial offences, medical negligence cases, corruption cases, and cases where there has been an abnormal delay in reporting the matter to the authorities without satisfactory explanation. The Court in the present case noted that commercial offences specifically fall in this category of cases where a preliminary inquiry is appropriate.

Further, drawing upon Anil Kumar v. M.K. Aiyappa, reported in (2013) 10 SCC 705, the Court confirmed that a direction under Section 156(3) cannot be issued mechanically or routinely. The order of the Magistrate directing investigation under Section 156(3) must reflect application of mind, and mere statement that the Magistrate has gone through the complaint and heard the complainant is insufficient. The reasons for directing investigation must be at least broadly discernible from the order. The Court, synthesising the law, held on the first question that the direction under Section 156(3) is to be issued only after the Magistrate applies his mind to the material before him and forms a prima facie opinion that a cognizable offence appears to have been committed, and where the Magistrate considers it appropriate to forthwith direct investigation without postponing the issuance of process. Cases falling under the categories described in Lalita Kumari, including commercial disputes, may well be routed through Section 202 rather than Section 156(3).

On the second and more contentious question of whether the police can arrest an accused during an inquiry under Section 202, the Court examined the argument that Section 202(3) of the Code, read through the lens of the legal maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius, implicitly permitted police to arrest. Section 202(3) states that if an investigation under Section 202(1) is conducted by a person other than a police officer, that person shall have all the powers of an officer in charge of a police station except the power to arrest without warrant. The Appellant argued that by expressly denying the power of arrest to a non-police investigator, the provision by necessary implication granted that power to a police investigator. This is the classical application of the Latin maxim meaning that express mention of one thing implies the exclusion of all others.

The Court engaged deeply with this argument but rejected it, invoking the same maxim's limitations as a tool of construction. It relied on the observations of the Supreme Court in Mary Angel and Others v. State of Tamil Nadu, reported in (1999) 5 SCC 209, where it was noted that the maxim is often described as a valuable servant but a dangerous master, and that its application is inappropriate when it would lead to inconsistency or injustice. The Court traced this observation to the classic English formulation from Colquhoun v. Brooks, reported in (1887) 19 QBD 400, which warned that the exclusio is often the result of inadvertence or accident, and the maxim must not be applied when it leads to inconsistency or injustice. The Court also recalled the position in CCE v. National Tobacco Company of India Limited, reported in (1972) 2 SCC 560, and in Harish Chandra Bajpai v. Triloki Singh, reported in AIR 1957 SC 444, that courts must endeavour to ascertain legislative intent and adopt a construction that effectuates rather than defeats it.

The Court held that Section 202(3) is not the source of the police power of arrest at all. The power of the police to arrest derives from Sections 41, 54, and related provisions of the Code and from a warrant issued by a Magistrate. Section 202(3) was designed to empower the non-police investigator by granting him most of the powers of a police officer, while specifically excluding the power of arrest from that grant. This legislative purpose of expanding the power of a non-police investigator up to but not including arrest says nothing about whether police officers retained the power of arrest in the completely different context of a Section 202 inquiry. The provision is about the non-police investigator, not about the police.

The Court also brought in the practical and principled reason why police cannot arrest under Section 202. The entire premise of Section 202 is that the Magistrate is in seized of the matter but has not yet decided whether there is even sufficient ground to proceed. At this uncertain and preliminary stage, allowing the police to arrest would be, in the words of the Court, "contradiction in terms." An arrest causes severe damage to a person's liberty, reputation, and standing. Allowing such an arrest at a stage when the Magistrate himself is undecided about whether the complaint merits any process would be to put the cart before the horse. The Court also specifically rejected the argument that the inability to record a confession under Section 27 of the Indian Evidence Act, which requires a person to be in police custody, should motivate the grant of power of arrest to police under Section 202. The admissibility of a confession cannot be the basis for authorising an arrest. If an arrest is not otherwise warranted, the desire to invoke Section 27 cannot facilitate it.

The Court reviewed a clear conflict between High Courts. The High Courts of Bombay, Gujarat, and Delhi had consistently held in Sankalchand Valjibhai Patel, Emperor v. Nurmahomed Rajmahomed reported in (1929) 31 BOM LR 84, Mahendrasinh Shanabhai Chauhan and Others v. State of Gujarat and Another reported in (2009) 2 GLR 1647, and Harsh Khurana v. Union of India reported in 121 (2005) DLT 301, that police cannot exercise the power of arrest during a Section 202 inquiry. The contrary view had been taken by the Sind High Court in Emperor v. Bikha Moti reported in AIR (1938) Sind 113 and by the Assam High Court in Asha Das and Others v. The State reported in AIR (1953) Assam 1, both of which had held that police investigating pursuant to Section 202(1) have the same power to arrest as they would have in an investigation following registration of an FIR. The Court decisively resolved this conflict by approving the view of the Bombay, Gujarat, and Delhi High Courts and overruling the decisions in Bikha Moti and Asha Das.

On the third and most case-specific question, the Court found no reason to fault the Magistrate or the High Court. The alleged forgery related to a partnership deed, and the dispute about the genuineness of the document was already the subject of civil proceedings that had gone up to the Supreme Court. The Court cited the well-known observations in Indian Oil Corporation v. NEPC India Limited, reported in (2006) 6 SCC 736, cautioning against the growing tendency in commercial disputes to convert civil grievances into criminal cases by applying pressure through the threat of arrest and prosecution. Criminal proceedings, the Court emphasised, should not be set in motion as a matter of course. Referring to Pepsi Foods Limited v. Special Judicial Magistrate, reported in (1998) 5 SCC 749, the Court reiterated that summoning an accused in a criminal case is a serious matter and the Magistrate must carefully apply his mind to whether the complaint and the evidence on record are sufficient to justify the issuance of process. In the present case, the Magistrate had not found clear material to proceed against the accused. Even a case for summoning had not yet been established. The Magistrate and High Court had therefore correctly concluded that a report under Section 202 was the appropriate course.


Final Decision

The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal. The Court confirmed the Orders of the Judicial Magistrate, First Class, Sanand dated 16th August, 2005 and the High Court of Gujarat dated 17th February, 2006. All three questions framed for consideration were answered in a manner that upheld the approach adopted by the Magistrate and the High Court. The Court held that the Magistrate had correctly exercised his discretion by proceeding under Section 202(1) rather than Section 156(3), that the police do not have the power of arrest in the course of an inquiry directed under Section 202, and that on the specific facts of this case there was no error in the view taken by the courts below.


Points of Law Settled

This judgment settled several important points of procedural criminal law in India. The Court clarified that the choice between Section 156(3) and Section 202 is not a mechanical one but must be made by the Magistrate after applying his mind to the quality and nature of the material before him. It confirmed that commercial offences and disputes that are primarily civil in nature are appropriate candidates for the Section 202 route. It definitively laid down that the police have no power to arrest an accused person during a Section 202 inquiry, thereby resolving a conflict between High Courts that had persisted for decades. It overruled the judgments in Emperor v. Bikha Moti reported in AIR (1938) Sind 113 and Asha Das and Others v. The State reported in AIR (1953) Assam 1, and affirmed the line of decisions from the Bombay, Gujarat, and Delhi High Courts. It also reinforced the principle that Section 27 of the Indian Evidence Act cannot be used as a justification to authorise arrest where such arrest is not otherwise legally warranted.


Case Details

Title: Ramdev Food Products Private Limited Vs. State of Gujarat

Date of Order: 16th March, 2015

Case Number: Criminal Appeal No. 600 of 2007

Neutral Citation: MANU/SC/0286/2015

Equivalent Citations: AIR 2015 SC 1742; (2015) 6 SCC 439; 2015 CriLJ 2382; 2015(3)SCALE622

Court: Supreme Court of India

Hon'ble Judges: Justice T.S. Thakur, Justice A.K. Goel, and Justice R. Banumathi (Judgment authored by Justice A.K. Goel)


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

  1. Section 156(3) vs Section 202 CrPC: Supreme Court Settles the Law on Magistrate's Discretion in Ramdev Food Products Case
  2. Can Police Arrest During Section 202 Inquiry? Supreme Court's Landmark Ruling in Ramdev Food Products v. State of Gujarat
  3. When Must a Magistrate Order Police Investigation Under Section 156(3) Instead of Section 202 CrPC?
  4. Ramdev Food Products v. State of Gujarat 2015: Complete Legal Analysis of CrPC Sections 156(3) and 202
  5. Police Power of Arrest Under Section 202 CrPC: Supreme Court Overrules Bikha Moti and Asha Das

SEO Tags

Section 156(3) CrPC, Section 202 CrPC, Magistrate discretion investigation, police power of arrest, cognizance of offence, postponement of process, Ramdev Food Products v State of Gujarat, Supreme Court 2015 criminal law, FIR registration mandatory, Lalita Kumari judgment, commercial disputes criminal law, forgery partnership deed, CrPC investigation inquiry distinction, Anil Kumar v MK Aiyappa, Indian Oil Corporation v NEPC India, Pepsi Foods v Special Judicial Magistrate, Section 27 Evidence Act arrest, criminal procedure law India, abuse of criminal process, Bikha Moti overruled, AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman, IPAdjutor


Headnote

Ramdev Food Products Private Limited v. State of Gujarat — (2015) 6 SCC 439 — Supreme Court of India — Criminal Appeal No. 600 of 2007 — Decided: 16.03.2015 — Bench: T.S. Thakur, A.K. Goel and R. Banumathi, JJ.

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 — Sections 156(3) and 202 — Distinction between the two provisions — Direction under Section 156(3) operates at pre-cognizance stage and activates full police investigation machinery including power of arrest — Direction under Section 202 operates at post-cognizance stage and has the limited purpose of enabling the Magistrate to decide whether there is sufficient ground to issue process — Magistrate must apply mind before directing investigation under Section 156(3) and cannot do so mechanically — Commercial offences and disputes primarily civil in nature are appropriate candidates for the Section 202 route — Lalita Kumari v. Govt. of U.P., (2014) 2 SCC 1 and Anil Kumar v. M.K. Aiyappa, (2013) 10 SCC 705 followed.

Section 202 CrPC — Power of police to arrest during Section 202 inquiry — Held, police have no power to arrest an accused person on their own during an inquiry directed under Section 202 — Section 202(3) which denies power of arrest to non-police investigators does not by implication grant such power to police officers — Power of arrest is derived from Sections 41 and 54 of the Code and not from Section 202(3) — At the stage of Section 202 inquiry, the Magistrate has yet to decide whether sufficient ground to proceed exists and permitting arrest at this stage would be contradictory — Desire to record a confession under Section 27 of the Evidence Act cannot justify an arrest not otherwise warranted — Conflict between High Courts resolved — View taken in Sankalchand Valjibhai Patel v. J.P. Chavda, (1979) 1 GLR 17 (Gujarat HC); Emperor v. Nurmahomed Rajmahomed, (1929) 31 BOM LR 84 (Bombay HC); Mahendrasinh Shanabhai Chauhan v. State of Gujarat, (2009) 2 GLR 1647 (Gujarat HC); and Harsh Khurana v. Union of India, 121 (2005) DLT 301 (Delhi HC) approved — Contrary view in Emperor v. Bikha Moti, AIR (1938) Sind 113 and Asha Das v. The State, AIR (1953) Assam 1 overruled.

Indian Penal Code, 1860 — Sections 406, 409, 420, 467, 468, 471, 120-B, 114 — Complaint alleging forgery of partnership deed and usurpation of trademark — Dispute primarily of civil nature with ongoing civil litigation up to Supreme Court — Magistrate justified in proceeding under Section 202 rather than Section 156(3) — Tendency to convert civil disputes into criminal cases deprecated — Indian Oil Corporation v. NEPC India Ltd., (2006) 6 SCC 736 and Pepsi Foods Ltd. v. Special Judicial Magistrate, (1998) 5 SCC 749 followed — Appeal dismissed.

SC-The Registrar of Trade Marks Vs. Ashok Chandra Rakhit Ltd.


The Registrar of Trade Marks vs. Ashok Chandra Rakhit Ltd.: The Law on Disclaimer of Non-Distinctive Words in Trade Marks


Introduction

Every trade mark, as registered, may consist of a combination of elements — some distinctive and capable of identifying the goods of a particular trader, and others which are generic, common, or incapable of belonging exclusively to any one person. The law of trade marks has long grappled with the question of what should happen when a registered mark contains within it a word or element that is not distinctive and which no single trader can legitimately claim as his own. The mechanism devised by trade mark law to deal with this situation is known as a "disclaimer." A disclaimer is essentially a notation on the trade mark register stating that although a particular word forms part of a registered trade mark, the registration does not give the proprietor the exclusive right to use that word alone or separately. The Supreme Court of India, in its judgment dated April 15, 1955 in The Registrar of Trade Marks vs. Ashok Chandra Rakhit Ltd., addressed this question in depth and settled important principles regarding when and why the Registrar of Trade Marks may properly exercise the power to insert a disclaimer. The word at the centre of the controversy was "Shree" — a word of deep religious and cultural significance in India, widely used by Hindus as an auspicious symbol. The judgment remains a foundational authority on the scope, purpose, and limits of the disclaimer power under Indian trade mark law.


Factual and Procedural Background

The story of the trade mark in question begins as far back as the year 1897. A gentleman named Durga Charan Rakhit adopted a distinctive device as his trade mark in respect of ghee that he produced and marketed. This device, with some slight and immaterial modifications, eventually came to be registered as trade mark No. 3815. The mark was an elaborate and visually rich device. At the top was the word "Shree" written in bold Bengali characters. Below that was an ornamental figure consisting of a triangle and an inverted triangle together forming a Star of David-like shape, with the word "Shree" written in small Devanagari script at the centre. The words "TRADE" and "MARK" were written in English in an inclined manner on the left and right sides of the ornamental figure respectively. At the bottom appeared the words "Shree Durga Charan Rakhit" in Bengali. The entire ornamental figure was enclosed in a circle surrounded by twelve decorative petals. It is worth noting that throughout the proceedings, the directors of the respondent company themselves referred to this mark as "the said mark SHREE," and their ghee was commonly known in the market by that name.

Durga Charan Rakhit subsequently became insolvent, and all his properties, including the goodwill of his ghee business and the said trade mark, vested in the Official Assignee of Calcutta. On January 15, 1915, the Official Assignee sold the goodwill of the business including the trade mark at a public auction. A minor named Hem Dev Konch was declared the highest bidder. The sale was confirmed by a deed of assignment executed by the Official Assignee on January 27, 1915. On August 22, 1917, the father and natural guardian of the minor conveyed the goodwill, including all rights in the mark, to one Ashok Chandra Rakhit, who was the son of the original creator Durga Charan Rakhit. Ashok Chandra Rakhit then carried on the ghee business and marketed his product under this mark. He got his ownership of the mark advertised in the Calcutta Exchange Gazette on September 15, 1926 and registered a declaration of ownership with the Registrar of Assurances of Calcutta on December 22, 1926.

In 1932, a private limited company was incorporated under the Indian Companies Act, 1913, and Ashok Chandra Rakhit assigned the goodwill of his business and all rights in the mark to this newly formed respondent company. In 1933, the mark was also registered in the Trade Mark Registry at Hong Kong under the Hong-Kong Trade Marks Ordinance, 1909. The respondent company's business under this mark was considerable, with an annual turnover of between Rs. 10,00,000 and Rs. 15,00,000 and annual advertisement expenditure ranging between Rs. 10,000 and Rs. 39,000. The ghee marketed by the respondent company was, by the time of the proceedings, widely and popularly known as "Shree ghee" and was asked for under that name.

The respondent company's track record in asserting the mark was also significant. In 1934, two persons named Rajendra Prasad and Dilliram were convicted by the Chief Presidency Magistrate of Calcutta under Section 486 of the Indian Penal Code for infringing this mark, and this conviction was upheld by the Calcutta High Court. In 1935, another person named Chiranjilal Sharma was similarly convicted for the same offence.

When the Indian Trade Marks Act, 1940 came into force in 1942, the respondent company filed an application on August 21, 1942 for registration of its mark under the new Act. By a letter dated November 29, 1943, the Registrar of Trade Marks proposed that a disclaimer of the word "Shree" should be inserted as a condition of registration. The respondent company objected strongly through its agents' letter dated February 15, 1944, stating that "the trade mark Shree is very important in the device" and that "the ghee is commonly designated by the trade mark Shree." The company also filed a supporting affidavit. The Registrar did not then press his proposal, and the mark was duly registered as trade mark No. 3815 without any disclaimer.

Some years later, however, the Registrar took note of the fact that the word "Shree" was widely used by Hindus as an auspicious symbol placed even on letter heads and commercial correspondence, and that consequently it was not inherently capable of distinguishing one trader's goods from another's. Over time, a firm practice developed in the Trade Mark Registry that the word "Shree" would either be refused standalone registration or, if it formed part of a composite mark, a disclaimer would be mandatorily insisted upon. This practice had become so consistent that trade mark No. 3815 of the respondent company was the only registered trade mark containing the word "Shree" that did not carry a disclaimer. This perceived discrimination was pointed out and it was urged that the Registry should deal with all applicants uniformly and impartially.

Moved by these considerations, the Registrar initiated suo motu proceedings under Section 46(4) of the Trade Marks Act, 1940 and on March 8, 1947 issued a notice to the respondent company asking it to show cause why the register should not be rectified by inserting a disclaimer of the exclusive right to use the word "Shree." The respondent company responded by filing a detailed affidavit. After hearing arguments, the Registrar, by his decision dated March 24, 1950, directed rectification of the register by inserting a disclaimer in the following terms: "Registration of this Trade Mark shall give no right to the exclusive use of the word 'Shree'."

The respondent company appealed to the High Court at Calcutta under Section 76 of the Act. A Division Bench of the High Court, by its judgment dated August 23, 1951, reversed the Registrar's order. The High Court agreed that "Shree" had numerous meanings and that no trader could claim an exclusive right to it. However, the High Court held that the respondent company had never actually claimed any exclusive right to the word "Shree" separately, and therefore there was no sufficient ground for the Registrar to have inserted the disclaimer. The appeal was allowed and the Registrar's order was set aside. The High Court, recognising that the question was novel and of considerable importance for future practice at the Registry, granted a certificate under Article 133(1)(c) of the Constitution for the matter to be brought before the Supreme Court of India. Hence the present appeal by the Registrar.


The Dispute

The central dispute in this case turned on two related questions. The first was whether the Registrar of Trade Marks had validly exercised his discretionary power under Section 13 of the Trade Marks Act, 1940 to insert a disclaimer of the word "Shree" in the respondent company's registered trade mark. The second, and more fundamental, question was whether the mere fact that a trade mark proprietor has not expressly claimed an exclusive right to a particular non-distinctive word forming part of its mark is a sufficient reason to refuse to impose a disclaimer of that word.

The respondent company's case, as accepted by the High Court, was essentially that since they had never openly asserted any exclusive statutory right to the word "Shree" standing alone, there was no practical need for the disclaimer, and the Registrar's order was unwarranted. The Registrar's position, on the other hand, was that the respondent company's conduct and the statements of its own counsel clearly showed that it was in fact asserting a claim to the exclusive use of "Shree" through the registration of its composite mark, and that it was precisely to prevent such an extravagant claim that the disclaimer was necessary.


Reasoning and Analysis of the Court, Including Judgments Discussed

The judgment was delivered by Justice Sudhi Ranjan Das on behalf of a three-judge bench also comprising Justice S.B. Sinha and Justice N.H. Bhagwati.

The Court began its analysis by closely examining Section 13 of the Trade Marks Act, 1940, which is the provision governing disclaimers. That section provided that where a trade mark contains either a part that is not separately registered by the proprietor or any matter that is common to the trade or otherwise of a non-distinctive character, the tribunal — being the Registrar or the Court — may, as a condition of registration, require the proprietor to disclaim any right to the exclusive use of such part or matter to which the tribunal holds the proprietor is not entitled. An important proviso to the section made clear that a disclaimer would not affect any rights of the proprietor except those arising from the registration itself, thereby leaving intact any rights under common law or under the Indian Penal Code that the proprietor might have acquired through long use.

The Court identified four key features of Section 13 that needed to be properly understood.

The first feature was that the power to impose a disclaimer was not automatic even after the existence of the required facts was established. The section required as a threshold condition that one of two "jurisdictional facts" must first be present — either the mark contains a part not separately registered, or the mark contains matter common to the trade or of a non-distinctive character. But the existence of one of these jurisdictional facts, while necessary, was not by itself sufficient to justify the imposition of a disclaimer. The section used an enabling form — empowering the tribunal to impose a disclaimer — which meant the power was always a matter of discretion to be exercised judicially, not mechanically. In support of this principle, the Court referred to the observations of Lord Halsbury in Sharp v. Wakefield, LR 1891 AC 173, where the principle of judicial exercise of discretion was laid down, and to the English case of In re Albert Baker Co.'s Application and In re Aerated Bread Company's Application, LR [1908] 2 Ch. 86, commonly known as the A.B.C. case. In that case, Justice Eve had held, while dealing with Section 15 of the English Trade Marks Act of 1905, that the condition of disclaimer was one for the imposition of which some good reason ought to be established, rather than one which must be imposed unless good reason to the contrary was shown. The power was in an enabling form and must only be exercised for good cause shown.

The second feature of Section 13 was the question of how a High Court should approach an appeal from a Registrar's discretionary decision. The Court noted that Section 13 conferred discretionary power on the "tribunal," which by virtue of Section 2(n) of the Act meant both the Registrar and the Court. In deciding an appeal from the Registrar, the High Court would have a concurrent discretionary power. However, the Court emphasised, adapting the language of Lord Macnaghten in Eno v. Dunn, LR [1890] 15 AC 252, that it was the Registrar who was "in the first instance committed the discretionary power." If the Registrar had exercised that discretion in good faith and without violation of law, the High Court ought not to interfere merely because it might have exercised the discretion differently. The proper test for the High Court was that laid down by Lord Dunedin in In re F. Reddaway & Co. Ltd., [1926] 44 RPC 27: whether the Registrar had "really gone so wrong as to make it necessary to interfere with his discretion." The Supreme Court also noted the observations in In the matter of an application by the Diamond T. Motor Car Co., [1921] 38 RPC 373, regarding the approach of the Court when hearing appeals from the Registrar.

The third feature was the underlying purpose of Section 13. The Court noted that the real purpose of requiring a disclaimer was not to confer any direct benefit on rival traders or the general public, but to define the rights of the proprietor under the registration so as to minimise the possibility of extravagant claims being made by proprietors on the strength of their trade mark registrations. The Court referred to In re Smokeless Powder Co.'s Trade Mark, LR [1892] 1 Ch. 590, as an illustration of attempts by proprietors to expand the operation of their trade marks beyond legitimate bounds. The Court also referred to Greers Ltd. v. Pearman and Corder Ltd., [1922] 39 RPC 406 — known as the "Banquet" case — as an example of proprietors making exaggerated claims to exclusive use of parts of their marks in spite of having expressly disclaimed those parts.

The fourth feature the Court discussed was the proviso to Section 13, which preserved intact any rights the proprietor might have under any other law. A disclaimer only affected rights arising from the registration itself. The proprietor's rights acquired through long use — whether under common law or under the Indian Penal Code — were wholly unaffected by the disclaimer.

The Court then turned to the High Court's reasoning in the present case. The High Court had relied heavily on the English case of In re Cadbury Brothers' Application, LR [1915] 2 Ch. 307; 32 RPC 456, which had been decided under Section 9 of the English Act of 1905. In that case, the Registrar had declined registration because the mark contained the word "Tudor," which was a surname that could not be separately registered by him without the order of the Board of Trade. The Registrar had acted pursuant to an inflexible practice of refusing registration or insisting on a disclaimer wherever the mark contained such a word, without making any investigation into whether the word was distinctive or not. Justice Sargant had overruled the Registrar because on the evidence the word "Tudor" was actually distinctive and identified the goods of the applicant, and the Registrar had not made any finding on that question at all, acting purely on the basis of an inflexible mechanical practice.

The Supreme Court distinguished the Cadbury Brothers case carefully from the facts before it. In the present case, unlike in Cadbury Brothers, both the Registrar and the High Court had concurrently found as a matter of fact that the word "Shree" was not adapted to distinguish and was incapable of being exclusively owned by any trader. There was therefore no question of the word being distinctive in the way that "Tudor" had been found distinctive in relation to chocolates. Further, the Court noted that the Registrar in the present case had not acted purely on the basis of an inflexible mechanical practice. He had in fact adverted to several important substantive considerations that justified the disclaimer, and the High Court had failed to appreciate this.

The Court then turned to what it considered the most telling evidence in the case — the respondent company's own conduct and statements. Throughout the affidavit filed before the Registrar, the company had repeatedly referred to its trade mark as "the said mark SHREE." In the agents' letter of February 15, 1944 objecting to any disclaimer, the mark was referred to as "trade mark Shree" and it was stated to be "very important in the device." The company had claimed that its ghee was commonly designated by the trade mark "Shree" and asked for under that name. The two successful criminal prosecutions in 1934 and 1935 showed that the company actively asserted rights in the word. Most revealingly, when the company's counsel was asked by the Registrar how the company would be affected by a disclaimer of the word "Shree," counsel frankly stated that it was far easier to succeed in an infringement action than in a passing off action. The Supreme Court found this admission deeply significant. It demonstrated clearly that the respondent company's real purpose in resisting the disclaimer was precisely to avail of the easier remedy of an infringement action — which flows from registration — against any rival trader who might use the word "Shree" in their mark for ghee, without having to prove all the additional facts that would be required in a passing off action.

The Court also noted the observation of Lord Radcliffe in De Cordova and Others v. Vick Chemical Coy., [1951] 68 RPC 103, that if a word forming part of a mark has come in trade to be used to identify the goods of the owner, using that word as part of another trader's mark could amount to infringement of the whole mark, as confusion was likely to result. This observation might well have encouraged the respondent company to pursue infringement actions on the strength of the registration alone, without having to prove all the facts needed for a passing off action.

The Court also cited a number of other English cases to reinforce the principle that the registration of a composite device mark as a whole does not confer any exclusive statutory right to any individual word or part contained within it. Lord Esher's observation in Pinto v. Badman, 8 RPC 181, was referred to, to the effect that "the truth is that the label does not consist of each particular part of it, but consists of the combination of them all." The same principle was found in In re Apollinaris Company's Trade Marks, LR [1891] 2 Ch. 186, In re Clement and Cie, LR [1900] 1 Ch. 114, and the A.B.C. case referred to earlier. However, the Court pointed out that even accepting this principle, a disclaimer might still be necessary and appropriate because Section 13 itself, in clause (a), expressly contemplates a disclaimer in respect of parts contained in a mark that has been registered as a whole. Therefore, the argument that registration of the whole mark gave no exclusive right to any individual part was not a reason to refuse a disclaimer — if anything, it was one of the very jurisdictional bases on which a disclaimer might be imposed.


Final Decision of the Court

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal filed by the Registrar of Trade Marks and set aside the judgment of the High Court at Calcutta. The Court held that the Registrar had properly exercised his discretion in directing the insertion of a disclaimer of the word "Shree" in the respondent company's trade mark No. 3815. The High Court had been in error in interfering with the Registrar's discretion, particularly because it had failed to take into account the important consideration that the respondent company was, through its conduct and statements, effectively asserting a claim to the exclusive use of the word "Shree" by virtue of registration, and intended to use that registration to bring infringement actions against rival traders who might use the word "Shree" without having to prove the additional facts that a passing off action or a prosecution under the Indian Penal Code would require. The respondent company was directed to pay the Registrar's costs both in the Supreme Court and in the High Court.


Point of Law Settled in the Case

This judgment of the Supreme Court settles several important and enduring principles of trade mark law in India. First, the power to require a disclaimer under Section 13 of the Trade Marks Act, 1940 is a discretionary power and must be exercised judicially on good cause shown, not automatically merely because the jurisdictional facts exist. Second, when the Registrar has exercised this discretion in good faith and without violation of law, a High Court hearing an appeal ought not to substitute its own view for that of the Registrar unless the Registrar has gone so clearly wrong as to make interference necessary. Third, the true purpose of a disclaimer is to define the rights of a trade mark proprietor under the registration so as to prevent extravagant and unauthorised claims being made on the strength of registration for elements of the mark that are non-distinctive and cannot be exclusively owned by any trader. Fourth, the fact that a composite mark is registered as a whole does not mean a disclaimer of a non-distinctive element within it is inappropriate — on the contrary, such a disclaimer is specifically contemplated by the statute. Fifth, a disclaimer does not deprive the proprietor of any rights acquired through long use; those rights under common law, passing off law, or criminal law under the Indian Penal Code remain fully intact.


Case Details

Title: The Registrar of Trade Marks Vs. Ashok Chandra Rakhit Ltd.

Date of Order: April 15, 1955

Neutral Citation: MANU/SC/0052/1955

Equivalent Citations: AIR 1955 SC 558; [1955] 2 SCR 252

Name of Court: Supreme Court of India

Name of Hon'ble Judges: Justice S.B. Sinha, Justice N.H. Bhagwati, and Justice Sudhi Ranjan Das


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

  1. Registrar of Trade Marks vs Ashok Chandra Rakhit 1955: Supreme Court on Disclaimer of Non-Distinctive Words in Trade Marks
  2. Disclaimer in Trade Mark Law India: The Shree Trade Mark Case AIR 1955 SC 558 Explained
  3. Section 13 Trade Marks Act 1940: When Can the Registrar Insert a Disclaimer? Supreme Court Ruling
  4. Non-Distinctive Words in Registered Trade Marks India: Lessons from the Shree Ghee Trade Mark Case
  5. Trade Mark Disclaimer India: How the Supreme Court Protected Public Interest in the Ashok Chandra Rakhit Case

Suggested SEO Tags

Registrar of Trade Marks vs Ashok Chandra Rakhit, AIR 1955 SC 558, trade mark disclaimer India, Section 13 Trade Marks Act 1940, non-distinctive trade mark India, Shree trade mark case Supreme Court, disclaimer of word Shree, trade mark registration India 1955, discretionary power Registrar trade marks, jurisdictional facts disclaimer trade mark, trade mark rectification India, passing off versus infringement action India, In re Cadbury Brothers Application 1915, In re Albert Baker Company ABC case, Sharp v Wakefield discretion, Eno v Dunn Lord Macnaghten, In re F Reddaway Co 1926 RPC, De Cordova v Vick Chemical Company 1951 RPC, Pinto v Badman trade mark label, composite trade mark disclaimer India, non-distinctive character trade mark India, exclusive right word trade mark, trade mark registration ghee India, Indian Trade Marks Act 1940 disclaimer provision, AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman, IPAdjutor


Headnote

The Registrar of Trade Marks vs. Ashok Chandra Rakhit Ltd., AIR 1955 SC 558

Supreme Court of India | April 15, 1955 | Justice S.B. Sinha, Justice N.H. Bhagwati, Justice Sudhi Ranjan Das

Trade Marks Act, 1940 — Sections 2, 13, 46(4) — Disclaimer of word forming part of registered trade mark — Non-distinctive word — Discretionary power of Registrar — Scope of appellate interference.

The respondent company was the registered proprietor of trade mark No. 3815 in respect of ghee, being an ornamental device containing the word "Shree" prominently in Bengali, Devanagari, and as part of the firm's name. The Registrar initiated suo motu proceedings and, by order dated March 24, 1950, directed insertion of a disclaimer stating that the registration gave no right to the exclusive use of the word "Shree," finding that the word was not adapted to distinguish and was in widespread auspicious and commercial use by Hindus. The Calcutta High Court reversed this order on the ground that the respondent had never claimed exclusive right to the word "Shree." The Registrar appealed.

Held, allowing the appeal: (1) The power to require a disclaimer under Section 13 of the Trade Marks Act, 1940 is discretionary and arises only on the existence of one of two jurisdictional facts specified in clauses (a) and (b) of the section. Even after the jurisdictional fact is established, a disclaimer must be imposed only for good cause shown. (2) Where the Registrar has exercised his discretion in good faith and not in violation of law, a High Court hearing an appeal ought not to interfere merely because it would have exercised the discretion differently; the test is whether the Registrar has really gone so wrong as to make interference necessary. (3) The true purpose of a disclaimer is to define the rights of the proprietor under the registration and to prevent extravagant claims to non-distinctive elements. The respondent company's own conduct and its counsel's frank admission that infringement actions were easier than passing off actions demonstrated that it was claiming effective exclusive rights to the word "Shree" through registration. This was precisely the situation the disclaimer provision was designed to prevent. (4) A disclaimer does not affect any rights of the proprietor except those arising from the registration; rights under common law, passing off actions, or criminal proceedings under the Indian Penal Code remain unaffected. The Registrar's order was restored.

SC-Ram Kishore Vs. State of Uttar Pradesh

Ram Kishore vs. State of U.P.: A Landmark Ruling on Trade Mark Infringement, Limitation, and Acquiescence


Introduction

Trade mark law exists to protect honest traders from unscrupulous competitors who attempt to ride on the goodwill and reputation built by others over years of diligent business conduct. When a trader copies the mark of another, the public gets deceived and the genuine trade mark owner suffers both economically and reputationally. The criminal provisions embedded in trade mark legislation are specifically designed to deter such dishonest conduct. The Supreme Court of India, in its judgment dated March 28, 1966 in Ram Kishore vs. State of Uttar Pradesh, addressed two critical and interrelated questions arising from a criminal prosecution for trade mark infringement under the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958. The first question concerned whether the prosecution was barred by the law of limitation under Section 92 of that Act, and the second was whether the conduct of the trade mark owner amounted to acquiescence, thereby legitimising the infringer's continued use of the deceptively similar mark. The Supreme Court's ruling in this case settles important points of law regarding how limitation is to be computed in criminal proceedings involving trade mark offences and what constitutes assent or acquiescence on the part of a trade mark proprietor.


Factual and Procedural Background

The complainants in this case were a firm by the name of M/s Nandoo Ram Khedan Lal, engaged in the business of selling chewing tobacco in the city of Varanasi. For many years prior to the events in question, they had been marketing their product under the registered trade mark "Titli," which in English means "butterfly." The label on their tobacco containers was distinctive and recognisable — it featured figures of three butterflies set against a yellow-green background, with the word "Titli" printed in both Devnagari and English characters.

The appellant, Ram Kishore, was also engaged in the business of selling chewing tobacco in Varanasi. At some point before 1955, he began marketing his own product under the name "Titli," which in his case was intended to refer to "partridge." However, the label on his tobacco containers bore figures of four butterflies set against a leaf-green background, again with the word "Titli" inscribed in both Devnagari and English characters. The colour schemes of the butterflies on both labels were substantially similar to each other.

In January 1955, the complainants wrote a formal letter to Ram Kishore asserting that "Titli" was their registered trade mark and that he had, with criminal intention, started making unlawful use of their trade mark by copying it and marketing similar but inferior chewing tobacco, thereby passing off his goods as those of the complainants. They called upon him to immediately stop selling goods bearing labels resembling their trade mark. Ram Kishore replied to this letter denying all the allegations. He claimed he had never used the trade mark "Titli" on his goods and further asserted that he had in fact been marketing his goods under that name for many years, and that it was the complainants who were attempting to pass off their product as his. After this exchange of letters in 1955, no further legal action was taken by the complainants for several years.

Then, in November 1960, the complainants lodged information with the police that Ram Kishore was infringing their trade mark. On November 25, 1960, Ram Kishore was found to be in possession of counterfeit labels that could be used to pass off his tobacco tins as the goods of the complainants bearing the "Titli" butterfly trade mark, and he was also found in possession of tobacco tins bearing counterfeit versions of that trade mark for the purpose of sale. A charge-sheet was filed in the Court of the Magistrate, 1st Class, Varanasi on March 22, 1961.

The Trial Magistrate convicted Ram Kishore and sentenced him to simple imprisonment for three months for offences under Section 78 read with Section 77 and Section 79 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, and directed that the two sentences run consecutively. On appeal, the Sessions Judge at Varanasi set aside the conviction and acquitted Ram Kishore primarily on the ground that the prosecution was barred by limitation under Section 92 of the Act, since the complainants had come to know of the infringement as early as 1955. The matter then came before the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad, which overturned the acquittal and restored the conviction, but reduced the sentences on each charge to a fine of Rs. 1,000 each. Ram Kishore then obtained a certificate from the High Court under Article 134 of the Constitution and preferred the present appeal before the Supreme Court of India.


The Dispute

The central dispute before the Supreme Court revolved around two distinct but connected arguments advanced by the appellant Ram Kishore to challenge his conviction.

The first argument was that the prosecution was barred by limitation under Section 92 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958. The appellant's case was that since the complainants had themselves admitted, through the letter written in January 1955, that they were already aware of his use of the "Titli" mark, the two-year limitation period from the date of discovery of the offence had long since expired by the time they lodged the complaint in November 1960. In other words, the appellant was arguing that time began to run from the first discovery of the infringement in 1955, and not from the date of the actual offence charged in 1960.

The second argument was that the complainants had, through their long silence between 1955 and 1960, acquiesced to the use of the trade mark by the appellant. The appellant contended that this acquiescence effectively amounted to assent by the proprietors of the trade mark, and that under Section 77 of the Act, making a deceptively similar mark without the assent of the proprietor is what constitutes falsification. Since there was assent through acquiescence, the argument ran, no offence had been committed at all.


Reasoning and Analysis of the Court, Including Judgments Discussed

The judgment was delivered by Justice J.C. Shah on behalf of a three-judge bench comprising Justice K.N. Wanchoo and Justice S.M. Sikri as well.

On the factual question of whether there was a close resemblance between the two labels that was likely to deceive buyers, the Court noted that the Trial Magistrate had examined the labels carefully and found that the vast majority of users of such tobacco being illiterate were likely to be misled by the pictorial device of "Titli" (butterfly), since they could not read the descriptions on the labels in Devnagari or in English. Both the Sessions Court and the High Court had agreed with this finding, and the Supreme Court found no reason to disturb it, observing that no substantial argument had been advanced before it that would justify a different view.

On the question of limitation, the Court undertook a careful and detailed analysis of Section 92 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958. The Section, to the extent relevant, reads: "No prosecution for an offence under this Act shall be commenced after the expiration of three years next after the commission of the offence charged, or two years after the discovery thereof by the prosecutor, whichever expiration first happens."

The appellant's argument on limitation was essentially that the words "discovery thereof" in Section 92 should be read to mean the "first discovery" of infringement, which had occurred in 1955. The Court firmly rejected this interpretation, saying that the Legislature had deliberately not used the phrase "first discovery" or the phrase "commission of the first infringement," and there was no warrant for reading those words into the statute. The offence charged was the specific act committed on November 25, 1960, and the prosecution was commenced by filing the charge-sheet on March 22, 1961, well within two years of the discovery of that offence and well within three years of its commission.

To support this reasoning, the Court engaged in an important comparative exercise between Section 15 of the earlier Merchandise Marks Act, 1889 and Section 92 of the new Act of 1958. Under Section 15 of the Act of 1889, the language was: "No such prosecution shall be commenced after the expiration of three years next after the commission of the offence, or one year after the first discovery thereof by the prosecutor, whichever expiration first happens." The Court pointed out that the older provision had expressly used the phrase "first discovery" and the limitation period was one year. The new provision in the Act of 1958 had replaced "first discovery" with simply "discovery" and extended the limitation period to two years. This was described by the Court as a deliberate and significant departure by the Legislature.

The Court examined three earlier judicial decisions in this context. The Madras High Court in Ruppell v. Ponnusami Jevan and Another, ILR 22 Madras 468, had held, while interpreting Section 15 of the old Act of 1889, that a prosecution commenced more than one year after the first discovery of infringement was barred, even if the infringement was a continuing one. In that case, the complainant had discovered in 1893 that goods were being sold bearing a counterfeit mark similar to his, had protested to the accused, but then waited until 1898 to prosecute. The Madras High Court ruled this was barred. This view was then followed by the Bombay High Court in Abdulsatar Khan Kamruddin Khan v. Ratanlal-Kishenlal, ILR 59 Bombay 551, which held that where infringement is a continuing offence, time runs from the first instance of infringement or from the first discovery of that infringement.

However, the Bombay High Court later overruled its own earlier decision in a Full Bench judgment in Emperor v. Chhotalal Amarchand, ILR (1937) Bombay 183. The Full Bench dissented from the Madras view in Ruppell's case and overruled Abdulsatar Khan's case, holding that the starting point of limitation under Section 15 of the Act of 1889 was in all cases the date of the offence charged, not the date of first discovery.

The appellant had also relied upon the Supreme Court's earlier decision in Dau Dayal v. State of Uttar Pradesh, reported as 1959 CriLJ 524, suggesting that this Court had approved the view in Ruppell's case. The Supreme Court in Ram Kishore's case carefully analysed Dau Dayal and clarified that in that case, the accused was being prosecuted under Sections 420, 482, 483 and 486 of the Indian Penal Code for being in possession of bidis bearing counterfeit trade marks. The complaint was filed on March 26, 1954 and the charge-sheet was submitted on September 30, 1954. The accused had argued that since the offence was discovered on April 26, 1954 and the Magistrate issued process on July 22, 1955 — more than one year after discovery — the prosecution was barred under Section 15 of the old Act. The Supreme Court had rejected this plea. While the judgment in Dau Dayal had incorporated passages from the Madras judgment in Ruppell's case, the Court in Ram Kishore clarified that this had been done only to indicate the general tenor of Section 15 and not to express approval of everything decided in Ruppell's case. In any event, the Court in Ram Kishore concluded that it need not decide whether Ruppell's case was correctly decided, because the matter before it was governed by Section 92 of the new Act of 1958, which had consciously departed from the language of Section 15 of the old Act. Under Section 92, time runs not from the first discovery but from the discovery of the specific offence charged.

On the second argument of acquiescence, the Court turned to Section 77 of the Act, which provides that a person shall be deemed to falsify a trade mark who, without the assent of the proprietor, makes that trade mark or a deceptively similar mark, or who falsifies any genuine trade mark by alteration, addition, effacement or otherwise. The appellant argued that because the complainants had written a letter in 1955 and then done nothing for five years, their silence amounted to tacit assent to his use of the mark. The Court rejected this argument clearly and logically. A protest against infringement is the very opposite of assent. The complainants had written a strong letter in 1955 demanding that Ram Kishore stop using their mark. That letter was not an act of acquiescence; it was an assertion of rights. The Court held that protest against infringement of a trade mark cannot under any interpretation be regarded as assent to the use or application of the false trade mark. The High Court had also, on a review of all the evidence, found that there was no acquiescence on the part of the complainants from which assent could be inferred, and the Supreme Court found no reason to take a different view.


Final Decision of the Court

The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal and upheld the conviction of Ram Kishore as restored by the High Court of Allahabad. The Court affirmed that the prosecution was not barred by limitation since it was initiated in respect of the specific offence committed on November 25, 1960, and not in respect of any earlier alleged infringement. The Court also confirmed that the mere silence of the complainants between 1955 and 1960, following their letter of protest, did not amount to acquiescence or assent to the use of the infringing mark. The fine of Rs. 1,000 on each of the two charges, as imposed by the High Court, stood.


Point of Law Settled in the Case

This judgment settles a significant and lasting point of law in the field of trade mark jurisprudence in India. The Supreme Court definitively clarified that under Section 92 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, the limitation period for a criminal prosecution is to be computed from the date of the commission of the specific offence charged, or from the date of discovery of that specific offence by the prosecutor, and not from the date of the first discovery of any infringement of the trade mark. This interpretation is grounded in the deliberate and conscious departure made by the Legislature in the Act of 1958 from the language of the earlier Act of 1889, which had used the words "first discovery." By omitting the word "first" and replacing it with simply "discovery" of the offence charged, Parliament made plain that each continuing act of infringement gives rise to a fresh cause for prosecution, and the limitation is to be counted from the date of the offence actually charged. The judgment also reinforces the legal principle that a formal protest by a trade mark proprietor against infringement is the antithesis of acquiescence, and cannot be construed as assent under Section 77 of the Act.


Case Details

Title: Ram Kishore Vs. State of Uttar Pradesh

Date of Order: March 28, 1966

Case Number: Criminal Appeal (with certificate under Article 134 of the Constitution of India)

Neutral Citation: MANU/SC/0181/1966

Equivalent Citations: AIR 1966 SC 1820; 1966 CriLJ 1500; [1966] Supp SCR 68

Name of Court: Supreme Court of India

Name of Hon'ble Judges: Justice J.C. Shah, Justice K.N. Wanchoo, and Justice S.M. Sikri


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

  1. Ram Kishore vs State of UP 1966: Supreme Court on Trade Mark Infringement and Limitation Period
  2. Trade Mark Infringement Limitation Period India: Analysis of Ram Kishore vs State of UP AIR 1966 SC 1820
  3. Section 92 Trade and Merchandise Marks Act 1958: Supreme Court Ruling on Limitation in Criminal Prosecution
  4. Acquiescence in Trade Mark Law India: What the 1966 Supreme Court Ruling Really Means
  5. Titli Trade Mark Case 1966: How India's Supreme Court Settled the Law on Limitation and Assent

Suggested SEO Tags

Ram Kishore vs State of UP, AIR 1966 SC 1820, trade mark infringement India, Section 92 Trade and Merchandise Marks Act 1958, limitation period criminal prosecution trademark, acquiescence trade mark law India, Titli butterfly trademark case, Supreme Court India intellectual property 1966, Trade and Merchandise Marks Act 1958, Section 77 trade mark falsification, Merchandise Marks Act 1889 Section 15, Ruppell vs Ponnusami Jevan ILR 22 Madras, Dau Dayal vs State of UP 1959 CriLJ 524, Emperor vs Chhotalal Amarchand Bombay 1937, criminal trade mark law India, chewing tobacco trademark Varanasi, first discovery vs discovery limitation trademark, continuing offence trademark law India, trademark proprietor acquiescence protest, Justice JC Shah Supreme Court, AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman, IPAdjutor


Headnote

Ram Kishore vs. State of Uttar Pradesh, AIR 1966 SC 1820

Supreme Court of India | March 28, 1966 | Justice J.C. Shah, Justice K.N. Wanchoo, Justice S.M. Sikri

Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 — Sections 77, 78, 79, 92 — Criminal prosecution for trade mark infringement — Limitation — Acquiescence.

The appellant was convicted for possessing counterfeit labels and tobacco tins bearing a mark deceptively similar to the registered "Titli" (butterfly) trade mark of the complainants. The complainants had first written to the appellant protesting infringement in January 1955, but filed a criminal complaint only in November 1960 in respect of offences committed on November 25, 1960. The appellant contended that the prosecution was barred under Section 92 of the Act since the complainants had discovered the infringement in 1955, and further that the complainants' long silence amounted to acquiescence and hence assent to the use of the mark under Section 77 of the Act.

Held, dismissing the appeal: (1) Section 92 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 deliberately departed from the language of Section 15 of the Merchandise Marks Act, 1889 by omitting the word "first" before "discovery." Under Section 92, the period of limitation is to be computed from the date of commission of the specific offence charged or from the date of discovery of that specific offence, and not from the date of first discovery of any infringement. The prosecution initiated in respect of offences committed on November 25, 1960 was therefore within time. (2) A formal letter of protest by the trade mark proprietor against infringement does not constitute assent to the use of the infringing mark within the meaning of Section 77. Silence following a protest is not acquiescence amounting to assent. No acquiescence by the complainants was established on the facts.

SC-Pernod Ricard India Private Limited & Another Vs. Karanveer Singh Chhabra

When PRIDE Alone Cannot Establish Infringement: The Supreme Court's Landmark Ruling on Composite Trademarks


Introduction

Trademark law exists at the crossroads of commerce and consumer protection. Its central purpose is to prevent one trader from riding on the coattails of another's hard-earned reputation. Yet the law must equally guard against the monopolisation of ordinary words and commonplace expressions that belong to the public at large. The Supreme Court of India, in its judgment delivered on August 14, 2025, in the case of Pernod Ricard India Private Limited & Another versus Karanveer Singh Chhabra, addressed this delicate balance with considerable thoroughness. The case arose from the whisky industry and involved the question of whether a small regional trader's brand "LONDON PRIDE" was deceptively similar to the internationally renowned brands "BLENDERS PRIDE," "IMPERIAL BLUE," and "SEAGRAM'S" — all owned by the liquor giant Pernod Ricard India Private Limited. The judgment is significant not merely for its outcome, but for the clarity it brings to the application of the anti-dissection rule, the dominant feature test, and the average consumer standard in trademark disputes involving composite marks. It also takes note of recent developments in United Kingdom trademark jurisprudence, particularly the emerging doctrine of post-sale confusion, while explaining why that doctrine did not apply to the facts before it.


Factual and Procedural Background

Pernod Ricard India Private Limited, the first appellant, is one of India's most prominent manufacturers and distributors of wines, liquors, and spirits. Its predecessor, Seagram Company Limited, obtained registration of the trademark "SEAGRAM'S" as far back as February 5, 1945, under Registration No. 105507 in Class 33 covering whisky. The trademark "BLENDERS PRIDE" was coined and adopted by the appellants' predecessor and has been in extensive worldwide use since 1973. It was registered in India on March 25, 1994, under Registration No. 623365 in Class 33 for wines, spirits, and liqueurs. The product was officially launched in the Indian market in 1995 and achieved an annual turnover exceeding INR 1,700 Crores for the financial year 2019-20. The trademark "IMPERIAL BLUE" was launched in India in 1997. Two separate device registrations were obtained for this mark: Registration No. 3296387 dated June 28, 2016, and Registration No. 3327621 dated August 3, 2016, both in Class 33 for alcoholic beverages except beers. The brand "IMPERIAL BLUE" achieved an annual turnover exceeding INR 2,700 Crores for the financial year 2018-19. Both brands enjoy formidable goodwill and reputation in India and internationally.

In May 2019, the appellants became aware that one Karanveer Singh Chhabra, the respondent, had been marketing whisky under the mark "LONDON PRIDE" in the State of Madhya Pradesh using packaging that was allegedly deceptively similar to the appellants' products. The appellants alleged that the respondent was using the "SEAGRAM'S" embossed bottles for his product, in addition to copying the colour combination, get-up, and trade dress of "IMPERIAL BLUE," and adopting a mark phonetically similar to "BLENDERS PRIDE." The respondent, it was pointed out, had only a pending application for the mark "LONDON PRIDE" and had no registered trademark rights of his own.

Aggrieved, the appellants instituted Civil Suit No. 3 of 2020 before the Commercial Court at District Judge Level, Indore, seeking a permanent injunction, damages, account of profits, and delivery up of infringing material. Alongside the main suit, an application under Order XXXIX Rules 1 and 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure was filed seeking an interim injunction. By order dated November 26, 2020, the Commercial Court dismissed the interim injunction application, finding that the only common element was the word "PRIDE" and that the overall packaging, bottle shape, and logos of the two brands were entirely different. The appellants challenged this before the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Indore by filing Misc. Appeal No. 232 of 2021. The High Court, by its judgment dated November 3, 2023, dismissed the appeal, agreeing with the Commercial Court. The appellants then approached the Supreme Court by way of Special Leave Petition No. 28489 of 2023, which was converted into Civil Appeal No. 10638 of 2025 upon leave being granted.


The Dispute

The core dispute before the Supreme Court was whether the respondent's mark "LONDON PRIDE" was deceptively similar to the appellants' registered trademarks "BLENDERS PRIDE," "IMPERIAL BLUE," and "SEAGRAM'S," so as to entitle the appellants to an interim injunction. The appellants contended that the respondent had dishonestly and deliberately imitated multiple elements of their established brands. They pointed out that both "BLENDERS PRIDE" and "LONDON PRIDE" share the word "PRIDE," that the colour combination on the packaging of "LONDON PRIDE" — dark blue, light blue, gold, and white — was identical to "IMPERIAL BLUE," that the dome structure on the label was the same, that the bottle shapes were identical, and that the respondent had been using embossed "SEAGRAM'S" bottles. The appellants argued that the respondent's conduct was not coincidental but was a calculated attempt to pass off his goods as those of the appellants or to create an impression of association.

The respondent denied all allegations and contended that his mark "LONDON PRIDE" was entirely dissimilar in name, appearance, and composition from any of the appellants' marks. He maintained that the products were sold in sealed boxes and that the boxes were visually distinct in terms of colour scheme, typography, logos, and graphics. He also argued that the word "PRIDE" was a common, laudatory English word over which no exclusive rights could be claimed.


Reasoning and Analysis of the Court

The Supreme Court, authored by Justice R. Mahadevan and concurred in by Justice J.B. Pardiwala, undertook an extensive and systematic analysis of the legal framework, precedents, and facts before arriving at its conclusion.

The Court began by setting out the statutory framework under the Trade Marks Act, 1999. It noted that Section 2(1)(h) defines "deceptively similar" as a mark that so nearly resembles another as to be likely to deceive or cause confusion. Section 17(1) grants exclusive rights over the trademark taken as a whole upon registration. Section 17(2) clarifies that where a trademark contains any element that is common to the trade or non-distinctive, registration does not confer exclusive rights over that element in isolation. Section 29 defines infringement, and Section 135 empowers courts to grant injunctive relief and other remedies.

The Court then conducted a comprehensive survey of judicial precedents. It referred to the Privy Council decision in Coca-Cola Company of Canada Ltd. v. Pepsi-Cola Company of Canada Ltd., reported at AIR 1942 PC 40, where it was held that the word "Cola" was a common descriptive term used widely in the beverage industry and the distinctive features of the competing marks were "Coca" and "Pepsi" respectively. This case established that the mere presence of a shared element, if that element is descriptive or commonly used, does not create deceptive similarity.

In Corn Products Refining Co. v. Shangrila Food Products Ltd., reported at AIR 1960 SC 142, the Court had found that "Glucovita" and "Gluvita" were phonetically and visually similar and likely to mislead an average consumer with imperfect recollection. The Court noted the principle that where a common element is present in many marks in the same market, purchasers tend to pay more attention to other distinctive features.

In Amritdhara Pharmacy v. Satya Deo Gupta, reported at AIR 1963 SC 449, the Supreme Court had held that marks must be assessed as a whole and not dissected into their component parts. An average purchaser with imperfect recollection goes by the overall impression of the mark rather than its etymological breakdown. The marks "Amritdhara" and "Lakshmandhara" were held deceptively similar on account of their structural and phonetic resemblance in the context of similar medicinal products.

In Kaviraj Pandit Durga Dutt Sharma v. Navaratna Pharmaceutical Laboratories, reported at AIR 1965 SC 980, the Court distinguished infringement from passing off and held that in an infringement action, if the essential features of the plaintiff's mark have been copied by the defendant, differences in get-up, packaging, or additional writing are immaterial. The Court cautioned, however, against mechanical side-by-side comparison and held that the true test is whether the defendant's mark, taken as a whole, is deceptively similar to the plaintiff's registered mark.

In Parle Products (P) Ltd. v. J.P. & Co., Mysore, reported at (1972) 1 SCC 618, the Court laid down that broad and essential features of the rival marks must be considered and that an average purchaser can be misled if one product bears such an overall similarity to another that it is likely to be mistaken for it.

In Cadila Healthcare Ltd. v. Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd., reported at AIR 2001 SC 1952, the Court set out the multifactorial test for passing off actions based on deceptive similarity, which includes the nature of the marks, degree of resemblance phonetically and visually, nature of goods, class of purchasers, mode of purchase, and all surrounding circumstances. The Court also applied the "Pianotist Test" from Pianotist Co. Ltd.'s Application, reported at (1906) 23 RPC 774, which requires simultaneous consideration of visual similarity, phonetic similarity, the nature of goods, the class of consumers, and all surrounding circumstances.

In Khoday Distilleries Limited v. Scotch Whisky Association, reported at (2008) 10 SCC 723, the Supreme Court had held that where the class of buyers is educated and economically well-placed, a different standard of the average consumer applies compared to products sold to illiterate or poor consumers. The Court had rejected the claim that the mark "Peter Scot" was deceptively similar to "Scotch," finding that the adoption was bona fide.

On the issue of interim injunctions, the Court referred to Wander Ltd. v. Antox India (P) Ltd., reported at 1990 Supp SCC 727, which held that appellate courts should be circumspect in interfering with discretionary orders of lower courts in such matters and that interference is warranted only where discretion has been exercised arbitrarily, capriciously, or perversely. Anand Prasad Agarwalla v. Tarkeshwar Prasad, reported at (2001) 5 SCC 568, was cited for the proposition that courts must avoid conducting a mini-trial at the stage of interim injunction. The Court also relied on the recent decision in Ramakant Ambalal Choksi v. Harish Ambalal Choksi and Others, reported at 2024 SCC OnLine SC 3538, which reaffirmed that the trial court's findings at the interim stage deserve appellate deference.

On the principle that exclusive rights cannot be claimed over generic or laudatory terms, the Court referred to Godfrey Philips India Ltd. v. Girnar Food & Beverages Pvt. Ltd., reported at (2004) 5 SCC 257, which unequivocally held that descriptive words denoting the character or quality of goods cannot be exclusively appropriated unless they have acquired distinctiveness through prolonged and exclusive use.

The Court then applied these principles with care to the specific facts. On the question of similarity and distinctiveness, it held that "BLENDERS PRIDE," "IMPERIAL BLUE," and "SEAGRAM'S" are inherently distinctive marks. However, the term "PRIDE," which is a common laudatory English word suggesting excellence or heritage, is widely used in the alcoholic beverages industry. Judicial notice was taken of multiple registrations under Class 33 incorporating "PRIDE" — such as McDowell's Pride, Highland Pride, Royal Pride, Pride of India, Rockford Pride, Royal Pride, and Oak Pride — demonstrating that the word is publici juris and cannot be monopolized by any single trader. The shared use of elements such as blue and gold colours, while noted, was found insufficient to establish deceptive similarity because such colour combinations are common in the premium liquor segment. The placement of elements, design of labels, font styles, and emblems were found to differ in material respects.

On the anti-dissection rule, the Court found that the appellants were, ironically, themselves violating this very principle by isolating the word "PRIDE" as the basis for comparison. The Court held that when the marks "BLENDERS PRIDE," "IMPERIAL BLUE," and "SEAGRAM'S" are compared in their entirety with "LONDON PRIDE," they are structurally, phonetically, and visually distinct. The mere presence of the common word "PRIDE" does not render the competing marks deceptively similar.

Applying the dominant feature test, the Court held that in composite marks like "BLENDERS PRIDE" or "IMPERIAL BLUE," the dominant elements are "BLENDERS" and "IMPERIAL" respectively, owing to their distinctive and less frequently used character. The term "LONDON" in the respondent's mark introduces a geographical identifier that conveys a distinct brand identity. The respondent's mark therefore does not imitate the dominant features of the appellants' marks.

An illuminating analogy was employed by the Court to explain this principle: if a small amount of milk is added to a half-glass of water, the mixture becomes cloudy but the dominant character remains watery. Conversely, if water is added to a half-glass of milk, the result still appears to be milk. Similarly, in trademark analysis, the relative prominence and distinctiveness of the elements determines the overall perception. A dominant feature can shape consumer perception in the same way that milk overwhelms water in the second scenario.

The Court also took note of the fact that the appellants had previously failed in a similar challenge against United Spirits Limited's mark "Royal Challenge American Pride." In Pernod Ricard India (P) Ltd. v. United Spirits Ltd., reported at 2023 SCC OnLine P&H 477, the Punjab and Haryana High Court had held that the appellants had no independent registration for the word "Pride" and could not claim exclusive rights over it. Crucially, the appellants had themselves stated in their reply to the Trademark Registrar's objection during registration proceedings that the word "PRIDE" was not independently distinctive and that the mark must be compared as a whole. Having taken this position before the Registry, they were estopped from now claiming that "PRIDE" was the dominant element warranting protection. The Special Leave Petition filed against this judgment was dismissed by the Supreme Court on September 6, 2023.

The Court noted with concern the observation in Bajaj Auto Ltd. v. TVS Motor Co. Ltd., reported at (2009) 9 SCC 797, that trademark and intellectual property litigation in India is often fought primarily at the stage of interim injunction rather than reaching final adjudication. Citing this judgment, the Court reinforced the need for time-bound disposal of the main suit.

Regarding post-sale confusion, the Court took note of the United Kingdom Supreme Court's recent decision in Iconix Luxembourg Holdings SARL v. Dream Pairs Europe Inc., reported at (2025) UKSC 25, which elaborated on the doctrine of post-sale confusion — the confusion that arises not at the point of purchase but afterwards, when the product is seen in use by the public at large. While the Court found this doctrine significant for future consideration in India, it held that it had no direct application to the facts of the present case since the goods in question — whisky — are intended for private consumption and not for public display.

On the allegation of "SEAGRAM'S" embossing, the Court affirmed the Commercial Court's finding that the bottle produced as evidence by the appellants did not bear the embossed "SEAGRAM QUALITY" mark, and that no invoice or witness was produced to support this claim, rendering the allegation unreliable.

The Court also took a dim view of the appellants' strategy of combining elements from two distinct marks — "BLENDERS PRIDE" and "IMPERIAL BLUE" — to challenge the respondent's mark "LONDON PRIDE." It termed this a hybrid and legally untenable pleading, holding that each mark must be assessed independently and that cherry-picking generic or unregistered features from multiple marks to fabricate a composite infringement claim is not permissible.


Final Decision of the Court

The Supreme Court dismissed Civil Appeal No. 10638 of 2025. It found no grounds to interfere with the concurrent findings of the Commercial Court and the High Court. The appellants had failed to establish a prima facie case of deceptive similarity sufficient to justify the grant of an interim injunction. However, recognising that the main suit was still pending, the Court directed the Commercial Court to proceed with the trial and dispose of Civil Suit No. 3 of 2020 on its merits, uninfluenced by any observations made during the interlocutory proceedings, within four months of the receipt of a certified copy of the judgment. No order as to costs was made.


Points of Law Settled in the Case

The judgment crystallises several important points of law in Indian trademark jurisprudence. First, the word "PRIDE," being a common laudatory term extensively used in the alcoholic beverages industry, is publici juris and cannot be monopolized by any single trader unless it is affirmatively proved to have acquired secondary meaning exclusively pointing to that trader's product. Second, the anti-dissection rule requires marks to be compared as a whole, and a party cannot simultaneously invoke this rule while seeking to isolate a single element for protection. Third, the dominant feature of a composite mark is typically its most inherently distinctive component, and generic or laudatory elements do not ordinarily qualify as dominant features. Fourth, in premium and ultra-premium product markets, the average consumer exercises greater care and attentiveness, which reduces the likelihood of confusion. Fifth, an application for interim injunction requires concurrent satisfaction of prima facie case, balance of convenience, and irreparable harm — the mere existence of one element is insufficient. Sixth, exclusive rights over individual elements of a composite mark, such as bottle shape, colour combinations, or generic words, cannot be asserted unless those elements have been separately registered or have acquired clear secondary meaning. Seventh, the emerging doctrine of post-sale confusion, while now recognized in the United Kingdom, is not yet applicable under Indian law in the context of goods intended for private consumption. Eighth, a party who has relinquished a claim over a standalone word during trademark registration proceedings before the Registrar is estopped from asserting exclusive rights over that word in subsequent infringement or passing off proceedings.


Case Details

Title: Pernod Ricard India Private Limited & Another Vs. Karanveer Singh Chhabra

Date of Order: August 14, 2025

Case Number: Civil Appeal No. 10638 of 2025 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 28489 of 2023)

Neutral Citation: 2025 INSC 981

Name of Court: Supreme Court of India, Civil Appellate Jurisdiction

Name of Hon'ble Judges: Justice J.B. Pardiwala and Justice R. Mahadevan (Judgment authored by Justice R. Mahadevan)


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

  1. Supreme Court on Trademark Infringement: When Sharing a Common Word Does Not Amount to Passing Off
  2. BLENDERS PRIDE vs LONDON PRIDE: Supreme Court Clarifies Dominant Feature Test and Anti-Dissection Rule in Trademark Law
  3. Pernod Ricard v. Karanveer Singh Chhabra 2025 INSC 981: Supreme Court Refuses Interim Injunction in Whisky Trademark Dispute
  4. Can You Own the Word PRIDE? Supreme Court of India Rules on Trademark Monopoly Over Laudatory Terms
  5. Composite Trademarks and Deceptive Similarity: Supreme Court's Landmark 2025 Ruling on BLENDERS PRIDE and LONDON PRIDE
  6. Anti-Dissection Rule in Indian Trademark Law: Supreme Court's Definitive Analysis in Pernod Ricard Case 2025
  7. Post-Sale Confusion Doctrine Enters Indian Trademark Discussion: What the Supreme Court Said in 2025

Suggested SEO Tags

Trademark Infringement India, Deceptive Similarity Trademark, Anti-Dissection Rule Trademark, Dominant Feature Test Trademark, BLENDERS PRIDE Trademark, LONDON PRIDE Trademark, Pernod Ricard India Trademark Case, Supreme Court Trademark 2025, Composite Trademark India, Passing Off India, Trade Marks Act 1999, Section 29 Trade Marks Act, Interim Injunction Trademark, Average Consumer Test Trademark, Post-Sale Confusion India, Laudatory Trademark Terms, Secondary Meaning Trademark, Trade Dress Infringement India, Whisky Trademark Dispute India, Publici Juris Trademark, IMPERIAL BLUE Trademark, SEAGRAM'S Trademark, 2025 INSC 981, Trademark Law India 2025, IP Law India, AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman, IPAdjutor


Headnote

Pernod Ricard India Private Limited & Another v. Karanveer Singh Chhabra 2025 INSC 981 — Supreme Court of India — Civil Appeal No. 10638 of 2025 — Decided August 14, 2025 — Justices J.B. Pardiwala and R. Mahadevan

Trade Marks Act, 1999 — Sections 2(1)(h), 17(1), 17(2), 27(2), 29 — Interim Injunction — Composite Trademark — Anti-Dissection Rule — Dominant Feature Test — Deceptive Similarity — Passing Off — Common Laudatory Term — Publici Juris

The appellants, registered proprietors of well-known trademarks "BLENDERS PRIDE," "IMPERIAL BLUE," and "SEAGRAM'S" used for whisky since 1995 and 1997 respectively, sought an interim injunction against the respondent's mark "LONDON PRIDE" alleging trademark infringement, passing off, and copyright violation. Both Commercial Court and High Court declined interim injunction. Held by Supreme Court dismissing the appeal: (i) The word "PRIDE" being a common laudatory term extensively used across the alcoholic beverages industry is publici juris and cannot be claimed exclusively in the absence of proof that it has acquired secondary meaning exclusively associated with the appellants' goods; (ii) The anti-dissection rule requires marks to be compared as a whole — extracting a single component such as "PRIDE" for isolated comparison is contrary to law; (iii) The dominant elements of "BLENDERS PRIDE" and "IMPERIAL BLUE" are "BLENDERS" and "IMPERIAL" respectively, and these are entirely distinct from "LONDON" in the respondent's mark; (iv) Colour combinations of blue and gold are widely prevalent in premium liquor packaging and cannot independently establish deceptive similarity; (v) Consumers of premium and ultra-premium whisky products are more discerning and likely to exercise greater care, reducing likelihood of confusion; (vi) A party who has relinquished claim over a standalone word before the Trademark Registrar is estopped from asserting exclusive rights over it in subsequent proceedings; (vii) Combining generic or unregistered elements from two distinct marks to construct a hybrid infringement claim is legally untenable; (viii) The doctrine of post-sale confusion, though recognised in United Kingdom trademark jurisprudence in Iconix Luxembourg Holdings SARL v. Dream Pairs Europe Inc. (2025) UKSC 25, is not directly applicable in India to goods intended for private consumption; (ix) Appellate courts must exercise restraint in interfering with concurrent discretionary findings of lower courts on interim injunction applications unless those findings are arbitrary, capricious, or perverse. Main suit directed to be disposed of within four months. Appeal dismissed. No order as to costs.

Blog Archive

Featured Post

WHETHER THE REGISTRAR OF TRADEMARK IS REQUIRED TO BE SUMMONED IN A CIVIL SUIT TRIAL PROCEEDING

WHETHER THE REGISTRAR OF TRADEMARK IS REQUIRED TO BE SUMMONED IN A CIVIL SUIT TRIAL PROCEEDING IN ORDER TO PROVE THE TRADEMARK  REGISTRA...

My Blog List

IPR UPDATE BY ADVOCATE AJAY AMITABH SUMAN

IPR UPDATE BY ADVOCATE AJAY AMITABH SUMAN

Search This Blog