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Latest Business Laws, Legal Insights, News & Updates | The HinduBusinessLine

Corporations have a fundamental duty to protect ecosystem: SC holds How to copyright colours Only strong reforms can clear massive backlog of court cases SC reasserts ‘bail is the rule’ doctrine in landmark ruling Misleading ads: How global brands are testing India’s regulatory framework How the Supreme Court verdict is set to reshape India’s mining industry Income Tax tribunal paves way for double deduction claims Where does the liability of the principal borrower begin and end? Why fixed-dose combination drugs need a tighter leash Who is a ‘workman’? SC reiterates binding nature of government tenders Corporate guarantee: A ‘yearly’ quandary A treaty to protect traditional knowledge IBBI’s proposed ‘guarantees’ under fire Guidelines diminish arbitration’s role in government procurement disputes RBI expands overseas portfolio investment options Balancing business revival and creditor interests under IBC: A statistical insight Upholding tenets of fairness in arbitration ‘Conscious acceptance’ necessary for arbitration agreements AI under new management: EU sets global standard with Artificial Intelligence Act DMRC vs DAMEPL: A legal rollercoaster culminates as SC presents ‘cure’ Indian innovators rally behind Digital Competition Bill New CCI regulations: Tightening the reins on confidential information Amending nuclear law to spur ‘pink’ hydrogen generation Level up or Log out: India’s gaming industry at a crossroads Blurred boundaries: Taxing escrowed funds in M&A deals No consideration, no tax When insolvency meets money laundering Strengthening whistleblowers’ hands Electoral bonds case: Transparency triumphs over donors’ right to privacy Arbitration trumps criminality Vedanta’s environmental violations: A wake-up call for industries Mediation, the future of insolvency resolution? Interpreting Sec 29A(c) of IBC: NCLAT shows how No liability for directors who resigned before cheque issue, rules SC How to save deals from falling apart Madras High Court backs taxpayer in GST delayed payments interest case The promise of voluntary carbon market Are compulsorily convertible debentures debt or equity? Navigating the pre-arbitration maze Making deepfakes work Dissenting creditor’s settlement issue sent to larger bench The permanence of skill in the arena of monetary play SC solves the stamp duty puzzle in arbitration Trademark issues in naming drugs Nomination is not a statutory testament, says Supreme Court in landmark verdict The EU’s AI Act and the Brussels effect Apex court rules in favour of Jindal Steel RBI rules for cybersecurity in financial institutions Non-signatories join the arbitration bandwagon Ramakrishna Forgings wins at SC, set to bag ACIL Is women’s reservation merely a paper tiger? SC gives confidence boost to creditors in landmark verdict Revolutionising real estate insolvency with enhanced protections for homebuyers Property redevelopment approvals: Lessons from Bombay HC M Sricharan RangaRajan’s ‘Treatise on Arbitration’ provides a detailed insight on arbitration CCI’s new merger norms: Hits and misses Streamlining civil litigation: Supreme Court’s comprehensive guidelines Demat mandated for private companies too
Tooth-and-nail fight over trademark colours
By Team Gavel · 2024-06-16 · via Latest Business Laws, Legal Insights, News & Updates | The HinduBusinessLine

On May 28, the Delhi High Court quashed a ‘summoning order’ issued 12 years ago by a metropolitan magistrate. The order summoned the directors of the toothpaste giant Colgate-Palmolive in a longstanding dispute with Anchor Health and Beauty Care Pvt Ltd, over the use of a ‘red and white’ colour combination on Colgate’s toothpaste cartons.

According to Colgate, this is a registered trademark. The two companies have been fighting over the use of a red-and-white trademark for their respective toothpastes. Colgate has sued Anchor, alleging trademark infringement. Anchor, on its part, has alleged that Colgate had forged certain documents relating to trademarks.

Upon Anchor’s complaint that the registration certification of Colgate was forged, the metropolitan magistrate summoned Colgate’s directors as well as the Deputy Registrar of Trade Marks Registry. Anchor’s stand was that the Trade Marks Registry had colluded with Colgate.

Colgate argued that in its application it had clearly mentioned ‘red and white’ colour combination. The Trade Marks Registry committed an error by publishing it as ‘black and white’ in its journal, it said.

The Delhi High Court observed that it was Anchor’s case that the copy of the registration certificate did not match with the application advertisement. Therefore, it was not as though Anchor believed that the seals used in the copy or the signatures of the issuing authority had been forged. Holding that there was no forgery, the court observed that the certified copy of the certificate of registration as well as the advertisement published in the Trade Marks Journal were both signed by the same person — the Deputy Registrar.

This judgement, while highlighting that procedural irregularities do not mean criminal forgery, also underscores the need for procedural correctness in trademark registration. Transgressions of procedural requirements without fraudulent intent do not constitute forgery.

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Published on June 16, 2024