Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
PETITIONER:
PARLE PRODUCTS (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
J. P. & CO. MYSORE
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/01/1972
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
DUA, I.D.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 1359 1972 SCR (3) 289
1972 SCC (1) 618
ACT:
Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, s. 2(d)--Deceptively
similar’--Proper approach by court for determining if one
mark is deceptively similar to another.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants filed a suit for an injunction restraining
the respondents from infringing their registered trade mark
used on packets of biscuits manufactured by them, The suit
was dismissed by the trial court and the High Court.
Allowing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) Under the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958,
a registered trade mark is infringed by a person who uses,
in the course of trade, a mark which is identical with or
deceptively similar to, the trade mark, in relation to any
goods in respect of which the trade mark is, registered; and
the expression ’deceptively similar’ means a mark which so
nearly resembles another mark as likely to deceive or cause
confusion. In order to come to the conclusion whether one
mark is deceptively similar to another the broad and
essential features of the two are to be considered. They
should not be placed side by side to find out if there are
any differences in the design, and if so, whether they are
of such character as to prevent one design from being
mistaken for the other. It would be enough if the impugned
mark bears such an overall similarity to the registered mark
as would be likely to mislead a person usually dealing with
one to accept the other if offered to him. [292 B-D; 294 D-
F]
In this case, the packets of biscuits manufactured by the
appellants and respondents were practically of the same
size, the color scheme of the two wrappers was almost the
same, and the designs on both, though not identical, bore
such a close resemblance that one could easily be mistaken
for the other. If one was not careful enough to note the
peculiar features of the wrapper on the plaintiffs’ goods,
he might easily mistake the defendants’ wrapper for the
plaintiffs’ if shown to him some time after he bad seen the
plaintiffs’ wrapper. Though the trial court and the High
Court had concurrently found that the defendants’ wrapper
was not deceptively similar to that of the plaintiffs, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
finding must be set aside as it was not arrived at on a
proper consideration of the law. 1294 F-H],
Durga Dutt v. Navaratna Laboratories [1965] 1 SC.R. 737
followed.
Karly’s Law, of Trade Marks and Trade Names, 9th ed. para
838 .referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : C.A. No. 1051 of 1967.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
July 5, 1966 of the Mysore High Court in Regular First
Appeal No. 170 of 1963.
290
S. T. Desai and I. N. Shroff, for the appellant.
S. K. Mehta and K. L. Mehta, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter, J. This is an appeal by special leave from a
judgment of the Mysore High Court confirming the dismissal
of a suit for an injunction restraining the respondent from
infringing the registered trade mark of the plaintiffs used
on packets of biscuits.
The facts are as follows. The plaintiffs-appellants before
us are manufacturers of biscuits and confectionery and are
owners of certain registered trade marks. One of them is
the word "Gluco" used on their half pound biscuit packets.
Another registered trade mark of theirs is a wrapper with
its color scheme, general set up and entire collocation of
words registered under the Trade Marks Act 1940 as No. 9184
of 7th December, 1942. This wrapper is used in connection
with the sale of their biscuits known as "Parle’s Gluco
Biscuits" printed on the wrapper. The wrapper is of buff
color and depicts a farm yard with a girl in the centre
carrying a pail of water and cows and hens around her on the
background of a farmyard house and trees. The plaintiffs
claim that they have been selling their biscuits on an
extensive scale for many years past under the said trade
mark which acquired great reputation and goodwill among. the
members of the public. They claimed to have discovered in
March 1961 that the defendants were manufacturing, selling
and offering for sale biscuits in a wrapper which according
to them was deceptively similar to their registered trade
mark. The plaintiffs assert that this act of the defendant
constitutes an infringement of their trade mark rights. As
in spite of lawyer’s notice the defendants persisted in
manufacturing, selling and using the wrappers complained of
with regard to their biscuits, the plaintiffs filed the suit
claiming injunction as already mentioned.
The defendants pleaded ignorance of the registration of the
trade marks claimed by the plaintiffs. They denied that the
wrapper used by them in connection with the sale of their biscu
its was deceptively similar to the plaintiffs’ trade
marks as alleged or that they had in any way infringed the
trade mark rights of the plaintiffs. They pleaded further
that there was a good deal of difference in the design of
their wrapper from that of the plaintiffs and relied on
certain features of their design which were said to be quite
dissimilar to those of the plaintiffs’ wrapper inasmuch as
the defendant’s wrapper contained the picture of a girl
supporting with one band a bundle of hay on her head and
carrying a sickle and a bundle of food in the other, the
cow-, and hens being unlike
291
those of the plaintiffs’ wrappers. There was also said to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
be difference in the design of the buildings on the two
wrappers and the words printed on the two wrappers were
distinct and separate.
The trial court meticulously examined the features found on
the two wrappers and the packets of biscuits produced before
it and took the view that there were greater points of
dissimilarity than of similarity between the two and as such
it was unlikely that the defendants, goods could be passed
off as and for the goods of the plaintiffs. After pointing
out the distinguishing features of the wrappers, the trial
court concluded that there was no chance of a seller
committing fraud on a customer and an ordinary purchaser
would certainly refuse to purchase the defendants’ goods if
he was offered them as and for the plaintiffs’ goods.
Accordingly the trial court held that the plaintiffs had
failed to establish their case.
Although the High Court held that in such a case it was not
necessary for the plaintiffs to adduce evidence that any
particular individual had been deceived by the defendants’
wrapper and it was undeniable that the general get up of the
two wrappers was more or less similar, it went on to observe
that the court had to bear in mind that it was dealing with
packets of biscuits which were generally used by people of
the upper classes, and a purchaser desirous of getting a
packet of Parle biscuits would go and ask for the same as
such, in which case there could be no scope for deception;
again the plaintiffs could have no cause for grievance if a
purchaser was content to buy any biscuits which
were offered to him by the shopkeeper. The High Court also
took the view that there were several’ distinguishing
features between the two wrappers and these could be noticed
even from a distance. According to the High Court, the
similarity in the two wrappers lay in the facts that both
were partly yellow and partly white in color and both bore
the design of a girl and some birds. "But" the High Court
said "there the similarity ends. The lady in the wrapper
used by the plaintiff company has a pot on her hand while,
the lady in the wrapper used by the defendant has a hay-
bundle on her head. In fact, they are not identical in
features. In the defendants’ wrapper we have got a cow and
in the plaintiffs’ wrapper we have got two calves. The
upper portion of the defendants wrapper is not similar to
that of the ,Plaintiffs’ wrapper." The High Court went on to
comment:
"it is true that in a passing off action, one
is not to look to minor details but must take
into consideration the broad features. Even
if we take the broad features of the two
wrappers into consideration, we do not think
that they are similar. At any rate, they are
not so similar as to deceive an ordinary
purchaser of biscuits."
292
With due respect to the learned Judges of the High Court, we
are constrained to remark that they fell into an error. The
plaintiffs’ marks were registered under the Trade Marks Act,
1940 which was however repealed by S. 136 of the Trade
and .,Merchandise Marks Act, 1958. Under sub-s. (2) of the
said section any registration under the Act of 1940 if in
force at the commencement of the Act of 1958 was to continue
in force and have effect as if made, issued and given under
the corresponding provisions of the Act of 1958. Under S.
21(1) of the Act of 1940 the registration of a person in the
register as proprietor of a trade mark in respect of any
goods gave to that person the, exclusive right to the use of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
the Trade mark in relation to those goods and that right was
to be deemed to be infringed by any person who, not being
the proprietor of the trade mark or a registered user
thereof using by way of the permitted use, used a mark
identical with it or so nearly resembling it as to be likely
to deceive or cause confusion, in the course of trade, in
relation to any goods in respect of which it was registered.
Under s. 28(1) of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958
the registration of a trade mark in Part A or Part B of the
register gave to the registered proprietor of the trade mark
the exclusive right to the use of the trade mark in relation
to the goods in respect of which the trade mark was
registered and to obtain relief in respect of the
infringement of the trade mark in the manner provided by the
Act. Under s. 29(1):
"A registered trade mark is infringed by a
person who, not being the registered
proprietor of the trade mark or a registered
user thereof using by way of permitted use,
uses in the course of a trade a mark which is
identical with, or deceptively similar to, the
trade mark, in relation to any goods in
respect of which the trade mark is registered
and in such manner as to render the use of the
mark likely to be taken as being used as a
trade mark."
The expression ’.’deceptively similar" has now been defined
under s. 2(d) of the Act of 1958 thus
"A mark shall be deemed to be deceptively
similar to another mark if it so nearly
resembles that other mark as to be likely to
deceive or cause confusion;"
It is to be noted that although there was no such provision
in the definition section of the Act of 1940 s. 21(1) of the
said Act was to the same effect. The Indian Trade Marks Act
of 1940 was based on the English Trade Marks Act, 1938 and
s. 21 of the Act of 1940 was more or less similar to s. 4 of
the English Act of 1938.
293
To decide the question as to whether the plaintiffs’ right
to a trade mark has been infringed in a particular case, the
approach must not be that in an action for passing off goods
of the defendant as and for those of the plaintiff.
According to this, Court in Durga Dutt v. Navaratna
Laboratories(1):
"While an action for passing off is a Common
Law remedy being in substance an action for
deceit, that is, a passing off by a person of
his own goods as those of another, that is not
the gist of an action for infringement. The
action for infringement is a statutory remedy
conferred on the registered proprietor of a
registered trade mark for the vindication of
the exclusive right to the use of t
he trade
mark, in relation to those goods (vide s. 21
of the Act). The, use, by the defendant of
the trade mark of the plantiff is not
essential in an action for passing off, but is
the sine qua non in the case of an action for
infringement."
In the above case the Court further pointed out
"In an action for infringement, the plaintiff
must, no doubt, make out that the use of the
defendant’s mark is likely to deceive, but
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
where the similarity between the plaintiff’s
and the defendant’s mark is so close either
visually, phonetically or otherwise and the
court reaches the conclusion that there is an
imitation, no further evidence is required to
establish that the plaintiff’s rights are
violated. Expressed in another way, if the
essential features of the trade mark of the
plaintiff have been adopted by the defendant,
the fact that the get-up, packing and other
writing or marks on the goods or on the
packets hi which he offers his goods for sale
show marked differences, or indicate clearly a
trade or’ in different from that of the regis-
tered proprietor of the mark would be
material; whereas in the case of passing off,
the defendant may escape liability if he can
show that the added matter is sufficient to
distinguish his goods from those of the
plaintiff."
According to Karly’s Law of Trade Marks and Trade (9th
edition paragraph 838):
"Two marks, when placed side by side, may
exhibit many and various differences vet the
main idea left on the mind by both may be the
same. A person acquainted with one mark, and
not having the two side by side
.lm0
(1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 737. 754
294
for comparison, might well be deceived, if the
goods were allowed to be impressed with the
second mark, into a belief that he was dealing
with goods which. bore tile same mark as that
with which he was acquainted. Thus, for
example, a mark may represent a game of
football; another mark may show players in a
different dress, and in very different
positions, and yet the idea conveyed by each
might be simply a game of football. It would
be too much to expect that persons dealing
with trade-marked goods, and relying, as they
frequently do, upon marks, should be able to
remember the exact details of the marks upon
the goods with which they are in the habit of
dealing. Marks are remembered rat
her by
general impressions or by some significant
detail than by any photographic recollection
of the whole. Moreover, variations in detail
might well be supposed by customers to have
been made by the owners of the trade mark they
are already acquainted with for reasons of
their own."
It is therefore clear that in order to come to the
conclusion whether one mark is deceptively similar to
another, the broad and essential features of the two are to
be considered. They should not be placed side by side to
find out if there are any differences in the design and if
so, whether they are of such character as to prevent one
design from being mistaken for the other. It would be
enough if the impugned mark bears such an overall similarity
to the registered mark as would be likely to mislead a
person usually dealing with one to accept the other if
offered to him. In this case we find that the packets are
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
practically of the same size, the color scheme of the two
wrappers is almost the same; the design on both though not
identical bears such a close resemblance that one can easily
be mistaken for the other. The essential features of both
are that there is a girl with one arm raised and carrying
something in the other with a cow or cows near her and hens
or chickens in the foreground. In the background there is a
farm house with a fence. The word "Gluco Biscuits" in one
and "Glucose Biscuits" on the other occupy a prominent place
at the top with a good deal of similarity between the two
writings. Anyone in ,our opinion who has a look at one of
the packets to-day may easily mistake the other if shown on
another day as being the same article which he had seen
before. If one was not careful enough to note the peculiar
features of the wrapper on the plaintiffs goods, he might
easily mistake the defendants’ wrapper for the plaintiffs if
shown to. him some time after he had seen the plaintiffs’.
After all, an ordinary purchaser is not gifted with
295
the powers of observation of a Sherlock Holmes. We have
therefore no doubt that the defendants’ wrapper is
deceptively similar to the plaintiffs’ which was registered.
We do not think it necessary to refer to the decisions
referred to at the Bar as in our view each case will have to
be, judged on its own features and it would be of no use to
note on how many points there was similarity and in how many
others there was absence of it.
It was argued before us that as both the trial court and the
High Court had come to the same conclusion namely, that the
defendants, wrapper was not deceptively similar to the
plaintiffs’, the finding is one of fact which should not be
disturbed by this Court. Normally, no doubt this Court does
not disturb a concurrent finding of fact. But where, as
here, we find that,, the finding was arrived at not on
proper consideration of the law on the subject it is our
duty to set the same aside on appeal.
In the result, we hold that the defendant had infringed the
registered trade mark of the plaintiff and the suit of the
plaintiff should be decreed and an injunction granted
restraining the defendant-respondent from selling or using
in any manner whatsoever biscuits in wrappers similar in
appearance to the registered trade mark of the plaintiffs on
their packets. The appellants will be entitled to their
costs throughout.
V.P.S.
Appeal allowed.
296