Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. SABLE WAGHIRE & CO. & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/03/1975
BENCH:
GOSWAMI, P.K.
BENCH:
GOSWAMI, P.K.
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1172 1975 SCR 9
1975 SCC (1) 763
ACT:
Emblems and Names (Prevention of Improper Use) Act, 1950-
Legislative competence of Parliament-Sanctity of names and
emblems of international and national entities-Act, if
covered by Entries 49 and 97 of List I or by Entry 26 of
List II of Schedule VII of the Constitution.
Emblems and Names (Prevention of Improper use) Act, 1950,
Sections 3, 4 and 8-Regulation of use of emblems and names-
"Chhatrapati Shivaji", it could be used as trade name-
Provisions, if suffer from the vice of excessive delegation
of legislative power-Petitioner’s right under Article
19(1)(f) and (g), if violated.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners Nos. 2 to 5 in Writ Petition No. 37 of 1970
are the sole partners of petitioner No. I which is a
registered partnership firm carrying on the business of
manufacturing, marketing and selling bidis under the
pictorial representation and the trade name "Chhatrapati
Shivaji Bidi". The firm is the sole proprietor of the
Registered Trade Mark No. 12549 in respect of the pictorial
representation of the picture of "Chhatrapati Shivaji" and
of the Registered Trade Mark No. 12550 in respect of the
trade name "Chhatrapati Shivaji" registered in the Registry
of Trade Marks, Bombay. The petitioner in Writ Petition No.
38 of 1970 supporting the petitioners in Writ Petition No.
37 of 1970 has submitted the additional petition claiming
the same reliefs. The petitioner in Writ Petition No. 38 of
1970 (the company) has also been implement as respondent no.
4 in Writ Petition No. 37 of 1970. By a declaration dated
November 25, 1938, filed with the Registrar of Assurances at
Bombay, petitioner no. 2 obtained protection for the user of
the said pictorial representation of "Chhatrapati Shivaji"
and for the use of the said trade name as the exclusive
proprietor thereof. In due course under an agreement-dated
June 29, 1967, the firm while retaining exclusive
proprietary rights in respect of the Registered Trade Marks
Nos. 12549 and 12550 gave exclusive right of user thereof to
the company for valuable consideration. By a notification
No. SO/1020 dated March 16, 1968, issued by the Central
Government under section 8 of the Emblems and Names
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(Prevention of Improper Use) Act, 1950, and published in the
Gazette of India on March 23, 1968, in item No,. 9A in the
Schedule to the Act after the words "pictorial
representation of", the words "Chharapati Shivaji Maharaj
or" were inserted. On the representation made by the
petitioners, the Government allowed the petitioners to use
the existing Trade Marks with the name and the pictorial
representation of Chbatrapati Shivaji till May 31, 1969.
The Joint Registrar of Trade Marks (Respondent No. 3) by
Notice No. PR./ 2951 dated October 16, 1969, informed the
firm that the use and registration of the name and the
pictorial representation of "Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj" is
prohibited by virtue of section 3 and 4 of the impugned Act
and the registration of the aforesaid Trade Marks Nos. 12549
and 12550 offended the provisions of section 11 of the Trade
and Merchandise Marks Act 1958 read with section 32(b) of
’the said Act, and, therefore, proposed to rectify the
Register by expunging therefrom the said Trade Marks under
section 56(4) of the said Act. The Registrar called upon
the firm to submit objections if any. The petitioners
applied for extension of time to show cause before the
Registrar and ultimately moved these Writ applications
challenging the constitutional validity of the Act and in
particular of sections 3, 4 and 8 of the Act as well as of
the Notification of the Central Government dated March 16,
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1968. They have also prayed for quashing the Notice of the
Registrar dated October 1 6, 1969. A rule nisi was obtained
on March 2, 1970, with interim stay preventing the
Government from enforcing the provisions of the Act.
It was contended for the petitioners : (1) The Act is void
for want of legislative competence, (ii) Sections 3, 4 and 8
of the Act suffer from the vice of excessive delegation of
legislative power; (iii) The Act has become unworkable
because no rules have been framed tinder section 9 of the
Act; and (iv) The Notification tinder section 8 was not
published in the name of the President and was issued by the
Under Secretary who was not authorised to do so.
Rejecting the contentions and dismissing the Writ Petitions
HELD : (i) Entry 49 of List I may well supply the coverage
for the Union legislative field so far as the Act is
concerned. Trade marks, designs and merchandise marks may
legitimately take in matters relating to their abuses and
improper uses. Even otherwise the residuary entry 97 of
List I is of wide amplitude to take care of the particular
subject matter of legislation, namely, prevention of
improper use of certain emblems and names for professional
and/or commercial purposes. [14G]
(ii)The scheme disclosed in the provisions of the Act read
with the preamble, and the Objects and Reasons make it clear
that there was imperative necessity for regulating the use
of certain emblems and names. The fact that only improper
use of the names and emblems is prohibited itself provides
guidance. The original entries in the Schedule would also
point to the nature and character of the names, emblems and
entities. It is not possible for the Parliament to envisage
the possibility of improper use of all names and emblems as
time goes on. Nor is it possible to enumerate in the
Schedule in exhaustive list of all the names, emblems and
entities. Section 8, therefore, makes provision for
empowering the Central Government to add to or alter the
Schedule. In the nature of things, there is no abdication
of legislative function by Parliament in delegating its
power under section 8 in favour of the Central Government
which will be the appropriate authority to consider from
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time to time as to the items to be included in or omitted
from the Schedule in the light of knowledge and experience
gathered from the nook and corner of the entire country.
There is, therefore, no excessive delegation of legislative
power by Parliament in favour of the Central Government.
[16A-B]
The petitioners’ right to trade in bidis is not at all
interfered with by the legislation. Section 3 in terms
provides for enabling the affected persons to adjust their
business or affairs inasmuch as the Central Government can
permit some time to alter their emblems, designs, etc. to
carry on with their trade. Indeed in the present case the
petitioners on their own application obtained ,in extension
of time presumably under section 3 of the Act and,
therefore, cannot complain on that score. There is built-in
safeguard in section 3 itself for mitigating any hardship to
persons or any rigor of the law. The provisions are
accordingly regulatory in nature and even, if at all, they
impose only reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the
petitioner-,’ right under Article 19(1)(f) and (g).Section 4
is a consequential provision and validly co-exists with
section 3. [16FG]
(iii) From the scheme and machinery of the Act there is
nothing to indicate that absence of rules will make the Act
unworkable. [16G-H]
(iv) The Notification is not an executive order but is a
piece of subordinate legislation made by the Central
Government under section 8 of the Act. It was duly
published in the Gazette of India over the signature of the
Under Secretary who was authorised for the purpose.
’Therefore, the question of violation of Article 77 does not
arise. [17A]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos. 37 and 38 of
1970.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India.
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B. D. Bal, J. V. Deshpande, O. C. Mathur and D. N.
Mishra, for the petitioners.
L. N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India, G. L. Sanghi and
Girish Chandra, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GOSWAMI, J.-The petitioners Nos. 2 to 5 in Writ Petition No.
37 of 1970 are the sole, partners of petitioner No. 1 which
is a registered partnership firm (briefly the firm) carrying
on the business of manufacturing, marketing and selling
bidis under the pictorial representation and the trade name
"Chhatrapati Shivaji Bidi". The firm is the sole proprietor
of the Registered Trade Mark No. 12549 in respect of the
pictorial representation of the picture of "Chhatrapati
Shivaji" and of the Registered Trade Mark No. 12550 in
respect of the trade name "Chhatrapati Shivaji" registered
in the Registry of Trade Marks, Bombay. The petitioner in
Writ Petition No. 38 of 1970 supporting the petitioners in
Writ Petition No. 37 of 1970 has submitted the additional
petition claiming the same reliefs. In fact the petitioner
in Writ Petition No. 38 of 1970 (briefly the company) has
also been impleaded as respondent No. 4 in Writ Petition No.
37 of 1970.
According to the petitioners the business of manufacturing
bidis according to special formulae and processes and of
marketing and selling them under the pictorial
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representation of "Chhatrapati Shivaji" and under the trade
name "Chhatrapati Shivaji" was first started in about the
year 1928 by one Raghunath Ramchandra Sable, the father of
petitioners 2 and 4. It is stated that Raghunath Ramchandra
Sable adopted the said pictorial representation and the said
trade name in. response to a call of the then popular
leaders to adopt the name of Chhatrapati Shivaji in relation
to all articles designed for public use or consumption with
a view to popularise and keep before the public eye the
image of the national hero, Chhatrapati Shivaji. By a
declare Lion dated November 25, 1938, filed with the
Registrar of Assurances at Bombay, petitioner No. 2 obtained
protection for the user of the said pictorial representation
of "Chhatrapati Shivaji" and for the use of the said trade
name as the exclusive proprietor thereof. In due course
under an agreement dated June 29, 1967, the firm while
retaining exclusive proprietary rights in respect of the
Registered Trade Marks Nos. 12549 as 12550 gave exclusive
right of user thereof to the company for valuable
consideration. It is said that the bidi business developed
on a very vast and extensive scale and the sale of bidis
marketed and sold under the pictorial representation of
"Chhatrapati Shivaji" and the words "Chhatrapati Shivaji"
associated therewith came to over Rs. 2 chores. The
business also spread to different States.
Trouble started when by a Notification No. SO/1020 dated
March 16, 1968. issued by the Central Government under
section 8 of the Emblems and Names (Prevention of Improper
Use) Act, 1950 (briefly the Act) and published in the
Gazette of India on March 23, 1968, in item No. 9A in the
Schedule to the Act after the words
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"pictorial representation of", the words "Chhatrapati
Shivaji Maharaj or" were inserted. We have, therefore, to
turn our attention to the Act.
The long title of the Act is The Emblems and Names
(Prevention of Improper Use) Act, 1950. The preamble shows
that it is "an ’Act to prevent the improper use of certain
emblems and names for professional and commercial purposes".
The Act extends to the whole of India and also applies to
citizens of India outside India. It was brought into force
from September 1, 1950. Section 3 which is the most
important section reads as under :
Prohibition of Improper use of certain emblems
and names.
3."Notwithstanding anything contained in any
law for the time being in force, no person
shall, except in such cases and under such
conditions as may be prescribed by the Central
Government, use, or continue to use, for the
purpose of any trade, business, calling or
profession, or in the title of any patent, or
in any trade mark or design, any name or
emblem specified in the Schedule or any
colorable imitation thereof without the
previous permission of the Central Government
or of such officer of Government as may be
authorised in this behalf by the Central
Government".
Section 4 prohibits registration of certain
companies, etc. and is as follows :--
4(1). "Notwithstanding anything contained in
any law for the time being in force, no
competent authority shall,-
(a) register any company, firm or other body
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of persons which bears any name, or
(b) register a trade mark or design which
bears any emblem or name, or
(c) grant a patent in respect of any
invention which bears a title containing any
emblem or name;
if the use of such name or emblem is in
contravention of section 3.
(2)If any question arises before a competent
authority whether any emblem is an emblem
specified in the Schedule or a colourable
imitation thereof, the competent authority may
refer the question to the Central Government,
and the decision of the Central Government
thereon shall be final.
Section 5 which imposes penalty for
contravention of section 3 of the Act runs as
follows :-
5. "Any person who contravenes the
provisions of section 3
shall be punishable with fine which may extend
to five hundred rupees".
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Section 8 reads as under
Power of the Central Government to amend the
Schedule.
8. "The Central Government may, by
notification in the
Official Gazette, add to or alter the
Schedule, and any such addition or alteration
shall have effect as if it had been made by
this Act".
Section 9 empowers the Central Government to make rules to
carry out the purposes of the Act. Originally the Schedule
attached to the Act had only three items, namely,-
(1) The name, emblem or official seal of the
United Nations Organization;
(2) The name, emblem or official seal of the
World Health Organization; and
(3) The Indian National Flag.
But by various notifications of the Central Government in
the course of several years the Schedule now contains 17
items of which we are now concerned only with item No. 9A
which as amended by the impugned Notification dated March
16, 1968, stands as under
9A. "The name or pictorial representation of
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj or Mahatma Gandhi
or the Prime Minister of India (except the
pictorial use thereof on calendars where only
the name of the manufacturers and printers of
the calendars are given and the calendars are
not used for advertising goods)."
It is, therefore, clear that under section 3 read with the
Schedule as amended the petitioners will not be able to use
for the purpose of their trade or business the particular
Trade Marks containing the name or emblem of Chhatrapati
Shivaji.
The petitioners represented to the Government of India in
the Commerce Department about the hardship caused to them
and requested for extension of time upto March 31, 1972 for
continuing to the use the said Trade Marks. The Government
allowed the petitioners time to use the existing Trade Marks
with the name and the pictorial representation of
Chhatrapati Shivaji till May 31, 1969. After the expiry, of
the aforesaid date no further extension of time was granted.
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The Joint Registrar of Trade Marks (Respondent No. 3) by
Notice No. PR/2951 dated October 16, 1969, informed the firm
that the use and registration of the name and the pictorial
representation of "Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj" is
prohibited by virtue of sections 3 and 4 of the impugned Act
and the registration of the aforesaid Trade Marks Nos. 12549
and 12550 offended the provisions of section 11 of the Trade
and Merchandise Marks Act 1958 read with section 32(b) of
the said Act and, therefore, proposed to rectify the
Register by
14
expunging therefrom the said Trade Marks under section 56(4)
of the said Act. The Registrar called upon the firm to
submit objections if any. The petitioners applied for
extension of time to show cause before the Registrar and
ultimately moved these Writ applications challenging the
constitutional validity of the Act and in particular of
sections 3, 4 and 8 of the Act as well as of the
Notification of the Central Government dated March 16, 1968.
They have also prayed for quashing the Notice of the
Registrar dated October 16, 1969. A rule nisi was obtained
on March 2, 1970, with interim stay preventing the
Government from enforcing the provisions of the Act.
Mr. Bal, learned counsel for the petitioners, submits that
the Act is void for want of legislative ’competence of the
Parliament. According to him the subject matter of the
legislation relates to "trade and commerce" and, therefore,
falls squarely within entry No. 26 of List 11 of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution. Hence the Parliament is not
competent to make the law in question. On the other hand,
the learned Solicitor General, contends that the pith and
substance of the legislation as gathered from the preamble,
the marginal note of section 3 and the illustrations
furnished by the Schedule is the preservation of sanctity of
the names and emblems of international and national
entities, and not "Trade and commerce within the State".
Hence the residuary entry 97 of List I will be attracted.
Alternatively, he submits the legislation is closer to entry
No. 49 "Patents, inventions, designs, copyright, trade marks
and merchandise marks" in List No. 1 of the Seventh
Schedule.
In considering the question of competency of legislation
and, for the matter of that, in interpreting the entries in
the Lists of the Seventh Schedule a broad and liberal
approach has been a well-settled rule of the Court. The
subject matter of the legislation is also to be gathered
from the totality of the provisions of the Act read with the
preamble and the Schedule. So read it is clear that the Act
does not concern itself directly or even substantially with
trade or commerce.
Entry 49 of List I may well supply the coverage for the
Union legislative field so far as the Act is concerned.
Trade marks, designs and merchandise marks may legitimately
take in matters relating to their abuses and improper uses.
Even otherwise the residuary entry 97 of List I is of wide
amplitude to take care of the particular subject’ matter of
legislation, namely, prevention of improper use of certain
emblems and names for professional and/or commercial
purposes. The objection on the score of legislative
incompetency of Parliament is. therefore, devoid of merit.
Next attack is upon sections 3, 4 and 8 of the Act. It is
contended that sections 3, 4 and 8 confer unguided,
uncanalised and arbitrary power on the Central Government
the exercise of which is capable of leading to
discrimination and imposition of unreasonable restrictions
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on the fundamental rights of the citizens under articles 14
and
15
19(1) (f) and (g) of the Constitution. It is emphasised
that there is no guideline in the Act for exercise of power.
There is, therefore, the vice of excessive delegation of
legislative power, says counsel.
Let us, therefore, have a background of the promulgation of
the Act. The Statement of Objects and Reasons will make the
position ,clear and may be quoted in extenso :
"The General Assembly of the United Nation
Organisation recommended in 1946 that members
of United Nations should take necessary
legislative or other appropriate measures to
prevent the use, without proper authority, and
in particular for commercial purposes, of the
emblem, the official seal and the name of the
United Nations and of the abbreviations of
that name. A similar recommendation has since
been received also from the World Health
Organisation for prevention of the use of its
name (and abbreviations), emblem and official
seal. Instances have also come to light of
the use in India (and abroad) of the Indian
National Flag and emblem and of the names or
pictorial representations of Mahatma Gandhi
and other national leaders, for commercial and
trade purposes and in a manner likely to
offend the sentiments of the people. The pro-
visions of the Indian Trade Marks Act, 1940,
Indian Patents and Designs Act, 1911, Indian
Merchandise Marks Act, 1889, and the Indian
Companies Act, 1913, are not adequate to
prevent these abuses. The Bill seeks to
prevent the improper use of these names,
emblems, etc., for the purpose of trade,
business, calling, profession, patent or
design, and to impose a penalty for misuse of
emblems, etc., specified in the Schedule and
empowers the Central Government to make
additions and amendments in the Schedule ;is
and when necessary".
What is in a name’ may not always be innocent. Logically,
proper names are not connotative but have often gathered a
content, a halo, around them sometimes or for all times to
come. National or international significance gets attached
to certain names or institutions over the years or ages and
then they belong to the nation or to nations. Human
sentiments and often ’a deep sense of religiosity pervade
through and provide a sacred mantle as it were to the nomen-
clature. In order to arouse national sentiments everywhere
invocation of "Chhatrapati Shivaji" in manifold ways in the
era of struggle for independence of our country is now, by
turn of history, replaced by an ardent worship of the proud
heritage by a grateful nation. Law reflecting the national
consciousness, therefore, forbids ordinary commercial use of
the sacred name by individuals in their own interest as
opposed to national interest.
We take it that the scheme disclosed in the provisions of
the Act read with the preamble, and the Objects and Reasons
make it clear that there was imperative necessity for
regulating the use of,
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certain emblems and names. The fact that only improper use
of the names and emblems is prohibited itself provides
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guidance. The original entries in the Schedule would also
point to the nature and character of the names, emblems and
entities. It is not possible for the Parliament to envisage
the possibility of improper use of all names and emblems as
time goes on. Nor is it possible to enumerate in the
Schedule an exhaustive list of all the names, emblems and
entities Section 8, therefore, makes provision for
empowering the Central Government to add to or alter the
Schedule. In the nature of things, there is no abdication
of legislative function by Parliament in delegating its
power under section 8 in favour of the Central Government
which will be the appropriate authority to consider from
time to time as to the items to be included in or omitted
from the Schedule in the light of knowledge and experience
gathered from the nook and corner of the entire country.
There is, therefore, no excessive delegation of legislative
power by Parliament in favour of the Central Government.
From the Objects and Reasons, the preamble and the
Provisions of the Act with the built-in limitations in
section 3 taken with the Schedule, a policy is clearly
discernible and there is sufficient guidance therein to
enable the Central Government to exercise its power under
the Act. The relevant matters mentioned above are
sufficiently informative of the policy of the law to rob the
efficacy of an argument on the score of scantiness in the
Act. The impugned Notification dated March 16, 1968 of the
Central Government under section 8 cannot, therefore, be
invalid. The objection on the score of Article 14 is of no
avail.
There is also no merit in the contention that section 3 and
4 violate the provisions of Article 19 (1) (f) and (g) of
the Constitution. The petitioners’ right to trade in bidis
is not at all interfered with by the legislation. Section 3
in terms provides for enabling the affected persons to
adjust their business or affairs inasmuch as the Central
,Government can permit some time to alter their emblems,
designs, etc. to carry on with their trade. Indeed in the
present case the petitioners on their own application
obtained an extension of time presumably under section 3 of
the Act and, therefore, cannot complain on that score. Th.-
are is built-in safeguard in section 3 itself for mitigating
any hardship to persons or any rigor of the law. The
provisions are accordingly regulatory in nature and even, if
at all, impose only reasonable restrictions on the exercise
of the petitioners’ right under Article 19 (1) (f) and (g).
Section 4 is a consequential provision and validly co-exists
with section 3.
It is also contended by the petitioners that no rules have
been framed under section 9 of the Act which make the same
unworkable. We are not impressed by this argument. From
the scheme and machinery of the Act there is nothing to
indicate that absence of rules will make the Act unworkable.
The submission is devoid of substance.
Lastly it was submitted that the Notification under section
8 was not published in the name of the President and was
issued by the Under Secretor who was not authorised to do
so. The Notification is not an executive order but is a
piece of subordinate legislation
17
made by the Central Government under section 8 of the Act.
It was duly published in the Gazette of India over the
signature of the Under Secretary who was authorised for the
purpose’. The question of violation of Article 77 does not
arise.
Since the ’Act and the impugned provisions are
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constitutionally valid, objection to the Notice of the Joint
Registrar dated October 16, 1969, is also of no avail.
In the result the petitions are dismissed but there will be
no order as to costs.
Petitions dismissed
V.M.K.
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