TRADE MARKS ACT, 1999
PRELIMINARY
1. Short title, extent and commencement.
2. Definitions and interpretation.
THE REGISTER AND
CONDITIONS FOR REGISTRATION
3. Appointment of Registrar and other officers
4. Power of Registrar to withdraw or transfer
cases, etc.
5. Trade Marks Registry and offices thereof
6. The Register of Trade Marks
7. Classification of goods and services
8. Publication of alphabetical index
9. Absolute grounds for refusal of registration
11. Relative grounds for refusal of registration
12. Registration in the case of honest
concurrent use, etc.
13. Prohibition of registration of names of
chemical elements or international non-proprietary names
14. Use of names and representations of living
persons or persons recently dead
15. Registration of parts of trade marks and of
trade marks as a series
16. Registration of trade, marks as associated
trade marks
17. Effect of registration of parts of a mark
PROCEDURE FOR
AND DURATION OF REGISTRATION
18. Application for registration
20. Advertisement of application
21. Opposition to registration
23. Registration
25. Duration, renewal, removal and restoration
of registration
26. Effect of removal from register for failure
to pay fee for renewal
27. No action for infringement of unregistered
trade mark
28. Rights conferred by registration
29. Infringement of registered trade marks
30. Limits on effect of registered trade mark
31. Registration to be prima facie evidence of
validity
32. Protection of registration on ground of
distinctiveness in certain cases
35. Saving for use of name, address or
description of goods or services
36. Saving for words used as name or description
of an article or substance or service
37. Power of registered proprietor to assign and
give receipts
38. Assignability and transmissibility of
registered trade marks
39. Assignability and transmissibility of
unregistered trade marks
40. Restriction on assignment or transmission
where multiple exclusive rights would be created
42. Conditions for assignment otherwise than in
connection with the goodwill of a business
43. Assignability and transmissibility of certification
trade marks
44. Assignability and transmissibility or
associated trade marks
45. Registration of assignments and
transmissions
USE OF TRADE
MARK AND REGISTERED USERS
46. Proposed use of trade mark by company to be
formed, etc.
47. Removal from register and imposition of
limitations on ground of non-use
48. Registered users
49. Registration as registered user
50. Power of Registrar for variation or
cancellation of registration as registered user
51. Power of Registrar to call for information
relating to agreement in respect of registered users
52. Right of registered user to take proceedings
against infringement
53. No right of permitted user to take
proceeding against infringement
54. Registered user not to have right of
assignment or transmission
55. Use of one of associated or substantially
identical trade marks equivalent to use of another
56. Use of trade mark for export trade and use
when form of trade connection changes
RECTIFICATION
AND CORRECTION OF THE REGISTER
57. Power to cancel or vary registration and to
rectify the register
59. Alteration of registered trade marks
60. Adaptation of entries in register to amended
or substituted classification of goods or services
61. Special provisions for collective marks
62. Collective mark not to be misleading as to
character or significance
63. Application to be accompanied by regulations
governing use of collective marks
64. Acceptance of application and regulations by
Registrar
65. Regulations to be open to inspection
67. Infringement proceedings by registered
proprietor of collective mark
68. Additional grounds for removal of
registration of collective mark
69. Certain provisions of this Act not
applicable to certification trade marks
70. Registration of certification trade marks
71. Applications for registration of
certification trade marks
72. Consideration of application for
registration by the Registrar
73. Opposition to registration of certification
trade marks
74. Filing of regulations governing the use of a
certification trade mark
75. Infringement of certification trade marks
76. Acts not constituting infringement of
certification trade marks
77. Cancellation or varying of registration of
certification trade marks
78. Rights conferred by registration of
certification trade marks
79. Textile goods
80. Restriction on registration of textile goods
81. Stamping of piece goods, cotton yam and
thread
82. Determination of character of textile goods
by sampling
83. Establishment of Appellate Board
84. Composition
of Appellate Board
85. Qualifications for appointment as Chairman,
Vice-Chairman, or other Members
86. Term of office of Chairman, Vice-Chairman
and other Members
91. Appeals to Appellate Board
92. Procedure and powers of Appellate Board
93. Bar of jurisdiction of courts, etc.
94. Bar to appear before Appellate Board
95. Conditions as to making of interim orders
96. Power of Chairman to transfer cases from one
Bench to another
97. Procedure for application for rectification,
etc., before Appellate Board
98. Appearance
of Registrar in legal proceedings
99. Costs of Registrar in proceedings before
Appellate Board
100. Transfer of pending proceedings to
Appellate Board
101. Meaning of applying trade marks and trade
descriptions
102. Falsifying and falsely applying trade marks
103. Penalty for applying false trade marks,
trade descriptions, etc.
105. Enhanced penalty on second or subsequent
conviction
106. Penalty for removing piece goods, etc.,
contrary to section 81
107. Penalty for falsely representing a trade
mark as registered
108. Penalty for improperly describing a place
of business as connected with the Trade Marks Office
109. Penalty
for falsification of entries in the register
110. No offence in certain cases
111. Forfeiture of goods
112. Exemption of certain persons employed in
ordinary course of business
113. Procedure where invalidity of registration
is pleaded by the accused
115. Cognizance of certain offences and the
powers of police officer for search and seizure
116. Evidence of origin of goods imported by sea
117. Costs of defence or prosecution
118. Limitation of prosecution
119. Information as to commission of offence
120. Punishment of abetment in India of acts
done out of India
121. Instructions of Central Government as to
permissible variation to be observed by criminal courts
122. Protection of action taken in good faith
123. Certain persons to be public servants
124. Stay of proceedings where the validity of
registration of the trade mark is questioned, etc.
125. Application for rectification of register
to be made to Appellate Board in certain cases
126. Implied warranty on sale of marked goods
127. Powers of Registrar
128. Exercise of discretionary power by
Registrar
129. Evidence before Registrar
130. Death of party to a proceeding
131. Extension of time
132. Abandonment
133. Preliminary advice by the Registrar as to
distinctiveness
134. Suit for infringement, etc., to be
instituted before District Court
135. Relief in suits for infringement or for
passing off
136. Registered user to be impleaded in certain
proceedings
137. Evidence of entries in register, etc., and
things done by the Registrar
138. Registrar and other officers not
compellable to produce register, etc.
139. Power to require goods to show indication
of origin
140. Power to require information of imported
goods bearing false trade marks
142. Groundless threats of legal proceedings
143. Address for service
144. Trade usages, etc., to be taken into
consideration
145. Agents
146. Marks registered by an agent or
representative without authority
147. Indexes
148. Documents open to public inspection
149. Reports of Registrar to be placed before
Parliament
150. Fees and surcharge
151. Savings in respect of certain matters in
Chapter XII
152. Declaration as to ownership of trade mark
not registrable under the Registration Act, 1908
154. Special provisions relating to applications
for registration from citizens of convention countries
155. Provision as to reciprocity
156. Power of Central Government to remove
difficulties
157. Power to make rules
158. Amendments
159. Repeal and saving
THE SCHEDULE:
-AMENDMENTS
TRADE MARKS ACT,
1999
[Act No. 47 of
Year 1999 dated 30th. December, 1999]
An
Act to amend and consolidate the law relating to trade marks, to provide for
registration and better protection of trade marks for goods and services and
for the prevention of the use of fraudulent marks
Be it enacted by Parliament in the
Fiftieth Year of the Republic of India as follows: -
PRELIMINARY
1.
Short title, extent and
commencement. -
(1) This Act may be called the Trade Marks Act,
1999.
(2) It extends to the whole of India.
(3) It shall come into force on such date as
the Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint:
PROVIDED that different dates may be
appointed for different provisions of this Act, and any reference in any such
provision to the commencement of this Act shall be construed as a reference to
the coming into force of that provision.
2. Definitions
and interpretation. -
(1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise
requires, -
(a) Appellate Board means the Appellate Board
established under section 83;
(b) Assignment means an assignment in writing by act of the parties concerned;
(c) Associated trade marks means a trade
marks deemed to be, or requited to be, registered as associated trade marks
under this Act;
(d) Bench means a Bench of the Appellate
Board;
(e) Certification trade mark means a mark
capable of distinguishing the goods or services in connection with which it is
used in the course of trade which are certified by the proprietor of the mark
in respect of origin, material, mode of manufacture of goods or performance of
services, quality, accuracy or other characteristics from goods or services not
so certified and registrable as such under Chapter IX in respect of those goods
or services in the name, as proprietor of the certification trade mark, of that
person;
(f) Chairman means the Chairman of the
Appellate Board;
(g) Collective mark means a trade mark
distinguishing the goods or services of members of an association of persons
(not being. a partnership within the meaning of the Indian Partnership Act,
1932) which is the proprietor of the mark from those of others;
(h) Deceptively similar-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;
(i) False trade description means-
(I) A trade description which is untrue or
misleading in a material respect as regards the goods or services to which it
is applied. Or
(II) Any alteration of trade description as
regards the goods or services to which it is applied, whether by way of
addition, effacement or otherwise, where that alteration makes the description
untrue or misleading in a material respect; or
(III) Any trade description which denotes or
implies that there are contained, as regards the goods to which it is applied,
more yards or metres than there are contained therein standard yards or
standard metres; or
(IV) Any marks or arrangement or combination
thereof when applied -
(a) To goods in such a manner as to be likely
to lead persons to believe that the goods are the manufacture or merchandise of
some person other than the person whose merchandise or manufacture they really
are;
(b) In relation to services in such a manner as
to be likely to lead persons to believe that the services are provided or
rendered by some person other than the person whose services they really are;
or
(V) Any false name or initials of a person
applied to goods or services in such manner as if such name or initials were a
trade description in any case where the name or initials -
(a) Is or are not a trade mark or part of a
trade mark; and
(b) Is or are identical with or deceptively
similar to the name or initials of a person carrying on business in connection
with goods or services of the same description or both and who has not
authorised the use of such name or initials; and
(c) Is or are either the name or initials of a
fictitious person or some person not bona fide carrying on business in
connection with such goods or services,
And the fact that a trade description is a trade mark or part of a trade mark shall not prevent such trade description being a false trade description within the meaning of this Act;
(j) Goods means anything which is the
subject of trade or manufacture;
(k) Judicial Member means a Member of the
Appellate Board appointed as such under this Act, and includes the Chairman and
the Vice-Chairman;
(l) Limitations (with its grammatical
variations) means any limitation of the exclusive right to the use of a trade
mark given by the registration of a person as proprietor thereof, including
limitations of that right as to mode or area of use within India or outside
India;
(m) Mark includes a device, brand, heading,
label, ticket, name, signature, word, letter, numeral, shape of goods,
packaging or combination of colours or any combination thereof;
(n) Member
means a Judicial Member or a Technical Member of the Appellate Board and
includes the Chairman and the Vice-Chairman;
(o) Name includes any abbreviation of a name;
(p) Notify means to notify in the Trade Mark
Journal published by the Registrar;
(q) Package includes any case, box,
container, covering, folder, receptacle, vessel, casket, bottle, wrapper,
label, band, ticket, reel, frame, capsule, cap, lid, stopper and cork;
(r) Permitted use, in relation to a
registered trade mark, means the use of trade mark -
(i) By a registered user of the trade mark in
relation to goods or services-
(a) With which he is connected in the course of
trade; and
(b) In respect of which the trade mark remains
registered for the time being; and
(c) For which he is registered as registered
user; and
(d) Which complies with any conditions or
limitations to which the registration of registered user is subject; or
(ii) By a person other than the registered
proprietor and registered user in relation to goods or services -
(a) With which he is connected in the course of
trade; and
(b) In respect of which the trade mark remains
registered for the time being; and
(c) By consent of such registered proprietor in
a written agreement; and
(d) Which complies with any conditions or
limitations to which such user is subject and to which the registration of the
trade mark is subject;
(s) Prescribed means prescribed by rules made
under this Act;
(t) Register means the Register of Trade Marks referred to in sub-section (1) of section 6;
(u) Registered (with its grammatical
variations) means registered under this Act;
(v) Registered proprietor, in relation to a
trade mark, means the person for the time being entered in the register as
proprietor of the trade mark;
(w) Registered trade mark means a trade mark
which is actually on the register and remaining in force;
(x) Registered user means a person who is for
the time being registered as such under section 49;
(y) Registrar means the Registrar of Trade
Marks referred to in section 3;
(z) Service means service of any description which is made available to potential users and includes the provision of services in connection with business of any industrial or commercial matters such as banking, communication, education, financing, insurance, chit funds, real estate, transport, storage, material treatment, processing, supply of electrical or other energy, boarding, lodging, entertainment, amusement, construction, repair, conveying of news or information and advertising;
(za) Trade description means any description,
statement or other indication, direct or indirect, -
(i) As to the number, quantity, measure, guage
or weight of any goods ; or
(ii) As to the standard of quality of any goods
or services according to a classification commonly used or recognised in the
trade; or
(iii) As to fitness for the purpose, strength,
performance or behaviour of any goods, being drug as defined in the Drugs and
Cosmetics Act, 1940, or food as defined in the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act, 1954; or
(iv) As to the place or country in which or the
time at which any goods or services were made, produced or provided, as the
case may be; or
(v) As to the name and address or other
indication of the identity of the manufacturer or of the person providing the
services or of the person for whom the goods are manufactured or services are
provided; or
(vi) As to the mode of manufacture or producing
any goods or providing services; or
(vii) As to the material of which any goods are
composed; or
(viii) As
to any goods being the subject of an existing patent, privilege or copyright,
And includes -
(a) Any description as to the use of any mark
which according to the custom of the trade is commonly taken to be an
indication of any of the above matters;
(b) The description as to any imported goods
contained in any bill of entry or shipping bill;
(c) Any other description, which is likely to
be misunderstood or mistaken for all or any of the said matters;
(zb) Trade mark means a mark capable of being
represented graphically and which is capable of distinguishing the goods or
services of one person from those of others and may include shape of goods,
their packaging and combination of colours; and
(i) In relation to Chapter XII (other than
section 107), a registered trade mark or a mark used in relation to goods or
services for the purpose of indicating or so as to indicate a connection in the
course of trade between the goods or services, as the case may be, and some
person having the right as proprietor to use the mark; and
(ii) In relation to other provisions of this
Act, a mark used or proposed to be used in relation to goods or services for
the purpose of indicating or so to indicate a connection in the course of trade
between the goods or services, as the case may be, and some person having the
right, either as proprietor or by way of permitted user, to use the mark
whether with or without any indication of the identity of that person, and
includes a certification trade mark or collective mark;
(zc) Transmission means transmission by
operation of law, devolution on the personal representative of a deceased
person and any other mode of transfer, not being assignment;
(zd) Technical Member means a Member who is not
a Judicial Member;
(ze) Tribunal means the Registrar or, as the case may be, the Appellate Board, before which the proceeding concerned is pending;
(zf) Vice-Chairman means a Vice-Chairman of the
Appellate Board;
(zg) Well-known trade mark, in relation to any
goods or services, means a mark which has become so to the substantial segment
of the public which uses such goods or receives such services that the use of
such mark in relation to other goods or services would be likely to be taken as
indicating a connection in the course of trade or rendering of services between
those goods or services and a person using the mark in relation to the
first-mentioned goods or services.
(2) In this Act, unless the context otherwise
requires, any reference-
(a) To trade mark shall include reference to collective mark or certification trade mark;
(b) To the use of a mark shall be construed as
a reference to the use of printed or other visual representation of the mark;
(c) To the use of a mark, -
(i) In relation to goods, shall be construed
as a reference to the use of the mark upon, or in any physical or in any other
relation whatsoever, to such goods;
(ii) In relation to services, shall be construed
as a reference to the use of the mark as or as part of any statement about the
availability, provision or performance of such services;
(d) To the Registrar shall be construed as
including a reference to any officer when discharging the functions of the
Registrar in pursuance of sub-section (2) of section 3;
(e) To
the Trade Marks Registry shall be construed as including a reference to any
office of the Trade Marks Registry.
(3) For the purposes of this Act, goods and
services are associated with each other if it is likely that those goods might
be sold or otherwise traded in and those services might be provided by the same
business and so with descriptions of goods and descriptions of services.
(4) For the purposes of this Act, existing
registered trade mark means a trade mark registered under the Trade and
Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 immediately before the commencement of this Act.
THE REGISTER AND CONDITIONS FOR REGISTRATION
3. Appointment
of Registrar and other officers. -
(1) The Central Government may, by notification
in the Official Gazette, appoint a person to be known as the Controller-General
of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks, who shall be the Registrar of Trade Marks
for the purposes of this Act.
(2) The Central Government may appoint such
other officers with such designations as it thinks fit for the purpose of
discharging, under the superintendence and direction of the Registrar, such
functions of the Registrar under this Act as he may from time to time authorise
them to discharge.
4. Power
of Registrar to withdraw or transfer cases, etc. - Without
prejudice to the generality of the provisions of sub-section (2) of section 3,
the Registrar may, by order in writing and for reasons to be recorded therein,
withdraw any matter pending before an officer appointed under the said
sub-section (2) and deal with such matter himself either de novo or from the
stage it was so withdrawn or transfer the same to another officer so appointed
who may, subject to special directions in the order of transfer, proceed with
the matter either de novo or from the stage it was so transferred.
5. Trade
Marks Registry and offices thereof. -
(1) For the purposes of this Act, there shall
be a trade marks registry and the Trade Marks Registry established under the
Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 shall be the Trade Marks Registry under
this Act.
(2) The head office of the Trade Marks Registry
shall be at such place as the Central Government may specify, and for the
purpose of facilitating the registration of trade marks, there may be
established at such places as the Central Government may think fit branch
offices of the Trade Marks Registry.
(3) The Central Government may, by notification
in the Official Gazette, define the territorial limits within which an office
of the Trade Marks Registry may exercise its functions.
(4) There shall be a seal of the Trade Marks
Registry.
6. The
Register of Trade Marks. -
(1) For the purposes of this Act, a record
called the Register of Trade Marks shall be kept at the head office of the
Trade Marks Registry, wherein shall be entered all registered trade marks with
the names, addresses and description of the proprietors, notifications of
assignment and transmissions, the names, addresses and descriptions of
registered users, conditions, limitations and such other matter relating to
registered trade marks as may be prescribed.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), it shall be lawful for the Registrar to keep the records
wholly or partly in computer floppies diskettes or in any other electronic form
subject to such safeguards as may be prescribed.
(3) Where such register is maintained wholly or
partly on computer under sub-section (2) any reference in this Act to entry in
the register shall be construed as the reference to any entry as maintained on
computer or in any other electronic form.
(4) No notice of any trust, express or implied
or constructive, shall be entered in the register and no such notice shall be
receivable by the. Registrar.
(5) The register shall be kept under the
control and management of the Registrar.
(6) There shall be kept at each branch office
of the Trade Marks Registry a copy of the register and such of the other
documents mentioned in section 148 as the Central Government may, by notification
in the Official Gazette, direct.
(7) The Register of Trade Marks, both Part A
and Part B, existing at the commencements of this Act, shall be incorporated in
and form part of the register under this Act.
7. Classification
of goods and services. -
(1) The Registrar shall classify goods and
services, as far as may be, in accordance with the International classification
of goods and services for the purposes of registration of trade marks.
(2) Any question arising as to the class within
which any goods or services falls shall be determined by the Registrar whose
decision shall be final.
8. Publication
of alphabetical index. -
(1) The Registrar may publish in the prescribed
manner an alphabetical index of classification of goods and services referred
to in section 7.
(2) Where any goods or services are not
specified in the alphabetical index of goods and services published under
sub-section (1), the classification of goods or services shall be determined by
the Registrar in accordance with sub-section (2) of section 7.
9. Absolute
grounds for refusal of registration. -
(1) The trade marks -
(a) Which are devoid of any distinctive
character, that is to say, not capable of distinguishing the goods or services
of one person from those of another person;
(b) Which consist exclusively of marks or
indications, which may serve, in trade to designate the kind, quality,
quantity, intended purpose, values, geographical origin or the time of
production of the goods or rendering of the service or other characteristics of
the goods or service;
(c) Which consist exclusively of marks or
indications, which have become customary in the current language or in the bona
fide and established practices of the trade,
Shall not be registered:
PROVIDED that a trade mark shall not be
refused registration if before the date of application for registration it has
acquired a distinctive character as a result of the use made of it or is a
well-known trade mark.
(2) A mark shall not be registered as a trade
mark if -
(a) It is of such nature as to deceive the
public or cause confusion;
(b) It contains or comprises of any matter
likely to hurt the religious susceptibilities of any class or section of the
citizens of India;
(c) It comprises or contains scandalous or
obscene matter;
(d) Its use is prohibited under the Emblems and
Names (Prevention of Improper Use) Act, 1950.
(3) A mark shall not be registered as a trade mark
if it consists exclusively of -
(a) The shape of goods which results from the
nature of the goods themselves; or
(b) The shape of goods which is necessary to obtain a technical result; or
(c) The shape, which gives substantial value to
the goods.
Explanation: For the purposes of this section,
the nature of goods or services in relation to which the trade mark is used or
proposed to be used shall not be a ground for refusal of registration.
10. Limitation
as to colour. -
(1) A trade mark may be limited wholly or in
part to any combination of colours and any such limitation shall be taken into
consideration by the tribunal having to decide on the distinctive character of
the trade mark.
(2) So far as a trade mark is registered
without limitation of colour, it shall be deemed to be registered for all
colours.
11. Relative
grounds for refusal of registration
(1) Save as provided in section l2, a trade
mark shall not be registered if, because of -
(a) Its identity with an earlier trade mark and
similarity of goods or services covered by the trade mark; or
(b) Its similarity to an earlier trade mark and
the identity or similarity of the goods or services covered by the trade mark,
There exists a likelihood of
confusion on the part of the public, which includes the likelihood of
association with the earlier trade mark.
(2) A trade mark which -
(a) Is identical with or similar to an earlier
trade mark; and
(b) Is to be registered for goods or services which are not similar to those for which the earlier trade mark is registered in the name of a different proprietor, shall not be registered if or to the extent the earlier trade mark is a well-known trade mark in India and the use of the later mark without due course would take unfair advantage of or be detrimental to the distinctive character or repute of the earlier trade mark.
(3) A trade mark shall not be registered if, or
to the extent that, its use in India is liable to be prevented -
(a) By virtue of any law in particular the law of passing off protecting an unregistered trade mark used in the course of trade; or
(b) By virtue of law of copyright.
(4) Nothing in this section shall prevent the
registration of a trade mark where the proprietor of the earlier trade mark or
other earlier right consents to the registration, and in such case the
Registrar may register the mark under special circumstances under section 12.
Explanation: For the purposes of this section,
earlier trade mark means -
(a) A registered trade mark or convention
application referred to in section 154 which has a date of application earlier
than that of the trade mark in question, taking account, where appropriate, of
the priorities claimed in respect of the trade marks;
(b) A trade mark which, on the date of the
application for registration of the trade mark in question, or where
appropriate, of the priority claimed in respect of the application, was
entitled to protection as a well-known trade mark.
(5) A trade mark shall not be refused
registration on the grounds specified in sub-sections (2) and (3), unless
objection on any one or more of those grounds is raised in opposition
proceedings by the proprietor of the earlier trade mark.
(6) The Registrar shall, while determining
whether a trade mark is a well-known trade mark, take into account any fact
which he considers relevant for determining a trade mark as a well-known trade
mark including -
(i) The knowledge or recognition of that trade
mark in the relevant section of the public including knowledge in India
obtained as a result of promotion of the trade mark;
(ii) The duration, extent and geographical area
of any use of that trade mark;
(iii) The duration, extent and geographical area
of any promotion of the trade mark, including advertising or publicity and
presentation, at fairs or exhibition of the goods or services to which the
trade mark applies;
(iv) The duration and geographical area of any
registration of or any publication for registration of that trade mark under
this Act to the extent they reflect the use or recognition of the trade mark;
(v) The record of successful enforcement of the
rights in that trade mark, in particular, the extent to which the trade mark
has been recognised as a well-known trade mark by any court or Registrar under
that record.
(7) The Registrar shall, while determining as
to whether a trade mark is known or recognised in a relevant section of the
public for the purposes of sub-section (6), take into account -
(i) The number of actual or potential
consumers of the goods or services;
(ii) The number of persons involved in the
channels of distribution of the goods or services;
(iii) The business circles dealing with the goods
or services,
To which that trade mark applies.
(8) Where a trade mark has been determined to
be well-known in at least one relevant section of the public in India by any
court or Registrar, the Registrar shall consider that trade mark as a
well-known trade mark for registration under this Act.
(9) The Registrar shall not require as a
condition, for determining whether a trade mark is a well-known trade mark, any
of the following, namely: -
(i) That the trade mark has been used in
India;
(ii) That the trade mark has been registered;
(iii) That the application for registration of
the trade mark has been filed in India;
(iv) That the trade mark -
(a) Is well known in; or
(b) Has been registered in; or
(c) In respect of which an application for
registration has been filed in, any jurisdiction other than India; or
(v) That the trade mark is well-known to the
public at large in India.
(10) While considering an application for
registration of a trade mark and opposition filed in respect thereof, the
Registrar shall -
(i) Protect a well-known trade mark against
the identical or similar trade marks;
(ii) Take into consideration the bad faith
involved either of the applicant or the opponent affecting the right relating
to the trade mark.
(11) Where a trade mark has been registered in
good faith disclosing the material informations to the Registrar or where right
to a trade mark has been acquired through use in goods faith before the
commencement of this Act, then, nothing in this Act shall prejudice the
validity of the registration of that trade mark or right to use that trade mark
on the ground that such trade mark is identical with or similar to a well known
trade mark.
12. Registration
in the case of honest concurrent use, etc. - In the case of honest concurrent use or of other special circumstances
which in the opinion of the Registrar, make it proper so to do, he may permit
the registration by more than one proprietor of the trade marks which are
identical or similar (whether any such trade mark is already registered or not)
in respect of the same or similar goods or services, subject to such conditions
and limitations, if any, as the Registrar may think fit to impose.
13. Prohibition
of registration of names of chemical elements or international non-proprietary names. - No word -
(a) Which is the commonly used and accepted
name of any single chemical element or any single chemical compound (as
distinguished from a mixture) in respect of a chemical substance or
preparation, or
(b) Which is declared by the World Health
Organisation and notified in the prescribed manner by the Registrar from time
to time, as an international non-proprietary name or which is deceptively
similar to such name,
Shall be registered as a trade
mark and any such registration shall be deemed for the purpose of section 57 to
be an entry made in the register without sufficient cause or an entry wrongly
remaining on the register, as the circumstances may require.
14. Use
of names and representations of living persons or persons recently dead. - Where an application is made for the registration of a trade mark which
falsely suggests a connection with any living person, or a person whose death
took place within twenty years prior to the date of application for
registration of the trade mark, the Registrar may, before he proceeds with the
application, require the applicant to furnish him with the consent in writing
of such living person or, as the case may be, of the legal representative of
the deceased person to the connection appearing on the trade mark, and may refuse
to proceed with the application unless the applicant furnishes the registrar
with such consent.
15. Registration
of parts of trade marks and of trade marks as a series. -
(1) Where the proprietor of a trade mark claims
to be entitled to the exclusive use of any part thereof separately, he may
apply to register the whole and the part as separate trade marks.
(2) Each such separate trade mark shall satisfy
all the conditions applying to and have all the incidents of, an independent
trade mark.
(3) Where a person claiming to be the
proprietor of several trade marks in respect of the same or similar goods or
services or description of goods or description of services, which, while
resembling each other in the material particulars thereof, yet differ in
respect of -
(a) Statement of the. goods or services in relation to which they are respectively used or proposed to be used; or
(b) Statement of number, price, quality or
names of places; or
(c) Other matter of a non-distinctive character
which does not substantially affect the identity of the trade mark; or
(d) Colour,
Seeks to register those trade
marks, they may be registered as a series in one registration.
16. Registration
of trade, marks as associated trade marks. -
(1) Where a trade mark which is registered, or
is the subject of an application for registration, in respect of any goods or
services is identical with another trade mark which is registered, or is the
subject of an application for registration, in the name of the same proprietor
in respect of the same goods or description of goods or same services or
description of services or so nearly resembles it as to be likely to deceive or
cause confusion if used by a person other than the proprietor, the Registrar
may, at any time, require that the trade marks shall be entered on the register
as associated trade marks.
(2) Where there is an identity or near
resemblance of marks that are registered, or are the subject of applications
for registration in the name of the same proprietor, in respect of goods and in
respect of services which are associated with those goods or goods of that
description and with those services or services of that description,
sub-section (1) shall apply as it applies as where there is an identity or near
resemblance of marks that are registered, or are the subject of applications
for registration, in the name of the same proprietor in respect of the same
goods or description of goods or same services or description of services.
(3) Where a trade mark and any part thereof
are, in accordance with the provisions of sub-section (1) of section 15,
registered as separate trade marks in the name of the same proprietor, they
shall be deemed to be, and shall be registered as, associated trade marks.
(4) All trade marks registered in accordance
with the provisions of sub-section (3) of section 15 as a series in one
registration shall be deemed to be, and shall be registered as, associated
trade marks.
(5) On application made in the prescribed
manner by the registered proprietor of two or more trade marks registered as
associated trade marks, the Registrar may dissolve the association as respects
any of them if he is satisfied that there would be no likelihood of deception
or confusion being caused if that trade mark were used by any other person in
relation to any of the goods or services or both in respect of which it is
registered, and may amend the register accordingly.
17. Effect
of registration of parts of a mark. -
(1) When a trade mark consists of several
matters, its registration shall confer on the proprietor exclusive right to the
use of the trade mark taken as a whole.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), when a trademark-
(a) Contains any part -
(i) Which is not the subject of a separate
application by the proprietor for registration as a trade mark; or
(ii) Which is not separately registered by the
proprietor as a trade mark; or
(b) Contains any matter which is common to the
trade or is otherwise of a non-distinctive character,
The registration thereof shall not
confer any exclusive right in the matter forming only a part of the whole of
the trade mark so registered.
PROCEDURE FOR AND DURATION OF REGISTRATION
18. Application
for registration. -
(1) Any person claiming to be the proprietor of
a trade mark used or purposed to be used by him, who is desirous of registering
it, shall apply in writing to the Registrar in the prescribed manner for the
registration of his trade mark.
(2) A single application may be made for
registration of a trademark for different classes of goods and services and fee
payable therefor shall be in respect of each such class of goods or services.
(3) Every application under sub-section (1)
shall be filed in the office of the Trade Marks Registry within whose
territorial limits the principal place of business in India of the applicant or
in the case of joint applicants the principal place of business in India of the
applicant whose name is first mentioned in the application as having a place of
business in India, is situate:
PR0VIDED that where the applicant or any
of the joint applicants does not carry on business in India, the application
shall be filed in the office of the Trade Marks Registry within whose
territorial limits the place mentioned in the address for service in India as
disclosed in the application, is situate.
(4) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the
Registrar may refuse the application or may accept it absolutely or subject to
such amendments, modifications, conditions or limitations, if any, as he may
think fit.
(5) In the case of a refusal or conditional
acceptance of an application, the Registrar shall record in writing the grounds
for such refusal or conditional acceptance and the materials used by him in
arriving at his decision.
19. Withdrawal
of acceptance. - Where, after the acceptance of an
application for registration of a trade mark but before its registration, the
Registrar is satisfied -
(a) That the application has been accepted in
error; or
(b) That in the circumstances of the case the
trade mark should not be registered. or should be registered subject to
conditions or limitations or to conditions additional to or different from the
conditions or limitations subject to which the application has been accepted,
The Registrar may, after hearing
the applicant if he so desires, withdraw the acceptance and proceed as if the
application had not been accepted.
20. Advertisement
of application. -
(1) When an application for registration of a
trade mark has been accepted, whether absolutely or subject to conditions or
limitations, the Registrar shall, as soon as may be after acceptance, cause the
application as accepted together with the conditions or limitations, if any,
subject to which it has been accepted, to be advertised in the prescribed
manner:
PROVIDED that the Registrar may cause the
application to be advertised before acceptance if it relates to a trade mark to
which sub-section (1) of section 9 and sub-sections (1) and (2) of section 11
apply, or in any other case where it appears to him that it is expedient by
reason of any exceptional circumstances so to do.
(2) Where -
(a) An application has been advertised before
acceptance under sub-section (1); or
(b) After advertisement of an application, -
(i) An error in the application has been corrected;
or
(ii) The application has been permitted to be
amended under section 22,
The Registrar may in his
discretion cause the application to be advertised again or in any case falling
under clause (b) may, instead of causing the application to be advertised
again, notify in the prescribed manner the correction or amendment made in the
application.
21. Opposition
to registration. -
(1) Any person may, within three months from
the date of the advertisement or re-advertisement of an application for
registration or within such further period, not exceeding one month in the
aggregate, as the Registrar, on application made to him in the prescribed
manner and on payment of the prescribed fee, allows, give notice in writing in
the prescribed manner to the Registrar, of opposition to the registration.
(2) The Registrar shall serve a copy of the
notice on the applicant for registration and, within two months from the
receipt by the applicant of such copy of the notice of opposition, the
applicant shall send to the Registrar in the prescribed manner a
counter-statement of the grounds on which he relies for his application, and if
he does not do so he shall be deemed to have abandoned his application.
(3) If the applicant sends such
counter-statement, the Registrar shall serve a copy thereof on the person
giving notice of opposition.
(4) Any evidence upon which the opponent and
the applicant may rely shall be submitted in the prescribed manner and
within the prescribed time to the Registrar, and the Registrar shall give an
opportunity to them to be heard, if they so desire.
(5) The Registrar shall, after hearing the
parties, if so required, and considering the evidence, decide whether and
subject to what conditions or limitations, if any, the registration is to be
permitted, and may take into account a ground of objection whether relied upon
by the opponent or not.
(6) Where a person giving notice of opposition
or an applicant sending a counter-statement after receipt of a copy of such
notice neither resides nor carries. on business in India, the Registrar may
require him to give security for the costs of proceedings before him, and in
default of such security being duly given, may treat the opposition or application,
as the case may be, as abandoned.
(7) The Registrar may, on request, permit
correction of any error in, or any amendment of, a notice of opposition or a
counter-statement on such terms as he thinks just.
22. Correction
and amendment. - The Registrar may, on such terms
as he thinks just, at any time, whether before or after acceptance of an
application for registration under section 18, permit the correction of any
error in or in connection with the application or permit an amendment of the
application:
PROVIDED that if an amendment is made to a
single application referred to in sub-section (2) of section 18 involving
division of such application into two or more applications, the date of making
of the initial application shall be deemed to be the date of making of the
divided applications so divided.
(1) Subject to the provisions of section 19,
when an application for registration of trade mark has been accepted and
either-
(a) The application has not been opposed and
the time for notice of opposition has expired; or
(b) The application has been opposed and the
opposition has been decided in favour of the applicant,
The Registrar shall, unless the
Central Government otherwise directs, register the said trade mark and the
trade mark when registered shall be registered as of the date of the making of
the said application and that date shall, subject to the provisions of section
154, be deemed to be the date of registration.
(2) On the registration of a trade mark, the
Registrar shall issue to the applicant a certificate in the prescribed form of
the registration thereof, sealed with the seal of the Trade Marks Registry.
(3) Where registration of a trade mark is not
completed within twelve months from the date of the application by reason of
default on the part of the applicant, the Registrar may, after giving notice to
the applicant in the prescribed manner, treat the application as abandoned
unless it is completed within the time specified in that behalf in the notice.
(4) The Registrar may amend the register or a
certificate of registration for the purpose of correcting a clerical error or
an obvious mistake.
24. Jointly
owned trade marks. -
(1) Save as provided in sub-section (2),
nothing in this Act shall authorise the registration of two or more persons who
use a trade mark independently, or propose so to use it, as joint proprietors
thereof.
(2) Where the relations between two or more
persons interested in a trade. mark are such that no one of them is entitled as
between himself and the other or others of them to use it except-
(a) On behalf of both or all of them; or
(b) In relation to an article or service with which both or all of them are connected in the course of trade,
Those persons may be registered as
joint proprietors of the trade mark, and this Act shall have effect in relation
to any rights to the use of the trade mark vested in those persons as if those
rights had been vested in a single person.
25. Duration,
renewal, removal and restoration of registration. -
(1) The registration of a trade mark, after the
commencement of this Act, shall be for a period of ten years, but may be
renewed from time to time in accordance with the provisions of this section.
(2) The Registrar shall, on application made by
the registered proprietor of a trade mark in the prescribed manner and within
the prescribed period and subject to payment of the prescribed fee, renew the
registration of the trade mark for a period of ten years from the date of
expiration of the original registration or of the last renewal of registration,
as the case may be (which date is in this section referred to as the expiration
of the last registration).
(3) At the prescribed time before the
expiration of the last registration of a trade mark the Registrar shall send
notice in the prescribed manner to the registered proprietor of the date of
expiration and the conditions as to payment of fees and otherwise upon which a
renewal of registration may be obtained, and, if at the expiration of the time
prescribed in that behalf those conditions have not been duly complied with the
Registrar may remove the trade mark from the register:
PROVIDED that the Registrar shall not
remove the trade mark from the register if an application is made in the
prescribed form and the prescribed fee and surcharge is paid within six months
from the expiration of the last registration of the trade mark and shall renew
the registration of the trade mark for a period of ten years under sub-section
(2).
(4) Where a trade mark has been removed from
the register for non-payment of the prescribed fee, the Registrar shall, after
six months and within one year from the expiration of the last registration of
the trade mark, on receipt of an application in the prescribed form and on
payment of the prescribed fee, if satisfied that it is just so to do, restore
the trade mark to the register and renew the registration of the trade mark
either generally or subject to such conditions or limitations as he thinks fit
to impose, for a period of ten years from the expiration of the last
registration.
26. Effect
of removal from register for failure to pay fee for renewal. -Where a trade mark has been removed from the register for failure to
pay the fee for renewal, it shall nevertheless, for the purpose of any
application for the registration of another trade mark during one year, next
after the date of the removal, be deemed to be a trade mark already on the
register, unless the tribunal is satisfied either-
(a) That there has been no bona fide trade use
of the trade mark which has been removed during the two years immediately
preceding its removal; or
(b) That no deception or confusion would be
likely to arise from the use of the trade mark which is the subject of the
application for registration by reason of any previous use of the trade mark
which has been removed.
EFFECT OF REGISTRATION
27. No
action for infringement of unregistered trade mark. -
(1) No person shall be entitled to institute
any proceeding to prevent, or to recover damages for, the infringement of an
unregistered trade mark.
(2) Nothing in this Act shall be deemed to
affect rights of action against any person for passing off goods or services as
the goods of another person or as services provided by another person, or the
remedies in respect thereof.
28. Rights
conferred by registration. -
(1) Subject to the other provisions of this
Act, the registration of a trade mark shall, if valid, give to the registered
proprietor of the trade mark the exclusive right to the use of the trade mark
in relation to the goods or services in respect of which the trade mark is
registered and to obtain relief in respect of infringement of the trade mark in
the manner provided by this Act.
(2) The exclusive right to the use of a trade
mark given under sub-section (1) shall be subject to any conditions and
limitations to which the registration is subject.
(3) Where two or more persons are registered
proprietors of trade marks, which are identical with or nearly resemble each
other, the exclusive right to the use of any of those trade marks shall not
(except so far as their respective rights are subject to any conditions or
limitations entered on the register) be deemed to have been acquired by any one
of those persons as against any other of those persons merely by registration
of the trade marks but each of those persons has otherwise the same rights as
against other persons (not being registered users using by way of permitted
use) as he would have if he were the sole registered proprietor.
29. Infringement
of registered trade marks. -
(1) A registered trade mark is infringed by a
person who, not being a registered proprietor or a person using by way of
permitted use, uses in the course of trade, a mark which is identical with, or
deceptively similar to, the trade mark in relation to goods or services 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.
(2) A registered trade mark is infringed by a
person who, not being a registered proprietor or a person using by way of
permitted use, uses in the course of trade, a mark which because of-
(a) Its identity with the registered trade mark
and the similarity of the goods or services covered by such registered trade
mark; or
(b) Its similarity to the registered trade mark
and the identity or similarity of the goods or services covered by such
registered trade mark; or
(c) Its identity with the registered trade mark
and the identity of the goods or services covered by such registered trade
mark,
Is likely to cause confusion on
the part of the public, or which is likely to have an association with the
registered trade mark.
(3) In any case falling under clause (c) of
sub-section (2), the court shall presume that it is likely to cause confusion
on the part of the public.
(4) A registered trade mark is infringed by a
person who, not being a registered proprietor or a person using by way of
permitted use, uses in the course of trade, a mark which-
(a) Is identical with or similar to the
registered trade mark; and
(b) Is used in relation to goods or services
which are not similar to those for which the trade mark is registered; and
(c) The registered trade mark has a reputation
in India and the use of the mark without due cause takes unfair advantage of or
is detrimental to, the distinctive character or repute of the registered trade
mark.
(5) A registered trade mark is infringed by a
person if he uses such registered trade mark, as his trade name or part of his
trade name, or name of his business concern or part of the name, of his
business concern dealing in goods or services in respect of which the trade
mark is registered.
(6) For the purposes of this section, a person
uses a registered mark, if, in particu1ar, he-
(a) Affixes it to goods or the packaging
thereof;
(b) Offers or exposes goods for sale, puts them
on the market, or stocks them for those purposes under the registered trade
mark, or offers or supplies services under the registered trade mark;
(c) Imports or exports goods under the mark; or
(d) Uses the registered trade mark on business
papers or in advertising.
(7) A registered trade mark is infringed by a
person who applies such registered trade mark to a material intended to be used
for labelling or packaging goods, as a business paper, or for advertising goods
or services, provided such person, when he applied the mark, knew or had reason
to believe that the application of the mark was not duly authorised by the
proprietor or a licensee.
(8) A registered trade mark is infringed by any
advertising of that trade mark if such advertising-
(a) Takes unfair advantage of and is contrary
to honest practices in industrial or commercial matters; or
(b) Is detrimental to its distinctive
character; or
(c) Is against the reputation of the trade mark.
(9) Where the distinctive elements of a
registered trade mark consist of or include words, the trade mark may be
infringed by the spoken use of those words as well as by their visual
representation and reference in this section to the use of a mark shall be
construed accordingly.
30. Limits
on effect of registered trade mark. -
(1) Nothing in section 29 shall be construed as
preventing the use of a registered trade mark by any person for the purposes of
identifying goods or services as those of the proprietor provided the use-
(a) Is in accordance with honest practices in
industrial or commercial matters, and
(b) Is
not such as to take unfair advantage of or be detrimental to the distinctive
character or repute of the trade mark.
(2) A registered trade mark is not infringed
where-
(a) The use in relation to goods or services indicates the kind, quality, quantity, intended purpose, value, geographical origin, the time of production of goods or of rendering of services or other characteristics of goods or services;
(b) A trade mark is registered subject to any
conditions or limitations, the use of the trade mark in any manner in relation
to goods to be sold or otherwise traded in, in any place, or in relation to
goods to be exported to any market or in relation to services for use or
available or acceptance in any place or country outside India or in any other
circumstances, to which, having regard to those conditions or limitations, the
registration does not extend;
(c) The use by a person of a trade mark-
(i) In relation to goods connected in the
course of trade with the proprietor or a registered user of the trade mark if,
as to those goods or a bulk or which they form part, the registered proprietor
or the registered user conforming to the permitted use has applied the trade
mark and has not subsequently removed or obliterated it, or has at any time
expressly or impliedly consented to the use of the trade mark; or
(ii) In relation to services to which the
proprietor of such mark or of a registered user conforming to the permitted use
has applied the mark, where the purpose and effect of the use of the mark is to
indicate, in accordance with the fact, that those services have been performed
by the proprietor or a registered user of the mark;
(d) The use of a trade mark by a person in relation to goods adapted to form part of, or to be accessory to, other goods or services in relation to which the trade mark has been used without infringement of the right given by registration under this Act or might for the time being be so used, if the use of the trade mark is reasonably necessary in order to indicate that the goods or services are so adapted, and neither the purpose nor the effect of the use of the trade mark is to indicate, otherwise than in accordance with the fact, a connection in the course of trade between any person and the goods or services, as the case may be;
(e) The use of a registered trade mark, being
one of two or more trade marks registered under this Act which are identical or
nearly resemble each other, in exercise of the right to the use of that trade
mark given by registration under this Act.
(3) Where the goods bearing a registered trade
mark are lawfully acquired by a person, the sale of the goods in the market or
otherwise dealing in those goods by that person or by a person claiming under
or through him is not infringement of a trade by reason only of-
(a) The registered trade mark having been
assigned by the registered proprietor to some other person, after the
acquisition of those goods; or
(b) The goods having been put on the market
under the registered trade mark by the proprietor or with his consent.
(4) Sub-section (3) shall not apply where there
exists legitimate reasons for the proprietor to oppose further dealings in the
goods in particular, where the condition of the goods, has been changed or
impaired after they have been put on the market.
31. Registration
to be prima facie evidence of validity. -
(1) In all legal proceedings relating to a
trade mark registered under this Act (including applications under section 57),
the original registration of the trade mark and of all subsequent assignments
and transmissions of the trade mark shall be prima facie evidence of the
validity thereof;
(2) In all legal proceedings as aforesaid a
registered trade mark shall not be held to be invalid on the ground that it was
not a registrable trade mark under section 9 except upon evidence of
distinctiveness and that such evidence was not submitted to the Registrar
before registration, if it is proved that the trade mark had been so used by
the registered proprietor or his predecessor in title as to have become
distinctive at the date of registration.
32. Protection
of registration on ground of distinctiveness in certain cases. - Where
a trade mark
is registered in breach of sub-section (1) of section 9, it shall not be
declared invalid if, in consequence of the use which has been made of it, it
has after registration and before commencement of any legal proceedings
challenging the validity of such registration, acquired a distinctive character
in relation to the goods or services for which it is registered.
(1) Where the proprietor of an earlier trade
mark has acquiesced for a continuous period of five years in the use of a
registered trade mark, being aware of that use, he shall no longer be entitled
on the basis of that earlier trade mark-
(a) To apply for a declaration that the
registration of the later trade mark is invalid, or
(b) To oppose the use of the later trade mark
in relation to the goods or services in relation to which it has been so used,
unless the registration of the later trade mark was not applied in good faith.
(2) Where sub-section (1) applies, the
proprietor of the later trade mark is not entitled to oppose the use of the
earlier trade mark, or as the case may be, the exploitation of the earlier
right, notwithstanding that the earlier trade mark may no longer be invoked
against his later trade mark.
34. Saving
for vested rights. - Nothing in this Act shall entitle
the proprietor or a registered user of registered trade mark to interfere with
or restrain the use by any person of a trade mark identical with or nearly
resembling it in relation to goods or services in relation to which that person
or a predecessor in title of his has continuously used that trade mark from a
date prior-
(a) To the use of the first-mentioned trade
mark in relation to those goods or services be the proprietor or a predecessor
in title of his; or
(b) To the date of registration of the
first-mentioned trade mark in respect of those goods or services in the name of
the proprietor of a predecessor in title of his;
Whichever is the earlier, and the
Registrar shall not refuse (on such use being proved) to register the second
mentioned trade mark by reason only to the registration of the first-mentioned
trade mark.
35. Saving
for use of name, address or description of goods or services. - Nothing in this Act shall entitle the proprietor or a registered user
of a registered trade mark to interfere with any bona fide use by a person of
his own name or that of his place of business, or of the name, or of the name
of the place of business, of any of his predecessors in business, or the use by
any person of any bona fide description of the character or quality of his
goods or services.
36. Saving
for words used as name or description of an article or substance or service. -
(1) The registration of a trade mark shall not
be deemed to have become invalid by reason only of any use after the date of
the registration of any word or words which the trade mark contains or of which
it consists as the name or description of an article or substance or service:
PROVIDED that, if it is proved either-
(a) That there is a well known and established
use of the said word as the name or description of the article or substance or
service by a person or persons carrying on trade therein, not being use in
relation to goods or services connected in the course of trade with the
proprietor or a registered user of the trade mark or (in the case of a
certification trade mark) in relation to goods or services certified by the
proprietor; or
(b) That the article or substance was formerly
manufactured under a patent that a period of two years or more after the cesser
of the patent has elapsed and that the said word is the only practicable name
or description of the article or substance,
The provisions of sub-section (2)
shall apply.
(2) Where the facts mentioned in clause (a) or
clause (b) of the proviso to sub-section (1) are proved with respect to any
words, then, -
(a) For the purposes of any proceedings under
section 57 if the trade mark consists solely of such words, the registration of
the trade mark, so far as regards registration in respect of the article or
substance in question or of any goods of the same description, or of the
services or of any services of the same description, as the case requires,
shall be deemed to be an entry wrongly remaining on the register;
(b) For the purposes of any other legal
proceedings relating to the trade mark, -
(i) If the trade mark consists solely of such
words, all rights of the proprietor under this Act or any other law to the use
of the trade mark; or
.
(ii) If the trade
mark contains such words and other matter, all such right of the proprietor to
the use of such words,
In relation to the article or
substance or to any goods of the same description, or to the services or to any
services of the same description as the case requires, shall be deemed to have
ceased on the date on which the use mentioned in clause (a) of the proviso to
sub-section (1) first became well known and established or at the expiration of
the period of two years mentioned in clause (b) of the said proviso.
ASSIGNMENT AND TRANSMISSION
37. Power
of registered proprietor to assign and give receipts. - The person for the time being entered in the register as proprietor of
a trade mark shall, subject to the provisions of this Act and to any rights
appearing from the register to be vested in any other person, have power to
assign the trade mark, and to give effectual receipts for any consideration for
such assignment.
38. Assignability
and transmissibility of registered trade marks. - Notwithstanding
anything in
any other law to the contrary, a registered trade mark shall, subject to the
provisions of this Chapter, be assignable and transmissible, whether with or
without the goodwill of the business concerned and in respect either of all the
goods or services in respect of which the trade mark is registered or of some
only of those goods or services.
39. Assignability
and transmissibility of unregistered trade marks. - An unregistered trade mark may be assigned or transmitted with or
without the goodwill of the business concerned.
40. Restriction
on assignment or transmission where multiple exclusive rights would be created.
-
(1) Notwithstanding anything in sections 38 and
39, a trade mark shall not be assignable or transmissible in a case in which as
a result of the assignment or transmission there would in the circumstances
subsist, whether under this Act or any other law, exclusive rights in more than
one of the persons concerned to the use, in relation to-
(a) Same goods or services;
(b) Same description of goods or services;
(c) Goods or services or description of goods
or services which are associated with each other,
Of trade marks nearly resembling each other or of identical trade mark, if having regard to the similarity of the goods and services and to the similarity of the trade marks, the use of the trade marks in exercise of those rights would be likely to deceive or cause confusion:
PROVIDED that an assignment or
transmission shall not be deemed to be invalid under this sub-section if the
exclusive rights subsisting as a result thereof in the persons concerned
respectively are, having regard to limitations imposed thereon, such as not to
be exercisable by two or more of those persons in relation to goods to be sold,
or otherwise traded in, within India otherwise than for export therefrom, or in
relation to goods to be exported to the same market outside India or in relation
to services for use at any place in India or any place outside India in
relation to services available for acceptance in India.
(2) The proprietor of a registered trade mark
who proposes to assign it may submit to the Registrar in the prescribed manner
a statement of case setting out the circumstances and the Registrar may issue
to him a certificate stating whether, having regard to the similarity of the
goods or services and of the trade marks referred to in the case, the proposed
assignment would or would not be invalid under sub-section (1),and a
certificate so issued shall, subject to appeal and unless it is shown that the
certificate was obtained by fraud or misrepresentation, be conclusive as to the
validity or invalidity under sub-section (1) of the assignment in so far as
such validity or invalidity depends upon the facts set out in the case, but, as
regards a certificate in favour of validity, only if application for the
registration under section 45 of the title of the person becoming entitled is
made within six months from the date on which the certificate is issued.
41. Restriction
on assignment or transmission when exclusive rights would be created in different parts of India. - Notwithstanding anything in sections 38 and
39, a trade mark shall not be assignable or transmissible in a case in which as
a result of the assignment or transmission there would in the circumstances
subsist, whether under this Act or any other law-
(a) An exclusive right in one of the persons
concerned, to the use of the trade mark limited. to use in relation to goods to
be sold or otherwise traded in, in any place in India, or in relation to
services for use, or services available for acceptance in any place in India;
and
(b) An exclusive right in another of these
persons concerned, to the use of a trade mark nearly resembling the
first-mentioned trade mark or of an identical trade mark in relation to-
(i) The same goods or services; or
(ii) The same description of goods or services;
or
(iii) Services which are associated with those
goods or goods of that description or goods which are associated with those
services or services of that description,
Limited to use in relation to
goods to be sold or otherwise traded in, or services for use, or available for
acceptance, in any other place in India:
PROVIDED that in any such case, on
application in the prescribed manner by the proprietor of a trade mark who
proposes to assign it, or by a person who claims that a registered trade mark
has been transmitted to him or to a predecessor in title of his since the
commencement of this Act, the Registrar, if he is satisfied that in all the
circumstances the use of the trade mark in exercise of the said rights would
not be contrary to the public interest may approve the assignment or
transmission, and an assignment or transmission so approved shall not, unless
it is shown that the approval was obtained by fraud or misrepresentation, be
deemed to be invalid under this section or section 40 if application for the
registration under section 45 of the title of the person becoming entitled is
made within six months from the date on which the approval is given or, in the
case of a transmission, was made before that date.
42. Conditions
for assignment otherwise than in connection with the goodwill of a business. - Where an assignment of a trade mark, whether registered or unregistered
is made otherwise than in connection with the goodwill of the business in which
the mark has been or is used, the assignment shall not take effect unless the
assignee, not later than the expiration of six months from the date on which
the assignment is made or within such extended period, if any, not exceeding
three months in the aggregate, as the Registrar may allow, applies to the
Registrar for directions with respect to the advertisement of the assignment,
and advertises it in such form and manner and within such period as the
Registrar may direct.
Explanation: For the purposes of this section,
an assignment of a trade mark of the following description shall not be deemed
to be an assignment made otherwise than in connection with the goodwill of the
business in which the mark is used, namely:-
(a) An assignment of a trade mark in respect
only of some of the goods or services for which the trade mark is registered
accompanied by the transfer of the goodwill of the business concerned in those
goods or services only; or
(b) An assignment of a trade mark which is used
in relation to goods exported from India or in relation to services for use
outside India if the assignment is accompanied by the transfer of the goodwill
of the export business only.
43. Assignability
and transmissibility of certification trade marks. - A certification trade mark shall not be assignable or transmissible
otherwise than with the consent of the Registrar, for which application shall
be made in writing in the prescribed manner.
44. Assignability
and transmissibility or associated trade marks. - Associated trade marks shall be assignable and transmissible only as a
whole and not separately, but, subject to the provisions of this Act, they
shall, for all other purposes, be deemed to have been registered as separate
trade marks.
45. Registration
of assignments and transmissions. -
(1) Where a person becomes entitled by
assignment or transmission to a registered trade mark, he shall apply in the
prescribed manner to the Registrar to register his title, and the Registrar
shall, on receipt of the application and on proof of title to his satisfaction,
register him as the proprietor of the trade mark in respect of the goods or
services in respect of which the assignment or transmission has effect, and
shall cause particulars of the assignment or transmission to be entered on the
register:
PROVIDED that where the validity of an
assignment or transmission is in dispute between the parties, the Registrar may
refuse to register the assignment or transmission until the rights of the
parties have been determined by a competent court.
(2) Except for the purpose of an application
before the Registrar under sub-section (1) or an appeal from an order thereon,
or an application under section 57 or an appeal from an order thereon, a
document or instrument in respect of which no entry has been made in the
register in accordance with sub-section (1), shall not be admitted in evidence
by the Registrar or the Appellate Board or any court in proof of title to the
trade mark by assignment or transmission unless the Registrar or the Appellate
Board or the court. as the case may be, otherwise directs.
USE OF TRADE
MARK AND REGISTERED USERS
46. Proposed
use of trade mark by company to be formed, etc. -
(1) No application for the registration of a
trade mark in respect of any goods or services shall be refused nor shall
permission for such registration be withheld, on the ground only that it
appears that the applicant does not use or propose to use the trade mark if the
Registrar is satisfied that-
(a) A company is about to be formed and
registered under the Companies Act, 1956 and that the applicant intends to
assign the trade mark to that company with a view to the use thereof in
relation to those goods or services by the company, or
(b) The proprietor intends it to be used by a
person, as a registered user after the registration of the trade mark.
(2) The provisions of section 47 shall have
effect, in relation to trade mark registered under the powers conferred by this
sub-section, as if for the reference, in clause (a) of sub-section (1) of that
section, to the intention on the part of an applicant for registration that a
trade mark should be used by him there were substituted a reference to the
intention on his part that it should be used by the company or registered user
concerned.
(3) The tribunal may, in case to which
sub-section (1) applies, require the applicant to give security for the costs
of any proceedings relating to any opposition or appeal, and in default of such
security being duly given, may treat the application as abandoned.
(4) Where in a case to which sub-section (1)
applies, a trade mark in respect of any goods or services is registered in the
name of an applicant who, relies on intention to assign the trade mark to a
company, then, unless within such period as may be prescribed or within such
further period not exceeding six months as the Registrar may, on application
being made to him in the prescribed manner, allow, the company has been
registered as the proprietor of the trade mark in respect of those goods or
services, the registration shall cease to have effect in respect thereof at the
expiration of that period and the Registrar shall amend the register
accordingly.
47. Removal
from register and imposition of limitations on ground of non-use. -
(1) A registered trade mark may be taken off
the register in respect of the goods or services in respect of which it is
registered on application made in the prescribed manner to the Registrar or the
Appellate Board by any person aggrieved on the ground either-
(a) That the trade mark was registered without any bona fide intention on the part of the applicant for registration that it should be used in relation to those goods or services by him or, in a case to which the provisions of section 46 apply, by the company concerned or the registered user, as the case may be, and that there has, in fact, been no bona fide use of the trade mark in relation to those goods or services by any proprietor thereof for the time being up to a date three months before the date of the application; or
(b) That up to a date three months before the
date of the application, a continuous period of five years from the date on
which the trade mark is actually entered in the register or longer had elapsed
during which the trade mark was registered and during which there was no bona
fide use thereof in relation to those goods or services by any proprietor
thereof for the time being:
PROVIDED that except where the applicant
has been permitted under section 12 to register an identical or nearly
resembling trade mark in respect of the goods or services in question, or where
the tribunal is of opinion that he might properly be permitted so to register
such a trade mark, the tribunal may refuse an application under clause (a) or
clause (b) in relation to any goods or services, if it is shown that there has
been, before the relevant date or during the relevant period, as the case may
be, bona fide use of the trade mark by any proprietor thereof for the time
being in relation to-
(i) Goods or services of the same description;
or
(ii) Goods or services associated with those
goods or services of that description being goods or services, as the case may
be, in respect of which the trade mark is registered.
(2) Where in relation to any goods or services
in respect of which a trade mark is registered-
(a) The
circumstances referred to in clause (b) of sub-section (1) are shown to exist
so far as regards non-use of the trade mark in relation to goods to be sold, or
otherwise traded in a particular place in India (otherwise than for export from
India), or in relation to goods to be exported to a particular market outside
India; or in relation to services for use or available for acceptance in a
particular place in India or for use in a particular market outside India; and
(b) A person has been permitted under section
12 to register an identical or nearly resembling trade mark in respect of those
goods, under a registration extending to use in relation to goods to be so
sold, or otherwise traded in, or in relation to goods to be so exported, or in
relation to services for use or available for acceptance in that place or for
use in that country, or the tribunal is of opinion that he might properly be
permitted so to register such a trade mark,
On application by that person in
the prescribed manner to the Appellate Board or to the Registrar, the tribunal
may impose on the registration of the first-mentioned trade mark such
limitations as it thinks proper for securing that that registration shall cease
to extend to such use.
(3) An applicant shall not be entitled to rely
for the purpose of clause (b) of sub-section (1) or for the purposes of
sub-section (2) on any non-use of a trade mark which is shown to have been due
to special circumstances in the trade, which includes restrictions on the use
of the trade mark in India imposed by any law or regulation and not to any
intention to abandon or not to use the trade mark in relation to the goods or
services to which the application relates.
(1) Subject to the provisions of section 49, a
person other than the registered proprietor of a trade mark may be registered as
a registered user thereof in respect of any or all of the goods or services in
respect of which the trade mark is registered.
(2) The permitted use of a trade mark
shall be deemed to be used by the proprietor thereof, and shall be deemed not
to be used by a person other than the proprietor, for the purposes of section
47 or for any other purpose for which such use is material under this Act or
any other law.
49. Registration
as registered user. -
(1) Where it is proposed that a person should
be registered as a registered user of a trade mark, the registered proprietor
and the proposed registered user shall jointly apply in writing to the
Registrar in the prescribed manner, and every such application shall be
accompanied by-
(a) The agreement in writing or a duly
authenticated copy thereof, entered into between the registered proprietor and
the proposed registered user with respect to the permitted use of the trade
mark; and
(b) An affidavit made by the registered
proprietor or by some person authorised to the satisfaction of the Registrar to
act on his behalf, -
(i) Giving particulars of the relationship,
existing or proposed, between the registered proprietor and the proposed
registered user, including particulars showing the degree of control by the
proprietor over the permitted use which their relationship will confer and
whether it is a term of their relationship that the proposed registered user
shall be the sole registered user or that there shall be any other restriction
as to persons for whose registration as registered users application may be
made;
(ii) Stating the goods or services in respect of
which registration is proposed;
(iii) Stating the conditions or restrictions, if any,
proposed with respect to the characteristics of the goods or services, to the
mode or place of permitted use, or to any other matter;
(iv) Stating whether the permitted use is to be
for a period or without limit of period, and, if for a period, the duration
thereof; and
(c) Such further documents or other evidence as may be required by the Registrar or as may be prescribed.
(2) When the requirements of sub-section (1)
have been complies with, the Registrar shall register the propose registered
user in respect of the goods or services as to which he is so satisfied.
(3) The Registrar shall issue notice in the
prescribed manner of the registration of a person as a registered user, to
other registered users of the trade mark, if any.
(4) The Registrar shall, if so requested by the
applicant, take steps for securing that information given for the purposes of
an application under this section (other than matters entered in the register)
is not disclosed to rivals in trade.
50. Power
of Registrar for variation or cancellation of registration as registered user. -
(1) Without prejudice to the provisions of
section 57, the registration of a person as registered user-
(a) May be varied by the Registrar as regards
the goods or services in respect of which it has effect on the application in
writing in the prescribed manner of the registered proprietor of the trade
mark;
(b) May be cancelled by the Registrar on the
application in writing in the prescribed manner of the registered proprietor or
of the registered user or of any other registered user of the trade mark ;
(c) May be cancelled by the Registrar on the application in writing in the prescribed manner of any person on any of the following, rounds, namely: -
(i) That the registered user has used the
trade mark otherwise than in accordance with the agreement under clause (a) of
sub-section (1) of section 49 or in such way as to cause or to be likely to
cause, deception or confusion;
(ii) That the proprietor or the registered user
misrepresented, or failed to disclose, some fact material to the application
for registration which if accurately represented or disclosed would not have
justified the registration of the registered user;
(iii) That the circumstances have changed since
the date of registration in such a way that at the date of such application for
cancellation they would not have justified registration of the registered user;
(iv) That the registration ought not to have been
effected having regard to rights vested in the applicant by virtue of a
contract in the performance of which he is interested;
(d) May be cancelled by the Registrar on his
own motion or on the application in writing in the prescribed manner by any
person, on the ground that any stipulation in the agreement between the
registered proprietor and the registered user regarding the quality of the
goods or services in relation to which the trade mark is to be used is either
not being enforced or is not being complied with;
(e) May be cancelled by the Registrar in
respect of any goods or services in relation to which the trade mark is no
longer registered.
(2) The Registrar shall issue notice in the
prescribed manner in respect of every application under this section to the
registered proprietor and each registered user (not being the applicant) of the
trade mark.
(3) The procedure for cancelling a registration
shall be such as may be prescribed:
PROVIDED that before cancelling of
registration, the registered proprietor shall be given a reasonable opportunity
of being heard.
51. Power
of Registrar to call for information relating to agreement in respect of registered users. -
(1) The Registrar may, at any time during the
continuance of the registration of the registered user, by notice in writing,
require the registered proprietor to confirm to him within one month that the
agreement filed under clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 49 continues to
be in force.
(2) If the registered proprietor fails to
furnish the confirmation within one month as required under sub-section (1),
the registered user shall cease to be the registered user on the day
immediately after the expiry of the said period and the Registrar shall notify
the same.
52. Right
of registered user to take proceedings against infringement. -
(1) Subject to any agreement subsisting between
the parties, a registered user may institute proceedings for infringement in
his own name as if he were the registered proprietor, making the registered
proprietor a defendant and the rights and obligations of such registered user
in such case being concurrent with those of the registered proprietor.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law, a registered proprietor so added as defendant shall not be liable
for any costs unless he enters an appearance and takes part in the proceedings.
53. No
right of permitted user to take proceeding against infringement. -A person referred to in sub-clause (ii) of clause (r) of sub-section
(1) of section 2 shall have no right to institute any proceeding for any
infringement.
54. Registered
user not to have right of assignment or transmission. -Nothing
in this Act shall confer on a registered user of a trade mark any
assignable or transmissible right to the use thereof.
Explanation I: The right of a registered user of a trade
mark shall not be deemed to have been assigned or transmitted within the
meaning of this section in the following cases, namely:-
(a) Where the registered user being an
individual enters into a partnership with any other person for carrying on the
business concerned; but in any such case the firm may use the trade mark, if
otherwise in force, only for so long as the registered user is a member of the
firm;
(b) Where the registered user being a firm
subsequently undergoes a change in its constitution; but in any such case the
reconstituted firm may use the trade mark, if otherwise in force, only for so
long as any partner of the original firm at the time of its registration as
registered user, continues to be a partner of the reconstituted firm;
Explanation II: For the purposes of Explanation I, firm
has the same meaning as in the Indian Partnership Act, 1932.
55. Use
of one of associated or substantially identical trade marks equivalent to use
of another. -
(1) Where under the provisions of this Act, use
of a registered trade mark is required to be proved for any purpose, the
tribunal may, if and, so far as it shall. think right, accept use of a
registered associate trade mark, or of the trade mark with additions or
alterations not substantially affecting its identity, as an equivalent for the
use required to be proved.
(2) The use of the whole of a registered trade
mark shall, for the purpose of this Act, be deemed to be also use of any trade
mark being a part thereof and registered in accordance with sub-section (1) of
section 15 in the name of the same proprietor.
(3) Notwithstanding anything in section32, the
use of part of the registered trade mark in sub-section (2) shall not be
conclusive as to its evidence of distinctiveness for any purpose under this
Act.
56. Use
of trade mark for export trade and use when form of trade connection changes. -
(1) The application in India of trade mark to
goods to be exported from India or in relation to services for use outside
India and any other act done in India in relation to goods to be so exported or
services so rendered outside India which, if done in relation to goods to be
sold or services provided or otherwise traded in within India would constitute
use of a trade mark therein, shall be deemed to constitute use of the trade
mark in relation to those goods or services for any purpose for which such use
is material under this Act or any other law.
(2) The use of a registered trade mark in
relation to goods or services between which and the person using the mark any
form of connection in the course of trade subsists shall not be deemed to be
likely to cause deception or confusion on the ground only that the mark has
been or is used in relation to goods or services between which and the said
person or a predecessor in title of that person a different form of connection
in the course of trade subsisted or subsists.
RECTIFICATION AND CORRECTION OF THE REGISTER
57. Power
to cancel or vary registration and to rectify the register. -
(1) On application made in the prescribed
manner to the Appellate Board or to the Registrar by any person aggrieved, the
tribunal may make such order as it may think fit for cancelling or varying the
registration of a trade mark on the ground of any contravention, or failure to
observe a condition entered on the register in relation thereto.
(2) Any person aggrieved by the absence or
omission from the register of any entry, or by any entry made in the register
without sufficient cause, or by any entry wrongly remaining on the register, or
by any error or defect in any entry in the register, may apply in the
prescribed manner to the Appellate Board or to the Registrar, and the tribunal
may make such order for making, expunging or varying the entry. as it may think
fit.
(3) The tribunal may in any proceeding under
this section decide any question that may be necessary or expedient to decide
in connection with the rectification of the register.
(4) The tribunal, of its own motion, may, after
giving notice in the prescribed manner to the parties concerned and after
giving them an opportunity of being heard, make any order referred to in
sub-section (1) or sub-section (2).
(5) Any order of the Appellate Board rectifying
the register shall direct that notice of the rectification shall be served upon
the Registrar in the prescribed manner who shall upon receipt of such notice
rectify the register accordingly.
(1) The Registrar may, on application made in
the prescribed manner by the registered proprietor, -
(a) Correct any error in the name, address or description of the registered proprietor of a trade mark, or any other entry; relating to the trade mark;
(b) Enter any change in the name, address or
description of the person who is registered as proprietor of a trade mark;
(c) Cancel the entry of a trade mark on the
register;
(d) Strike out any goods or classes of goods or
services from those in respect of which a trade mark is registered,
And may make any consequential
amendment or alteration in the certificate of registration, and for that
purpose, may require the certificate of registration to be produced to him.
(2) The Registrar may, on application made in
the prescribed manner by a registered user of a trade mark, and after notice to
the registered proprietor, correct any error, or enter any change, in the name,
address or description of the registered user.
59. Alteration
of registered trade marks. -
(1) The registered proprietor of a trademark
may apply in the prescribed manner to the Registrar for leave to add to or
alter the trade mark in any manner not substantially affecting the identity
thereof, and the Registrar may refuse leave or may grant it on such terms and
subject to such limitations as he may think fit
(2) The Registrar may cause an application
under this section to be advertised in the prescribed manner in any case where
it appears to him that it is expedient so to do, and where he does so, if
within the prescribed time from the date of the advertisement any person gives
notice to the Registrar in the prescribed manner of opposition to the
application, the Registrar shall, after hearing the parties if so required,
decide the matter.
(3) Where leave is granted under this section,
the trade mark as altered shall be advertised in the prescribed manner, unless
the application has already been advertised under sub-section (2).
(1) The Registrar shall not make any amendment
of the register which would have the effect of adding arty goods or classes, of
goods or services to those in respect of which a trade mark is registered
(whether in one or more classes) immediately before the amendment is to be made
or of antedating the registration of a trade mark in respect of any goods or
services:
PROVIDED that this sub-section, shall not
apply when the Registrar is satisfied that compliance therewith would involve
undue complexity and that the addition or antedating, as the case may be, would
not affect any substantial quantity of goods or services and would not
substantially prejudice the rights of any person.
(2) A proposal so to amend the register shall
be brought to the notice of the registered proprietor of the trade mark
affected and advertised in the prescribed manner, and may be opposed before the
Registrar by any person aggrieved on the ground that the proposed amendment
contravenes the provisions of sub-section (1).
COLLECTIVE MARKS
61. Special
provisions for collective marks. -
(1) The provision of this Act shall apply to
collective marks subject to the provisions contained in this Chapter.
(2) In relation to a collective mark the reference
in clause (zb) of sub-section (1) of section 2 to distinguishing the goods or
services of one person from those of others shall be construed as a reference
to distinguishing the goods or services of members of an association of persons
which is the proprietor of the mark from those of others.
62. Collective
mark not to be misleading as to character or significance. A collective mark shall not be
registered if it is likely to deceive or cause confusion on the part of public
in particular if it is likely to be taken to be something other than a
collective mark, and in such case the Registrar may require that a mark in
respect of which application is made for registration comprise some indication
that it is a collective mark.
63. Application
to be accompanied by regulations governing use of collective marks. -
(1) An application for registration of a
collective mark shall be accompanied by the regulations governing the use of
such collective mark.
(2) The regulations referred to in sub-section
(1) shall specify the persons authorised to use the mark, the conditions of
membership of the association and, the conditions of use of the mark, including
any sanctions against misuse and such other matters as may be prescribed.
64. Acceptance
of application and regulations by Registrar. - If
it appears to the Registrar that the requirements for registration are satisfied, he
shall accept the application together with the regulations, either
unconditionally or subject to such conditions including amendments of the said
regulations, if any, as he may deem fit or refuse to accept it and if accepted
shall notify the regulations.
65. Regulations
to be open to inspection. - The regulations referred to in
sub-section (1)
of section 63 shall be open to public inspection in the same way as the
register as provided in section 148.
66. Amendment
of regulations. - Any amendment of regulations
referred to in sub-section (1) of section 63 shall not be effective unless the
amended regulations are filed with the Registrar, and accepted and published by
him in accordance with section 64.
67. Infringement
proceedings by registered proprietor of collective mark. - In a suit for infringement instituted by the registered proprietor of a
collective mark as plaintiff the court shall take into account any loss
suffered or likely to be suffered by authorised users and may give such
directions as it thinks fit as to the extent to which the plaintiff shall hold
the proceeds of any pecuniary remedy on behalf of such authorised users.
68. Additional
grounds for removal of registration of collective mark. - The registration of a collective mark may also be removed from the
register on the ground-
(a) That the manner in which the collective
mark has been used by the proprietor or authorised user has caused it to become
liable to mislead the public as a collective mark; or
(b) That the proprietor has failed to observe,
or to secure the observance of the regulations governing the use of the mark.
Explanation I: For the purposes of this Chapter, unless the
context otherwise requires, authorised user means a member of an association
authorised to use the registered collective mark of the association.
Explanation II: For the purposes of this Act, use of a
collective mark by an authorised user referred to in Explanation I shall be
deemed to be the use by the registered proprietor thereof.
CERTIFICATION TRADE MARKS
69 Certain
provisions of this Act not applicable to certification trade marks. - The
following
provisions of this Act shall not apply to certification trade marks, that is to
say, -
(a) Clauses (a) and (c) of sub-section (1) of
section 9;
(b) Sections 18, 20 and 21, except as expressly
applied by this Chapter;
(c) Sections 28, 29, 30, 41, 42, 47, 48, 49,
50, 52, 54 and sub-section (2) of section 56;
(d) Chapter XII, except section 107.
70. Registration
of certification trade marks. - A mark shall not be registrable as
a certification trade mark in the name of a person who carries on a trade in
goods of the kind certified or a trade of the provision of services of the kind
certified.
71. Applications
for registration of certification trade marks. -
(1) An application for the registration of a
mark as a certification trade mark shall be made to the Registrar in the
prescribed manner by the person proposed to be registered as the proprietor
thereof, and accompanied by a draft of the regulations to be deposited under
section 74.
(2) Subject to the provisions of section 70,
the provisions of sections l8, 19 and 22 shall apply in relation to an
application under this section as they apply in relation to an application
under section 18, subject to the modification that reference therein to
acceptance of an application shall be construed as reference to authorisation
to proceed with an application.
(3) In dealing under the said provisions with
an application under this section, the tribunal shall have regard to the like
considerations, so far as relevant, as if the application were applications
under section 18 and to any other considerations relevant to applications under
this section, including the desirability of securing that a certification trade
mark shall comprise some indication that it is a certification trade mark.
72. Consideration
of application for registration by the Registrar. -
(1) The Registrar shall consider the
application made under section 71 with regard to the following matters,
namely:-
(a) Whether the applicant is competent to
certify the goods in respect of which the mark is to be registered;
(b) Whether the draft of the regulations to be
filed under section 74 is satisfactory;
(c) Whether in all the circumstances the
registration applied for would be to the public advantage,
And may either-
(i) Refuse the application; or
(ii) Accept the application and approve the said draft of the regulations either without modification and unconditionally or subject to any conditions or limitations, or to any amendments or modifications of the application or of the regulations, which he thinks requisite having regard to any of the said matters.
(2) Except in the case of acceptance and
approval without modification and unconditionally, the Registrar shall not
decide any matter under sub-section (1) without giving the applicant an
opportunity of being heard.
73. Opposition
to registration of certification trade marks. - When an application has been accepted, the Registrar shall, as soon as
may be thereafter, cause the application as accepted to be advertised in the
prescribed manner, and the provisions of section 21 shall apply in relation to
the registration of the mark as they apply in relation to an application under
section 18.
74. Filing
of regulations governing the use of a certification trade mark. -
(1) There shall be filed at the Trade Marks
Registry in respect of every mark registered as a certification trade mark
regulations for governing the use thereof, which shall include provisions as to
the cases in which the proprietor is to certify goods or services and to
authorise the use of the certification trade mark, and may contain any other
provisions which the Registrar may by general or special order, require or
permit to be inserted therein (including provisions conferring a right of
appeal to the Registrar against any refusal of the proprietor to certify goods
or to authorise the use of the certification trade mark in accordance with the
regulations); and regulations so filed shall be open to inspection in like
manner as the register as provided in section 148.
(2) The regulations so filed may, on the
application of the registered proprietor, be altered by the Registrar.
(3) The Registrar may cause such application to
be advertised in any case where it appears to him expedient so to do, and where
he does so, if within the time specified in the advertisement any person gives
notice of opposition to the application, the Registrar shall not decide the
matter without giving the parties an opportunity of being heard.
75. Infringement of
certification trade marks. - The right conferred by section 78 is infringed by any
person who, not being the registered proprietor of the certification trade mark
or a person authorised by him in that behalf under the regulations filed under
section 74, using it in accordance therewith, uses in the course of trade, a
mark, which is identical with, or deceptively similar to the certification
trade mark in relation to any goods or services in respect of which it is
registered, and in such manner as to render the use of the mark likely to be
taken as being a use as a trade mark.
76. Acts
not constituting infringement of certification trade marks. -
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act, the following acts do not constitute an infringement of the right to the
use of a registered certification trade mark-
(a) Where a certification trade mark is registered subject to any conditions or limitations entered on the register, the use of any such mark in any mode, in relation to goods to be sold or otherwise traded in any place, or in relation to goods to be exported to any market or in relation to services for use or available for acceptance in any place, country or territory or in any other circumstances, to which having regard to any such limitations, the registration does not extend;
(b) The use of a certification trade mark in
relation to goods or services certified by the proprietor of the mark if, as to
those goods or services or a bulk of which they form part, the proprietor or
another in accordance with his authorisation under the relevant regulations has
applied the mark and has not subsequently removed or obliterated it, or the
proprietor has at any time expressly or impliedly consented to the use of the
mark;
(c) The use of a certification trade mark in
relation to goods or services adapted to form part of, or to be accessory to,
other goods in relation to which the mark has been used without infringement of
the right given as aforesaid or might for the time being be so used, if the use
of the mark is reasonably necessary in order to indicate that the goods or
services are so adapted and neither the purpose nor the effect of the use of
the mark is to indicate otherwise than in accordance with the fact that the
goods or services are certified by the proprietor.
(2) Clause (b) of sub-section (1) shall not
apply to the case of use consisting of the application of a certification trade
mark to goods or services, notwithstanding that they are such goods or services
as are mentioned in that clause if such application is contrary to the
regulations referred to in that clause.
(3) Where a certification trade mark is one of
two or more trade marks registered under this Act, which are identical or
nearly resemble each other, the use of any of those trade marks in exercise of
the right to the use of that trade mark given by registration, shall not be
deemed to be an infringement of the right so given to the use of any other of
those trade marks.
77. Cancellation
or varying of registration of certification trade marks. -The Registrar may, on the application in the prescribed manner of any
person aggrieved and after giving the proprietor an opportunity of opposing the
application, make such order as he fit for expunging or varying any entry in
the register to a certification trade mark, or for varying the regulations, on
any of the following grounds, namely:-
(a) That the proprietor is no longer competent,
in the case of any of the goods or services in respect of which the mark is
registered, to certify those goods or services;
(b) That the proprietor has failed to observe
any provisions of the regulations to be observed on his part;
(c) That it is no longer to the public
advantage that the mark should remain registered;
(d) That it is requisite for the public
advantage that if the mark remains registered, the regulations should be
varied.
78. Rights
conferred by registration of certification trade marks
(1) Subject to the provisions of sections 34,
35 and 76, the registration of a person as a proprietor of certification trade
mark in respect of any goods or services shall, if valid, give to that person
the exclusive right to the use of the mark in relation to those goods or
services.
(2) The exclusive right to the use of a
certification trade mark given under sub-section (1) shall be subject to any
conditions and limitations to which the registration is subject.
SPECIAL PROVISIONS FOR TEXTILE GOODS
79. Textile
goods. - The Central Government may prescribe classes
of goods (in this Chapter referred to as textile goods) to the trade marks used in
relation to which the provisions of this chapter shall apply; and subject to
the said provisions, the other provisions of this Act shall apply to such trade
marks as they apply to trade marks used in relation to other classes of goods.
80. Restriction
on registration of textile goods. -
(1) In respect of textile goods being piece
goods-
(a) No mark consisting of a line heading alone
shall be registrable as a trade mark;
(b) A line heading shall not be deemed to be
capable of distinguishing;
(c) The registration of trade mark shall not
give any exclusive right to the use of a line heading.
(2) In respect of any textile goods, the
registration of letters or numerals, or any combination thereof, shall be
subject to such conditions and restrictions as may be prescribed.
81. Stamping
of piece goods, cotton yam and thread. -
(1) Piece goods, such as are ordinarily sold by
length or by the piece, which have been manufactured, bleached, dyed, printed
or finished in premises which are a factory, as defined in the Factories Act,
1948, shall not be removed for sale from the last of such premises in which
they underwent any of the said processes without having conspicuously stamped
in international form of Indian numerals on each piece the length thereof in
standard yards, or in standard yards and a fraction of such a yard, or in
standard metres or in standard metres and a fraction of such a metre, according
to the real length of the piece, and, except when the goods are sold from the
factory for export from India, without being conspicuously marked on each piece
with the name of the manufacturer or of the occupier of the premises in which
the piece was finally processed or of the wholesale purchaser in India of the
piece.
(2) Cotton yarn such as is ordinarily sold in
bundles, and cotton thread, namely, sewing, darning, crochet or handicraft
thread, which, have been manufactured, bleached, dyed or finished in any
premises not exempted by the rules made under section 82 shall not be removed
for sale from those premises unless, in accordance with the said rules in the
case of yarn-
(a) The bundles are conspicuously marked with
an indication of the weight of yarn in English or the metric system in each
bundles; and
(b) The count of the yarn contained in the bundles
and in the case of thread each unit is conspicuously marked with the length or
weight of thread in the unit and in such other manner as may be required by the
said rules; and
(c) Except where the goods are sold from the
premises for export from India, unless each bundle or unit is conspicuously
marked with the name of the manufacturer or of the wholesale purchaser in India
of the goods:
PROVIDED that the rules made under section
82 shall exempt all premises where the work is done by members of one family
with or without the assistance of not more than ten other employees, and all
premises controlled by a co-operative society where not more than twenty
workers are employed in the premises.
82. Determination
of character of textile goods by sampling. -
(1) For the purposes of this Act, the Central
Government may make rules-
(a) To provide, with respect to any goods which
purport or are alleged to be of uniform number, quantity, measure, gauge or
weight, for the number of samples to be selected and tested and for the
selection of the samples;
(b) To provide, for the manner in which for the purposes of section 81 cotton yarn and cotton thread shall be marked with the particulars required by that section, and for the exemption of certain premises used for the manufacture, bleaching, dying or finishing of cotton yarn or cotton thread from the provisions of, that section; and
(c) Declaring what classes of goods are
included in the expression piece goods such as are ordinarily sold by length
or by the piece for the purpose of section 81, of this Act or clause (n) of
sub-section (2) of section 11 of the Customs Act, 1962.
(2) With respect to any goods for the selection
and testing of samples of which provision is not made in any rules for the time
being in force under sub-section (1), the court of officer of customs, as the
case may be, having occasion to ascertain the number, quantity, measure, gauge
or weight of the goods, shall, by order in writing, determine the number of
samples to be selected and tested and the manner in which the samples are to be
selected.
(3) The average of the results of the testing
in pursuance of rules under sub-section (1) or of an order under sub-section
(2) shall be prima facie evidence of the number, quantity, measure, gauge or
weight, as the case may be, of the goods.
(4) If a person having any claim to, or in
relation to, any goods of which samples have been selected and tested in
pursuance of rules under sub-section (1), or of an order under sub-section (2),
desires that any further samples of the goods be selected and tested, such
further samples shall, on his written application and on the payment in advance
by him to the court or Officer of customs, as the case may be, of such sums for
defraying the cost of the further selection and testing as the court or officer
may from time to time require, be selected and tested to such extent as may be
permitted by rules made by the Central Government in this behalf or as, in the
case of goods with respect to which provision is not made in such rules, the
court or officer of customs may determine in the circumstances to be
reasonable, the samples being selected in the manner prescribed under
sub-section (1), or in sub-section (2), as the case may be.
(5) The average of the results of the testing
referred to in sub-section (3) and of the further testing under sub-section (4)
shall be conclusive proof of the number, quantity, measure, gauge or weight, as
the case may be, of the goods.
APPELLATE BOARD
83. Establishment
of Appellate Board. - The Central Government shall, by
notification in the Official Gazette, establish an Appellate Board to be known
as the Intellectual Property Appellate Board to exercise the jurisdiction,
powers and authority conferred on it by or under this Act.
84. Composition
of Appellate Board. -
(1) The Appellate Board shall consist of a
Chairman, Vice-Chairman and such number of other Members, as the Central
Government may, deem fit and, subject to the other provisions of this Act, the
jurisdiction, powers and authority of the Appellate Board may be exercised by
Benches thereof.
(2) Subject to the other provisions of this
Act, a Bench shall consist of one Judicial Member and one Technical Member and
shall sit at such place as the Central Government may, by notification in the
Official Gazette, specify.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (2), the Chairman-
(a) May, in addition to discharging the
functions of the Judicial Member or Technical Member of the Bench to which he
is appointed, discharge the functions of the Judicial Member or, as the case
may be, the Technical Member, of any other Bench;
(b) May transfer a Member from one Bench to
another Bench;
(c) May authorise the Vice-Chairman, the
Judicial Member or the Technical Member appointed to one Bench to discharge
also the functions of the Judicial Member or the Technical member, as the case
may be, of another Bench.
(4) Where any Benches are constituted, the
Central Government may, from time to time, by notification, make provisions as
to the distribution of the business of the Appellate Board amongst the Benches
and specify the matters which may be dealt with by each Bench.
(5) If any question arises as to whether any
matter falls within the purview of the business allocated to a Bench, the
decision of the Chairman shall be final.
Explanation: For the removal of doubts, it is
hereby declared that the expression matter includes an appeal under section
91.
(6) If the Members of a Bench differ in opinion
on any point, they shall state the point or points on which they differ, and
make a reference to the Chairman who shall either hear the point or points
himself or refer the case for hearing on such point or points by one or more of
the other Members and such point or points shall be decided according to the
opinion of the majority of the Members who have heard the case, including those
who first heard it.
85. Qualifications
for appointment as Chairman, Vice-Chairman, or other Members. -
(1) A person shall not be qualified for
appointment as the Chairman unless he-
(a) Is, or has been, a judge of a High Court;
or
(b) Has, for at least two years, held the
office of a Vice-Chairman.
(2) A person shall not be qualified for
appointment as the Vice-Chairman, unless he-
(a) Has, for at least two years, held the
office of a Judicial Member or a Technical Member; or
(b) Has been a member of the Indian Legal
Service and has held a post in Grade I of that Service or any higher post for
at least five years.
(3) A person shall not be qualified for
appointment as a Judicial Member, unless he-
(a) Has been a member of the Indian Legal
Service and has held the post in Grade 1 of that Service for at least three
years; or
(b) Has, for at least ten years, held a civil
judicial office.
(4) A person shall not be qualified for
appointment as a Technical Member, unless he-
(a) Has, for at least ten years, exercised
functions of a tribunal under this Act or under the Trade and Merchandise Marks
Act, 1958, or both, and has held a post not lower than the post of a Joint
Registrar for at least five years; or
(b) Has, for at least ten years, been an
advocate of a proven specialised experience in trade mark law.
(5) Subject to the provisions of sub-section
(6), the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and every other Member shall be appointed by
the President of India.
(6) No appointment of a person as the Chairman
shall be made except after. consultation with the Chief Justice of India.
86. Term
of office of Chairman, Vice-Chairman and other Members. - The
Chairman,
Vice-Chairman or other Members shall hold office as such for a term of five
years from the date on which he enters upon his office or until he attains, -
(a) In the case of Chairman and Vice-Chairman,
the age of sixty-five years; and
(b) In the case of a Member, the age of
sixty-two years, whichever is earlier?
87. Vice-Chairman
or senior-most Member to act as Chairman or discharge his functions in certain circumstances. -
(1) In the event of or any vacancy in the
office of the Chairman by reasons of his death, resignation or otherwise, the
Vice-Chairman and in his absence the senior-most Member shall act as Chairman
until the date on which a new Chairman, appointed in accordance with the
provisions of this Act to fill such vacancy, enters upon his office.
(2) When the Chairman is unable to discharge
his functions owing to his absence, illness or any other cause, the
Vice-Chairman and in his absence the senior-most Member shall discharge the
functions of the Chairman until the date on which the Chairman resumes his
duty.
88. Salaries,
allowances and other terms and conditions of service of Chairman, Vice-Chairman and other Members. -
(1) The salaries and allowances payable to, and
other terms and conditions of service (including pension, gratuity and other
retirement benefits) of the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and other Members shall be
such as may be prescribed.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), a person who, immediately before the date of assuming office as
the Chairman, Vice-Chairman or other Member was in service of Government, shall
be deemed to have retired from service on the date on which he enters upon
office as the Chairman, Vice-Chairman or other Member.
89. Resignation
and removal. -
(1) The Chairman, Vice-Chairman or any other
member may, by notice in writing under his hand addressed to the President of
India, resign his office:
PROVIDED that the Chairman, Vice-Chairman
or any other Member shall, unless he is permitted by the President of India to
relinquish his office sooner, continue to hold office until the expiry of three
months from the date of receipt of such notice or until a person duly appointed
as his successor enters upon his office or until the expiry of his term of
office, whichever is earlier.
(2) The Chairman, Vice-Chairman or any other
Member shall not be removed from his office except by an order made by the
President of India on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity after an
inquiry made by a Judge of the Supreme Court in which the Chairman,
Vice-Chairman or other Member had been informed of the charges against him and
given a reasonable opportunity of being heard in respect of those charges.
(3) The Central Government may, by rules,
regulate the procedure for the investigation of misbehaviour or incapacity of
the Chairman, Vice-Chairman or other Member referred to in sub-section (2).
90. Staff
of Appellate Board. -
(1) The Central Government shall determine the
nature and categories of the officers and other employees required to assist
the Appellate Board in the discharge of its functions and provide the Appellate
Board with such officers and other employees as it may think fit.
(2) The salaries and allowances and conditions
of service of the officers and other employees of the Appellate Board shall be
such as may be prescribed.
(3) The officers and other employees of the
Appellate Board shall discharge their functions under the general
superintendence of the Chairman in the manner as may be prescribed.
91. Appeals
to Appellate Board. -
(1) Any person aggrieved by an order or
decision of the Registrar under this Act, or the rules made thereunder may
prefer an appeal to the Appellate Board within three months from the date on
which the order or decision sought to be appealed against is communicated to
such person preferring the appeal.
(2) No appeal shall be admitted if it is
preferred after the expiry of the period specified under sub-section (1):
PROVIDED that an appeal may be admitted
after the expiry of the period specified therefor, if the appellant satisfies
the Appellate Board that he had sufficient cause for not preferring the appeal
within the specified period.
(3) An appeal to the Appellate Board shall be
in the prescribed form and shall be verified in the prescribed manner and shall
be accompanied by a copy of the order or decision appealed against and by such
fees as may be prescribed.
92. Procedure
and powers of Appellate Board
(1) The Appellate Board shall not be bound by
the procedure laid down in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 but shall be
guided by principles of natural justice and subject to such provisions of this
Act and the rules made thereunder, the Appellate Board shall have powers to
regulate its own procedure including the fixing of places and times of its
hearing.
(2) The Appellate Board shall have, for the
purpose of discharging its functions under this Act, the same powers as are
vested in a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 while trying a
suit in respect of the following matters, namely:-
(a) Receiving evidence;
(b) Issuing commissions for examination of
witness;
(c) Requisitioning any public record; and
(d) Any other matter which may be prescribed.
(3) Any proceeding before the Appellate Board
shall be deemed to be a judicial proceeding within the meaning of sections 193
and 228, and for the purpose of section 196, of the Indian Penal Code, and the
Appellate Board shall be deemed to be a civil court for all the purposes of
section 195 and Chapter XXVI of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.
93. Bar
of jurisdiction of courts, etc. - No court or other authority shall
have or, be entitled to, exercise any jurisdiction, powers or authority in
relation to the matters referred to in sub-section (1) of section 91.
94. Bar
to appear before Appellate Board. - On ceasing to hold office, the
Chairman, Vice-chairman or other Members shall not appear before the Appellate
Board or the Registrar.
95. Conditions
as to making of interim orders. - Notwithstanding
anything contained in any other provisions of this Act or in any other law for
the time being in force, no interim order (whether by way of injunction or stay
or any other manner) shall be made on, or in any proceedings relating to, an
appeal unless-
(a) Copies of such appeal and of all documents
in support of the plea for such interim order are furnished to the party
against whom such appeal is made or proposed to be made; and
(b) Opportunity is given to such party to be
heard in the matter.
96. Power
of Chairman to transfer cases from one Bench to another. - On the application of any of the parties and after notice to the
parties, and after hearing such of them as he may desire to be heard or on his
own motion without such notice, the Chairman may transfer any case pending
before one Bench, for disposal, to any other Bench.
97. Procedure
for application for rectification, etc., before Appellate Board. -
(1) An application for rectification of the
register made to the Appellate Board under section 57 shall be in such form as
may be prescribed.
(2) A certified copy of every order or
judgement of the Appellate Board relating to a registered trade mark under this
Act shall be communicated to the Registrar by the Board and the Registrar shall
give effect to the order of the Board and shall, when so directed, amend the
entries in, or rectify, the register in accordance with such order.
98. Appearance
of Registrar in legal proceedings. -
(1) The Registrar shall have the right to
appear and be heard-
(a) In any legal proceedings before the
Appellate Board in which the relief sought includes alteration or rectification
of the register or in which any question relating to the practice of the Trade
Marks Registry is raised;
(b) In any appeal to the Board from an order of
the Registrar on an application for registration of a trade mark-
(i) Which is not opposed, and the application
is either refused by the Registrar or is accepted by him subject to any
amendments, modifications, conditions or limitations, or
(ii) Which has been opposed and the Registrar
considers that his appearance is necessary in the public interest,
And the Registrar shall appear in
any case if so directed by the Board.
(2) Unless the Appellate Board otherwise
directs, the Registrar may, in lieu of appearing, submit a statement in writing
signed by him, giving such particulars as he thinks proper of the proceedings
before him relating to the matter in issue or of the grounds of any decision
given by him affecting it, or of the practice of the Trade Marks Registry in
like cases, or of other matters relevant to the issues and within his knowledge
as Registrar, and such statement shall be evidence in the proceeding.
99. Costs
of Registrar in proceedings before Appellate Board. - In
all proceedings under
this Act before the Appellate Board the costs of the Registrar shall be in the
discretion of the Board, but the Registrar shall not be ordered to pay the
costs of any of the parties.
100. Transfer
of pending proceedings to Appellate Board. - All
cases of appeals against
any order or decision of the Registrar and all cases pertaining to
rectification of register, pending before any High Court, shall be transferred
to the Appellate Board from the date as notified by the Central Government in
the Official Gazette and the Appellate Board may proceed with the matter either
de novo or from the stage it was so transferred.
OFFENCES, PENALTIES AND PROCEDURE
101. Meaning
of applying trade marks and trade descriptions. -
(1) A person shall be deemed to apply a trade
mark or mark or trade description to goods or services who-
(a) Applies it to the goods themselves or uses it in relation to services; or
(b) Applies it to any package in or with which the goods are sold, or exposed for sale, or had in possession for sale or for any purpose of trade or manufacture; or
(c) Places, encloses or annexes any goods which
are sold, or exposed for sale, or had in possession for sale or for any purpose
of trade or manufacture, in or with any package or other thing to which a trade
mark or mark or trade description has been applied; or
(d) Uses a trade mark or mark or trade
description in any manner reasonably likely to lead to the belief that the
goods or services in connection with which it is used are designated or
described by that trade mark or mark or trade description; or
(e) In relation to the goods or services uses a
trade mark or trade description in any sign, advertisement, invoice, catalogue,
business letter, business paper, price list or other commercial document and
goods are delivered or services are rendered to a person in pursuance of a
request or order made by reference to the trade mark or trade description as so
used.
(2) A trade mark or mark or trade description
shall be deemed to be applied to goods whether it is woven in, impressed on, or
otherwise worked into, or annexed or affixed to, the goods or to any package or
other thing.
102. Falsifying
and falsely applying trade marks. -
(1) A person shall be deemed to falsify a trade
mark who, either, -
(a) Without the assent of the proprietor of the
trade mark makes that trade mark or a deceptively similar mark; or
(b) Falsifies any genuine trade mark, whether
by alteration, addition, effacement or otherwise.
(2) A person shall be deemed to falsely apply
to goods or services a trademark who, without the assent of the proprietor of
the trademark, -
(a) Applies such trade mark or a deceptively
similar mark to goods or services or any package containing goods;
(b) Uses any package bearing a mark which is
identical with or deceptively similar to the trade mark of such proprietor, for
the purpose of packing, filling or wrapping therein any goods other than the
genuine goods of the proprietor of the trade mark.
(3) Any trade mark falsified as mentioned in
sub-section (1) or falsely applied as mentioned in sub-section (2), is in this
Act referred to as a false trade mark.
(4) In any prosecution for falsifying a trade
mark or falsely applying a trade mark to goods or services, the burden of
proving the assent of the proprietor shall lie on the accused.
103. Penalty
for applying false trade marks, trade descriptions, etc. - Any
person who-
(a) Falsifies any trade mark; or
(b) Falsely applies to goods or services any
trade mark; or
(c) Makes, disposes of, or has in his
possession, any die, block, machine, plate or other instrument for the purpose
of falsifying or of being used for falsifying, a trade mark; or
(d) Applies any false trade description to
goods or services; or
(e) Applies to any goods to which an indication
of the country or place in which they were made or produced or the name and
address of the manufacturer or person for whom the goods are manufactured is
required to be applied under section 139, a false indication of such country,
place, name or address; or
(f) Tampers with, alters or effaces an
indication of origin which has been applied to any goods to which it is
required to be applied under section 139; or
(g) Causes any of things above-mentioned in
this section to be done,
Shall, unless he proves that he
acted, without intent to defraud, be punishable with imprisonment for a term
which shall not be less than six months but which may extend to three years and
with fine which shall not be less than fifty thousand rupees but which may
extend to two lakh rupees:
PROVIDED that the court may, for adequate
and special reasons to be mentioned in the judgement, impose a sentence of
imprisonment for a term of less than six months or a fine of less than fifty
thousand rupees.
104. Penalty
for selling goods or providing services to which false trade mark or false trade description is applied. - Any person who sells, lets for hire or
exposes for sale, or hires or has in his possession for sale, goods or things,
or provides or hires services, to which any false trade mark or false trade
description is applied or which, being required under section 139 to have
applied to them an indication of the country or place in which they were made
or produced or the name and address of the manufacturer, or person for whom the
goods are manufactured or services provided, as the case may be, are without
the indications so required, shall, unless he proves, -
(a) That, having taken all reasonable
precautions against committing an offence against this section, he had at the
time of commission of the alleged offence no reason to suspect the genuineness
of the trade mark or trade description or that any offence had been committed in
respect of the goods or services; or
(b) That, on demand by or on behalf of the
prosecutor, he gave all the information in his power with respect to the person
from whom he obtained such goods or things or services; or
(c) That otherwise he had acted innocently,
Be punishable with imprisonment
for a term which shall not be less than six months but which may extend to
three years and with fine which shall not be less than fifty thousand rupees
but which may extend to two lakh rupees:
PROVIDED that the court may, for adequate
and special reasons to be mentioned in the judgement, impose a sentence of
imprisonment for a term of less than six months or a fine of less than fifty
thousand rupees.
105. Enhanced
penalty on second or subsequent conviction. - Whoever having already been convicted of an offence under section 103
or section 104 is again convicted of any such offence shall be punishable for
the second and for every subsequent offence, with imprisonment for a term which
shall not be less than one year but which may extend to three years and with
fine which shall not be less than one lakh rupees but which may extend to two
lakh rupees:
PROVIDED that the court may, for adequate
and special reason to be mentioned in the judgement, impose a sentence of
imprisonment for a term of less than one year or a fine of less than one lakh
rupees:
PROVIDED FURTHER that for the purposes of this
section, no cognizance shall be taken of any conviction made before the
commencement of this Act.
106. Penalty
for removing piece goods, etc., contrary to section 81. - If any person removes or attempts to remove or causes or attempts to
cause to be removed for sale from any premises referred to in section 81 or
sells or exposes for sale or has in his possession for sale or for any purpose
of trade or manufacture piece goods or cotton yarn or cotton thread which is
not marked as required by that section, every such piece and every such bundle
of yarn and all such thread and everything used for the packing thereof shall
be forfeited to Government and such person shall be punishable with fine which
may extend to one thousand rupees.
107. Penalty
for falsely representing a trade mark as registered. -
(1) No person shall make any representation-
(a) With respect to a mark, not being a
registered trade mark, to the effect that it is a registered trade mark; or
(b) With respect to a part of a registered
trade mark, not being a part separately registered as a trade mark, to the
effect that it is separately registered as a trade mark; or
(c) To the effect that a registered trade mark
is registered in respect of any goods services in respect of which it is not in
fact registered; or
(d) To the effect that registration of a trade
mark gives an exclusive right to the use thereof in any circumstances in which,
having regard to limitation entered on the register, the registration does not
in fact give that right.
(2) If any person contravenes any of the
provisions of sub-section (1), he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to three years, or with fine, or with both.
(3) For the purposes of this section, the use
in India in relation to a trade mark of the word registered, or of any other
expression, symbol or sign referring whether expressly or impliedly to
registration, shall be deemed to import a reference to registration in the
register, except-
(a) Where that word or other expression, symbol
or sign is used in direct association with other words delineated in characters
at least as large as those in which that word or other expression, symbol or
sign is delineated and indicating that the reference is to registration as a
trade mark under the law of a country outside India being a country under the
law of which the registration referred to is in fact in force; or
(b) Where that other expression, symbol or sign
is of itself such as to indicate that the reference is to such registration as
is mentioned in clause (a); or
(c) Where that word is used in relation to a
mark registered as a trade mark under the law of a country outside India and in
relation solely to goods to be exported to that country or in relation to
services for use in that country.
108. Penalty
for improperly describing a place of business as connected with the Trade Marks
Office. - If any person uses on his place of business,
or on any document issued by him, or otherwise, words which would reasonably
lead to the belief that his place of business is, or is officially connected
with, the Trade Marks Office, he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to two years, or with fine, or with both.
109. Penalty
for falsification of entries in the register. - If any person makes, or causes to be made, a false entry in the
register, or a writing falsely purporting to be a copy of an entry in the
register, or produces or tenders or causes to be produced or tendered, in
evidence any such writing, knowing the entry or writing to be false, he shall
be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years, or
with fine, or with both.
110. No
offence in certain cases. - The provisions of sections 102,
103, 104 and 105 shall, in relation to a registered trade mark or proprietor of
such mark, be subject to the rights created or recognised by this Act and no
act or omission shall be deemed to be an offence under the aforesaid sections
if, -
(a) The alleged offence relates to a registered
trade mark and the act or omission is permitted under this Act; and
(b) The alleged offence relates to a registered
or an unregistered trade mark and the act or omission is permitted under any
other law for the time being in force.
(1) Where a person is convicted of an offence
under section 103 or section 104 or section 105 or is acquitted of an offence
under section 103 or section 104 on proof that he acted without intent to
defraud, or under section 104 on proof of the matters specified in clause (a),
clause (b) or clause (c) of that section, the court convicting or acquitting
him may direct the forfeiture to Government of all goods and things by means
of, or in relation to, which the offence has been committed, or but for such
proof as aforesaid would have been committed.
(2) When a forfeiture is directed on a
conviction and an appeal lies against the conviction, an appeal shall lie
against the forfeiture also.
(3) When a forfeiture is directed on acquittal
and the goods or things to which the direction relates are of value exceeding
fifty rupees, an appeal against the forfeiture may be preferred, within thirty
days from the date of the direction, to the court to which in appealable cases
appeals lie from sentences of the court which directed the forfeiture.
(4) When a forfeiture is directed on a
conviction, the court, before whom the person is convicted, may order any
forfeited articles to be destroyed or otherwise disposed of as the court thinks
fit.
112. Exemption
of certain persons employed in ordinary course of business. - Where a person accused of an offence under section 103 proves
(a) That in the ordinary course of his business
he is employed on behalf of other persons to apply trade marks or trade
descriptions, or as the case may be, to make dies, blocks, machines, plates, or
other instruments for making, or being used in making, trade marks; and
(b) That in the case which is the subject of
the charge he was so employed, and was not interested in the goods or other
thing by way of profit or commission dependent on the sale of such goods or
providing of services, as the case may be; and
(c) That, having taken all reasonable
precautions against committing the offence charged, he had, at the time of the
commission of the alleged offence, no reason to suspect the genuineness of the
trade mark or trade description; and
(d) That, on demand made by or on behalf of the
prosecutor, he gave all the information in his power with respect to the
persons on whose behalf the trade mark or trade description was applied,
He shall be acquitted.
113. Procedure
where invalidity of registration is pleaded by the accused. -
(1) Where the offence charged under section 103
or section 104 or section 105 is in relation to a registered trade mark and the
accused pleads that the registration of the trade mark is invalid, the
following procedure shall be followed: -
(a) If the court is satisfied that such defence is prima facie tenable, it shall not proceed with the charge but shall adjourn the proceeding for three months from the date on which the plea of the accused is recorded to enable the accused to file an application before the Appellate Board under this Act, for the rectification of the register on the ground that the registration is invalid.
(b) If the accused proves to the court that he
has made such application within the time so limited or within such further
time as the court may for sufficient cause allow, the further proceedings in
the prosecution shall stand stayed till the disposal of such application for
rectification.
(c) If within a period of three months or
within such extended time as may be allowed by the court the accused fails to
apply to the Appellate Board for rectification of the register, the court shall
proceed with the case as if the registration were valid.
(2) Where before the institution of a complaint
of an offence referred to in sub-section (1), any application for the
rectification of the register concerning the trade mark in question on the
ground of invalidity of the registration thereof has already been properly made
to and is pending before the tribunal, the court shall stay the further
proceedings in the prosecution pending the disposal of the application
aforesaid and shall determine the charge against the accused in conformity with
the result of the application for rectification in so far as the complainant
relies upon the registration of his mark.
(1) If the person committing an offence under
this Act is a company, the company as well as every person in charge of, and
responsible to, the company for the conduct of its business at the time of the
commission of the offence shall be deemed to be guilty of the offence and shall
be liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly:
PROVIDED that nothing contained in this
sub-section shall render any such person liable to any punishment if he proves
that the offence was committed without his knowledge or that he exercised all
due diligence to prevent the commission of such offence.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), where an offence under this Act has been committed by a
company and it is proved that the offence has been committed with the consent
or connivance of, or that the commission of the offence is attributable to any
neglect on the part of, any director, manager, secretary or other officer of
the company, such director, manager, secretary or other officer shall also be
deemed to be guilty of that offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against
and punished accordingly.
Explanation: For the purpose of this section-
(a) Company means any body corporate and
includes a firm or other association of individuals; and
(b) Director, in relation to a firm, means a
partner in the firm.
115. Cognizance
of certain offences and the powers of police officer for search and seizure. -
(1) No court shall take cognizance of an
offence under section 107 or section 108 or section 109 except on complaint in
writing made by the Registrar or any officer authorised by him in writing:
PROVIDED that in relation to clause (c) of
sub-section (1) of section 107, a court shall take cognizance of an offence on
the basis of a certificate issued by the Registrar to the effect that a
registered trade mark has been represented as registered in respect of any
goods or services in respect of which it is not in fact registered.
(2) No court inferior to that of a Metropolitan
Magistrate or Judicial Magistrate of the first class shall try an offence under
this Act.
(3) The offences under section l03 or section
l04 or section l05 shall be cognizable.
(4) Any police officer not below the rank of
deputy superintendent of police or equivalent, may, if he is satisfied that any
of the offences referred to in sub-section (3) has been, is being, or is likely
to be, committed, search and seize without warrant the goods, die, block,
machine, plate, other instruments or things involved in committing the offence,
wherever found, and all the articles of seized shall, as soon as practicable,
be produced before a judicial Magistrate of the first class or Metropolitan
Magistrate, as the case may be:
PROVIDED that the police officer, before
making any search and seizure, shall obtain the opinion of the Registrar on
facts involved in the offence relating to trade mark and shall abide by the
opinion so obtained.
(5) Any person having an interest in any
article seized under sub-section (4), may, within fifteen days of such seizure,
make an application to the Judicial Magistrate of the first class or
Metropolitan Magistrate, as the case may be, for such article being restored to
him and the Magistrate, after hearing the applicant and the prosecution, shall
make such order on the application as he may deem fit.
116. Evidence
of origin of goods imported by sea. - In the case of
goods, brought into India by sea, evidence of the port of shipment shall, in a
prosecution for an offence under this Act or under clause (b) of section 112 of
the Customs Act, 1962, relating to confiscation of goods under clause (d) of
section 111 and notified by the Central Government under clause (n) of
sub-section (2) of section 11 of the said Act for the protection of trade marks
relating to import of goods, be prima facie evidence of the place or country in
which the goods are made or produced.
117. Costs
of defence or prosecution. - In any prosecution under this Act,
the court may order such costs to be paid by the accused to the complainant, or
by the complainant to the accused, as the court deems reasonable having regard
to all the circumstances of the case and the conduct of the parties and the
costs so awarded shall be recoverable as if they were a fine.
118. Limitation
of prosecution. - No prosecution for an offence
under this Act or under clause (b) of section 112 of the Customs Act, 1962,
relating to confiscation of goods under clause (d) of section 111 and notified
by the Central Government under clause (n) of sub-section (2) of section 11 of
the said Act for the protection of trade marks, relating to import of goods
shall be commenced after 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.
119. Information
as to commission of offence. - An officer of the Government whose
duty it is to take part in the enforcement of the provisions of this Chapter
shall not be compelled in any court to say whence he got any information as to
the commission of any offence against this Act.
120. Punishment
of abetment in India of acts done out of India. - If any person, being within India, abets the commission, without India,
of any act which, if committed in India, would, under this Act, be an offence,
he may be tried for such abetment in any place in India in which he may be
found, and be punished therefor with the punishment to which he would be liable
if he had himself committed in that place the act which he abetted.
21. Instructions
of Central Government as to permissible variation to be observed by criminal
courts. - The Central Government may, by notification
in the Official Gazette, issue instructions for the limits of variation, as
regards number, quantity, measure, guage or weight which are to be recognised
by criminal courts as permissible in the case of any goods.
MISCELLANEOUS
122. Protection
of action taken in good faith. - No suit or other legal proceedings
shall lie
against any person in respect of anything, which is in good faith done or
intended to be done in. pursuance of this Act.
123. Certain
persons to be public servants. - Every person appointed under this
Act and every Member of the Appellate Board shall be deemed to be a public
servant within the meaning of section 21 of the Indian Penal Code.
124. Stay
of proceedings where the validity of registration of the trade mark is
questioned, etc. -
(1) Where in any suit for infringement of a
trade mark-
(a) The defendant pleads that registration of the plaintiffs trade mark is invalid; or
(b) The defendant raises a defence under clause
(e) of sub-section (2) of section 30 and the plaintiff pleads the invalidity of
registration of the defendants trade mark,
The court trying the suit
(hereinafter referred to as the court), shall, -
(i) If any proceedings for rectification of
the register in relation to the plaintiffs or defendants trade mark are
pending before the Registrar or the Appellate Board, stay the suit pending the
final disposal of such proceedings;
(ii) If no such proceedings are pending and the
court is satisfied that the plea regarding the invalidity of the registration
of the plaintiffs or defendants trade mark is prima facie tenable, raise an
issue regarding the same and adjourn the case for a period of three months from
the date of the framing of the issue in order to enable the party concerned to
apply to the Appellate Board for rectification of the register.
(2) If the party concerned proves to the court
that he has made any such application as is referred to in clause (b) (ii) of
sub-section (1) within the time specified therein or within such extended time
as the court may for sufficient cause allow, the trial of the suit shall stand
stayed until the final disposal of the rectification proceedings.
(3) If no such application as aforesaid has
been made within the time so specified or within such extended time as the
court may allow, the issue as to the validity of the registration of the trade
mark concerned shall be deemed to have been abandoned and the court shall
proceed with the suit in regard to the other issues in the case.
(4) The final order made in any rectification
proceedings referred to in sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) shall be binding
upon the parties and the court shall dispose of the suit conformably to such
order in so far as it relates to the issue as to the validity of the
registration of the trade mark.
(5) The stay of suit for the infringement of a
trade mark under this section shall not preclude the court from making any
interlocutory order (including any order granting an injunction, directing
account to be kept, appointing a receiver or attracting any property), during
the period of the stay of the suit.
125. Application
for rectification of register to be made to Appellate Board in certain cases. -
(1) Where in a suit for infringement of a
registered trade mark the validity of the registration of the plaintiffs trade
mark is questioned by the defendant or where in any such suit the defendant
raises a defence under clause (e) of sub-section (2) of section 30 and the
plaintiff questions the validity of the registration of the defendants trade
mark, the issue as to the validity of the registration of the trade mark
concerned shall be determined only on an application for the rectification of
the register and, notwithstanding anything contained in section 47 or section
57, such application shall be made to the Appellate Board and not to the
Registrar.
(2) Subject to the provisions of sub-section
(1), where an application for rectification of the register is made to the
Registrar under section 47 or section 57, the Registrar may, if he thinks fit,
refer the application at any stage of the proceedings to the Appellate Board.
126. Implied
warranty on sale of marked goods. - Where a mark or a trade mark or
trade description has been applied to the goods on sale or in the contract for
sale of any goods or in relation to any service, the seller shall be deemed to
warrant that the mark is a genuine mark and not falsely applied, or that the
trade description is not a false trade description within the meaning of this
Act unless the contrary is expressed in writing signed by or on behalf of the
seller and delivered at the time of the sale of goods or providing of services
on contract to and accepted by the buyer.
127. Powers
of Registrar. - In all proceedings under this Act before the
Registrar, -
(a) The Registrar shall have all the powers of
a civil court for the purposes of receiving evidence, administering oaths,
enforcing the attendance of witnesses, compelling the discovery and production
of documents and issuing commissions for the examination of witnesses;
(b) The Registrar may, subject to any rules
made in this behalf under section 157, make such orders as to costs as he
considers reasonable, and any such order shall be executable as a decree of a
civil court:
PROVIDED that the Registrar shall have no
power to award costs to or against any party on an appeal to him against a
refusal of the proprietor of a certification trade mark to certify goods or
provision of services or to authorise the use of the mark;
(c) The Registrar may, on an application made
in the prescribed manner, review his own decision.
128. Exercise
of discretionary power by Registrar. - Subject to the
provisions of section 131, the Registrar shall not exercise any discretionary
or other power vested in him by this Act or the rules made thereunder adversely
to a person applying for the exercise of that power without (if so required by
that person within the prescribed time) giving to the person an opportunity of
being heard.
129. Evidence
before Registrar. - In any proceeding under this Act
before the Registrar, evidence shall be given by affidavit:
PROVIDED that the Registrar may, if he
thinks fit, take oral evidence in lieu of, or in addition to, such evidence by
affidavit.
130. Death
of party to a proceeding. - If a person who is a party to a
proceeding under this Act (not being a proceeding before the Appellate Board or
a court) dies pending the proceeding, the Registrar may, on request, and on
proof to his satisfaction of the transmission of the interest of the deceased
person, substitute in the proceeding his successor in interest in his place,
or, if the Registrar is of opinion that the interest of the deceased person is
sufficiently represented by the surviving parties, permit the proceeding to
continue without the substitution of his successor in interest.
(1) If the Registrar is satisfied, on
application made to him in the prescribed manner and accompanied by the
prescribed fee, that there is sufficient cause for extending the time for doing
any act (not being a time expressly provided in this Act), whether the time so
specified has expired or not, he may, subject to such conditions as he may
think fit to impose, extend the time and inform the parties accordingly.
(2) Nothing in sub-section (1) shall be deemed
to require the Registrar to hear the parties before disposing of an application
for extension of time, and no appeal shall lie from any order of the Registrar
under this section.
132. Abandonment.
- Where, in the opinion of the Registrar, an
applicant is in default in the prosecution of an application filed under this Act or any Act
relating to trade marks in force prior to the commencement of this Act, the
Registrar may, by notice require the applicant to remedy the default within a
time specified and after giving him, if so, desired, an opportunity of being
heard, treat the application as abandoned, unless the default is remedied
within the time specified in the notice.
133. Preliminary
advice by the Registrar as to distinctiveness. -
(1) The Registrar may, on application made to
him in the prescribed manner by any person who proposes to apply for the
registration of a trade mark, give advice as to whether the trade mark appears
to him prima facie to be distinctive.
(2) If, on an application for the registration
of a trade mark as to which the Registrar has given
advice as aforesaid in the affirmative made within three months after the
advice was given, the Registrar, after further investigation or consideration,
gives notice, to the applicant of objection on the ground that the trade mark
is not distinctive, the applicant shall be entitled, on giving notice of
withdrawal of the application within the prescribed period, to have repaid to
him any fee paid on the filing of the application.
134. Suit
for infringement, etc., to be instituted before District Court. -
(1) No suit-
(a) For the infringement of a registered trade
mark; or
(b) Relating to any right in a registered trade
mark; or
(c) For passing off arising out of the use by
the defendant of any trade mark which is identical with or deceptively similar
to the plaintiffs trade mark, whether registered or unregistered,
Shall be instituted in any court
inferior to a District Court having jurisdiction to try the suit.
(2) For the purpose of clauses (a) and (b) of
sub-section (1), a District Court having jurisdiction shall, notwithstanding
anything contained in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 or any other law for
the time being in force, include a District Court within the local limits of
whose jurisdiction, at the time of the institution of the suit or other
proceeding, the person instituting the suit or proceeding, or, where there are
more than one such persons any of them, actually and voluntarily resides or
carries on business or personally works for gain.
Explanation: For the purposes of sub-section
(2), person includes the registered proprietor and the registered user.
135. Relief
in suits for infringement or for passing off. -
(1) The relief which a court may grant in any
suit for infringement or for passing off referred to in section 134 includes
injunction (subject to such terms, if any, as the court thinks fit) and at the
option of the plaintiff, either damages or an account of profits, together with
or without any order for the delivery-up of the infringement labels and marks
for destruction or erasure.
(2) The order of injunction under sub-section
(1) may include an ex parte injunction or any interlocutory order for any of
the following matters, namely: -
(a) For discovery of documents;
(b) Preserving of infringing goods, documents
or other evidence which are related to the subject-matter of the suit;
(c) Restraining the defendant from disposing of
or dealing with his assets in a manner, which may adversely affect plaintiffs
ability to recover damages, costs or other pecuniary remedies which may be
finally awarded to the plaintiff.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), the court shall not grant relief by way of damages
(other than nominal damages) or on account of profits in any case-
(a) Where in a suit for infringement of a trade
mark, the infringement complained of is in relation to a certification trade
mark or collective mark; or
(b) Where in a suit for infringement the
defendant satisfies the court-
(i) That at the time he commenced to use the
trade mark complained of in the suit, he was unaware and had no reasonable
ground for believing that the trade mark of the plaintiff was on the register
or that the plaintiff was a registered user using by way of permitted use; and
(ii) That when he became aware of the existence
and nature of the plaintiffs right in the trade mark, he forthwith ceased to
use the trade mark in relation to goods or services in respect of which it was
registered; or
(c) Where in a suit for passing off, the defendant satisfies the court-
(i) That at the time he commenced to use the
trade mark complained of in the suit he was unaware and had no reasonable
ground for believing that the trade mark of the plaintiff was in use; and
(ii) That when he became aware of the existence
and nature of the plaintiffs trade mark he forthwith ceased to use the trade
mark complained of.
136. Registered
user to be impleaded in certain proceedings. -
(1) In every proceeding under Chapter VII or
under section 91, every registered user of a trade mark using by way of
permitted use, who is not himself an applicant in respect of any proceeding
under that Chapter or section, shall be made a party to the proceeding.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law, a registered user so made a party to the proceeding shall not be
liable for any costs unless. he enters an appearance and takes part in the
proceeding.
137. Evidence
of entries in register, etc., and things done by the Registrar. -
(1) A copy of any entry in the register or of
any document referred to in sub-section (1) of section 148 purporting to be
certified by the Registrar and sealed with the seal of the Trade Marks Registry
shall be admitted in evidence in all courts and in all proceedings without
further proof or production of the original.
(2) A certificate purporting to be under the
hand of the Registrar as to any entry, matter or thing that he is authorised by
this Act or the rules to make or do shall be prima facie evidence of the entry
having been made, and of the contents thereof, or of the matter or things
having been done or not done.
138. Registrar
and other officers not compellable to produce register, etc. - The
Registrar or
any officer of the Trade Marks Registry shall not, in any legal proceedings to
which he is not a party, be compellable to produce the register or any other
document in his custody, the contents of which can be proved by the production
of a certified copy issued under this Act or to appear as a witness to prove
the matters therein recorded unless by order of the court made for special
cause.
139. Power
to require goods to show indication of origin. -
(1) The Central Government may, by notification
in the Official Gazette, require that goods of any class specified in the
notification which are made or produced beyond the limits of India and imported
into India, or, which are made or produced within the limits of India, shall,
from such date as may be appointed by the notification not being less than
three months from its issue, have applied to them an indication of the country
or place in which they were made or produced, or of the name and address of the
manufacturer or the person for whom the goods were manufactured.
(2) The notification may specify the manner in
which such indication shall be applied that is to say, whether to goods
themselves or in any other manner, and the times or occasions on which the
presence of the indication shall be necessary, that is to say, whether on importation
only, or also at the time of sale, whether by wholesale or retail or both.
(3) No notification under this section shall be
issued, unless application is made for its issue by persons or associations
substantially representing the interests of dealers in, or manufacturers,
producers, or users of, the goods concerned, or unless the Central Government
is otherwise convinced that it is necessary in the public interest to issue the
notification, with or without such inquiry, as the Central Government may
consider necessary.
(4) The provisions of section 23 of the General
Clauses Act, 1897 shall apply to the issue of a notification under this section
as they apply to the making of a rule or bye-law the making of which is subject
to the condition of previous publication.
(5) A notification under this section shall not
apply to goods made or produced beyond the limits of India and imported into
India, if in respect of those goods, the Commissioner of Customs is satisfied
at the time of importation that they are intended for exportation whether after
transhipment in or transit through India or otherwise.
140. Power
to require information of imported goods bearing false trade marks. -
(1) The proprietor or a licensee of a
registered trade mark may give notice in writing to the Collector of Customs to
prohibit the importation of any goods if the import of the said goods
constitute infringement under clause (c) of sub-section (6) of section 29.
(2) Where goods, which are prohibited to be
imported into India by notification of the Central Government under clause (n)
of sub-section (2) of section 11 of the Customs Act, 1962, for the protection
of trade marks, and are liable to confiscation on importation under that Act,
are imported into India, the Commissioner of Customs if, upon representation
made to him, he has reason to believe that the trade mark complained of is used
as a false trade mark, may require the importer of the goods, or his agent, to
produce any documents in his possession relating to the goods and to furnish
information as to the name and address of the person by whom the goods were
consigned to India and the name and address of the person to whom the goods
were sent in India.
(3) The importer or his agent shall, within
fourteen days, comply with the requirement as aforesaid, and if he fails to do
so, he shall be punishable with fine which may extend to five hundred rupees.
(4) Any information obtained from the importer
of the goods or his agent under this section may be communicated by the
Commissioner of Customs to the registered proprietor or registered user of the
trade mark which is alleged to have been used as a false trade mark.
141. Certificate
of validity. - If in any legal proceeding for
rectification of the register before the Appellate Board a decision is on
contest given in favour of the registered proprietor of the trade mark on the
issue as to the validity of the registration of the trade mark, the Appellate
Board may grant a certificate to that effect, and if such a certificate is
granted, then, in any subsequent legal proceeding in which the said validity
comes into question the said proprietor on obtaining a final order or judgement
in his favour affirming validity of the registration of the trade mark shall,
unless the said final order or judgement for sufficient reason directs
otherwise, be entitled to his full cost charges and expenses as between legal
practitioner and client.
142. Groundless
threats of legal proceedings. -
(1) Where a person, by means of circulars,
advertisements or otherwise, threatens a person with an action or proceeding
for infringement of a trade mark which is registered, or alleged by the
first-mentioned person to be registered, or with some other like proceeding, a
person aggrieved may, whether the person making the threats is or is not the
registered proprietor or the registered user of the trade mark, bring a suit
against the first-mentioned person and may obtain a declaration to the effect
that the threats are unjustifiable, and an injunction against the continuance
of the threats and may recover such damages (if any) as he has sustained,
unless the first-mentioned person satisfies the court that the trade mark is
registered and that the acts in respect of which the proceedings were
threatened, constitute, or, if done, would constitute, an infringement of the
trade mark.
(2) The last preceding sub-section does not
apply if the registered proprietor of the trade mark, or a registered user
acting in pursuance of sub-section (1) of section 52 with due diligence
commences and prosecutes an action against the person threatened for
infringement of the trade mark.
(3) Nothing in this section shall render a
legal practitioner or a registered trade marks agent liable to an action under
this section in respect of an act done by him in his professional capacity on
behalf of a client.
(4) A suit under sub-section (1) shall not be
instituted in any court inferior to a District Court.
143. Address
for service. - An address for service stated in
an application or notice of opposition shall for the purposes of the
application or notice of opposition be deemed to be the address of the
applicant or opponent, as the case may be, and all documents in relation to the
application or notice of opposition may be served by leaving them at or sending
them by post to the address for service of the applicant or opponent, as the
case may be.
144. Trade
usages, etc., to be taken into consideration. - In any proceeding relating to a trade mark, the tribunal shall admit
evidence of the usages of the trade concerned and of any relevant trade mark or
trade name or get up legitimately used by other persons.
145. Agents.
- Where, by or under this Act, any act, other
than the making of an affidavit, is required to be done before the Registrar by
any person, the act may, subject to the rules made in this behalf, be done
instead of by that person himself, by a person duly authorised in the
prescribed manner, who is-
(a) A legal practitioner, or
(b) A person registered in the prescribed
manner as a trade marks agent, or
(c) A person in the sole and regular employment
of the principal.
146. Marks
registered by an agent or representative without authority. - If an agent or a representative of the proprietor of a registered trade
mark, without authority uses or attempts to register or registers the mark in
his own name, the proprietor shall be entitled to oppose the registration
applied for or secure its cancellation or rectification of the register so as
to bring him as the registered proprietor of the said mark by assignment in his
favour:
PROVIDED that such action shall be taken
within three years of the registered proprietor of the trade mark becoming
aware of the conduct of the agent or representative.
147. Indexes. - There
shall be kept under the direction and supervision of the Registrar-
(a) An index of registered trade marks;
(b) An index of trade marks in respect of which
applications for registration are pending;
(c) An index of the names of the proprietors of
registered trade marks; and
(d) An
index of the names of registered users.
148. Documents
open to public inspection. -
(1) Save as otherwise provided in sub-section
(4) of section 49, -
(a) The register and any document upon which
any entry in the register is based;
(b) Every notice of opposition to the
registration of a trade mark application for rectification before the
Registrar, counter-statement thereto, and any affidavit or document filed by
the parties in any proceedings before the Registrar;
(c) All regulations deposited under section 63
or section 74, and all applications under section 66 or section 77 for varying
such regulations;
(d) The indexes mentioned in section 147; and
(e) Such other documents as the Central
Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, specify,
Shall, subject to such conditions
as may be prescribed, be open to public inspection at the Trade Marks Registry:
PROVIDED that when such register is
maintained wholly or partly on computer, the inspection of such register
under this section shall be made by inspecting the computer print-out of the
relevant entry in the register so maintained on computer..
(2) Any person may, on an application to the
Registrar and on payment of such fees as may be prescribed, obtain a certified
copy of any entry in the register or any document referred to in sub-section
(1).
149. Reports
of Registrar to be placed before Parliament. - The Central Government shall cause to be placed before both Houses of
Parliament once a year a report respecting the execution by or under the
Registrar of this Act.
(1) There shall be paid in respect of
applications and registration and other matters under this Act such fees and
surcharge as may be prescribed by the Central Government.
(2) Where a fee is payable in respect of the
doing of an act by the Registrar, the Registrar shall not do that act until the
fees has been paid.
(3) Where a fee is payable in respect of the
filing of a document at the Trade Marks Registry, the document shall be deemed
not to have been filed at the registry until the fee has been paid.
151. Savings
in respect of certain matters in Chapter XII. - Nothing
in Chapter XII shall-
(a) Exempt any person from any suit or other
proceeding which might, but for anything in that Chapter, be brought against
him; or
(b) Entitle any person to refuse to make a
complete discovery, or to answer any question or interrogatory in any suit or
other proceeding, but such discovery or answer shall not be admissible in
evidence against such person in any such prosecution for an offence under that
Chapter or against clause (h) of section 112 of the Customs Act, 1962 relating
to confiscation of goods under clause (d) of section 111 of that Act and
notified by the Central Government under clause (n) of sub-section (2) of
section 11 thereof for the protection of trade marks relating to import of
goods, or
(c) Be construed so as to render liable to any
prosecution or punishment any servant of a master resident in India who in good
faith acts in obedience to the instructions of such master, and, on demand made
by or on behalf of the prosecutor, has given full information as to his master
and as to the instructions which he has received from his master.
152. Declaration
as to ownership of trade mark not registrable under the Registration Act, 1908.
- Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Registration Act, 1908, no document declaring or purporting to declare the
ownership or title of a person to a trade mark other than a registered trade
mark shall be registered under that Act.
153. Government
to be bound. - The provisions of this Act shall
be binding on the Government.
(1) With a view to the fulfilment of a treaty,
convention or arrangement with any country or country which is a member of a
group of countries or union of countries or Inter-Governmental Organisation
outside India which affords to citizens of India similar privileges as granted
to its own citizens, the Central Government may, by notification in the
Official Gazette, declare such country or group of countries or union of
countries or Inter-Governmental Organisation to be a convention country or
group of countries or union of countries, or Inter-Governmental Organisations,
as the case may be, for the purposes of this Act.
(2) Where a person has made an application for
the registration of a trade mark in a convention country or country which is a
member of a group of countries or union of countries or Inter-Governmental Organisation
and that person, or his legal representative or assignee, makes an application
for the registration of the trade mark in India within six months after the
date on which the application was made in the convention country or country
which is a member of a group of countries or union of countries or
Inter-Governmental Organisations, the trade mark shall, if registered under
this Act, be registered as of the date on which the application was made in the
convention country or country which is a member of a group of countries or
union of countries or Inter-Governmental Organisation and that date shall be
deemed for the purposes of this Act to be the date of registration.
(3) Where applications have been made for the
registration of a trade mark in two or more convention countries or country
which are members of group of countries or union of countries or
Inter-Governmental Organisation, the period of six months referred to in the
last preceding sub-section shall be reckoned from the date on which the earlier
or earliest of those applications was made.
(4) Nothing in this Act shall entitle the
proprietor of a trade to recover damages for infringement which took place
prior to the date of application for registration under this Act.
155. Provision
as to reciprocity. - Where any country or country which
is a member of a group of countries or union of countries or Inter-Governmental
Organisation specified by the Central Government in this behalf by notification
in the Official Gazette does not accord to citizens of India the same rights in
respect of the registration and protection of trade marks as it accords to its
own nationals, no national of such country or country which is a member of a
group of countries or union of countries or Inter-Governmental Organisation, as
the case may be, shall be entitled, either solely or jointly with any other
person, -
(a) To apply for the registration of, or be
registered as the proprietor of, a trade mark;
(b) To be registered as the assignee of the proprietor
of a registered trade mark; or
(c) To apply for registration or be registered
as a registered user of a trade mark under section 49.
156. Power
of Central Government to remove difficulties. -
(1) If any difficulty arises in giving effect
to the provisions of this Act, the Central Government may, by order published
in the Official Gazette, make such provisions not inconsistent with the
provisions of this Act as may appear to be necessary for removing the
difficulty:
PROVIDED that no order shall be made under
this section after the expiry of five years from the commencement of this Act.
(2) Every order made under this section shall,
as soon as may be after it is made, be laid before each House of Parliament.
(1) The Central Government may, by notification
in the Official Gazette and subject to the condition of previous publication,
make rules to carry out the provisions of this Act.
(2) In particular, and without prejudice to the
generality of the foregoing power, such rules may provide for all or any of the
following matters, namely:-
(i) The matters to be included in the Register
of Trade Marks under sub-section (1) of section 6, and the safeguards to be
observed in the maintenance of records on computer floppies or diskettes or in
any other electronic form under sub-section (2) of that section;
(ii) The manner of publication of alphabetical
index of classification of goods and services under sub-section (1) of section
8;
(iii) The manner in which the Registrar may
notify a word as an international non-proprietary name under section 13;
(iv) The manner of making an application for
dissolution of an association under sub-section (5) of section 16;
(v) The manner of making an application for
registration of a trade mark under sub-section (1) of section 18;
(vi) The manner of advertising of an application
for registration under sub-section (1), and the manner of notifying corrections
or amendments under sub-section (2), of section 20;
(vii) The manner of making an application and the
fee payable for such application. giving notice under sub-section (1) and
sending counter-statements under sub-section (2) and submission of evidence and
the time therefor under sub-section (4) of section 21;
(viii) The form of certificate of registration under
sub-section (2), and the manner of giving notice to the applicant under
sub-section (3) of section 23;
(ix) The forms of application for renewal and
restoration the time within which such application is to be made and fee and
surcharge if any payable with each application, under section 25 and the time
within which the Registrar shall send a notice and the manner of such notice
under sub-section (3) of that section;
(x) The manner of submitting statement of cases
under sub-section (2) of section 40;
(xi) The manner of making an application by the
proprietor of a trade mark under section 41;
(xii) The manner of making an application for
assignment or transmission of a certification trade mark under section 43;
(xiii) The manner of making an application to the
Registrar to register title under sub-section (1) of section 45;
(xiv) The manner in which and the period within
which an application is to be made under sub-section (4) of section 46;
(xv) The manner of marking an application under
sub-section (2) of section 47;
(xvi) The manner of making an application, documents and other evidence to accompany such application under sub-section (1) and the manner in which notice is to be issued under sub-section (3) of section 49;
(xvii) The manner of making an application under
sub-section (1), the manner of issuing a notice under sub-section (2) and the
procedure for cancelling a registration under sub-section (3) of section 50;
(xviii) The manner of making applications under
sub-sections (1) and (2), the manner of giving notice under sub-section (4) and
the manner of service of notice of rectification under sub-section (5) of
section 57;
(xix) The manner of making an application under
section 58;
(xx) The manner of making an application under sub-section (1), the manner of advertising an application, time and manner of notice by which application may be opposed under sub-sections (2) and (3) of section 59;
(xxi) The manner of advertisement under sub-section
(2) of section 60;
(xxii) The other matters to be specified in the
regulations under sub-section (2) of section 63;
(xxiii) The manner of making an application under
sub-section (1) of section 71;
(xxiv) The manner of advertising an application under
section 73;
(xxv) The manner of making an application under
section 77;
(xxvi) The classes of goods under section 79;
(xxvii) The conditions and restrictions under
sub-section (2) of section 80;
(xxviii)
Determination of character of textile goods by sampling under section 82;
(xxix) The salaries and allowances payable to, and the
other terms and conditions of service of the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and other
Members under sub-section (1) of section 88;
(xxx) The procedure for investigation of
misbehaviour or incapacity of the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and other Members
under sub-section (3) of section 89;
(xxxi) The salaries and allowances and other
conditions of service of the officers and other employees of the Appellate
Board under sub-section (2), and the manner in which the officers and other
employees of the Appellate Board shall discharge their functions under
sub-section (3) of section 90;
(xxxii) The form of making an appeal, the
manner of verification and the fee payable under sub-section (3) of section 91;
(xxxiii) The form in
which and the particulars to be included in the application to the Appellate
Board under sub-section (1) of section 97;
(xxxiv) The manner of
making an application for review under clause (c) of section 127;
(xxxv) The time within which an application
is to be made to the Registrar for exercising his discretionary power under
section 128;
(xxxvi) The manner of
making an application and the fee payable therefore under sub-section (1) of
section 131;
(xxxvii) The manner
of making an application under sub-section (1) and the period for withdrawal of
such application under sub-section (2) of section 133;
(xxxviii) The manner of authorising any person to act and the manner of registration as a trade mark agent under section 145;
(xxxix) The
conditions for inspection of documents under sub-section (1) and the fee
payable for obtaining a certified copy of any entry in the register under
sub-section (2) of section 148;
(xl) The fees and surcharge payable for making
applications and registration and other matters under section 150;
(xli) Any other matter which is required to be or
may be prescribed.
(3) The power to make rules conferred by this
section shall include the power to give retrospective effect in respect of the
matters referred to in clause (xxix) and (xxxi) of sub-section (2) from a date
not earlier than the date of commencement of this Act, but no retrospective
effect shall be given to any such rule so as to prejudicially affect the
interests of any person to whom sub-rule may be applicable.
(4) Every rule made by the Central Government
under this Act shall be laid, as soon as may be after it is made, before each
House of Parliament, while it is in session for a total period of thirty days
which may be comprised in one session or in two or more successive sessions,
and if, before the expiry of the session immediately following the session or
the successive sessions aforesaid, both Houses agree in making any modification
in the rule or both Houses agree that the rule should not be made, the rule
shall thereafter have effect only in such modified form or be of no effect, as
the case may be; so however, that any such modification or annulment shall be
without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done under that rule.
158. Amendments.
-The enactment specified in the Schedule shall
be amended in the manner specified therein.
(1) The Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958
is hereby repealed.
(2) Without prejudice to the provisions
contained in the General Clauses Act, 1897, with respect to repeals, any
notification, rule, order, requirement, registration, certificate, notice,
decision, determination, direction, approval. authorisation, consent,
application, request or thing made, issued, given or done under the Trade and
Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 shall, if in force at the commencement of this Act,
continue to be in force and have effect as if made, issued, given or done under
the corresponding provisions of this Act.
(3) The provisions of this Act shall apply to
any application for registration of a trade mark pending at the commencement of
this Act and to any proceedings consequent thereon and to any registration
granted in pursuance thereof.
(4) Subject to the provisions of section 100
and notwithstanding anything contained in any other provisions of this Act, any
legal proceeding pending in any court at the commencement of this Act may be
continued in that court as if this Act had not been passed.
(5) Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act, where a particular use of a registered trade mark is not an infringement
of a trade mark registered before the commencement of this Act, then, the
continued use of that mark shall not be an infringement under this Act.
(6) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (2), the date of expiration of registration of a trade mark registered
before the commencement of this Act shall be the date immediately after the
period of seven years for which it was registered or renewed:
PROVIDED that the registration of a
defensive trade mark referred to in section 47 of the Trade and Merchandise
Marks Act, 1958 shall cease to have effect on the date immediately after the
expiry of five years of such commencement or after the expiry of the period for
which it was registered or renewed, whichever is earlier.
AMENDMENTS
[Section 158]
|
Year |
Act No. |
Short title |
Amendment |
|
1956 |
1 |
The Companies Act, 1956 |
(1) In section 20, for sub-section (2), the following sub-sections shall be substituted, namely:- (2) Without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power, a name which is identical with, or too nearly resembles, - (i) The name by which a company in existence has been previously registered, or (ii) A registered trade mark, or a trade mark which is subject of an application for registration, of any other person under the Trade Marks Act, 1999, May be deemed to be undesirable by the Central Government within the meaning of sub-section (1). (3) The Central Government may, before deeming a name as undesirable under clause (ii) of sub-section (2), consult the Registrar of Trade Marks. (II) In section 22, in sub-section (1), (i) For the potion beginning with if, through and ending with the first-mentioned company-the following shall be substituted, namely:- If, through inadvertence or otherwise, a company on its first registration or on its registration by a new name, is registered by a name which, - (i) In the opinion of the Central Government, is identical with, or too nearly resembles, the name by which a company in existence has been previously registered, whether under this Act or any previous companies law, the first mentioned company, or (ii) On an application by a registered proprietor of a trade mark, is in the opinion of the Central Government identical with, or too nearly resembles, a registered trade mark of such proprietor under the Trade Marks Act, 1999, such company, - (ii) The following proviso shall be added, namely: - PROVIDED that no application under clause (ii) made by a registered proprietor of a trade mark after five years of coming to notice of registration of the company shall be considered by the Central Government. |