Trade dress refers to characteristics of the visual or sensual appearance of a product that may also include its packaging which may be registered and protected from being used by competitors in relation to their business and services. The characteristic includes their shape (3 dimensional), packaging, colour, graphic design or even the smell of the product.
Trade
dress refers to characteristics of the visual or sensual appearance of a
product that may also include its packaging which may be registered and
protected from being used by competitors in relation to their business and
services. The characteristic includes their shape (3 dimensional), packaging,
colour, graphic design or even the smell of the product.
The
concept of trade dress was first brought in under the Trademarks Act, 1999
under the definition of ‘mark’ which replaced the previous Trade and
Merchandise Marks Act, 1958.
The
Trademarks Act, 1999 came into force in India on September 15, 2003. Under
the Trademarks Act, 1999, the definition of the ‘mark’ was revised. The
definition of the mark is as follows:
Section
2. Definition and interpretation.-
..
..
(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;
…
(q) “package” includes any
case, box, container, covering, folder, receptacle, vessel, casket, bottle,
wrapper, label, band, ticket, reel, frame, capsule, cap, lid, stopper an cork;
In case of shape of goods registration
of the trademark besides other criteria is still subjected to provision of
Subsection (3) of Section 9 of the Trademarks Act, 1999, which reads as
follows:
(3)
A mark shall not be registered as a trademark 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 results from the nature of the goods themselves; or
(c) the
shape of goods which gives substantial value to the goods.
Indian
Courts have been repeatedly recognizing the concept of the trade dress even
prior to 1999 or 2003 by under common law remedies. Few of the prominent cases
are as follows:
Recently
in one matter Delhi High Court has restrained Ajanta India Ltd. from using the
trade dress of a red and white packaging for its toothpowder on a complaint of
Colgate-Palmolive. Earlier Ajanta was using a
red can for marketing its toothpowder and later it switched to a red and white
can which was virtual mirror image of Colgate-Palmolive. The Ajanta
was allowed two months to exhaust its stocks of injuncted cans.
Similarly
in another matter, Kangaro Industries Limited, a renowned name in the office
equipment and stationary goods approached Delhi High Court against “Evershine
STY” on the ground that it is copying their unique get-up Lay-out and colour
combination of blue and warm grey and selling their product under the Trademark
“Frog”. The High Court ex parte restrained the “Evershine STY” and its agents
etc. from using the impugned label, cartoon, packaging material as may be
deceptively similar to the “Kangaro’s”
In Cadbury India Limited and Ors. Vs. Neeraj Food
Products, the Delhi High Court held the trademark “JAMES BOND” to be physically
and phonetically similar to the registered trademark “GEMS” of the Cadbury. The
High Court further held the packaging of Neeraj food product to be similar to
that of Cadbury and eventfully Neeraj Foods was restrained from using said
trademarks as well as the packaging similar to that of Cadbury.
Therefore the concept of the tradedress is well
recognized and settled in India and its importance with relation to trade has
been repeatedly upheld by the Courts in India.
| About the author |
Author is an Advocate and Patent and Trademark Attorney with Aswal Associates, Attorneys at law & Intellectual property, New Delhi, India and can be reached at sudhir@aswal.com. Author is a member of APAA, Delhi Bar Council, Delhi High Court Bar Association and Supreme Court Bar Association |
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