- Home
- Topics
- Services
- Constitutional law
- Submit Articles
- Lawyers
- Laws
- My Account
- Members
Tags
Categories
- Administrative Law
- Animal Laws
- Arbitration
- Army laws
- Aviation Law
- Bangladesh Laws
- Banking & Finance laws
- Canada Law
- Civil Law
- Company Law
- Competition Law
- Constitutional law
- Consumer laws
- Contract Laws
- Criminal Law
- Cyber Law
- Disability Laws
- Education Law
- Elderly Law
- Election Law
- Election Laws
- Employment Law
- Environmental Law
- Family Law
- Food and Drugs
- Foreign laws
- Human Rights
- Immigration Law
- Insurance laws
- Intellectual Property
- International law
- Jurisprudence
- Juvenile Law
- Labour Law
- Land Laws
- Laws
- Legal Profession
- Lok Adalat
- Maritime Law
- Media laws
- Medico Legal
- Minority Laws
- Miscellaneous Laws
- Personal Laws
- Politics
- Property laws
- Sports Law
- Supreme Court
- Tax laws
- Technology laws
- Third Gender
- Torts Law
- Traffic Laws
- UAE Laws
- Uncategorized
- United Kingdom
- Woman Law
- Don’t Be a Dead Hero While Handling IEDs
- Underdevelopment as a Driver of Left-Wing Extremism in India
- John Doe Defendants and the Merger Rule
- The Different Types of Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs): Evolution, Trends, and Emerging Threats
- Unlocking Global Markets: Export of Gems and Jewellery from India Explained
- Marital Rape in India: Meaning, Legal Status, 2013 Amendment & The Continuing Exception
- Victims vs Offenders: Reimagining Victim Justice in India’s Criminal Process through Comparative Perspectives
- How Use of IEDs by LWE Influenced All-Weather Roads in India’s LWE-Affected Areas
Abstract The recovery process established in the Income Tax Act, 1961, is essential to enable the government to run the…
Introduction – The Constitutional Framework of Judicial Review in India The question “Is Article 137 judicial review?” requires a nuanced…
Abstract From Article 14’s principle of equal treatment, emerged a doctrine named ‘manifest arbitrariness’ crafted by courts to overturn unchecked…
Introduction – The Constitutional Framework of Right to Education The right to education stands as one of the most transformative…
Introduction This judgment, delivered by a division bench, underscores the distinction between mere prior use and the requirement to establish…
Learn about pasara licence documents required for PSARA registration in India. Step-by-step guide with expert PSARA services by Agile Regulatory.
This judgment settles several critical points in patent litigation, particularly for biologics in quia timet scenarios, affirming that product-to-claim mapping under Rule 3(A)(ix) of the Delhi High Court Patent Suits Rules cannot be entirely dispensed with, even in anticipatory actions; the phrase “to the extent possible” allows flexibility but demands maximum feasible effort, and collateral evidence alone may not suffice for prima facie infringement without raising triable issues.
This judgment settles that in trademark disputes involving registered marks, no statutory infringement action lies against another registered proprietor under Section 28(3) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, but passing off remains actionable under common law via Section 27(2), provided the plaintiff proves prior goodwill predating the defendant’s use, misrepresentation, and damage.
The Division Bench’s reasoning pivoted on a critical procedural distinction between interim relief and final rectification under Section 57 of the Act. While acknowledging the Single Judge’s analysis of phonetic similarity—observing that “INSEAD” and “INSAID” shared auditory traits that could invoke initial interest confusion, especially in educational services—the court noted that these conclusions were repeatedly qualified as “prima facie.” For instance, the Single Judge held that phonetic similarity existed based on examples like “dead” and “said,” and that even enlightened students might experience momentary wonderment upon encountering the marks, satisfying the likelihood of confusion test under Section 11.
Introduction The dispute between The Procter & Gamble Company, a global giant in consumer goods, and IPI India Private Limited,…
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest Legal Updates from Legal Service India
India’s Oldest Independent Digital Legal Knowledge Platform
ISBN: 978-81-928510-0-6

