
Under the Trade Marks Act, 1999 and Trade Marks Rules, 2017, India’s trademark
system balances domestic registration rights with transborder reputation principles, a
critical safeguard for global brands without local registration. Administered by the
Controller General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks (CGPDTM), India follows a
mixed first-to-file and first-to-use regime, where unregistered marks with proven
global goodwill can defeat local bad-faith registrations. However, registered trademarks
face strict non-use cancellation rules—registrations may be revoked if unused for five
consecutive years post-registration. This case study analyzes a cross-border dispute
involving transborder reputation and non-use challenges, clarifying key compliance risks for
international brand owners.
A Swiss luxury watchmaker with a globally renowned word-and-device mark established
decades of international reputation but delayed formal registration in India, focusing on
European and Asian markets. In 2021, a local Indian entity filed a TM-A application for an
identical mark in Class 14 (watches), securing registration in 2023 after overcoming a minor
formality objection.
In 2024, the Swiss brand discovered the local registration and initiated rectification proceedings
under Section 57 of the Trade Marks Act, arguing transborder reputation and bad-faith
adoption. The local registrant countered with two defenses: prior local use since 2020 and the
Swiss brand’s non-use in India, claiming no domestic goodwill existed. The Indian
Trademark Registry initially dismissed the rectification, prompting an appeal to the Delhi High
Court. The court reversed the decision, holding the Swiss brand’s global reputation and
cross-border goodwill outweighed the local registration, and the local entity acted in bad faith
by copying a famous mark. Concurrently, the Swiss brand filed a non-use cancellation against a
competing local mark registered in 2018, which had never been used commercially. The court
ordered its removal under Section 47 for failure to use within the five-year grace period.
Transborder reputation protects unregistered global brands. Under Section 11(2), Indian
courts recognize that a mark’s goodwill transcends borders—even without local sales or
registration, a globally famous mark can block or cancel a subsequent local registration if the
applicant acted in bad faith. Proof requires international use, media recognition, and global sales
data, not just local presence.
Non-use cancellation is a powerful enforcement tool. Section 47 mandates revocation if a
registered mark remains unused for five years from registration, with no grace period extension
for procedural delays. Mere registration without commercial use (e.g., token sales or internal use) is
insufficient to defend against cancellation.
Composite marks require holistic assessment. Indian law applies the anti-dissection rule—
composite marks (word+logo) must be evaluated as a whole, not by individual elements. Courts
prioritize overall consumer impression, including visual, phonetic, and conceptual similarity, rather
than isolated components.
2024–2026 procedural reforms strengthen enforcement. The Jan Vishwas Act, 2023
decriminalized minor trademark offenses (e.g., false registration claims) while increasing civil
penalties for infringement. New IP Divisions in High Courts (Delhi, Madras, Calcutta) streamline
dispute resolution, reducing case backlogs.
● Secure early registration, even for low-priority markets. File multi-class TM-A applications
via the IP India e-filing system before market entry to avoid bad-faith registrationsIntellectual
Property India. Prioritize Class 14 (luxury goods), Class 25 (apparel), and Class 35 (retail) for
consumer brands.
● Build transborder reputation evidence proactively. Compile global sales records,
international media coverage, and celebrity endorsements to prove cross-border goodwill.
Even without local sales, consistent global branding strengthens transborder reputation claims.
● Maintain active local use for registered marks. Avoid non-use cancellation by documenting
commercial sales, advertising, and distribution in India. File affidavits of use with supporting
evidence (invoices, packaging) to defend against Section 47 challenges.
● Monitor the Trademark Journal for oppositions. Conduct quarterly reviews of published
applications in relevant classes to identify conflicting marks. File oppositions within the 4-month
statutory period to prevent bad-faith registrationsIntellectual Property India.
● Leverage dedicated IP Divisions for disputes. For high-stakes cases (e.g., transborder
reputation, non-use cancellation), file proceedings in Delhi or Madras High Court IP Divisions for
specialized adjudication and faster resolution.
India’s trademark regime uniquely blends transborder reputation protection for global
brands with strict non-use cancellation rules for registrants, creating both opportunities and
risks. This case study demonstrates that delayed local registration and inadequate use
documentation can lead to costly disputes, while proactive evidence collection and early
filing safeguard brand rights. For global enterprises, compliance requires balancing international
reputation building with local registration and use maintenance—critical to securing
long-term trademark protection in India’s fast-growing consumer market.
Hyperlink List:
● IPcrossark:
IPcrossark—Reliable IP Registration Platform | Trademark, Patent & Copyright Help
● Delhi High Court IP Division Trademark Rules: