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In Re: Abdul Satar Khan Kamruddinkhan - Court Judgment

SooperKanoon Citation
SubjectIntellectual Property Rights
CourtMumbai
Decided On
Reported inAIR1935Bom359; 158Ind.Cas.168
AppellantIn Re: Abdul Satar Khan Kamruddinkhan
Excerpt:
- - 5. i agree that the better view seems to be that where the offence of infringement of a trade or property mark is a continuing one, and no discontinuance is proved, time runs under section 15 from the first instance of infringement, or from the first discovery of infringement. although, therefore, the matter is by no means free from difficulty, i am not satisfied that there are any grounds for differing from the view which the sessions judge has taken......had after the first discovery of the offence given an undertaking to discontinue the use of the trademark. in the present case the complainant has no doubt alleged that after he discovered the infringement of his property mark he sent a notice to the accused and that the accused promised to discontinue the use of it. but there is no proof of any such discontinuance, and the complainant has admitted in his deposition that he has no documentary evidence such as he might be expected to have to show that there really was any discontinuance by the accused at all. mr. garden noad has advanced the argument that a man may infringe a trade-mark, discontinue doing so on discovery, and then repeat the infringement after a year, in which case, if frame runs from the original infringement, there.....
Judgment:

Broomfield, J.

1. This is an application for revision of an order of acquittal made by the Sessions Judge of Sholapur in a case in which one Ratanlal Kishenlal was convicted by the First Class Magistrate of Sholapur of an offence under Section 482, I.P.C., i.e., the offence of using a false trade-mark or a false property mark. The allegation of the complainant was that the accused had used a property mark which had been in use by the complainant for a considerable number of years and to which he had established a right and that he had thereby induced his customers to support that the bidis sold by him were the complainant's bidis. The Sessions Judge on appeal from the conviction did not go into the merits of the case at all. He acquitted the accused on a preliminary ground that the prosecution was barred by limitation under Section 15, Merchandise Marks Act, which provides that no such prosecution as is mentioned in Section 14 (and that includes a prosecution under Section 482, I.P.C.) shall be commenced after the expiration of three years next after the commission of the offence or one year after the first discovery thereof by the prosecutor, whichever expiration first happens. Now, the charge in this case alleged the use of a false property mark on 24th-July 1933, that being the date apparently on which it is alleged that a certain person was induced to purchase a packet of bidis bearing the alleged false property mark. But in the course of the trial it was admitted by the complainant that he had come to know of the infringement of his property mark by the accused more than a year before this particular offence, and on that ground the Sessions Judge, following a decision of the Madras High Court, 22 Mad. 488 (1), has held that the prosecution was barred.

2. The question raised in this revision application depends upon the construction of Section 15, Mercandise Marks Act, the particular point being whether the word 'offence' as used in that section means the specific offence alleged in the charge or the first of a series of offences when the offence as here is a continuous one. There is no authority of this High Court upon the point, but the matter has been considered by several of the other High Courts, and there is apparently a conflict of authority. Ruppell v. Ponnusami Tevan (1899) 22 Mad 488 the ease on which the Sessions Judge has relied, is very much on all fours with the present case. The facts there were that a complainant had discovered in 1893 that goods were being sold marked with what was alleged to be a counterfeit trade-mark, and he called upon the person so selling to discontinue the use of the said mark and to render an account of the sales. The right to proceed further was reserved, but no action was then taken. In 1898, upon its being ascertained that the said trade-mark was being used, the prosecution was commenced. The Court held that, inasmuch as the complainant had not shown that he believed the use of the alleged counterfeit trade-mark had been discontinued after his first discovery and complaint in 1893, the prosecution was time-barred under Section 15. So that the view vtaken by the Court was that 'offence' in this section means the first of a series of offences, and there are certain observations in the judgment on which the Sessions Judge here has relied. Their Lordships said (p. 490):

Ordinarily the infringement of a trade-mark is rather a civil than a criminal wrong, but as civil proceedings may require much time and expenditure to bring them to a conclusion, the legislature, in its anxiety to protect traders, has allowed a resort to the criminal Courts to provide a speedy remedy in cases where the aggrieved party is diligent and does not by his conduct show that the case is not one of urgency. If, therefore, the person aggrieved, fails to resort to the criminal Courts within a year of the offence coming to his knowledge, the law assumes that the case is not one of urgency, and it leaves him to his civil remedy by an action, for injunction.

3. This case has been followed in Burma, Mahomed Jewa v. Wilson 12 Cri. L.J. 246 and also in Abdul Majid v. Emperor 17 Cri. L.J. 488. The counsel who appears for the applicant has relied in particular on two Calcutta cases: Akshoy Kumar Dey v. The King-Emperor 32 C.W.N. 699 and Nagendranath Shaha v. Emperor 57 Cal. 1153. These cases do appear to support his contention that the word 'offence' in Section 15 should be interpreted to mean the specific offence alleged in the charge. But possibly they can be distinguished. Akshoy Kumar Dey v. The King-Emperor 32 C.W.N. 699 was a case under Section 486, I.P.C., which deals with the offence of selling, exposing or possessing specific goods or things. The section, therefore, differs to some extent from Section 482 which deals 'with the offence of using a false trade or property mark, an offence which is in its nature continuous. In the second place in this ease there was a finding of fact that the complainant had no knowledge of the previous user. Nagendranath Shaha v. Emperor 57 Cal. 1153 was a case under Section 482, but there it was held proved that the accused had after the first discovery of the offence given an undertaking to discontinue the use of the trademark. In the present case the complainant has no doubt alleged that after he discovered the infringement of his property mark he sent a notice to the accused and that the accused promised to discontinue the use of it. But there is no proof of any such discontinuance, and the complainant has admitted in his deposition that he has no documentary evidence such as he might be expected to have to show that there really was any discontinuance by the accused at all. Mr. Garden Noad has advanced the argument that a man may infringe a trade-mark, discontinue doing so on discovery, and then repeat the infringement after a year, in which case, if frame runs from the original infringement, there could be no prosecution, This, it is suggested, would be absurd. A similar argument seems to have weighed with Ghose, J., in Nagendranath Shaha v. Emperor 57 Cal. 1153. But it there is proof of a discontinuance of the infringement, the limitation would not operate, even according to Ruppell v. Ponnusami Tevan (1899) 22 Mad 488. Moreover, on the other view, the section is really reduced to a dead letter. In that connexion I may refer to Mahomed Jewa v. Wilson 12 Cri. L.J. 246 where Twomey, J., says (p. 247):

The intention of the legislature will be frustrated if it is held that the owner of a trademark can stand by for several years while his trade-mark is being infringed continuously and then bring a criminal complaint in respect o some recent instance in which there has been infringomemt. To interpret the section in that way would reduce its provisions to a nullity, for it would entirely remove the bar of limitation except in cases where the series of infringements has actually ceased.

4. In the same case the Judge has laid stress upon the words 'first discovery' in the section. He says (p. 248):

The words 'first discovery' cannot reasonably be applied to the last of a long series of similar offences extending without interruption throughout several years to the knowledge of the prosecutor. In my opinion, they can refer only to the first offence of the series which comes to his knowledge.

5. I agree that the better view seems to be that where the offence of infringement of a trade or property mark is a continuing one, and no discontinuance is proved, time runs under Section 15 from the first instance of infringement, or from the first discovery of infringement. Although, therefore, the matter is by no means free from difficulty, I am not satisfied that there are any grounds for differing from the view which the Sessions Judge has taken. That being so, we decline to interfere and the rule is discharged.

Divatia, J.

6. It appears from the evidence that from 1st October 1932, when according to the complainant himself he knew that his trade mark was being infringed by the accused, to 24th July 1933, when according to him he discovered that a customer was misled on account of the use of this trade-mark by the accused, there has been a continuous use of this mark by the accused. Under Section 15, Merchandise Marks Act, limitation would begin to run from the time when the complainant made the first discovery of the offence. Now the offence in this case is the offence under Section 482, I.P.C., of using a false mark. It is true that in the complaint he alloges that he first discovered the deception on 24th July 1933, and according to him, limitation commenced from that time. But with regard to the offence under Section 482 it would be the first discovery of the use of the false trademark and not the first discovery of any deception practised upon a customer on account of the use of such mark that is to be taken as the starting point. And on these facts, therefore, this case would be governed by the principle of the ruling in Ruppell v. Ponnusami Tevan (1899) 22 Mad 488 not only because the facts of the present case are similar to those in the Madras case but also because the reasoning adopted in that case is to be preferred to the view taken in the two Calcutta cases in Akshoy Kumar Dey v. The King-Emperor 32 C.W.N. 699 and Nagendranath Shaha v. Emperor 57 Cal. 1153. That view would render Section 15, Merchandise Marks Act, almost nugatory if the complainant is at liberty to choose any act out of the continuous series of acts forming, to his knowledge, the breach of the provisions of Section 482. The reasoning of the Madras High Court has been adopted by the Burma Court in Mahomed Jewa v. Wilson 12 Cri. L.J. 246. Besides, the Calcutta case of Akshoy Kumar Dey v. The King-Emperor 32 C.W.N. 699 can be distinguished from the Madras case and the present case on the ground that there it was not proved that the complainant had knowledge of the breach of the provisions of the section before the complaint was filed. Here, however, the complainant has admitted that he became aware of the use of his mark in October 1932, The result is that limitation runs from 1st October 1932, and not from 24th July 1933. I, therefore, agree that the rule should be discharged.


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