Certification Trade Marks - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: certification trade marksCertification trade mark
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 trademark, of that person. [Trade Marks Act, 1999 (47 of 1999), s. 2(1)(e)]...
Trade marks
Trade marks. by the Trade Marks Act, 1905 (English) (5 Edw. 7, c. 15), s. 3:-A 'mark' shall include a device, brand, heading, label, ticket, name, signature, word, letter, numeral or any combination thereof.A 'trade mark' shall mean a mark used or proposed to be used upon or in connexion with goods for the purpose of indicating that they are the goods of the proprietor of such trademark by virtue of manufacture, selection, certification, dealing with, or offering for sale.A 'registrable trademark' shall mean a trade mark which is capable of registration under the pro-visions of this Act.Subject to the Trade Mark Acts, the owner of a trademark has a right to its use in connection with the goods associated with it, whether or not it is registered or registrable by him, and if that right is infringed by a sale of other goods under his mark, or a colourable imitation or otherwise so as to be calculated to deceive a purchaser that those goods are goods of his manufacture, sale or mark, the ...
Trade mark and property mark
Trade mark and property mark, the concept of trade mark is distinct from that of a property mark. A mark, as defined by s. 2(1)(j) of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, includes a device, brand, heading, label, ticket, name, signature, world, letter or numerical or any combination thereof. A trade mark means a mark used in relation to goods for the purpose of indicating or so as to indicate a connection in the course of trade between the goods and some person having the right as proprietor to use that mark. The function of a trade mark is to give an indication to the purchaser or a possible purchaser as to the manufacture or quality of the goods, to give an indication to his eye of the trade source from which the goods come, or the trade hands through which they pass on their way to the market. On the other hand, a property mark, as defined by s. 479 of the Penal Code means a mark used for denoting that a movable property belongs to a particular person. Thus, the distinction be...
Property mark, trade mark
Property mark, trade mark, a property mark, as defined by s. 479 of the Indian Penal Code means a mark used for denoting that a movable property belongs to a particular person. The distinction between a trade mark and a property mark is that whereas the former denotes the manufacture or quality of the goods to which it is attached, the latter denotes the ownership in them. In other words, a trade mark concerns the goods themselves, while a property mark concerns the proprietor. A property mark attached to the movable property of a person remains even if part of such property goes out of his hands and ceases to be his, Sumat Prasead Jain v. Sheojonaw Prasad, AIR 1972 SC 2488 (2490): (1973) 1 SCC 56. [Penal Code, s. 479; Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, s. 2(1)(i) & (v)]...
Associated Trade Marks
Associated Trade Marks, 'associated trade marks' means trade marks deemed to be, or required to be, registered as associated trade marks under this Act. [Trade Marks Act, (47 of 1999) s. 2 (1) (c)]...
Trade Mark
Trade Mark, a trade mark includes a registered as well as unregistered trade mark, State of Uttar Pradesh v. Ram Nath, (1972) 1 SCC 130: AIR 1972 SC 232. [Trade and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958, s. 2(1)(v)]...
Trafficking in trade marks
Trafficking in trade marks, to get a trade mark registered without any intention to use it in relation to any goods but merely to make money out of it by selling to others the right to use it as a commodity would be trafficking in trade mark. A trade mark is meant to distinguish the goods made by any person from those by another, American Home Products Corpn. v. Mac. Laboratories Pvt. Ltd., AIR 1986 SC 137: 1985 Supp (3) SCR 264: (1986) 1 SCC 465....
Well known trade mark
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. [Trade Marks Act, 1999, s. 2(zg)]...
Registration of trade marks
Registration of trade marks. See TRADE MARKS....
Trade description
Trade description, means 'any description, state-ment, or other indication, direct or indirect, (a) as to the number, quantity, measure, gauge, or weight of any goods, or (b) as to the place or country in which any goods were made or produced, or (c) as to the mode of manufacturing or producing any goods, or (d) as to the material of which any goods are composed, or (e) as to any goods being the subject of an existing patent, privilege, or copyright, and the use of any figure, word, or mark which, accord-ing to the custom of the trade, is commonly taken to be an indication of any of the above matters.' A 'false trade description' means a trade description which is false in a material respect as regards the goods to which it is applied, and includes every alteration of a trade description, whether by way of addition, effacement, or otherwise, where that alteration makes the description false in a material respect, and the fact that a trade description is a trade mark, or part of a trade...
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