Trademark registration in India

The challenge of registering a trademark that includes common words revolves largely around the principle of secondary meaning 🧠. A generic or descriptive word may only qualify for trademark protection if it acquires distinctiveness through usage. The legal position is well-explained through key judicial precedents 📚:


📌 Key Case Law Analysis

🧑‍⚖️ 1. Godfrey Phillips v. Girnar Food & Beverages (2005) (30) PTC 1 (SC)

Ruling: The Supreme Court ruled that descriptive marks can attain trademark protection if they have gained a secondary meaning that identifies the source or product.
📌 Example: The term ‘SUPERCUP’, though descriptive or laudatory for tea, was held protectable due to its brand association.
⚖️ However, the Court emphasized that a proper evaluation of evidence is essential to prove acquired distinctiveness.
💡 Note: Long market presence is not the only route to secondary meaning—rapid popularity can also suffice.


🧑‍⚖️ 2. Cadila Healthcare v. Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (2009) (41) PTC 336 (Del) (DB)

🚫 The Court introduced a critical exception to Godfrey Phillips:
➡️ If a term is so inherently descriptive, it may be incapable of acquiring distinctiveness, no matter how long it’s been used.
📉 Conclusion: Some words are beyond the threshold of registrability due to their purely descriptive nature.


🧑‍⚖️ 3. Skyline Education v. Vaswani (2010) (42) PTC 217 (SC)

⚖️ A landmark case addressing common words in trademarks.
🗣️ The plaintiff claimed exclusivity over the word ‘SKYLINE’ for educational institutions.
🔎 However, evidence showed over 30 institutions in the region and 100+ nationwide using the word ‘SKYLINE’.
📉 The Supreme Court held the word to be generic and incapable of exclusive trademark protection.
Skyline Test: If a word is widely used, generic, and lacks a strong proprietary link, it fails the test for trademark protection—regardless of any claimed secondary meaning.


⚖️ Legal Takeaways

Godfrey Phillips Principle:
Descriptive words may be protected if they acquire secondary meaning via long use or intense popularity.
🧾 Requires evidence: market presence, sales figures, advertising, customer recognition, etc.

🚫 Skyline Exception:
If a term is too commonly used, it may be inherently generic, and not registrable despite widespread use.

🧩 Balancing Act:
To register a common or descriptive term:

  • ✅ Prove longstanding use and consumer recognition
  • 🔍 Show intent to distinguish the brand
  • 🚫 Avoid words that are publici juris (in public domain)

We offer trademark registration in mohali,Chandigarh, Panchkula and various other cities at affordable prices. You can contact us as follows

Trademark And Legal Hub

Phone:- +91-7814757608

Address:- Savitry Enclave, 3 A, W VIP Rd, Zirakpur, Punjab 140603

Location- https://g.co/kgs/TNwUzhE

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