John Cockerill Hamon Sa vs Hamon Cooling Systems Private Limited on 6 July, 2026

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    Bombay High Court

    John Cockerill Hamon Sa vs Hamon Cooling Systems Private Limited on 6 July, 2026

     VAIBHAV                                                                           6-IA-345-2026
     NAMDEV
     BARE
    Digitally signed by
    VAIBHAV NAMDEV
    BARE
                               IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY
    Date: 2026.07.07
    20:00:56 +0530
                                     ORDINARY ORIGINAL CIVIL JURISDICTION
                                      INTERIM APPLICATION NO. 345 OF 2026
                                                           IN
                                        COMMERCIAL IP SUIT NO. 7 OF 2026
    
    
              John Cockerill Hamon SA. ​          ​    ​        ​   ​         ...Applicant/Plaintiff
                            Versus
              Hamon Cooling Systems Private Limited & Anr.​              ...Defendants/Respondents
                                                       _______
              Mr. Janak Dwarkadas, Senior Advocate, a/w. Mr. Hiren Kamod, Ms. Namrata
              Vinod, Mr. Ashutosh Kane, Ms. Sumana Roychowdhury and Mr. Kanak Kadam
              i/b. W. S. Kane & Co., for the Applicant/Plaintiff.
              Dr. Veerendra Tulzapurkar, Senior Advocate, a/w. Mr. Hitesh Mutha, Mr. Sajid
              Mohamed, Mr. Sumit Raghani and Ms. Dikshita Pawar i/b. Argud Partners, for the
              Defendants.
                                                       _______
                                                  CORAM ​ ​             : ARIF S. DOCTOR, J.
    
                                                  RESERVED ON ​         : 7th APRIL 2026.
                                                  PRONOUNCED ON : 6th JULY 2026.
              P.C.
    
    
    
    

    1.​ The captioned Suit has been filed inter alia for infringement and passing off in

    respect of the mark HAMON.

    SPONSORED

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    2.​ It is the Plaintiff’s case that the Plaintiff is the proprietor of the following

    marks, all of which are registered and, for convenience, are referred to as the

    “HAMON Marks”, viz.

    
    
              Mark       Registration   Class     Obtained on       User                  Valid upto
                         No.
    
              HAMON      495228         7         1st August 1988   1st January 1963      1st January
              (word)                              (Engetra S.A.)                          2029
    
              HAMON      495229         11        1st August 1988   'Proposed to be       1st August
              (word)                              (Engetra S.A.)    used'                 2029
    
                         1710809        7, 11,    16th July 2008    1st March 1999        16th    July
                                        19, 37,   (HCI)                                   2028
                                        42
              (device)
    
                         1836422        19, 37,   3rd July 2009     'Proposed to be       3rd     July
                                        42        (HCI)             used'                 2029
              (device)
    
                         495230         7         1st August 1988   'Proposed to be       1st August
                                                                    used'                 2009
    
    
    
    
    

    3.​ It is the Plaintiff’s case that Defendant No. 1, despite not having any right, title,

    or interest in the mark HAMON, is using “HAMON COOLING” and “HCS

    HAMON COOLING” (“the impugned marks”) in the course of its trade and

    also as a part of its corporate name. It is thus that the Plaintiff has filed the

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    captioned Suit, claiming infringement of the “HAMON” Mark and also for

    passing off the goods and services of Defendant No. 1 as those of the Plaintiff.

    4.​ The Plaintiff has, by way of the present Interim Application, sought the

    following relief:

    “a. that pending the hearing and final disposal of the present Suit the Defendants
    by itself, its directors, its servants, agents, representatives, distributions, stockists
    and all other persons claiming by, through or under it be restrained by a
    temporary order and injunction of this Hon’ble Court from in any manner,
    directly or indirectly, using, affixing, the impugned mark “HAMON” and in
    respect of its goods/services as a mark, corporate name, domain name, email,
    business name, trade name and/or trading style etc. or any other mark, corporate
    name, domain name, email, business name, trade name and/or trading style etc.
    containing and/or incorporating the word `HAMON’ or any other mark
    deceptively similar to that of the Plaintiffs said trademark “HAMON” and in
    respect of the Defendants’ goods or service and/or as a part of its trade
    name/corporate name, domain name so as to infringe the Plaintiff’s registered
    trade mark “HAMON” bearing nos. 495229, 495228, 1710809 and 1836422;
    b. that pending the hearing and final disposal of the suit, the Defendants by itself,
    its directors, its servants, agents, representatives, distributions, stockists and all
    other persons claiming by, through or under it be restrained by a temporary order
    and injunction of this Hon’ble Court from in any manner, directly or indirectly,
    using, affixing, the impugned mark “HAMON” and in respect of its goods as a
    mark, business name, trade name, domain name and/or trading style etc. or any
    other mark, business name, trade name, domain name and/or trading style etc.
    containing and/or incorporating the word `HAMON’ and/or deceptively similar
    to the Plaintiff’s mark `HAMON’ and so as to pass-off or enable others to

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    pass-off the Defendants’ goods and business as and for the goods and business of
    the Plaintiff or as emanating from or affiliated and be further restrained from in
    anyway associating and/or connecting itself with the Plaintiff by use of the mark
    `HAMON’ and/or any other deceptively similar mark thereto;

    c. that pending the hearing and final disposal of the present Suit, the Defendants
    be ordered and directed to transfer the domain name viz www.hamonindia.com
    and or any other domain name containing/incorporating the word/mark
    `HAMON’ and or any other similar/deceptively similar mark/name to the
    Plaintiff by taking appropriate steps at its own cost and until such transfer is
    made in the name of the Plaintiff the Defendants be restrained from
    transferring and or creating any third party rights and or in dealing in any
    manner with the said domain name with third parties;

    d. for ad-interim reliefs in terms of prayers (a), (b) and (c), above;

    e. for costs of the Suit;

    f. for such further and other reliefs as the nature and circumstances of the case
    may require.”

    Submissions on behalf of the Plaintiff:

    5.​ Mr. Dwarkadas, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of the Plaintiff

    at the outset pointed out that HAMON had been adopted as a trade mark by

    ENGETRA S.A. (“ENGETRA”), a Belgian entity, in the year 1963 in

    respect of goods falling in Classes 7 and 11, including, but not limited to, air

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    cooling apparatus, air conditioning apparatus, air condensers, water heaters,

    heat exchangers, etc.

    6.​ He submitted that in the year 1988, in order to secure statutory rights in

    India, ENGETRA applied for and obtained registration of the trade mark

    HAMON (word per se) bearing registration nos. 495228 and 495229 in

    Classes 7 and 11, and also for the device mark ” ” bearing registration

    nos. 495230 and 495231 in Classes 7 and 11.

    7.​ On 15th September, 1999, ENGETRA S.A. executed a Deed of Assignment

    assigning its exclusive right, title, and interest in the HAMON Marks

    bearing registration nos. 495228, 495229, and 495230, along with the

    goodwill, to HCI.

    8.​ Thereafter, Hamon & CIE (International) S.A. (“HCI”) acquired

    approximately a 70% stake in an Indian Company, i.e., Thermopack

    Engineers Pvt. Ltd. Following this acquisition, Thermopack Engineers Pvt.

    Ltd. was renamed Hamon Thermopack Engineers Pvt. Ltd. and in

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    1998-1999, Thermopack Engineers Pvt. Ltd. changed its name to Hamon

    Thermopack (“Hamon Thermopack”). On 12th April 1999, HCI acquired

    100% of the shareholding in Hamon Thermopack. Thus, HCI had full

    control and ownership of Hamon Thermopack.

    9.​ In the year 2007, Hamon Thermopack entered into a joint venture with

    Shriram EPC Ltd. for collaboration on cooling tower engineering projects.

    On 16th July 2008 and 3rd July 2009, HCI filed applications for registration

    of the HAMON Marks in India. Shriram EPC acquired 50.01% equity in

    Hamon Thermopack, due to which Hamon Thermopack was renamed

    Hamon Shriram Cottrell Pvt. Ltd. Shriram Industrial Holdings thereafter

    acquired Shriram EPC’s 49.99% stake in Hamon Shriram through an internal

    share transfer in the year 2013.

    10.​In the year 2019-2020, HCI increased its shareholding in Hamon Shriram to

    99.16%, and Hamon Shriram was thereafter renamed Hamon Cooling

    Systems Pvt. Ltd., i.e., Defendant No. 1. Mr. Dwarkadas then invited my

    attention to Exhibit “G” to the Plaint as well as a chart in paragraph 13 of the

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    Plaint to point out that Defendant No. 1 had achieved an annual turnover of

    Rs. 2,19,51,37,850/- in the financial year 2023-24, and Defendant No. 2, i.e.,

    Hamon India, had a turnover of Rs. 9,81,417/- in the year 2023-24, and that

    the net worth of Defendant No. 1 was Rs. 36,40,52,516/-. He thus submitted

    that HCI was using the HAMON Marks on an extensive scale throughout the

    Indian market, due to which the HAMON Marks had acquired tremendous

    goodwill and reputation throughout India and had become the valuable

    assets of HCI.

    11.​Mr. Dwarkadas then submitted that in the year 2022, HCI had initiated

    judicial reorganisation proceedings in Belgium, which were subsequently

    converted into bankruptcy proceedings in which three trustees were

    appointed by the Belgian Court to deal with the assets of HCI.

    12.​He pointed out that on 20th May 2022, CMI France, a subsidiary of the John

    Cockerill Group, submitted a bid to, inter alia, acquire substantially all of

    the intellectual property assets of HCI. He submitted that the bid specifically

    covered the entire portfolio of HAMON brands and trade marks, the ERP,

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    patents, the website and HCI’s equity interests in companies forming part of

    the Esindus subgroup carrying on the cooling (wet cooling) and water

    management (water solutions) business of the erstwhile Hamon Group. He

    submitted that although the equity securities of the Esindus subgroup

    belonging to HCI initially formed part of the bid submitted by CMI France,

    the Trustees of HCI ultimately sought and obtained approval only for the

    transfer of HCI’s assets, excluding the Esindus subgroup shares.

    13.​On 27th May, 2022, “Le Tribunal de Commerce Spécialisé de Bobigny”, i.e.,

    the Specialised Commercial Tribunal Bobigny, issued an order for the

    transfer/assignment of the assets belonging to Hamon Thermal Europe,

    France, and certain assets of the French company Compagnie Financiers

    Hamon for the benefit of CMI France. Consequently, on 30th May 2022, the

    Trustees of HCI filed a petition with the Official Receiver in the bankruptcy

    proceedings, requesting authorisation to sell HCI’s assets (excluding Esindus

    sub-group shares) to CMI France, acting for and on behalf of John Cockerill

    Hamon SA. This application, he pointed out, was allowed on 1st June, 2022.

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    He also relied upon material from the Hamon group website showing that

    Defendant No. 1 formed part of the Esindus subgroup within the wider

    Hamon group structure.

    14.​Mr. Dwarkadas submitted that on 2nd June 2022, CMI France transferred

    €1,100,000 to the Trustees as a guarantee/consideration for the acquisition of

    the assets of HCI (except Esindus securities), including all the intellectual

    property rights pertaining to the HAMON marks. He then pointed out that on

    25th July 2022, a Transfer Agreement was executed between HCI, acting

    through its Court-appointed trustees, and the Plaintiff, which he pointed out

    was effective from 1st June 2022. He also pointed out that Clause 1.1.1.1 of

    the Transfer Agreement made clear that the entire portfolio of brands held by

    HCI, including all brand names and trade names attached to the HAMON

    brands, stood transferred to the Plaintiff.

    15.​ He then invited my attention to Clause 6 of the Transfer Agreement and

    pointed out that, at the request of the Trustees, the Transferee, i.e., the

    Plaintiff, agreed to pay an additional consideration of €500,000 over and

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    above the agreed purchase price to permit certain Hamon group companies,

    which had not been acquired by the Plaintiff group, to continue using the

    HAMON brands for a limited period solely to enable them to complete their

    ongoing projects. He pointed out that Clause 1.1.1.2 of the Transfer

    Agreement expressly describes this arrangement as the “Brand Usage

    Right”. He submitted that Defendant No. 1 was one such company who was

    permitted to use the HAMON brand to complete ongoing projects.

    16.​Mr. Dwarkadas submitted that by virtue of the Transfer Agreement dated

    25th July 2022, HCI transferred to the Plaintiff all its rights, title, interest and

    goodwill in the HAMON Marks worldwide, including in India. He

    submitted that, while the Plaintiff had not acquired the Indian business of the

    Hamon group nor had the Plaintiff acquired Defendant No. 1, the Plaintiff

    had acquired all the statutory rights in respect of the HAMON Marks

    worldwide, including in India, from HCI. Mr. Dwarkadas pointed out that

    this was confirmed and reiterated by HCI in a Confirmatory Deed dated 18th

    April 2024.

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    17.​Mr. Dwarkadas, then to highlight what he submitted was the dishonest

    conduct of Defendant No. 1, pointed out that Defendant No. 1 had, on 18th

    August 2022, maliciously filed a trade mark application bearing No.

    5573155 in Class 7 for the mark “HAMON COOLING” on a

    proposed-to-be-used basis.

    18.​He then pointed out that on 30th September, 2022, a Share Sale Agreement

    (“SSA”) was executed between one Mr. Akhileshwar G. Chorasiya,

    Defendant No. 2 and Hamon (Netherlands) B.V., whereby the entire 99.16%

    equity stake of Defendant No. 2 in Defendant No. 1 was transferred to Mr.

    Chorasiya. He took pains to point out that the SSA clearly marked the

    disassociation of Defendant No. 1 from the Hamon Group. He also pointed

    out that the SSA was restricted only to the transfer of the shares and that

    none of the intellectual property rights, brand ownership, or logo rights in

    the HAMON marks were in any manner transferred to Mr. Chorasiya.

    19.​He further pointed out that under Clause 2.1(a)(iii) of the SSA, Mr.

    Chorasiya was obliged to fulfil the existing contracts/projects executed or

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    being executed by Defendant No. 1 as specifically listed in Schedule 4 of the

    SSA. He reiterated that, since Defendant No. 1 had not been acquired by the

    Plaintiff, as per Clause 1.1.1.2 of the Transfer Agreement, only a temporary

    right to use the HAMON brands was granted to Defendant No. 1 solely for

    the purpose of completing the pending projects, which were more

    particularly set out in Schedule 4 of the SSA.

    20.​Mr. Dwarkadas then invited my attention to the Plaint to point out that the

    Plaintiff had in paragraph 24 specifically pleaded as follows:

    “The Plaintiff agreed to increase the purchase price of the IPR
    belonging to the curators/trustees in return for a limitation of the
    Plaintiff’s undertaking to grant, under certain conditions, a
    temporary right to use the Hamon brands and/or the ERP to
    Hamon Group companies not taken over by the JCG, for the limited
    and sole purpose of completing the projects in progress (as was
    then) and did not grant any broader rights to the Defendants to use
    the trade marks.”

    He took pains to point out that Defendant No. 1 had not denied the Plaintiff’s

    above contention.

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    21.​He then also submitted that Defendant No. 1’s conduct before the Trade

    Marks Registry was wholly inconsistent with the stand taken by Defendant

    No. 1 in the present proceedings. In support of his contention, he invited my

    attention to the Examination Report dated 31st January 2023 issued by the

    Registry in respect of the Application for registration made by Defendant

    No. 1 for the mark “HAMON COOLING”. He pointed out that the

    Plaintiff’s HAMON Mark bearing Registration No. 495228 was cited as a

    conflicting mark under Section 11 of the Trade Marks Act. He submitted that

    Defendant No. 1 had, in the Affidavit in Reply to the Examination Report,

    merely sought to distinguish the proposed mark, “HAMON COOLING”,

    from the Plaintiff’s registered HAMON Mark and had not claimed prior use

    nor asserted any independent right and/or superior right over the proposed

    marks. He thus submitted that the stand taken by Defendant No. 1 in the

    present proceedings, in which Defendant No. 1 had asserted independent and

    long-standing rights in the HAMON Mark, was plainly an afterthought and

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    was wholly inconsistent with the stand taken by Defendant No. 1 before the

    Trade Marks Registry.

    22.​Mr. Dwarkadas submitted that on 30th May, 2024, the Plaintiff had filed an

    application before the Trade Marks Registry to bring the name of the

    Plaintiff on record as the subsequent proprietor of the HAMON Marks. He

    then pointed out that the Trade Mark Registry had, on 9th December 2024,

    rejected the Application filed by Defendant No. 1 for “HAMON

    COOLING”. However, despite this, Defendant No. 1 had, on 11th December,

    2024, mischievously filed another application bearing No. 6751645 in Class

    7 for the word mark “HCS HAMON COOLING” and trade mark

    applications under Nos. 6751644 and 6751646, both in Class 11, for the

    word marks “HAMON COOLING” and “HCS HAMON COOLING”,

    respectively, on a proposed to be used basis.

    23.​He submitted that on 17th April, 2025, despite the expiry of the limited and

    temporary “Brand Usage Right” granted to Defendant No. 1 under the

    Transfer Agreement, Defendant No. 1 had brazenly continued its

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    unauthorised use of the HAMON Marks in its corporate name, goods,

    services, and communications. He thus submitted that the Plaintiff issued a

    cease and desist notice to Defendant No. 1. He submitted that instead of

    complying with the said notice, Defendant No. 1 brazenly continued its use

    of the impugned marks. He submitted that such blatant and unauthorised use

    of the HAMON trade mark clearly amounted to infringement under the

    provisions of Sections 29(1), 29(2), and 29(5) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999,

    as well as passing off.

    24.​He pointed out that Defendant No. 1 was using the impugned marks, i.e.,

    “HAMON COOLING” and “HCS HAMON COOLING”, both of which

    contain the whole of the Plaintiff’s registered trade mark “HAMON” as their

    leading, essential, and prominent feature. He submitted that Defendant No. 1

    also simultaneously continued to operate the domain name

    www.hamonindia.com and email addresses such as [email protected]

    which contains the Plaintiff’s registered trade mark HAMON in its entirety,

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    and was also using the impugned marks in respect of goods and services that

    are identical to those of the Plaintiff.

    25.​Mr. Dwarkadas then invited my attention to two emails received by the

    Plaintiff, one from Technip (annexed at Exhibit “P” to the Plaint) and the

    other from Relysolutions (annexed at Exhibit “F” to the Rejoinder), to point

    out that the use of impugned marks by Defendant No. 1 had in fact resulted

    in actual confusion. He then pointed out from the emails that they set out

    specific instances of confusion and also sought a clarification from the

    Plaintiff with respect to the ownership and use of the HAMON Marks by

    Defendant No. 1. He submitted that these emails demonstrated that

    Defendant No. 1 had continued to hold itself out as being associated with the

    HAMON brand and business, thereby misrepresenting itself to customers

    and to persons in the trade.

    26.​ Mr. Dwarkadas submitted that it was clear from the conduct of Defendant

    No. 1 that the intention of Defendant No. 1 was to ride upon the Plaintiff’s

    reputation and goodwill in the HAMON Marks. He submitted that the very

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    fact that Defendant No. 1 had applied for registration of the marks

    “HAMON COOLING” and “HCS HAMON COOLING”, on a

    proposed-to-be-used basis, was an admission of the fact that Defendant No.

    1 did not have any independent subsisting legal right to use HAMON.

    27.​Mr. Dwarkadas also submitted that the Plaintiff’s chain of title of the

    ownership and proprietorship of the HAMON Marks was clear and in light

    of the Transfer Agreement, pursuant to which the Plaintiff had acquired all

    right, title, interest and goodwill in the HAMON Marks. He thus submitted

    that the Plaintiff, having stepped into the shoes of HCI, who was the prior

    owner and proprietor in respect of the HAMON Marks, had become entitled

    to enjoy all the right, title and interest that HCI had in the HAMON Marks,

    including the right to claim prior adoption, as the registration of the

    HAMON word mark dated back to the year 1963.

    28.​He submitted that the Plaintiff had at all times acted consistently as the

    successor-in-title and proprietor of the HAMON Marks. He pointed out that

    the Trade Marks Registry had already recorded the name of the Plaintiff in

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    respect of the “HAMON device mark” bearing Registration Mark No.

    1836422 and that, although the application filed by the Plaintiff in respect of

    the other HAMON Marks was pending, the pendency of such applications

    did not in any manner affect the Plaintiff’s rights as the successor-in-title and

    proprietor of the HAMON Marks to file a Suit for infringement and passing

    off.

    29.​In support of this contention, Mr. Dwarkadas placed reliance upon the

    decisions in SKOL Breweries Ltd. v. Som Distilleries and Breweries Ltd &

    Anr1 and J.K. Jain & Others v. Ziff-Davies Inc2 from which he pointed out

    that even prior to, or pending an application to register an assignee as the

    proprietor of the registered Trade Mark, the Court is entitled to grant

    interlocutory as well as final relief in an infringement action instituted by

    such assignee. He further pointed out that Defendant No. 1 had admittedly

    not claimed any assignment nor any title to the HAMON Marks through

    HCI and was therefore a complete stranger to the Plaintiff’s chain of title. He

    1
    2010 (42) PTC 389 (Bom).

    2

    2000 (56) DRJ (Suppl) 810 (SC).

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    then placed reliance upon the decision in Parksons Cartamundi (P) Ltd. v.

    Suresh Kumar Jasraj Burad,3 to submit that in these facts, Defendant No. 1

    could not be permitted to impeach the validity of the Transfer Agreement or

    the Confirmatory Deed.

    30.​Mr. Dwarkadas then reiterated that Clause 1.1.1.1 of the Transfer Agreement

    clearly covers the Indian registrations in the HAMON marks. He thus

    submitted that the said marks were therefore clearly and sufficiently

    transferred to the Plaintiff. He also reiterated that, vide the SSA, no property

    rights were assigned or transferred to Mr. Chorasiya. He thus submitted that

    the Plaintiff was clearly the sole proprietor of the HAMON Marks, and the

    use of impugned marks by Defendant No. 1 plainly amounted to

    infringement and passing off.

    31.​Mr. Dwarkadas submitted that the balance of convenience was plainly in

    favour of the Plaintiff since the Plaintiff is the lawful proprietor of the

    HAMON Marks in India. He submitted that Defendant No. 1 did not have

    3
    2012 SCC OnLine Bom 438.

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    any right, title or interest in HAMON or the HAMON Marks, as was evident

    from the fact that Defendant No. 1 had filed applications for registration of

    the impugned marks on a proposed-to-be-used basis. He submitted that if the

    injunction prayed for was not granted, Defendant No. 1 would effectively be

    permitted to continue to project itself in the market as being associated with

    the Plaintiff and/or passing off its goods and services as being those of the

    Plaintiff. He submitted that this would cause confusion in tenders and/or

    projects and also divert business opportunities away from the Plaintiff to

    Defendant No. 1. He submitted that this confusion and deception amongst

    members of the public and trade alike would cause irreparable injury to the

    Plaintiff’s reputation and goodwill, which could not be compensated for in

    damages.

    32.​Conversely, Mr. Dwarkadas submitted that Defendant No. 1 would not suffer

    any damage or hardship if restrained from using the impugned marks. He

    pointed out that Defendant No. 1 had, since at least April 2024, upon receipt

    of the cease-and-desist notice, been put to notice that its use of the HAMON

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    Mark was illegal and unauthorised. He also submitted that post-September

    2022, Defendant No. 1 could have adopted a distinct brand identity of its

    own; instead, Defendant No. 1 chose to continue trading upon the Plaintiff’s

    reputation by persisting with HAMON in its corporate and domain names.

    He therefore submitted that any inconvenience caused to Defendant No. 1 by

    the grant of an injunction would be the direct result of Defendant No. 1’s

    own deliberate and dishonest conduct. This, he submitted, would not and

    could not outweigh the Plaintiff’s statutory and proprietary rights that flowed

    from being the proprietor of the HAMON Marks.

    33.​Basis the above, Mr Dwarkadas submitted that the balance of convenience

    was therefore entirely in favour of the Plaintiff. He also submitted that the

    question of balance of convenience would arise only when, on merit, the

    scales were balanced and not when they were tilted in favour of one party. In

    support of his contention, Mr. Dwarkadas placed reliance upon the

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    judgement of this Court in Poddar Tyres Ltd v. Bedrock Sales Corporation

    Ltd.4 which he pointed out inter alia held that as follows:

    “…Reiterating the test laid down in its earlier judgment in Wearwell Cycle Co. (India)
    Ltd. v. Wearwell Industries
    , , the High Court pointed out that the question of balance of
    convenience was relevant only when, at least prima facie, “the two parties were on the
    same level and their rights were about equal”. In my view, neither are there any special
    circumstances, nor are the parties in a situation of being near-equal, so as to invoke
    consideration of balance of convenience in the present case.”

    34.​Mr. Dwarkadas, therefore, submitted that the Interim Application be allowed

    and Defendant No. 1 be restrained from infringing the Plaintiff’s HAMON

    Marks and from passing off its products and services as those of the

    Plaintiff’s.

    Submissions on behalf of Defendant No. 1:

    35.​Dr. Tulzapurkar, Learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of Defendant

    No. 1, at the outset submitted that the following questions would arise for

    consideration in the present Interim Application:

    I. Whether the Plaintiff is the registered proprietor of the HAMON Marks?

    4
    AIR 1993 BOM 237.

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    If not, whether the Plaintiff can seek any interim relief?

    II. Whether in the absence of a valid assignment the Plaintiff could be
    granted interim reliefs on the basis of infringement or passing off?

    III. Whether Defendant No. 1 is protected by the statutory and equitable
    defences, including prior and continuous user under Section 34;
    acquiescence under Section 33; and use by consent under Section 30(2) of
    the Trade Marks Act; and

    IV. Whether the balance of convenience is in favour of the Defendants?

    36.​Dr. Tulzapurkar submitted that the Plaintiff’s entire case was premised on

    the basis of five registrations comprising the word mark “HAMON” and the

    logo/device mark, which also has “HAMON” as part thereof. He submitted

    that it was on this basis that the Plaintiff had sought to restrain Defendant

    No. 1 from using HAMON as part of its trade name, corporate name and

    trade mark. Dr. Tulzapurkar, however, submitted that the Plaintiff’s claim for

    infringement was fundamentally flawed and unsustainable since the Plaintiff

    had failed to establish that the Plaintiff is the registered proprietor or lawful

    owner of the “HAMON” Marks.

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    37.​He then invited my attention to Section 29 of the Trade Marks Act to point

    out that an action for infringement can be maintained only by the registered

    proprietor of a trade mark and that Section 2(v) of the Trade Marks Act

    defines a “registered proprietor” as the person whose name is entered on the

    Register of Trade Marks as the proprietor of any such mark. He pointed out

    that, as on date, the Register of Trade Marks records the name of HCI as the

    registered proprietor of the HAMON Marks and not the Plaintiff.

    38.​Dr. Tulzapurkar then pointed out that the Plaintiff’s application seeking

    registration as the subsequent proprietor of the HAMON Marks was

    presently pending and that the records of the Trade Marks Registry disclosed

    that clarifications had been sought for by the Registrar from HCI, the alleged

    assignor. He therefore submitted that it was not open for the Plaintiff in these

    circumstances to claim the status of a registered proprietor of the HAMON

    Marks, and therefore the Plaintiff was also not entitled to any relief, let alone

    interlocutory relief.

    24
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    39.​In dealing with the decision in Cott Beverage Inc. v. Silvassa Bottling

    Company,5 upon which reliance was placed by the Plaintiff, Dr. Tulzapurkar

    submitted that the said judgment did not advance the Plaintiff’s case since it

    only held that the pendency of an application for recording an assignment

    does not create an absolute bar to the institution of a Suit for infringement.

    He pointed out from the said decision that the same specifically recognises

    the fact that registration of an assignment is not a mere formality, and the

    Court must consider that the non-registration of the assignment is an

    important factor while deciding whether interim relief should or should not

    be granted. He submitted that, in the present case, far from there being a

    delay in recording the alleged assignment in favour of the Plaintiff, the

    material on record itself demonstrated that the Registrar was not satisfied

    with the validity and efficacy of the alleged assignment, as objections had

    been raised by the Registrar.

    5
    2003 SCC OnLine Bom 965.

    25
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    40.​In addition to the above, Dr. Tulzapurkar submitted that the Plaintiff had also

    failed to establish even a prima facie chain of title in respect of the HAMON

    Marks since the documents relied upon by the Plaintiff suffered from serious

    infirmities. He pointed out that the Transfer Agreement did not specifically

    refer to the Indian trade marks of HCI and that, admittedly, the Indian

    business of HCI was not acquired by CMI France. He then submitted that

    the purported Confirmatory Deed merely referred to an earlier Private Deed

    dated 1st June 2022, which was the basis on which the Plaintiff had claimed

    title to the HAMON Marks. He, however, submitted that the Plaintiff had not

    produced this Private Deed either before the Registrar or before this Court.

    41.​Dr. Tulzapurkar then submitted that the position was even more problematic

    for the Plaintiff since what was filed by the Plaintiff before the Registrar was

    not the Transfer Agreement Deed but only the Confirmatory Deed. He

    submitted that the Plaintiff’s own pleadings proceeded on the basis that the

    Confirmatory Deed merely confirmed an earlier transaction, and therefore

    26
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    the Confirmatory Deed could never have, by itself, operated as the document

    conferring and/or transferring title in respect of the “HAMON” Marks.

    42.​Dr. Tulzapurkar submitted that the Confirmatory Deed was itself suspect

    since it was executed only by a Curator, whereas the Transfer Agreement

    was executed by the three Trustees in bankruptcy acting pursuant to

    authority granted by the insolvency authorities. He submitted that the

    Plaintiff had not produced any order, authority or mandate empowering the

    Curator to assign or confirm the transfer of the Indian trade marks by HCI,

    and hence the validity of the Confirmatory Deed was itself in serious doubt.

    43.​Dr. Tulzapurkar then also submitted that both the Transfer Agreement and

    the Confirmatory Deed were unstamped and consequently inadmissible in

    evidence. Apart from this, he submitted that the existence of separate

    consideration paid under the Confirmatory Deed itself indicated that the

    Indian trade marks were not part of the assets transferred under the Transfer

    Agreement. He, therefore, submitted that the Plaintiff ought to be directed to

    27
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    produce the alleged Private Deed dated 1st June 2022, which was the

    authority under which the Trustees of HCI purportedly acted, and also the

    relevant documents evidencing the authority of the so-called Curator to

    execute the Confirmatory Deed. He submitted that in the absence of such

    disclosure, an adverse inference must be drawn against the Plaintiff.

    44.​Dr. Tulzapurkar next submitted that the alleged assignment was also

    ineffective in law by reason of non-compliance with the provisions of

    Section 42 of the Trade Marks Act. He submitted that the Plaintiff’s own

    case was that the Plaintiff did not acquire the Indian business of the Hamon

    Group (HCI), and hence the assignment, if any, was only an assignment of

    trade marks that did not include goodwill. In these facts, he submitted that

    the provisions of Section 42 of the Trade Marks Act would squarely apply,

    which he pointed out required the Plaintiff to advertise the assignment

    within 6 months from the date of the assignment. He therefore submitted that

    it was incumbent upon the Plaintiff to have sought directions from the

    Registrar and to have advertised the assignment as mandated by the

    28
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    provisions of Section 42, which the Plaintiff had not complied with. He thus

    submitted that it was clear that the assignment of the HAMON Mark in

    favour of the Plaintiff never took effect in law and that the Plaintiff cannot

    therefore sustain a claim for infringement, much less an application for

    interim relief.

    45.​According to Dr. Tulzapurkar, the Plaintiff’s attempt to rely upon the alleged

    assignment was further undermined by the fact that the application made

    before the Registrar was itself defective. He pointed out that Rule 75 of the

    Trade Marks Rules, 2017, requires the parties to provide particulars

    concerning the nature of the assignment, including whether it is with or

    without goodwill. He submitted that in the facts of the present case, no such

    particulars had been properly furnished. He submitted that the Registrar was

    required, after applying his mind to the validity of the assignment, to

    consider the assignment and determine whether the title in the marks in

    question had validly passed. He thus submitted that the Registrar’s function

    was not merely ministerial and, in support of his contention, placed reliance

    29
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    upon the decision in the case of Electronica India Ltd. v. Electronica

    Hitech Machines Pvt. Ltd.6

    46.​Dr. Tulzapurkar then pointed out that Defendant No. 1 was incorporated as

    far back as in the year 1971 and had been carrying on business continuously

    thereafter. He submitted that the HAMON name was adopted by Defendant

    No. 1 in the year 1999 following the acquisition of shares in Defendant No.

    1 by entities associated with HCI. He submitted that thereafter Defendant

    No. 1 had carried on substantial business under the HAMON name and had

    built an independent reputation and goodwill in India. He also submitted that

    in the year 2007, when the Shriram Group acquired control of Defendant

    No. 1, HCI had not raised any objection whatsoever to the continued use of

    the HAMON name and marks. He submitted that the business continued

    thereafter under the name Hamon Shriram Cottrell Private Limited and

    subsequently as Hamon Cooling Systems Private Limited.

    6
    Commercial Miscellaneous Petition No. 51 of 2022, Order dated 15.04.2024.

    30
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    47.​Dr. Tulzapurkar submitted that the Plaintiff’s case of permissive use was

    entirely an afterthought and that the cease-and-desist notice as well as the

    Plaint proceeded on the footing that Defendant No. 1’s use was wholly

    unauthorised. He submitted that it was only after Defendant No. 1 disclosed

    the facts that the Plaintiff had, in rejoinder, introduced a case of permissive

    use and that such a plea was neither pleaded nor supported by any

    contemporaneous document. He submitted that no written licence agreement

    existed by which HCI permitted Defendant No. 1 to use the HAMON Mark

    and that Section 2(r)(ii)(c) specifically contemplated a written agreement in

    case of permitted use.

    48.​Dr. Tulzapurkar submitted that the mere fact that HCI held shares in

    Defendant No. 1 also did not, ipso facto, mean that a licence had been

    granted by HCI to Defendant No. 1 to use “HAMON”. In support of his

    contention, he placed reliance upon the decision of the Hon’ble Supreme

    Court in the case of Mrs. Bacha F. Guzdar v. Commissioner of Income

    31
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    Tax,7 to point out that HCI, being a mere shareholder of Defendant No. 1,

    was a separate and distinct legal entity from Defendant No. 1. He submitted

    that merely because HCI held shares in Defendant No. 1 did not mean that

    Defendant No. 1 would have any rights over the assets of HCI, much less the

    trade marks of HCI, and vice versa.

    49.​Dr. Tulzapurkar additionally submitted that trade mark law requires the

    existence of a connection in the course of trade between the proprietor of a

    mark and the goods or services offered under that mark. He submitted that

    ordinarily such a connection manifests itself through the proprietor’s

    supervision and control over the nature and quality of the goods or services

    marketed under the mark in question. In the present case, he pointed out that

    the Plaintiff had failed to plead, let alone prima facie establish, that HCI

    exercised any such control or supervision over the business activities of

    Defendant No. 1.

    7
    AIR 1955 SC 74.

    32
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    50.​He then placed reliance upon the decisions in American Home Products

    Corporation v. Mac Laboratories Pvt. Ltd.8 and Gujarat Bottling Co. Ltd. v.

    Coca Cola Co.,9 to point out that use of a trade mark by a person other than

    the registered proprietor can be treated as use by the proprietor only where

    there exists a genuine trade connection in which the proprietor exercises

    effective control over the quality and character of the goods or services in

    respect of which the mark in question is used. He submitted that a licence

    devoid of such control is inconsistent with the fundamental principles of

    trade mark law.

    51.​Dr. Tulzapurkar also submitted that Defendant No. 1 had a compelling

    defence under Section 34 of the Trade Marks Act since Defendant No. 1 had

    been continuously using the HAMON name and mark in India since 1999.

    Conversely, he pointed out that no use of the HAMON Marks by HCI in

    India had either been pleaded, much less established. He submitted that the

    Plaintiff was therefore seeking to appropriate the very reputation built by

    8
    (1986) 1 SCC 465.

    9

    (1995) 5 SCC 545.

    33
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    Defendant No. 1 in the HAMON Mark for over a period exceeding two

    decades. Dr. Tulzapurkar submitted that Defendant No. 1 was also protected

    under the provisions of Section 30(2)(b) of the Act, since the use of the

    HAMON Mark by Defendant No. 1 was entirely with the knowledge of and

    with the consent of HCI. He therefore submitted that such use cannot

    amount to infringement.

    52.​He also submitted that the conduct of the Plaintiff and its predecessors

    clearly attracts the doctrine of acquiescence. He pointed out that Defendant

    No. 1 had been continuously and openly using the HAMON name and mark

    since 1999, with HCI’s knowledge, and that HCI had never objected to such

    use. He also pointed out that even after the Plaintiff claimed to have acquired

    rights in the HAMON Marks in the year 2022, the Plaintiff took no action

    until April 2024. He submitted that such prolonged inaction itself disentitled

    the Plaintiff from being granted any equitable relief. In support of his

    contention, he placed reliance upon the decisions in Willmott v. Barber,10

    10
    15 (1880) Chancery Division 96.

    34
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    Power Control Appliances v. Sumeet Machines Pvt. Ltd.,11 and Northern &

    Shell PLC v. Conde Nast & National Magazines Distributors Limited &

    Anr.12

    53.​Dr. Tulzapurkar submitted that the Plaintiff’s claim for passing off was

    equally unsustainable. He submitted that neither the Plaintiff nor HCI had

    established any business operations or goodwill in India under the HAMON

    Mark. He submitted that a claim for passing off is necessarily founded on

    reputation, goodwill, misrepresentation and damage, which the Plaintiff had

    failed to establish. On the other hand, he pointed out that Defendant No. 1

    had demonstrated extensive business activity and a substantial turnover in

    India under the HAMON name for over several decades. He submitted that

    if the injunction as prayed for were granted, Defendant No. 1 would suffer

    grave and irreparable loss, harm and injury, whereas no loss, harm or injury

    would be caused to the Plaintiff if the injunction were refused. He therefore

    11
    1994 2 SCC 448
    12
    1995 RPC 117.

    35
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    submitted that the balance of convenience lay squarely in favour of

    Defendant No. 1.

    54.​Dr. Tulzapurkar, then with regard to the instances of confusion alleged by

    the Plaintiff, submitted that two such stray communications cannot constitute

    evidence of actual deception or establish the extensive confusion necessary

    to sustain a passing off action. He submitted that at the highest, such emails,

    even assuming they were genuine, merely demonstrate routine commercial

    enquiries.

    55.​Dr. Tulzapurkar thus submitted that the balance of convenience was

    overwhelmingly in favour of Defendant No. 1. He submitted that Defendant

    No. 1 was presently executing projects valued in excess of Rs. 450 crores for

    various public sector undertakings and major industrial customers, and an

    injunction at this stage would jeopardise ongoing projects, expose Defendant

    No. 1 to substantial contractual liabilities, disrupt public infrastructure

    projects and seriously prejudice hundreds of employees. Conversely, he

    36
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    reiterated that the Plaintiff did not have any operating business in India, and

    therefore the Plaintiff would suffer no prejudice if the injunction as prayed

    for were not granted. He submitted that any alleged injury to the Plaintiff

    was entirely speculative and compensable in damages, assuming the Plaintiff

    were to succeed, whereas the injury to Defendant No. 1 would be immediate,

    severe and irreparable. He also reiterated that delay, acquiescence and

    serious defects in title vitiated the Plaintiff’s claim. In these circumstances,

    he submitted that the Plaintiff had failed to establish any prima facie case in

    support of the grant of interim relief, and, therefore, the Interim Application

    ought to be dismissed with costs.

    Submissions in Rejoinder on behalf of the Plaintiff:

    56.​Mr. Dwarkadas submitted that the present case was not one involving a

    challenge to title or competing claims of original proprietorship but was

    considerably narrower and pertained to a derivative user, i.e., Defendant No.

    37
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    1, who had admittedly adopted and used the HAMON Mark with the consent

    and authority of HCI, the registered proprietor, and who now seeks to resist

    enforcement by the successor in interest even after the original consent had

    ceased. He therefore submitted that the central question for consideration

    was whether a user whose adoption of a mark is traceable to the proprietor’s

    consent can subsequently assert an independent proprietary right in the mark

    that is against the right, title and interest of the successive proprietor.

    57.​Mr. Dwarkadas then invited my attention to the averment made in the

    Affidavit in Reply and Affidavit in Sur-Rejoinder filed by Defendant No. 1

    to point out that Defendant No. 1 had expressly admitted that the adoption

    and use of the HAMON Mark by Defendant No. 1 from 1999 onwards was

    with the “implied or express consent” of HCI. He submitted that Defendant

    No. 1, having specifically conceded to this position, could not thereafter

    seek to simultaneously invoke the defence of the prior user under Section 34

    of the Trade Marks Act and the defence available to a permitted user under

    Section 30(2)(c).

    38
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    58.​He placed reliance upon the decision of Calcutta High Court in the case of

    Patton International Ltd. v. Patton Electronics (I) Pvt. Ltd.13 to point out

    that a licence does not create any title in the licensee. He submitted that in

    the present case, Defendant No. 1, being a permissive user/licensee, cannot

    claim title as per Section 34. In support of this contention, he placed reliance

    upon the decision of this Court in the case of Velcro Industries B.V. and

    Anr. v. Velcro India Ltd.14 and also upon the extract from Professor

    Christopher Wadlow’s book titled ‘The Law of Passing Off – Unfair

    Competition By Misrepresentation’ to point out that the goodwill in the

    business carried on by the licensee under the licenced name/mark will accrue

    to the owner/licensor and no such goodwill or interest can be claimed to

    have been acquired by the licensee independently.

    59.​ Mr. Dwarkadas therefore submitted that the two stands taken by Defendant

    No. 1, i.e., on the one hand claiming independent prior use of the HAMON

    Mark since 1999 and on the other claiming that Defendant No. 1 has used

    13
    2009 (40) PTC 633 (Cal).

    14

    1992 SCC Online Bom 582.

    39
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    the HAMON Mark with the consent or authority of HCI, were

    fundamentally inconsistent and mutually destructive. He submitted that a

    party who traces its adoption and use of a mark to the authority of a

    proprietor of a mark necessarily acknowledges and accepts the superior

    right, title and interest of the proprietor and therefore cannot, at the same

    time, assert any independent proprietary rights adverse to and/or in

    derogation of the right, title and interest of the proprietor or the proprietor’s

    successor-in-title. In support of his contention, he placed reliance upon the

    decision of Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Steel Authority of India

    Ltd. v. Union of India.15

    60.​He further submitted that the defence of prior use under Section 34

    presupposes an independent adoption and use of the mark, whereas a

    defence founded on permissive user proceeds on the basis of an

    acknowledgement that the use of the mark in question originates from the

    authority of the proprietor of such mark. He therefore submitted that once

    15
    (2006) 12 SCC 233.

    40
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    Defendant No. 1 had admitted that its use of HAMON commenced pursuant

    to the consent of HCI, Defendant No. 1 was estopped from asserting that

    such use simultaneously constituted independent proprietary use. In support

    of this contention, Mr. Dwarkadas placed reliance upon the decisions of

    Abdul Rasul Nurallah Virjee and Jalalluddin Nurallah Virjee v. Regal

    Footwear,16 Nextech Sensors & Controls v. Omicron Sensing Pvt. Ltd.,17

    Kores (India) Ltd. v. Whale Stationary Products Ltd.18 and Louis Vuitton

    Malletier v. Mrs. Sharmila Lalit Vyas & Anr.19

    61.​Mr. Dwarkadas, then in dealing with the contentions advanced in respect of

    the Transfer Agreement and Confirmatory Deed, reiterated that the

    expression “all IP Rights” in the Transfer Agreement was comprehensive

    and admits no exclusion. He submitted that the absence of a specific mention

    of Indian registrations by number in the Transfer Agreement did not mean

    that the Indian trade marks were in any manner excluded from its ambit and

    16
    Order dated 02.01.2023 in Notice of Motion No. 516 of 2017 at Bombay High Court.
    17
    Order dated 25.07.2025 in IA(L)/6056/2025 at Bombay High Court.
    18
    Reported in 2008(3) Mh. L. J. 523.

    19

    Order dated. 24.02.2023 in IA(L)/1684/2022 at Bombay High Court.

    41
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    scope since Clause 1.1.1.1 of the Transfer Agreement specifically provided

    that “The entire portfolio of brands held by HCI”.

    62.​He then, in dealing with the submissions made regarding the Confirmatory

    Deed, reiterated that the Plaintiff had already been recorded as the

    subsequent proprietor of “Trade Mark No. 1836422”

    and that the Registrar had therefore acted on the basis of the Confirmatory

    Deed without insisting on any additional documents. He submitted that this

    fact alone evidenced the validity of the Plaintiff’s title to the HAMON

    Marks.

    63.​He submitted that Defendant No. 1 had sought to cast unwarranted doubt on

    the Confirmatory Deed by relying on the reference to the “Private Deed

    dated 1st June 2022” contained therein and contending that the same had not

    been produced. He submitted that the reference in the Confirmatory Deed to

    a Private Deed dated 1st June 2022 was only to the Transfer Agreement dated

    25th July 2022, which, by Clause 6, was deemed effective from 1st June 2022,

    42
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    and that no separate Private Deed existed. He submitted that the expression

    “Private Deed” was used merely to indicate that the Transfer Agreement was

    not a public document and to signify its effective date.

    64.​He also pointed out that the Confirmatory Deed had been duly stamped in

    India and that, out of the total IP rights consideration of €1,100,001, an

    amount of €9,998 was allocated towards the Indian trade marks solely for

    stamp duty purposes. He submitted that the stamp duty so paid had been

    accepted by the competent authorities. He also then pointed out that

    the Transfer Agreement was executed by all three Belgian Court-appointed

    Trustees/Curators of HCI, including Mr. Xavier Ibarrondo, who had

    executed the Confirmatory Deed as sole Curator on behalf of all three

    Trustees. He therefore submitted that Defendant No. 1’s attempt to

    manufacture an inconsistency in the Plaintiff’s chain of title by doubting the

    Confirmatory Deed was wholly misconceived and liable to be rejected.

    65.​Mr. Dwarkadas then pointed out from the tender documents and the material

    reproduced on Defendant No. 1’s website (Exhibit N) that Defendant No. 1

    43
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    had also misrepresented the commercial lineage and technical credentials of

    the Plaintiff and HCI in ongoing tenders. He pointed out that Defendant No.

    1 had been projecting the credentials and experience of HCI and the Hamon

    Group as those of Defendant No. 1. He submitted that such technical

    credentials and commercial lineage formed an integral part of the goodwill

    and reputation associated with the HAMON Marks, which now stood vested

    in the Plaintiff.

    66.​Mr. Dwarkadas then submitted that the present case goes far beyond a mere

    similarity of marks. He submitted that Defendant No. 1 was actively and

    affirmatively representing a continuity of source, identity and corporate

    lineage that no longer existed. Such conduct, he submitted, was plainly to

    deceive and mislead customers and members of the trade into believing that

    Defendant No. 1 continued to be associated with, or form part of, the

    HAMON group. He submitted that such conduct would cause continued and

    irreversible injury to the Plaintiff’s reputation and goodwill.

    44
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    67.​Mr. Dwarkadas reiterated that any inconvenience now claimed by the

    Defendant No. 1 was entirely self-created. He submitted that Defendant No.

    1 was well aware, at least since September 2022, that all the intellectual

    property rights in the HAMON Marks had been separated from Defendant

    No. 1 and vested in the Plaintiff. Despite this, he submitted that Defendant

    No. 1 had consciously chosen to continue using the marks and to hold itself

    out as connected with the HAMON group. He therefore submitted that it was

    not open to Defendant No. 1 to invoke considerations of hardship or balance

    of convenience arising from circumstances brought about by its own wilful

    and deliberate conduct.

    68.​Finally, he submitted that a Court exercising equitable jurisdiction ought not

    to aid and protect a party who has wilfully and knowingly acted in a manner

    which was violative of the Plaintiff’s proprietary and statutory rights. He

    thus submitted that the balance of convenience was overwhelmingly in

    favour of the Plaintiff and in protecting the statutory and proprietary rights

    45
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    of the registered proprietor rather than permitting the continued unauthorised

    use of the HAMON Marks by Defendant No. 1.

    69.​Mr. Dwarkadas submitted that even the plea of acquiescence was

    misconceived and unsustainable. He submitted that the use of the HAMON

    Mark and trade name by Defendant No. 1 from the year 1999 was under a

    common law licence/permitted use by the Plaintiff’s predecessor and,

    therefore, such use inured to the benefit of the Plaintiff’s predecessor and,

    consequently, the Plaintiff. He submitted that the defence of acquiescence

    had no applicability in the facts of the present case and also that it was well

    settled that to establish acquiescence, Defendant No. 1 must show a positive

    act on the part of the Plaintiff that encouraged or induced Defendant No. 1 to

    use the impugned marks, which he submitted that Defendant No. 1 had

    failed to do. In support of this contention, he placed reliance on the

    judgement of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Power Control Appliances v.

    Sumeet Machines.20

    20
    1994 2 SCC 448.

    46
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    Reasons and Conclusions:

    70.​ After considering the rival contentions, the case law upon which reliance

    has been placed, and the material before me, I find that the Plaintiff has

    made out a prima facie case for the grant of interim relief.

    A.​It is well settled that, when deciding an interlocutory application, the Court

    is not required to conduct a mini trial or finally decide disputed questions of

    either fact or law. The enquiry at this stage is confined to a prima facie

    assessment based on the material before the Court. It is on the basis of this

    material as a whole, that the Court is required to arrive at a determination

    after taking into consideration the well-established principles to be

    considered, i.e., prima facie case, balance of convenience and irreparable

    loss, harm and injury. As held in a catena of cases, the Court at the interim

    stage is not required to and, in fact, cannot decide questions which require a

    detailed examination of the parties’ respective rights, appreciation of

    evidence, or final determination of disputed questions. These are all matters

    for trial that cannot be conclusively determined at the interlocutory stage. In

    47
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    the facts of the present case, in my view, not only has the Plaintiff made out

    a strong prima facie case for the grant of interim relief, but I must also note

    that Defendant No. 1 would not be entitled to any equitable relief, both on

    account of its conduct and the stand taken by it in the pleadings, as I shall

    deal with subsequently.

    B.​ In my view, there can be little doubt that the Plaintiff has made out a prima

    facie case that the Plaintiff is the registered proprietor of the HAMON

    Marks. This, in my view, is plainly evident from (i) the Deed of Assignment

    dated 15th September 1999 by which ENGETRA assigned the HAMON

    Mark to HCI, which is not disputed; (ii) the Transfer Agreement which

    leaves no manner of doubt that all the HAMON Marks stood transferred to

    and vested in the Plaintiff as is plainly evident from Clause 1.1.1.1 of the

    Transfer Agreement, which records that the entire portfolio of brands held

    by HCI, including all brand names and trade names attached to the Hamon

    brands, stood transferred to the Plaintiff. Clause 3 exhaustively enumerates

    the assets excluded from the transfer from which the Indian HAMON Marks

    48
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    are absent; (iii) the orders sanctioning the sale/transfer of HCI’s assets to

    CMI France, which is undisputedly part of the John Cockerill Group of

    Companies; (iv) the Confirmatory Deed dated 18th April 2024 by which the

    transfer was confirmed; and (v) most crucially, the fact that the name of the

    Plaintiff has been entered in the Register of Trade Marks as the proprietor in

    respect of Trade Mark No. 1836422.

    C.​ Furthermore, and importantly, the fact that Defendant No. 1 had no

    independent right to use the HAMON name and marks is supported by the

    fact that the Plaintiff paid an additional sum of €500,000 to the Trustees of

    HCI specifically to enable the former Hamon group companies, which were

    not acquired by the Plaintiff, to complete their ongoing projects under the

    HAMON name. This is plainly evident from a reading of Clauses 1.1.1.2

    and 6 of the Transfer Agreement as well as from the SSA, which was

    confined solely to the sale of shares held by Hamon (Netherlands) B.V. in

    Defendant No. 1. In my prima facie view, these facts lend considerable

    support to the Plaintiff’s case that the worldwide rights in the HAMON

    49
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    portfolio of trade marks, including the Indian registrations, stood transferred

    to the Plaintiff and the very fact that separate consideration was paid to

    secure only a limited “Brand Usage Right” for the purpose of completing

    ongoing projects makes implicit the fact that the former Hamon group

    companies, including Defendant No. 1, did not possess any independent or

    proprietary right in the HAMON Marks. Thus, the reliance placed by

    Defendant No. 1 upon Mrs. Bacha F. Guzdar is of no assistance to the

    present facts of the case.

    D.​Also, the mere fact that the name of HCI continues to appear on the Register

    in respect of the remaining HAMON Marks would not, in my view, in the

    facts of the present case, in any manner, disentitle the Plaintiff from suing

    for infringement and passing off or negate the existence of a valid

    assignment in favour of the Plaintiff. It is now well settled that an

    assignment of a trade mark is complete and effective inter partes upon

    execution of the instrument of assignment and does not require recordal on

    the Register as a condition precedent to its validity or enforceability. In this

    50
    Vaibhav
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    context, the Plaintiff’s reliance upon the decision of this Court in Skol

    Breweries Ltd., and J.K. Jain & Ors, which hold that non-recordal of an

    assignment or delay in recording the assignee’s name on the Register would

    not disentitle an assignee from instituting or maintaining an infringement

    action, in my view, squarely apply to the facts of the present case. In these

    circumstances, Defendant No. 1’s reliance on the decision of Electronica

    India Ltd. is also of no assistance.

    E.​ The decision in Cott Beverage would not assist the Defendants since the

    facts of that case were entirely distinguishable. Furthermore, that decision

    does not hold that an assignee is precluded from maintaining infringement

    proceedings pending the recordal of the assignment before the Registrar.

    Thus, for the reasons set out in (B) and (D), I am unable to therefore accept

    that the Plaintiff cannot be treated as the registered proprietor of the

    HAMON Marks or that the Plaintiff would be disentitled from maintaining a

    claim for infringement and/or passing off.

    51
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    F.​ Also, the contention that the Plaintiff would be disentitled to interim relief

    on the ground that the Plaintiff has not produced the “Private Deed” is, in

    my view, wholly untenable for two reasons. Firstly, the name of the Plaintiff

    has already, on the basis of the Confirmatory Deed, been entered in the

    Register of Trade Marks in respect of “Trade Mark No. 1836422”. Secondly,

    I am prima facie satisfied that the “Private Deed” referred to in the

    Confirmatory Deed is nothing but the Transfer Agreement. I say so because,

    immediately after inspection, the Plaintiff clarified in writing that the

    reference in the Confirmatory Deed to the “Private Deed dated 1st June

    2022” was in fact a reference to the Transfer Agreement dated 25th July

    2022, which, by Clause 6 thereof, became effective from 1st June 2022, and

    further furnished inspection of all the relevant documents. There is,

    therefore, prima facie, no material to suggest that any separate Private Deed

    exists.

    G.​Additionally, and in my view crucially, Defendant No. 1 is admittedly not

    the assignor of the HAMON Marks, nor does Defendant No. 1 claim any

    52
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    6-IA-345-2026

    title to the registered HAMON Marks by virtue of any assignment,

    transmission or other conveyance executed by HCI in its favour. The

    defence of Defendant No. 1 is founded principally on the alleged

    long-standing use of the mark, its association with the Hamon group, and the

    rights asserted as a prior or independent user. Also, as already noted, it is not

    in dispute that HCI, i.e., the assignor of the HAMON Marks to the Plaintiff,

    has not challenged either the Transfer Agreement or the Confirmatory Deed.

    In this context, the Plaintiff’s reliance upon the decision in the case of

    Parksons Cartamundi (P) Ltd. in support of the contention that a third party

    who is neither the assignor nor a competing assignee cannot impeach the

    validity of the assignment is entirely apposite.

    H.​Conversely, the material upon which reliance has been placed by the

    Plaintiff in particular, the email dated 16th June 2025 of Mr. Bernard

    Vanham, one of the Trustees of HCI, unequivocally confirms that the

    Plaintiff is the sole legal owner of the HAMON brand and the worldwide

    intellectual property rights in the HAMON Marks. I prima facie find that

    53
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    6-IA-345-2026

    this therefore supports the Plaintiff’s case of a valid assignment in respect of

    all the intellectual property rights in the HAMON Marks in favour of the

    Plaintiff by HCI. Hence, in my view, in the present case, the assignor itself,

    acting through its duly appointed Trustees, has expressly confirmed that the

    Plaintiff is the sole legal owner of the HAMON brand and the worldwide

    intellectual property rights in the HAMON Marks. Also, and in my view

    crucially, there is no competing claim or denial of the Plaintiff’s title to the

    HAMON marks.

    I.​ I am also unable to uphold the objections raised by Defendant No. 1

    regarding the stamping and the alleged non-compliance with the provisions

    of Section 42 of the Trade Marks Act. Clause 1.1 of the Transfer Agreement,

    as already noted, clearly provides for the transfer of “all IP Rights” without

    any restriction or severance of goodwill. Also, an assignment without

    goodwill must be express and specific. In the present case, there is no such

    exclusion in the Transfer Agreement. The Confirmatory Deed also

    specifically confirms the transfer of “ownership of the trade marks as well as

    54
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    6-IA-345-2026

    the related goodwill”. Therefore, in the absence of express severance of the

    goodwill, the assignment of the HAMON Marks clearly includes the

    attendant goodwill.

    J.​ It is also crucial to note that Defendant No. 1 has, in justification of its use of

    the impugned marks, taken a contrary and, in my view, self-defeating stand.

    Defendant No. 1 has, on the one hand, invoked the provisions of Section 34

    of the Trade Marks Act, claiming to be an independent prior user of the

    HAMON mark since 1999. On the other hand, Defendant No. 1 has asserted

    that the use of HAMON was “with the implied or express consent” of HCI,

    as pleaded by Defendant No. 1, in the Reply Affidavit21 and Affidavit in

    Sur-Rejoinder.22 Thus, it is the pleaded case of Defendant No. 1 that its use

    of the HAMON Mark was with the consent of HCI.

    K.​Therefore, the defence under Section 34 would not apply, since the

    protection afforded thereunder applies only to a party that has independently

    adopted and used the mark in question and not to a permitted user. Hence the

    21
    Paragraph 14(i) at page 30 and paragraph 14(iv) at page 32.
    22
    Paragraph 31 at page 461, paragraph 41 at page 468 and paragraph 49 at page 478.

    55
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    Plaintiff’s reliance upon the decisions in case of Abdul Rasul Nurallah

    Virjee and Jalalluddin Nurallah Virjee v. Regal Footwear, Nextech

    Sensors & Controls v. Omicron Sensing Pvt. Ltd., Kores (India) Ltd. v.

    Whale Stationary Products Ltd, Steel Authority of India Ltd. v. Union of

    India and Louis Vuitton Malletier v. Mrs. Sharmila Lalit Vyas & Anr.,

    would squarely apply.

    L.​ Furthermore, the Defendant No. 1’s conduct also undermines the claim of

    independent use since Defendant No. 1 has admittedly, in August 2022 and

    in January 2024, filed trade mark applications for “HAMON COOLING”

    and “HCS HAMON COOLING” on a “proposed to be used” basis. A party

    asserting continuous independent use of a mark since 1999 does not, a

    quarter century later, solemnly declare before a statutory authority that the

    mark is “proposed to be used”. In my view, this alone establishes the

    patently dishonest conduct on the part of Defendant No. 1 in attempting to

    usurp a mark over which Defendant No. 1 was fully aware it had absolutely

    no independent legal right.

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    Vaibhav
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    M.​In my view, the explanation of Defendant No. 1 that the applications filed

    for “HAMON COOLING” and “HCS HAMON COOLING” relate only to

    composite or device marks and not to the “core” HAMON Mark does not

    diminish the significance of the applications themselves. Equally significant

    is the Examination Report dated 31st January 2023, issued by the Registrar,

    which cited the Plaintiff’s HAMON registration as a conflicting mark. In

    response, by its Reply dated 6th February 2023, Defendant No. 1 sought to

    distinguish the mark “HAMON COOLING” from “HAMON” but

    significantly did not assert any prior proprietary right in, or independent

    ownership of, the HAMON Marks. The contemporaneous conduct of

    Defendant No. 1, viewed as a whole, is difficult to reconcile. On the one

    hand, Defendant No. 1 traces its permissive use of the HAMON Marks to

    HCI and relies upon its long-standing association with the Hamon group. On

    the other hand, Defendant No. 1 has filed trade mark applications on a

    proposed-to-be-used basis and had, before the Trade Marks Registry

    attempted to distinguish its marks, i.e., “HAMON COOLING” and “HCS

    57
    Vaibhav
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    HAMON COOLING”, from the HAMON Marks rather than asserting any

    independent proprietary rights in the impugned marks. Such conduct itself

    speaks volumes, not only of the lack of any bona fides on the part of

    Defendant No. 1 but also of any right that Defendant No. 1 has in the

    impugned marks, much less any long-standing, independent proprietary

    rights claimed in the HAMON Marks.

    N.​I also find much merit in the Plaintiff’s claim for passing off and the

    Plaintiff’s reliance upon the decisions in Patton International and Velcro

    Industries B.V. The HAMON Marks have been in use in India since 1988 at

    the very latest, and the user claim for the word mark dates to 1963.

    Therefore, the goodwill and reputation associated with these marks now vest

    in the Plaintiff by virtue of the Transfer Agreement. By their own admission,

    the Defendant No. 1’s use of the marks was derivative, so it is not open for

    Defendant No. 1 to claim that any goodwill built up by use of the HAMON

    Mark is an independent proprietary asset of Defendant No. 1. It is well

    settled that the benefit of goodwill in a trade mark which is used by consent

    58
    Vaibhav
    6-IA-345-2026

    of the proprietor would inure for the benefit of the proprietor and not for the

    benefit of the user. Having due regard to the statutory recognition accorded

    to the concepts of permitted use and registered user under Sections 48 and

    49 of the Trade Marks Act, the same principle would equally apply, even in

    cases of unregistered or informal permitted use where the user traces its right

    to use the mark back to the consent of the proprietor. Accordingly, the

    reliance placed by Defendant No. 1 upon the decisions in American Home

    Products and Gujarat Bottling is misplaced, since the present case does not

    concern the validity of a registered user arrangement or the extent of quality

    control exercised by the proprietor.

    O.​The Plaintiff has also placed on record material which sets out actual

    instances of confusion arising from the Defendant No. 1’s use of the

    impugned marks. Although Defendant No. 1 has sought to characterise the

    emails on which the Plaintiff relied as “stray” or “isolated” instances, the

    fact remains that confusion exists. The Plaintiff has, prima facie, sufficiently

    established that the continued use by Defendant No. 1 of the impugned

    59
    Vaibhav
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    HAMON Marks has resulted in actual confusion amongst persons in the

    trade as to the source, affiliation and authority under which Defendant No. 1

    is operating, thereby giving rise to a real likelihood of injury to the goodwill

    and reputation now vested in the Plaintiff. Hence, in my view, the Plaintiff

    has made out a prima facie case of passing off.

    P.​ I also find no merit in the contention of Defendant No. 1 that the Plaintiff is

    disentitled to relief on the grounds of acquiescence and delay. Prima facie,

    the Plaintiff’s submission that there can be no acquiescence in respect of the

    acts of its licensee or permitted user merits acceptance. Further, as held by

    the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Power Control Appliances v. Sumeet

    Machines Pvt. Ltd., acquiescence requires a positive act or conduct on the

    part of the proprietor which induces or encourages the party taking the

    defence of acquiescence to independently use the infringing mark. In the

    present case, Defendant No. 1 has not pointed to any such positive act or

    conduct by HCI or the Plaintiff. On the contrary, the material on record

    indicates that upon discovering Defendant No. 1’s continued use of the

    60
    Vaibhav
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    HAMON Mark, the Plaintiff promptly issued a cease and desist notice in

    April 2024. Significantly, Defendant No. 1 did not even respond to the said

    notice. The period between the execution of the Transfer Agreement in

    June/July 2022 and the institution of the present Suit in 2025 is, in any

    event, well within the five-year period contemplated under Section 33 of the

    Trade Marks Act. More importantly, the question of acquiescence does not

    arise because the Defendant’s prior use was admittedly permissive in nature.

    In the present facts, I find that decisions in Willmott v. Barber and Northern

    & Shell plc v. Condé Nast & Anr. upon which reliance was placed by

    Defendant No. 1, would not apply since the facts in those cases were

    materially different.

    Q.​In the present case, the Plaintiff is the registered proprietor of marks the

    registration of which dates back to 1963. The Defendants are, on their own

    admitted case, derivative users whose authority to use the marks has expired.

    The balance clearly favours the Plaintiff, and even considering if the

    injunction is refused, the Plaintiff, in fact, will continue to suffer its marks

    61
    Vaibhav
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    being exploited by a former permitted user who is actively projecting

    continuity of corporate identity and lineage to which it has no entitlement

    whatsoever. The balance of convenience, therefore, overwhelmingly favours

    the Plaintiff. Hence, the Plaintiffs reliance upon the decisions in Poddar

    Tyres Ltd. v. Bedrock Sales Corporation Ltd., and Wearwell Cycle Co.

    (India) Ltd. v. Wearwell Industries, in the facts of the present case, is

    entirely apposite.

    R.​ In my unhesitating view, even assuming any inconvenience is caused to

    Defendant No. 1, such inconvenience would be a result of Defendant No. 1’s

    own creation. Defendant No. 1 has chosen to use a mark and bid for projects

    after the expiry of the limited brand usage rights, despite the fact that

    Defendant No. 1 had absolutely no right, title or interest in the HAMON

    Mark after the expiry of the limited “Brand Usage Right”. Defendant No. 1

    has also, despite having received the cease and desist notice, continued to

    use the HAMON Mark and has continued to do so even after the application

    filed by Defendant No. 1 for the mark “HAMON COOLING” was rejected

    62
    Vaibhav
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    and subsequently proceeded to file fresh applications for “HAMON

    COOLING” and “HCS HAMON COOLING” on a proposed-to-be-used

    basis. Having done so, Defendant No. 1 cannot now contend that the projects

    it is executing would be affected. I must note that some of the projects that

    Defendant No. 1 is executing are public projects. Hence in my view, it is

    imperative to grant an injunction so that Defendant No. 1 does not continue

    to misrepresent itself and secure public projects on the basis of a reputation

    and goodwill which it plainly lacks. In my view, therefore, it would in fact

    be in the larger public interest to shield the public and public authorities

    from Defendant No. 1’s misuse of the HAMON Mark.

    71.​Hence, for the aforesaid reasons, I pass the following Order:

    i. The captioned Interim Application is allowed in terms of prayer clauses

    (a) and (b).

    ii. There shall be no orders as to costs.

              ​        ​      ​      ​     ​      ​        ​   ​   [ARIF S. DOCTOR, J.]
    
    
                                                      63
    Vaibhav
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    After pronouncement:
    
    

    72.​ Learned counsel for the Defendant sought a stay of the Order for a period of

    four weeks. This was opposed by Mr. Kamod. However, Mr. Kamod

    submitted that the Order shall not be acted upon by the Applicant for a

    period of three weeks from today. His statement is accepted.

    ​

    [ARIF S. DOCTOR, J.]

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    Vaibhav



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