
Stories of Success

Purging Counterfeits from the Market
Three N Products v. Kasana Ram Chaudhary Representing the fight against unethical trade practices, we secured a vital win in Gujarat against a defendant using a counterfeit mark to create a false impression of brand affiliation. The court's injunction effectively stopped the dilution and falsification of our client's registered trademarks.

Defeating Design Piracy in Premium Packaging
Varahi Limited (AQA) v. Labneh & Ors. In a significant win for industrial designers, we defended the unique, registered bottle design of AQA premium mineral water. The court recognized that the defendant’s bottle was a "clear imitation" likely to confuse the common man, granting an immediate restraint against the manufacturing and marketing of the pirated design.

Defeating Frivolous Suits and Recovering Costs
Omaxe Ltd. v. New Rama Seed Corporation. Strategic litigation is as much about ending bad cases as it is about winning good ones. In this matter, we successfully highlighted a frivolous suit that was wasting judicial time. The court allowed the suit's withdrawal but penalized the plaintiff with Rs. 50,000 in costs, ensuring our client was compensated for the inconvenience of unnecessary litigation.

Protecting Global Reputation Against Infringing Domains
Three N Products v. Lokaveda Naturals. We protected our client’s heritage dating back to 1984 by proving that the mark "Ayurl.com" was strikingly similar to the registered "AYUR" trademark. By securing a prima facie case of infringement, we obtained an ad-interim injunction to halt the dilution of our client's global goodwill.

The Digital Takedown of Infringing Trademarks
Three-N-Products v. Teamex Retail & Ors. In a high-stakes digital battle, our firm successfully defended the sanctity of the "AYUR" brand. We secured an ex-parte interim injunction that not only restrained the use of the deceptively similar mark "AYURLAND" but also ordered the immediate suspension of the infringing domain www.ayurland.in to prevent further consumer confusion.
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