IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
Yashwant Varma, Dharmesh Sharma, JJ.
Pankaj Ravjibhai Patel Trading As Rakesh Pharmaceuticals - Appellant
Versus
Sss Pharmachem Pvt. Ltd. - Respondent
FAO (COMM) 98 of 2023
Decided On : 02-11-2023
Undervaluation - Intellectual Property Rights - Commercial Courts Act, 2015 - Section 12(1)(d)
Fact of the Case:
The appeal challenged the vacation of an ex parte injunction granted in favor of the plaintiff due to doubts about the valuation of the suit. The Division Bench restored the injunction and expressed reservations about a previous judgment regarding the valuation of IPR suits.
Finding of the Court:
The court found that the previous judgment had incorrectly presumed undervaluation of IPR suits and had issued directions that distorted the distribution of matters between commercial and non-commercial courts. The court also found that the Commercial Courts Act did not intend to override the provisions of the Court Fees and Suits Valuation Acts.
Issues: The issues included the correctness of the valuation of IPR suits, the applicability of the Commercial Courts Act, and the interplay between specified value and valuation for court fees.
Ratio Decidendi: The court held that the valuation of IPR suits should not be presumed to be undervalued and that the issue of undervaluation should be evaluated based on the facts of each case. It also directed plaintiffs in IPR suits valued below Rs. 3 lakhs to declare that they have not taken an inconsistent position with respect to specified value in any other litigation.
Final Decision: The court set aside the previous judgment's directions, overruled the directions in the previous judgment, and allowed the appeal. The matter was remanded to the District Judge for fresh consideration in accordance with the court's observations.
JUDGMENT
FAO (COMM) 98/2023 & CM APPL 20261/2023 (Stay), CM APPL. 20262/2023 (Addl. Document)
1. The present appeal impugns the order dated 21 February 2023 passed by the District Judge (Commercial) who has for reasons assigned and recorded in that order, vacated the ex parte injunction which had been granted in favour of the plaintiff/ appellant on 25 September 2021 and called upon it to furnish additional material in support of the Chartered Accountant's ["CA"] certificate which had been presented in respect of the "specified value" of the suit.
2. We find from the order dated 25 April 2023 passed on this appeal that the Court while entertaining the challenge had placed the impugned order in abeyance and restored the ad interim ex parte injunction which had operated on the suit. While considering the questions which were canvassed for consideration, the Division Bench also expressed reservation with respect to the correctness of the view expressed by a learned Single Judge of the Court in Vishal Pipes Limited vs. Bhavya Pipe Industry, 2022 SCC OnLine Del 1730. It accordingly appointed Ms. Swathi Sukumar, learned counsel, as the Amicus Curiae to assist the Court in examining the questions which arose.
3. The doubts which were expressed by the Court with respect to the judgment in Vishal Pipes essentially appear to have arisen in light of the following facts. The proceedings in Vishal Pipes emanated from a suit for injunction which had been instituted alleging infringement of a registered trademark and copyright. The plaintiff had valued the suit at below Rs. 3 lakhs as a result of which it came to be placed before a District Judge who was not designated as a commercial court. The learned Single Judge found that in light of the suit having been valued at below Rs. 3 lakhs, notwithstanding the same raising issues of infringement of trademarks and copyright, it was liable to be tried as a regular civil suit and thus not be regulated by the provisions of the Commercial Courts Act, 2015 [CCA]. It was in the aforesaid backdrop that the learned Single Judge in Vishal Pipes formulated the question which arose to be whether IPR suits valued below Rs. 3 lakhs ought to be listed before District Judges manning commercial courts and thus be tried in accordance with the provisions of the CCA or by District Judges (Non-Commercial) as ordinary suits. The learned Single Judge noted that unscrupulous plaintiffs appeared to be deliberately undervaluing IPR suits leading to a situation where they were not only choosing the court before which those matters would be listed but also avoiding the proceedings being governed by the provisions of the CCA. On an analysis of the provisions of the CCA, the Court Fee Act, 1870 [Court Fees Act] and decisions rendered by this Court as well as other High Courts, the learned Single Judge proceeded to hold as under:
"62. To answer the above, first, the discussion in paragraph 25 above is pertinent, as it clearly shows that IPR disputes are a set of disputes which lie only before the District Court. Thus, in that sense, such disputes are an exception to the rule of institution of cases at the Court of the lowest level having jurisdiction. With the enactment of the CCA, the subject-matter jurisdiction over IPR disputes now vests with the Commercial Courts, at the District Court Level. Therefore, can litigants and lawyers escape the rigors of the provisions of the CCA by valuing the suits below Rs. 3 lakhs? The answer ought to be a clear 'NO'. This is due to the following reasons:
(i) The application of the judicial principles that the plaintiff is dominus litis and is free to value the suit in the manner it so chooses, has to be in the context of enactment of the CCA. The principles cannot be stretched to justify undervaluation of IPR disputes and payment of lower Court fee.
(ii) Not ascribing a `specified value' in the suit would be contrary to the scheme of the CCA which requires every suit to have a `specified val
The valuation of IPR suits should not be presumed to be undervalued, and the issue of undervaluation should be evaluated based on the facts of each case.
For a suit to be considered a commercial dispute, it should meet both the requirements of falling within the definition of a commercial dispute and having a specified value of more than Rs. 3 lakhs. ....
The court established that disputes arising from license agreements for properties used exclusively for trade qualify as commercial disputes under the CC Act.
The court confirmed that the counter-claim is a commercial dispute under the Commercial Courts Act, emphasizing the need for clear admissions for invoking judgment on admissions.
The court confirmed the trial court's ruling that the counter-claim is a commercial dispute under the Commercial Courts Act, emphasizing the importance of clear admissions in legal proceedings.
In commercial disputes under the Trade Marks Act, 1999, the specified value for jurisdiction must be determined under Section 12 of the Commercial Courts Act, 2015, which takes precedence over the Ka....
The judgment clarifies the jurisdictional boundaries between Commercial Courts and Commercial Divisions under the Commercial Courts Act, particularly for intellectual property disputes.
A plaintiff's discretion in valuing a suit should only be interfered with upon clear evidence of arbitrary or malicious intent; otherwise, the valuation stands as lawful.
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