Karnataka High Court. 
Bengaluru

No infringement of trademark, Karnataka HC on Vogue institute

There is no infringement of the trademark, the court added.

Express News Service

BENGALURU: Quashing a city civil court order that restrained city-based Vogue Institute of Fashion Technology from using the trademarked ‘Vogue’ as part of their name and trade style, the Karnataka High Court observed that readers of Vogue will know that the fashion magazine is only involved in the business of publishing and not running the institute.

Justice MI Arun passed the order while allowing the appeal filed by M M Kariappa and Vogue Institute of Management against the order dated September 25, 2014, passed by a city civil court restraining the institute from using the Vogue in its name. The court further said the magazine is published by the plaintiff -- Advance Magazine Publishers Inc, USA -- which is not subscribed to or read by a large section of the public.

Consideration the degree of care that an average student is likely to exercise, it is highly unlikely that they will confuse the institute of the defendants as one belonging to the plaintiff. Further, no evidence is let in by the plaintiff to show otherwise, the court observed. There is no infringement of the trademark, the court added.

'WE GOT HIM!': Trump says missing US airman rescued as Iran claims it downed search aircraft

Amid AAP row over claims he failed to raise Punjab issues in Parliament, Chadha hits back, defends record

West Bengal elections: Why Mothabari is not an isolated tremor but a warning

BJP redraws Assam campaign plank from infiltration to youth welfare as April 9 polls near

Pandemic to polemic: Kerala politics evolves under CM Pinarayi Vijayan

SCROLL FOR NEXT