TRISA trademark dispute Pakistan
TRISA trademark dispute Pakistan

TRISA Trademark Battle: How a Karachi Brand Defended Its Identity

Tri-Star Industries, a Pakistani company, begins manufacturing toothbrushes and hairbrushes in Karachi. Through years of hard work, they build TRISA into a trusted household name. Their crowning achievement? Securing the “TRISA” trademark registration in 1985 under Class 21 (brushes).

But trouble arrived in 1997 when TRISA Burstenfabrik AG (a Swiss giant) attempted to register the identical mark in Pakistan for similar products. For Tri-Star, this wasn’t just business—it was an existential threat to their brand identity.

The Legal Battle Begins

Tri-Star struck first:
 1997: Filed civil suit No. 863/1997 in Sindh High Court, alleging trademark “usurpation”
 1999: Obtained injunction barring Swiss company from using TRISA in Pakistan
 2005: Case settled via consent, maintaining the injunction

Meanwhile, the Swiss company’s 1997 trademark application was quietly progressing:

  • Published in Trade Marks Journal: November 2000

  • Opposition deadline: January 22, 2001 (60 days under Trade Marks Act, 1940)

Here’s where Tri-Star made a fatal mistake—they missed the deadline.

The 108-Day Delay That Changed Everything

On March 11, 2003 (108 days late), Tri-Star finally filed opposition (Form TM-55) with:
Four backdated extension requests filed simultaneously
Generic justification: “Needed more time to prepare”
Claimed Registrar failed to notify them under Rule 23

Against all odds, the Registrar:
 August 18, 2003: Granted all 108 days’ extension
Allowed belated opposition

The Swiss company appealed to Sindh High Court (M.A. No. 10/2004), arguing this violated procedural rules.

Courtroom Showdown: Rule 76 Under Scrutiny

The core legal issue revolved around Rule 76 of Trade Mark Rules 1963:

  • Permits Registrar to extend deadlines if “satisfied”

  • Requires monthly extension requests (max 6 months total)

Sindh High Court’s 2021 Decision:
Overturned Registrar’s order
Ruled Tri-Star’s simultaneous requests violated Rule 76
Found justification (“needed more time”) insufficient

Tri-Star appealed to Supreme Court of Pakistan.

Supreme Court’s Landmark Ruling (April 27, 2023)

Justice Muhammad Ali Mazhar’s bench delivered a devastating blow to Tri-Star:

Key Findings:
1️⃣ 
Procedural Violation

  • Four extension requests filed together ≠ monthly compliance

  • Registrar’s approval was “stereotypical” without proper scrutiny

2️⃣ “Satisfied” Means Rigorous Review

  • Cited Nazir Ahmad v. King Emperor (1936): “Satisfied” requires reasoned conclusion

  • Compared to CPC Section 148: Extensions demand judicial consideration

3️⃣ Mandatory Deadlines Matter

  • Rule 76’s wording (“must”) makes timelines compulsory

  • “Law cannot bend for indolent litigants”

Verdict:
Rejected Tri-Star’s appeal
Upheld Sindh High Court’s decision

The Aftermath & Lessons Learned

While Tri-Star retained its 1985 registration, the Swiss company’s application remained alive due to:

  • Tri-Star’s procedural missteps

  • Failure to timely oppose

Critical Takeaways for Businesses:

  1. Deadlines Are Sacred – Miss one, lose your rights

  2. Document Everything – Notices, correspondence, filings

  3. Follow Procedures Exactly – Courts won’t excuse sloppiness

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