Justice Manmohan said the orders "shall not be given effect to" till central government decides the joint venture (JV) company's representation to not cancel its licence.
It directed the JV, TTK Protective Devices Ltd, to file its representation within two weeks and also ordered it to maintain a "log and accounts" of the number of such condoms manufactured and sold by it.
With these directions, the court disposed of the plea filed by Reckitt and TTK against the Centre's and the state authority's orders.
The Centre's lawyer told the court that if the company approaches it with a representation, a decision would be taken in eight weeks.
He also said there is no mention of Benzocaine in the licence granted by the Centre to Reckitt in February last year to import the product.
To this, Gupta said that in the application for import licence, Benzocaine was mentioned along with name of the product.
In January this year the Centre wrote to the state
authority that the product falls under the category of a new drug requiring permission of the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI) which TTK does not have and thus, the licence for manufacture ought to be cancelled, the petition had said.
It had also said that in view of the January 2016 letter of the Centre, the state authority wrote to the company in February this year to surrender its manufacturing licence.
It had argued that the condom was being manufactured in India for last 15 years and over 300 million boxes have been sold and thus, it cannot be termed as a new drug.
