The counsel appearing for Britannia, which has challenged the September 6 order of the single judge, told a bench of justices B D Ahmed and Ashutosh Kumar that their business was getting affected because of the order as manufacturing of this product has been stopped.
A single judge bench had restrained Britannia from using the wrapper of its 'Nutri Choice Digestive Zero' biscuits in its present form, saying it was "deceptively similar" to packaging of ITC's Sunfeast 'Farmlite Digestive All Good' biscuits.
However, senior advocates Rajiv Nayar, Sandeep Sethi and Pratibha M Singh, representing ITC, countered the submissions claiming that they have "adopted" their packaging and even lines on the packs were "replicated" by them.
Britannia, while refuting the allegations, had countered ITC's submissions, saying it did not need to adopt anyone's packaging, being the market leader.
The bench, which has fixed the matter for final disposal on September 15, said "You will win or lose on the quality of your product and not on its get-up or packaging."
The single judge had granted four weeks to Britannia to phase out the existing stocks of 'Nutri Choice Zero Digestive' biscuits with the present packaging.
Advancing the arguments today, Britannia's counsel told
the bench "this (Nutri Choice Digestive Zero biscuit) is a hot selling item and I have stopped its production. It is a commercial loss to us. I cannot be asked to stop selling this item. Yellow has been our standard colour since 2008."
"For us, it is a day to day loss. Manufacturing of this product has stopped. If I am not selling the product, I cannot be able to quantify my loss," the lawyer said.
When ITC's counsel said the colour combination used by Britannia was similar to the colours used by them, the bench said, "You cannot appropriate a colour or combination of a colour."
The single judge had asked Britannia to adopt a "distinctively different" packaging from the one currently used by ITC for its biscuit as such "deception" could confuse the consumers.
The single judge had said it would be open to Britannia to adopt the packaging it uses for the product internationally or, while retaining the yellow colour, it could substitute the blue colour in the packaging with any other distinctive colour other than variants of blue.
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