Supreme Court judgment concerning an intellectual property dispute between Cryogas Equipment Private Limited and LNG Express India Private Limited against Inox India Limited. The core of the case revolves around whether Inox’s proprietary engineering drawings and literary works related to cryogenic storage tanks are protected under India’s Copyright Act, 1957, or fall under the Designs Act, 2000. The appeals address the maintainability of an application to reject the suit, with the Supreme Court ultimately upholding the High Court’s decision that the complex questions involved require a full trial, rather than a summary dismissal. The judgment also establishes a two-pronged test for future cases to distinguish between works protected by copyright and those covered by design law, considering both the nature of the artistic work and its functional utility.
(A) Civil Procedure Code, 1908, Order 7 Rule 11 – Copyright Act, 1957, Section 2(c), 14, 15(1), 15(2) – Designs Act in 2000, Section 2(d) – Rejection of plaint – Infringement of copyright – What are the parameters for determining whether a work or an article falls within the limitation set out in Section 15(2) of the Copyright Act, thereby classifying it as a ‘design’ under Section 2(d) of the Designs Act? – Held that formulated a two-pronged approach in order to crack open the conundrum caused by Section 15(2) of the Copyright Act so as to ascertain whether a work is qualified to be protected by the Designs Act – This test shall consider: (i) whether the work in question is purely an ‘artistic work’ entitled to protection under the Copyright Act or whether it is a ‘design’ derived from such original artistic work and subjected to an industrial process based upon the language in Section 15(2) of the Copyright Act; (ii) if such a work does not qualify for copyright protection, then the test of ‘functional utility’ will have to be applied so as to determine its dominant purpose, and then ascertain whether it would qualify for design protection under the Design Act.
(Para 60)
(B) Civil Procedure Code, 1908, Order 7 Rule 11 – Copyright Act, 1957, Section 2(c), 14, 15(1), 15(2) – Designs Act in 2000, Section 2(d) – Rejection of plaint – Infringement of copyright – Whether the High Court erred in setting aside the order of the Commercial Court and thus rejecting the application under Order VII Rule 11 of the CPC? – Held that whether the original artistic work would fall within the meaning of ‘design’ under the Designs Act cannot be answered while deciding an application under Order VII Rule 11 of the CPC – This stage would involve only a prima facie inquiry as to the disclosure of cause of action in the plaint – The question pertaining to ascertaining the true nature of the ‘Proprietary Engineering Drawings’ involves a mixed question of law and fact and could not have been decided by the Commercial Court at a preliminary stage based upon such a casual appraisal of the plaint averments – This case warrants a trial given the triable issues involved – The plaintiff before the Commercial Court, i.e., Inox, was erroneously non-suited due to incorrect assumptions made by the Commercial Court which misread the plaint, misapplied legal principles and overlooked the distinction between ‘artistic work’ and ‘design.’ – Decision of the High Court rejecting the application under Order 7 Rule 11 of the CPC is upheld – The Commercial Court directed to deliver its decision on the pending application seeking interim injunction preferred by Inox, within a period of two months – The Commercial Court further directed to conduct trial and discern the true nature of the Proprietary Engineering Drawings based upon the test laid down in paragraph 60 of this judgement, as also the other related IP right infringements claimed by Inox, within a period of one year, given that it has already wasted significant judicial time on this issue.
(Para 67 to 70)
Cryogas Equipment Private Limited V. Inox India Limited And Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 483: (DoJ 15-04-2025)




