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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Delhi High Court restrains misuse of personality attributes of Anil Kapoor for commercial gain

The lawsuit sought to protect the actors's personality rights with respect to his name, voice, image, likeness, manner of speaking and gestures, among others

PTI New Delhi Published 20.09.23, 01:34 PM
Anil Kapoor

Anil Kapoor Twitter / @AnilKapoor

Delhi High Court on Wednesday restrained the misuse of the name, image, voice and other attributes of persona, including the "jhakaas" catchphrase, of actor Anil Kapoor for commercial gain.

Justice Prathiba M Singh passed the ex-parte interim order against several websites and platforms on a lawsuit by the actor, alleging unauthorised exploitation of his personality and celebrity rights for commercial use.

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Advocate Pravin Anand, appearing for Kapoor, said several websites and platforms have been misusing the personality rights of the plaintiff through various activities.

Kapoor's counsel pointed to the unauthorised sale of merchandise, collection of fees by using his photograph as a motivational speaker, morphing his image in a derogatory manner, and selling pictures with forged autographs and the "jhakaas" catchphrase, among others.

The lawsuit sought to protect Kapoor's personality rights with respect to his name, voice, image, likeness, manner of speaking and gestures, among others.

Justice Singh observed that while there can be no doubt that free speech is protected, the same would be illegal when it "crosses the line" and results in tarnishing and jeopardising individual personality rights.

"Using the plaintiff's name, voice, dialogue, image in illegal manner, that too for commercial purposes, cannot be permitted. Court cannot turn a blind eye to such misuse of personality," Justice Singh said.

"Defendants 1 to 16 are restrained from using ... in any manner the plaintiff Anil Kapoor's name, likeness, voice or any other attributes of his personality … for monetary gain or otherwise," the court ordered.

It also restrained other unknown persons from disseminating the offending links. The court directed the authorities concerned to block the offending platforms.

The court said "fame for a person comes with disadvantages" and "this case shows that reputation and fame can transcend into damage".

Such misuse can damage a celebrity's right to endorsement, it added.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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