IPC Salao
IPC Salao
IPC Salao
8293
AN
ACT
PRESCRIBING
THE
INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
CODE
AND
ESTABLISHING
THE
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY OFFICE, PROVIDING FOR
ITS POWERS AND FUNCTIONS, AND FOR OTHER
PURPOSES
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the Philippines in Congress
assembled::
PART I THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY OFFICE
Section 1. Title. - This Act shall be known as
the
"Intellectual
Property
Code
of
the
Philippines."
Section 2. Declaration of State Policy. - The
State recognizes that an effective intellectual
and industrial property system is vital to the
development of domestic and creative activity,
facilitates transfer of technology, attracts
foreign investments, and ensures market access
for our products. It shall protect and secure
the exclusive rights of scientists, inventors,
artists and other gifted citizens to their
intellectual
property
and
creations,
particularly when beneficial to the people, for
such periods as provided in this Act.
The use of intellectual property bears a social
function. To this end, the State shall promote
the diffusion of knowledge and information for
the
promotion
of
national
development
and
progress and the common good.
It is also the policy of the State to streamline
administrative
procedures
of
registering
patents, trademarks and copyright, to liberalize
the registration on the transfer of technology,
and to enhance the enforcement of intellectual
property rights in the Philippines. (n)
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Section
3.
International
Conventions
and
Reciprocity. - Any person who is a national or
who is domiciled or has a real and effective
industrial establishment in a country which is a
party to any convention, treaty or agreement
relating to intellectual property rights or the
repression of unfair competition, to which the
Philippines
is
also
a
party,
or
extends
reciprocal
rights
to
nationals
of
the
Philippines by law, shall be entitled to
benefits to the extent necessary to give effect
to any provision of such convention, treaty or
reciprocal law, in addition to the rights to
which any owner of an intellectual property
right is otherwise entitled by this Act. (n)
A. Intellectual Property Rights
Section
4.
Definitions.
4.1.
The
"intellectual property rights" consists of:
term
(Topographies)
g) Protection
TRIPS).
Undisclosed
of
of
Integrated
Information
(n,
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to
by
the
this
In
1976,
Tobacco
Industries
filed
its
manufacturers sworn statement as basis for BIRs
collection of specific tax on GALLO cigarettes.9
[9]
On February 5, 1974, Tobacco Industries applied
for,
but
eventually
did
not
pursue,
the
registration of the GALLO cigarette trademark in
the principal register of the then Philippine
Patent Office.10[10]
In May 1984, Tobacco Industries assigned the
GALLO cigarette trademark to La Campana which,
on
July
16,
1985,
applied
for
trademark
registration in the Philippine Patent Office.11
[11] On July 17, 1985, the National Library
issued Certificate of Copyright Registration No.
5834 for La Campanas lifetime copyright claim
over GALLO cigarette labels.12[12]
Subsequently,
La
Campana
authorized
Mighty
Corporation to manufacture and sell cigarettes
bearing the GALLO trademark.13[13] BIR approved
Mighty Corporations use of GALLO 100s cigarette
brand, under licensing agreement with Tobacco
Industries, on May 18, 1988, and GALLO SPECIAL
MENTHOL 100s cigarette brand on April 3, 1989.14
[14]
Petitioners claim that GALLO cigarettes have
been sold in the Philippines since 1973,
initially by Tobacco Industries, then by La
Campana and finally by Mighty Corporation.15[15]
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
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order
RTC
damages
in
the
amount
of
29
30
9 | Page
Makati RTC
petitioners
III.
The Issues
Petitioners now seek relief from this Court
contending that the CA did not follow prevailing
laws and jurisprudence when it held that: [a] RA
8293
(Intellectual
Property
Code
of
the
Philippines [IP Code]) was applicable in this
case; [b] GALLO cigarettes and GALLO wines were
identical, similar or related goods for the
reason alone that they were purportedly forms of
vice; [c] both goods passed through the same
channels of trade and [d] petitioners were
liable
for
trademark
infringement,
unfair
competition and damages.31[31]
Respondents, on the other hand, assert that this
petition which invokes Rule 45 does not involve
pure questions of law, and hence, must be
dismissed outright.
IV.
Discussion
THE EXCEPTIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
IN THIS CASE OBLIGE THE COURT TO REVIEW
THE CAS FACTUAL FINDINGS
As a general rule, a petition for review on
certiorari under Rule 45 must raise only
questions of law32[32] (that is, the doubt
pertains to the application and interpretation
of law to a certain set of facts) and not
questions of fact (where the doubt concerns the
truth or falsehood of alleged facts),33[33]
otherwise, the petition will be denied. We are
not a trier of facts and the Court of Appeals
31
32
33
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based
on
its
the
the
the
evidence] on record.36[36]
In this light, after thoroughly examining the
evidence on record, weighing, analyzing and
balancing all factors to determine whether
trademark infringement and/or unfair competition
has been committed, we conclude that both the
Court of Appeals and the trial court veered away
from the law and well-settled jurisprudence.
Thus, we give due course to the petition.
THE TRADEMARK LAW AND THE PARIS
CONVENTION ARE THE APPLICABLE LAWS,
NOT THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY CODE
We note that respondents sued petitioners on
March 12, 1993 for trademark infringement and
unfair
competition
committed
during
the
effectivity of the Paris Convention and the
Trademark Law.
Yet, in the Makati RTC decision of November 26,
1998, petitioners were held liable not only
under the aforesaid governing laws but also
under the IP Code which took effect only on
January 1, 1998,37[37] or about five years after
the filing of the complaint:
Defendants
unauthorized
use
of
the
GALLO
trademark
constitutes
trademark
infringement
pursuant to Section 22 of Republic Act No. 166,
Section 155 of the IP Code, Article 6bis of the
Paris Convention, and Article 16 (1) of the
TRIPS
Agreement
as
it
causes
confusion,
deception and mistake on the part of the
purchasing
public.38[38]
(Emphasis
and
underscoring supplied)
The CA apparently did not notice the error and
affirmed the Makati RTC decision:
In the light of its finding that appellants use
of the GALLO trademark on its cigarettes is
36
37
38
12 | P a g e
is
used
for
identical
or
is
used
for
identical
or
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71
72
73
74
75
29 | P a g e
in
of
In
comparing
the
resemblance
or
colorable
imitation of marks, various factors have been
considered, such as the dominant color, style,
size, form, meaning of letters, words, designs
and emblems used, the likelihood of deception of
the mark or name's tendency to confuse82[82] and
the commercial impression likely to be conveyed
by the trademarks if used in conjunction with
the respective goods of the parties.83[83]
Applying the Dominancy and Holistic Tests, we
find that the dominant feature of the GALLO
cigarette trademark is the device of a large
rooster facing left, outlined in black against a
gold background. The roosters color is either
green or red green for GALLO menthols and red
for GALLO filters. Directly below the large
rooster device is the word GALLO. The rooster
device
is
given
prominence
in
the
GALLO
cigarette packs in terms of size and location on
the labels.84[84]
The GALLO mark appears to be a fanciful and
arbitrary mark for the cigarettes as it has no
relation at all to the product but was chosen
merely as a trademark due to the fondness for
fighting cocks of the son of petitioners
president.
Furthermore,
petitioners
adopted
GALLO, the Spanish word for rooster, as a
cigarette trademark to appeal to one of their
target
markets,
the
sabungeros
(cockfight
85
aficionados). [85]
Also, as admitted by respondents themselves,86
[86] on the side of the GALLO cigarette packs
are the words MADE BY MIGHTY CORPORATION, thus
clearly informing the public as to the identity
of the manufacturer of the cigarettes.
82
83
84
85
86
31 | P a g e
related,96[96]
the
are
and
111
112
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116
38 | P a g e
different
social
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
mark
must
be
internationally
b)
c)
d)
Considerations
Each trademark infringement case presents a
unique problem which must be answered by
weighing
the
conflicting
interests
of
the
124
litigants. [124]
Respondents claim that GALLO wines and GALLO
cigarettes flow through the same channels of
trade, that is, retail trade. If respondents
assertion is true, then both goods co-existed
peacefully for a considerable period of time. It
took respondents almost 20 years to know about
the existence of GALLO cigarettes and sue
petitioners for trademark infringement. Given,
on one hand, the long period of time that
petitioners were engaged in the manufacture,
marketing,
distribution
and
sale
of
GALLO
cigarettes and, on the other, respondents delay
in enforcing their rights (not to mention
implied consent, acquiescence or negligence) we
hold that equity, justice and fairness require
us to rule in favor of petitioners. The scales
of conscience and reason tip far more readily in
favor of petitioners than respondents.
Moreover,
there
exists
no
evidence
that
petitioners employed malice, bad faith or fraud,
or
that
they
intended
to
capitalize
on
respondents goodwill in adopting the GALLO mark
for their cigarettes which are totally unrelated
to respondents GALLO wines. Thus, we rule out
trademark
infringement
on
the
part
of
petitioners.
PETITIONERS ARE ALSO NOT LIABLE
FOR UNFAIR COMPETITION
Under Section 29 of the Trademark Law, any
person who employs deception or any other means
contrary to good faith by which he passes off
the goods manufactured by him or in which he
deals, or his business, or services for those of
the one having established such goodwill, or who
commits any acts calculated to produce said
result, is guilty of unfair competition. It
includes the following acts:
124
45 | P a g e
125
46 | P a g e
petitioners
are
not
liable
for
trademark
infringement, unfair competition or damages.
WHEREFORE, finding the petition for review
meritorious, the same is hereby GRANTED. The
questioned decision and resolution of the Court
of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 65175 and the
November 26, 1998 decision and the June 24, 1999
order of the Regional Trial Court of Makati,
Branch 57 in Civil Case No. 93-850 are hereby
REVERSED and SET ASIDE and the complaint against
petitioners DISMISSED.
B. Differences
and Patent
between
Copyrights,
Trademarks
- P1,000.000.00
- P1,000,000.00
- P1,000,000.00
to
deliver,
under
oath,
for
impounding in the National Library, all
light boxes of SMI which were fabricated
by Metro Industrial Services and EYD
Rainbow Advertising Corporation;
(3)
(4)
to
permanently
refrain
from
infringing the copyright on plaintiffs
light boxes and its trademark Poster Ads.
Court
of
Appeals
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xxx
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xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
x x x
x x x
copyright
under
work. This being
the
so,
manufacturing
or
commercially
using
the
contraption. In Creser Precision Systems, Inc.
vs. Court of Appeals,137[12] we held that there
can be no infringement of a patent until a
patent has been issued, since whatever right one
has to the invention covered by the patent
arises alone from the grant of patent. x x x
(A)n inventor has no common law right to a
monopoly of his invention. He has the right to
make use of and vend his invention, but if he
voluntarily discloses it, such as by offering it
for sale, the world is free to copy and use it
with impunity. A patent, however, gives the
inventor the right to exclude all others. As a
patentee, he has the exclusive right of making,
selling or using the invention.138[13] On the
assumption that petitioners advertising units
were patentable inventions, petitioner revealed
them fully to the public by submitting the
engineering drawings thereof to the National
Library.
To be able to effectively and legally preclude
others from copying and profiting from the
invention, a patent is a primordial requirement.
No patent, no protection. The ultimate goal of a
patent system is to bring new designs and
technologies into the public domain through
disclosure.139[14] Ideas, once disclosed to the
public without the protection of a valid patent,
are subject to appropriation without significant
restraint.140[15]
On one side of the coin is the public which will
benefit from new ideas; on the other are the
inventors who must be protected. As held in
Bauer & Cie vs. ODonnel,141[16] The act secured to
the inventor the exclusive right to make use,
137
138
139
140
141
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an
ideal
balance
no
it
the
may
By
for
x x x
Now, whilst no one has a right to print or
publish his book, or any material part thereof,
as a book intended to convey instruction in the
art, any person may practice and use the art
itself which he has described and illustrated
therein. The use of the art is a totally
different thing from a publication of the book
explaining it. The copyright of a book on
bookkeeping cannot secure the exclusive right to
make, sell and use account books prepared upon
the plan set forth in such book. Whether the art
might or might not have been patented, is a
question, which is not before us. It was not
patented, and is open and free to the use of the
public. And, of course, in using the art, the
ruled lines and headings of accounts must
necessarily be used as incident to it.
The plausibility of the claim put forward by the
complainant in this case arises from a confusion
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the
Court
of
Appeals,
petitioners
expert
witnesses himself had testified that Poster Ads
was too generic a name. So it was difficult to
identify
it
with
any
company,
honestly
speaking.153[28] This crucial admission by its own
expert witness that Poster Ads could not be
associated with P & D showed that, in the mind
of the public, the goods and services carrying
the
trademark
Poster
Ads
could
not
be
distinguished from the goods and services of
other entities.
This fact also prevented the application of the
doctrine of secondary meaning. Poster Ads was
generic and incapable of being used as a
trademark because it was used in the field of
poster advertising, the very business engaged in
by petitioner. Secondary meaning means that a
word or phrase originally incapable of exclusive
appropriation with reference to an article in
the market (because it is geographically or
otherwise descriptive) might nevertheless have
been used for so long and so exclusively by one
producer with reference to his article that, in
the trade and to that branch of the purchasing
public, the word or phrase has come to mean that
the article was his property.154[29] The admission
by petitioners own expert witness that he
himself could not associate Poster Ads with
petitioner P & D because it was too generic
definitely precluded the application of this
exception.
Having discussed the most important and critical
issues, we see no need to belabor the rest.
All told, the Court finds no reversible error
committed by the Court of Appeals when it
reversed the Regional Trial Court of Makati
City.
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby DENIED and the
decision of the Court of Appeals dated May 22,
2001 is AFFIRMED in toto.
153
154
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and
authorized
importer,
re-packer
and
distributor
of
Chin
Chun
Su
products
manufactured by Shun Yi Factory of Taiwan; that
the
said
Taiwanese
manufacturing
company
authorized Summerville to register its trade
name Chin Chun Su Medicated Cream with the
Philippine Patent Office and other appropriate
governmental
agencies;
that
KEC
Cosmetics
Laboratory
of
the
petitioner
obtained
the
copyrights
through
misrepresentation
and
falsification;
and,
that
the
authority
of
Quintin
Cheng,
assignee
of
the
patent
registration certificate, to distribute and
market Chin Chun Su products in the Philippines
had
already
been
terminated
by
the
said
Taiwanese Manufacturing Company.
After due hearing on the application for
preliminary injunction, the trial court granted
the same in an Order dated February 10, 1992,
the dispositive portion of which reads:
ACCORDINGLY, the application of plaintiff Elidad
C. Kho, doing business under the style of KEC
Cosmetic Laboratory, for preliminary injunction,
is hereby granted. Consequentially, plaintiff is
required to file with the Court a bond executed
to defendants in the amount of five hundred
thousand pesos (P500,000.00) to the effect that
plaintiff will pay to defendants all damages
which defendants may sustain by reason of the
injunction if the Court should finally decide
that plaintiff is not entitled thereto.
SO ORDERED.iii[3]
The respondents moved for reconsideration but
their motion for reconsideration was denied by
the trial court in an Order dated March 19,
1992.iv[4]
On April 24, 1992, the respondents filed a
petition for certiorari with the Court of
Appeals, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 27803,
praying for the nullification of the said writ
of preliminary injunction issued by the trial
court. After the respondents filed their reply
and almost a month after petitioner submitted
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xxx
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(e) An abstract.
32.2. No patent may be granted unless
application identifies the inventor. If
applicant is not the inventor, the Office
require him to submit said authority. (Sec.
R.A. No. 165a)
the
the
may
13,
Section
33.
Appointment
of
Agent
or
Representative. - An applicant who is not a
resident of the Philippines must appoint and
maintain a resident agent or representative in
the Philippines upon whom notice or process for
judicial or administrative procedure relating to
the application for patent or the patent may be
served. (Sec. 11, R.A. No. 165a)
Section 34. The Request. - The request shall
contain a petition for the grant of the patent,
the name and other data of the applicant, the
inventor and the agent and the title of the
invention. (n)
Section 35. Disclosure and Description of the
Invention. - 35.1. Disclosure. - The application
shall disclose the invention in a manner
sufficiently clear and complete for it to be
carried out by a person skilled in the art.
Where the application concerns a microbiological
process or the product thereof and involves the
use
of
a
micro-organism
which
cannot
be
sufficiently disclosed in the application in
such a way as to enable the invention to be
carried out by a person skilled in the art, and
such material is not available to the public,
the application shall be supplemented by a
deposit of such material with an international
depository institution.
35.2. Description. - The Regulations shall
prescribe the contents of the description and
the order of presentation. (Sec. 14, R.A. No.
165a)
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Information
identifying
the
applicant;
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and
the
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of
the
protection
Section 60. Form and Publication of Amendment. An amendment or correction of a patent shall be
accomplished by a certificate of such amendment
or correction, authenticated by the seal of the
Office and signed by the Director, which
certificate shall be attached to the patent.
Notice of such amendment or correction shall be
published in the IPO Gazette and copies of the
patent kept or furnished by the Office shall
include a copy of the certificate of amendment
or correction. (Sec. 27, R.A. No. 165)
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Request Form
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The
request
for
substantive
examination of the application must be filed
within six (6) months from the date of the
publication.
The
application
is
considered
withdrawn if no request is made within that
period. If the examiner finds reason to refuse
the registration of the application, i.e. the
application
is
not
new,
inventive
or
industrially applicable, the Bureau shall notify
the
applicant
of
the
reason
for
refusal/rejection
giving
the
applicant
the
chance to defend or amend the application.
5. Decision to Grant Patent Registration or
Decision of Refusal
If the examiner finds no reason for
refusal of the application, or if the notice of
reason for refusal is satisfactorily complied
with by amendment or correction, the examiner
issues
a
decision
to
grant
the
patent
registration. Otherwise, the examiner refuses
the application.
6. Inspection of Records
The grant of a patent together with
other information shall be published in the IPO
Gazette within six (6) months. Any interested
party may inspect the complete description,
claims, and drawings of the patent on file with
the Office.
7. Appeal
(a) Every applicant may appeal to the
Director of Patents the final refusal of the
examiner to grant the patent within two (2)
months from the mailing date of the final
refusal. The decision or order of the Director
shall become final and executory fifteen (15)
days after receipt of a copy by the appellant
unless within the same period, a motion for
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CHAPTER VI
CANCELLATION OF PATENTS AND SUBSTITUTION OF
PATENTEE
Section 61. Cancellation of Patents. - 61.1. Any
interested person may, upon payment of the
required fee, petition to cancel the patent or
any claim thereof, or parts of the claim, on any
of the following GROUNDS:
(a) That what is claimed as the invention is
not new or Patentable;
(b) That the patent does not disclose the
invention in a manner sufficiently clear and
complete for it to be carried out by any
person skilled in the art; or
(c) That the patent is contrary to public
order or morality.
61.2. Where the grounds for cancellation relate
to some of the claims or parts of the claim,
cancellation may be effected to such extent
only. (Secs. 28 and 29, R.A. No. 165a)
Section 62. Requirement of the Petition. - The
petition for cancellation shall be in writing,
verified by the petitioner or by any person in
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own
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relate to the
invention;
subject
matter
of
the
patented
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Patent Infringement
1. Tests in patent infringement
a. Literal Infringement - In using literal
infringement as a test, ". . . resort must be
had, in the first instance, to the words of the
claim. If accused matter clearly falls within
the claim, infringement is made out and that is
the end of it."
To determine whether the
particular item falls within the literal meaning
of the patent claims, the court must juxtapose
the claims of the patent and the accused product
within the overall context of the claims and
specifications, to determine whether there is
exact identity of all material elements.
Literal
infringement
exists
when
every
limitation recited in a patent claim is found in
the infringing device (or process).
b. Infringement by equivalents happens when a
device
(or
process)
appropriates
a
prior
invention
by
incorporating
its
innovative
concept and, although with some modification and
change, performs substantially the same function
in substantially the same way to achieve
substantially the same result. This "functionway-result" equation lies at the heart of the
doctrine of equivalents.
SMITH KLINE BECKMAN CORPORATION vs.CA
Smith Kline Beckman Corporation (petitioner), a
corporation existing by virtue of the laws of
the state of Pennsylvania, United States of
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Petitioner
likewise
points
out
that
its
application with the Philippine Patent Office on
account of which it was granted Letters Patent
No. 14561 was merely a divisional application of
a prior application in the U. S. which granted a
patent
for
Albendazole.
Hence,
petitioner
concludes that both methyl 5 propylthio-2benzimidazole carbamate and the U.S.-patented
Albendazole are dependent on each other and
mutually contribute to produce a single result,
thereby making Albendazole as much a part of
Letters Patent No. 14561 as the other substance
is.
Petitioner concedes in its Sur-Rejoinder13 that
although
methyl
5
propylthio-2-benzimidazole
carbamate is not identical with Albendazole, the
former is an improvement or improved version of
the latter thereby making both substances still
substantially the same.
With respect to the award of actual damages in
favor of private respondent in the amount of
P330,000.00
representing
lost
profits,
petitioner
assails
the
same
as
highly
speculative and conjectural, hence, without
basis. It assails too the award of P100,000.00
in attorneys fees as not falling under any of
the instances enumerated by law where recovery
of attorneys fees is allowed.
In its Comment,14 private respondent contends
that application of the doctrine of equivalents
would not alter the outcome of the case,
Albendazole
and
methyl
5
propylthio-2benzimidazole carbamate being two different
compounds with different chemical and physical
properties. It stresses that the existence of a
separate U.S. patent for Albendazole indicates
that the same and the compound in Letters Patent
No. 14561 are different from each other; and
that since it was on account of a divisional
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reasonable
degree
of
certainty
based
on
competent proof and on the best evidence
obtainable
by
the
injured
party.27
The
testimonies of private respondents officers are
not the competent proof or best evidence
obtainable to establish its right to actual or
compensatory damages for such damages also
require presentation of documentary evidence to
substantiate a claim therefor.28
In the same vein, this Court does not sustain
the grant by the appellate court of attorneys
fees to private respondent anchored on Article
2208 (2) of the Civil Code, private respondent
having been allegedly forced to litigate as a
result of petitioners suit. Even if a claimant
is compelled to litigate with third persons or
to incur expenses to protect its rights, still
attorneys fees may not be awarded where no
sufficient showing of bad faith could be
reflected in a partys persistence in a case
other than an erroneous conviction of the
righteousness of his cause.29 There exists no
evidence on record indicating that petitioner
was moved by malice in suing private respondent.
This Court, however, grants private respondent
temperate or moderate damages in the amount of
P20,000.00 which it finds reasonable under the
circumstances, it having suffered some pecuniary
loss the amount of which cannot, from the nature
of the case, be established with certainty.30
WHEREFORE, the assailed decision of the Court of
Appeals is hereby AFFIRMED with MODIFICATION.
The award of actual or compensatory damages and
attorneys fees to private respondent, Tryco
Pharma Corporation, is DELETED; instead, it is
hereby awarded the amount of P20,000.00 as
temperate or moderate damages.
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Section 76. Civil Action for Infringement. 76.1. The making, using, offering for sale,
selling, or importing a patented product or a
product obtained directly or indirectly from a
patented process, or the use of a patented
process
without
the
authorization
of
the
patentee constitutes patent infringement.
76.2. Any patentee, or anyone possessing any
right, title or interest in and to the patented
invention, whose rights have been infringed, may
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CHAPTER IX
VOLUNTARY LICENSING
Section 85. Voluntary License Contract. - To
encourage the transfer and dissemination of
technology, prevent or control practices and
conditions
that
may
in
particular
cases
constitute an abuse of intellectual property
rights having an adverse effect on competition
and trade, all technology transfer arrangements
shall comply with the provisions of this
Chapter. (n)
Section 86. Jurisdiction to Settle Disputes on
Royalties. - The Director of the Documentation,
Information and Technology Transfer Bureau shall
exercise quasi-judicial jurisdiction in the
settlement of disputes between parties to a
technology transfer arrangement arising from
technology transfer payments, including the
fixing of appropriate amount or rate of royalty.
(n)
Section 87. Prohibited Clauses. - Except in
cases under Section 91, the following provisions
shall be deemed prima facie to have an adverse
effect on competition and trade:
87.1. Those which impose upon the licensee the
obligation to acquire from a specific source
capital
goods,
intermediate
products,
raw
materials,
and
other
technologies,
or
of
permanently employing personnel indicated by the
licensor;
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equivalent
effects.
Section
88.
Mandatory
Provisions.
The
following
provisions
shall
be
included
in
voluntary license contracts:
88.1. That the laws of the Philippines shall
govern the interpretation of the same and in the
event of litigation, the venue shall be the
proper court in the place where the licensee has
its principal office;
88.2.
Continued
access
to
improvements
in
techniques
and
processes
related
to
the
technology shall be made available during the
period of the technology transfer arrangement;
88.3. In the event the technology transfer
arrangement shall provide for arbitration, the
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CHAPTER X
COMPULSORY LICENSING
Section 93. Grounds for Compulsory Licensing. The Director of Legal Affairs may grant a
license to exploit a patented invention, even
without the agreement of the patent owner, in
favor of any person who has shown his capability
to exploit the invention, under any of the
following circumstances:
93.1. National emergency or other circumstances
of extreme urgency;
93.2. Where the public interest, in particular,
national security, nutrition, health or the
development of other vital sectors of the
national
economy
as
determined
by
the
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appropriate
requires; or
agency
of
the
Government,
so
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95.1
national emergency or
extreme urgency, the
notified as soon as
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