Pro Line Sports Center, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
Pro Line Sports Center, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
Pro Line Sports Center, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
Facts:
This petition stemmed from a criminal case for unfair competition filed by Pro
Line Sports Center, Inc. (PRO LINE) and Questor Corporation (QUESTOR)
against Monico Sehwani, president of Universal Athletics and Industrial
Products, Inc. (UNIVERSAL). In that case Sehwani was exonerated. As a
retaliatory move, Sehwani and UNIVERSAL filed a civil case for damages
against PRO LINE and QUESTOR for what they perceived as the wrongful and
malicious filing of the criminal action for unfair competition against them.
The complaint was dropped on 24 June 1981 for the reason that it was
doubtful whether QUESTOR had indeed acquired the registration rights over
the mark „Spalding from A.G. Spalding Bros., Inc., and complainants failed to
adduce an actual receipt for the sale of „Spalding balls by UNIVERSAL.
QUESTOR, a US-based corporation, became the owner of the trademark
„Spalding appearing in sporting goods, implements and apparatuses. Co-
petitioner PRO LINE, a domestic corporation, is the exclusive distributor of
„Spalding sports products in the Philippines.
Issue: (a) whether private respondents Sehwani and UNIVERSAL are entitled
to recover damages for the alleged wrongful recourse to court proceedings
by petitioners PRO LINE and QUESTOR; and, (b) whether petitionersÊ
counterclaim should be sustained
Held: NO
PRO LINE and QUESTOR cannot be adjudged liable for damages for the
alleged unfounded suit. The complainants were unable to prove two (2)
essential elements of the crime of malicious prosecution, namely,
absence of probable cause and legal malice on the part of petitioners.
The intent on the part of Universal Sports to deceive the public and to
defraud a competitor by the use of the trademark „Spalding‰ on
basketballs and volleyballs seems apparent. The existence of
probable cause for unfair competition by UNIVERSAL is derivable
from the facts and circumstances of the case.
Petitioners PRO LINE and QUESTOR could not have been moved by legal
malice in instituting the criminal complaint for unfair competition which led to
the filing of the Information against Sehwani.
The criminal complaint for unfair competition, including all other legal
remedies incidental thereto, was initiated by petitioners in their honest belief
that the charge was meritorious. For indeed it was. The law brands business
practices which are unfair, unjust or deceitful not only as contrary to public
policy but also as inimical to private interests.
In the instant case, we find quite aberrant SehwaniÊs reason for the
manufacture of 1,200 „Spalding‰ balls, i.e., the pending application for
trademark registration of UNIVERSAL with the Patent Office, when viewed in
the light of his admission that the application for registration with the Patent
Office was filed on 20 February 1981, a good nine (9) days after the goods
were confiscated by the NBI. This apparently was an afterthought but
nonetheless too late a remedy.
projected sale would have pushed through were it not for the timely seizure
of the goods made by the NBI. That there was intent to sell or distribute the
product to the public cannot also be disputed given the number of goods
manufactured and the nature of the machinery and other equipment installed
in the factory.