Conrad Vs CA
Conrad Vs CA
Conrad Vs CA
All actions under Sections 150, 155, 164, and 166 to 169 shall be brought before the proper courts with appropriate jurisdiction under existing laws. (Sec. 27, R.A. No. 166) Facts: CONRAD AND COMPANY [petitioner here] is also engaged in the business of importing, selling and distributing biscuits and cookies in the Philippines under exclusive distributorship by Sunshine Biscuits, USA. FITRITE, INC. and VICTORIA BISCUIT CO., INC. [private respondents here], both domestic corporations, are engaged in the business of manufacturing, selling and distributing biscuits and cookies bearing the trademark "SUNSHINE" in the Philippines. The defendants have the registered trademark for Sunshine..however, it was subsequently discovered that CONRAD had been importing, selling and distributing biscuits and cookies, and other food items bearing this trademark in the Philippines. Sometime in April 1982, FITRITE filed in the Bureau of Patents, Trademarks and Technology Transfer (hereto referred as BPTTT) applications for registration of the trademark "SUNSHINE," both in the Supplemental and Principal Registers, to be used on biscuits and cookies. FITRITE's application for this trademark in the Supplemental Register was approved by the BPTTT. , FITRITE assigned its trademark "SUNSHINE AND DEVICE LABEL," together with its interest and business goodwill to said VICTORIA BISCUIT. Then sometime in June 1990, through the affidavit executed on May 30, 1990 by CONRAD's own Import Manager and Executive Assistant by the name of Raul Olaya, plaintiffs succeeded in tracing and discovered that CONRAD had been importing, selling and distributing biscuits and cookies, and other food items bearing this trademark in the Philippines. Issue: whether or not the Court of Appeals committed reversible error (1) in allowing the trial court to proceed with the case for "injunction with damages" filed by private respondents notwithstanding the pendency of an administrative case for the cancellation of the former's trademark filed by supposedly "petitioner's principal" with the Bureau of Patents, Trademarks and Technology Transfer ("BPTTT"); Held: No. While an application for the administrative cancellation of a registered trademark on any of the grounds enumerated in Section 17 of Republic Act No. 166, as amended, otherwise known as the Trade-Mark Law, falls under the exclusive cognizance of BPTTT (Sec. 19, Trade-Mark Law), an action, however, for infringement or unfair competition, as well as the remedy of injunction and
relief for damages, is explicitly and unquestionably within the competence and jurisdiction of ordinary courts. registration in the Principal Register gives rise to a presumption of validity of the registration and of the registrant's ownership and right to the exclusive use of the mark. It is precisely such a registration that can serve as the basis for an action for infringement. An invasion of this right entitles the registrant to court protection and relief. Surely, an application with BPTTT for an administrative cancellation of a registered trade mark cannot per se have the effect of restraining or preventing the courts from the exercise of their lawfully conferred jurisdiction. This rule, evidently, did not escape the appellate court for it likewise decreed that for "good cause shown, the lower court, in its sound discretion, may suspend the action pending outcome of the cancellation proceedings" before BPTTT.