[G.R. No. 113388.
September 5, 1997.]
ANGELITA MANZANO, petitioner, vs. COURT
OF APPEALS, and MELECIA MADOLARIA, as Assignor to NEW UNITED FOUNDRY
D E C I S I O N
The primary
purpose of the patent system is not the reward of the individual but the
advancement of the arts and sciences. The function of a patent is to add to the
sum of useful knowledge and one of the purposes of the patent system is to
encourage dissemination of information concerning discoveries and inventions.
This is a matter which is properly within the competence of the Patent Office,
the official action of which has the presumption of correctness and may not be
interfered with in the absence of new evidence carrying thorough conviction
that the Office has erred. Since the Patent Office is an expert body
preeminently qualified to determine questions of patentability, its findings
must be accepted if they are consistent with the evidence, with doubts as to
patentability resolved in favor of the Patent Office.
Petitioner
Angelita Manzano filed with the Philippine Patent Office on 19 February 1982 an
action for the cancellation of Letters Patent No. UM-4609 for a gas burner
registered in the name of respondent Melecia Madolaria who subsequently
assigned the letters patent to New United Foundry and *Manufacturing
Corporation (UNITED FOUNDRY, for brevity). Petitioner alleged that (a) the
utility model covered by the letters patent, in this case, an LPG gas burner,
was not inventive, new or useful; (b) the specification of the letters patent
did not comply with the requirements of Sec.
14, RA No. 165, as amended; (c) respondent Melecia Madolaria was not the
original, true and actual inventor nor did she derive her rights from the
original, true and actual inventor of the utility model covered by the letters
patent; and, (d) the letters patent was secured by means of fraud or
misrepresentation. In support of her petition for cancellation petitioner
further alleged that (a) the utility model covered by the letters patent of
respondent had been known or used by others in the Philippines for more than
one (1) year before she filed her application for letters patent on 9 December
1979; (b) the products which were produced in accordance with the utility model
covered by the letters patent had been in public use or on sale in the
Philippines for more than one (1) year before the application for patent
therefor was filed.
Petitioner
presented the following documents which she correspondingly marked as exhibits:
(a) affidavit of petitioner alleging the existence of prior art, marked Exh.
"A;" (b) a brochure distributed by Manila Gas Corporation disclosing
a pictorial representation of Ransome Burner made by Ransome Torch and Burner
Company, USA, marked Exh. "D;" and, (c) a brochure distributed by
Esso Gasul or Esso Standard Eastern, Inc., of the Philippines showing a picture
of another similar burner with top elevation view and another perspective view
of the same burner, marked Exh. "E."
Testifying for
herself petitioner narrated that her husband Ong Bun Tua worked as a helper in
the UNITED FOUNDRY where respondent Melecia Madolaria used to be affiliated
with from 1965 to 1970; that Ong helped in the casting of an LPG burner which
was the same utility model of a burner for which Letters Patent No. UM-4609 was
issued, and that after her husband's separation from the shop she organized
Besco Metal Manufacturing (BESCO METAL, for brevity) for the casting of LPG
burners one of which had the configuration, form and component parts similar to
those being manufactured by UNITED FOUNDRY. Petitioner presented in evidence an
alleged model of an LPG burner marked Exh. "K" and covered by the
Letters Patent of respondent, and testified that it was given to her in January
1982 by one of her customers who allegedly acquired it from UNITED FOUNDRY.
Petitioner also presented in evidence her own model of an LPG burner called
"Ransome" burner marked Exh. "L," which was allegedly
manufactured in 1974 or 1975 and sold by her in the course of her business
operation in the name of BESCO METAL. Petitioner claimed that this
"Ransome" burner (Exh. "L") had the same configuration and
mechanism as that of the model which was patented in favor of private
respondent Melecia Madolaria. Also presented by petitioner was a burner cup of
an imported "Ransome" burner marked Exh "M" which was
allegedly existing even before the patent application of private respondent.
Petitioner
presented two (2) other witnesses, namely, her husband Ong Bun Tua and Fidel
Francisco. Ong testified that he worked as a helper in the UNITED FOUNDRY from
1965 to 1970 where he helped in the casting of LPG burners with the same form,
configuration and mechanism as that of the model covered by the Letters Patent
issued to private respondent. Francisco testified that he had been employed
with the Manila Gas Corporation from 1930 to 1941 and from 1952 up to 1969
where he retired as supervisor and that Manila Gas Corporation imported
"Ransome" burners way back in 1965 which were advertised through
brochures to promote their sale.
Private
respondent, on the other hand, presented only one witness, Rolando Madolaria,
who testified, among others, that he was the General Supervisor of the UNITED
FOUNDRY in the foundry, machine and buffing section; that in his early years
with the company, UNITED FOUNDRY was engaged in the manufacture of different
kinds of gas stoves as well as burners based on sketches and specifications
furnished by customers; that the company manufactured early models of
single-piece types of burners where the mouth and throat were not detachable;
that in the latter part of 1978 respondent Melecia Madolaria confided in him
that complaints were being brought to her attention concerning the early models
being manufactured; that he was then instructed by private respondent to cast
several experimental models based on revised sketches and specifications; that
private respondent again made some innovations; that after a few months,
private respondent discovered the solution to all the defects of the earlier
models and, based on her latest sketches and specifications, he was able to
cast several models incorporating the additions to the innovations introduced
in the models. Various tests were conducted on the latest model in the presence
and under the supervision of Melecia Madolaria and they obtained perfect
results. Rolando Madolaria testified that private respondent decided to file
her application for utility model patent in December 1979.
On 7 July 1986
the Director of Patents Cesar C. Sandiego issued Decision No. 86-56 denying the
petition for cancellation and holding that the evidence of petitioner was not
able to establish convincingly that the patented utility model of private
respondent was anticipated. Not one of the various pictorial representations of
business clearly and convincingly showed that the devices presented by
petitioner was identical or substantially identical with the utility model of
the respondent. The decision also stated that even assuming that the brochures
depicted clearly each and every element of the patented gas burner device so
that the prior art and patented device became identical although in truth they
were not, they could not serve as anticipatory bars for the reason that they
were undated. The dates when they were distributed to the public were not
indicated and, therefore, were useless prior art references. The records and
evidence also do not support the petitioner's contention that Letters Patent
No. UM-4609 was obtained by means of fraud and/or misrepresentation. No
evidence whatsoever was presented by petitioner to show that the then applicant
Melecia Madolaria withheld with intent to deceive material facts which, if
disclosed, would have resulted in the refusal by the Philippine Patent Office
to issue the Letters Patent under inquiry.
Petitioner
elevated the decision of the Director of Patents to the Court of Appeals which
on 15 October 1993 affirmed the decision of the Director of Patents. Hence,
this petition for review on certiorari alleging that the Court of Appeals erred
(a) in relying on imaginary differences which in actuality did not exist
between the model of private respondent covered by Letters Patent No. UM-4609
and the previously known model of Esso Standard Eastern, Inc., and Manila Gas
Corporation, making such imaginary differences grounded entirely on
speculation, surmises and conjectures; (b) in rendering judgment based on
misapprehension of facts; (c) in relying mainly on the testimony of private
respondent's sole witness Rolando Madolaria; and, (d) in not cancelling Letters
Patent No. UM-4609 in the name of private respondent.
Petitioner
submits that the differences cited by the Court of Appeals between the utility
model of private respondent and the models of Manila Gas Corporation and Esso
Standard Eastern, Inc., are more imaginary than real. She alleges that based on
Exhs. "E," "E-1," "F" and "F-1" or the
brochures of Manila Gas Corporation and Esso Standard Eastern, Inc., presented
by petitioner, the cup-shaped burner mouth and threaded hole on the side are
shown to be similar to the utility model of private respondent. The exhibits
also show a detachable burner mouth having a plurality of upwardly existing
undulations adopted to act as gas passage when the cover is attached to the top
of said cup-shaped mouth all of which are the same as those in the patented
model. Petitioner also denies as substantial difference the short cylindrical
tube of the burner mouth appearing in the brochures of the burners being sold
by Manila Gas Corporation and the long cylindered tube of private respondent's
model of the gas burner.
Petitioner argues
that the actual demonstration made during the hearing disclosed the
similarities in form, operation and mechanism and parts between the utility
model of private respondent and those depicted in the brochures. The findings
of the Patent Office and the Court of Appeals that the brochures of Manila Gas
Corporation and Esso Standard Eastern, Inc., are undated cannot overcome the
fact of their circulation before private respondent filed her application for
utility model patent. Petitioner thus asks this Court to take judicial notice
of the fact that Esso Standard Eastern, Inc., disappeared before 1979 and
reappeared only during the Martial Law years as Petrophil Corporation.
Petitioner also emphasizes that the brochures indicated the telephone number of
Manila Gas Corporation as 5-79-81 which is a five (5) numbered telephone number
existing before 1975 because telephones in Metro Manila started to have six (6)
numbers only after that year.
Petitioner
further contends that the utility model of private respondent is absolutely
similar to the LPG burner being sold by petitioner in 1975 and 1976, and also
to the "Ransome" burner depicted in the old brochures of Manila Gas
Corporation and Esso Standard Eastern, Inc., fabricated by Ransome Torch and
Burner Company of Oakland, California, USA, especially when considered through
actual physical examination, assembly and disassembly of the models of
petitioner and private respondent. Petitioner faults the Court of Appeals for
disregarding the testimonies of Ong Bun Tua and Fidel Francisco for their
failure to produce documents on the alleged importation by Manila Gas
Corporation of "Ransome" burners in 1965 which had the same
configuration, form and mechanism as that of the private respondent's patented
model.
Finally, it is
argued that the testimony of private respondent's lone witness Rolando
Madolaria should not have been given weight by the Patent Office and the Court
of Appeals because it contained mere after-thoughts and pretensions.
We cannot sustain petitioner. Section 7 of RA No. 165, as amended, which is the law on patents,
expressly provides —
Sec. 7. Inventions
patentable. — Any invention of a new and useful
machine, manufactured product or substance, process or an improvement of any of the foregoing, shall be
patentable.
Further, Sec. 55 of
the same law provides —
Sec. 55. Design patents and
patents for utility models. — (a) Any new, original and ornamental design
for an article of manufacture and (b) any new model of implements or tools or of any
industrial product or of part of
the same, which does not possess the quality of
invention, but which is of practical utility by reason
of its form, configuration, construction or
composition, may be protected by the author thereof, the former by a patent for
a design and the latter by a patent for a utility model, in the same manner and
subject to the same provisions and requirements as relate to patents for
inventions insofar as they are applicable except as otherwise herein provided.
The element of novelty
is an essential requisite of the patentability of an invention or discovery. If a device or process has
been known or used by others prior to its invention or discovery by the
applicant, an application for a patent therefor should be denied; and if the
application has been granted, the court, in a judicial
proceeding in which the validity of the patent is
drawn in question, will hold it void and ineffective. It has been repeatedly
held that an invention must possess the essential elements of
novelty, originality and precedence, and for the patentee to be entitled to the
protection the invention must be new to the world.
In issuing Letters Patent No. UM-4609 to
Melecia Madolaria for an "LPG Burner" on 22 July 1981, the Philippine
Patent Office found her invention novel and patentable. The issuance of such patent creates a presumption which yields only to
clear and cogent evidence that the patentee was the original and first
inventor. The burden of proving want of novelty is on him who avers it and the burden is a heavy
one which is met only by clear and satisfactory proof which overcomes every
reasonable doubt. Hence, a utility model shall not be considered
"new" if before the application for a patent it has been publicly
known or publicly used in this country or has been described in a printed
publication or publications circulated within the country, or if it is
substantially similar to any other utility model so known, used or described
within the country.
As found by the Director of
Patents, the standard of evidence sufficient to
overcome the presumption of legality of the issuance of UM-4609 to
respondent Madolaria was not legally met by petitioner in her action for the
cancellation of the patent. Thus the Director of Patents explained his reasons for the denial of the petition to cancel private respondent's patent —
Scrutiny of Exhs. "D" and
"E" readily reveals that the utility model (LPG Burner) is not
anticipated. Not one of the various pictorial
representations of burners clearly and convincingly
show that the device presented therein is identical or substantially identical
in construction with the aforesaid utility model. It is relevant and material
to state that in determining whether novelty or newness is negatived by any
prior art, only one item of the prior art may be used
at a time. For anticipation to occur, the prior art must show that each element
is found either expressly or described or under principles of
inherency in a single prior art reference or that the claimed invention was
probably known in a single prior art device or practice. (Kalman v. Kimberly Clark, 218 USPQ 781, 789)
Even assuming gratia arguendi that the aforesaid brochures
do depict clearly on all fours each and every element of
the patented gas burner device so that the prior art and the said patented
device become identical, although in truth they are not, they cannot serve as
anticipatory bars for the reason that they are undated. The dates when they
were distributed to the public were not indicated and, therefore, they are
useless prior art references.
xxx xxx xxx
Furthermore, and more significantly, the model marked Exh.
"K" does not show whether or not it was manufactured and/or cast
before the application for the issuance of patent for
the LPG burner was filed by Melecia Madolaria.
With respect to Exh. "L," petitioner claimed it to be
her own model of LPG burner allegedly manufactured
sometime in 1974 or 1975 and sold by her in the course of
her business operation in the name of Besco Metal
Manufacturing, which burner was denominated as "Ransome" burner.
xxx xxx xxx
But a careful examination of Exh.
"L" would show that it does not bear the word "Ransome"
which is the burner referred to as the product being sold by the Petitioner.
This is not the way to prove that Exh. "L" anticipates Letters Patent
No. UM-4609 through Exhs. "C" and "D." Another factor
working against the Petitioner's claims is that an examination of Exh. "L" would disclose that there is no
indication of the time or date it was manufactured.
This Office, thus has no way of determining whether
Exh. "L" was really manufactured before the filing of
the aforesaid application which matured into Letters Patent No. UM-4609,
subject matter of the cancellation proceeding.
At this juncture, it is worthwhile to point out that petitioner
also presented Exh. "M" which is the alleged burner cup of an imported "Ransome" burner. Again, this
Office finds the same as unreliable evidence to show anticipation. It observed
that there is no date indicated therein as to when it was manufactured and/or
imported before the filing of the application for
issuance of patent of the
subject utility model. What is more, some component parts of
Exh. "M" are missing, as only the cup was presented so that the same
could not be compared to the utility model (subject matter of
this case) which consists of several other detachable
parts in combination to form the complete LPG burner.
xxx xxx xxx
It must likewise be pointed out that Ong Bun Tua testified on the
brochures allegedly of Manila Gas and of Esso Gasul marked Exhs. "E" and "F"
and on the alleged fact that Manila Gas Corporation was importing from the
United States "Ransome" burners. But the same could not be given
credence since he himself admitted during cross-examination that he has never
been connected with Manila Gas Corporation. He could not even present any
importation papers relating to the alleged imported ransome burners. Neither did
his wife.
The above findings and conclusions of the Director of Patent were
reiterated and affirmed by the Court of Appeals.
The validity of the
patent issued by the Philippine Patent Office in favor of
private respondent and the question over the inventiveness, novelty and
usefulness of the improved model of
the LPG burner are matters which are better determined by the Patent Office.
The technical staff of the Philippine Patent Office
composed of experts in their field has by the issuance
of the patent in question accepted private
respondent's model of gas burner as a discovery. There
is a presumption that the Office has correctly determined the patentability of the model and such action must not be interfered with in
the absence of competent evidence to the contrary.
The rule is settled that the findings of fact of the Director of Patents, especially when affirmed by the Court of Appeals,
are conclusive on this Court when supported by
substantial evidence. Petitioner has failed to show compelling grounds for a
reversal of the findings and conclusions of the Patent Office and the Court of Appeals.
The alleged failure of
the Director of Patents and the Court
of Appeals to accord
evidentiary weight to the testimonies of the witnesses
of petitioner showing anticipation is not a
justification to grant the petition. Pursuant to the requirement of clear and convincing evidence to overthrow the
presumption of validity of a
patent, it has been held that oral testimony to show anticipation is open to
suspicion and if uncorroborated by cogent evidence, as what occurred in this
case, it may be held insufficient.
Finally, petitioner would want this Court to review all over again the evidence she presented
before the Patent Office. She argues that contrary to the decision of the Patent Office and the Court of Appeals, the evidence she
presented clearly proves that the patented model of
private respondent is no longer new and, therefore, fraud attended the
acquisition of patent by private respondent.
It has been held that the question on priority of invention is one of fact.
Novelty and utility are likewise questions of fact.
The validity of patent is decided on the basis of factual inquiries. Whether evidence presented comes
within the scope of prior art is a factual issue to be
resolved by the Patent Office. There is question of
fact when the doubt or difference arises as to the truth or falsehood of alleged facts or when the query necessarily invites
calibration of the whole evidence considering mainly
the credibility of witnesses, existence and relevance of specific surrounding circumstances, their relation to
each other and to the whole and the probabilities of
the situation.il
Time and again we have held that it is not the
function of the Supreme Court
to analyze or weigh all over again the evidence and credibility of witnesses presented before the lower tribunal or office.
The Supreme Court is not a trier of
facts. Its jurisdiction is limited to reviewing and revising errors of law imputed to the lower court,
its findings of fact being conclusive and not
reviewable by this Court.
WHEREFORE, the Petition is DENIED. The Decision
of the Court of Appeals affirming that of the Philippine Patent Office is AFFIRMED. Costs against
petitioner.
SO ORDERED.