[G.R. No. 172835. December 13, 2007.]
AIR PHILIPPINES CORPORATION, petitioner,
vs. PENNSWELL, INC., respondent.
D E C I S I O N
Petitioner Air Philippines Corporation seeks, via the instant
Petition for Review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, the nullification of
the 16 February 2006 Decision and the 25 May 2006 Resolution of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 86329, which affirmed the Order dated 30 June 2004 of
the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Makati City, Branch 64, in Civil Case No.
00-561.
Petitioner Air Philippines Corporation is a domestic corporation
engaged in the business of air transportation services. On the other hand,
respondent Pennswell, Inc. was organized to engage in the business of
manufacturing and selling industrial chemicals, solvents, and special
lubricants.
On various dates, respondent delivered and sold to petitioner
sundry goods in trade, covered by Sales Invoices No. 8846, 9105, 8962, and
8963, which correspond to Purchase Orders No. 6433, 6684, 6634 and 6633,
respectively. Under the contracts, petitioner's total outstanding obligation
amounted to P449,864.98 with interest at 14% per annum until the amount would
be fully paid. For failure of the petitioner to comply with its obligation
under said contracts, respondent filed a Complaint for a Sum of Money on 28
April 2000 with the RTC.
In its Answer, petitioner contended that its refusal to pay was not without valid and justifiable reasons. In particular, petitioner alleged that it was defrauded in the amount of P592,000.00 by respondent for its previous sale of four items, covered by Purchase Order No. 6626. Said items were misrepresented by respondent as belonging to a new line, but were in truth and in fact, identical with products petitioner had previously purchased from respondent. Petitioner asserted that it was deceived by respondent which merely altered the names and labels of such goods. Petitioner specifically identified the items in question, as follows:
|
|
Label/Description |
Item No. |
Amount |
P.O. |
Date |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1. |
a. |
Anti-Friction Fluid |
MPL-800 |
153,941.40 |
5714 |
05/20/99 |
|
|
|
MPL-008 |
155,496.00 |
5888 |
06/20/99 |
|
b. |
Excellent Rust |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Corrosion (fake) |
|
|
|
|
2. |
a. |
Contact Grease |
COG #2 |
115,236.00 |
5540 |
04/26/99 |
|
b. |
Connector Grease (fake) |
CG |
230,519.52 |
6327 |
08/05/99 |
3. |
a. |
Trixohtropic Grease |
EPC |
81,876.96 |
4582 |
01/29/99 |
|
b. |
Di-Electric Strength |
EPC#2 |
81,876.96 |
5446 |
04/21/99 |
|
|
Protective Coating (fake) |
|
|
|
|
4. |
a. |
Dry Lubricant |
ASC-EP |
87,346.52 |
5712 |
05/20/99 |
|
b. |
Anti-Seize Compound |
ASC-EP |
124,108.10 |
4763 & |
02/16/99 & |
|
|
(fake) |
2000 |
|
5890 |
06/24/99 |
According to petitioner, respondent's products, namely Excellent
Rust Corrosion, Connector Grease, Electric Strength Protective Coating, and
Anti-Seize Compound, are identical with its Anti-Friction Fluid, Contact
Grease, Thixohtropic Grease, and Dry Lubricant, respectively. Petitioner
asseverated that had respondent been forthright about the identical character
of the products, it would not have purchased the items complained of. Moreover,
petitioner alleged that when the purported fraud was discovered, a conference
was held between petitioner and respondent on 13 January 2000, whereby the
parties agreed that respondent would return to petitioner the amount it
previously paid. However, petitioner was surprised when it received a letter
from the respondent, KKIJ demanding payment of the amount of P449,864.94, which
later became the subject of respondent's Complaint for Collection of a Sum of
Money against petitioner.
During the pendency of the trial, petitioner filed a Motion to
Compel respondent to give a detailed list of the ingredients and chemical
components of the following products, to wit: (a) Contact Grease and Connector
Grease; (b) Thixohtropic Grease and Di-Electric Strength Protective Coating;
and (c) Dry Lubricant and Anti-Seize Compound. It appears that petitioner had
earlier requested the Philippine Institute of Pure and Applied Chemistry
(PIPAC) for the latter to conduct a comparison of respondent's goods.
On 15 March 2004, the RTC rendered an Order granting the
petitioner's motion. It disposed, thus:
The Court directs [herein respondent]
Pennswell, Inc. to give [herein petitioner] Air Philippines Corporation[,] a
detailed list of the ingredients or chemical components of the following
chemical products:
a. Contact Grease to be compared with
Connector Grease;
b. Thixohtropic Grease to be compared with
Di-Electric Strength Protective Coating; and
c. Dry Lubricant to be compared with
Anti-Seize Compound[.]
[Respondent] Pennswell, Inc. is given fifteen
(15) days from receipt of this Order to submit to [petitioner] Air Philippines
Corporation the chemical components of all the above-mentioned products for
chemical comparison/analysis.
Respondent sought reconsideration of the foregoing Order,
contending that it cannot be compelled to disclose the chemical components
sought because the matter is confidential. It argued that what petitioner
endeavored to inquire upon constituted a trade secret which respondent cannot
be forced to divulge. Respondent maintained that its products are specialized
lubricants, and if their components were revealed, its business competitors may
easily imitate and market the same types of products, in violation of its
proprietary rights and to its serious damage and prejudice.
The RTC gave credence to respondent's reasoning, and reversed
itself. It issued an Order dated 30 June 2004, finding that the chemical
components are respondent's trade secrets and are privileged in character. A
priori, it rationalized:
The Supreme Court held in the case of Chavez
vs. Presidential Commission on Good Government, 299 SCRA 744, p. 764, that
"the drafters of the Constitution also unequivocally affirmed that aside
from national security matters and intelligence information, trade or
industrial secrets (pursuant to the Intellectual Property Code and other related
laws) as well as banking transactions (pursuant to the Secrecy of Bank Deposit
Act) are also exempted from compulsory disclosure."
Trade secrets may not be the subject of
compulsory disclosure. By reason of [their] confidential and privileged
character, ingredients or chemical components of the products ordered by this
Court to be disclosed constitute trade secrets lest [herein respondent] would
eventually be exposed to unwarranted business competition with others who may
imitate and market the same kinds of products in violation of [respondent's]
proprietary rights. Being privileged, the detailed list of ingredients or
chemical components may not be the subject of mode of discovery under Rule 27,
Section 1 of the Rules of Court, which expressly makes privileged information
an exception from its coverage.
Alleging grave abuse of discretion on the part of the RTC,
petitioner filed a Petition for Certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules
of Court with the Court of Appeals, which denied the Petition and affirmed
the Order dated 30 June 2004 of the RTC.
The Court of Appeals ruled that to compel respondent to reveal in
detail the list of ingredients of its lubricants is to disregard respondent's
rights over its trade secrets. It was categorical in declaring that the
chemical formulation of respondent's products and their ingredients are
embraced within the meaning of "trade secrets." In disallowing the
disclosure, the Court of Appeals expounded, thus:
The Supreme Court in Garcia v. Board of
Investments (177 SCRA 374 [1989]) held that trade secrets and confidential,
commercial and financial information are exempt from public scrutiny. This is
reiterated in Chavez v. Presidential Commission on Good Government
(299 SCRA 744 [1998]) where the Supreme Court enumerated the kinds of
information and transactions that are recognized as restrictions on or
privileges against compulsory disclosure. There, the Supreme Court explicitly
stated that:
"The drafters of the Constitution also
unequivocally affirmed that, aside from national security matters and
intelligence information, trade or industrial secrets (pursuant to the
Intellectual Property Code and other related laws) as well as banking
transactions (pursuant to the Secrecy of Bank Deposits Act) are also exempt
from compulsory disclosure."
It is thus clear from the foregoing that a
party cannot be compelled to produce, release or disclose documents, papers, or
any object which are considered trade secrets.
In the instant case, petitioner [Air
Philippines Corporation] would have [respondent] Pennswell produce a detailed
list of ingredients or composition of the latter's lubricant products so that a
chemical comparison and analysis thereof can be obtained. On this note, We
believe and so hold that the ingredients or composition of [respondent]
Pennswell's lubricants are trade secrets which it cannot be compelled to
disclose.
[Respondent] Pennswell has a proprietary or
economic right over the ingredients or components of its lubricant products.
The formulation thereof is not known to the general public and is peculiar only
to [respondent] Pennswell. The legitimate and economic interests of business
enterprises in protecting their manufacturing and business secrets are
well-recognized in our system.
[Respondent] Pennswell has a right to guard its
trade secrets, manufacturing formulas, marketing strategies and other
confidential programs and information against the public. Otherwise, such
information can be illegally and unfairly utilized by business competitors who,
through their access to [respondent] Pennswell's business secrets, may use the
same for their own private gain and to the irreparable prejudice of the latter.
xxx xxx xxx
In the case before Us, the alleged trade
secrets have a factual basis, i.e., it comprises of the ingredients and
formulation of [respondent] Pennswell's lubricant products which are unknown to
the public and peculiar only to Pennswell.
All told, We find no grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the part of public respondent
Judge in finding that the detailed list of ingredients or composition of the
subject lubricant products which petitioner [Air Philippines Corporation] seeks
to be disclosed are trade secrets of [respondent] Pennswell; hence, privileged
against compulsory disclosure.
Petitioner's Motion for Reconsideration was denied.
Unyielding, petitioner brought the instant Petition before us, on
the sole issue of:
WHETHER THE COURT OF APPEALS RULED IN
ACCORDANCE WITH PREVAILING LAWS AND JURISPRUDENCE WHEN IT UPHELD THE RULING OF
THE TRIAL COURT THAT THE CHEMICAL COMPONENTS OR INGREDIENTS OF RESPONDENT'S
PRODUCTS ARE TRADE SECRETS OR INDUSTRIAL SECRETS THAT ARE NOT SUBJECT TO
COMPULSORY DISCLOSURE.
Petitioner seeks to convince this Court that it has a right to
obtain the chemical composition and ingredients of respondent's products to
conduct a comparative analysis of its products. Petitioner assails the
conclusion reached by the Court of Appeals that the matters are trade secrets
which are protected by law and beyond public scrutiny. Relying on Section 1,
Rule 27 of the Rules of Court, petitioner argues that the use of modes of
discovery operates with desirable flexibility under the discretionary control
of the trial court. Furthermore, petitioner posits that its request is not done
in bad faith or in any manner as to annoy, embarrass, or oppress respondent.
A trade secret is defined as a plan or process, tool, mechanism or
compound known only to its owner and those of his employees to whom it is
necessary to confide it. The definition also extends to a secret formula or
process not patented, but known only to certain individuals using it in
compounding some article of trade having a commercial value. A trade secret may
consist of any formula, pattern, device, or compilation of information that:
(1) is used in one's business; and (2) gives the employer an opportunity to
obtain an advantage over competitors who do not possess the information.
Generally, a trade secret is a process or device intended for continuous use in
the operation of the business, for example, a machine or formula, but can be a
price list or catalogue or specialized customer list. It is indubitable that
trade secrets constitute proprietary rights. The inventor, discoverer, or
possessor of a trade secret or similar innovation has rights therein which may
be treated as property, and ordinarily an injunction will be granted to prevent
the disclosure of the trade secret by one who obtained the information "in
confidence" or through a "confidential relationship." American
jurisprudence has utilized the following factors to determine if an information
is a trade secret, to wit:
(1) the extent to which the information is
known outside of the employer's business;
(2) the extent to which the information is
known by employees and others involved in the business;
(3) the extent of measures taken by the
employer to guard the secrecy of the information;
(4) the value of the information to the
employer and to competitors;
(5) the amount of effort or money expended
by the company in developing the information; and
(6) the extent to which the information
could be easily or readily obtained through an independent source.
In Cocoland Development Corporation v. National Labor
Relations Commission, the issue was the legality of an employee's
termination on the ground of unauthorized disclosure of trade secrets. The
Court laid down the rule that any determination by management as to the
confidential nature of technologies, processes, formulae or other so-called
trade secrets must have a substantial factual basis which can pass judicial
scrutiny. The Court rejected the employer's naked contention that its own
determination as to what constitutes a trade secret should be binding and
conclusive upon the NLRC. As a caveat, the Court said that to rule otherwise
would be to permit an employer to label almost anything a trade secret, and
thereby create a weapon with which he/it may arbitrarily dismiss an employee on
the pretext that the latter somehow disclosed a trade secret, even if in fact
there be none at all to speak of. Hence, in Cocoland, the parameters in
the determination of trade secrets were set to be such substantial factual
basis that can withstand judicial scrutiny.
The chemical composition, formulation, and ingredients of
respondent's special lubricants are trade secrets within the contemplation of
the law. Respondent was established to engage in the business of general
manufacturing and selling of, and to deal in, distribute, sell or otherwise
dispose of goods, wares, merchandise, products, including but not limited to
industrial chemicals, solvents, lubricants, acids, alkalies, salts, paints,
oils, varnishes, colors, pigments and similar preparations, among others. It is
unmistakable to our minds that the manufacture and production of respondent's
products proceed from a formulation of a secret list of ingredients. In the
creation of its lubricants, respondent expended efforts, skills, research, and
resources. What it had achieved by virtue of its investments may not be wrested
from respondent on the mere pretext that it is necessary for petitioner's
defense against a collection for a sum of money. By and large, the value of the
information to respondent is crystal clear. The ingredients constitute the very
fabric of respondent's production and business. No doubt, the information is
also valuable to respondent's competitors. To compel its disclosure is to
cripple respondent's business, and to place it at an undue disadvantage. If the
chemical composition of respondent's lubricants are opened to public scrutiny,
it will stand to lose the backbone on which its business is founded. This would
result in nothing less than the probable demise of respondent's business. Respondent's
proprietary interest over the ingredients which it had developed and expended
money and effort on is incontrovertible. Our conclusion is that the detailed
ingredients sought to be revealed have a commercial value to respondent. Not
only do we acknowledge the fact that the information grants it a competitive
advantage; we also find that there is clearly a glaring intent on the part of
respondent to keep the information confidential and not available to the prying
public.
We now take a look at Section 1, Rule 27 of the Rules of Court,
which permits parties to inspect documents or things upon a showing of good
cause before the court in which an action is pending. Its entire provision
reads:
SECTION 1. Motion for production or
inspection order. — Upon motion of any party showing good cause therefore,
the court in which an action is pending may (a) order any party to produce and
permit the inspection and copying or photographing, by or on behalf of the
moving party, of any designated documents, papers, books, accounts, letters,
photographs, objects or tangible things, not privileged, which constitute or
contain evidence material to any matter involved in the action and which are in
his possession, custody or control; or (b) order any party to permit entry upon
designated land or other property in his possession or control for the purpose
of inspecting, measuring, surveying, or photographing the property or any
designated relevant object or operation thereon. The order shall specify the
time, place and manner of making the inspection and taking copies and
photographs, and may prescribe such terms and conditions as are just.
A more than cursory glance at the above text would show that the
production or inspection of documents or things as a mode of discovery
sanctioned by the Rules of Court may be availed of by any party upon a
showing of good cause therefor before the court in which an action is pending.
The court may order any party: a) to produce and permit the inspection and
copying or photographing of any designated documents, papers, books, accounts,
letters, photographs, objects or tangible things, which are not privileged;
which constitute or contain evidence material to any matter involved in the
action; and which are in his possession, custody or control; or b) to permit
entry upon designated land or other property in his possession or control for
the purpose of inspecting, measuring, surveying, or photographing the property
or any designated relevant object or operation thereon.
Rule 27 sets an unequivocal proviso that the documents, papers,
books, accounts, letters, photographs, objects or tangible things that may be
produced and inspected should not be privileged. The documents must not
be privileged against disclosure. On the ground of public policy, the rules
providing for production and inspection of books and papers do not authorize
the production or inspection of privileged matter; that is, books and papers
which, because of their confidential and privileged character, could not be
received in evidence. Such a condition is in addition to the requisite that the
items be specifically described, and must constitute or contain evidence
material to any matter involved in the action and which are in the party's
possession, custody or control.
Section 24 of Rule 130 draws the types of disqualification by
reason of privileged communication, to wit: (a) communication between husband
and wife; (b) communication between attorney and client; (c) communication
between physician and patient; (d) communication between priest and penitent;
and (e) public officers and public interest. There are, however, other
privileged matters that are not mentioned by Rule 130. Among them are the
following: (a) editors may not be compelled to disclose the source of published
news; (b) voters may not be compelled to disclose for whom they voted; (c) trade
secrets; (d) information contained in tax census returns; and (d) bank
deposits.
We, thus, rule against the petitioner. We affirm the ruling of the
Court of Appeals which upheld the finding of the RTC that there is substantial
basis for respondent to seek protection of the law for its proprietary rights
over the detailed chemical composition of its products
That trade secrets are of a privileged nature is beyond quibble.
The protection that this jurisdiction affords to trade secrets is evident in
our laws. The Interim Rules of Procedure on Government Rehabilitation,
effective 15 December 2000, which applies to: (1) petitions for rehabilitation
filed by corporations, partnerships, and associations pursuant to Presidential
Decree No. 902-A, 31 as amended; and (2) cases
for rehabilitation transferred from the Securities and Exchange Commission to
the RTCs pursuant to Republic Act No. 8799, otherwise known as The
Securities Regulation Code, expressly provides that the court may issue an
order to protect trade secrets or other confidential research, development,
or commercial information belonging to the debtor. Moreover, the
Securities Regulation Code is explicit that the Securities and Exchange
Commission is not required or authorized to require the revelation of trade secrets
or processes in any application, report or document filed with the Commission.
This confidentiality is made paramount as a limitation to the right of any
member of the general public, upon request, to have access to all information
filed with the Commission.
Furthermore, the Revised Penal Code endows a cloak of protection to trade secrets
under the following articles:
Art. 291. Revealing secrets with abuse
of office. — The penalty of arresto mayor and a fine not exceeding
500 pesos shall be imposed upon any manager, employee or servant who, in such
capacity, shall learn the secrets of his principal or master and shall
reveal such secrets.
Art. 292. Revelation of industrial
secrets. — The penalty of prision correccional in its minimum and
medium periods and a fine not exceeding 500 pesos shall be imposed upon the
person in charge, employee or workman of any manufacturing or industrial
establishment who, to the prejudice of the owner thereof, shall reveal the
secrets of the industry of the latter.
Similarly, Republic Act No. 8424, otherwise known as the
National Internal Revenue Code of 1997, has a restrictive provision on
trade secrets, penalizing the revelation thereof by internal revenue officers
or employees, to wit:
SECTION 278. Procuring Unlawful
Divulgence of Trade Secrets. — Any person who causes or procures an officer
or employee of the Bureau of Internal Revenue to divulge any confidential
information regarding the business, income or inheritance of any taxpayer,
knowledge of which was acquired by him in the discharge of his official duties,
and which it is unlawful for him to reveal, and any person who publishes or
prints in any manner whatever, not provided by law, any income, profit, loss or
expenditure appearing in any income tax return, shall be punished by a fine of
not more than two thousand pesos (P2,000), or suffer imprisonment of not less
than six (6) months nor more than five (5) years, or both.
Republic Act No. 6969, or the Toxic
Substances and Hazardous and Nuclear Wastes Control Act of 1990, enacted to
implement the policy of the state to regulate, restrict or prohibit the
importation, manufacture, processing, sale, distribution, use and disposal of
chemical substances and mixtures that present unreasonable risk and/or injury
to health or the environment, also contains a provision that limits the
right of the public to have access to records, reports or information
concerning chemical substances and mixtures including safety data submitted and
data on emission or discharge into the environment, if the matter is
confidential such that it would divulge trade secrets, production or sales
figures; or methods, production or processes unique to such manufacturer,
processor or distributor; or would otherwise tend to affect adversely the
competitive position of such manufacturer, processor or distributor. ICc
Clearly, in accordance with our statutory laws, this Court has
declared that intellectual and industrial property rights cases are not simple
property cases. Without limiting such industrial property rights to trademarks
and trade names, this Court has ruled that all agreements concerning
intellectual property are intimately connected with economic development. The
protection of industrial property encourages investments in new ideas and
inventions and stimulates creative efforts for the satisfaction of human needs.
It speeds up transfer of technology and industrialization, and thereby bring
about social and economic progress. Verily, the protection of industrial
secrets is inextricably linked to the advancement of our economy and fosters
healthy competition in trade.
Jurisprudence has consistently acknowledged the private character
of trade secrets. There is a privilege not to disclose one's trade secrets.
Foremost, this Court has declared that trade secrets and banking transactions
are among the recognized restrictions to the right of the people to information
as embodied in the Constitution. We said that the drafters of the Constitution
also unequivocally affirmed that, aside from national security matters and
intelligence information, trade or industrial secrets (pursuant to the
Intellectual Property Code and other related laws) as well as banking
transactions (pursuant to the Secrecy of Bank Deposits Act), are also exempted
from compulsory disclosure.
Significantly, our cases on labor are replete with examples of a protectionist stance towards the trade secrets of employers. For instance, this Court upheld the validity of the policy of a pharmaceutical company prohibiting its employees from marrying employees of any competitor company, on the rationalization that the company has a right to guard its trade secrets, manufacturing formulas, marketing strategies and other confidential programs and information from competitors. Notably, it was in a labor-related case that this Court made a stark ruling on the proper determination of trade secrets.
In the case at bar, petitioner cannot rely on Section 77 of Republic
Act 7394, or the Consumer Act of the Philippines, in order to compel
respondent to reveal the chemical components of its products. While it is true
that all consumer products domestically sold, whether manufactured locally or
imported, shall indicate their general make or active ingredients in their
respective labels of packaging, the law does not apply to respondent.
Respondent's specialized lubricants — namely, Contact Grease, Connector Grease,
Thixohtropic Grease, Di-Electric Strength Protective Coating, Dry Lubricant and
Anti-Seize Compound — are not consumer products. "Consumer products,"
as it is defined in Article 4 (q), 44 refers to goods,
services and credits, debts or obligations which are primarily for personal,
family, household or agricultural purposes, which shall include, but not be
limited to, food, drugs, cosmetics, and devices. This is not the nature of
respondent's products. Its products are not intended for personal, family,
household or agricultural purposes. Rather, they are for industrial use, specifically
for the use of aircraft propellers and engines.
Petitioner's argument that Republic Act No. 8203, or the Special
Law on Counterfeit Drugs, requires the disclosure of the active ingredients
of a drug is also on faulty ground. Respondent's products are outside the scope
of the cited law. They do not come within the purview of a drug which, as
defined therein, refers to any chemical compound or biological substance, other
than food, that is intended for use in the treatment, prevention or diagnosis
of disease in man or animals. Again, such are not the characteristics of
respondent's products.
What is clear from the factual findings of the RTC and the Court
of Appeals is that the chemical formulation of respondent's products is not
known to the general public and is unique only to it. Both courts uniformly
ruled that these ingredients are not within the knowledge of the public. Since
such factual findings are generally not reviewable by this Court, it is not
duty-bound to analyze and weigh all over again the evidence already considered
in the proceedings below. We need not delve into the factual bases of such
findings as questions of fact are beyond the pale of Rule 45 of the Rules of
Court. Factual findings of the trial court when affirmed by the Court of
Appeals, are binding and conclusive on the Supreme Court.
We do not find merit or applicability in petitioner's invocation
of Section 12 of the Toxic Substances and Hazardous and Nuclear Wastes
Control Act of 1990, which grants the public access to records, reports or
information concerning chemical substances and mixtures, including safety data
submitted, and data on emission or discharge into the environment. To
reiterate, Section 12 of said Act deems as confidential matters, which
may not be made public, those that would divulge trade secrets, including
production or sales figures or methods; production or processes unique to such
manufacturer, processor or distributor, or would otherwise tend to affect
adversely the competitive position of such manufacturer, processor or
distributor. It is true that under the same Act, the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources may release information; however, the clear
import of the law is that said authority is limited by the right to
confidentiality of the manufacturer, processor or distributor, which
information may be released only to a medical research or scientific
institution where the information is needed for the purpose of medical
diagnosis or treatment of a person exposed to the chemical substance or
mixture. The right to confidentiality is recognized by said Act as primordial.
Petitioner has not made the slightest attempt to show that these circumstances
are availing in the case at bar.
Indeed, the privilege is not absolute; the trial court may compel
disclosure where it is indispensable for doing justice. We do not, however,
find reason to except respondent's trade secrets from the application of the
rule on privilege. The revelation of respondent's trade secrets serves no
better purpose to the disposition of the main case pending with the RTC, which
is on the collection of a sum of money. As can be gleaned from the facts,
petitioner received respondent's goods in trade in the normal course of
business. To be sure, there are defenses under the laws of contracts and sales
available to petitioner. On the other hand, the greater interest of justice
ought to favor respondent as the holder of trade secrets. If we were to weigh
the conflicting interests between the parties, we rule in favor of the greater
interest of respondent. Trade secrets should receive greater protection from
discovery, because they derive economic value from being generally unknown and
not readily ascertainable by the public. To the mind of this Court,
petitioner was not able to show a compelling reason for us to lift the veil of
confidentiality which shields respondent's trade secrets.
WHEREFORE, the Petition is DENIED. The Decision dated 16 February
2006, and the Resolution dated 25 May 2006, of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
SP No. 86329 are AFFIRMED. No costs.
SO ORDERED.