CASE DIGEST
FACTS: Petitioner 20th Century Fox Film Corporation sought the assistance of the NBI in conducting searches and seizures in connection with the NBI’s anti-film piracy campaign. Petitioner alleged that certain videotape outlets all over Metro Manila are engaged in the unauthorized sale and renting out of copyrighted films in violation of PD No. 49 (the old Intellectual Property Law).
FACTS: Petitioner 20th Century Fox Film Corporation sought the assistance of the NBI in conducting searches and seizures in connection with the NBI’s anti-film piracy campaign. Petitioner alleged that certain videotape outlets all over Metro Manila are engaged in the unauthorized sale and renting out of copyrighted films in violation of PD No. 49 (the old Intellectual Property Law).
The
NBI conducted surveillance and investigation of the outlets pinpointed by the
petitioner and subsequently filed three (3) applications for search warrants
against the video outlets owned by the private respondents. The lower court issued the desired search
warrants. The NBI, accompanied by the petitioner's agents, raided the video
outlets and seized the items described in the three warrants.
Private
respondents later filed a motion to lift the search warrants and release the
seized properties, which was granted by the lower court. Petitioner’s motion
for reconsideration was denied by the lower court. The CA affirmed the trial
court.
ISSUE: Did the judge properly lift the
search warrants he issued earlier in the absence of probable cause?
RULING: [The Court DISMISSED the
petition and AFFIRMED the questioned decision and resolution of the CA.]
YES,
the judge properly lifted the search warrants he issued earlier.
The
lower court lifted the three (3) questioned search warrants in the absence of
probable cause that the private respondents violated P.D. 49. NBI agents who
acted as witnesses during the application for search warrant did not have
personal knowledge of the subject matter of their testimony, which was the
alleged commission of the offense of piracy by the private respondents. Only
the petitioner’s counsel who was also a witness during the application stated
that he had personal knowledge that the confiscated tapes owned by the private
respondents were pirated tapes taken from master tapes belonging to the
petitioner. The lower court lifted the warrants, declaring that the testimony
of petitioner’s counsel did not have much credence because the master tapes of
the allegedly pirated tapes were not shown to the court during the application.
The
presentation of the master tapes of the copyrighted films, from which the pirated
films were allegedly copied, was necessary for the validity of search warrants
against those who have in their possession the pirated films. The petitioner's
argument to the effect that the presentation of the master tapes at the time of
application may not be necessary as these would be merely evidentiary in nature
and not determinative of whether or not a probable cause exists to justify the
issuance of the search warrants is not meritorious. The court cannot presume
that duplicate or copied tapes were necessarily reproduced from master tapes
that it owns.
The
essence of a copyright infringement is the similarity or at least substantial
similarity of the purported pirated works to the copyrighted work. Hence, the
applicant must present to the court the copyrighted films to compare them with
the purchased evidence of the video tapes allegedly pirated to determine
whether the latter is an unauthorized reproduction of the former. This linkage
of the copyrighted films to the pirated films must be established to satisfy
the requirements of probable cause. Mere allegations as to the existence of the
copyrighted films cannot serve as basis for the issuance of a search warrant.
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