FILSCAP v. Tan
[L-36402, Mar. 16, 1987]
The principal issues in this case are whether or not the
playing and singing of musical compositions which have been
copyrighted under the provisions of the Copyright Law inside
the establishment of the defendant-appellee constitute a public
performance for profit within the meaning and contemplation
of the Copyright Law of the Philippines; and assuming that
there were indeed public performances for profit, whether
or not appellee can be held liable therefor.
In the case at bar, it is admitted that the patrons of the
restaurant in question pay only for the food and drinks and
apparently not for listening to the music. As found by the
trial court, the music provided is for the purpose of entertaining
and amusing the customers in order to make the establishment
more attractive and desirable. It will be noted that for the
playing and singing the musical compositions involved, the
combo was paid as independent contractors by the appellant.
It is therefore obvious that the expenses entailed thereby
are added to the overhead of the restaurant which are either
eventually charged in the price of the food and drinks or
to the overall total of additional income produced by the
bigger volume of business which the entertainment was programmed
to attract. Consequently, it is beyond question that the playing
and singing of the combo in defendant-appellee's restaurant
constituted performance for profit contemplated by the Copyright
Law.
Nevertheless, appellee cannot be said to have infringed upon
the Copyright Law. Appellee's allegation that the composers
of the contested musical compositions waived their right in
favor of the general public when they allowed their intellectual
creations to become property of the public domain before applying
for the corresponding copyrights for the same is correct.
Indeed, if the general public has made use of the object
sought to be copyrighted for thirty (30) days prior to the
copyright application the law deems the object to have been
donated to the public domain and the same can no longer be
copyrighted. Under the circumstances, it is clear that the
musical compositions in question had long become public property,
and are therefore beyond the protection of the Copyright Law. |