International Hotel Corporation, Petitioner, vs. Francisco B. Joaquin, JR. and RAFAEL SUAREZ, Respondents
International Hotel Corporation, Petitioner, vs. Francisco B. Joaquin, JR. and RAFAEL SUAREZ, Respondents
International Hotel Corporation, Petitioner, vs. Francisco B. Joaquin, JR. and RAFAEL SUAREZ, Respondents
JOAQUIN,
JR. and RAFAEL SUAREZ, Respondents.
2013-04-10 | G.R. No. 158361
FIRST DIVISION
DECISION
BERSAMIN, J.:
To avoid unjust enrichment to a party from resulting out of a substantially performed contract, the
principle of quantum meruit may be used to determine his compensation in the absence of a written
agreement for that purpose. The principle of quantum meruit justifies the payment of the reasonable
value of the services rendered by him.
The Case
Under review is the decision the Court of Appeals (CA) promulgated on November 8, 2002, 1 disposing:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the decision dated August 26, 1993 of the Regional Trial Court,
Branch 13, Manila in Civil Case No. R-82-2434 is AFFIRMED with Modification as to the amounts
awarded as follows: defendant-appellant IHC is ordered to pay plaintiff-appellant Joaquin P700,000.00
and plaintiff-appellant Suarez P200,000.00, both to be paid in cash.
SO ORDERED.
Antecedents
On February 1, 1969, respondent Francisco B. Joaquin, Jr. submitted a proposal to the Board of
Directors of the International Hotel Corporation (IHC) for him to render technical assistance in securing a
foreign loan for the construction of a hotel, to be guaranteed by the Development Bank of the The
proposal encompassed nine phases, namely: (1) the preparation of a new project study; (2) the
settlement of the unregistered mortgage prior to the submission of the application for guaranty for
processing by DBP; (3) the preparation of papers necessary to the application for guaranty; (4) the
securing of a foreign financier for the project; (5) the securing of the approval of the DBP Board of
Governors; (6) ; (7) the overall coordination in implementing the projections of the project study; (8) the
preparation of the staff for actual hotel operations; and (9) the actual hotel operations.4
The IHC Board of Directors approved phase one to phase six of the proposal during the special board
meeting on February 11, 1969, and earmarked P2,000,000.00 for the project.5 Anent the financing, IHC
applied with DBP for a foreign loan guaranty. DBP processed the application,6 and approved it on
October 24, 1969 subject to several conditions.7
On July 11, 1969, shortly after submitting the application to DBP, Joaquin wrote to IHC to request the
payment of his fees in the amount of P500,000.00 for the services that he had provided and would be
providing to IHC in relation to the hotel project that were outside the scope of the technical proposal.
Joaquin intimated his amenability to receive shares of stock instead of cash in view of IHCs financial
situation.8
On July 11, 1969, the stockholders of IHC met and granted Joaquins request, allowing the payment for
both Joaquin and Rafael Suarez for their services in implementing the proposal.9
On June 20, 1970, Joaquin presented to the IHC Board of Directors the results of his negotiations with
potential foreign financiers. He narrowed the financiers to Roger Dunn & Company and Materials
Handling Corporation. He recommended that the Board of Directors consider Materials Handling
Corporation based on the more beneficial terms it had offered. His recommendation was accepted.10
Negotiations with Materials Handling Corporation and, later on, with its principal, Barnes International
(Barnes), ensued. While the negotiations with Barnes were ongoing, Joaquin and Jose Valero, the
Executive Director of IHC, met with another financier, the Weston International Corporation (Weston), to
explore possible financing.11 When Barnes failed to deliver the needed loan, IHC informed DBP that it
would submit Weston for DBPs consideration.12 As a result, DBP cancelled its previous guaranty
through a letter dated December 6, 1971.13
On December 13, 1971, IHC entered into an agreement with Weston, and communicated this
development to DBP on June 26, 1972. However, DBP denied the application for guaranty for failure to
comply with the conditions contained in its November 12, 1971 letter.14
Due to Joaquins failure to secure the needed loan, IHC, through its President Bautista, canceled the
17,000 shares of stock previously issued to Joaquin and Suarez as payment for their services. The latter
requested a reconsideration of the cancellation, but their request was rejected.
Consequently, Joaquin and Suarez commenced this action for specific performance, annulment,
damages and injunction by a complaint dated December 6, 1973 in the Regional Trial Court in Manila
(RTC), impleading IHC and the members of its Board of Directors, namely, Felix Angelo Bautista, Sergio
O. Rustia, Ephraim G. Gochangco, Mario B. Julian, Benjamin J. Bautista, Basilio L. Lirag, Danilo R.
Lacerna and Hermenegildo R. Reyes.15 The complaint alleged that the cancellation of the shares had
been illegal, and had deprived them of their right to participate in the meetings and elections held by IHC;
that Barnes had been recommended by IHC President Bautista, not by Joaquin; that they had failed to
meet their obligation because President Bautista and his son had intervened and negotiated with Barnes
instead of Weston; that DBP had canceled the guaranty because Barnes had failed to release the loan;
and that IHC had agreed to compensate their services with 17,000 shares of the common stock plus
cash of P1,000,000.00.16
IHC, together with Felix Angelo Bautista, Sergio O. Rustia, Mario B. Julian and Benjamin J. Bautista,
filed an answer claiming that the shares issued to Joaquin and Suarez as compensation for their past
and future services had been issued in violation of Section 16 of the Corporation Code; that Joaquin
and Suarez had not provided a foreign financier acceptable to DBP; and that they had already received
P96,350.00 as payment for their services.17
On their part, Lirag and Lacerna denied any knowledge of or participation in the cancellation of the
shares.18
Similarly, Gochangco and Reyes denied any knowledge of or participation in the cancellation of the
shares, and clarified that they were not directors of IHC.19 In the course of the proceedings, Reyes died
and was substituted by Consorcia P. Reyes, the administratrix of his estate.20
Under its decision rendered on August 26, 1993, the RTC held IHC liable pursuant to the second
paragraph of Article 1284 of the Civil Code, disposing thusly:
WHEREFORE, in the light of the above facts, law and jurisprudence, the Court hereby orders the
defendant International Hotel Corporation to pay plaintiff Francisco B. Joaquin, the amount of Two
Hundred Thousand Pesos (P200,000.00) and to pay plaintiff Rafael Suarez the amount of Fifty
Thousand Pesos (P50,000.00); that the said defendant IHC likewise pay the co-plaintiffs, attorneys fees
of P20,000.00, and costs of suit.
IT IS SO ORDERED.21
The RTC found that Joaquin and Suarez had failed to meet their obligations when IHC had chosen to
negotiate with Barnes rather than with Weston, the financier that Joaquin had recommended; and that
the cancellation of the ares of stock had been proper under Section 68 of the Corporation Code, which
allowed such transfer of shares to compensate only past services, not future ones.
Ruling of the CA
[I.]
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN HOLDING THAT PLAINTIFFSAPPELLANTS HAVE NOT BEEN
COMPLETELY PAID FOR THEIR SERVICES, AND IN ORDERING THE DEFENDANT-APPELLANT
TO PAY TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND PESOS (P200,000.00) AND FIFTY THOUSAND PESOS
(P50,000.00) TO PLAINTIFFSAPPELLANTS FRANCISCO B. JOAQUIN AND RAFAEL SUAREZ,
RESPECTIVELY.
[II.]
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN AWARDING PLAINTIFFSAPPELLANTS ATTORNEYS FEES AND
COSTS OF SUIT.24
In its questioned decision promulgated on November 8, 2002, the CA concurred with the RTC, upholding
IHCs liability under Article 1186 of the Civil Code. It ruled that in the context of Article 1234 of the Civil
Code, Joaquin had substantially performed his obligations and had become entitled to be paid for his
services; and that the issuance of the shares of stock was ultra vires for having been issued as
consideration for future services.
Anent how much was due to Joaquin and Suarez, the CA explained thusly:
This Court does not subscribe to plaintiffs-appellants view that defendant-appellant IHC agreed to pay
them P2,000,000.00. Plaintiffappellant Joaquins letter to defendant-appellee F.A. Bautista, quoting
defendant-appellant IHCs board resolutions which supposedly authorized the payment of such amount
cannot be sustained. The resolutions are quite clear and when taken together show that said amount
was only the estimated maximum expenses which defendant-appellant IHC expected to incur in
accomplishing phases 1 to 6, not exclusively to plaintiffsappellants compensation.This conclusion finds
support in an unnumbered board resolution of defendant-appellant IHC dated July 11, 1969:
Incidentally, it was also taken up the necessity of giving the Technical Group a portion of the
compensation that was authorized by this corporation in its Resolution of February 11, 969 considering
that the assistance so far given the corporation by said Technical Group in continuing our project with
the DBP and its request for guaranty for a foreign loan is 70% completed leaving only some details
which are now being processed. It is estimated that P400,000.00 worth of Common Stock would be
reasonable for the present accomplishments and to this effect, the President is authorized to issue the
same in the name of the Technical Group, as follows:
P200,000.00 in common stock to Rafael Suarez, as associate in the Technical Group, and P200,000.00
in common stock to Francisco G. Joaquin, Jr., also a member of the Technical Group.
It is apparent that not all of the P2,000,000.00 was allocated exclusively to compensate
plaintiffs-appellants. Rather, it was intended to fund the whole undertaking including their compensation.
On the same date, defendant-appellant IHC also authorized its president to pay plaintiff-appellant
Joaquin P500,000.00 either in cash or in stock or both.
The amount awarded by the lower court was therefore less than what defendant-appellant IHC agreed to
pay plaintiffs-appellants. While this Court cannot decree that the cancelled shares be restored, for they
are without a doubt null and void, still and all, defendant-appellant IHC cannot now put up its own ultra
vires act as an excuse to escape obligation to plaintiffs-appellants. Instead of shares of stock,
defendant-appellant IHC is ordered to pay plaintiff-appellant Joaquin a total of P700,000.00 and
plaintiff-appellant Suarez P200,000.00, both to be paid in cash.
Although the lower court failed to explain why it was granting the attorneys fees, this Court nonetheless
finds its award proper given defendant-appellant IHCs actions.25
Issues
In this appeal, the IHC raises as issues for our consideration and resolution the following:
I
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS IS CORRECT IN AWARDING COMPENSATION AND
EVEN MODIFYING THE PAYMENT TO HEREIN RESPONDENTS DESPITE NONFULFILLMENT OF
THEIR OBLIGATION TO HEREIN PETITIONER
II
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS IS CORRECT IN AWARDING ATTORNEYS FEES
TO RESPONDENTS26
IHC maintains that Article 1186 of the Civil Code was erroneously applied; that it had no intention of
preventing Joaquin from complying with his obligations when it adopted his recommendation to negotiate
with Barnes; that Article 1234 of the Civil Code applied only if there was a merely slight deviation from
the obligation, and the omission or defect was technical and unimportant; that substantial compliance
was unacceptable because the foreign loan was material and was, in fact, the ultimate goal of its
contract with Joaquin and Suarez; that because the obligation was indivisible and subject to a
suspensive condition, Article 1181 of the Civil Code27 applied, under which a partial performance was
equivalent to nonperformance; and that the award of attorneys fees should be deleted for lack of legal
and factual bases.
On the part of respondents, only Joaquin filed a comment,28 arguing that the petition was fatally
defective for raising questions of fact; that the obligation was divisible and capable of partial performance;
and that the suspensive condition was deemed fulfilled through IHCs own actions.29
Ruling
We deny the petition for review on certiorari subject to the ensuing disquisitions.
1.
IHC raises questions of law
We first consider and resolve whether IHCs petition improperly raised questions of fact.
A question of law exists when there is doubt as to what the law is on a certain state of facts, but, in contrast, a
question of fact exists when the doubt arises as to the truth or falsity of the facts alleged. A question of law
does not involve an examination of the probative value of the evidence presented by the litigants or by any of
them; the resolution of the issue must rest solely on what the law provides on the given set of
circumstances.30 When there is no dispute as to the facts, the question of whether or not the conclusion
drawn from the facts is correct is a question of law.31
Considering that what IHC seeks to review is the CAs application of the law on the facts presented therein,
there is no doubt that IHC raises questions of law. The basic issue posed here is whether the conclusions
drawn by the CA were correct under the pertinent laws.
2.
Article 1186 and Article 1234 of the Civil Code cannot
be the source of IHCs obligation to pay respondents
IHC argues that it should not be held liable because: (a) it was Joaquin who had recommended Barnes;
and (b) IHCs negotiation with Barnes had been neither intentional nor willfully intended to prevent
Joaquin from complying with his obligations.
Article 1186. The condition shall be deemed fulfilled when the obligor voluntarily prevents its fulfillment.
This provision refers to the constructive fulfillment of a suspensive condition,32 whose application calls
for two equisites, namely: (a) the intent of the obligor to prevent the fulfillment of the condition, and (b)
the actual prevention of the fulfillment. Mere intention of the debtor to prevent the happening of the
condition, or to place ineffective obstacles to its compliance, without actually preventing the fulfillment, is
insufficient.33
The error lies in the CAs failure to determine IHCs intent to preempt Joaquin from meeting his
obligations. The June 20, 1970 minutes of IHCs special board meeting discloses that Joaquin impressed
upon the members of the Board that Materials Handling was offering more favorable terms for IHC, to wit:
xxxx
At the meeting all the members of the Board of Directors of the International Hotel Corporation were
present with the exception of Directors Benjamin J. Bautista and Sergio O. Rustia who asked to be
excused because of previous engagements. In that meeting, the President called on Mr. Francisco G.
Joaquin, Jr. to explain the different negotiations he had conducted relative to obtaining the needed
financing for the hotel project in keeping with the authority given to him in a resolution approved by the
Board of Directors.
Mr. Joaquin presently explained that he contacted several local and foreign financiers through different
brokers and after examining the different offers he narrowed down his choice to two (2), to wit: the
foreign financier recommended by George Wright of the Roger Dunn & Company and the offer made by
the Materials Handling Corporation.
After explaining the advantages and disadvantages to our corporation of the two (2) offers
specifically with regard to the terms and repayment of the loan and the rate of interest requested by
them, he concluded that the offer made by the Materials Handling Corporation is much more
advantageous because the terms and conditions of payment as well as the rate of interest are much
more reasonable and would be much less onerous to our corporation. However, he explained that the
corporation accepted, in principle, the offer of Roger Dunn, per the corporations telegrams to Mr.
Rudolph Meir of the Private Bank of Zurich, Switzerland, and until such time as the corporations
negotiations with Roger Dunn is terminated, we are committed, on one way or the other, to their
financing.
It was decided by the Directors that, should the negotiations with Roger Dunn materialize, at the same
time as the offer of Materials Handling Corporation, that the funds committed by Roger Dunn may be
diverted to other borrowers of the Development Bank of the Philippines. With this condition, Director
Joaquin showed the advantages of the offer of Materials Handling Corporation. Mr. Joaquin also
informed the corporation that, as of this date, the bank confirmation of Roger Dunn & Company has not
been received. In view of the fact that the corporation is racing against time in securing its financing, he
recommended that the corporation entertain other offers.
After a brief exchange of views on the part of the Directors present and after hearing the clarification and
explanation made by Mr. C. M. Javier who was present and who represented the Materials Handling
Corporation, the Directors present approved unanimously the recommendation of Mr. Joaquin to
entertain the offer of Materials Handling Corporation.34
Evidently, IHC only relied on the opinion of its consultant in deciding to transact with Materials Handling
and, later on, with Barnes. In negotiating with Barnes, IHC had no intention, willful or otherwise, to
prevent Joaquin and Suarez from meeting their undertaking. Such absence of any intention negated the
basis for the CAs reliance on Article 1186 of the Civil Code.
Nor do we agree with the CAs upholding of IHCs liability by virtue of Joaquin and Suarezs substantial
erformance. In so ruling, the CA applied Article 1234 of the Civil Code, which states:
Article 1234. If the obligation has been substantially performed in good faith, the obligor may recover as
though there had been a strict and complete fulfillment, less damages suffered by the obligee.
It is well to note that Article 1234 applies only when an obligor admits breaching the contract35 after
honestly and faithfully performing all the material elements thereof except for some technical aspects
that cause no serious harm to the obligee.36 IHC correctly submits that the provision refers to an
omission or deviation that is slight, or technical and unimportant, and does not affect the real purpose of
the contract.
Tolentino explains the character of the obligors breach under Article 1234 in the following manner, to wit:
In order that there may be substantial performance of an obligation, there must have been an attempt in good
faith to perform, without any willful or intentional departure therefrom. The deviation from the obligation must
be slight, and the omission or defect must be technical and unimportant, and must not pervade the whole or
be so material that the object which the parties intended to accomplish in a particular manner is not attained.
The non-performance of a material part of a contract will prevent the performance from amounting to a
substantial compliance.
The party claiming substantial performance must show that he has attempted in good faith to perform his
contract, but has through oversight, misunderstanding or any excusable neglect failed to completely
perform in certain negligible respects, for which the other party may be adequately indemnified by an
allowance and deduction from the contract price or by an award of damages. But a party who knowingly
and wilfully fails to perform his contract in any respect, or omits to perform a material part of it, cannot be
permitted, under the protection of this rule, to compel the other party, and the trend of the more recent
decisions is to hold that the percentage of omitted or irregular performance may in and of itself be
sufficient to show that there had not been a substantial performance.37
By reason of the inconsequential nature of the breach or omission, the law deems the performance as
substantial, making it the obligees duty to pay.38 The compulsion of payment is predicated on the
substantial benefit derived by the obligee from the partial performance. Although compelled to pay, the
obligee is nonetheless entitled to an allowance for the sum required to remedy omissions or defects and
to complete the work agreed upon.39
Conversely, the principle of substantial performance is inappropriate when the incomplete performance
constitutes a material breach of the contract. A contractual breach is material if it will adversely affect the
nature of the obligation that the obligor promised to deliver, the benefits that the obligee expects to
receive after full compliance, and the extent that the nonperformance defeated the purposes of the
contract.40 Accordingly, for the principle embodied in Article 1234 to apply, the failure of Joaquin and
Suarez to comply with their commitment should not defeat the ultimate purpose of the contract.
The primary objective of the parties in entering into the services agreement was to obtain a foreign loan
to finance the construction of IHCs hotel project. This objective could be inferred from IHCs approval of
phase 1 to phase 6 of the proposal. Phase 1 and phase 2, respectively the preparation of a new project
study and the settlement of the unregistered mortgage, would pave the way for Joaquin and Suarez to
render assistance to IHC in applying for the DBP guaranty and thereafter to look for an able and willing
foreign financial institution acceptable to DBP. All the steps that Joaquin and Suarez undertook to
accomplish had a single objective to secure a loan to fund the construction and eventual operations of
the hotel of IHC. In that regard, Joaquin himself admitted that his assistance was specifically sought to
seek financing for IHCs hotel project.41
Needless to say, finding the foreign financier that DBP would guarantee was the essence of the parties
contract, so that the failure to completely satisfy such obligation could not be characterized as slight and
unimportant as to have resulted in Joaquin and Suarezs substantial performance that consequentially
benefitted IHC. Whatever benefits IHC gained from their services could only be minimal, and were even
probably outweighed by whatever losses IHC suffered from the delayed construction of its hotel.
Consequently, Article 1234 did not apply.
Notwithstanding the inapplicability of Article 1186 and Article 1234 of the Civil Code, IHC was liable
based on the nature of the obligation.
Considering that the agreement between the parties was not circumscribed by a definite period, its
termination was subject to a condition the happening of a future and uncertain event.42 The prevailing
rule in conditional obligations is that the acquisition of rights, as well as the extinguishment or loss of
those already acquired, shall depend upon the happening of the event that constitutes the condition.43
To recall, both the RTC and the CA held that Joaquin and Suarezs obligation was subject to the
suspensive condition of successfully securing a foreign loan guaranteed by DBP. IHC agrees with both
lower courts, and even argues that the obligation with a suspensive condition did not arise when the
event or occurrence did not happen. In that instance, partial performance of the contract subject to the
suspensive condition was tantamount to no performance at all. As such, the respondents were not
entitled to any compensation.
To secure a DBP-guaranteed foreign loan did not solely depend on the diligence or the sole will of the
respondents because it required the action and discretion of third persons an able and willing foreign
financial institution to provide the needed funds, and the DBP Board of Governors to guarantee the loan.
Such third persons could not be legally compelled to act in a manner favorable to IHC. There is no
question that when the fulfillment of a condition is dependent partly on the will of one of the contracting
parties,44 or of the obligor, and partly on chance, hazard or the will of a third person, the obligation is
mixed.45 The existing rule in a mixed conditional obligation is that when the condition was not fulfilled
but the obligor did all in his power to comply with the obligation, the condition should be deemed
satisfied.46
Considering that the respondents were able to secure an agreement with Weston, and subsequently
tried to reverse the prior cancellation of the guaranty by DBP, we rule that they thereby constructively
fulfilled their obligation.
The next issue to resolve is the amount of the fees that IHC should pay to Joaquin and Suarez.
Joaquin claimed that aside from the approved P2,000,000.00 fee to implement phase 1 to phase 6, the
IHC Board of Directors had approved an additional P500,000.00 as payment for his services. The RTC
declared that he and Suarez were entitled to P200,000.00 each, but the CA revised the amounts to
P700,000.00 for Joaquin and P200,000.00 for Suarez.
Anent the P2,000,000.00, the CA rightly concluded that the full amount of P2,000,000.00 could not be
awarded to respondents because such amount was not allocated exclusively to compensate
respondents, but was intended to be the estimated maximum to fund the expenses in undertaking phase
6 of the scope of services. Its conclusion was unquestionably borne out by the minutes of the February
11, 1969 meeting, viz:
xxxx
II
The [p]reparation of the necessary papers for the DBP including the preparation of the application, the
presentation of the mechanics of financing, the actual follow up with the different departments of the
DBP which includes the explanation of the feasibility studies up to the approval of the loan, conditioned
on the DBPs acceptance of the project as feasible. The estimated expenses for this particular phase
would be contingent, i.e. upon DBPs approval of the plan now being studied and prepared, is
somewhere around P2,000,000.00.
After a brief discussion on the matter, the Board on motion duly made and seconded, unanimously
adopted a resolution of the following tenor:
Gentlemen:
I have the honor to request this Body for its deliberation and action on the fees for my services rendered
and to be rendered to the hotel project and to the corporation. These fees are separate from the fees you
have approved in your previous Board Resolution, since my fees are separate. I realize the position of
the corporation at present, in that it is not in a financial position to pay my services in cash, therefore, I
am requesting this Body to consider payment of my fees even in the form of shares of stock, as you
have done to the other technical men and for other services rendered to the corporation by other people.
Inasmuch as my fees are contingent on the successful implementation of this project, I request that my
fees be based on a percentage of the total project cost. The fees which I consider reasonable for the
services that I have rendered to the project up to the completion of its construction is P500,000.00. I
believe said amount is reasonable since this is approximately only of 1% of the total project cost.
So far, I have accomplished Phases 1-5 of my report dated February 1, 1969 and which you
authorized us to do under Board Resolution of February 11, 1969. It is only Phase 6 which now
remains to be implemented. For my appointment as Consultant dated May 12, 1969 and the Board
Resolution dated June 23, 1969 wherein I was appointed to the Technical Committee, it now follows that
I have been also authorized to implement part of Phases 7 & 8.
approximately P24,735,000.00.
I have rendered services to your corporation for the past 6 months with no clear understanding as to the
compensation of my services. All I
have drawn from the corporation is the amount of P500.00 dated May 12, 1969 and personal payment
advanced by Justice Felix Angelo Bautista in the amount of P1,000.00.
I am, therefore, requesting this Body for their approval of my fees. I have shown my good faith and
willingness to render services to your
corporation which is evidenced by my continued services in the past 6 months as well as the
accomplishments above mentioned. I believe that the final completion of this hotel, at least for the
processing of the DBP up to the completion of the construction, will take approximately another 2
years. In view of the above, I again reiterate my request for your approval of my fees. When the
corporation is in a better financial position, I will request for a withdrawal of a monthly allowance, said
amount to be determined by this Body.
Very truly yours,
(Sgd.)
Francisco G., Joaquin, Jr.48
(Emphasis supplied)
Joaquin could not even rest his claim on the approval by IHCs Board of Directors. The approval
apparently arose from the confusion between the supposedly separate services that Joaquin had
rendered and those to be done under the technical proposal. The minutes of the July 11, 1969 board
meeting (when the Board of Directors allowed the payment for Joaquins past services and for the 70%
project completion by the technical group) showed as follows:
III
The Third order of business is the compensation of Mr. Francisco G. Joaquin, Jr. for his services in the
corporation. After a brief discussion that ensued, upon motion duly made and seconded, the
stockholders unanimously approved a resolution of the following tenor:
RESOLVED that Mr. Francisco G. Joaquin, Jr. be granted a compensation in the amount of Five
Hundred Thousand (P500,000.00) Pesos for his past services and services still to be rendered in the
future to the corporation up to the completion of the Project. The President is given full discretion to
discuss with Mr. Joaquin the manner of payment of said compensation, authorizing him to pay part in
stock and part in cash.
Incidentally, it was also taken up the necessity of giving the Technical Group a portion of the
compensation that was authorised by this corporation in its Resolution of February 11, 1969 considering
that the assistance so far given the corporation by said Technical Group in continuing our project with
the DBP and its request for guaranty for a foreign loan is 70% completed leaving only some details
which are now being processed. It is estimated that P400,000.00 worth of Common Stock would be
reasonable for the present accomplishments and to this effect, the President is authorized to issue the
same in the name of the Technical Group, as follows:
P200,000.00 in Common Stock to Rafael Suarez, an associate in the Technical Group, and P200,000.00
in Common stock to Francisco G. Joaquin, Jr., also a member of the Technical Group.
Lastly, the amount purportedly included services still to be rendered that supposedly extended until the
completion of the construction of the hotel. It is basic, however, that in obligations to do, there can be no
payment unless the obligation has been completely rendered.50
It is notable that the confusion on the amounts of compensation arose from the parties inability to agree
on the fees that respondents should receive. Considering the absence of an agreement, and in view of
respondents constructive fulfillment of their obligation, the Court has to apply the principle of quantum
meruit in determining how much was still due and owing to respondents. Under the principle of quantum
meruit, a contractor is allowed to recover the reasonable value of the services rendered despite the lack
of a written contract.51 The measure of recovery under the principle should relate to the reasonable
value of the services performed.52 The principle prevents undue enrichment based on the equitable
postulate that it is unjust for a person to retain any benefit without paying for it. Being predicated on
equity, the principle should only be applied if no express contract was entered into, and no specific
statutory provision was applicable.53
Under the established circumstances, we deem the total amount of P200,000.00 to be reasonable
compensation for respondents services under
the principle of quantum meruit.
Finally, we sustain IHCs position that the grant of attorneys fees lacked factual or legal basis. Attorneys
fees are not awarded every time a party prevails in a suit because of the policy that no premium should
be placed on the right to litigate. There should be factual or legal support in the records before the award
of such fees is sustained. It is not enough justification for the award simply because respondents were
compelled to protect their rights.54
ACCORDINGLY, the Court DENIES the petition for review on certiorari; and AFFIRMS the decision of
the Court of Appeals promulgated on November 8, 2002 in C.A.-G.R. No. 47094 subject to the
MODIFICATIONS that: (a) International Hotel Corporation is ordered to. pay Francisco G. Joaquin, Jr.
and Rafael Suarez P I00,000.00 each as compensation for their services, and (b) the award of
P20,000.00 as attorney's fees is deleted.
No costs of suit.
SO ORDERED.
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
BIENVENIDO L. REYES
Associate Justice
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, I certify that the conclusions in the above Decision
had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court's
Division.
___________________________
Footnotes
1 Rollo, pp. 38-49; penned by Associate Justice Remedios A. Salazar-Femando, with Associate Justice
Ruben T. Reyes (later Presiding Justice, and Member of the Court, but now retired) and Edgardo F.
Sundiam (retired/deceased) concurring.
3 Id. at 221.
4 Id. at 220-221.
6 Id. at 43.
7 Id. at 47-48.
8 Id. at 49-50.
9 Id. at 58-60.
12 Records, p. 236.
13 Id. at 233.
14 TSN dated July 8, 1977, pp. 20-21.
15 Records, pp. 5-14.
18 Id. at 60-64.
19 Id. at 65-74.
20 Id. at 477.
21 Id. at 591.
23 CA rollo, p. 33.
24 Id. at 107.
26 Rollo, p. 22.
27 Article 1181. In conditional obligations, the acquisition of rights, as well as the extinguishment or loss
of those already acquired, shall depend upon the happening of the event which constitutes the condition.
28 Rollo,pp. 143-144.
29 Under the resolution dated October 22, 2007, the Court dispensed with the comment of Suarez
following the manifestation by his daughter that he was already 83 years old and already residing in the
United States of America.
30 Lorzano v. Tabayag, G.R. No. 189647, February 6, 2012; Tongonan Holdings and Development
Corporation v. Escano, Jr., G.R. No. 190994, September 7, 2011, 657 SCRA 306, 314; Republic v.
Malabanan, G.R. No. 169067, October 6, 2010, 632 SCRA 338, 345.
31 The Heirs of Nicolas S. Cabigas v. Limbaco, G.R. No. 175291, July 27, 2011, 654 SCRA 643, 651-652. 32
Jurado, Comments and Jurisprudence on Obligations and Contracts, 2002, p. 122.
35 Mathis Implement Company v. Heath, 2003 SD 72, 665 N.W.2d 90 (S.D. 2003).
43 Development Bank of the Philippines v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 118180, September 20, 1996,
262 SCRA 245, 252.
45 Naga Telephone Co., Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 107112, February 24, 1994, 230 SCRA 351,
371.
46 Smith Bell & Co. v. SoteloMatti, No.L-16570, 44 Phil. 874, 880 (1922).
47 Exhibits, p. 52
49 Exhibits, p. 59.
51 Heirs of Ramon C. Gaite v. The Plaza, Inc., G.R. No. 177685, January 26, 2011, 640 SCRA 576, 594;
H.L. Carlos Construction , Inc. v. Marina Properties Corporation, G.R. No. 147614, January 29, 2004,
421 SCRA 428, 439.
52 Department of Health v. C.V. Canchela & Associates, G.R. Nos. 151373-74, November 17, 2005, 475
SCRA 218, 244.
54 Benedicto v. Villaflores, G.R. No. 185020, October 6, 2010, 632 SCRA 446, 455.