This document summarizes 9 case digests related to partnerships under Philippine law. Some key points include:
1) The essential elements of a partnership are agreement to contribute money/property to a common fund and intent to divide profits.
2) While a corporation has a separate legal personality, courts may disregard this fiction if it supports an end against policy.
3) One corporation can represent another in a lawsuit and corporations can form joint ventures if the nature aligns with their charters.
4) Partnership agreements cannot be specifically enforced by courts as they require personal acts of the partners.
This document summarizes 9 case digests related to partnerships under Philippine law. Some key points include:
1) The essential elements of a partnership are agreement to contribute money/property to a common fund and intent to divide profits.
2) While a corporation has a separate legal personality, courts may disregard this fiction if it supports an end against policy.
3) One corporation can represent another in a lawsuit and corporations can form joint ventures if the nature aligns with their charters.
4) Partnership agreements cannot be specifically enforced by courts as they require personal acts of the partners.
This document summarizes 9 case digests related to partnerships under Philippine law. Some key points include:
1) The essential elements of a partnership are agreement to contribute money/property to a common fund and intent to divide profits.
2) While a corporation has a separate legal personality, courts may disregard this fiction if it supports an end against policy.
3) One corporation can represent another in a lawsuit and corporations can form joint ventures if the nature aligns with their charters.
4) Partnership agreements cannot be specifically enforced by courts as they require personal acts of the partners.
This document summarizes 9 case digests related to partnerships under Philippine law. Some key points include:
1) The essential elements of a partnership are agreement to contribute money/property to a common fund and intent to divide profits.
2) While a corporation has a separate legal personality, courts may disregard this fiction if it supports an end against policy.
3) One corporation can represent another in a lawsuit and corporations can form joint ventures if the nature aligns with their charters.
4) Partnership agreements cannot be specifically enforced by courts as they require personal acts of the partners.
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CASE DIGESTS: ARTICLES 1767 TO 1783
1 EVANGELISTA, ET. AL. V. CIR
102 PHIL 140 The essential elements of a partnership are the following: 1. An agreement to contribute money, property, or industry to a common fund 2. Intent to divide the profits among the contracting parties. The first element is admittedly present in this case. The petitioners have agreed to and did contribute money and property to a common fund. On the second element, considering the facts and circumstances of the case, it is shown that the purpose was to engage in real estate transactions for monetary gain and then divide the same among themselves because: 1. They created the fund purposedly 2. They invested the same not only in one transaction but in a series of transactions 3. The properties were not used for personal consumption or residential use but were leased separately to several persons 4. The properties were under the management of one person Although, taken singly, they might not suffice to establish the intent necessary to constitute a partnership, the collective effect of these circumstances is such as to leave no room for doubt of the existence of said intent in petitioners herein. *For purposes of the tax on corporations, our NIRC includes these partnershipswith the exception only of general copartnershipswithin the purview of the term corporation. It thus clear clear to our mind that petitioners herein constitute a partnership, insofar as the Code is concerned, and are subject to the income tax for corporations. 2 LAGUNA TRANSPORTATION CO. V. SSS 107 PHIL 833 While it is true that a corporation once formed is conferred a juridical personality separate and distinct from the persons composing it, it is but of legal fiction introduced for the purposes of convenience and to subverve the ends of justice. The concept cannot be extended to a point beyond its reasons and policy, and when invoked in support of an end subversive of this policy, will be disregarded by the courts. 3 TUAZON V. BOLANOS 95 PHIL 106 There is nothing against one corporation being represented by another person, natural or juridical, in a suit in court. The contention that Gregorio Araneta Inc. cannot act as
managing partner for plaintiff on the theory that
it is illegal for two corporations to enter into a partnership is without merit, for the true rule is that though a corporation has no power into a partnership, it may nevertheless enter into a joint venture with another where the nature of that venture is in line with the business authorized by its charter. 4 WOODHOUSE V. HALILI 93 PHIL 526 A contract to form a partnership cannot be executed. It entails an obligation to do. The law recognizes the individuals freedom to do an act he has promised to do, or not to do it, as he pleases. This is a very personal act of which courts may not compel compliance, as it is considered as an act of violence to do so. 5 EVANGELISTA V. ABAD SANTOS 51 SCRA 416 It is not disputed that the prohibition against an industrial partner engaging in business for himself seeks to prevent any conflict in interest between the industrial partner and the partnership, and to insure faithful compliance by said partner with his prestation. 6 MORAN V. CA 133 SCRA 98 1. Partner who promises to contribute to partnership becomes promissory debtor of latter. 2. Essence of partnership is that partners share in profits and losses. 3. Partner entitled to recover shares of profits and losses realized by venture. 4. Where partnership venture is a failure, a partner is not entitled to any commission promised by co-partner where agreement doesnt state basis of commission. 7 THE LEYTE-SAMAR CO. V. CEA 93 PHIL 100 A partner is not a creditor of the partnership. 8 COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE V. SUTER 27 SCRA 152 1. Where a company is not a universal partnershipwhen the contributions of the partners were fixed sums of money and neither one of them was an industrial partner, it follows that it is not a partnership wherein spouses are forbidden to enter. Nor could the subsequent marriage of the partners operate to dissolve it, such marriage being one of the causes provided for that purpose. 2. The marriage of the partners doesnt make the company a sole proprietorship when the capital contributions of the partners were separately owned and contributed by them
before their marriage, and after they were
joined in wedlock, such contributions remained their respective separate property. 9 IN RE: PETITION FOR AUTHORITY, ETC. 92 SCRA 1 It is tacitly provided for in the pertinent provisions of the Civil Code in Partnership that names in a firm name of a partnership must either be those of living partners
and, in the case of non-partners, should be living
persons who can subjected to liability. It is also provided in the Code that a third person is precluded from including his name in the firm name under pain of assuming liability. The heirs of a deceased partner in a law firm cannot be held liable as the old members of the creditor of a firm particularly where they are nonlawyers.
[SALES] “A” sells his 1976 Colt Lancer Sedan to “B,” a compadre, and leaves it to “B” to determine the price. If “BR” refuses to fix a price and simply takes the car, is he still obliged to pay the price? Explain. (1976)