Supreme Court: Ramon Diokno, For Appellant. No Appearance For Appellee

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Republic of the Philippines

SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
G.R. No. L-5671

August 24, 1910

BENITO DE LOS REYES, plaintiff-appellant,


vs.
VERONICA ALOJADO, defendant-appellee.
Ramon Diokno, for appellant.
No appearance for appellee.
TORRES, J.:
On or about January 22, 1905, Veronica Alojado received, as a
loan, from Benito de los Reyes that the sum P67 .60, for the
purpose of paying a debt she owed to Olimpia Zaballa. It was
agreed between Alojado and Reyes that the debtor should
remain as a servant in the house and in the service of her
creditor, without any renumeration whatever, until she should
find some one who would furnish her with the said sum where
with to repeat the loan. The defendant, Veronica Alojado,
afterwards left the house of the plaintiff, on March 12, 1906,
without having paid him her debt, nor did she do so at any
subsequent date, notwithstanding his demands. The plaintiff,
therefore, on the 15th of march, 1906, filed suit in the court of
the justice of the peace of Santa Rosa, La Laguna, against
Veronica Alojado to recover the said sum or, in a contrary case,
to compel her to return to his service. The trial having been had,
the justice of the peace, on April 14, 1906, rendered judgment
whereby he sentenced the defendant to pay to the plaintiff the
sum claimed and declared that, in case the debtor should be
insolvent, she should be obliged to fulfill the agreement between
her and the plaintiff. The costs of the trial were assessed against
the defendant.

The defendant appealed from the said judgment to the Court of


First Instance to which the plaintiff, after the case had been
docketed by the clerk of court, made a motion on May 4, 1906,
requesting that the appeal interposed by the defendant be
disallowed, with the costs of both instances against her. The
grounds alleged in support of this motion. were that the appeal
had been filed on the sixth day following that when judgment
was rendered in the trial, on April 14th, and that it, therefore,
did not come within the period of the five days prescribed by
section 76 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as proven by the
certificate issued by the justice of the peace of Santa Rosa. The
Court of First Instance, however, by order of July 16, 1906,
overruled the motion of the plaintiff-appellee, for the reasons
therein stated, namely, that the defendant was not notified of the
judgment rendered in the case on April 14th of that year until
the 16th of the same month, and the appeal having been filed
four days later, on the 20th, it could having seen that the five
days specified by section 76 of the Code of Civil Procedure had
not expired. The plaintiff was advised to reproduce his complaint
within ten days, in order that due procedure might he had
thereupon.
The plaintiff took exception to the aforementioned order and at
the same time reproduced the complaint he had filed in the
court of the justice of the peace, in which, after relating to the
facts hereinbefore stated, added that the defendant, besides the
sum above-mentioned, had also received from the plaintiff,
under the same conditions, various small amounts between the
dates of January 22, 1905, and March 10, 1906, aggregating
altogether P11.97, and that they had not been repaid to him. He
therefore asked that judgment be rendered sentencing the
defendant to comply with the said contract and to pay to the
plaintiff the sums referred to, amounting in all to P79.57, and
that until this amount should have been in paid, the defendant
should remain gratuitously in the service of plaintiff's household,
and that she should pay the costs of the trial.
The defendant, in her written answer of August 15, 1906, to the
aforesaid complaint, denied the allegations contained in

paragraphs 1 and 2 of the complaint and alleged that, although


she had left the plaintiff's service, it was because the latter had
paid her no sum whatever for the services she had rendered in
his house. The defendant likewise denied the conditions
expressed in paragraph 4 of the complaint, averring that the
effects purchased, to the amount of P11.97, were in the
possession of the plaintiff, who refused to deliver them to her.
She therefore asked that she be absolved from the complaint
and that the plaintiff be absolved from the complaint the wages
due her for the services she had rendered.
The case came to trial on October 19, 1906, and, after the
production of testimony by both parties, the judge, on November
21st of the same year, rendered judgment absolving the
defendant from the complain, with the costs against the plaintiff,
and sentencing the latter to pay to the former the sum of P2.43,
the balance found to exist between the defendant's debt of
P79.57 and the wages due her by the plaintiff, which amounted
to P82. The plaintiff, on the 6th of December, filed a written
exception to the judgment aforesaid through the regular
channels, and moved for a new trial on the ground that the
findings of fact set forth in the judgment were manifestly
contrary to the weight of the evidence. This motion was
overruled on the 17th of the same month, to which exception
was taken by the appellant, who afterwards filed the proper bill
of exceptions, which was approved, certified, and forwarded to
the clerk of this court.
The present suit, initiated in a justice of the peace court and
appealed to the Court of First Instance of La Laguna at a time
prior to the enactment of Act No. 1627, which went into effect
on July 1, 1907, which limited to two instances the procedure to
be observed in verbal actions, concerns the collection of certain
sum received as a loan by the defendant from the plaintiff, and
of the wages earned by the former for services rendered as a
servant in the said plaintiff's house.
Notwithstanding the denial of the defendant, it is a fact clearly
proven, as found in the judgment appealed from, that the

plaintiff did deliver to Hermenegildo de los Santos the sum of


P67.60 to pay a debt was paid by De los Santos with the
knowledge and in behalf of the said defendant who, of her free
will, entered the service of the plaintiff and promised to pay him
as soon as she should find the money wherewith to do so.
The duty to pay the said sum, as well as that of P11.97 delivered
to the defendant in small amounts during the time that she was
in the plaintiff's house, is unquestionable, inasmuch as it is a
positive debt demandable of the defendant by her creditor. (Arts.
1754, 1170, Civil Code.) However, the reason alleged by the
plaintiff as a basis for the loan is untenable, to wit, that the
defendant was obliged to render service in his house as a
servant without remuneration whatever and to remain therein so
long as she had not paid her debt, inasmuch as this condition is
contrary to law and morality. (Art. 1255, Civil Code.)
Domestic services are always to be remunerated, and no
agreement may subsist in law in which it is stipulated that any
domestic service shall be absolutely gratuitous, unless it be
admitted that slavery may be established in this country through
a covenant entered into between the interested parties.
Articles 1583, 1584, and 1585 of the Civil Code prescribe rules
governing the hiring of services of domestics servants, the
conditions of such hire, the term during which the service may
rendered and the wages that accrue to the servant, also the
duties of the latter and of the master. The first of the articles
cited provides that a hiring for life by either of the contracting
parties is void, and, according to the last of three articles just
mentioned, besides what is prescribed in the preceding articles
with regard to masters and servants, the provisions of special
laws and local ordinances shall be observed.
During the regime of the former sovereignty, the police
regulations governing domestic service, of the date of
September 9, 1848, were in force, article 19 of which it is
ordered that all usurious conduct toward the servants and
employees of every class is prohibited, and the master who,

under pretext of an advance of pay or of having paid the debts


or the taxes of his servant, shall have succeeded in retaining the
latter in his service at his house, shall be compelled to pay to
such servant all arrears due him and any damages he may have
occasioned him, and the master shall also be fined.
The aforementioned article 1585 of the Civil Code undoubtedly
refers to the provisions of the regulations just cited.
When legal regulations prohibit even a usurious contract and all
abuses prejudicial to subordinates and servant, in connection
with their salaries and wages, it will be understood at once that
the compact whereby service rendered by a domestic servant in
the house of any inhabitant of this country is to be gratuitous, is
in all respects reprehensible and censurable; and consequently,
the contention of the plaintiff, that until the defendant shall have
paid him her debt she must serve him in his house gratuitously
is absolutely inadmissible.

The trial record discloses no legal reason for the rejection of the
findings of fact and of law contained in the judgment appealed
from, nor for an allowance of the errors attributed appealed
from, nor for an allowance of the errors attributed thereto; on
the contrary, the reasons hereinabove stated show the propriety
of the said judgment.
For the foregoing reasons, and accepting those set forth in the
judgment appealed from, it is proper, in our opinion, to affirm
and we hereby affirm the said judgment, with the costs against
the appellant.
Arellano, C. J., Johnson, Moreland and Trent, JJ., concur.

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