Transpo Cases 1
Transpo Cases 1
Transpo Cases 1
]
PEDRO DE GUZMAN, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS and
ERNESTO CENDAA, respondents.
Vicente D. Millora for petitioner.
Jacinto Callanta for private respondent.
SYLLABUS
1. CIVIL CODE; COMMON CARRIERS; ARTICLE 1732, DEFINITION UNDER
ARTICLE 1732 OF THE CODE. The Civil Code defines "common carriers" in
the following terms: "Article 1732. Common carriers are persons, corporations,
firms or associations engaged in the business of carrying or transporting
passengers or goods or both, by land, water, or air for compensation, offering
their services to the public." The above article makes no distinction between one
whose principal business activity is the carrying of persons or goods or both, and
one who does such carrying only as an ancillary activity (in local idiom, as "a
sideline"). Article 1732 also carefully avoids making any distinction between a
person or enterprise offering transportation service on a regular or scheduled
basis and one offering such service on an occasional, episodic or unscheduled
basis. Neither does Article 1732 distinguish between a carrier offering its services
to the "general public," i.e., the general community or population, and one who
offers services or solicits business only from a narrow segment of the general
population. We think that Article 1733 deliberately refrained from making such
distinctions.
2. ID.; ID.; ID.; LAW ON COMMON CARRIERS SUPPLEMENTED BY THE
PUBLIC SERVICE ACT; SCOPE OF PUBLIC SERVICE. So understood, the
concept of "common carrier" under Article 1732 may be seen to coincide neatly
with the notion of "public service," under the Public Service Act (Commonwealth
Act No. 1416, as amended) which at least partially supplements the law on
common carriers set forth in the Civil Code. Under Section 13, paragraph (b) of
the Public Service Act, "public service" includes: ". . . every person that now or
hereafter may own, operate, manage, or control in the Philippines, for hire or
compensation, with general or limited clientele, whether permanent, occasional
or accidental, and done for general business purposes, any common carrier,
railroad, street railway, traction railway, subway motor vehicle, either for freight or
passenger, or both, with or without fixed route and whatever may be its
classification, freight or carrier service of any class, express service, steamboat,
or steamship line, pontines, ferries and water craft, engaged in the transportation
of passengers or freight or both, shipyard, marine repair shop, wharf or dock, ice
plant, ice-refrigeration plant, canal, irrigation system, gas, electric light, heat and
power, water supply and power petroleum, sewerage system, wire or wireless
communications systems, wire or wireless broadcasting stations and other similar
public services . . ." (Emphasis supplied) It appears to the Court that private
respondent is properly characterized as a common carrier even though he merely
"back-hauled" goods for other merchants from Manila to Pangasinan, although
such backhauling was done on a periodic or occasional rather than regular or
scheduled manner, and even though private respondent's principal occupation
was not the carriage of goods for others. There is no dispute that private
respondent charged his customers a fee for hauling their goods; that fee
frequently fell below commercial freight rates is not relevant here.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; CERTIFICATE OF PUBLIC CONVENIENCE; NOT A
REQUISITE FOR INCURRING LIABILITY AS A COMMON CARRIER; NATURE
OF THE BUSINESS OF A COMMON CARRIER. The Court of Appeals
referred to the fact that private respondent held no certificate of public
convenience, and concluded he was not a common carrier. This is palpable error.
A certificate of public convenience is not a requisite for the incurring of liability
under the Civil Code provisions governing common carriers. That liability arises
the moment a person or firm acts as a common carrier, without regard to whether
or not such carrier has also complied with the requirements of the applicable
regulatory statute and implementing regulations and has been granted a
certificate of public convenience or other franchise. To exempt private respondent
from the liabilities of a common carrier because he has not secured the
necessary certificate of public convenience, would be offensive to sound public
policy; that would be to reward private respondent precisely for failing to comply
with applicable statutory requirements. The business of a common carrier
impinges directly and intimately upon the safety and well being and property of
those members of the general community who happen to deal with such carrier.
The law imposes duties and liabilities upon common carriers for the safety and
protection of those who utilize their services and the law cannot allow a common
carrier to render such duties and liabilities merely facultative by simply failing to
obtain the necessary permits and authorizations.
4. ID.; ID.; DEGREE OF DILIGENCE REQUIRED OF, COMMON CARRIERS.
Common carriers, "by the nature of their business and for reasons of public
policy," are held to a very high degree of care and diligence ("extraordinary
diligence") in the carriage of goods as well as of passengers. The specific import
of extraordinary diligence in the care of goods transported by a common carrier
is, according to Article 1733, "further expressed in Articles 1734, 1735 and 1745,
numbers 5, 6 and 7" of the Civil Code.
5. ID.; ID.; ID.; LIABILITY OF COMMON CARRIERS. Article 1734 establishes
the general rule that common carriers are responsible for the loss, destruction or
deterioration of the goods which they carry, "unless the same is due to any of the
following causes only: (1) Flood, storm, earthquake, lightning, or other natural
disaster or calamity; (2) Act of the public enemy in war, whether international or
civil; (3) Act or omission of the shipper or owner of the goods; (4) The character
of the goods or defects in the packing or in the containers; and (5) Order or act of
competent public authority." It is important to point out that the above list of
causes of loss, destruction or deterioration which exempt the common carrier for
responsibility therefor, is a closed list. Causes falling outside the foregoing list,
even if they appear to constitute a species of force majeure, fall within the scope
of Article 1735, which provides as follows: "In all cases other than those
mentioned in numbers 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of the preceding article, if the goods are
lost, destroyed or deteriorated, common carriers are presumed to have been at
fault or to have acted negligently, unless they prove that they observed
extraordinary diligence as required in Article 1733." (Emphasis supplied)
6. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; COMMON CARRIER'S ARE NOT ABSOLUTE INSURERS
AGAINST ALL RISKS; NO LIABILITY ATTACHES IN CASE OF FORTUITOUS
EVENTS. Under Article 1745 (6) above, a common carrier is held responsible
and will not be allowed to divest or to diminish such responsibility even for
acts of strangers like thieves or robbers, except where such thieves or robbers in
fact acted "with grave or irresistible threat, violence or force." We believe and so
hold that the limits of the duty of extraordinary diligence in the vigilance over the
goods carried are reached where the goods are lost as a result of a robbery
which is attended by "grave or irresistible threat, violence or force." In these
circumstances, we hold that the occurrence of the loss must reasonably be
regarded as quite beyond the control of the common carrier and properly
regarded as a fortuitous event. It is necessary to recall that even common
carriers are not made absolute insurers against all risks of travel and of transport
of goods, and are not held liable for acts or events which cannot be foreseen or
are inevitable, provided that they shall have complied with the rigorous standard
of extraordinary diligence.
DECISION
FELICIANO, J :
p
cartons were placed on board the other truck which was driven by Manuel
Estrada, respondent's driver and employee.
Only 150 boxes of Liberty filled milk were delivered to petitioner. The other 600
boxes never reached petitioner, since the truck which carried these boxes was
hijacked somewhere along the MacArthur Highway in Paniqui, Tarlac, by armed
men who took with them the truck, its driver, his helper and the cargo.
On 6 January 1971, petitioner commenced action against private respondent in
the Court of First Instance of Pangasinan, demanding payment of P22,150.00,
the claimed value of the lost merchandise, plus damages and attorney's fees.
Petitioner argued that private respondent, being a common carrier, and having
failed to exercise the extraordinary diligence required of him by the law, should be
held liable for the value of the undelivered goods.
In his Answer, private respondent denied that he was a common carrier and
argued that he could not be held responsible for the value of the lost goods, such
loss having been due to force majeure.
On 10 December 1975, the trial court rendered a Decision' finding private
respondent to be a common carrier and holding him liable for the value of the
undelivered goods (P22,150.00) as well as for P4,000.00 as damages and
P2,000.00 as attorney's fees.
cdrep
On appeal before the Court of Appeals, respondent urged that the trial court had
erred in considering him a common carrier; in finding that he had habitually
offered trucking services to the public; in not exempting him from liability on the
ground of force majeure; and in ordering him to pay damages and attorney's fees.
The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court and held that
respondent had been engaged in transporting return loads of freight "as a casual
occupation a sideline to his scrap iron business" and not as a common carrier.
Petitioner came to this Court by way of a Petition for Review assigning as errors
the following conclusions of the Court of Appeals:
1. that private respondent was not a common carrier;
We consider first the issue of whether or not private respondent Ernesto Cendaa
may, under the facts earlier set forth, be properly characterized as a common
carrier.
The Civil Code defines "common carriers" in the following terms:
"Article 1732. Common carriers are persons, corporations, firms or
associations engaged in the business of carrying or transporting
passengers or goods or both, by land, water, or air for compensation,
offering their services to the public."
The above article makes no distinction between one whose principal business
activity is the carrying of persons or goods or both, and one who does such
carrying only as an ancillary activity (in local idiom, as "a sideline"). Article 1732
also carefully avoids making any distinction between a person or enterprise
offering transportation service on a regular or scheduled basis and one offering
such service on an occasional, episodic or unscheduled basis. Neither does
Article 1732 distinguish between a carrier offering its services to the "general
public," i.e., the general community or population, and one who offers services or
solicits business only from a narrowsegment of the general population. We think
that Article 1733 deliberately refrained from making such distinctions.
So understood, the concept of "common carrier" under Article 1732 may be seen
to coincide neatly with the notion of "public service," under the Public Service Act
(Commonwealth Act No. 1416, as amended) which at least partially supplements
the law on common carriers set forth in the Civil Code. Under Section 13,
paragraph (b) of the Public Service Act, "public service" includes:
". . . every person that now or hereafter may own, operate, manage, or
control in the Philippines, for hire or compensation, with general or
limited clientele, whether permanent, occasional or accidental, and done
for general business purposes, any common carrier, railroad, street
railway, traction railway, subway motor vehicle, either for freight or
passenger, or both, with or without fixed route and whatever may be its
classification, freight or carrier service of any class, express service,
It is important to point out that the above list of causes of loss, destruction or
deterioration which exempt the common carrier for responsibility therefor, is a
closed list. Causes falling outside the foregoing list, even if they appear to
constitute a species of force majeure, fall within the scope of Article 1735,
which provides as follows:
"In all cases other than those mentioned in numbers 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of
the preceding article, if the goods are lost, destroyed or
deteriorated, common carriers are presumed to have been at fault or to
have acted negligently, unless they prove that they observed
extraordinary diligence as required in Article 1733." (Emphasis supplied)
Applying the above-quoted Articles 1734 and 1735, we note firstly that the
specific cause alleged in the instant case the hijacking of the carrier's truck does not fall within any of the five (5) categories of exempting causes listed in
Article 1734. It would follow, therefore, that the hijacking of the carrier's vehicle
must be dealt with under the provisions of Article 1735, in other words, that the
private respondent as common carrier is presumed to have been at fault or to
have acted negligently. This presumption, however, may be overthrown by proof
of extraordinary diligence on the part of private respondent.
cdll
Under Article 1745 (6) above, a common carrier is held responsible and will
not be allowed to divest or to diminish such responsibility even for acts of
strangers like thieves or robbers, except where such thieves or robbers in fact
acted "with grave or irresistible threat, violence or force." We believe and so hold
that the limits of the duty of extraordinary diligence in the vigilance over the goods
carried are reached where the goods are lost as a result of a robbery which is
attended by "grave or irresistible threat, violence or force."
In the instant case, armed men held up the second truck owned by private
respondent which carried petitioner's cargo. The record shows that an
information for robbery in band was filed in the Court of First Instance of Tarlac,
Branch 2, in Criminal Case No. 198 entitled "People of the Philippines v. Felipe
Boncorno, Napoleon Presno, Armando Mesina, Oscar Oria and one John Doe."
There, the accused were charged with willfully and unlawfully taking and carrying
away with them the second truck, driven by Manuel Estrada and loaded with the
600 cartons of Liberty filled milk destined for delivery at petitioner's store in
Urdaneta, Pangasinan. The decision of the trial court shows that the accused
acted with grave, if not irresistible, threat, violence or force. 3 Three (3) of the five
(5) hold-uppers were armed with firearms. The robbers not only took away the
truck and its cargo but also kidnapped the driver and his helper, detaining them
for several days and later releasing them in another province (in Zambales). The
hijacked truck was subsequently found by the police in Quezon City. The Court of
First Instance convicted all the accused of robbery, though not of robbery in
band. 4
In these circumstances, we hold that the occurrence of the loss must reasonably
be regarded as quite beyond the control of the common carrier and properly
regarded as a fortuitous event. It is necessary to recall that even common
carriers are not made absolute insurers against all risks of travel and of transport
of goods, and are not held liable for acts or events which cannot be foreseen or
are inevitable, provided that they shall have complied with the rigorous standard
of extraordinary diligence.
prLL
We, therefore, agree with the result reached by the Court of Appeals that private
respondent Cendaa is not liable for the value of the undelivered merchandise
which was lost because of an event entirely beyond private respondent's control.
ACCORDINGLY, the Petition for Review on Certiorari is hereby DENIED and the
Decision of the Court of Appeals dated 3 August 1977 is AFFIRMED. No
pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
|||
(De Guzman v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. L-47822, [December 22, 1988], 250
PHIL 613-624)
[G.R. No. 186312. June 29, 2010.]
SPOUSES DANTE CRUZ and LEONORA CRUZ, petitioners, vs.
SUN HOLIDAYS, INC., respondent.
DECISION
CARPIO MORALES, J :
p
2000, but was advised to stay for another night because of strong winds and
heavy rains.
On September 11, 2000, as it was still windy, Matute and 25 other
Resort guests including petitioners' son and his wife trekked to the other side
of the Coco Beach mountain that was sheltered from the wind where they
boarded M/B Coco Beach III, which was to ferry them to Batangas.
Shortly after the boat sailed, it started to rain. As it moved farther away
from Puerto Galera and into the open seas, the rain and wind got stronger,
causing the boat to tilt from side to side and the captain to step forward to the
front, leaving the wheel to one of the crew members.
The waves got more unwieldy. After getting hit by two big waves which
came one after the other,M/B Coco Beach III capsized putting all passengers
underwater.
The passengers, who had put on their life jackets, struggled to get out
of the boat. Upon seeing the captain, Matute and the other passengers who
reached the surface asked him what they could do to save the people who
were still trapped under the boat. The captain replied "Iligtas niyo na lang ang
sarili niyo" (Just save yourselves).
AcCTaD
Help came after about 45 minutes when two boats owned by Asia
Divers in Sabang, Puerto Galera passed by the capsized M/B Coco Beach
III. Boarded on those two boats were 22 persons, consisting of 18 passengers
and four crew members, who were brought to Pisa Island. Eight passengers,
including petitioners' son and his wife, died during the incident.
At the time of Ruelito's death, he was 28 years old and employed as a
contractual worker for Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding Arabia, Ltd. in Saudi
Arabia, with a basic monthly salary of $900. 3
Petitioners, by letter of October 26, 2000, 4 demanded indemnification
from respondent for the death of their son in the amount of at least
P4,000,000.
Replying, respondent, by letter dated November 7, 2000, 5 denied any
responsibility for the incident which it considered to be a fortuitous event. It
ETDHSa
17
in
That respondent does not charge a separate fee or fare for its ferry
services is of no moment. It would be imprudent to suppose that it provides
said services at a loss. The Court is aware of the practice of beach resort
operators offering tour packages to factor the transportation fee in arriving at
the tour package price. That guests who opt not to avail of respondent's ferry
services pay the same amount is likewise inconsequential. These guests may
only be deemed to have overpaid.
As De Guzman instructs, Article 1732 of the Civil Code defining
"common carriers" has deliberately refrained from making distinctions on
whether the carrying of persons or goods is the carrier's principal business,
whether it is offered on a regular basis, or whether it is offered to the general
public. The intent of the law is thus to not consider such distinctions.
Otherwise, there is no telling how many other distinctions may be concocted
by unscrupulous businessmen engaged in the carrying of persons or goods in
order to avoid the legal obligations and liabilities of common carriers.
Under the Civil Code, common carriers, from the nature of their
business and for reasons of public policy, are bound to observe extraordinary
diligence for the safety of the passengers transported by them, according to all
the circumstances of each case. 19 They are bound to carry the passengers
safely as far as human care and foresight can provide, using the utmost
diligence of very cautious persons, with due regard for all the
circumstances. 20
When a passenger dies or is injured in the discharge of a contract of
carriage, it is presumed that the common carrier is at fault or negligent. In fact,
there is even no need for the court to make an express finding of fault or
negligence on the part of the common carrier. This statutory presumption may
only be overcome by evidence that the carrier exercised extraordinary
diligence. 21
Respondent nevertheless harps on its strict compliance with the earlier
mentioned conditions of voyage before it allowed M/B Coco Beach III to sail
on September 11, 2000. Respondent's position does not impress.
ITcCaS
Article 1764 27 vis--vis Article 2206 28 of the Civil Code holds the
common carrier in breach of its contract of carriage that results in the death of
a passenger liable to pay the following: (1) indemnity for death, (2) indemnity
for loss of earning capacity and (3) moral damages.
Petitioners are entitled to indemnity for the death of Ruelito which is fixed at
P50,000. 29
As for damages representing unearned income, the formula for its computation
is:
Net Earning Capacity
life expectancy x (gross annual income reasonable and necessary living expenses).
Life expectancy is determined in accordance with the formula:
2/3 x [80 age of deceased at the time of death]
30
The first factor, i.e., life expectancy, is computed by applying the formula
(2/3 x [80 age at death]) adopted in the American Expectancy Table of
Mortality or the Actuarial of Combined Experience Table of Mortality. 31
The second factor is computed by multiplying the life expectancy by the
net earnings of the deceased, i.e., the total earnings less expenses necessary
in the creation of such earnings or income and less living and other incidental
expenses. 32 The loss is not equivalent to the entire earnings of the deceased,
but only such portion as he would have used to support his dependents or
heirs. Hence, to be deducted from his gross earnings are the necessary
expenses supposed to be used by the deceased for his own needs. 33
In computing the third factor necessary living expense, Smith Bell
Dodwell Shipping Agency Corp. v. Borja 34 teaches that when, as in this case,
there is no showing that the living expenses constituted the smaller
percentage of the gross income, the living expenses are fixed at half of the
gross income.
Applying the above guidelines, the Court determines Ruelito's life expectancy as
follows:
Life expectancy
Life expectancy
2/3 x [52]
35
Documentary evidence shows that Ruelito was earning a basic monthly salary of
$900 35 which, when converted to Philippine peso applying the annual average
exchange rate of $1 = P44 in 2000, 36 amounts to P39,600. Ruelito's net earning
capacity is thus computed as follows:
Net Earning Capacity
35 x (P475,200 - P237,600)
=
=
35 x (P237,600)
P8,316,000
for the death of Ruelito Cruz; (2) P8,316,000 as indemnity for Ruelito's loss of
earning capacity; (3) P100,000 as moral damages; (4) P100,000 as
exemplary damages; (5) 10% of the total amount adjudged against
respondent as attorneys fees; and (6) the costs of suit.
The total amount adjudged against respondent shall earn interest at the
rate of 12% per annum computed from the finality of this decision until full
payment.
SO ORDERED.
|||
(Spouses Cruz v. Sun Holidays, Inc., G.R. No. 186312, [June 29, 2010], 636
PHIL 396-413)
The Supreme Court upheld the assailed decision on appeal, ruling: that petitioner
is a common carrier because the transportation of goods is an integral part of her
business: that as such, she is bound to observe extraordinary diligence in the
carriage of goods; that to prove extraordinary diligence, petitioner must do more
than merely show the possibility that some other party could be responsible for
the damage; and that improper packing of the goods could be a basis to exempt
petitioner from liability, but petitioner accepted the cargo without exception
despite the apparent defects in some of the container vans.
SYLLABUS
1. CIVIL LAW; COMMON CARRIERS; CUSTOMS BROKER AND
WAREHOUSEMAN AS COMMON CARRIER; CASE AT BAR. Petitioner
contends that contrary to the findings of the trial court and the Court of Appeals,
she is not a common carrier but a private carrier because, as a customs broker
and warehouseman, she does not indiscriminately hold her services out to the
public but only offers the same to select parties with whom she may contract in
the conduct of her business. The contention has no merit. In De Guzman v. Court
of Appeals, the Court dismissed a similar contention and held the party to be a
common carrier, . . . as defined in Article 1732 of the Civil Code. . . . There is
greater reason for holding petitioner to be a common carrier because the
transportation of goods is an integral part of her business. To uphold petitioners'
contention would be to deprive those with whom she contracts the protection
which the law affords them notwithstanding the fact that the obligation to carry
goods for her customers, as already noted, is part and parcel of petitioner's
business.
2. ID.; ID.; ID.; PROOF OF THE EXERCISE OF EXTRAORDINARY DILIGENCE
IN THE CARRIAGE OF GOODS; CASE AT BAR. Anent petitioner's insistence
that the cargo could not have been damaged while in her custody as she
immediately delivered the containers to SMC's compound, suffice it to say that to
prove the exercise of extraordinary diligence, petitioner must do more than
merely show the possibility that some other party could be responsible for the
damage. It must prove that it used "all reasonable means to ascertain the nature
and characteristic of goods tendered for [transport] and that [it] exercise[d] due
care in the handling [thereof]." Petitioner failed to do this. Nor is there basis to
exempt petitioner from liability under Art. 1734(4), . . . For this provision to apply,
the rule is that if the improper packing or, in this case, the defect/s in the
container, is/are known to the carrier or his employees or apparent upon ordinary
observation, but he nevertheless accepts the same without protest or exception
notwithstanding such condition, he is not relieved of liability for damage resulting
therefrom. In this case, petitioner accepted the cargo without exception despite
the apparent defects in some of the container vans. Hence, for failure of
petitioner to prove that she exercised extraordinary diligence in the carriage of
goods in this case or that she is exempt from liability, the presumption of
negligence as provided under Art. 1735 holds.
EDISaA
DECISION
MENDOZA, J :
p
This is a petition for review of the decision, 1 dated May 31, 2001, of the Court of
Appeals, affirming the decision 2 of the Regional Trial Court, Makati City, Branch
148, which ordered petitioner to pay respondent, as subrogee, the amount of
P93,112.00 with legal interest, representing the value of damaged cargo handled
by petitioner, 25% thereof as attorney's fees, and the cost of the suit.
The facts are as follows:
Petitioner Virgines Calvo is the owner of Transorient Container Terminal Services,
Inc. (TCTSI), a sole proprietorship customs broker. At the time material to this
case, petitioner entered into a contract with San Miguel Corporation (SMC) for
the transfer of 114 reels of semi-chemical fluting paper and 124 reels of kraft liner
board from the Port Area in Manila to SMC's warehouse at the Tabacalera
Compound, Romualdez St., Ermita, Manila. The cargo was insured by
respondent UCPB General Insurance Co., Inc.
On July 14, 1990, the shipment in question, contained in 30 metal vans, arrived
in Manila on board "M/V Hayakawa Maru" and, after 24 hours, were unloaded
from the vessel to the custody of the arrastre operator, Manila Port Services, Inc.
From July 23 to July 25, 1990, petitioner, pursuant to her contract with SMC,
withdrew the cargo from the arrastre operator and delivered it to SMC's
warehouse in Ermita, Manila. On July 25, 1990, the goods were inspected by
Marine Cargo Surveyors, who found that 15 reels of the semi-chemical fluting
paper were "wet/stained/torn" and 3 reels of kraft liner board were likewise torn.
The damage was placed at P93,112.00.
SMC collected payment from respondent UCPB under its insurance contract for
the aforementioned amount. In turn, respondent, as subrogee of SMC, brought
suit against petitioner in the Regional Trial Court, Branch 148, Makati City, which,
on December 20, 1995, rendered judgment finding petitioner liable to respondent
for the damage to the shipment.
The trial court held:
It cannot be denied . . . that the subject cargoes sustained damage while
in the custody of defendants. Evidence such as the Warehouse Entry
Slip (Exh. "E"); the Damage Report (Exh. "F") with entries appearing
therein, classified as "TED" and "TSN", which the claims processor, Ms.
Agrifina De Luna, claimed to be tearrage at the end and tearrage at the
middle of the subject damaged cargoes respectively, coupled with the
Marine Cargo Survey Report (Exh. "H" "H-4-A") confirms the fact of
the damaged condition of the subject cargoes. The surveyor[s'] report
(Exh. "H-4-A") in particular, which provides among others that:
" . . . we opine that damages sustained by shipment
is attributable to improper handling in transit presumably
whilst in the custody of the broker . . . ."
is a finding which cannot be traversed and overturned.
The evidence adduced by the defendants is not enough to sustain [her]
defense that [she is] are not liable. Defendant by reason of the nature of
[her] business should have devised ways and means in order to prevent
the damage to the cargoes which it is under obligation to take custody of
and to forthwith deliver to the consignee. Defendant did not present any
evidence on what precaution [she] performed to prevent [the] said
incident, hence the presumption is that the moment the defendant
accepts the cargo [she] shall perform such extraordinary diligence
because of the nature of the cargo.
The decision was affirmed by the Court of Appeals on appeal. Hence this petition
for review on certiorari.
Petitioner contends that:
Petitioner contends that contrary to the findings of the trial court and the Court of
Appeals, she is not a common carrier but a private carrier because, as a customs
broker and warehouseman, she does not indiscriminately hold her services out to
the public but only offers the same to select parties with whom she may contract
in the conduct of her business.
The contention has no merit. In De Guzman v. Court of Appeals, 7 the Court
dismissed a similar contention and held the party to be a common carrier, thus
The Civil Code defines "common carriers" in the following terms:
"Article 1732. Common carriers are persons, corporations, firms
or associations engaged in the business of carrying or
transporting passengers or goods or both, by land, water, or air for
compensation, offering their services to the public."
The above article makes no distinction between one
whose principal business activity is the carrying of persons or goods or
both, and one who does such carrying only as an ancillary activity . . .
There is greater reason for holding petitioner to be a common carrier because the
transportation of goods is an integral part of her business. To uphold petitioner's
contention would be to deprive those with whom she contracts the protection
which the law affords them notwithstanding the fact that the obligation to carry
goods for her customers, as already noted, is part and parcel of petitioner's
business.
Now, as to petitioner's liability, Art. 1733 of the Civil Code provides:
Common carriers, from the nature of their business and for reasons of
public policy, are bound to observe extraordinary diligence in the
vigilance over the goods and for the safety of the passengers
transported by them, according to all the circumstances of each
case. . . .
In the case at bar, petitioner denies liability for the damage to the cargo. She
claims that the "spoilage or wettage" took place while the goods were in the
custody of either the carrying vessel "M/V Hayakawa Maru," which transported
the cargo to Manila, or the arrastre operator, to whom the goods were unloaded
and who allegedly kept them in open air for nine days from July 14 to July 23,
1998 notwithstanding the fact that some of the containers were deformed,
cracked, or otherwise damaged, as noted in the Marine Survey Report (Exh. H),
to wit:
MAXU-2062880 - rain gutter deformed/cracked
ICSU-363461-3 - left side rubber gasket on door distorted/partly loose
PERU-204209-4 - with pinholes on roof panel right portion
TOLU-213674-3 - wood flooring we[t] and/or with signs of water soaked
MAXU-201406-0 - with dent/crack on roof panel
Anent petitioner's insistence that the cargo could not have been damaged while
in her custody as she immediately delivered the containers to SMC's compound,
suffice it to say that to prove the exercise of extraordinary diligence, petitioner
must do more than merely show the possibility that some other party could be
responsible for the damage. It must prove that it used "all reasonable means to
ascertain the nature and characteristic of goods tendered for [transport] and that
[it] exercise[d] due care in the handling [thereof]." Petitioner failed to do this.
Nor is there basis to exempt petitioner from liability under Art. 1734(4), which
provides
Common carriers are responsible for the loss, destruction, or
deterioration of the goods, unless the same is due to any of the following
causes only:
For this provision to apply, the rule is that if the improper packing or, in this case,
the defect/s in the container, is/are known to the carrier or his employees or
apparent upon ordinary observation, but he nevertheless accepts the same
without protest or exception notwithstanding such condition, he is not relieved of
liability for damage resulting therefrom. 14 In this case, petitioner accepted the
cargo without exception despite the apparent defects in some of the container
vans. Hence, for failure of petitioner to prove that she exercised extraordinary
diligence in the carriage of goods in this case or that she is exempt from liability,
the presumption of negligence as provided under Art. 1735 15 holds.
WHEREFORE, the decision of the Court of Appeals, dated May 31, 2001, is
AFFIRMED.
aDcTHE
SO ORDERED.
|||
(Calvo v. UCPB General Insurance Co., Inc., G.R. No. 148496, [March 19,
of the goods or defects in the packing or in the containers; (5) Order or act of
competent public authority.
4. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; TYPHOON; NOT APPRECIATED IN THE ABSENCE
OF PROOF THAT IT WAS THE PROXIMATE AND ONLY CAUSE OF LOSS AND
DUE DILIGENCE EXERCISED BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER THE
TYPHOON. In the case at bar, the barge completely sank after its towing bits
broke, resulting in the total loss of its cargo. Petitioner claims that this was
caused by a typhoon, hence, it should not be held liable for the loss of the cargo.
However, petitioner failed to prove that the typhoon is the proximate and only
cause of the loss of the goods, and that it has exercised due diligence before,
during and after the occurrence of the typhoon to prevent or minimize the loss.
The evidence show that, even before the towing bits of the barge broke, it had
already previously sustained damage when it hit a sunken object while docked at
the Engineering Island. It even suffered a hole. Clearly, this could not be solely
attributed to the typhoon. The partly-submerged vessel was refloated but its hole
was patched with only clay and cement. The patch work was merely a provisional
remedy, not enough for the barge to sail safely. Thus, when petitioner persisted to
proceed with the voyage, it recklessly exposed the cargo to further damage.
DECISION
PUNO, J :
p
On appeal is the Court of Appeals' May 11, 2000 Decision 1 in CA-G.R. CV No.
49195 and February 21, 2001 Resolution 2 affirming with modification the April 6,
1994 Decision 3 of the Regional Trial Court of Manila which found petitioner liable
to pay private respondent the amount of indemnity and attorney's fees.
First, the facts.
On June 13, 1990, 3,150 metric tons of Better Western White Wheat in bulk,
valued at US$423,192.35 4 was shipped by Marubeni American Corporation of
Portland, Oregon on board the vessel M/V NEO CYMBIDIUM V-26 for delivery to
the consignee, General Milling Corporation in Manila, evidenced by Bill of Lading
No. PTD/Man-4. 5The shipment was insured by the private respondent Prudential
Guarantee and Assurance, Inc. against loss or damage for P14,621,771.75
under Marine Cargo Risk Note RN 11859/90. 6
On July 25, 1990, the carrying vessel arrived in Manila and the cargo was
transferred to the custody of the petitioner Asia Lighterage and Shipping, Inc. The
petitioner was contracted by the consignee as carrier to deliver the cargo to
consignee's warehouse at Bo. Ugong, Pasig City.
On August 15, 1990, 900 metric tons of the shipment was loaded on barge
PSTSI III, evidenced by Lighterage Receipt No. 0364 7 for delivery to consignee.
The cargo did not reach its destination.
It appears that on August 17, 1990, the transport of said cargo was suspended
due to a warning of an incoming typhoon. On August 22, 1990, the petitioner
proceeded to pull the barge to Engineering Island off Baseco to seek shelter from
the approaching typhoon. PSTSI III was tied down to other barges which arrived
ahead of it while weathering out the storm that night. A few days after, the barge
developed a list because of a hole it sustained after hitting an unseen
protruberance underneath the water. The petitioner filed a Marine Protest on
August 28, 1990. 8 It likewise secured the services of Gaspar Salvaging
Corporation which refloated the barge. 9 The hole was then patched with clay and
cement.
The barge was then towed to ISLOFF terminal before it finally headed towards
the consignee's wharf on September 5, 1990. Upon reaching the Sta. Mesa
spillways, the barge again ran aground due to strong current. To avoid the
complete sinking of the barge, a portion of the goods was transferred to three
other barges. 10
The next day, September 6, 1990, the towing bits of the barge broke. It sank
completely, resulting in the total loss of the remaining cargo. 11 A second Marine
Protest was filed on September 7, 1990. 12
On September 14, 1990, a bidding was conducted to dispose of the damaged
wheat retrieved and loaded on the three other barges. 13 The total proceeds from
the sale of the salvaged cargo was P201,379.75. 14
On the same date, September 14, 1990, consignee sent a claim letter to the
petitioner, and another letter dated September 18, 1990 to the private respondent
for the value of the lost cargo.
On January 30, 1991, the private respondent indemnified the consignee in the
amount of P4,104,654.22. 15 Thereafter, as subrogee, it sought recovery of said
amount from the petitioner, but to no avail.
On July 3, 1991, the private respondent filed a complaint against the petitioner for
recovery of the amount of indemnity, attorney's fees and cost of suit. 16 Petitioner
filed its answer with counterclaim. 17
The Regional Trial Court ruled in favor of the private respondent. The dispositive
portion of its Decision states:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, judgment is hereby rendered
ordering defendant Asia Lighterage & Shipping, Inc. liable to pay plaintiff
Prudential Guarantee & Assurance Co., Inc. the sum of P4,104,654.22
with interest from the date complaint was filed on July 3, 1991 until fully
satisfied plus 10% of the amount awarded as and for attorney's fees.
Defendant's counterclaim is hereby DISMISSED. With costs against
defendant. 18
Petitioner's Motion for Reconsideration dated June 3, 2000 was likewise denied
by the appellate court in a Resolution promulgated on February 21, 2001.
Hence, this petition. Petitioner submits the following errors allegedly committed
by the appellate court, viz: 19
Petitioner contends that it is not a common carrier but a private carrier. Allegedly,
it has no fixed and publicly known route, maintains no terminals, and issues no
tickets. It points out that it is not obliged to carry indiscriminately for any person. It
is not bound to carry goods unless it consents. In short, it does not hold out its
services to the general public. 20
We disagree.
In De Guzman vs. Court of Appeals, 21 we held that the definition of common
carriers in Article 1732 of the Civil Code makes no distinction between one
whose principal business activity is the carrying of persons or goods or both, and
one who does such carrying only as an ancillary activity. We also did not
distinguish between a person or enterprise offering transportation service on a
regular or scheduled basis and one offering such service on an occasional,
episodic or unscheduled basis. Further, we ruled that Article 1732 does not
distinguish between a carrier offering its services to the general public, and one
who offers services or solicits business only from a narrow segment of the
general population.
In the case at bar, the principal business of the petitioner is that of lighterage and
drayage 22 and it offers its barges to the public for carrying or transporting goods
by water for compensation. Petitioner is clearly a common carrier. In De Guzman,
supra, 23 we considered private respondent Ernesto Cendaa to be a common
carrier even if his principal occupation was not the carriage of goods for others,
but that of buying used bottles and scrap metal in Pangasinan and selling these
items in Manila.
We therefore hold that petitioner is a common carrier whether its carrying of
goods is done on an irregular rather than scheduled manner, and with an only
limited clientele. A common carrier need not have fixed and publicly known
routes. Neither does it have to maintain terminals or issue tickets.
To be sure, petitioner fits the test of a common carrier as laid down in Bascos vs.
Court of Appeals. 24 The test to determine a common carrier is "whether the given
undertaking is a part of the business engaged in by the carrier which he has held
out to the general public as his occupation rather than the quantity or extent of
the business transacted." 25 In the case at bar, the petitioner admitted that it is
engaged in the business of shipping and lighterage, 26 offering its barges to the
public, despite its limited clientele for carrying or transporting goods by water for
compensation. 27
On the second issue, we uphold the findings of the lower courts that petitioner
failed to exercise extraordinary diligence in its care and custody of the
consignee's goods.
Common carriers are bound to observe extraordinary diligence in the vigilance
over the goods transported by them. 28 They are presumed to have been at fault
or to have acted negligently if the goods are lost, destroyed or deteriorated. 29 To
overcome the presumption of negligence in the case of loss, destruction or
deterioration of the goods, the common carrier must prove that it exercised
extraordinary diligence. There are, however, exceptions to this rule. Article 1734
of the Civil Code enumerates the instances when the presumption of negligence
does not attach:
Art. 1734. Common carriers are responsible for the loss, destruction, or
deterioration of the goods, unless the same is due to any of the following
causes only:
(1) Flood, storm, earthquake, lightning, or other natural disaster or
calamity;
(2) Act of the public enemy in war, whether international or civil;
(3) Act or omission of the shipper or owner of the goods;
(4) The character of the goods or defects in the packing or in the
containers;
(5) Order or act of competent public authority.
In the case at bar, the barge completely sank after its towing bits broke, resulting
in the total loss of its cargo. Petitioner claims that this was caused by a typhoon,
hence, it should not be held liable for the loss of the cargo. However, petitioner
failed to prove that the typhoon is the proximate and only cause of the loss of the
goods, and that it has exercised due diligence before, during and after the
occurrence of the typhoon to prevent or minimize the loss. 30 The evidence show
that, even before the towing bits of the barge broke, it had already previously
sustained damage when it hit a sunken object while docked at the Engineering
Island. It even suffered a hole. Clearly, this could not be solely attributed to the
typhoon. The partly-submerged vessel was refloated but its hole was patched
with only clay and cement. The patch work was merely a provisional remedy, not
enough for the barge to sail safely. Thus, when petitioner persisted to proceed
with the voyage, it recklessly exposed the cargo to further damage. A portion of
the cross-examination of Alfredo Cunanan, cargo-surveyor of Tan-Gatue
Adjustment Co., Inc., states:
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY ATTY. DONN LEE: 31
xxx xxx xxx
q Can you tell us what else transpired after that incident?
a After the first accident, through the initiative of the barge owners, they
tried to pull out the barge from the place of the accident, and bring
it to the anchor terminal for safety, then after deciding if the vessel
is stabilized, they tried to pull it to the consignee's warehouse,
now while on route another accident occurred, now this time the
barge totally hitting something in the course.
q You said there was another accident, can you tell the court nature of
the second accident?
a The sinking, sir.
q Can you tell the nature . . . can you tell the court, if you know what
caused the sinking?
a Mostly it was related to the first accident because there was already a
whole (sic) on the bottom part of the barge.
xxx xxx xxx
This is not all. Petitioner still headed to the consignee's wharf despite knowledge
of an incoming typhoon. During the time that the barge was heading towards the
consignee's wharf on September 5, 1990, typhoon "Loleng" has already entered
the Philippine area of responsibility. 32 A part of the testimony of Robert Boyd,
Cargo Operations Supervisor of the petitioner, reveals:
DIRECT-EXAMINATION BY ATTY. LEE: 33
a Yes, sir.
q And yet you proceeded to the premises of the GMC?
a ISLOFF Terminal is far from Manila Bay and anytime even with the
typhoon if you are already inside the vicinity or inside Pasig
entrance, it is a safe place to tow upstream.
Accordingly, the petitioner cannot invoke the occurrence of the typhoon as force
majeure to escape liability for the loss sustained by the private respondent.
Surely, meeting a typhoon head-on falls short of due diligence required from a
common carrier. More importantly, the officers/employees themselves of
petitioner admitted that when the towing bits of the vessel broke that caused its
sinking and the total loss of the cargo upon reaching the Pasig River, it was no
longer affected by the typhoon. The typhoon then is not the proximate cause of
the loss of the cargo; a human factor, i.e., negligence had intervened.
IN VIEW THEREOF, the petition is DENIED. The Decision of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 49195 dated May 11, 2000 and its Resolution dated
February 21, 2001 are hereby AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioner.
HIEAcC
SO ORDERED.
|||
(Asia Lighterage and Shipping Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 147246,
On July 19, 2000, V. Reyes Lazo withdrew, and petitioner released, the
shipment and delivered it to Access International's warehouse in Binondo,
Manila. 10While the shipment was at Access International's warehouse, the
latter, together with its surveyor, Lloyd's Agency, conducted an inspection and
noted that only twelve (12) boxes were accounted for, while fourteen (14)
boxes were missing. 11 Access International thus filed a claim against
petitioner and V. Reyes Lazo for the missing shipment amounting to
$34,993.28. 12 For failure to collect its claim, Access International sought
In a claim for loss filed by the consignee (or the insurer), the burden of
proof to show compliance with the obligation to deliver the goods to the
appropriate party devolves upon the arrastre operator. Since the safekeeping
of the goods is its responsibility, it must prove that the losses were not due to
its negligence or to that of its employees. 36 To prove the exercise of diligence
in handling the subject cargoes, petitioner must do more than merely show the
possibility that some other party could be responsible for the loss or the
damage. It must prove that it exercised due care in the handling
thereof. 37 Petitioner failed to do this. Instead, it insists that it be exonerated
from liability, because the customs broker's representative received the
subject shipment in good order and condition without exception. The appellate
court's conclusion on this matter is instructive:
ATI may not disclaim responsibility for the shortage/pilferage of fourteen
(14) boxes of printed aluminum sheet while the container van remained
in its custody for seven (7) days (at the Container Yard) simply because
the alleged representative of the customs broker had withdrawn the
shipment from its premises and signed the EIR without any complaint.
The signature of the person/broker representative merely signifies that
said person thereby frees the ATI from any liability for loss or damage to
the cargo so withdrawn while the same was in the custody of such
representative to whom the cargo was released. It does not foreclose
any remedy or right of the consignee to prove that any loss or damage to
the subject shipment occurred while the same was under the custody,
control and possession of the arrastre operator. 38
Management Contract drawn between the PPA and the Marina Port Services,
Inc., petitioner's predecessor-in-interest, to wit:
CLAIMS AND LIABILITY FOR LOSSES AND DAMAGES
Section 7.01. Responsibility and Liability for Losses and Damages;
Exceptions. The CONTRACTOR shall, at its own expense, handle all
merchandise in all work undertaken by it, hereunder, diligently and in a
skillful, workman-like and efficient manner. The CONTRACTOR shall be
solely responsible as an independent contractor, and hereby agrees to
accept liability and to pay to the shipping company, consignees,
consignors or other interested party or parties for the loss, damage or
non-delivery of cargoes in its custody and control to the extent of the
actual invoice value of each package which in no case shall be more
than FIVE THOUSAND PESOS (P5,000.00) each, unless the value of
the cargo shipment is otherwise specified or manifested or
communicated in writing together with the declared Bill of Lading value
and supported by a certified packing list to the CONTRACTOR by the
interested party or parties before the discharge or loading unto vessel of
the goods. This amount of Five Thousand Pesos (P5,000.00) per
package may be reviewed and adjusted by the AUTHORITY from time to
time. The CONTRACTOR shall not be responsible for the condition or
the contents of any package received, nor for the weight nor for any loss,
injury or damage to the said cargo before or while the goods are being
received or remains in the piers, sheds, warehouses or facility, if the
loss, injury or damage is caused by force majeure or other causes
beyond the CONTRACTOR'S control or capacity to prevent or remedy:
PROVIDED that a formal claim together with the necessary copies of Bill
of Lading, Invoice, Certified Packing List and Computation arrived at
covering the loss, injury or damage or non-delivery of such goods shall
have been filed with the CONTRACTOR within fifteen (15) days from day
of issuance by the CONTRACTOR of a certificate of non-delivery:
PROVIDED, however, that if said CONTRACTOR fails to issue such
certification within fifteen (15) days from receipt of a written request by
the shipper/consignee or his duly authorized representative or any
interested party, said certification shall be deemed to have been issued,
and thereafter, the fifteen (15) day period within which to file the claim
commences: PROVIDED, finally, that the request for certification of loss
shall be made within thirty (30) days from the date of delivery of the
package to the consignee.
ECHSDc
As clearly stated above, such limitation does not apply if the value of the cargo
shipment is communicated to the arrastre operator before the discharge of the
cargoes.
It is undisputed that Access International, upon arrival of the shipment,
declared the same for taxation purposes, as well as for the assessment of
arrastre charges and other fees. For the purpose, the invoice, packing list and
other shipping documents were presented to the Bureau of Customs as well
as to petitioner for the proper assessment of the arrastre charges and other
fees. Such manifestation satisfies the condition of declaration of the actual
invoices of the value of the goods before their arrival, to overcome the
limitation on the liability of the arrastre operator. 43 Then, the arrastre operator,
by reason of the payment to it of a commensurate charge based on the higher
declared value of the merchandise, could and should take extraordinary care
of the special or valuable cargo. 44 What would, indeed, be unfair and arbitrary
is to hold the arrastre operator liable for the full value of the merchandise after
the consignee has paid the arrastre charges only on a basis much lower than
the true value of the goods. 45
What is essential is knowledge beforehand of the extent of the risk to be
undertaken by the arrastre operator, as determined by the value of the
property committed to its care. This defines its responsibility for loss of or
damage to such cargo and ascertains the compensation commensurate to
such risk assumed. Having been duly informed of the actual invoice value of
the merchandise under its custody and having received payment of arrastre
SO ORDERED.
|||
(Asian Terminals, Inc. v. Daehan Fire and Marine Insurance Co., Ltd., G.R. No.
The operator of a school bus service is a common carrier in the eyes of the law.
He is bound to observe extraordinary diligence in the conduct of his business. He
is presumed to be negligent when death occurs to a passenger. His liability may
include indemnity for loss of earning capacity even if the deceased passenger
may only be an unemployed high school student at the time of the accident.
The Case
By petition for review on certiorari, Spouses Teodoro and Nanette Perea
(Pereas) appeal the adverse decision promulgated on November 13, 2002, by
which the Court of Appeals (CA) affirmed with modification the decision rendered
on December 3, 1999 by the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 260, in
Paraaque City that had decreed them jointly and severally liable with Philippine
National Railways (PNR), their co-defendant, to Spouses Nicolas and Teresita
Zarate (Zarates) for the death of their 15-year old son, Aaron John L. Zarate
(Aaron), then a high school student of Don Bosco Technical Institute (Don
Bosco).
Antecedents
The Pereas were engaged in the business of transporting students from their
respective residences in Paraaque City to Don Bosco in Pasong Tamo, Makati
City, and back. In their business, the Pereas used a KIA Ceres Van (van) with
Plate No. PYA 896, which had the capacity to transport 14 students at a time, two
of whom would be seated in the front beside the driver, and the others in the rear,
with six students on either side. They employed Clemente Alfaro (Alfaro) as driver
of the van.
ACcHIa
In June 1996, the Zarates contracted the Pereas to transport Aaron to and from
Don Bosco. On August 22, 1996, as on previous school days, the van picked
Aaron up around 6:00 a.m. from the Zarates' residence. Aaron took his place on
the left side of the van near the rear door. The van, with its air-conditioning unit
turned on and the stereo playing loudly, ultimately carried all the 14 student riders
on their way to Don Bosco. Considering that the students were due at Don Bosco
by 7:15 a.m., and that they were already running late because of the heavy
vehicular traffic on the South Superhighway, Alfaro took the van to an alternate
route at about 6:45 a.m. by traversing the narrow path underneath the
Magallanes Interchange that was then commonly used by Makati-bound vehicles
as a short cut into Makati. At the time, the narrow path was marked by piles of
construction materials and parked passenger jeepneys, and the railroad crossing
in the narrow path had no railroad warning signs, or watchmen, or other
responsible persons manning the crossing. In fact, the bamboo barandilla was
up, leaving the railroad crossing open to traversing motorists.
At about the time the van was to traverse the railroad crossing, PNR Commuter
No. 302 (train), operated by Jhonny Alano (Alano), was in the vicinity of the
Magallanes Interchange travelling northbound. As the train neared the railroad
crossing, Alfaro drove the van eastward across the railroad tracks, closely tailing
a large passenger bus. His view of the oncoming train was blocked because he
overtook the passenger bus on its left side. The train blew its horn to warn
motorists of its approach. When the train was about 50 meters away from the
passenger bus and the van, Alano applied the ordinary brakes of the train. He
applied the emergency brakes only when he saw that a collision was imminent.
The passenger bus successfully crossed the railroad tracks, but the van driven by
Alfaro did not. The train hit the rear end of the van, and the impact threw nine of
the 12 students in the rear, including Aaron, out of the van. Aaron landed in the
path of the train, which dragged his body and severed his head, instantaneously
killing him. Alano fled the scene on board the train, and did not wait for the police
investigator to arrive.
Devastated by the early and unexpected death of Aaron, the Zarates commenced
this action for damages against Alfaro, the Pereas, PNR and Alano. The
Pereas and PNR filed their respective answers, with cross-claims against each
other, but Alfaro could not be served with summons.
HCDaAS
At the pre-trial, the parties stipulated on the facts and issues, viz.:
A. FACTS:
(1) That spouses Zarate were the legitimate parents of Aaron
John L. Zarate;
(2) Spouses Zarate engaged the services of spouses Perea for
the adequate and safe transportation carriage of the former
spouses' son from their residence in Paraaque to his
school at the Don Bosco Technical Institute in Makati City;
(3) During the effectivity of the contract of carriage and in the
implementation thereof, Aaron, the minor son of spouses
Zarate died in connection with a vehicular/train collision
any
liability
for
the
The Zarates' claim against the Pereas was upon breach of the contract of
carriage for the safe transport of Aaron; but that against PNR was based on
quasi-delict under Article 2176, Civil Code.
In their defense, the Pereas adduced evidence to show that they had exercised
the diligence of a good father of the family in the selection and supervision of
Alfaro, by making sure that Alfaro had been issued a driver's license and had not
been involved in any vehicular accident prior to the collision; that their own son
had taken the van daily; and that Teodoro Perea had sometimes accompanied
Alfaro in the van's trips transporting the students to school.
For its part, PNR tended to show that the proximate cause of the collision had
been the reckless crossing of the van whose driver had not first stopped, looked
and listened; and that the narrow path traversed by the van had not been
intended to be a railroad crossing for motorists.
Ruling of the RTC
On December 3, 1999, the RTC rendered its decision, 3 disposing:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, judgment is hereby rendered in
favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants ordering them to jointly
and severally pay the plaintiffs as follows:
(1) (for) the death of Aaron Php50,000.00;
(2) Actual damages in the amount of Php100,000.00;
(3) For the loss of earning capacity Php2,109,071.00;
(4) Moral damages in the amount of (Php)4,000,000.00;
(5) Exemplary damages in the amount of Php1,000,000.00;
(6) Attorney's fees in the amount of Php200,000.00; and
On June 29, 2000, the RTC denied the Pereas' motion for
reconsideration, 4 reiterating that the cooperative gross negligence of the
Pereas and PNR had caused the collision that led to the death of Aaron; and
that the damages awarded to the Zarates were not excessive, but based on the
established circumstances.
The CA's Ruling
Both the Pereas and PNR appealed (C.A.-G.R. CV No. 68916).
PNR assigned the following errors, to wit: 5
The Court a quo erred in:
1. In finding the defendant-appellant Philippine National Railways jointly
and severally liable together with defendant-appellants spouses
Teodorico and Nanette Perea and defendant-appellant Clemente
Alfaro to pay plaintiffs-appellees for the death of Aaron Zarate and
damages.
CaAIES
2. In giving full faith and merit to the oral testimonies of plaintiffsappellees witnesses despite overwhelming documentary evidence
on record, supporting the case of defendants-appellants
Philippine National Railways.
On November 13, 2002, the CA promulgated its decision, affirming the findings of
the RTC, but limited the moral damages to P2,500,000.00; and deleted the
attorney's fees because the RTC did not state the factual and legal bases, to
wit: 6
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the assailed Decision of the
Regional Trial Court, Branch 260 of Paraaque City is AFFIRMED with
the modification that the award of Actual Damages is reduced
to P59,502.76; Moral Damages is reduced to P2,500,000.00; and the
award for Attorney's Fees is Deleted.
SO ORDERED.
The CA upheld the award for the loss of Aaron's earning capacity, taking
cognizance of the ruling in Cariaga v. Laguna Tayabas Bus Company and Manila
Railroad Company, 7 wherein the Court gave the heirs of Cariaga a sum
representing the loss of the deceased's earning capacity despite Cariaga being
only a medical student at the time of the fatal incident. Applying the formula
adopted in the American Expectancy Table of Mortality:
cSIHCA
Ruling
The petition has no merit.
aEHTSc
1.
Were the Pereas and PNR jointly
and severally liable for damages?
The Zarates brought this action for recovery of damages against both the
Pereas and the PNR, basing their claim against the Pereas on breach of
contract of carriage and against the PNR on quasi-delict.
The RTC found the Pereas and the PNR negligent. The CA affirmed the
findings.
We concur with the CA.
To start with, the Pereas' defense was that they exercised the diligence of a
good father of the family in the selection and supervision of Alfaro, the van driver,
by seeing to it that Alfaro had a driver's license and that he had not been involved
in any vehicular accident prior to the fatal collision with the train; that they even
had their own son travel to and from school on a daily basis; and that Teodoro
In relation to common carriers, the Court defined public use in the following terms
in United States v. Tan Piaco, 15 viz.:
"Public use" is the same as "use by the public". The essential feature of
the public use is not confined to privileged individuals, but is open to the
indefinite public. It is this indefinite or unrestricted quality that gives it its
public character. In determining whether a use is public, we must look
not only to the character of the business to be done, but also to the
proposed mode of doing it. If the use is merely optional with the owners,
or the public benefit is merely incidental, it is not a public use,
authorizing the exercise of the jurisdiction of the public utility
commission. There must be, in general, a right which the law compels
the owner to give to the general public. It is not enough that the general
prosperity of the public is promoted. Public use is not synonymous with
public interest. The true criterion by which to judge the character of the
use is whether the public may enjoy it by right or only by permission.
17
AEITDH
The common carrier's standard of care and vigilance as to the safety of the
passengers is defined by law. Given the nature of the business and for reasons of
public policy, the common carrier is bound "to observe extraordinary diligence in
the vigilance over the goods and for the safety of the passengers transported by
them, according to all the circumstances of each case." 22 Article 1755 of
the Civil Code specifies that the common carrier should "carry the passengers
safely as far as human care and foresight can provide, using the utmost diligence
of very cautious persons, with a due regard for all the circumstances." To
successfully fend off liability in an action upon the death or injury to a passenger,
the common carrier must prove his or its observance of that extraordinary
diligence; otherwise, the legal presumption that he or it was at fault or acted
negligently would stand. 23 No device, whether by stipulation, posting of notices,
statements on tickets, or otherwise, may dispense with or lessen the
responsibility of the common carrier as defined under Article 1755 of the Civil
Code. 24
And, secondly, the Pereas have not presented any compelling defense or
reason by which the Court might now reverse the CA's findings on their liability.
On the contrary, an examination of the records shows that the evidence fully
supported the findings of the CA.
As earlier stated, the Pereas, acting as a common carrier, were already
presumed to be negligent at the time of the accident because death had occurred
to their passenger. 25 The presumption of negligence, being a presumption of law,
laid the burden of evidence on their shoulders to establish that they had not been
negligent.26 It was the law no less that required them to prove their observance of
extraordinary diligence in seeing to the safe and secure carriage of the
passengers to their destination. Until they did so in a credible manner, they stood
to be held legally responsible for the death of Aaron and thus to be held liable for
all the natural consequences of such death.
There is no question that the Pereas did not overturn the presumption of their
negligence by credible evidence. Their defense of having observed the diligence
of a good father of a family in the selection and supervision of their driver was not
legally sufficient. According to Article 1759 of the Civil Code, their liability as a
common carrier did not cease upon proof that they exercised all the diligence of a
good father of a family in the selection and supervision of their employee. This
was the reason why the RTC treated this defense of the Pereas as inappropriate
in this action for breach of contract of carriage.
HCTDIS
The Pereas were liable for the death of Aaron despite the fact that their driver
might have acted beyond the scope of his authority or even in violation of the
orders of the common carrier. 27 In this connection, the records showed their
driver's actual negligence. There was a showing, to begin with, that their driver
traversed the railroad tracks at a point at which the PNR did not permit motorists
going into the Makati area to cross the railroad tracks. Although that point had
been used by motorists as a shortcut into the Makati area, that fact alone did not
excuse their driver into taking that route. On the other hand, with his familiarity
with that shortcut, their driver was fully aware of the risks to his passengers but
he still disregarded the risks. Compounding his lack of care was that loud music
was playing inside the air-conditioned van at the time of the accident. The
loudness most probably reduced his ability to hear the warning horns of the
oncoming train to allow him to correctly appreciate the lurking dangers on the
railroad tracks. Also, he sought to overtake a passenger bus on the left side as
both vehicles traversed the railroad tracks. In so doing, he lost his view of the
train that was then coming from the opposite side of the passenger bus, leading
him to miscalculate his chances of beating the bus in their race, and of getting
clear of the train. As a result, the bus avoided a collision with the train but the van
got slammed at its rear, causing the fatality. Lastly, he did not slow down or go to
a full stop before traversing the railroad tracks despite knowing that his
slackening of speed and going to a full stop were in observance of the right of
way at railroad tracks as defined by the traffic laws and regulations. 28 He thereby
violated a specific traffic regulation on right of way, by virtue of which he was
immediately presumed to be negligent. 29
The omissions of care on the part of the van driver constituted
negligence, 30 which, according to Layugan v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 31 is
"the omission to do something which a reasonable man, guided by those
considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs, would do,
or the doing of something which a prudent and reasonable man would not
do, 32 or as Judge Cooley defines it, '(t)he failure to observe for the protection of
the interests of another person, that degree of care, precaution, and vigilance
which the circumstances justly demand, whereby such other person suffers
injury.'" 33
The test by which to determine the existence of negligence in a particular case
has been aptly stated in the leading case of Picart v. Smith, 34 thuswise:
ITSaHC
Pursuant to the Picart v. Smith test of negligence, the Pereas' driver was entirely
negligent when he traversed the railroad tracks at a point not allowed for a
motorist's crossing despite being fully aware of the grave harm to be thereby
caused to his passengers; and when he disregarded the foresight of harm to his
passengers by overtaking the bus on the left side as to leave himself blind to the
approach of the oncoming train that he knew was on the opposite side of the bus.
2.
And, secondly, the fact that Aaron was then without a history of earnings should
not be taken against his parents and in favor of the defendants whose negligence
not only cost Aaron his life and his right to work and earn money, but also
deprived his parents of their right to his presence and his services as well. Our
law itself states that the loss of the earning capacity of the deceased shall be the
liability of the guilty party in favor of the heirs of the deceased, and shall in every
case be assessed and awarded by the court "unless the deceased on account of
permanent physical disability not caused by the defendant, had no earning
capacity at the time of his death."38 Accordingly, we emphatically hold in favor of
the indemnification for Aaron's loss of earning capacity despite him having been
unemployed, because compensation of this nature is awarded not for loss of time
or earnings but for loss of the deceased's power or ability to earn money. 39
This favorable treatment of the Zarates' claim is not unprecedented. In Cariaga v.
Laguna Tayabas Bus Company and Manila Railroad Company, 40 fourth-year
medical student Edgardo Carriaga's earning capacity, although he survived the
accident but his injuries rendered him permanently incapacitated, was computed
to be that of the physician that he dreamed to become. The Court considered his
scholastic record sufficient to justify the assumption that he could have finished
the medical course and would have passed the medical board examinations in
due time, and that he could have possibly earned a modest income as a medical
practitioner. Also, in People v. Sanchez, 41 the Court opined that murder and rape
victim Eileen Sarmienta and murder victim Allan Gomez could have easily landed
good-paying jobs had they graduated in due time, and that their jobs would
probably pay them high monthly salaries from P10,000.00 to P15,000.00 upon
their graduation. Their earning capacities were computed at rates higher than the
minimum wage at the time of their deaths due to their being already senior
agriculture students of the University of the Philippines in Los Baos, the
country's leading educational institution in agriculture.
TAEDcS
3.
Were the amounts of damages excessive?
The Pereas plead for the reduction of the moral and exemplary damages
awarded to the Zarates in the respective amounts of P2,500,000.00 and
P1,000,000.00 on the ground that such amounts were excessive.
(Spouses Perea v. Spouses Zarate, G.R. No. 157917, [August 29, 2012], 693
PHIL 373-399)
G.R. No. 8095. November 5, 1914 & March 31, 1915.]
F. C. FISHER, plaintiff, vs. YANGCO STEAMSHIP COMPANY, J.
S. STANLEY, as Acting Collector of Custom of the Philippine
Islands, IGNACIO VILLAMOR, as Attorney-General of the
Philippine Islands, and W. H. BISHOP, as prosecuting attorney
of the city of Manila, respondents.
which they are threatened upon failure to carry such explosives, they cannot
subject themselves to "the ruinous consequences which would inevitably
result" from failure on their part to obey the demands and requirements of the
Acting Collector of Customs as to the acceptance for carriage of explosives;
that plaintiff believes that the Acting Collector of Customs erroneously
construes the provisions of Act No. 98 in holding that they require the
company to accept such explosives for carriage notwithstanding the above
mentioned resolution of the directors and stockholders of the company, and
that if the Act does in fact require the company to carry such explosives it is to
that extent unconstitutional and void; that notwithstanding this belief of
complainant as to the true meaning of the Act, the questions involved cannot
be raised by the refusal of the company or its agents to comply with the
demands of the Acting Collector of Customs, without the risk of irreparable
loss and damage resulting from his refusal to facilitate the documentation of
the company's vessels, and without assuming a risk of pains and penalties
under the drastic provisions of the Act which prohibit any attempt on the part
of the company to test the questions involved by refusing to accept such
explosives for carriage.
The prayer of the complaint is as follows:
"Wherefore your petitioner prays to this honorable court as
follows:
"First. That to the due hearing of the above entitled action be
issued a writ of prohibition perpetually restraining the respondent Yangco
Steamship Company, its appraisers, agents, servants or other
representatives from accepting to carry and from carrying, in steamers of
said company dynamite, powder or other explosive substance, in
accordance with the resolution of the board of directors and of the
shareholders of said company.
"Second. That a writ of prohibition be issued perpetually enjoining
the respondent J. S. Stanley as Acting Collector of Customs of the
Philippine Islands, his successors, deputies, servants or other
representatives, from obligating the said Yangco Steamship Company,
will in future decline to comply with such reasonable regulations and to take
such reasonable precautions as may be necessary and proper to secure the
safety of the vessels of the company in transporting such explosives. Indeed
the contention of petitioner is that a common carrier in the Philippine Islands
may decline to accept for carriage any shipment of merchandise of a class
which it expressly or impliedly declines to accept from all shippers alike,
because, as he contends "the duty of a common carrier to carry for all who
offer arises from the public profession he has made, and is limited by it."
In support of this contention counsel cites a number of English and
American authorities, discussing and applying the doctrine of the common law
with reference to common carriers. But it is unnecessary now to decide
whether, in the absence of statute, the principles on which the American and
English cases were decided would be applicable in this jurisdiction. The duties
and liabilities of common carriers in this jurisdiction are defined and fully set
forth in Act No. 98 of the Philippine Commission, and, until and unless that
statute be declared invalid or unconstitutional, we are bound by its provisions.
Sections 2, 3 and 4 of the Act are as follows:
"SEC. 2. It shall be unlawful for any common carrier engaged in
the transportation of passengers or property as above set forth to make
or give any unnecessary or unreasonable preference or advantage to
any particular person, company, firm, corporation or locality, or any
particular kind of traffic in any respect whatsoever, or to subject any
particular person, company, firm, corporation or locality, or any particular
kind of traffic, to any undue or unreasonable prejudice or discrimination
whatsoever, and such unjust preference or discrimination is also hereby
prohibited and declared to be unlawful.
"SEC. 3. No common carrier engaged in the carriage of
passengers or property as aforesaid shall, under any pretense
whatsoever, fail or refuse to receive for carriage, and as promptly as it is
able to do so without discrimination, to carry any person or property
offering for carriage, and in the order in which such persons or property
are offered for carriage, nor shall any such common carrier enter into any
arrangement, contract or agreement with any other person or corporation
whereby the latter is given an exclusive or preferential privilege over any
other person or persons to control or monopolize the carriage of any
The validity of this Act has been questioned on various grounds, and it
is vigorously contended that in so far as it imposes any obligation on a
common carrier to accept for carriage merchandise of a class which he makes
no public profession to carry, or which he has expressly or impliedly
announced his intention to decline to accept for carriage from all shippers
alike, it is ultra vires, unconstitutional and void.
We may dismiss without extended discussion any argument or
contention as to the invalidity of the statute based on alleged absurdities
inherent in its provisions or on alleged unreasonable or impossible
requirements which may be read into it by a strained construction of its terms.
We agree with counsel for petitioner that the provision of the Act which
prescribes that, "No common carrier . . . shall, under any pretense
whatsoever, fail or refuse to receive for carriage, and . . . to carry any person
or property offering for carriage," is not to be construed in its literal sense and
without regard to the context, so as to impose an imperative duty on all
common carriers to accept for carriage, and to carry all and any kind of freight
which may be offered for carriage without regard to the facilities which they
may have at their disposal. The legislator could not have intended and did not
intend to prescribe that a common carrier running passenger automobiles for
hire must transport coal in his machines; nor that the owner of a tank steamer,
expressly constructed in small watertight compartments for the carriage of
crude oil must accept a load of cattle or of logs in the rough; nor that any
common carrier must accept and carry contraband articles, such as opium,
morphine, cocaine, or the like, the mere possession of which is declared to be
a criminal offense; nor that common carriers must accept eggs offered for
transportation in paper parcels or any merchandise whatever so defectively
packed as to entail upon the company unreasonable and unnecessary care or
risks.
Read in connection with its context this, as well as all the other
mandatory and prohibitory provisions of the statute, was clearly intended
merely to forbid failures or refusals to receive persons or property for carriage
involving any "unnecessary or unreasonable preference or advantage to any
particular person, company, firm, corporation or locality, or any particular kind
of traffic in any respect whatsoever," or which would "subject any particular
person, company, firm, corporation or locality, or any particular kind of traffic to
any undue or unreasonable prejudice or discrimination whatsoever."
The question, then, of construing and applying the statute, in cases of
alleged violations of its provisions, always involves a consideration as to
whether the acts complained of had the effect of making or giving an
"unreasonable or unnecessary preference or advantage" to any person,
locality or particular kind of traffic, or of subjecting any person, locality, or
particular kind of traffic to any undue or unreasonable prejudice or
discrimination. It is very clear therefore that the language of the statute itself
refutes any contention as to its invalidity based on the alleged
unreasonableness of its mandatory or prohibitor provisions.
So also we may dismiss without much discussion the contentions as to
the invalidity of the statute, which are based on the alleged excessive severity
of the penalties prescribed for violation of its provisions. Upon general
principles it is peculiarly and exclusively within the province of the legislator to
prescribe the pains and penalties which may be imposed upon persons
convicted of violations of the laws in force within his territorial jurisdiction. With
the exercise of his discretion in this regard the courts have nothing to do, save
only in cases where it is alleged that excessive fines or cruel and unusual
punishments have been prescribed, and even in such cases the courts will not
presume to interfere in the absence of the clearest and most convincing
argument and proof in support of such contentions. (Weems vs. United States,
217 U. S., 349; U. S. vs. Pico, 18 Phil. Rep., 386.) We need hardly add that
the courts, there is no substantial basis for a contention on the part of any
common carrier that it or its officers are "intimidated from resorting to the
courts to test the validity" of the provisions of the statute prohibiting such
"unreasonable," "unnecessary" and "unjust" discriminations, or to test in any
particular case whether a given course of conduct does in fact involve such
discrimination. We will not presume, for the purpose of declaring the statute
invalid, that there is so real a danger that the Courts of First Instance and this
court on appeal will abuse the discretion thus conferred upon us, as to
intimidate any common carrier, acting in good faith, from resorting to the
courts to test the validity of the statute. Legislative enactments, penalizing
unreasonable discriminations, unreasonable restraints of trade, and
unreasonable conduct in various forms of human activity are so familiar and
have been so frequently sustained in the courts, as to render extended
discussion unnecessary to refute any contention as to the invalidity of the
statute under consideration, merely because it imposes upon the carrier the
obligation of adopting one of various courses of conduct open to it, at the risk
of incurring a prescribed penalty in the event that the course of conduct
actually adopted by it should be held to have involved an unreasonable,
unnecessary or unjust discrimination. Applying the test announced in Ex
parte Young, supra, it will be seen that the validity of the Act does not depend
upon the existence of a fact which can be determined only after investigation
of a very complicated and technical character," and that "the jurisdiction of the
legislature'" over the subject with which the statute deals "is complete in any
event." There can be no real question as to the plenary power of the
legislature to prohibit and to penalize the making of undue, unreasonable and
unjust discriminations by common carriers to the prejudice of any person,
locality or particular kind of traffic. (See Munn vs. Illinois, 94 U. S., 113, and
other cases hereinafter cited in support of this proposition.)
Counsel for petitioner contends also that the statute, if construed so as
to deny the right of the steamship company to elect at will whether or not it will
engage in a particular business, such as that of carrying explosives, is
unconstitutional "because it is a confiscation of property, a taking of the
carrier's property without due process of law," and because it deprives him of
his liberty by compelling him to engage in business against his will. The
argument continues as follows:
"To require of a carrier, as a condition to his continuing in said
business, that he must carry anything and everything is to render
useless the facilities he may have for the carriage of certain lines of
freight. It would be almost as complete a confiscation of such facilities as
if the same were destroyed. Their value as a means of livelihood would
be utterly taken away. The law is a prohibition to him to continue in
business; the alternative is to get out or to go into some other business
the same alternative as was offered in the case of the Chicago & N.
W. Ry. vs. Dey (35 Fed. Rep., 866, 880), and which was there
commented on as follows:
"'Whatever of force there may be in such arguments, as applied to
mere personal property capable of removal and use elsewhere, or in
other business, it is wholly without force as against railroad corporations,
so large a proportion of whose investment is in the soil and fixtures
appertaining thereto, which cannot be removed. For a government,
whether that government be a single sovereign or one of the majority, to
say to an individual who has invested his means in so laudable an
enterprise as the construction of a railroad, one which tends so much to
the wealth and prosperity of the community, that, if he finds that the rates
imposed will cause him to do business at a loss, he may quit business,
and abandon that road, is the very irony of despotism. Apples of Sodom
were fruit of joy in comparison. Reading, as I do, in the preamble of the
Federal Constitution, that it was ordained to "establish justice," I can
never believe that it is within the power of state or nation thus practically
to confiscate the property of an individual invested in and used for a
purpose in which even the Argus eyes of the police power can see
nothing injurious to public morals, public health, or the general welfare. I
read also in the first section of the bill of rights of this state that "all men
are by nature free and equal, and have certain inalienable rights, among
which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring,
possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety
and happiness;" and I know that, while that remains as the supreme law
of the state, no legislature can directly or indirectly lay its withering or
limitation upon his business and held himself out as unwilling to carry the
same for anyone."
To this it is sufficient answer to say that there is nothing in the statute
which would deprive any person of his liberty "by requiring him to engage in
business against his will." The prohibitions of the statute against undue,
unnecessary or unreasonable preferences and discriminations are merely the
reasonable regulations which the legislator has seen fit to prescribe for the
conduct of the business in which the carrier is engaged of his own free will
and accord. In so far as the self-imposed limitations by the carrier upon the
business conducted by him, in the various examples given by counsel, do not
involve an unreasonable or unnecessary discrimination the statute would not
control his action in any wise whatever. It operates only in cases involving
such unreasonable or unnecessary preferences or discriminations. Thus in
the hypothetical case suggested by the petitioner, a carrier engaged in the
carriage of green, blue or black jusi, and duly equipped therefor would
manifestly be guilty of "giving an unnecessary and unreasonable preference to
a particular kind of traffic" and of subjecting to "an undue and unreasonable
prejudice a particular kind of traffic," should he decline to carry red jusi, to the
prejudice of a particular shipper or of those engaged in the manufacture of
that kind of jusi, basing his refusal on the ground of "mere whim or caprice" or
of mere personal convenience. So a public carrier of passengers would not be
permitted under this statute to absolve himself from liability for a refusal to
carry a Chinaman, a Spaniard, an American, a Filipino, or a mestizo by proof
that from "mere whim or caprice or personal scruple," or to suit his own
convenience, or in the hope of increasing his business and thus making larger
profits, he had publicly announced his intention not to carry one or other of
these classes of passengers.
The nature of the business of a common carrier as a public employment
is such that it is clearly within the power of the state to impose such just and
reasonable regulations thereon in the interest of the public as the legislator'
may deem proper. Of course such regulations must not have the effect of
depriving an owner of his property without due process of law, nor of
confiscating or appropriating private property without just compensation, nor
of limiting or prescribing irrevocably vested rights or privileges lawfully
employ them, and in the order in which application is made, and without
discrimination as to terms. True, they were allowed to restrict their business so
as to exclude particular classes of goods, but as to the kinds of property which
the carrier was in the habit of carrying in the prosecution of his business he
was bound to serve all customers alike (State vs. Cincinnati etc. R. Co., 47
Ohio St., 130, 134, 138; Louisville etc. Ry. Co. vs. Queen City Coal Co., 13 Ky.
L. Rep., 832); and it is to be observed in passing that these common law rules
are themselves regulations controlling, limiting and prescribing the conditions
under which common carriers were permitted to conduct their business.
(Munn vs. Illinois, 94 U. S., 113, 133.)
It was found, in the course of time, that the correction of abuses which
had grown up with the enormously increasing business of common carriers
necessitated the adoption of statutory regulations controlling the business of
common carriers, and imposing severe and drastic penalties for violations of
their terms. In England, the Railway Clauses Consolidation Act was enacted in
1845, the Railway and Canal Traffic Act in 1854, and since the passage of
those Acts much additional legislation has been adopted tending to limit and
control the conduct of their business by common carriers. In the United States,
the business of common carriers has been subjected to a great variety of
statutory regulations. Among others Congress enacted "The Interstate
Commerce Act" (1887 ) and its amendments, and the Elkins Act as amended
(1906); and most if not all of the States of the Union have adopted similar
legislation regulating the business of common carriers within their respective
jurisdictions Unending litigation has arisen under these statutes and their
amendments, but nowhere has the right of the state to prescribe just and
reasonable regulations controlling and limiting the conduct of the business of
common carriers in the public interest and for the general welfare been
successfully challenged, though of course there has been wide divergence of
opinion as to the reasonableness, the validity and legality of many of the
regulations actually adopted.
The power of the Philippine legislator to prohibit and to penalize all and
any unnecessary or unreasonable discriminations by common carriers may be
maintained upon the same reasoning which justified the enactment by the
Parliament of England and the Congress of the United States of the above
mentioned statutes prohibiting and penalizing the granting of certain
preferences and discriminations in those countries. As we have said before,
we find nothing confiscatory or unreasonable in the conditions imposed in the
Philippine statute upon the business of common carriers. Correctly construed
they do not force him to engage in any business against his will or to make
use of his facilities in a manner or for a purpose for which they are not
reasonably adapted. It is only when he offers his facilities as a common carrier
to the public for hire, that the statute steps in and prescribes that he must treat
all alike, that he may not pick and choose which customer he will serve, and,
specifically, that he shall not make any undue or unreasonable preferences or
discriminations whatsoever to the prejudice not only of any person or locality
but also of any particular kind of traffic.
The legislator having enacted a regulation prohibiting common carriers
from giving unnecessary or unreasonable preferences or advantages to any
particular kind of traffic or subjecting any particular kind of traffic to any undue
or unreasonable prejudice or discrimination whatsoever, it is clear that
whatever may have been the rule at the common law, common carriers in this
jurisdiction cannot lawfully decline to accept a particular class of goods for
carriage, to the prejudice of the traffic in those goods, unless it appears that
for some sufficient reason the discrimination against the traffic in such goods
is reasonable and necessary. Mere whim or prejudice will not suffice. The
grounds for the discrimination must be substantial ones, such as will justify the
courts in holding the discrimination to have been reasonable and necessary
under all the circumstances of the case.
The prayer of the petition in the case at bar cannot be granted unless
we hold that the refusal of the defendant steamship company to accept for
carriage on any of its vessels "dynamite, gunpowder or other explosives"
would in no instance involve a violation of the provisions of this statute. There
can be little doubt, however, that cases may and will arise wherein the refusal
of a vessel "engaged in the coastwise trade of the Philippine Islands as a
common carrier" to accept such explosives for carriage would subject some
person, company; firm or corporation, or locality, or particular kind of traffic to
in the form and under the conditions in which they are offered for carriage; the
general nature of the business done by the carrier and, in a word, all the
attendant circumstances which might affect the question of the reasonable
necessity for the refusal by the carrier to undertake the transportation of this
class of merchandise.
But it is contended that whatever the rule may be as to other explosives,
the exceptional power and violence of dynamite and gunpowder in explosion
will always furnish the owner of a vessel with a reasonable excuse for his
failure or refusal to accept them for carriage or to carry them on board his
boat. We think however that even as to dynamite and gunpowder we would
not be justified in making such a holding unaided by evidence sustaining the
proposition that these articles can never be carried with reasonable safety on
any vessel engaged in the business of a common carrier. It is said that
dynamite is so erratic and uncontrollable in its action that it is impossible to
assert that it can be handled with safety in any given case. On the other hand
it is contended that while this may be true of some kinds of dynamite, it is a
fact that dynamite can be and is manufactured so as to eliminate any real
danger from explosion during transportation. These are of course questions of
fact upon which we are not qualified to pass judgment without the assistance
of expert witnesses who have made special studies as to the chemical
composition and reactions of the different kinds of dynamite, or attained a
thorough knowledge of its properties as a result of wide experience in its
manufacture and transportation.
As we construe the Philippine statute, the mere fact that violent and
destructive explosions can be obtained by the use of dynamite under certain
conditions would not be sufficient in itself to justify the refusal of a vessel, duly
licensed as a common carrier of merchandise, to accept it for carriage, if it can
be proven that in the condition in which it is offered for carriage there is no real
danger to the carrier, nor reasonable ground to fear that his vessel or those on
board his vessel will be exposed to unnecessary and unreasonable risk in
transporting it, having in mind the nature of his business as a common carrier
engaged in the coastwise trade in the Philippine Islands, and his duty as a
servant of the public engaged in a public employment. So also, if by the
exercise of due diligence and the taking of reasonable precautions the danger
having been formally submitted for judgment before the enactment of these
statutes, counsel have not been heard in this connection. We therefore refrain
from any comment upon any questions which might be raised as to whether or
not there may be another adequate and appropriate remedy for the alleged
wrong set forth in the complaint. Our disposition of the question raised by the
demurrer renders that unnecessary at this time, though it may not be improper
to observe that a careful examination of those acts confirms us in the holding
upon which we base our ruling on this demurrer, that is to say "That whatever
may have been the rule at the common law, common carriers in this
jurisdiction cannot lawfully decline to accept a particular class of goods for
carriage, to the prejudice of the traffic in those goods, unless it appears that
for some sufficient reason the discrimination against the traffic in such goods
is reasonable and necessary. Mere prejudice or whim will not suffice. The
grounds of the discrimination must be substantial ones, such as will justify the
courts in holding the discrimination to have been reasonable and necessary
under all the circumstances of the case."
Unless an amended complaint be filed in the meantime let judgment be
entered ten days hereafter sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the
complaint with costs against the complainant, and twenty days thereafter let
the record be filed in the archives of original actions in this court. So ordered.
Arellano, C.J., and Trent, J. concur.
Torres and Johnson, JJ., concur in the result.
|||
(Fisher v. Yangco Steamship Co., G.R. No. 8095, [March 31, 1915], 31 PHIL 1-
47)
[G.R. No. 8686. July 30, 1915.]
THE UNITED STATES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. PASCUAL
QUINAJON and EUGENIO QUITORIANO, defendants-appellants.
Irineo Javier for appellants.
Attorney-General Villamor for appellee.
SYLLABUS
1. COMMON CARRIERS; WHO ARE COMMON CARRIERS; ACT No.
98 CONSTRUED. A common carrier is a person or corporation whose
regular business is to carry passengers or property for all persons who may
choose to employ and remunerate him. A common carrier is a person or
corporation who undertakes to carry goods or persons for hire. Act No. 98 of
the United States Philippine Commission is an Act to regulate commerce in
the Philippine Islands.
2. ID.; PREFERENCES AND DISCRIMINATIONS. Act No. 98
provides that no common carrier shall, directly or indirectly, by any special
rate, rebate, drawback, or other device, charge, demand, collect, or receive
from any person or persons a greater or less compensation for any services
rendered in the transportation of passengers or property, between points in
the Philippine Islands, than he charges, demands, collects, or receives from
any other person or persons, for doing a like or contemporaneous service,
under substantially similar conditions or circumstances. A common carrier
cannot, under the law, give any unnecessary or unreasonable preference or
advantage to any particular person, company, firm, corporation or locality, or
any particular kind of traffic, or subject any particular person, company, firm,
or corporation or locality, or any particular kind of traffic, to any undue or
unreasonable prejudice or discrimination whatsoever.
3. ID.; ID. Said Act No. 98 does not require that the same charge
shall be made for carrying passengers or property, unless all the conditions
are alike and contemporaneous. It does not prohibit the charging of a different
rate for the carrying of passengers or property when the actual cost of
handling and transporting the same is different. Common carriers can not
make a different rate to different persons for carrying persons or merchandise,
unless the actual cost of handling and shipping is different. It is when the price
charged is for the purpose of favoring persons or localities or particular kinds
of merchandise, that the law intervenes and prohibits. It is favoritism and
discrimination which the law prohibits. If the services are alike and
contemporaneous, discrimination in the price charged is prohibited.
DECISION
JOHNSON, J :
p
Upon that complaint the defendants were duly arraigned, tried, found
guilty of the crime charged, and sentenced by the Honorable Dionisio Chanco,
judge, to pay a fine of $100 (P200) and costs, and to return to the provincial
government of the Province of Ilocos Norte the sum of P359.16.
From that sentence each of the defendants appealed to this court. In
this court they allege that the lower court committed the following errors:
"1. The court erred in holding that the accused had been regularly
collecting 6 centavos for the loading or the unloading of each sack of rice
from steamers in the port of Currimao.
"2. The court erred in holding that the defendants established
preferential privileges and made discriminations in favor of certain
shippers, against the provincial government of Ilocos Norte, in the
loading or unloading of merchandise on to or from the steamers in the
port of Currimao.
"3. The court erred, further, in sentencing the accused to pay to
the provincial government of Ilocos Norte the sum of P359.16."
thereby. The evidence clearly shows that the defendant collected 6 centavos
for each package, of whatever kind of merchandise, large or small, heavy or
light, from those merchants only with whom they had a special contract. From
other merchants, with whom they had not made said special contract, as well
as the Province of Ilocos Norte, they collected a different rate. The evidence
shows that they collected from the Province of Ilocos Norte 10 centavos for
each sack of rice which they unloaded from the steamers during the months of
June, July, and September. There seems to be no reason for reversing or
modifying the conclusions of the lower court based upon said finding of facts.
The effect of collecting a different amount from different persons for exactly
analogous or similar service performed by the defendants will be discussed
when we come to a discussion of the law applicable to the foregoing facts.
The second assignment of error, to wit, that "the lower court committed
an error in holding that the defendants established preferential privileges in
favor of certain shippers," presents the question whether or not the
defendants and appellants, in view of the foregoing facts, have violated the
provisions of said Act No. 98.
The facts, as they are disclosed by the record and the findings of the
lower court, may be stated concretely as follows: (1) The defendants, as
common carriers, charged and collected from some shippers and merchants,
a certain price for each package of merchandise, loaded or unloaded,
according to a certain schedule. (See Exhibit A.) The prices fixed in the
schedule depended upon the size and weight of the package. (2) The
defendants entered into a special contract with certainmerchants, under and
by virtue of the terms of which they charged and collected, for loading and
unloading merchandise in said port, the sum of 6 centavos for each package,
without reference to its size or weight.
It is not contended that it cost any more to load or unload the rice for the
province than it did for the merchants with whom the special contract was
made. There is no proof that the conditions were different. There is no proof
that the services rendered by the defendants for the different parties were
unlike or even not contemporaneous. The defendants justify their acts by the
fact that they handled all the merchandise of some merchants, whether the
packages were large or small, at the same price. Under these facts, the
question is squarely presented whether or not the defendants are guilty of a
violation of the spirit or the letter of said Act No. 98. Said Act No. 98 was
largely borrowed from the Act of Congress of February 4, 1887. The language
of the two Acts, so far as they relate to the present case, is practically the
same. Said Act of Congress has been construed by the Federal courts of the
United States in several decisions. In view of the similarity of the two Acts, we
feel justified in adopting the interpretation given by the Federal courts of the
United States to said Act of Congress.
The similarity of Act No. 98 and the Act of Congress may be seen in the
following quotations:
(Sec. 1, Act No. 98.)
"No person or corporation engaged as a common carrier of
passengers or property shall directly or indirectly by any special rate,
rebate,, drawback or other device, charge, demand, collect or receive
from any person or persons, a greater or less compensation for any
service rendered in the transportation of passengers or property on land
or water between any points in the Philippine Islands than such common
carriers charges, demands, collects or receives from any other person or
persons from doing for him a like or contemporaneous service in the
transportation of a like kind of traffic under substantially similar
circumstances and conditions, and any such unjust discrimination is
hereby prohibited and declared to be lawful."
province 5,986 sacks, for which they charged the sum of P598.60. They had a
right to collect 6 centavos, or the sum of P359.16. The appellants therefore
collected from the province more than they had a right to collect, the difference
between P598.60 and P359.16, or P239.44. They should be required,
therefore, to return to the province the excess which they collected, or the sum
of P239.44. The judgment of the lower court, therefore, should be modified in
this respect. The defendants are hereby ordered to return to the Province of
Ilocos Norte the sum P239.44, for which sum a judgment is hereby ordered to
be entered against them, for which execution may issue when this judgment
becomes final, in case the same is not paid.
After a careful analysis of the facts, and the law applicable thereto, the
judgment of the lower court, as herein modified, should be and is hereby
affirmed with costs. So ordered.
|||
(United States v. Quinajon, G.R. No. 8686, [July 30, 1915], 31 PHIL 189-202)
[G.R. No. 131621. September 28, 1999.]
LOADSTAR SHIPPING CO., INC., petitioner, vs. COURT OF
APPEALS and THE MANILA INSURANCE CO.,
INC., respondents.
LOADSTAR is a common carrier under Art. 1732 of the Civil Code. It is not
necessary that the carrier be issued a certificate of public convenience and that
the carriage of the goods was periodic or unscheduled. Further, on that fateful
day, the vessel was not chartered for a special cargo or to a special person only.
It was carrying a particular type of cargo for one shipper, but that is no reason to
convert the vessel from a common to a private carrier, especially as it was also
carrying passengers. On the second issue, the Court found M/V "Cherokee" not
seaworthy as it was not even sufficiently manned at the time. The Court affirmed
the decision of the Court of Appeals.
SYLLABUS
1. CIVIL LAW; SPECIAL CONTRACTS; COMMON CARRIERS; ELUCIDATED.
LOADSTAR is a common carrier. It is not necessary that the carrier be issued
a certificate of public convenience, and this public character is not altered by the
fact that the carriage of the goods in question was periodic, occasional, episodic
or unscheduled. In the case of De Guzman v. Court of Appeals, the Court
juxtaposed the statutory definition of "common carriers" with the peculiar
circumstances of that case, viz: The Civil Code defines "common carriers" in the
following terms: "Article 1732. Common carriers are persons, corporations, firms
or associations engaged in the business of carrying or transporting passengers
or goods or both, by land, water, or air for compensation, offering their services to
the public." The above article makes no distinction between one
whose principal business activity is the carrying of persons or goods or both, and
one who does such carrying only as an ancillary activity (in local idiom, as "a
sideline." Article 1732 also carefully avoids making any distinction between a
person or enterprise offering transportation service on a regular or scheduled
basis and one offering such service on an occasional, episodic or unscheduled
basis. Neither does Article 1732 distinguish between a carrier offering its services
to the "general public," i.e., the general community or population, and one who
offers services or solicits business only from a narrow segment of the general
population. We think that Article 1733 deliberately refrained from making such
distinctions.
SacTCA
DECISION
DAVIDE, JR., C.J :
p
Petitioner Loadstar Shipping Co., Inc. (hereafter LOADSTAR), in this petition for
review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure, seeks to
reverse and set aside the following: (a) the 30 January 1997 decision 1 of the
Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 36401, which affirmed the decision of 4
October 1991 2 of the Regional Trial Court of Manila, Branch 16, in Civil Case No.
85-29110, ordering LOADSTAR to pay private respondent Manila Insurance Co.
(hereafter MIC) the amount of P6,067,178, with legal interest from the filing of the
complaint until fully paid, P8,000 as attorney's fees, and the costs of the suit; and
(b) its resolution of 19 November 1997, 3 denying LOADSTAR's motion for
reconsideration of said decision.
The facts are undisputed.
LLjur
The goods, amounting to P6,067,178, were insured for the same amount with
MIC against various risks including "TOTAL LOSS BY TOTAL LOSS OF THE
VESSEL." The vessel, in turn, was insured by Prudential Guarantee &
Assurance, Inc. (hereafter PGAI) for P4 million. On 20 November 1984, on its
way to Manila from the port of Nasipit, Agusan del Norte, the vessel, along with
its cargo, sank off Limasawa Island. As a result of the total loss of its shipment,
the consignee made a claim with LOADSTAR which, however, ignored the
same. As the insurer, MIC paid P6,075,000 to the insured in full settlement of its
claim, and the latter executed a subrogation receipt therefor.
On 4 February 1985, MIC filed a complaint against LOADSTAR and PGAI,
alleging that the sinking of the vessel was due to the fault and negligence of
LOADSTAR and its employees. It also prayed that PGAI be ordered to pay the
insurance proceeds from the loss of the vessel directly to MIC, said amount to be
deducted from MIC's claim from LOADSTAR.
In its answer, LOADSTAR denied any liability for the loss of the shipper's goods
and claimed that the sinking of its vessel was due to force majeure. PGAI, on the
other hand, averred that MIC had no cause of action against it, LOADSTAR being
the party insured. In any event, PGAI was later dropped as a party defendant
after it paid the insurance proceeds to LOADSTAR.
As stated at the outset, the court a quo rendered judgment in favor of MIC,
prompting LOADSTAR to elevate the matter to the Court of Appeals, which,
however, agreed with the trial court and affirmed its decision in toto.
6) "Art. 361 (of the Code of Commerce) has been judicially construed to
mean that when goods are delivered on board a ship in good
order and condition, and the shipowner delivers them to the
shipper in bad order and condition, it then devolves upon the
shipowner to both allege and prove that the goods were damaged
by reason of some fact which legally exempts him from liability."
Transportation of the merchandise at the risk and venture of the
shipper means that the latter bears the risk of loss or deterioration
of his goods arising from fortuitous events, force majeure, or the
inherent nature and defects of the goods, but not those caused by
the presumed negligence or fault of the carrier, unless otherwise
proved. 7
Regarding the first issue, LOADSTAR submits that the vessel was a private
carrier because it was not issued a certificate of public convenience, it did not
have a regular trip or schedule nor a fixed route, and there was only "one shipper,
one consignee for a special cargo."
In refutation, MIC argues that the issue as to the classification of the M/V
"Cherokee" was not timely raised below; hence, it is barred by estoppel. While it
is true that the vessel had on board only the cargo of wood products for delivery
to one consignee, it was also carrying passengers as part of its regular business.
Moreover, the bills of lading in this case made no mention of any charter party but
only a statement that the vessel was a "general cargo carrier." Neither was there
any "special arrangement" between LOADSTAR and the shipper regarding the
shipment of the cargo. The singular fact that the vessel was carrying a particular
type of cargo for one shipper is not sufficient to convert the vessel into a private
carrier.
As regards the second error, LOADSTAR argues that as a private carrier, it
cannot be presumed to have been negligent, and the burden of proving otherwise
devolved upon MIC. 8
LOADSTAR also maintains that the vessel was seaworthy. Before the fateful
voyage on 19 November 1984, the vessel was allegedly dry docked at Keppel
Philippines Shipyard and was duly inspected by the maritime safety engineers of
the Philippine Coast Guard, who certified that the ship was fit to undertake a
voyage. Its crew at the time was experienced, licensed and unquestionably
competent. With all these precautions, there could be no other conclusion except
that LOADSTAR exercised the diligence of a good father of a family in ensuring
the vessel's seaworthiness.
LOADSTAR further claims that it was not responsible for the loss of the cargo,
such loss being due to force majeure. It points out that when the vessel left
Nasipit, Agusan del Norte, on 19 November 1984, the weather was fine until the
next day when the vessel sank due to strong waves. MIC's witness, Gracelia
Tapel, fully established the existence of two typhoons, "WELFRING" and
"YOLING," inside the Philippine area of responsibility. In fact, on 20 November
1984, signal no. 1 was declared over Eastern Visayas, which includes Limasawa
Island. Tapel also testified that the convergence of winds brought about by these
two typhoons strengthened wind velocity in the area, naturally producing strong
waves and winds, in turn, causing the vessel to list and eventually sink.
LibLex
LOADSTAR goes on to argue that, being a private carrier, any agreement limiting
its liability, such as what transpired in this case, is valid. Since the cargo was
being shipped at "owner's risk," LOADSTAR was not liable for any loss or
damage to the same. Therefore, the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the
provisions of the bills of lading apply only to the shipper and the carrier, and not
to the insurer of the goods, which conclusion runs counter to the Supreme
Court's ruling in the case of St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. Macondray &
Co., Inc., 9 and National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh v. StoltNielsen Phils., Inc. 10
Finally, LOADSTAR avers that MIC's claim had already prescribed, the case
having been instituted beyond the period stated in the bills of lading for instituting
the same suits based upon claims arising from shortage, damage, or nondelivery of shipment shall be instituted within sixty days from the accrual of the
right of action. The vessel sank on 20 November 1984; yet, the case for recovery
was filed only on 4 February 1985.
MIC, on the other hand, claims that LOADSTAR was liable, notwithstanding that
the loss of the cargo was due to force majeure, because the same concurred with
LOADSTAR's fault or negligence.
Secondly, LOADSTAR did not raise the issue of prescription in the court below;
hence, the same must be deemed waived.
Thirdly, the "limited liability" theory is not applicable in the case at bar because
LOADSTAR was at fault or negligent, and because it failed to maintain a
seaworthy vessel. Authorizing the voyage notwithstanding its knowledge of a
typhoon is tantamount to negligence.
We find no merit in this petition.
Anent the first assigned error, we hold that LOADSTAR is a common carrier. It is
not necessary that the carrier be issued a certificate of public convenience, and
this public character is not altered by the fact that the carriage of the goods in
question was periodic, occasional, episodic or unscheduled.
In support of its position, LOADSTAR relied on the 1968 case of Home Insurance
Co. v. American Steamship Agencies, Inc., 11 where this Court held that a
common carrier transporting special cargo or chartering the vessel to a special
person becomes a private carrier that is not subject to the provisions of the Civil
Code. Any stipulation in the charter party absolving the owner from liability for
loss due to the negligence of its agent is void only if the strict policy governing
common carriers is upheld. Such policy has no force where the public at large is
not involved, as in the case of a ship totally chartered for the use of a single party.
LOADSTAR also citedValenzuela Hardwood and Industrial Supply, Inc. v. Court
of Appeals 12 and National Steel Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 13 both of which
upheld the Home Insurancedoctrine.
LLjur
These cases invoked by LOADSTAR are not applicable in the case at bar for the
simple reason that the factual settings are different. The records do not disclose
that the M/V "Cherokee," on the date in question, undertook to carry a special
cargo or was chartered to a special person only. There was no charter party. The
bills of lading failed to show any special arrangement, but only a general
provision to the effect that the M/V "Cherokee" was a "general cargo
carrier." 14 Further, the bare fact that the vessel was carrying a particular type of
cargo for one shipper, which appears to be purely coincidental, is not reason
enough to convert the vessel from a common to a private carrier, especially
where, as in this case, it was shown that the vessel was also carrying
passengers.
Under the facts and circumstances obtaining in this case, LOADSTAR fits the
definition of a common carrier under Article 1732 of the Civil Code. In the case
of De Guzman v. Court of Appeals, 15 the Court juxtaposed the statutory
definition of "common carriers" with the peculiar circumstances of that case, viz.:
The Civil Code defines "common carriers" in the following terms:
"ARTICLE 1732. Common carriers are persons, corporations,
firms or associations engaged in the business of carrying or
transporting passengers or goods or both, by land, water, or air for
compensation, offering their services to the public."
The above article makes no distinction between one
whose principal business activity is the carrying of persons or goods or
both, and one who does such carrying only as an ancillary activity (in
local idiom, as "a sideline". Article 1732 also carefully avoids making any
distinction between a person or enterprise offering transportation service
on a regular or scheduled basis and one offering such service on
an occasional, episodic or unscheduled basis. Neither does Article 1732
distinguish between a carrier offering its services to the "general public,"
i.e., the general community or population, and one who offers services or
solicits business only from a narrowsegment of the general population.
We think that Article 1733 deliberately refrained from making such
distinctions.
Moving on to the second assigned error, we find that the M/V "Cherokee" was not
seaworthy when it embarked on its voyage on 19 November 1984. The vessel
was not even sufficiently manned at the time. "For a vessel to be seaworthy, it
must be adequately equipped for the voyage and manned with a sufficient
number of competent officers and crew. The failure of a common carrier to
Since the stipulation in question is null and void, it follows that when MIC paid
the shipper, it was subrogated to all the rights which the latter has against the
common carrier, LOADSTAR.
Neither is there merit to the contention that the claim in this case was barred by
prescription. MIC's cause of action had not yet prescribed at the time it was
concerned. Inasmuch as neither the Civil Code nor the Code of Commerce states
a specific prescriptive period on the matter, the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act
(COGSA) which provides for a one-year period of limitation on claims for loss
of, or damage to, cargoes sustained during transit may be applied suppletorily
to the case at bar. This one-year prescriptive period also applies to the insurer of
the goods. 22 In this case, the period for filing the action for recovery has not yet
elapsed. Moreover, a stipulation reducing the one-year period is null and
void; 23 it must, accordingly, be struck down.
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is DENIED and the challenged decision of 30
January 1997 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 36401 is AFFIRMED.
Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
|||
LLphil
(Loadstar Shipping Co., Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 131621, [September
services to the general public. As found by the Regional Trial Court, it carried
passengers or goods only for those it chose under a "special contract of charter
party." As correctly concluded by the Court of Appeals, the MV Vlason I "was not
a common but a private carrier." Consequently, the rights and obligations of VSI
and NSC, including their respective liability for damage to the cargo, are
determined primarily by stipulations in their contract of private carriage or charter
party.
3. ID.; ID.; IN A CONTRACT OF PRIVATE CARRIAGE, THE BURDEN OF
PROOF IN CASE OF ACCIDENT IS ON THE CARRIER. In view of the
aforementioned contractual stipulations, NSC must prove that the damage to its
shipment was caused by VSI's willful negligence or failure to exercise due
diligence in making MV Vlason I seaworthy and fit for holding, carrying and
safekeeping the cargo. Ineluctably, the burden of proof was placed on NSC by
the parties' agreement. Because the MV Vlason I was a private carrier, the
shipowner's obligations are governed by the provisions of the Code of Commerce
(Arts. 361 & 362) and not by the Civil Code which, as a general rule places the
prima facie presumption of negligence on a common carrier. In the instant case,
the Court of Appeals correctly found that NSC "has not taken the correct position
in relation to the question of who has the burden of proof. Thus in its brief, after
citing Clause 10 and Clause 12 of the NANYOZAI Charter Party it argues that 'a
careful examination of the evidence will show that VSI miserably failed to comply
with any of these obligations' as if defendant-appellee [VSI] had the burden of
proof."
4. COMMERCIAL LAW; CARRIAGE OF GOODS BY SEA ACT; DEMURRAGE;
DEFINED. The Court defined demurrage in its strict sense as the
compensation provided for in the contract of affreightment for the detention of the
vessel beyond the laytime or that period of time agreed on for loading and
unloading of cargo. It is given to compensate the shipowner for the nonuse of the
vessel.
5. ID.; ID.; PETITIONER NSC, NOT LIABLE FOR DEMURRAGE, AS THE
FOUR-DAY LAYTIME ALLOWED IN THE CHARTER CONTRACT DID NOT
LAPSE; CASE AT BAR. The contract of voyage charter hire provided for a four
day laytime; it also qualified laytime as WWDSHINC or weather working days
Sundays and holidays included. The running of laytime was thus made subject to
the weather, and would cease to run in the event unfavorable weather interfered
with the unloading of cargo. Consequently, NSC may not be held liable for
demurrage as the four-day laytime allowed it did not lapse, having been tolled by
unfavorable weather condition in view of the WWDSHINC qualification agreed
upon by the parties. Clearly, it was error for the trial court and the Court of
Appeals to have found and affirmed respectively that NSC incurred eleven days
of delay in unloading the cargo. The trial court arrived at this erroneous finding by
subtracting from the twelve days, specifically August 13, 1974 to August 24,
1974, the only day of unloading unhampered by unfavorable weather or rain,
which was August 22, 1974. Based on our previous discussion, such finding is a
reversible error.
6. REMEDIAL LAW; CIVIL PROCEDURE; APPEAL TO THE SUPREME COURT;
WHERE THE FACTUAL FINDINGS OF BOTH THE TRIAL COURT AND THE
COURT OF APPEALS COINCIDE, THE SAME ARE BINDING ON THE COURT.
The questions of fact were threshed out and decided by the trial court, which
had the firsthand opportunity to hear the parties' conflicting claims and to
carefully weigh their respective evidence. The findings of the trial court were
subsequently affirmed by the Court of Appeals. Where the factual findings of both
the trial court and the Court of Appeals coincide, the same are binding on this
Court. We stress that, subject to some exceptional instances, only questions of
law not questions of fact may be raised before this Court in a petition for
review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court. After a thorough review of the case at
bar, we find no reason to disturb the lower courts' factual findings, as indeed NSC
has not successfully proven the application of any of the aforecited exceptions.
7. ID.; EVIDENCE; ADMISSIBILITY OF EVIDENCE; AN ORIGINAL
CERTIFICATE ISSUED BY AN OFFICER OF THE PHILIPPINE COAST GUARD,
IS ADMISSIBLE UNDER A WELL-SETTLED EXCEPTION TO THE HEARSAY
RULE UNDER SECTION 44, RULE 130 OF THE RULES OF COURT. Exhibit
11 is admissible under a well-settled exception to the hearsay rule per Section 44
of Rule 130 of the Rules of Courts which provides that "(e)ntries in official records
made in the performance of a duty by a public officer of the Philippines, or by a
person in the performance of a duty especially enjoined by law, are prima
The Case
Before us are two separate petitions for review filed by National Steel Corporation
(NSC) and Vlasons Shipping, Inc. (VSI), both of which assail the August 12, 1993
Decision of the Court of Appeals. 1 The Court of Appeals modified the decision of
the Regional Trial Court of Pasig, Metro Manila, Branch 163 in Civil Case No.
23317. The RTC disposed as follows:
"WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of defendant and
against the plaintiff dismissing the complaint with cost against plaintiff,
and ordering plaintiff to pay the defendant on the counterclaim as
follows:
1. The sum of P75,000.00 as unpaid freight and P88,000.00 as
demurrage with interest at the legal rate on both amounts from April 7,
1976 until the same shall have been fully paid;
2. Attorney's fees and expenses of litigation in the sum of P100,000.00;
and
3. Cost of suit.
SO ORDERED." 2
The Facts
The MV Vlasons I is a vessel which renders tramping service and, as such, does
not transport cargo or shipment for the general public. Its services are available
only to specific persons who enter into a special contract of charter party with its
owner. It is undisputed that the ship is a private carrier. And it is in this capacity
that its owner, Vlasons Shipping, Inc., entered into a contract of affreightment or
contract of voyage charter hire with National Steel Corporation.
The facts as found by Respondent Court of Appeals are as follows:
states, 'Charterers to load, stow and discharge the cargo free of risk and
expenses to owners. . . .' (Emphasis supplied).
Under paragraph 10 thereof, it is provided that '(o)wners shall, before
and at the beginning of the voyage, exercise due diligence to make the
vessel seaworthy and properly manned, equipped and supplied and to
make the holds and all other parts of the vessel in which cargo is carried,
fit and safe for its reception, carriage and preservation. Owners shall not
be liable for loss of or damage of the cargo arising or resulting from:
unseaworthiness unless caused by want of due diligence on the part of
the owners to make the vessel seaworthy, and to secure that the vessel
is properly manned, equipped and supplied and to make the holds and
all other parts of the vessel in which cargo is carried, fit and safe for its
reception, carriage and preservation; . . ; perils, dangers and accidents
of the sea or other navigable waters; . . ; wastage in bulk or weight or
any other loss or damage arising from inherent defect, quality or vice of
the cargo; insufficiency of packing; . . .; latent defects not discoverable by
due diligence; any other cause arising without the actual fault or privity of
Owners or without the fault of the agents or servants of owners.'
Paragraph 12 of said NANYOZAI Charter Party also provides that
'(o)wners shall not be responsible for split, chafing and/or any damage
unless caused by the negligence or default of the master and crew.'
(2) On August 6, 7 and 8, 1974, in accordance with the Contract of
Voyage Charter Hire, the MV 'VLASONS I' loaded at plaintiffs pier at
Iligan City, the NSC's shipment of 1,677 skids of tinplates and 92
packages of hot rolled sheets or a total of 1,769 packages with a total
weight of about 2,481.19 metric tons for carriage to Manila. The
shipment was placed in the three (3) hatches of the ship. Chief Mate
Gonzalo Sabando, acting as agent of the vessel[,] acknowledged receipt
of the cargo on board and signed the corresponding bill of lading,
B.L.P.P. No. 0233 (Exhibit 'D') on August 8, 1974.
(3) The vessel arrived with the cargo at Pier 12, North Harbor, Manila, on
August 12, 1974. The following day, August 13, 1974, when the vessel's
three (3) hatches containing the shipment were opened by plaintiff's
agents, nearly all the skids of tinplates and hot rolled sheets were
allegedly found to be wet and rusty. The cargo was discharged and
in which the cargo was carried, fit and safe for its reception, carriage and
preservation all in violation of defendant's undertaking under their
Contract of Voyage Charter Hire.
(7) In its answer, defendant denied liability for the alleged damage
claiming that the MV 'VLASONS I' was seaworthy in all respects for the
carriage of plaintiff's cargo; that said vessel was not a 'common carrier'
inasmuch as she was under voyage charter contract with the plaintiff as
charterer under the charter party; that in the course of the voyage from
Iligan City to Manila, the MV 'VLASONS I' encountered very rough seas,
strong winds and adverse weather condition, causing strong winds and
big waves to continuously pound against the vessel and seawater to
overflow on its deck and hatch covers; that under the Contract of Voyage
Charter Hire, defendant shall not be responsible for losses/damages
except on proven willful negligence of the officers of the vessel, that the
officers of said MV 'VLASONS I' exercised due diligence and proper
seamanship and were not willfully negligent; that furthermore the Voyage
Charter Party provides that loading and discharging of the cargo was on
FIOST terms which means that the vessel was free of risk and expense
in connection with the loading and discharging of the cargo; that the
damage, if any, was due to the inherent defect, quality or vice of the
cargo or to the insufficient packing thereof or to latent defect of the cargo
not discoverable by due diligence or to any other cause arising without
the actual fault or privity of defendant and without the fault of the agents
or servants of defendant; consequently, defendant is not liable; that the
stevedores of plaintiff who discharged the cargo in Manila were negligent
and did not exercise due care in the discharge of the cargo; and that the
cargo was exposed to rain and seawater spray while on the pier or in
transit from the pier to plaintiff's warehouse after discharge from the
vessel; and that plaintiff's claim was highly speculative and grossly
exaggerated and that the small stain marks or sweat marks on the edges
of the tinplates were magnified and considered total loss of the cargo.
Finally, defendant claimed that it had complied with all its duties and
obligations under the Voyage Charter Hire Contract and had no
responsibility whatsoever to plaintiff. In turn, it alleged the following
counterclaim:
Appealing the RTC decision to the Court of Appeals, NSC alleged six errors:
"I
The trial court erred in finding that the MV 'VLASONS I' was seaworthy,
properly manned, equipped and supplied, and that there is no proof of
willful negligence of the vessel's officers.
"II
The trial court erred in finding that the rusting of NSC's tinplates was due
to the inherent nature or character of the goods and not due to contact
with seawater.
"III
The trial court erred in finding that the stevedores hired by NSC were
negligent in the unloading of NSC's shipment.
"IV
The trial court erred in exempting VSI from liability on the ground of force
majeure.
"V
The trial court erred in finding that NSC violated the contract of voyage
charter hire.
"VI
The trial court erred in ordering NSC to pay freight, demurrage and
attorney's fees, to VSI." 4
As earlier stated, the Court of Appeals modified the decision of the trial court by
reducing the demurrage from P88,000.00 to P44,000.00 and deleting the award
of attorneys fees and expenses of litigation. NSC and VSI filed separate motions
for reconsideration. In a Resolution 5 dated October 20, 1993, the appellate court
denied both motions. Undaunted, NSC and VSI filed their respective petitions for
review before this Court. On motion of VSI, the Court ordered on February 14,
1994 the consolidation of these petitions. 6
The Issues
In its petition 7 and memorandum, 8 NSC raises the following questions of law
and fact:
Questions of Law
"1. Whether or not a charterer of a vessel is liable for demurrage due to
cargo unloading delays caused by weather interruption;
2. Whether or not the alleged 'seaworthiness certificates' (Exhibits '3', '4',
'5', '6', '7', '8', '9', '11' and '12') were admissible in evidence and
constituted evidence of the vessel's seaworthiness at the
beginning of the voyages; and
3. Whether or not a charterer's failure to insure its cargo exempts the
shipowner from liability for cargo damage."
Questions of Fact
"1. Whether or not the vessel was seaworthy and cargo-worthy;
2. Whether or not vessel's officers and crew were negligent in handling
and caring for NSC's cargo;
3. Whether or not NSC's cargo of tinplates did sweat during the voyage
and, hence, rusted on their own; and
4. Whether or not NSC's stevedores were negligent and caused the
wetting[/]rusting of NSC's tinplates."
In its separate petition, 9 VSI submits for the consideration of this Court the
following alleged errors of the CA:
"A. The respondent Court of Appeals committed an error of law in
reducing the award of demurrage from P88,000.00 to P44,000.00.
B. The respondent Court of Appeals committed an error of law in
deleting the award of P10,000 for attorney's fees and expenses of
litigation."
Amplifying the foregoing, VSI raises the following issues in its memorandum: 10
"I. Whether or not the provisions of the Civil Code of the Philippines on
common carriers pursuant to which there exist[s] a presumption of
The foregoing issues raised by the parties will be discussed under the following
headings:
1. Questions of Fact
2. Effect of NSC's Failure to Insure the Cargo
maritime contract by which the charterer, a party other than the shipowner,
obtains the use and service of all or some part of a ship for a period of time or a
voyage or voyages." 12
In the instant case, it is undisputed that VSI did not offer its services to the
general public. As found by the Regional Trial Court, it carried passengers or
goods only for those it chose under a "special contract of charter party." 13 As
correctly concluded by the Court of Appeals, the MV Vlasons I "was not a
common but a private carrier."14 Consequently, the rights and obligations of VSI
and NSC, including their respective liability for damage to the cargo, are
determined primarily by stipulations in their contract of private carriage or charter
party. 15 Recently, in Valenzuela Hardwood and Industrial Supply, Inc., vs. Court
of Appeals and Seven Brothers Shipping Corporation, 16 the Court ruled:
". . . in a contract of private carriage, the parties may freely stipulate their
duties and obligations which perforce would be binding on them. Unlike
in a contract involving a common carrier, private carriage does not
involve the general public. Hence, the stringent provisions of the Civil
Code on common carriers protecting the general public cannot justifiably
be applied to a ship transporting commercial goods as a private carrier.
Consequently, the public policy embodied therein is not contravened by
stipulations in a charter party that lessen or remove the protection given
by law in contracts involving common carriers." 17
not be responsible for split, chafing and/or any damage unless caused by the
negligence or default of the master or crew." 19
Burden of Proof
In view of the aforementioned contractual stipulations, NSC must prove that the
damage to its shipment was caused by VSI's willful negligence or failure to
exercise due diligence in making MV Vlasons I seaworthy and fit for holding,
carrying and safekeeping the cargo. Ineluctably, the burden of proof was placed
on NSC by the parties' agreement.
This view finds further support in the Code of Commerce which pertinently
provides:
"Art. 361. Merchandise shall be transported at the risk and venture of the
shipper, if the contrary has not been expressly stipulated.
Therefore, the damage and impairment suffered by the goods during the
transportation, due to fortuitous event, force majeure, or the nature and
inherent defect of the things, shall be for the account and risk of the
shipper.
The burden of proof of these accidents is on the carrier."
"Art. 362. The carrier, however, shall be liable for damages arising from
the cause mentioned in the preceding article if proofs against him show
that they occurred on account of his negligence or his omission to take
the precautions usually adopted by careful persons, unless the shipper
committed fraud in the bill of lading, making him to believe that the goods
were of a class or quality different from what they really were."
Because the MV Vlasons I was a private carrier, the shipowner's obligations are
governed by the foregoing provisions of the Code of Commerce and not by the
Civil Code which, as a general rule, places the prima facie presumption of
negligence on a common carrier. It is a hornbook doctrine that:
"In an action against a private carrier for loss of, or injury to, cargo, the
burden is on the plaintiff to prove that the carrier was negligent or
unseaworthy, and the fact that the goods were lost or damaged while in
the carrier's custody does not put the burden of proof on the carrier.
In the instant case, the Court of Appeals correctly found that NSC "has not taken
the correct position in relation to the question of who has the burden of proof.
Thus, in its brief (pp. 10-11), after citing Clause 10 and Clause 12 of the
NANYOZAI Charter Party (incidentally plaintiff-appellant's [NSC's] interpretation
of Clause 12 is not even correct), it argues that 'a careful examination of the
evidence will show that VSI miserably failed to comply with any of these
obligations' as if defendant-appellee [VSI] had the burden of proof." 21
First Issue : Questions of Fact
These questions of fact were threshed out and decided by the trial court, which
had the firsthand opportunity to hear the parties' conflicting claims and to
carefully weigh their respective evidence. The findings of the trial court were
subsequently affirmed by the Court of Appeals. Where the factual findings of both
the trial court and the Court of Appeals coincide, the same are binding on this
Court. 22 We stress that, subject to some exceptional instances, 23 only questions
of law not questions of fact may be raised before this Court in a petition for
review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court. After a thorough review of the case at
bar, we find no reason to disturb the lower courts' factual findings, as indeed NSC
has not successfully proven the application of any of the aforecited exceptions.
Was MV Vlasons I Seaworthy?
In any event, the records reveal that VSI exercised due diligence to make the ship
seaworthy and fit for the carriage of NSC's cargo of steel and tinplates. This is
shown by the fact that it was drydocked and harbored by the Philippine Coast
Guard before it proceeded to Iligan City for its voyage to Manila under the
contract of voyage charter hire. 24 The vessel's voyage from Iligan to Manila was
the vessel's first voyage after drydocking. The Philippine Coast Guard Station in
Cebu cleared it asseaworthy, fitted and equipped; it met all requirements for
trading as cargo vessel. 25 The Court of Appeals itself sustained the conclusion of
the trial court that MV Vlasons I was seaworthy. We find no reason to modify or
reverse this finding of both the trial and the appellate courts.
As noted earlier, the NSC had the burden of proving that the damage to the cargo
was caused by the negligence of the officers and the crew of MV Vlasons I in
making their vessel seaworthy and fit for the carriage of tinplates. NSC failed to
discharge this burden.
Before us, NSC relies heavily on its claim that MV Vlasons I had used an old and
torn tarpaulin or canvas to cover the hatches through which the cargo was loaded
into the cargo hold of the ship. It faults the Court 26 of Appeals for failing to
consider such claim as an "uncontroverted fact and denies that MV Vlasons
I "was equipped with new canvas covers in tandem with the old ones as indicated
in the Marine Protest . . ." 27 We disagree.
The records sufficiently support VSI's contention that the ship used the old
tarpaulin, only in addition to the new one used primarily to make the ship's
hatches watertight. The foregoing are clear from the marine protest of the master
of the MV Vlasons I, Antonio C. Dumlao, and the deposition of the ship's
boatswain, Jose Pascua. The salient portions of said marine protest read:
". . . That the M/V "VLASONS I" departed Iligan City on or about 0730
hours of August 8, 1974, loaded with approximately 2,487.9 tons of steel
plates and tin plates consigned to National Steel Corporation; that before
departure, the vessel was rigged, fully equipped and cleared by the
authorities; that on or about August 9, 1974, while in the vicinity of the
western part of Negros and Panay, we encountered very rough seas and
strong winds and Manila office was advised by telegram of the adverse
weather conditions encountered; that in the morning of August 10, 1974,
the weather condition changed to worse and strong winds and big waves
continued pounding the vessel at her port side causing sea water to
overflow on deck and hatch (sic) covers and which caused the first layer
of the canvass covering to give way while the new canvass covering still
holding on;
That the weather condition improved when we reached Dumali Point
protected by Mindoro; that we re-secured the canvass covering back to
position; that in the afternoon of August 10, 1974, while entering
Maricaban Passage, we were again exposed to moderate seas and
heavy rains; that while approaching Fortune Island, we encountered
again rough seas, strong winds and big waves which caused the same
canvass to give way and leaving the new canvass holding on;
xxx xxx xxx" 28
q Is the beam that was placed in the hatch opening covering the whole
hatch opening?
a No, sir.
q How many hatch beams were there placed across the opening?
a There are five beams in one hatch opening.
ATTY. DEL ROSARIO
q And on top of the beams you said there is a hatch board. How many
pieces of wood are put on top?
a Plenty, sir, because there are several pieces on top of the hatch beam.
q And is there a space between the hatch boards?
a There is none, sir.
q They are tight together?
a Yes, sir.
q How tight?
a Very tight, sir.
q Now, on top of the hatch boards, according to you, is the canvas cover.
How many canvas covers?
a Two, sir." 29
That due diligence was exercised by the officers and the crew of the MV Vlasons
I was further demonstrated by the fact that, despite encountering rough weather
twice, the new tarpaulin did not give way and the ship's hatches and cargo holds
remained waterproof. As aptly stated by the Court of Appeals, ". . . we find no
reason not to sustain the conclusion of the lower court based on overwhelming
evidence, that the MV 'VLASONS I' was seaworthy when it undertook the voyage
on August 8, 1974 carrying on board thereof plaintiff-appellant's shipment of
1,677 skids of tinplates and 92 packages of hot rolled sheets or a total of 1,769
packages from NSC's pier in Iligan City arriving safely at North Harbor, Port Area,
Manila, on August 12, 1974; . . ." 30
Indeed, NSC failed to discharge its burden to show negligence on the part of the
officers and the crew of MV Vlasons I, On the contrary, the records reveal that it
was the stevedores of NSC who were negligent in unloading the cargo from the
ship.
cdasia
The stevedores employed only a tent-like material to cover the hatches when
strong rains occasioned by a passing typhoon disrupted the loading of the cargo.
This tent-like covering, however, was clearly inadequate for keeping rain and
seawater away from the hatches of the ship. Vicente Angliongto, an officer of VSI,
testified thus:
"ATTY. ZAMORA:
Q Now, during your testimony on November 5, 1979, you stated on
August 14 you went on board the vessel upon notice from the
National Steel Corporation in order to conduct the inspection of
the cargo. During the course of the investigation, did you chance
to see the discharging operation?
WITNESS:
A Yes, sir, upon my arrival at the vessel, I saw some of the tinplates
already discharged on the pier but majority of the tinplates were
inside the hall, all the hatches were opened.
Q In connection with these cargoes which were unloaded, where is the
place.
A At the Pier.
Q What was used to protect the same from weather?
ATTY. LOPEZ:
We object, your Honor, this question was already asked. This particular
matter . . . the transcript of stenographic notes shows the same
was covered in the direct examination.
ATTY. ZAMORA:
Precisely, your Honor, we would like to go on detail, this is the serious
part of the testimony.
COURT:
The fact that NSC actually accepted and proceeded to remove the cargo from the
ship during unfavorable weather will not make VSI liable for any damage caused
thereby. In passing, it may be noted that the NSC may seek indemnification,
subject to the laws on prescription, from the stevedoring company at fault in the
discharge operations. "A. stevedore company engaged in discharging cargo . . .
has the duty to load the cargo . . . in a prudent manner, and it is liable for injury
to, or loss of, cargo caused by its negligence . . . and where the officers and
members and crew of the vessel do nothing and have no responsibility in the
discharge of cargo by stevedores . . . the vessel is not liable for loss of, or
damage to, the cargo caused by the negligence of the stevedores . . ." 34 as in
the instant case.
Do Tinplates "Sweat"?
The trial court relied on the testimony of Vicente Angliongto in finding that " . . .
tinplates 'sweat' by themselves when packed even without being in contact with
water from outside especially when the weather is bad or raining . . ." 35 The
Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court's finding.
A discussion of this issue appears inconsequential and unnecessary. As
previously discussed, the damage to the tinplates was occasioned not by
airborne moisture but by contact with rain and seawater which the stevedores
negligently allowed to seep in during the unloading.
Second Issue : Effect of NSC's Failure to Insure the Cargo
The obligation of NSC to insure the cargo stipulated in the Contract of Voyage
Charter Hire is totally separate and distinct from the contractual or statutory
responsibility that may be incurred by VSI for damage to the cargo caused by the
willful negligence of the officers and the crew of MV Vlasons I . Clearly, therefore,
NSC's failure to insure the cargo will not affect its right, as owner and real party in
interest, to file an action against VSI for damages caused by the latter's willful
negligence. We do not find anything in the charter party that would make the
liability of VSI for damage to the cargo contingent on or affected in any manner by
NSC's obtaining an insurance over the cargo.
Third Issue : Admissibility of Certificates Proving Seaworthiness
NSC's contention that MV Vlasons I was not seaworthy is anchored on the
alleged inadmissibility of the certificates of seaworthiness offered in evidence by
VSI. The said certificates include the following:
1. Certificate of Inspection of the Philippine Coast Guard at Cebu
2. Certificate of Inspection from the Philippine Coast Guard
3. International Load Line Certificate from the Philippine Coast
Guard
4. Coastwise License from the Board of Transportation
5. Certificate of Approval for Conversion issued by the Bureau of
Customs 36
NSC argues that the certificates are hearsay for not having been presented in
accordance with the Rules of Court. It points out that Exhibits 3, 4 and 11
allegedly are "not written records or acts of public officers"; while Exhibits 5, 6, 7,
8, 9, 11 and 12 are not "evidenced by official publications or certified true copies"
as required bySections 25 and 26, Rule 132, of the Rules of Court. 37
After a careful examination of these exhibits, the Court rules that Exhibits 3, 4, 5,
6, 7, 8, 9 and 12 are inadmissible, for they have not been properly offered as
evidence. Exhibits 3 and 4 are certificates issued by private parties, but they have
not been proven by one who saw the writing executed, or by evidence of the
genuineness of the handwriting of the maker, or by a subscribing witness.
Exhibits 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 12 are photocopies, but their admission under the best
evidence rule have not been demonstrated.
We find, however, that Exhibit 11 is admissible under a well-settled exception to
the hearsay rule per Section 44 of Rule 130 of the Rules of Court, which provides
that "(e)ntries in official records made in the performance of a duty by a public
officer of the Philippines, or by a person in the performance of a duty specially
enjoined by law, are prima facie evidence of the facts therein stated." 38 Exhibit
39
The Court defined demurrage in its strict sense as the compensation provided for
in the contract of affreightment for the detention of the vessel beyond the laytime
or that period of time agreed on for loading and unloading of cargo. 40 It is given
to compensate the shipowner for the nonuse of the vessel. On the other hand,
the following is well-settled:
"Laytime runs according to the particular clause of the charter party. . . If
laytime is expressed in 'running days,' this means days when the ship
would be run continuously, and holidays are not excepted. A qualification
In this case, the contract of voyage charter hire provided for a four-day laytime; it
also qualified laytime as WWDSHINC or weather working days Sundays and
holidays included. 42 The running of laytime was thus made subject to the
weather, and would cease to run in the event unfavorable weather interfered with
the unloading of cargo. 43 Consequently, NSC may not be held liable for
demurrage as the four-day laytime allowed it did not lapse, having been tolled by
unfavorable weather condition in view of the WWDSHINC qualification agreed
upon by the parties. Clearly, it was error for the trial court and the Court of
Appeals to have found and affirmed respectively that NSC incurred eleven days
of delay in unloading the cargo. The trial court arrived at this erroneous finding by
subtracting from the twelve days, specifically August 13, 1974 to August 24,
1974, the only day of unloading unhampered by unfavorable weather or rain
which was August 22, 1974. Based on our previous discussion, such finding is a
reversible error. As mentioned, the respondent appellate court also erred in ruling
that NSC was liable to VSI for demurrage, even if it reduced the amount by
half.
LibLex
Attorney's Fees
VSI assigns as error of law the Court of Appeals' deletion of the award of
attorney's fees. We disagree. While VSI was compelled to litigate to protect its
rights, such fact by itself will not justify an award of attorney's fees under Article
2208 of the Civil Code when" . . . no sufficient showing of bad faith would be
reflected in a party's persistence in a case other than an erroneous conviction of
the righteousness of his cause . . ." 44 Moreover, attorney's fees may not be
awarded to a party for the reason alone that the judgment rendered was
favorable to the latter, as this is tantamount to imposing a premium on one's right
to litigate or seek judicial redress of legitimate grievances. 45
Epilogue
At bottom, this appeal really hinges on a factual issue: when, how and who
caused the damage to the cargo? Ranged against NSC are two formidable
truths. First, both lower courts found that such damage was brought about during
the unloading process when rain and seawater seeped through the cargo due to
the fault or negligence of the stevedores employed by it. Basic is the rule that
factual findings of the trial court, when affirmed by the Court of Appeals, are
binding on the Supreme Court. Although there are settled exceptions, NSC has
not satisfactorily shown that this case is one of them. Second, the agreement
between the parties the Contract of Voyage Charter Hire placed the burden
of proof for such loss or damage upon the shipper, not upon the shipowner. Such
stipulation, while disadvantageous to NSC, is valid because the parties entered
into a contract of private charter, not one of common carriage. Basic too is the
doctrine that courts cannot relieve a party from the effects of a private contract
freely entered into, on the ground that it is allegedly one-sided or unfair to the
plaintiff. The charter party is a normal commercial contract and its stipulations are
agreed upon in consideration of many factors, not the least of which is the
transport price which is determined not only by the actual costs but also by the
risks and burdens assumed by the shipper in regard to possible loss or damage
to the cargo. In recognition of such factors, the parties even stipulated that the
shipper should insure the cargo to protect itself from the risks it undertook under
the charter party. That NSC failed or neglected to protect itself with such
insurance should not adversely affect VSI, which had nothing to do with such
failure or neglect.
(National Steel Corp. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 112287, 112350, [December
DECISION
CORONA, J :
p
May a carrier be held liable for the loss of cargo resulting from the sinking of a
ship it does not own?
This is the issue presented for the Court's resolution in this petition for review
on certiorari 1 assailing the March 16, 2001 decision 2 and September 17, 2001
resolution3 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 40473 which in turn
affirmed the December 27, 1989 decision 4 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC),
Branch 145, Makati, Metro Manila. 5
The pertinent facts follow.
On November 12, 1984, petitioner Cebu Salvage Corporation (as carrier) and
Maria Cristina Chemicals Industries, Inc. [MCCII] (as charterer) entered into a
voyage charter 6 wherein petitioner was to load 800 to 1,100 metric tons of silica
quartz on board the M/T Espiritu Santo 7 at Ayungon, Negros Occidental for
transport to and discharge at Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental to consignee
Ferrochrome Phils., Inc. 8
Pursuant to the contract, on December 23, 1984, petitioner received and loaded
1,100 metric tons of silica quartz on board the M/T Espiritu Santo which left
Ayungon for Tagoloan the next day. 9 The shipment never reached its destination,
however, because the M/T Espiritu Santo sank in the afternoon of December 24,
1984 off the beach of Opol, Misamis Oriental, resulting in the total loss of the
cargo. 10
MCCII filed a claim for the loss of the shipment with its insurer, respondent
Philippine Home Assurance Corporation. 11 Respondent paid the claim in the
amount of P211,500 and was subrogated to the rights of MCCII. 12 Thereafter, it
filed a case in the RTC 13 against petitioner for reimbursement of the amount it
paid MCCII.
After trial, the RTC rendered judgment in favor of respondent. It ordered petitioner
to pay respondent P211,500 plus legal interest, attorney's fees equivalent to 25%
of the award and costs of suit.
TCDHaE
On appeal, the CA affirmed the decision of the RTC. Hence, this petition.
Petitioner and MCCII entered into a "voyage charter," also known as a contract of
affreightment wherein the ship was leased for a single voyage for the conveyance
of goods, in consideration of the payment of freight. 14 Under a voyage charter,
the shipowner retains the possession, command and navigation of the ship, the
charterer or freighter merely having use of the space in the vessel in return for his
payment of freight. 15 An owner who retains possession of the ship remains liable
as carrier and must answer for loss or non-delivery of the goods received for
transportation. 16
Petitioner argues that the CA erred when it affirmed the RTC finding that the
voyage charter it entered into with MCCII was a contract of carriage. 17 It insists
that the agreement was merely a contract of hire wherein MCCII hired the vessel
from its owner, ALS Timber Enterprises (ALS). 18 Not being the owner of the M/T
Espiritu Santo, petitioner did not have control and supervision over the vessel, its
master and crew. 19 Thus, it could not be held liable for the loss of the shipment
caused by the sinking of a ship it did not own.
We disagree.
Based on the agreement signed by the parties and the testimony of petitioner's
operations manager, it is clear that it was a contract of carriage petitioner signed
with MCCII. It actively negotiated and solicited MCCII's account, offered its
services to ship the silica quartz and proposed to utilize the M/T Espiritu Santo in
lieu of the M/T Seebees or the M/T Shirley (as previously agreed upon in the
voyage charter) since these vessels had broken down. 20
There is no dispute that petitioner was a common carrier. At the time of the loss
of the cargo, it was engaged in the business of carrying and transporting goods
by water, for compensation, and offered its services to the public. 21
From the nature of their business and for reasons of public policy, common
carriers are bound to observe extraordinary diligence over the goods they
is the Charter Party, and is the law between the parties who are bound
by its terms and condition provided that these are not contrary to law,
morals, good customs, public order and public policy. 30
Finally, petitioner asserts that MCCII should be held liable for its own loss since
the voyage charter stipulated that cargo insurance was for the charterer's
account. 31This deserves scant consideration. This simply meant that the
charterer would take care of having the goods insured. It could not exculpate the
carrier from liability for the breach of its contract of carriage. The law, in fact,
prohibits it and condemns it as unjust and contrary to public policy. 32
To summarize, a contract of carriage of goods was shown to exist; the cargo was
loaded on board the vessel; loss or non-delivery of the cargo was proven; and
petitioner failed to prove that it exercised extraordinary diligence to prevent such
loss or that it was due to some casualty or force majeure. The voyage charter
here being a contract of affreightment, the carrier was answerable for the loss of
the goods received for transportation. 33
The idea proposed by petitioner is not only preposterous, it is also dangerous. It
says that a carrier that enters into a contract of carriage is not liable to the
charterer or shipper if it does not own the vessel it chooses to use. MCCII never
dealt with ALS and yet petitioner insists that MCCII should sue ALS for
reimbursement for its loss. Certainly, to permit a common carrier to escape its
responsibility for the goods it agreed to transport (by the expedient of alleging
non-ownership of the vessel it employed) would radically derogate from the
carrier's duty of extraordinary diligence. It would also open the door to collusion
between the carrier and the supposed owner and to the possible shifting of
liability from the carrier to one without any financial capability to answer for the
resulting damages. 34
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby DENIED.
Costs against petitioner.
|||
After the Urea fertilizer was loaded in bulk by stevedores hired by and under the
supervision of the shipper, the steel hatches were closed with heavy iron lids,
covered with three (3) layers of tarpaulin, then tied with steel bonds. The hatches
remained closed and tightly sealed throughout the entire voyage. 5
Upon arrival of the vessel at her port of call on 3 July 1974, the steel pontoon
hatches were opened with the use of the vessel's boom. Petitioner unloaded the
cargo from the holds into its steel-bodied dump trucks which were parked
alongside the berth, using metal scoops attached to the ship, pursuant to the
terms and conditions of the charter-party (which provided for an F.I.O.S.
clause). 6 The hatches remained open throughout the duration of the discharge. 7
Each time a dump truck was filled up, its load of Urea was covered with tarpaulin
before it was transported to the consignee's warehouse located some fifty (50)
meters from the wharf. Midway to the warehouse, the trucks were made to pass
through a weighing scale where they were individually weighed for the purpose of
ascertaining the net weight of the cargo. The port area was windy, certain
portions of the route to the warehouse were sandy and the weather was variable,
raining occasionally while the discharge was in progress. 8 The petitioner's
warehouse was made of corrugated galvanized iron (GI) sheets, with an opening
at the front where the dump trucks entered and unloaded the fertilizer on the
warehouse floor. Tarpaulins and GI sheets were placed in-between and alongside
the trucks to contain spillages of the fertilizer. 9
It took eleven (11) days for PPI to unload the cargo, from 5 July to 18
July 1974 (except July 12th, 14th and 18th). 10 A private marine and cargo
surveyor, Cargo Superintendents Company Inc. (CSCI), was hired by PPI to
determine the "outturn" of the cargo shipped, by taking draft readings of the
vessel prior to and after discharge. 11 The survey report submitted by CSCI to
the consignee (PPI) dated 19 July 1974 revealed a shortage in the cargo of
106.726 M/T and that a portion of the Urea fertilizer approximating 18 M/T
was contaminated with dirt. The same results were contained in a Certificate
of Shortage/Damaged Cargo dated 18 July 1974 prepared by PPI which
showed that the cargo delivered was indeed short of 94.839 M/T and about 23
M/T were rendered unfit for commerce, having been polluted with sand, rust
and dirt. 12
Consequently, PPI sent a claim letter dated 18 December 1974 to Soriamont
Steamship Agencies (SSA), the resident agent of the carrier, KKKK, for
P245,969.31 representing the cost of the alleged shortage in the goods shipped
and the diminution in value of that portion said to have been contaminated with
dirt. 13
Respondent SSA explained that they were not able to respond to the consignee's
claim for payment because, according to them, what they received was just a
request for shortlanded certificate and not a formal claim, and that this "request"
was denied by them because they "had nothing to do with the discharge of the
shipment." 14Hence, on 18 July 1975, PPI filed an action for damages with the
Court of First Instance of Manila. The defendant carrier argued that the strict
public policy governing common carriers does not apply to them because they
have become private carriers by reason of the provisions of the charter-party. The
court a quo however sustained the claim of the plaintiff against the defendant
carrier for the value of the goods lost or damaged when it ruled thus: 15
". . . Prescinding from the provision of the law that a common carrier is
presumed negligent in case of loss or damage of the goods it contracts
to transport, all that a shipper has to do in a suit to recover for loss or
damage is to show receipt by the carrier of the goods and delivery by it
of less than what it received. After that, the burden of proving that the
loss or damage was due to any of the causes which exempt him from
liability is shifted to the carrier, common or private he may be. Even if the
provisions of the charter-party aforequoted are deemed valid, and the
defendants considered private carriers, it was still incumbent upon them
to prove that the shortage or contamination sustained by the cargo is
attributable to the fault or negligence on the part of the shipper or
consignee in the loading, stowing, trimming and discharge of the
cargo. This they failed to do. By this omission, coupled with their failure
to destroy the presumption of negligence against them, the defendants
are liable" (italics supplied).
On appeal, respondent Court of Appeals reversed the lower court and absolved
the carrier from liability for the value of the cargo that was lost or
damaged. 16 Relying on the 1968 case of Home Insurance Co. v. American
Steamship Agencies, Inc., 17 the appellate court ruled that the cargo vessel M/V
"Sun Plum" owned by private respondent KKKK was a private carrier and not a
common carrier by reason of the time charter-party. Accordingly, the Civil Code
provisions on common carriers which set forth a presumption of negligence do
not find application in the case at bar. Thus
". . . In the absence of such presumption, it was incumbent upon the
plaintiff-appellee to adduce sufficient evidence to prove the negligence of
the defendant carrier as alleged in its complaint. It is an old and well
settled rule that if the plaintiff, upon whom rests the burden of proving his
cause of action, fails to show in a satisfactory manner the facts upon
which he bases his claim, the defendant is under no obligation to prove
his exception or defense (Moran, Commentaries on the Rules of Court,
Volume 6, p. 2, citing Belen v. Belen, 13 Phil. 202).
"But, the record shows that the plaintiff-appellee dismally failed to prove
the basis of its cause of action, i.e., the alleged negligence of defendant
carrier. It appears that the plaintiff was under the impression that it did
not have to establish defendant's negligence. Be that as it may, contrary
to the trial court's finding, the record of the instant case discloses ample
evidence showing that defendant carrier was not negligent in performing
its obligations . . ." 18 (emphasis supplied).
Petitioner PPI appeals to us by way of a petition for review assailing the decision
of the Court of Appeals. Petitioner theorizes that the Home Insurance case has
no bearing on the present controversy because the issue raised therein is the
validity of a stipulation in the charter-party delimiting the liability of the shipowner
for loss or damage to goods caused by want of due diligence on its part or that of
its manager to make the vessel seaworthy in all respects, and not whether the
presumption of negligence provided under the Civil Code applies only to common
carriers and not to private carriers. 19 Petitioner further argues that since the
possession and control of the vessel remain with the shipowner, absent any
stipulation to the contrary, such shipowner should be made liable for the
negligence of the captain and crew. In fine, PPI faults the appellate court in not
applying the presumption of negligence against respondent carrier, and instead
shifting the onus probandi on the shipper to show want of due diligence on the
part of the carrier, when he was not even at hand to witness what transpired
during the entire voyage.
As earlier stated, the primordial issue here is whether a common carrier becomes
a private carrier by reason of a charter-party; in the negative, whether the
shipowner in the instant case was able to prove that he had exercised that
degree of diligence required of him under the law.
Upon the other hand, the term "common or public carrier" is defined in Art. 1732
of the Civil Code. 23 The definition extends to carriers either by land, air or water
which hold themselves out as ready to engage in carrying goods or transporting
passengers or both for compensation as a public employment and not as a
casual occupation. The distinction between a "common or public carrier" and a
"private or special carrier" lies in the character of the business, such that if the
undertaking is a single transaction, not a part of the general business or
occupation, although involving the carriage of goods for a fee, the person or
corporation offering such service is a private carrier. 24
Article 1733 of the New Civil Code mandates that common carriers, by reason of
the nature of their business, should observe extraordinary diligence in the
vigilance over the goods they carry. 25 In the case of private carriers, however, the
exercise of ordinary diligence in the carriage of goods will suffice. Moreover, in
case of loss, destruction or deterioration of the goods, common carriers are
presumed to have been at fault or to have acted negligently, and the burden of
proving otherwise rests on them. 26 On the contrary, no such presumption applies
to private carriers, for whosoever alleges damage to or deterioration of the goods
carried has the onus of proving that the cause was the negligence of the carrier.
It is not disputed that respondent carrier, in the ordinary course of business,
operates as a common carrier, transporting goods indiscriminately for all persons.
When petitioner chartered the vessel M/V "Sun Plum", the ship captain, its
officers and compliment were under the employ of the shipowner and therefore
continued to be under its direct supervision and control. Hardly then can we
charge the charterer, a stranger to the crew and to the ship, with the duty of
caring for his cargo when the charterer did not have any control of the means in
doing so. This is evident in the present case considering that the steering of the
ship, the manning of the decks, the determination of the course of the voyage
and other technical incidents of maritime navigation were all consigned to the
officers and crew who were screened, chosen and hired by the shipowner. 27
It is therefore imperative that a public carrier shall remain as such,
notwithstanding the charter of the whole or portion of a vessel by one or more
persons, provided the charter is limited to the ship only, as in the case of a timecharter or voyage-charter. It is only when the charter includes both the vessel and
loss, damage or deterioration of the cargo was due to fortuitous event, or some
other circumstances inconsistent with its liability. 31
To our mind, respondent carrier has sufficiently overcome, by clear and
convincing proof, the prima facie presumption of negligence.
The master of the carrying vessel, Captain Lee Tae Bo, in his deposition
taken on 19 April 1977 before the Philippine Consul and Legal Attache in the
Philippine Embassy in Tokyo, Japan, testified that before the fertilizer was
loaded, the four (4) hatches of the vessel were cleaned, dried and fumigated.
After completing the loading of the cargo in bulk in the ship's holds, the steel
pontoon hatches were closed and sealed with iron lids, then covered with
three (3) layers of serviceable tarpaulins which were tied with steel bonds. The
hatches remained close and tightly sealed while the ship was in transit as the
weight of the steel covers made it impossible for a person to open without the
use of the ship's boom. 32
It was also shown during the trial that the hull of the vessel was in good condition,
foreclosing the possibility of spillage of the cargo into the sea or seepage of water
inside the hull of the vessel. 33 When M/V "Sun Plum" docked at its berthing
place, representatives of the consignee boarded, and in the presence of a
representative of the shipowner, the foreman, the stevedores, and a cargo
surveyor representing CSCI, opened the hatches and inspected the condition of
the hull of the vessel. The stevedores unloaded the cargo under the watchful
eyes of the shipmates who were overseeing the whole operation on rotation
basis. 34
Verily, the presumption of negligence on the part of respondent carrier has been
efficaciously overcome by the showing of extraordinary zeal and assiduity
exercised by the carrier in the care of the cargo. This was confirmed by
respondent appellate court thus
". . . Be that as it may, contrary to the trial court's finding, the record of
the instant case discloses ample evidence showing that defendant
carrier was not negligent in performing its obligations. Particularly, the
following testimonies of plaintiff-appellee's own witnesses clearly show
absence of negligence by the defendant carrier; that the hull of the
vessel at the time of the discharge of the cargo was sealed and nobody
could open the same except in the presence of the owner of the cargo
and the representatives of the vessel (TSN, 20 July 1977, p. 14); that the
cover of the hatches was made of steel and it was overlaid with
tarpaulins, three layers of tarpaulins and therefore their contents were
protected from the weather (TSN, 5 April 1978, p. 24); and, that to open
these hatches, the seals would have to be broken, all the seals were
found to be intact (TSN, 20 July 1977, pp. 15-16)" (italics supplied).
The period during which private respondent was to observe the degree of
diligence required of it as a public carrier began from the time the cargo was
unconditionally placed in its charge after the vessel's holds were duly inspected
and passed scrutiny by the shipper, up to and until the vessel reached its
destination and its hull was re-examined by the consignee, but prior to unloading.
This is clear from the limitation clause agreed upon by the parties in the
Addendum to the standard "GENCON" time charter-party which provided for an
F.I.O.S., meaning, that the loading, stowing, trimming and discharge of the cargo
was to be done by the charterer, free from all risk and expense to the
carrier. 35 Moreover, a shipowner is liable for damage to the cargo resulting from
improper stowage only when the stowing is done by stevedores employed by him,
and therefore under his control and supervision, not when the same is done by
the consignee or stevedores under the employ of the latter. 36
Article 1734 of the New Civil Code provides that common carriers are not
responsible for the loss, destruction or deterioration of the goods if caused by the
character of the goods or defects in the packaging or in the containers. The Code
of Commerce also provides that all losses and deteriorations which the goods
may suffer during the transportation by reason of fortuitous event, force
majeure, or the inherent defect of the goods, shall be for the account and risk of
the shipper, and that proof of these accidents is incumbent upon the
carrier. 37 The carrier, nonetheless, shall be liable for the loss and damage
resulting from the preceding causes if it is proved, as against him, that they arose
through his negligence or by reason of his having failed to take the precautions
which usage has established among careful persons. 38
(Planters Products, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 101503, [September 15,
1993])
G.R. No. L-61461 & 61501. August 21, 1987.]
EPITACIO SAN PABLO (substituted by Heirs of E. San
Pablo), petitioners, vs. PANTRANCO SOUTH EXPRESS,
INC., respondent.
that it will not be safe to navigate the same by small boats or barges but only
by such steamboats or vessels as the M/V "Black Double." Considering the
environmental circumstances of the case, the conveyance of passengers,
trucks and cargo from Matnog to Allen is certainly not a ferryboat service but a
coastwise or interisland shipping service.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; OPEN SEA, NOT A CONTINUATION OF HIGHWAY.
Under no circumstance can the sea between Matnog and Allen be considered
a continuation of the highway. While a ferryboat service has been considered
as a continuation of the highway when crossing rivers or even lakes, which are
small body of waters separating the land, however, when as in this case the
two terminals, Matnog and Allen are separated by an open sea it can not be
considered as a continuation of the highway.
4. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; SEPARATE CERTIFICATE OF PUBLIC
CONVENIENCE MUST BE SECURED. Respondent PANTRANCO should
secure a separate CPC for the operation of an interisland or coastwise
shipping service in accordance with the provisions of law. Its CPC as a bus
transportation cannot be merely amended to include this water service under
the guise that it is a mere private ferry service. Thus the Court holds that the
water transport service between Matnog and Allen is not a ferryboat service
but a coastwise or interisland shipping service. Before private respondent may
be issued a franchise or CPC for the operation of the said service as a
common carrier, it must comply with the usual requirements of filing an
application, payment of the fees, publication, adducing evidence at a hearing
and affording the oppositors the opportunity to be heard, among others, as
provided by law.
DECISION
GANCAYCO, J :
p
The question that is posed in these petitions for review is whether the
sea can be considered as a continuation of the highway. The corollary issue is
whether a land transportation company can be authorized to operate a ferry
Thus on October 23, 1981 the BOT rendered its decision holding that the
ferryboat service is part of its CPC to operate from Pasay to Samar/Leyte by
amending PANTRANCO's CPC so as to reflect the same in this wise:
"Let the original Certificate of public convenience granted to Pantranco
South Express Co., Inc. be amended to embody the grant of authority to
operate a private ferryboat service as one of the conditions for the grant
of the certificate subject to the condition that the ferryboat shall be for the
exclusive use of Pantranco buses, its passengers and freight trucks, and
should it offer itself to the public for hire other than its own passengers, it
must apply for a separate certificate of public convenience as a public
ferryboat service, separate and distinct from its land transport
systems." 8
Cardinal Shipping Corporation and the heirs of San Pablo filed separate
motions for reconsideration of said decision and San Pablo filed a
supplemental motion for reconsideration that were denied by the BOT on July
21, 1981. 9
Hence, San Pablo filed the herein petition for review on certiorari with
prayer for preliminary injunction 10 seeking the revocation of said decision, and
pending consideration of the petition, the issuance of a restraining order or
preliminary injunction against the operation by PANTRANCO of said ferry
service. San Pablo raised the following issues:
Cdpr
"a. the decision did not conform to the procedures laid down by law for
an amendment of the original certificate of public convenience, and the
authority to operate a private ferry boat service to PANTRANCO was
issued without ascertaining the established essential requisites for such
grant, hence, violative of due process requirements;
b. the grant to PANTRANCO of authority to operate a ferryboat service
as a private carrier on said route contravenes existing government
policies relative to the rationalization of operations of all water transport
utilities;
c. it contravenes the memorandum of agreement between MARINA and
the Board of Transportation;
d. the grant of authority to operate a ferry service as a private carrier is
not feasible; it lessens PANTRANCO's liability to passengers and cargo
to a degree less than extraordinary diligence?
e. PANTRANCO is not a private carrier when it operates its ferry service;
f. it runs counter to the 'old operator' doctrine; and
g. the operation by PANTRANCO of the ferry service constitutes undue
competition.
The foregoing considerations constitutes the substantial errors
committed by the respondent Board which would more than amply justify
review of the questioned decision by this Honorable Court." 12
Both cases were consolidated and are now admitted for decision.
The resolution of all said issues raised revolves on the validity of the questioned
BOT decision.
The BOT resolved the issue of whether a ferry service is an extension of the
highway and thus is a part of the authority originally granted PANTRANCO in the
following manner:
"A ferry service, in law, is treated as a continuation of the highway from
one side of the water over which passes to the other side for
transportation of passengers or of travellers with their teams vehicles
and such other property as, they may carry or have with them. (U.S. vs.
Pudget Sound Nev. Co. D.C. Washington, 24 F. Supp. 431). It may be
Deach, C.C. 1093). (2) In an early case the court said: 'The distinction
between rivers navigable and not navigable, that is, where the sea
does, or does not, ebb and flow, is very ancient. Rex. vs. Smith, 2
Dougl. 441, 99 Reprint 283. The former are called arms of the sea,
while the latter pass under the denomination of private or inland rivers'
Adams vs. Pease 2 Conn. 481, 484." (Emphasis supplied)
18
(Emphasis
(San Pablo v. Pantranco South Express, Inc., G.R. No. L-61461 & 61501,
period of time or a voyage or voyages and gets the control of the vessel and its
crew.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; PRESUMED TO BEAT FAULT OR TO HAVE ACTED
NEGLIGENTLY IN CASE OF LOSS, DESTRUCTION OR DETERIORATION OF
GOODS UNDER ITS CARE; EXCEPTION. In case of loss, destruction or
deterioration of goods, common carriers are presumed to have been at fault or to
have acted negligently, and the burden of proving otherwise rests on them. The
provisions of Article 1733, notwithstanding, common carriers are exempt from
liability for loss, destruction, or deterioration of the goods due to any of the
following causes: (1) Flood, storm, earthquake, lightning, or other natural disaster
or calamity; (2) Act of the public enemy in war, whether international or civil; (3)
Act or omission of the shipper or owner of the goods; (4) The character of the
goods or defects in the packing or in the containers; and (5) Order or act of
competent public authority.
4. REMEDIAL LAW; EVIDENCE; FINDINGS OF FACTS OF THE COURT OF
APPEALS; CONCLUSIVE UPON THE SUPREME COURT; EXCEPTIONS.
Findings of fact of the Court of Appeals generally conclude this Court; none of
the recognized exceptions from the rule (1) when the factual findings of the
Court of Appeals and the trial court are contradictory; (2) when the conclusion is
a finding grounded entirely on speculation, surmises, or conjectures; (3) when the
inference made by the Court of Appeals from its findings of fact is manifestly
mistaken, absurd, or impossible; (4) when there is a grave abuse of discretion in
the appreciation of facts; (5) when the appellate court, in making its findings,
went beyond the issues of the case and such findings are contrary to the
admissions of both appellant and appellee; (6) when the judgment of the Court of
Appeals is premised on a misapprehension of facts; (7) when the Court of
Appeals failed to notice certain relevant facts which, if properly considered, would
justify a different conclusion; (8) when the findings of fact are themselves
conflicting; (9) when the findings of fact are conclusions without citation of the
specific evidence on which they are based; and (10) when the findings of fact of
the Court of Appeals are premised on the absence of evidence but such findings
are contradicted by the evidence on record would appear to be clearly extant
in this instance.
DECISION
VITUG, J :
p
The petition before the Court seeks a review of the decision of the Court of
Appeals in C.A. G.R. CV No. 56470, promulgated on 25 June 2001, which has
affirmed in totothe judgment of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 65, of
Makati, dismissing the complaint for damages filed by petitioner insurance
corporation against respondent shipping company.
Davao Union Marketing Corporation (DUMC) contracted the services of
respondent PKS Shipping Company (PKS Shipping) for the shipment to Tacloban
City of seventy-five thousand (75,000) bags of cement worth Three Million Three
Hundred Seventy-Five Thousand Pesos (P3,375,000.00). DUMC insured the
goods for its full value with petitioner Philippine American General Insurance
Company (Philamgen). The goods were loaded aboard the dumb barge Limar
I belonging to PKS Shipping. On the evening of 22 December 1988, about nine
o'clock, while Limar I was being towed by respondent's tugboat, MT Iron Eagle,
the barge sank a couple of miles off the coast of Dumagasa Point, in Zamboanga
del Sur, bringing down with it the entire cargo of 75,000 bags of cement.
DUMC filed a formal claim with Philamgen for the full amount of the insurance.
Philamgen promptly made payment; it then sought reimbursement from PKS
Shipping of the sum paid to DUMC but the shipping company refused to pay,
prompting Philamgen to file suit against PKS Shipping with the Makati RTC.
The RTC dismissed the complaint after finding that the total loss of the cargo
could have been caused either by a fortuitous event, in which case the ship
owner was not liable, or through the negligence of the captain and crew of the
vessel and that, under Article 587 of the Code of Commerce adopting the
"Limited Liability Rule," the ship owner could free itself of liability by abandoning,
as it apparently so did, the vessel with all her equipment and earned freightage.
establish that PKS Shipping was a common carrier at the time it undertook to
transport the bags of cement was wanting because the peculiar method of the
shipping company's carrying goods for others was not generally held out as a
business but as a casual occupation. It then concluded that PKS Shipping, not
being a common carrier, was not expected to observe the stringent extraordinary
diligence required of common carriers in the care of goods. The appellate court,
moreover, found that the loss of the goods was sufficiently established as having
been due to fortuitous event, negating any liability on the part of PKS Shipping to
the shipper.
In the instant appeal, Philamgen contends that the appellate court has committed
a patent error in ruling that PKS Shipping is not a common carrier and that it is
not liable for the loss of the subject cargo. The fact that respondent has a limited
clientele, petitioner argues, does not militate against respondent's being a
common carrier and that the only way by which such carrier can be held exempt
for the loss of the cargo would be if the loss were caused by natural disaster or
calamity. Petitioner avers that typhoon "APIANG" has not entered the Philippine
area of responsibility and that, even if it did, respondent would not be exempt
from liability because its employees, particularly the tugmaster, have failed to
exercise due diligence to prevent or minimize the loss.
PKS Shipping, in its comment, urges that the petition should be denied because
what Philamgen seeks is not a review on points or errors of law but a review of
the undisputed factual findings of the RTC and the appellate court. In any event,
PKS Shipping points out, the findings and conclusions of both courts find support
from the evidence and applicable jurisprudence.
The determination of possible liability on the part of PKS Shipping boils down to
the question of whether it is a private carrier or a common carrier and, in either
case, to the other question of whether or not it has observed the proper diligence
(ordinary, if a private carrier, or extraordinary, if a common carrier) required of it
given the circumstances.
The findings of fact made by the Court of Appeals, particularly when such
findings are consistent with those of the trial court, may not at liberty be reviewed
by this Court in a petition for review under Rule 45 of the Rules of
Court. 1 The conclusions derived from those factual findings, however, are not
necessarily just matters of fact as when they are so linked to, or inextricably
intertwined with, a requisite appreciation of the applicable law. In such instances,
the conclusions made could well be raised as being appropriate issues in a
petition for review before this Court. Thus, an issue whether a carrier is private or
common on the basis of the facts found by a trial court or the appellate court can
be a valid and reviewable question of law.
The Civil Code defines "common carriers" in the following terms:
"Article 1732. Common carriers are persons, corporations, firms or
associations engaged in the business of carrying or transporting
passengers or goods or both, by land, water, or air for compensation,
offering their services to the public."
The prevailing doctrine on the question is that enunciated in the leading case
of De Guzman vs. Court of Appeals. 2 Applying Article 1732 of the Code, in
conjunction with Section 13(b) of the Public Service Act, this Court has held:
"The above article makes no distinction between one
whose principal business activity is the carrying of persons or goods or
both, and one who does such carrying only as an ancillary activity (in
local idiom, as 'a sideline'). Article 1732 also carefully avoids making any
Appeals failed to notice certain relevant facts which, if properly considered, would
justify a different conclusion; (8) when the findings of fact are themselves
conflicting; (9) when the findings of fact are conclusions without citation of the
specific evidence on which they are based; and (10) when the findings of fact of
the Court of Appeals are premised on the absence of evidence but such findings
are contradicted by the evidence on record would appear to be clearly extant
in this instance.
ADTCaI
All given then, the appellate court did not err in its judgment absolving PKS
Shipping from liability for the loss of the DUMC cargo.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Ynares-Santiago, Carpio and Azcuna, JJ., c
|||
Hence, the Supreme Court affirmed the assailed order of the trial court and the
CA insofar as the respondent driver was concerned but GPS trucking company
was ordered to pay the petitioner FGU the value of the damaged and lost
cargoes.
SYLLABUS
1. CIVIL LAW; COMMON CARRIERS; DEFINED; CASE AT BAR. The Court
finds the conclusion of the trial court and the Court of Appeals to be amply
justified. GPS, being an exclusive contractor and hauler of Concepcion
Industries, Inc., rendering or offering its services to no other individual or entity,
cannot be considered a common carrier. Common carriers are persons,
corporations, firms or associations engaged in the business of carrying or
transporting passengers or goods or both, by land, water, or air, for hire or
compensation, offering their services to the public, whether to the public in
general or to a limited clientele in particular, but never on an exclusive basis. The
true test of a common carrier is the carriage of passengers or goods, providing
space for those who opt to avail themselves of its transportation service for a fee.
Given accepted standards, GPS scarcely falls within the term "common carrier."
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; CONTRACT CAN BIND ONLY THE PARTIES WHO HAVE
ENTERED INTO IT; CASE AT BAR. Respondent driver, on the other hand,
without concrete proof of his negligence or fault, may not himself be ordered to
pay petitioner. The driver, not being a party to the contract of carriage between
petitioner's principal and defendant, may not be held liable under the agreement.
A contract can only bind the parties who have entered into it or their successors
who have assumed their personality or their juridical position. Consonantly with
the axiom res inter alios acta aliis neque nocet prodest, such contract can neither
favor nor prejudice a third person. Petitioner's civil action against the driver can
only be based on culpa aquiliana, which, unlike culpa contractual, would require
the claimant for damages to prove negligence or fault on the part of the
defendant.
4. ID.; ID.; RESIPSA LOQUITOR; RELIEVES THE PLAINTIFF OF THE BURDEN
OF PRODUCING SPECIFIC PROOF OF NEGLIGENCE; CASE AT BAR. Res
ipsa loquitur, a doctrine being invoked by petitioner, holds a defendant liable
where the thing which caused the injury complained of is shown to be under the
latter's management and the accident is such that, in the ordinary course of
things, cannot be expected to happen if those who have its management or
control use proper care. It affords reasonable evidence, in the absence of
explanation by the defendant, that the accident arose from want of care. It is not
a rule of substantive law and, as such, it does not create an independent ground
of liability. Instead, it is regarded as a mode of proof, or a mere procedural
convenience since it furnishes a substitute for, and relieves the plaintiff of, the
burden of producing specific proof of negligence. The maxim simply places on
the defendant the burden of going forward with the proof. Resort to the doctrine,
however, may be allowed only when (a) the event is of a kind which does not
ordinarily occur in the absence of negligence; (b) other responsible causes,
including the conduct of the plaintiff and third persons, are sufficiently eliminated
by the evidence; and (c) the indicated negligence is within the scope of the
defendant's duty to the plaintiff. Thus, it is not applicable when an unexplained
accident may be attributable to one of several causes, for some of which the
defendant could not be responsible. Res ipsa loquitur generally finds relevance
whether or not a contractual relationship exists between the plaintiff and the
defendant, for the inference of negligence arises from the circumstances and
nature of the occurrence and not from the nature of the relation of the parties.
Nevertheless, the requirement that responsible causes other than those due to
defendant's conduct must first be eliminated, for the doctrine to apply, should be
understood as being confined only to cases of pure (non-contractual) tort since
obviously the presumption of negligence in culpa contractual, as previously so
pointed out, immediately attaches by a failure of the covenant or its tenor. In the
case of the truck driver, whose liability in a civil action is predicated on culpa
acquiliana, while he admittedly can be said to have been in control and
management of the vehicle which figured in the accident, it is not equally shown,
however, that the accident could have been exclusively due to his negligence, a
matter that can allow, forthwith, res ipsa loquitur to work against him.
TcSaHC
DECISION
VITUG, J :
p
The issues having thus been joined, FGU presented its evidence, establishing
the extent of damage to the cargoes and the amount it had paid to the assured.
GPS, instead of submitting its evidence, filed with leave of court a motion to
dismiss the complaint by way of demurrer to evidence on the ground that
petitioner had failed to prove that it was a common carrier.
The trial court, in its order of 30 April 1996, 1 granted the motion to dismiss,
explaining thusly:
"Under Section 1 of Rule 131 of the Rules of Court, it is provided that
'Each party must prove his own affirmative allegation, . . . '
"In the instant case, plaintiff did not present any single evidence that
would prove that defendant is a common carrier.
"xxx xxx xxx
"Accordingly, the application of the law on common carriers is not
warranted and the presumption of fault or negligence on the part of a
common carrier in case of loss, damage or deterioration of goods during
transport under 1735 of the Civil Code is not availing.
"Thus, the laws governing the contract between the owner of the cargo to
whom the plaintiff was subrogated and the owner of the vehicle which
transports the cargo are the laws on obligation and contract of the Civil
Code as well as the law on quasi delicts.
"Under the law on obligation and contract, negligence or fault is not
presumed. The law on quasi delict provides for some presumption of
negligence but only upon the attendance of some circumstances. Thus,
Article 2185 provides:
'Art. 2185. Unless there is proof to the contrary, it is presumed
that a person driving a motor vehicle has been negligent if at the
time of the mishap, he was violating any traffic regulation.'
"Evidence for the plaintiff shows no proof that defendant was violating
any traffic regulation. Hence, the presumption of negligence is not
obtaining.
"Considering that plaintiff failed to adduce evidence that defendant is a
common carrier and defendant's driver was the one negligent, defendant
cannot be made liable for the damages of the subject cargoes." 2
hauler since 1970, defendant has no choice but to comply with the
directive of its principal,' the inevitable conclusion is that the appellee is a
private carrier.
"xxx xxx xxx
". . . the lower court correctly ruled that 'the application of the law on
common carriers is not warranted and the presumption of fault or
negligence on the part of a common carrier in case of loss, damage or
deterioration of good[s] during transport under [article] 1735 of the Civil
Code is not availing.' . . .
"Finally, We advert to the long established rule that conclusions and
findings of fact of a trial court are entitled to great weight on appeal and
should not be disturbed unless for strong and valid reasons." 5
Petitioner's motion for reconsideration was likewise denied; 6 hence, the instant
petition, 7 raising the following issues:
I
WHETHER RESPONDENT GPS MAY BE CONSIDERED AS A
COMMON CARRIER AS DEFINED UNDER THE LAW AND EXISTING
JURISPRUDENCE.
II
WHETHER RESPONDENT GPS, EITHER AS A COMMON CARRIER
OR A PRIVATE CARRIER, MAY BE PRESUMED TO HAVE BEEN
NEGLIGENT WHEN THE GOODS IT UNDERTOOK TO TRANSPORT
SAFELY WERE SUBSEQUENTLY DAMAGED WHILE IN ITS
PROTECTIVE CUSTODY AND POSSESSION.
III
WHETHER THE DOCTRINE OF RES IPSA LOQUITUR IS
APPLICABLE IN THE INSTANT CASE.
On the first issue, the Court finds the conclusion of the trial court and the Court of
Appeals to be amply justified. GPS, being an exclusive contractor and hauler of
Concepcion Industries, Inc., rendering or offering its services to no other
individual or entity, cannot be considered a common carrier. Common carriers are
persons, corporations, firms or associations engaged in the business of carrying
assumed to deliver have been lost or damaged while in its custody. In such a
situation, a default on, or failure of compliance with, the obligation in this case,
the delivery of the goods in its custody to the place of destination gives rise to
a presumption of lack of care and corresponding liability on the part of the
contractual obligor the burden being on him to establish otherwise. GPS has
failed to do so.
Respondent driver, on the other hand, without concrete proof of his negligence or
fault, may not himself be ordered to pay petitioner. The driver, not being a party to
the contract of carriage between petitioner's principal and defendant, may not be
held liable under the agreement. A contract can only bind the parties who have
entered into it or their successors who have assumed their personality or their
juridical position. 17 Consonantly with the axiom res inter alios acta aliis neque
nocet prodest, such contract can neither favor nor prejudice a third person.
Petitioner's civil action against the driver can only be based on culpa aquiliana,
which, unlike culpa contractual, would require the claimant for damages to prove
negligence or fault on the part of the defendant. 18
A word in passing. Res ipsa loquitur, a doctrine being invoked by petitioner, holds
a defendant liable where the thing which caused the injury complained of is
shown to be under the latter's management and the accident is such that, in the
ordinary course of things, cannot be expected to happen if those who have its
management or control use proper care. It affords reasonable evidence, in the
absence of explanation by the defendant, that the accident arose from want of
care. 19 It is not a rule of substantive law and, as such, it does not create an
independent ground of liability. Instead, it is regarded as a mode of proof, or a
mere procedural convenience since it furnishes a substitute for, and relieves the
plaintiff of, the burden of producing specific proof of negligence. The maxim
simply places on the defendant the burden of going forward with the
proof. 20 Resort to the doctrine, however, may be allowed only when (a) the event
is of a kind which does not ordinarily occur in the absence of negligence; (b)
other responsible causes, including the conduct of the plaintiff and third persons,
are sufficiently eliminated by the evidence; and (c) the indicated negligence is
within the scope of the defendant's duty to the plaintiff. 21 Thus, it is not
(FGU Insurance Corp. v. G.P. Sarmiento Trucking Corp., G.R. No. 141910,
The plaintiff, being the owner of the launch Mascota, which was then at
Aparri, made a contract with the defendant about the 2d of February, 1903, by
the terms of which the defendant agreed to tow the launch from Aparri to
Manila. In accordance with this agreement the launch was delivered to the
defendant at Aparri on the day named, and the defendant's
steamer Churruca left Aparri on that day with the launch in tow. The steamer,
with the launch in tow, arrived safely at Vigan. Two or three hours after leaving
Vigan the wind increased in violence, with a rough sea. The speed of the
streamer was decreased so that the tow might travel more easily. About halfpast 11 at night the lookout, who was stationed in the stern of the steamer for
the purpose of watching the launch, reported to the officer of the deck that the
launch had disappeared. The steamer was stopped and search was made the
rest of the night for the launch, but without success, and in the morning the
steamer proceeded on her way to Manila. This action was brought to recover
the value of the launch. Judgment was rendered in the court below in favor of
plaintiff. The defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied, and it has
brought the case here by bill of exceptions.
The first question to be determined is as to the nature of the liability of
the defendant. Articles 1601 and 1602 of the Civil Code are as follows:
"ART. 1601. Carriers of goods by land or by water shall be subject
with regard to the keeping and preservation of the things intrusted to
them, to the same obligations as determined for in keepers by articles
1783 and 1784.
"The provisions of this article shall be understood without
prejudice to what is prescribed by the Code of Commerce with regard to
transportation by sea and land.
"ART. 1602. Carriers are also liable for the loss of and damage to
the things which they receive, unless they prove that the loss or damage
arose from a fortuitous event or force majuere."
"1. For all the damages suffered by the vessel and its cargo by
reason of want skill or negligence on his part. If a misdemeanor with the
Penal Code.
Donaldson (167 U. S., 599, 602, 603) are equally cogent when applied to the
Spanish law. The court there said:
"While the tug is performing her contract of towing the barges they
may indeed be regarded as part of herself, in the sense that her master
is bound to use due care to provide for their safety as well as her own
and to avoid collision, either of them or of herself, with other vessels.
(The Syracuse, 9 Wall., 672, 675, 676; The Civilta, 103 U. S., 699, 701.)
"But the barges in tow are by no means put under the control of
the master of the tug to the same extent as the tug herself, and the
cargo, if any, on board of her.
"A general ship carrying goods for hire, whether employed in
internal, in coasting, or in foreign commerce, is a common carrier; and
the ship and her owners, in the absence of a valid agreement to the
contrary, are liable to the owners of the goods carried as insurers against
all losses, excepting only such irresistible causes as the act of God and
public enemies. (Liverpool Steamship Co. vs. Phoenix Ins. Co., 129 U.
S., 397, 437.) But a tug and her owners are subject to no such liability to
the owners of the vessels towed, or of the cargoes can not maintain any
action for the loss of either against the tug of her owners, without proving
negligence on her part. As was said by Mr. Justice Strong, and repeated
by the present Chief Justice: "An engagement to tow does not impose
either an obligation to insure or the liability of common carriers. The
burden is always upon him who alleges the breach of such a contract to
show either that there has been no attempt at performance, or that there
has been negligence or unskillfulness to his injury in the performance.
Unlike the case of common carriers, damage sustained by the tow does
not ordinarily raise a presumption that the tug has been in fault. The
contract requires no more than that he who undertakes to tow shall carry
out his undertaking with that degree of caution and skill which prudent
navigators usually employ in similar services." (The Webb, 14 Wall., 406,
414; The Burlington, 137 U. S., 386, 391. See also The L. P. Dayton, 120
U. S., 337, 351.)
We do not think that the provisions of articles 1902 and 1903 are
applicable to this case. (Manresa's Commentaries on the Civil Code, vol. 8,
pp. 29, 69.)
By the terms of articles 1104 the defendant was bound to exercise what
is known in the American law as ordinary diligence, taking into consideration
the nature of the obligation and the circumstances of persons, time, and
place. We think the evidence in the case shows that the defendant did
exercise the diligence required of it by law. As we understand the evidence the
towing line was passed from the steamer to the launch, around the stern of
the launch once or twice, and one or two other lines passed entirely around
the bow of the launch and under the keel. These lines were fastened to a post
in the bow of the launch, which post, according to the testimony of the
defendant's witnesses, was used for fastening ropes in cases of towing, and,
according to one witness of the plaintiff, for the purpose of fastening the
launch to the wharf. At the time the loss occurred the towing line did not break,
but this post did, and was found fastened to the towing lines when they were
pulled on board the steamer. The captain of the steamer and the first mate,
both men of experience in the matter, testified that the lines were properly
adjusted and the tow properly made fast to the steamer. The only evidence to
the contrary was the evidence furnished by one witness of the plaintiff, who
testified that he was present when the towing lines were made fast by the
captain himself, of the steamer; that he then told the captain it should be done
another way. The captain denied this. This witness had no experience,
according to his own testimony, in the matter of towing; had never had
occasion to make fast a tow to a tug, and had never seen it done, with one
exception; and that when this same launch was towed from Manila to Aparri.
We do not think his evidence is sufficient to overcome the evidence of the
defendant.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and judgment entered for
the defendant, absolving it from the complaint, with the costs of the lower
court. No costs will be allowed to either party in this court. After the expiration
of twenty days final judgment will be entered in accordance herewith and ten
days thereafter the case remanded to the lower court for proper procedure. So
ordered.
Arellano, C. J., Torres, Mapa, and Carson, JJ., concur.
|||
(Baer Senior & Co.'s Successors v. La Compaia Maritima, G.R. No. 1963,