Obligations and Contract Digested Cases From 1157 To 1203
Obligations and Contract Digested Cases From 1157 To 1203
Obligations and Contract Digested Cases From 1157 To 1203
FACTS:
This case originated from a libel suit filed by then Assemblyman Antonio V. Raquiza against then Manila Mayor Antonio J. Villegas,
who allegedly publicly imputed to him acts constituting violations of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act. He did this on several
occasions in August 1968
After losing in the 1971 elections, Villegas left for the United States where he stayed until his death.
Nevertheless, trial for libel case proceeded on absentia. Two months after the prosecution rested its case, the court issued an order
dismissing the criminal aspect of the case but reserving the right to resolve its civil aspect.
Subsequently the Court awarded Raquiza actual, moral, exemplary damages and cost of suit.
2. Ordering the estate of Antonio J. Villegas, represented herein by his legal heirs to pay plaintiff Antonio V. Raquiza Two Hundred
Million Pesos (P200,000,000.00), itemized as follows:
On appeal, the CA affirmed but reduced the amount of damages to 2 million. Hence, this petition.
ISSUE: WON the death of the accused before final judgment extinguish his civil liability?
HELD:
1… NO, because the source of Villegas’ civil liability in the present case is the felonious act of libel he allegedly committed. and, this
act could also be deemed a quasi-delict within the purview of Article 33 in relation to Article 1157 of the Civil Code.
2.. Article 33 of the Civil Code provides Raquiza’s right to recover demages arose from this article not from delict.
3.. Also, Article 1157 of the Civil Code enumerates these other sources of obligation from which the civil liability may arise as a
result of the same act or omission:
a) Law
b) Contracts
c) Quasi-contracts
d) Act or omissions punished by law
e) Quasi-delicts
4.. Now, If the court ruled in People v. Bayotas that the death of an accused during the pendency of his appeal extinguishes not
only his criminal as well as the civil liability unless the latter can be predicated on a source of obligation other than the act or omission
complained, with more reason should it apply to the case at bar where the accused died shortly after the prosecution rested its case and
before he was able to submit his memorandum and all this before any decision could even be reached by the trial court.
5.. The Bayotas ruling, however, makes the enforcement of a deceased accused’s civil liability dependent on two factors, namely,
that it be pursued by filing a separate civil action and that it be made subject to the Rules on Criminal Procedure.
6.. Obviously, in the case at bar, the civil action was deemed instituted with the criminal. There was no waiver of the civil action and
no reservation of the right to institute the same, nor was it instituted prior to the criminal action.
7.. What then is the recourse of the private offended party in a criminal case such as this which must be dismissed in accordance
with the Bayotas doctrine, where the civil action was impliedly instituted with it?
9.. Hence, logically, the court should have dismissed both actions against Villegas which dismissal will not however, bar Raquiza
as the private offended party from pursuing his claim for damages against the executor or administrator of Villegas estate. Notwithstanding
the fact that he did not reserve the right to institute a civil action based on Article 33 of the Civil Code.
ARTICLE 1667 – IF A PERSON OBLIGED TO DO SOMETHING FAILS TO FOR IT, THE SAME SHALL BE EXECUTED
AT HIS COST
10. Petitioner: PERLA PALMA GIL, VICENTE HIZON, JR., and ANGEL PALMA GIL VS
Respondent: HON. COURT OF APPEALS, HEIRS OF EMILIO MATULAC, CONSTANCIO MAGLANA, AGAPITO PACETES & The
REGISTER OF DEEDS OF DAVAO CITY,
[G.R. No. 127206. September 12, 2003]
FACTS:
1.. This case is review on appeal by certiorari.
2. This was originated from a disputed portion of property between Concepcion Palma Gil, and her sister, Nieves Palma Gil,
married to Angel Villarica, who were co-owners of a parcel of commercial land in Davao City.
3. After due proceedings, the court rendered judgment in favor of Concepcion, ordering the defendant to deliver to the plaintiff an
undivided portion of the said property.
4. Concepcion executed a deed of absolute sale in favour of Iluminada Pacetes. Pacetes paid the agreed down payment and shall
pay the full obligation upon fulfilment agreed in the contract
5. The spouses Angel and Nieves Villarica filed a suit with regard to the parcel of land sold by Concepcion until the latter died
intestate.
6. The heirs of Concepcion wanted to claim the lot sold.
ISSUE: WON the expenses incurred by the vendee to obtain the owner’s duplicate title should be charged against the amount due to the
heirs of the vendor?
HELD:
1.. Yes, According to Article 1167 of the New Civil Code provides that if a person obliged to do something fails to do it, the same
shall be executed at his cost. This same rule shall be observed if he does it in contravention of the tenor of the obligation. Furthermore,
it may be decreed that what has been poorly done be undone. (1098)
2. The vendee (Iluminada) paid the down payment of P7,500.00. By the terms of the contract, the obligation of the vendee to pay
the balance of the purchase price happened only upon the issuance of the certificate of title under the name of the vendee, and the
delivery thereof by the vendor Concepcion Gil to the vendee.
3. Concepcion failed to secure a certificate of title over the property. When she died intestate her obligation to deliver the said title
to the vendee transferred upon her heirs, including the petitioners but they failed to do so, despite the lapse of eighteen years since
Concepcion’s death.
4. The vendee was not yet obliged on August 8, 1977 to pay the balance of the purchase price of the property, but as a sign of
good faith, she nevertheless consigned the amount of P11,983.00, part of the balance of the purchase price of P14,000.00.
5. The court accepted the payment and she was issued receipts therefor. Still, the heirs of Concepcion Gil, including the petitioners,
failed to deliver the said title to the vendee.
6. Although the vendee consigned with the Court only the amount less than that of the contract agreed it cannot be claimed that
Concepcion was an unpaid seller because under the deed of sale, she was still obligated to transfer the property in the name of the
vendee, which she failed to do so.
7. The vendee (Iluminada) had to obtain the owner’s duplicate title and thereafter secure its transfer in her name. Pursuant to
Article 1167, the expenses incurred by the vendee should be charged against the amount due to the heirs of Concepcion Gil as the
vendor’s successors-in-interest.
In sum, the decision of the CA affirming the decision of the RTC dismissing the complaint of the petitioners is affirmed.
IN LIGHT OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the petition for review is DENIED for lack of merit.
ARTICLE 1168 – WHEN OBLIGATION CONSISTS IN NOT DOING
11. Petitioner: JUAN L. PEREZ, LUIS KEH, CHARLIE LEE and ROSENDO G. TANSINSIN, JR., VS
Respondent: COURT OF APPEALS, LUIS CRISOSTOMO and VICENTE ASUNCION,
FACTS:
1.. the usufructuaries entered into a contract leasing the fishpond to Luis Keh for a period of five (5) years and renewable for another
five (5) years by agreement of the parties, In the lease contract states that the lessee "cannot sublease" the fishpond "nor assign his
rights to anyone." 3
2. Private respondent Luis Crisostomo, who engaged in the operation of fishponds was persuaded by the petitioners to take over
the operation of "Papaya Fishpond".
3. December 1977, Private respondent agreed to the proposal and they executed a written agreement
4. In the agreement the petitioner Keh ceded, conveyed and transferred all his "rights and interests" over the fishpond to petitioner
Lee, "up to June 1985." From private respondent's point of view, that document assured him of continuous possession of the property
for as long as he paid the agreed rentals.
5. However, sometime in June 1979, petitioners Atty. Tansinsin and Juan Perez, in the company of men bearing armalites, went
to the fishpond and presented private respondent with a letter dated June 7, 1979 showing that petitioner Luis Keh had surrendered
possession of the fishpond to the usufructuaries.
6. On September 6, 1989, the lower court rendered the aforesaid decision. It arrived at the conclusion that the defendants therein
"conspired with one another to exploit the plaintiff's naivete and educational inadequacies and, in the process, to defraud him by inducing
him into taking possession of the "Papaya Fishpond".
ISSUE: WON petitioner LUIS KEH shall be liable to private respondent for the value of the improvements made in the fishpond
HELD
1… YES, Art. 1168 of the Civil Code provides that when an obligation "consists in not doing and the obligor does what has been
forbidden him, it shall also be undone at his expense."
2. The contract between the usufructuaries and petitioner Keh has a provision barring the sublease of the fishpond. However, it
was petitioner Keh himself who violated that provision in offering the operation of the fishpond to private respondent.
3. The lease contract prohibited petitioner Luis Keh, as lessee, from subleasing the fishpond. In entering into the agreement with
private respondent, petitioner Keh did exactly what was prohibited of him under the contract — to sublease the fishpond to a third party.
4. That the agreement for pakiao-buwis was actually a sublease is borne out by the fact that private respondent paid petitioners
Luis Keh and Juan Perez, through petitioner Tansinsin the amount of annual rental agreed upon in the lease contract between the
usufructuaries and petitioner Keh.
5. Petitioner Keh led private respondent to unwittingly incur expenses to improve the operation of the fishpond. By operation of
law,
6. Therefore, petitioner Keh shall be liable to private respondent for the value of the improvements he had made in the fishpond.
13. CORONEL V. CA
FACTS:
The case arose from a complaint for specific performance filed by private respondent Alcaraz against petitioners to consummate
the sale of a parcel of land in Quezon City.
On January 19, 1985, petitioners executed a “Receipt of Down Payment” of P50,000 in favor of plaintiff Ramona Alcaraz, binding
themselves to transfer the ownership of the land in their name from their deceased father, afterwhich the balance of P1,190,000 shall be
paid in full by Alcaraz. On February 6, 1985, the property was transferred to petitioners. On February 18, 1985, petitioners sold the
property to Mabanag. For this reason, Concepcion, Ramona’s mother, filed an action for specific performance.
ISSUE:
Whether the contract between petitioners and private respondent was that of a conditional sale or a mere contract to sell
HELD:
Sale, by its very nature, is a consensual contract because it is perfected by mere consent. The essential elements of a contract
of sale are the following: a) Consent or meeting of the minds, that is, consent to transfer ownership in exchange for the price; b)
Determinate subject matter; and c) Price certain in money or its equivalent.
Under this definition, a Contract to Sell may not be considered as a Contract of Sale because the first essential element is
lacking. In a contract to sell, the prospective seller explicity reserves the transfer of title to the prospective buyer, meaning, the prospective
seller does not as yet agree or consent to transfer ownership of the property subject of the contract to sell until the happening of an event,
which for present purposes we shall take as the full payment of the purchase price. What the seller agrees or obliges himself to do is to
fulfill his promise to sell the subject property when the entire amount of the purchase price is delivered to him. In other words the full
payment of the purchase price partakes of a suspensive condition, the non-fulfillment of which prevents the obligation to sell from arising
and thus, ownership is retained by the prospective seller without further remedies by the prospective buyer. A contract to sell may thus
be defined as a bilateral contract whereby the prospective seller, while expressly reserving the ownership of the subject property despite
delivery thereof to the prospective buyer, binds himself to sell the said property exclusively to the prospective buyer upon fulfillment of
the condition agreed upon, that is, full payment of the purchase price.
A contract to sell may not even be considered as a conditional contract of sale where the seller may likewise reserve title to the
property subject of the sale until the fulfillment of a suspensive condition, because in a conditional contract of sale, the first element of
consent is present, although it is conditioned upon the happening of a contingent event which may or may not occur. If the suspensive
condition is not fulfilled, the perfection of the contract of sale is completely abated. However, if the suspensive condition is fulfilled, the
contract of sale is thereby perfected, such that if there had already been previous delivery of the property subject of the sale to the buyer,
ownership thereto automatically transfers to the buyer by operation of law without any further act having to be performed by the seller. In
a contract to sell, upon the fulfillment of the suspensive condition which is the full payment of the purchase price, ownership will not
automatically transfer to the buyer although the property may have been previously delivered to him. The prospective seller still has to
convey title to the prospective buyer by entering into a contract of absolute sale.
It is essential to distinguish between a contract to sell and a conditional contract of sale specially in cases where the subject
property is sold by the owner not to the party the seller contracted with, but to a third person, as in the case at bench. In a contract to
sell, there being no previous sale of the property, a third person buying such property despite the fulfillment of the suspensive condition
such as the full payment of the purchase price, for instance, cannot be deemed a buyer in bad faith and the prospective buyer cannot
seek the relief of reconveyance of the property. There is no double sale in such case. Title to the property will transfer to the buyer after
registration because there is no defect in the owner-seller's title per se, but the latter, of course, may be used for damages by the intending
buyer.
In a conditional contract of sale, however, upon the fulfillment of the suspensive condition, the sale becomes absolute and this
will definitely affect the seller's title thereto. In fact, if there had been previous delivery of the subject property, the seller's ownership or
title to the property is automatically transferred to the buyer such that, the seller will no longer have any title to transfer to any third person.
Such second buyer of the property who may have had actual or constructive knowledge of such defect in the seller's title, or at least was
charged with the obligation to discover such defect, cannot be a registrant in good faith. Such second buyer cannot defeat the first buyer's
title. In case a title is issued to the second buyer, the first buyer may seek reconveyance of the property subject of the sale.
The agreement could not have been a contract to sell because the sellers herein made no express reservation of ownership or
title to the subject parcel of land. Furthermore, the circumstance which prevented the parties from entering into an absolute contract of
sale pertained to the sellers themselves (the certificate of title was not in their names) and not the full payment of the purchase price.
Under the established facts and circumstances of the case, the Court may safely presume that, had the certificate of title been in the
names of petitioners-sellers at that time, there would have been no reason why an absolute contract of sale could not have been executed
and consummated right there and then.
What is clearly established by the plain language of the subject document is that when the said "Receipt of Down Payment" was
prepared and signed by petitioners Romeo A. Coronel, et al., the parties had agreed to a conditional contract of sale, consummation of
which is subject only to the successful transfer of the certificate of title from the name of petitioners' father, Constancio P. Coronel, to
their names.
The provision on double sale presumes title or ownership to pass to the first buyer, the exceptions being: (a) when the second
buyer, in good faith, registers the sale ahead of the first buyer, and (b) should there be no inscription by either of the two buyers, when
the second buyer, in good faith, acquires possession of the property ahead of the first buyer. Unless, the second buyer satisfies these
requirements, title or ownership will not transfer to him to the prejudice of the first buyer. In a case of double sale, what finds relevance
and materiality is not whether or not the second buyer was a buyer in good faith but whether or not said second buyer registers such
second sale in good faith, that is, without knowledge of any defect in the title of the property sold. If a vendee in a double sale registers
that sale after he has acquired knowledge that there was a previous sale of the same property to a third party or that another person
claims said property in a pervious sale, the registration will constitute a registration in bad faith and will not confer upon him any right.
19. Syquia v CA G.R. No. 98695 January 27, 1993 JUAN J. SYQUIA, CORAZON C. SYQUIA, CARLOTA C. SYQUIA, CARLOS C.
SYQUIA and ANTHONY C. SYQUIA, petitioners, vs. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS, and THE MANILA MEMORIAL
PARK CEMETERY, INC., respondents.
FACTS:
1. Petitioners were the parents and siblings, respectively, of the deceased Vicente Juan Syquia. On March 5, 1979, they filed a
complaint in the then Court of First Instance against herein private respondent, Manila Memorial Park Cemetery, Inc. for recovery of
damages arising from breach of contract and/or quasi-delict.
2. According to the complaint, the petitioners and respondent to inter the remains of deceased in the Manila Memorial Park Cemetery in
the morning of July 25, 1978. They also alleged that the concrete vault encasing the coffin of the deceased had a hole approximately
three (3) inches in diameter. Upon opening the vault, it became apparent that there was evidence of total flooding, the coffin was
entirely damaged and the exposed parts of the deceased’s remains were damaged.
3. The complaint prayed that judgment be rendered ordering defendant-appellee to pay plaintiffs-appellants P30,000.00 for actual
damages, P500,000.00 for moral damages, etc.
DECISION OF LOWER COURTS:
1. Trial Court: dismissed the complaint. the contract between the parties did not guarantee that the cement vault would be waterproof;
that there could be no quasi-delict because the defendant was not guilty of any fault or negligence, and because there was a pre-
existing contractual relation.
Contention of the defense: "The hole had to be bored through the concrete vault because if it has no hole the vault will (sic) float and
the grave would be filled with water and the digging would caved (sic) in the earth, the earth would caved (sic) in the (sic) fill up the
grave."
2. Court of Appeals: affirmed dismissal.
ISSUE: whether the Manila Memorial Park Cemetery, Inc., breached its contract with petitioners; or, alternatively, whether private
respondent was guilty of a tort.
RULING:
NO, there was no negligent act on the part of the cemetery.
Although a pre-existing contractual relation between the parties does not preclude the existence of aculpa aquiliana,
We find no reason to disregard the respondent's Court finding that there was no negligence.
Art. 2176. Whoever by act or omission causes damage to another, there being fault or negligence, is obliged to pay
for the damage done. Such fault or negligence, if there is no pre-existing contractual relation between the parties, is called a
quasi- delict.
Syquias and the Manila Memorial Park Cemetery, Inc., entered into a contract entitled "Deed of Sale and Certificate of
Perpetual Care" on August 27, 1969. That agreement governed the relations of the parties and defined their respective rights and
obligations. Hence, had there been actual negligence on the part of the Manila Memorial Park Cemetery, Inc., it would be held liable
not for a quasi-delict or culpa aquiliana, but for culpa contractual as provided by Article 1170 of the Civil Code, to wit:
Those who in the performance of their obligations are guilty of fraud, negligence, or delay, and those who in any manner
contravene the tenor thereof, are liable for damages.
There was no stipulation in the Deed of Sale and Certificate of Perpetual Care and in the Rules and Regulations of the Manila Memorial
Park Cemetery, Inc. that the vault would be waterproof.
The law defines negligence as the "omission of that diligence which is required by the nature of the obligation and
corresponds with the circumstances of the persons, of the time and of the place." In the absence of stipulation or legal
provision providing the contrary, the diligence to be observed in the performance of the obligation is that which is expected
of a good father of a family.
Private respondent has exercised the diligence of a good father of a family in preventing the accumulation of water inside the
vault which would have resulted in the caving in of earth around the grave filling the same with earth.
20. LEGASPI OIL CO., INC. V COURT OF APPEALS, GR NO. 96505, 01 JULY 1993
FACTS: Petitioner Legaspi Oil Company had several transactions with Oseraos through the agents of the latter. The transactions involve
the sale of copras (coconut husk) by private respondent to the petitioner. The selling price of Oseraos for every 100 kilos of copras
depends on the prevailing market price at the time the contract was entered into.
In one transaction, Oseraos committed to sell 100 tons of copra to Legaspi Oil for the price of P82 per 100 kilos with delivery
terms of 20 days effective 8 March 1975. After the period to deliver had lapsed, Oseraos was only able to sell 46,334 kilos of copra thus
leaving a balance of 53,666 kilos as per running account. Accordingly, demands were made upon Oseraos to deliver the balance with a
final warning embodied in a letter dated 6 October 1976 that failure to deliver will mean cancellation of the contract, the balance to be
purchased at open market and the price deferential to be charged against Oseraos. Since there was still no compliance, Legaspi Oil
purchased the undelivered balance from the open market at the prevailing price of P168.00 per 100 kilos, or a price differential of P86.00
per 100 kilos, a net loss of P46,152.76 chargeable against private respondent.
ISSUE: WoN Oseraos is liable for damages arising from fraud or bad faith in deliberately breaching the contract of sale entered into by
the parties.
HELD: Despite repeated demands by petitioner, private respondent failed to fulfill his contractual obligation to deliver the remaining
53,666 kilograms of copra. Based on the foregoing facts, the actuality of private respondent’s fraud cannot be gainsaid. In general fraud
may be defined as the voluntary execution of a wrongful act, or a willful omission, knowing and intending the effects which naturally and
necessarily arise from such act or omission. The conduct of the private respondent clearly manifests his deliberate faudulent intent to
evade his contractual obligation for the price of copra had in the meantime more than doubled from P82.00 to P168.00 per 100 kilograms.
Under Art. 1170 of the Civil Code, those who in the performance of their obligation are guilty of fraud, negligence, or delay, and those
who in any manner contravene the tenor thereof, are liable for damages. Pursuant to said article, private respondent is liable for damages.
26. THE SAN PEDRO BUS LINE, PAULINO DE LA CRUZ, and TEODOLO LACDAN, doing business under the name of "THE
SAN PEDRO BUS LINE," petitioners, vs. NICOLAS NAVARRO, and the HON. ASSOCIATE JUSTICES OF THE FIRST DIVISION,
COURT OF APPEALS, respondents.
G.R. No. L-6291 April 29, 1954
PARAS, C.J.:
Nicolas Navarro filed a complaint in the court of First Instance of Rizal against the San Pedro Bus Line, Paulino de la Cruz and
Teodulo Lacdan, doing business in the name of the San Pedro Bus Line, alleging that the plaintiff, on April 21, 1943, rode as a passenger
in Manila bound bus No. TPU-7654 owned and operated by the defendants; that while on its way the bus collided with another vehicle,
causing serious physical injuries to the plaintiff, with subsequent post-traumatic psychosis which might incapacitate him for life; that as a
result thereof the plaintiff suffered damages, for actual medical and hospital expenses and loss of earning power, in the total sum of
P4,500 which the plaintiff sought to recover from the defendants. In their answer the defendants admitted the occurrence of the accident
and the injuries received the plaintiff, but disclaimed responsibility for the accident. After trial, the court dismissed the complaint on the
ground that there was "no proof whatsoever of the relation of the defendants San Pedro Bus Line and Paulino de la Cruz with the
damages claimed by the plaintiff." The plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeals which, on part of which reads as follows: "WHEREFORE,
it appearing that the trial court erred as charged, and that the facts and the lawfully warrant a recovery by the appellant, the judgment
appealed in the total sum of P9,500, with interests thereon from the date this action was commenced. Costs are charged against the
appellees." The defendants have elevated the case by way of a petition for certiorari.
It is contended for the herein petitioners that they cannot be held civilly liable to respondents Nicolas Navarro, for the reason
that the Court of First Instance of Rizal had dismissed the criminal charge against petitioner Paulino de la Cruz, driver of the bus involved
in the accident, citing the case of Martinez vs. Barredo,* Off. Gaz., 4922. In answer to this contention, it is enough to advert to the
conclusion of the Court of Appeals — which is correct — that the action was not based on tort or quasi delict, but was one for breach of
a carrier's contract, there being a clear distinction between culpa as a source and creator of obligations (aquiliana) and culpa in the
performance of an already existing obligation (contractual). As already held in the case of Castro vs. Acro Taxicab Co.** 46 Off. Gaz.,
2023, "para que prosperase la accion del demandante pidiendo indemnizacion de daños y perjuicios bastaba que probase la existencia
del contrato de pasaje esto es, que causo lesiones y daños en el pasajero. De acuerdo con la doctrina enunciada, para el exito de la
accion de daños no era necesario que se probase la culpa, desuido a negligencia del chofer que guiaba el taximetro No. 962." The case
of Martinez vs. Barredo is not controlling, since it referred to an action based on criminal negligence.
The other contention of the petitioners is that it was erroneous for the Court of Appeals to award in favor of respondent Navarro
damages in the amount of P9,500, his claim in the complaint being only for P4,500. It appears, however, that the complaint prayed for
"such further relief as may be deemed just and equitable," and this of course warranted the granting in the complaint. Indeed, under
section 9, Rule 35, of the Rules of Court, "the judgment shall grant the relief to which the party in whose favor it is rendered is entitled,
even if the party has not demanded such relief in his pleadings."
It is also urged by counsel for the petitioners that the finding of the Court of Appeals that respondent Navarro is insane, is not
supported by any evidence, and that on the other hand, in the motion for new trial filed by the petitioners, accompanied by the affidavits
of Marcelo Legaspi and Ceferino Terello, respondent Navarro is shown not to be insane, with the result that there is no basis for awarding
the additional amount of P5,000. However, apart from the fact that the finding of the Court of Appeals is factual and therefore conclusive,
the said sum was granted by the Court of Appeals, not only for the resulting insanity of respondent Navarro but for his pain and suffering
in general; and we are not prepared to hold that the award is excessive as compensation for moral damages.
Wherefore, the decision complained of is affirmed, and it is so ordered with costs against petitioners.
28. CONSOLIDATED BANK AND TRUST CORPORATION VS. COURT OF APPEALS G.R. NO. 138569, SEPTEMBER 11, 2003
Solidbank’s tellers must exercise a high degree of diligence in insuring that they return the passbook only to the depositor or his authorized
representative. The tellers know, or should know, that the rules on savings account provide that any person in possession of the passbook
is presumptively its owner.
FACTS: Solidbank is a domestic banking corporation while private respondent L.C. Diaz and Company, CPA’s (“L.C. Diaz”), is a
professional partnership engaged in the practice of accounting and which opened a savings account with Solidbank. Diaz through its
cashier, Mercedes Macaraya , filled up a savings cash deposit slip and a savings checks deposit slip. Macaraya instructed the messenger
of L.C. Diaz, Ismael Calapre, to deposit the money with Solidbank and give him the Solidbank passbook. Calapre went to Solidbank and
presented to Teller No. 6 the two deposit slips and the passbook. The teller acknowledged receipt of the deposit by returning to Calapre
the duplicate copies of the two deposit slips. Since the transaction took time and Calapre had to make another deposit for L.C. Diaz with
Allied Bank, he left the passbook with Solidbank. When Calapre returned to Solidbank to retrieve the passbook, Teller No. 6 informed
him that somebody got the passbook. Calapre went back to L.C. Diaz and reported the incident to Macaraya. The following day,, L.C.
Diaz through its Chief Executive Officer, Luis C. Diaz, called up Solidbank to stop any transaction using the same passbook until L.C.
Diaz could open a new account followed by a formal written request later that day. It was also on the same day that L.C. Diaz learned of
the unauthorized withdrawal the day before of P300,000 from its savings account. The withdrawal slip bore the signatures of the
authorized signatories of L.C. Diaz, namely Diaz and Rustico L. Murillo. The signatories, however, denied signing the withdrawal slip. A
certain Noel Tamayo received the P300,000.
L.C. Diaz demanded from Solidbank the return of its money but to no avail. Hence, L.C. Diaz filed a Complaint for Recovery of
a Sum of Money against Solidbank with the Regional Trial Court. After trial, the trial court rendered a decision absolving Solidbank and
dismissing the complaint. Court of Appeals reversed the decision of the trial court.
ISSUE: Whether or not Solidbank must be held liable for the fraudulent withdrawal on private respondent’s account.
HELD: Solidbank’s tellers must exercise a high degree of diligence in insuring that they return the passbook only to the depositor or his
authorized representative. The tellers know, or should know, that the rules on savings account provide that any person in possession of
the passbook is presumptively its owner. If the tellers give the passbook to the wrong person, they would be clothing that person
presumptive ownership of the passbook, facilitating unauthorized withdrawals by that person. For failing to return the passbook to
Calapre, the authorized representative of L.C. Diaz, Solidbank and Teller No. 6 presumptively failed to observe such high degree of
diligence in safeguarding the passbook, and in insuring its return to the party authorized to receive the same. However, L.C. Diaz was
guilty of contributory negligence in allowing a withdrawal slip signed by its authorized signatories to fall into the hands of an
impostor. Thus, the liability of Solidbank should be reduced. Hence, the liability of Solidbank for actual damages was reduced to only
60%, the remaining 40% was borne by private respondent.
The contract between the bank and its depositor is governed by the provisions of the Civil Code on simple loan. There is a
debtor-creditor relationship between the bank and its depositor. The bank is the debtor and the depositor is the creditor. The law imposes
on banks high standards in view of the fiduciary nature of banking. RA 8791 declares that the State recognizes the “fiduciary nature of
banking that requires high standards of integrity and performance.” This new provision in the general banking law, introduced in 2000, is
a statutory affirmation of Supreme Court decisions holding that “the bank is under obligation to treat the accounts of its depositors
with meticulous care, always having in mind the fiduciary nature of their relationship.”
31. MERCURY DRUG CORPORATION and AURMELA GANZON vs. RAUL DE LEON
G.R. No. 165622 [ October 17, 2008]
FACTS:
Respondent Raul T. De Leon, a judge, noticed that his left eye was reddish. He also had difficulty reading. On the same evening,
he met a friend who happened to be a doctor, Dr. Charles Milla. The latter prescribed the drugs “CortisporinOpthalmic” and “Ceftin” to
relieve his eye problems. Before heading to work the following morning, De Leon went to the Betterliving, Parañaque, branch of
Mercury Drug Store Corporation to buy the prescribed medicines. He showed his prescription to petitioner AurmelaGanzon, a pharmacist
assistant. At his chambers, De Leon requested his sheriff to assist him in using the eye drops. As instructed, the sheriff applied 2-3
drops on respondent’s left eye. Instead of relieving his irritation, respondent felt searing pain. He immediately rinsed the affected eye
with water, but the pain did not subside. Only then did he discover that he was given the wrong medicine, “CortisporinOtic Solution.” De
Leon returned to the same Mercury Drug branch, with his left eye still red and teary. When he confronted Ganzon why he was given ear
drops, instead of the prescribed eye drops, she did not apologize and instead brazenly replied that she was unable to fully read the
prescription and it was her supervisor who apologized and informed De Leon that they do not have stock of the needed
CortisporinOpthalmic. De Leon wrote Mercury Drug, through its president, Ms. Vivian K. Askuna, about the day’s incident. Instead, two
sales persons went to his office and informed him that their supervisor was busy with other matters. Having been denied his simple desire
for a written apology and explanation, De Leon filed a complaint for damages against Mercury Drug.
ISSUE: Whether or not the Mercury Drug and Ganzon are liable.
RULING: Yes. Mercury Drug and Ganzoncannot exculpate themselves from any liability. As active players in the field of dispensing
medicines to the public, the highest degree of care and diligence is expected of them. Likewise, numerous decisions, both here and
abroad, have laid salutary rules for the protection of human life and humanhealth. In the United States case of Tombari v. Conners, it
was ruled that the profession of pharmacy demands care and skill, and druggists must exercise care of a specially high degree, the
highest degree of care known to practical men. In other words, druggists must exercise the highest practicable degree of prudence and
vigilance, and the most exact and reliable safeguards consistent with the reasonable conduct of the business, so that human life may not
constantly be exposed to the danger flowing from the substitution of deadly poisons for harmless medicines.
In cases where an injury is caused by the negligence of an employee, there instantly arises a presumption of law that there has been
negligence on the part of the employer, either in the selection or supervision of one’s employees. This presumption may be rebutted by
a clear showing that the employer has exercised the care and diligence of a good father of the family. Mercury Drug failed to overcome
such presumption.
Petitioners Mercury Drug and Ganzon have similarly failed to live up to high standard of diligence expected of them as pharmacy
professionals. They were grossly negligent in dispensing ear drops instead of the prescribed eye drops to De Leon.
As a buyer, De Leon relied on the expertise and experience of Mercury Drug and its employees in dispensing to him the right
medicine. This Court has ruled that in the purchase and sale of drugs, the buyer and seller do not stand at arms length. There exists an
imperative duty on the seller or the druggist to take precaution to prevent death or injury to any person who relies on one’s absolute
honesty and peculiar learning.
ARTICLE 1174 - RESPONSIBILITY FOR EVENTS WHICH CANNOT BE FORESEEN (CASO FORTUITO)
37. BACOLOD-MURCIA MILLING V. COURT OF APPEALS 182 SCRA 24, G.R. NO. 81100-01 (FEBRUARY 7, 1990)
FACTS:
-Bacolod-Murcia Milling Co., Inc.(BMMC) is the owner and operator of the sugar central in Bacolod.
-Alonso Gatuslao (Gatuslao) is a registered plantor of the Bacolod-Muria Mill District.
-BMMC and Gatuslao executed an “Extension and Modification of Milling Contract.
-From crop year 1957-1958 up to crop year 1967-1968, Gatuslao has been milling all the sugarcane grown and produced with the Mill of
BMMC.
-From crop year 1920-21 to crop year 1967-68, the canes of planters adhered to the mill of BMMC were transported from the plantation
to the mill by means of cane cars and through railway system operated by BMMC.
BMMC has been hauling planter Gatuslao’s sugar cane to its mill or factory continuously until crop year 1967 – 1968.
-The milling contract between BMMC and owners of the hacienda Helvetica expired at the end of the 1964-1965 crop year.
-The portion of the railway traversing the hacienda Helvetica was closed as per decision of the court.
-The use of the railroad tracks(traversing hacienda Helvetica) was temporarily allowed due to the intervention of the President of the
Philippines, which is until 1967-1978 milling season only.
-Gatuslao loaded their cut cranes on trucks provided by the Bacolod-Murcia Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Association, Inc. (B-
MACMA) during 1968-1969 crop year.
-BMMC had not been able to use its cane cars and railway system for the cargo crop year 1968-1989.
ISSUE/S:
-Whether or not the termination of petitioner’s right of way over the hacienda Helvetica caused by the expiration of its amended milling
contracts with the landowners of the land in question is fortuitous event or force majeure which will exempt petitioner BMMC from
fulfillment of its contractual obligation.
-Whether or not BMMC was able to provide adequate and efficient transportation facilities of the canes of Gatuslao and the other planters
milling with BMMC during the crop year 1968-69.
RULING:
No. The terms of the milling contracts were clear and undoubtedly there was no reason for BMMC to expect otherwise. The
closure of any portion of the railroad track, not necessarily in the hacienda Helvetica but in any of the properties whose owners decided
not to renew their milling contracts with the Central upon their expiration, was foreseeable and inevitable.
Despite its awareness that the conventional contract of lease would expire in crop year 1964-1965 and that refusal on the part
of any one of the landowners to renew their milling contracts and the corresponding use of the right of way on their lands would render
impossible compliance of its commitments, BMMC took a calculated risk that all the landowners would renew their contracts.
The closure of the railway lines was not an act of God nor it constitute force majeure. It was due to the termination of the
contractual relationships of the parties, for which BMMC is charged with knowledge. Owners of the hacienda Helvetica notified BMMC
as far back as August 1965 of its intention not to allow the passage of the railway system thru its land after the aforesaid crop year.
Adequate measures should have been adopted by BMMC to forestall such paralyzations but the records show none.
No, BMMC failed to provide adequate transportation facilities to Gatuslao and other adherent parties.
The inadequacies of the reparto or trailer allotment as well as the state of unpreparedness on the part of BMMC to meet the problem
posed by the closure of the railway lines.
It was established that after Gatuslao had cut his sugarcanes for hauling, no trailers arrived and when two trailers finally arrived
on October 1968 after several unheeded requests, they were left on the national highway about one kilometer away from the loading
station, the means of transportation provided by BMMC is very inadequate to answer the needs of Gatuslao.
38. BACHELOR EXPRESS, INCORPORATED, and CRESENCIO RIVERA vs. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS (Sixth
Division), RICARDO BETER, SERGIA BETER, TEOFILO RAUTRAUT and ZOETERA RAUTRAUT
G.R. No. 85691 July 31, 1990
FACTS: A bus owned by Bachelor Express, Inc. and driven by Cresencio Rivera was the situs of a stampede which resulted in the death
of passengers Ornominio Beter and Narcisa Rautraut.
The bus came from Davao City on its way to Cagayan de Oro City; that while in Butuan City, the bus picked up a passenger;
that about 15 minutes later, a passenger at the rear portion suddenly stabbed a PC soldier which caused commotion and panic
among the passengers; that when the bus stopped, passengers Ornominio Beter and Narcisa Rautraut were found lying down the road,
the former already dead as a result of head injuries and the latter also suffering from severe injuries which caused her death later. The
passenger assailant alighted from the bus and ran toward the bushes but was killed by the police. Thereafter, the heirs of Ornominio
Beter and Narcisa Rautraut, private respondents filed a complaint for "sum of money" against Bachelor Express, Inc. its alleged owner
Samson Yasay and the driver Rivera.
Petitioner alleged that the driver was able to transport his passengers safely to their respective places of destination except
Ornominio Beter and Narcisa Rautraut who jumped off the bus without the knowledge and consent.
The trial court dismissed the complaint which was reversed and set aside by the Court of Appeals.
Petitioners asseverate that they were not negligent in the performance of their duties and that the incident was completely and absolutely
attributable to a third person, the passenger who ran amuck, for without his criminal act, Beter and Rautraut could not have been subjected
to fear and shock which compelled them to jump off the running bus. They argue that they should not be made liable for damages arising
from acts of third persons over whom they have no control or supervision. . In effect, the petitioner, in order to overcome the presumption
of fault or negligence under the law, states that the vehicular incident resulting in the death of passengers Beter and Rautraut was caused
by force majeure or caso fortuito over which the common carrier did not have any control.
ISSUE: Whether petitioner is liable.
HELD: YES. The liability of the petitioners is anchored on culpa contractual or breach of contract of carriage.
Ornominio Beter and Narcisa Rautraut were passengers of a bus belonging to petitioner Bachelor Express, Inc. and, while
passengers of the bus, suffered injuries which caused their death. Consequently, pursuant to Article 1756 of the Civil Code, petitioner
Bachelor Express, Inc. is presumed to have acted negligently unless it can prove that it had observed extraordinary diligence in
accordance with Articles 1733 and 1755 of the New Civil Code.
The running amuck of the passenger was the proximate cause of the incident as it triggered off a commotion and panic among
the passengers such that the passengers started running to the sole exit shoving each other resulting in the falling off the bus by
passengers Beter and Rautraut causing them fatal injuries. The sudden act of the passenger who stabbed another passenger in the
bus is within the context of force majeure.
A caso fortuito presents the following essential characteristics: (1) The cause of the unforeseen and unexpected occurrence, or
of the failure of the debtor to comply with his obligation, must be independent of the human will. (2) It must be impossible to foresee
the event which constitutes the caso fortuito, or if it can be foreseen, it must be impossible to avoid. (3) The occurrence must be such as
to render it impossible for the debtor to fulfill his obligation in a normal manner. And (4) the obligor (debtor) must be free from any
participation in the aggravation of the injury resulting to the creditor.
As will be seen, these authorities agree that some extraordinary circumstance independent of the will of the obligor or of his
employees, is an essential element of a caso fortuito.
However, in order that a common carrier may be absolved from liability in case of force majeure, it is not enough that the
accident was caused by force majeure. The common carrier must still prove that it was not negligent in causing the injuries
resulting from such accident.
The bus driver did not immediately stop the bus at the height of the commotion; the bus was speeding from a full stop; the
victims fell from the bus door when it was opened or gave way while the bus was still running; the conductor panicked and blew his
whistle after people had already fallen off the bus; and the bus was not properly equipped with doors in accordance with law-it is clear
that the petitioners have failed to overcome the presumption of fault and negligence found in the law governing common carriers.
The petitioners' argument that the petitioners "are not insurers of their passengers" deserves no merit in view of the failure of
the petitioners to prove that the deaths of the two passengers were exclusively due to force majeure and not to the failure of the petitioners
to observe extraordinary diligence in transporting safely the passengers to their destinations as warranted by law.
39. NAPOCOR vs CA
GR 103442-45 May 21, 1993
FACTS:
This is a consolidated case comprising of four separate complaints., filed against NPC and a particular Chavez.
Plaintiffs filed a complaint against respondent for the lost of lives and destruction of properties due to the negligence of the latter
in releasing water from Angat dam during the typhoon “Kading”
Benjamin Chavez, being the supervisor at that time of a multi-purpose hydroelectric plant in the Angat River at Hilltop,
Norzagaray, Bulacan, failed to exercise due diligence in monitoring the water level at the dam.
NPC’s allegations were as follows:
1) the NPC exercised due care, diligence and prudence in the operation and maintenance of the hydroelectric plant;
2) the NPC exercised the diligence of a good father in the selection of its employees; 3) written notices were sent to the different
municipalities of Bulacan warning the residents therein about the impending release of a large volume of water with the onset of typhoon
"Kading" and advise them to take the necessary precautions;
4) the water released during the typhoon was needed to prevent the collapse of the dam and avoid greater damage to people and
property;
5) in spite of the precautions undertaken and the diligence exercised, they could still not contain or control the flood that resulted and;
6) the damages incurred by the private respondents were caused by a fortuitous event or force majeure and are in the nature and
character of damnum absque injuria. By way of special affirmative defense, the defendants averred that the NPC cannot be sued because
it performs a purely governmental function.
The trial court dismissed the complaints as against the NPC on the ground that the provision of its charter allowing it to sue and
be sued does not contemplate actions based on tort. Its decision on 30 April 1990 dismissing the complaints "for lack of sufficient and
credible evidence."
Court of Appeals reversed the appealed decision and awarded damages in favor of the private respondents. Based on the
findings that From the mass of evidence extant in the record, We are convinced, and so hold that the flash flood on October 27, 1978,
was caused not by rain waters (sic), but by stored waters (sic) suddenly and simultaneously released from the Angat Dam by defendants-
appellees, particularly from midnight of October 26, 1978 up to the morning hours of October 27, 1978.
ISSUE:
Whether or not respondent is negligent?
Whether or not the notices of warning were insufficient?
Whether or not The damages suffered was not DAMNUM ABSQUE INJURIA?
HELD:
We declared therein that the proximate cause of the loss and damage sustained by the plaintiffs therein — who were similarly
situated as the private respondents herein — was the negligence of the petitioners, and that the 24 October 1978 "early warning notice"
supposedly sent to the affected municipalities, the same notice involved in the case at bar, was insufficient.
The petitioners were guilty of "patent gross and evident lack of foresight, imprudence and negligence in the management and
operation of Angat Dam," and that "the extent of the opening of the spillways, and the magnitude of the water released, are all but
products of defendants-appellees' headlessness, slovenliness, and carelessness."
To exempt the obligor from liability under Article 1174 of the Civil Code, for a breach of an obligation due to an "act of God," the
following must concur: (a) the cause of the breach of the obligation must be independent of the will of the debtor; (b) the event must be
either unforseeable or unavoidable; (c) the event must be such as to render it impossible for the debtor to fulfill his obligation in a moral
manner; and (d) the debtor must be free from any participation in, or aggravation of the injury to the creditor. (Vasquez v. Court of Appeals,
138 SCRA 553; Estrada v. Consolacion, 71 SCRA 423; Austria v. Court of Appeals, 39 SCRA 527; Republic of the Phil. v. Luzon
Stevedoring Corp., 21 SCRA 279; Lasam v. Smith, 45 Phil. 657).
Accordingly, petitioners cannot be heard to invoke the act of God or force majeure to escape liability for the loss or damage
sustained by private respondents since they, the petitioners, were guilty of negligence. The event then was not occasioned exclusively
by an act of God or force majeure; a human factor — negligence or imprudence — had intervened. The effect then of the force majeure
in question may be deemed to have, even if only partly, resulted from the participation of man. Thus, the whole occurrence was thereby
humanized, as it were, and removed from the laws applicable to acts of God.
40. JACINTO TANGUILIG doing business under the name and style J.M.T. ENGINEERING AND GENERAL MERCHANDISING vs
COURT OF APPEALS and VICENTE HERCE JR.
G.R.No. 125994 29June2001
FACTS OF THE CASE:
Herce contracted Tanguilig to construct a windmill system for him, for consideration of 60,000.00. Pursuant to the agreement
Herce paid the downpayment of 30,000.00 and installment of 15,000.00 leaving a 15,000.00 balance.
Herce refused to pay the balance because he had already paid this amount to SPGMI which constructed a deep well to which
the windmill system was to be connected since the deepwell, and assuming that he owed the 15,000.00 this should be offset by the
defects in the windmill system which caused the structure to collapse after strong winds hit their place. According to Tanguilig, the
60,000.00 consideration is only for the construction of the windmill and the construction of the deepwell was not part of it. The collapse
of the windmill cannot be attributed to him as well, since he delivered it in good and working condition and Herce accepted it without
protest. Herce contested that the collapse is attributable to a typhoon, a force majeure that relieved him of liability.
The RTC ruled in favor of Tanguilig, but this decision was overturned by the Court of Appeals which ruled in favor of Herce.
ISSUES OF THE CASE:
Can the collapse of the windmill be attributed to force majeure? Thus, extinguishing the liability of Tanguilig?
- Yes, in order for a party to claim exemption from liability by reason of fortuitous event under Art 1174 of the Civil Code the event should
be the sole and proximate cause of the loss or destruction of the object of the contract.
- In Nakpil vs. Court of Appeals, the S.C. held that 4 requisites must concur that there must be a (a) the cause of the breach of the
obligation must be independent of the will of debtor (b) the event must be either unforeseeable or unavoidable; (c) the event be such to
render it impossible for the debtor to fulfill his obligation in a normal manner; and (d) the debtor must be free from any participation in or
aggravation of the injury to the creditor.
- Tanguilig merely stated that there was a strong wind, and a strong wind in this case is not fortuitous, it was not unforeseeable nor
unavoidable, places with strong winds are the perfect locations to put up a windmill, since it needs strong winds for it to work.
HELD:
WHEREFORE, the appealed decision is MODIFIED. Respondent VICENTE HERCE JR. is directed to pay petitioner JACINTO M.
TANGUILIG the balance of P15,000.00 with interest at the legal rate from the date of the filing of the complaint. In return, petitioner is
ordered to "reconstruct subject defective windmill system, in accordance with the one-year guaranty" and to complete the same within
three (3) months from the finality of this decision.
Obligations and Contracts Terms:
Fortuitous Events- Refers to an occurrence or happening which could not be foreseen, or even if foreseen, is inevitable. It is necessary
that the obligor is free from negligence. Fortuitous events may be produced by two (2) general causes: (1) by Nature, such as but not
limited to, earthquakes, storms, floods, epidemics, fires, and (2) by the act of man, such as but not limited to, armed invasion, attack by
bandits, governmental prohibitions, robbery, provided that they have the force of an imposition which the contractor or supplier could not
have resisted.
42. FORTUNE EXPRESS vs. COURT OF APPEALS and PAULIE CAORONG and HER MINOR CHILDREN, 305 SCRA 14 (1999)
FACTS:
Pauli Caurong filed a complaint for damages against petitioner, a bus company operating in Northern Mindanao, for the death
of her husband, Atty. Talib Caorong. Atty. Caurong was shot by Maranaos in an ambush involving said bus.
BACKGROUND OF THE STORY:
o In November 1989, a bus of Fortune was involved in an accident with a passenger jeepney resulting in the deaths of several
passengers.
o Crisanto Generalao, a local field agent of the Philippine Constabulary, conducted an investigation on the accident and found
that the owner of the jeepney was a Maranao and that several Maranaos were planning to burn some of Fortune’s buses
for revenge.
o Generalao informed Diosdado Bravo, operations manager of Fortune, about the plot, and Bravo assured him that they
would take the necessary precautions for safety.
o Several days later, Atty. Caorong was on board a bus to Iligan when three Maranaos went on board the vehicle. The leader
of the group ordered the passengers to leave the bus. Atty. Caorong later went back to get something when he saw that
the Maranaos were already pouring gasoline on the bus and on the driver. Atty. Caorong pleaded for the life of the driver,
after which the driver jumped out of the vehicle. Caorong was shot to death as a result.
RTC dismissed the complaint:
o Fortune was not negligent. Disregarding the suggestion of providing its buses with security guards is not an omission of
petitioner’s duty. The evidence showed that the assailants did not intend to harm the passengers. The death of Atty.
Caorong was an unexpected and unforeseen occurrence beyond petitioner’s control.
CA REVERSED RTC’s ruling:
o Fortune is negligent. Despite the tip to Manager Bravo of the devious plan by several Maranaos, management did not do
not take any safety precautions at all.
o One available safeguard that could have absolved Fortune from liability was frisking of incoming passengers en route
to dangerous areas and bag inspection at the terminals, which Fortune failed to do. The frisking system is not novel in
sensitive and dangerous places. Many companies adopt this measure. Fortune did “absolutely nothing”.
ISSUE:
1. W/N Petitioner is liable for the death of Atty. Caorong by failing to take necessary precautions to ensure the safety of its
passengers;
2. W/N the attack by the Maranaos constituted causo fortuito?
HELD: Petitioner is liable. Attack was not a fortuitous event.
Article 1763 holds common carriers liable for the injuries to passengers caused by the wilful act of other passengers, if its
employees failed to exercise the diligence of a good father in preventing the act.
Despite the warning by the constabulary officer, petitioner did nothing to protect the safety of its passengers.
If petitioner took the necessary precautions, they would have discovered the weapons and the large quantity of gasoline the
malefactors carried with them.
A common carrier is liable for failing to prevent hijacking by frisking passengers and inspecting baggages.
The seizure of the bus was not force majeure. Of the four elements to constitute an event as caso fotuito, the element of
“unforeseeable or unavoidable circumstances” was lacking. The seizure of the bus was foreseeable, given the fact that
petitioner was well-informed of the possibility, days before the incident. This situation was likened to a case1 where the common
carrier failed to take safety precautions despite warnings of an approaching typhoon.
Petitioner is solely liable for Atty. Caorong’s death. There was no contributory negligence on the part of the victim, since all he
did was pleading for the life of the driver. His heroic effort was neither an act of negligence or recklessness.
44. PHILCOMSAT V. GLOBE TELECOM 429 SCRA 153, G.R. NO. 147324 (MAY 25, 2004)
429 SCRA 153, G.R. NO. 147324 (MAY 25, 2004)
FACTS:
Globe Telecom, Inc. (Globe) is engaged in the coordination of the provision of various communication facilities for the military
bases of the United States of America (US) in the Clark Air Base and Subic Naval Base.
Saud communication facilities were installed and configured for the exclusive use of the US Defense Communications Agency
(USDCA).
Globe contracted Philippine Communications Satellite Corporation (Philcomsat) for the provision of the communication facilities.
Philcomsat and Globe entered into an agreement whereby Philcomsat obliged itself to establish, operate and provide an IBS
Standard B earth station (earth station) for the exclusive use of the USDCA. Globe promised to pay Philcomsat monthly rentals
for each leased circuit involved.
Philcomsat installed and established the earth station and the USDCA made use of the same.
Senate passed and adopted its resolution, expressing its decision not to concur in the ratification of the Treaty of Friendship,
Cooperation and Security and its Supplementary Agreements that was supposed to extend the term of the use by the US of Subic Naval
Base, among others.
PH government sent a Note Verbale to the US government through the US Embassy, notifying it of the Philippine termination of
the RP-US Military Base Agreement. The withdrawal of all US military forces from Subic Naval Base should be completed by December
31. 1992.
Globe notified Philcomsat of its intention to discontinue the use of the earth station.
Philcomsat demand payment of rentals for the balance of lease term, despite the non-use of earth station.
ISSUE/S:
Whether the termination of the RP-US Military Base Agreement, the non-ratification of the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Security,
and the consequent withdrawal of US military forces and personnel from Cubi Point constitute force majeure which would exempt Globe
from complying with its obligation to pay rentals under its Agreement with Philcomsat.
Whether Globe is liable to pay rentals under the Agreement for the month of December 1992.
Whether Philcomsat is entitled to attorney’s fees and exemplary damages.
RULING:
Yes. Philcomsat and Globe had no control over the non-renewal of the term of the RP-US Military Base Agreement when the
same expired in 1991, because the prerogative to ratify the treaty extending the life thereof belonged to the Senate. Neither did the
parties have control over the subsequent withdrawal of the US military forces and personnel from Cubi Point in December 1992.
As a consequence of the termination of the RP-US Military Base Agreement the continued stay of all US Military forces and
personnel from Subic Naval Base would no longer be allowed, hence, plaintiff would no longer be in any position to render service it was
obligated under the Agreement.
Events made impossible the continuation of the Agreement until the end of its five-year term without fault on the part of either
party. Such fortuitous events rendered Globe exempt from payment of rentals for the remainder of the term of the Agreement.
Philcomsat would like to charge globe rentals for the balance of the lease term without being any corresponding
telecommunications service subject of the lease. It will be grossly unfair and iniquitous to hold globe liable for lease charges for a service
that was not and could not have been rendered due to an act of the government which was clearly beyond globes control.
Yes. The US military forces and personnel completely withdrew from Cubi Point only on December 31, 1992. Thus, until that
date, USDCA had control over the earth station and had the option of using the same. Furthermore, Philcomsat could not have removed
or rendered ineffective said communication facility until after December 31, 1992 because Cubi Point was accessible only to US naval
personnel up to that time.
No. The award of attorney’s fees is the exemption rather than the rule. In cases where both parties have legitimate claims
against each other and no party actually prevailed, such as in the present case where the claims of both parties were sustained in part,
an award of attorney’s fees would not be warranted.
Exemplary damages may be awarded in cases involving contracts, if the erring party acted in wanton, fraudulent, reckless,
oppressive or malevolent manner. It was not shown that Globe acted wantonly or oppressively in not heeding Philcomsats demands for
payment of rentals. Globe had valid grounds for refusing to comply with its contractual obligations after 1992.
45. SPOUSES DANTE CRUZ and LEONORA CRUZ, Petitioners, vs. SUN HOLIDAYS, INC., Respondent.
G.R. No. 186312 June 29, 2010
FACTS: Spouses Dante and Leonora Cruz (petitioners) lodged a Complaint on January 25,2001 against Sun Holidays, Inc. (respondent)
with the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Pasig City for damages arising from the death of their son Ruelito C. Cruz (Ruelito) who perished
with his wife on September 11, 2000 on board the boat M/B Coco Beach III that capsized en route to Batangas from Puerto Galera,
Oriental Mindoro where the couple had stayed at Coco Beach Island Resort (Resort) owned and operated by respondent.
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).
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.
ISSUE: Whether or not respondent is a common carrier.
HELD: 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.
Indeed, respondent is a common carrier. Its ferry services are so intertwined with its main business as to be properly considered
ancillary thereto. The constancy of respondent’s ferry services in its resort operations is underscored by its having its own Coco Beach
boats. And the tour packages it offers, which include the ferry services, may be availed of by anyone who can afford to pay the same.
These services are thus available to the public. 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.
48. SOLIDBANK CORPORATION, (now Metroplolitan Bank and Trust Company), Petitioner,
vs. PERMANENT HOMES, INCORPORATED, Respondent. G.R. No. 171925 : July 23, 2010
FACTS: The records disclose that PERMANENT HOMES is a real estate development company, and to finance its housing project
known as the “Buena Vida Townhome” located within Merville Subdivision, Parañaque City, it applied and was subsequently granted by
SOLIDBANK with an “Omnibus Line” credit facility in the total amount of SIXTY MILLION PESOS. Of the entire loan, FIFTY NINE
MILLION as time loan for a term of up to three hundred sixty (360) days, with interest thereon at prevailing market rates, and subject to
monthly repricing. The remaining ONE MILLION was available for domestic bills purchase.
To secure the aforesaid loan, PERMANENT HOMES initially mortgaged three(3) townhouse units within the Buena Vida project
in Parañaque. At the time, however, the instant complaint was filed against SOLIDBANK, a total of thirty six (36) townhouse units were
mortgaged with said bank. Of the 60 million available to PERMANENT HOMES, it availed of a total of 41.5 million pesos covered by
three(3) promissory notes. There was a standing agreement by the parties that any increase or decrease in interest rates shall be subject
to the mutual agreement of the parties.
For the three loan availments that PERMANENT HOMES obtained, the herein respondent argued that SOLIDBANK unilaterally
and arbitrarily accelerated the interest rates without any declared basis of such increases, of which PERMANENT HOMES had not
agreed to, or at the very least, been informed of.
On July 5, 2002, the trial court promulgated its Decision in favor of Solidbank. Permanent then filed an appeal before the
appellate court which was granted, in which reversed and set aside the assailed decision dated July 5, 2002. Hence, the
present petition.
ISSUES: (1) WON the Honorable Court of Appeals was correct in ruling that the increases in the interest rates on Permanent’s loans
are void for having been unilaterally imposed without basis.
(2) WON the Honorable Court of Appeals was correct in ordering the parties to enter into an express agreement regarding the
applicable interest rates on Permanent’s loan availments subsequent to the initial thirty-day (30) period.
RULING: (1) Yes. Although interest rates are no longer subject to a ceiling, the lender still does not have an unbridled license to impose
increased interest rates. The lender and the borrower should agree on the imposed rate, and such imposed rate should be in writing of
which was not provided by petitioner.
(2) Yes. In order that obligations arising from contracts may have the force of law between the parties, there must be mutuality
between the parties based on their essential quality. A contract containing a condition which makes its fulfillment dependent exclusively
upon the uncontrolled will of one of the contracting parties is void. There was no showing that either Solidbank or Permanent coerced
each other to enter into the loan agreements. The terms of the Omnibus Line Agreement and the promissory notes were mutually and
freely agreed upon by the parties.