G.R. No. 76145 CATHAY INSURANCE CO., Petitioner, Hon. Court of Appeals, and Remington Industrial Sales CORPORATION, Respondents

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G.R. No.

76145

CATHAY INSURANCE CO., petitioner,


vs.
HON. COURT OF APPEALS, and REMINGTON INDUSTRIAL SALES
CORPORATION, respondents.

PARAS, J.:

This petition seeks the review of the decision of the Court of Appeals 1 in CA-G.R. CV No. 06559
affirming the decision of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), 2 National Capital Region (NCR) Manila,
Branch 38 and the Resolution of the said appellate court denying petitioner's motion for
reconsideration.

Originally, this was a complaint filed by private respondent corporation against petitioner (then
defendant) company seeking collection of the sum of P868,339.15 representing private respondent's
losses and damages incurred in a shipment of seamless steel pipes under an insurance contract in
favor of the said private respondent as the insured, consignee or importer of aforesaid merchandise
while in transit from Japan to the Philippines on board vessel SS "Eastern Mariner." The total value
of the shipment was P2,894,463.83 at the prevailing rate of P7.95 to a dollar in June and July 1984,
when the shipment was made.

The trial court decided in favor of private respondent corporation by ordering petitioner to pay it the
sum of P866,339.15 as its recoverable insured loss equivalent to 30% of the value of the seamless
steel pipes; ordering petitioner to pay private respondent interest on the aforecited amount at the
rate of 34% or double the ceiling prescribed by the Monetary Board per annum from February 3,
1982 or 90 days from private respondent's submission of proof of loss to petitioner until paid as
provided in the settlement of claim provision of the policy; and ordering petitioner to pay private
respondent certain amounts for marine surveyor's fee, attorney's fees and costs of the suit.

Respondent in its comment on the petition, contends that:

1. Coverage of private respondent's loss under the insurance policy issued by petitioner is
unmistakable.

2. Alleged contractual limitations contained in insurance policies are regarded with extreme caution
by courts and are to be strictly construed against the insurer; obscure phrases and exceptions
should not be allowed to defeat the very purpose for which the policy was procured.

3. Rust is not an inherent vice of the seamless steel pipes without interference of external factors.

4. No matter how petitioner might want it otherwise, the 15-day clause of the policy had been
foreclosed in the pre-trial order and it was not even raised in petitioner's answer to private
respondent's complaint.

5. The decision was correct in not holding that the heavy rusting of the seamless steel pipes did not
occur during the voyage of 7 days from July 1 to July 7, 1981.
6. The alleged lack of supposed bad order survey from the arrastre capitalized on by petitioner was
more than clarified by no less than 2 witnesses.

7. The placing of notation "rusty" in the way bills is not only private respondent's right but a natural
and spontaneous reaction of whoever received the seamless steel pipes in a rusty condition at
private respondent's bodega.

8. The Court of Appeals did not engage in any guesswork or speculation in concluding a loss
allowance of 30% in the amount of P868,339.15.

9. The rate of 34% per annum double the ceiling prescribed by the Monetary Board is the rate of
interest fixed by the Insurance Policy itself and the Insurance Code.

The petitioner however maintains that:

(1) Private respondent does not dispute the fact that, contrary to the finding of the respondent Court
(the petitioner has failed "to present any evidence of any viable exeption to the application of the
policy") there is in fact an express exeption to the application of the policy.

(2) As adverted to in the Petition for Review, private respondent has admitted that the question
shipment in not covered bya " square provision of the contract," but private respondent claims
implied coverage from the phrase " perils of the sea" mentioned in the opening sentenced of the
policy.

(3) The insistence of private respondent that rusting is a peril of the sea is erroneous.

(4) Private respondent inaccurately invokes the rule of strict construction against insurer under the
guise of construction in order to impart a non-existing ambiguity or doubt into the policy so as to
resolve it against the insurer.

(5) Private respondent while impliedly admitting that a loss occasioned by an inherent defect or vice
in the insured article is not within the terms of the policy, erroneously insists that rusting is not an
inherent vice or in the nature of steel pipes.

(6) Rusting is not a risk insured against, since a risk to be insured against should be a casualty or
some casualty, something which could not be foreseen as one of the necessary incidents of
adventure.

(7) A fact capable of unquestionable demonstration or of public knowledge needs no evidence. This
fact of unquestionable demonstration or of public knowledge is that heavy rusting of steel or iron
pipes cannot occur within a period of a seven (7) day voyage. Besides, petitioner had introduced the
clear cargo receipts or tally sheets indicating that there was no damage on the steel pipes during the
voyage.

(8) The evidence of private respondent betrays the fact that the account of P868,339.15 awarded by
the respondent Court is founded on speculation, surmises or conjectures and the amount of less has
not been proven by competent, satisfactory and clear evidence.

We find no merit in this petition.


There is no question that the rusting of steel pipes in the course of a voyage is a "peril of the sea" in
view of the toll on the cargo of wind, water, and salt conditions. At any rate if the insurer cannot be
held accountable therefor, We would fail to observe a cardinal rule in the interpretation of contracts,
namely, that any ambiguity therein should be construed against the maker/issuer/drafter thereof,
namely, the insurer. Besides the precise purpose of insuring cargo during a voyage would be
rendered fruitless. Be it noted that any attack of the 15-day clause in the policy was foreclosed right
in the pre-trial conference.

Finally, it is a cardinal rule that save for certain exceptions, findings of facts of the appellate tribunal
are binding on Us. Not one of said exceptions can apply to this case.

WHEREFORE, this petition is hereby DENIED, and the assailed decision of the Court of Appeals is
hereby AFFIRMED.

SO ORDERED.

Fernan (Chairman), Gutierrez, Jr., and Cortes, JJ., concur.

Padilla and Bidin, JJ., took no part.

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