StrongHold Decision
StrongHold Decision
StrongHold Decision
COURT OF APPEALS
MANILA
Promulgated:
STRONGHOLD STEEL
CORPORATION (SSC), April 3, 2013
Respondent.
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DECISION
DICDICAN, J.:
“SECTION VII
EFFECTIVITY
“This MOA shall take effect upon its approval by the ERC
and confirmation that Stronghold is similarly situated to that of SKK
Steel Corporation. The billing arrangement set forth herein shall
cease to be implemented subject to the provision in SECTION III of
this MOA or upon the commencement of the Third Regulatory
Period, whichever comes earlier.”
“SECTION III
ANOTHER BILLING DETERMINANT METHODOLOGY
Then came January 15, 2009 when the petitioner NGCP took
over TRANSCO's operation and management of the nationwide
electrical transmission system of the Philippines. The petitioner
continued to do what TRANSCO had been doing. In the matter of
billings its load customers, it billed them according to the 2006
Revised OATS Rules and AS-CRM. Of course, it respected the
special billing arrangement that TRANSCO had with SSC under the
MOA signed on June 29, 2007.
“SECTION VII
EFFECTIVITY
“This MOA shall take effect upon its approval by the ERC
and confirmation that Stronghold is similarly situated to that of SKK
Steel Corporation. The billing arrangement set forth herein shall
cease to be implemented subject to the provision in SECTION III of
this MOA or upon the commencement of the Third Regulatory
Period, whichever comes earlier.”
“SECTION III
ANOTHER BILLING DETERMINANT METHODOLOGY
Thus, by any legal yardstick, it is evident and plain that the ERC
erred in holding that, after January 2011, the transmission charges for
the respondent SSC by the petitioner should be calculated on the
basis of its coincident peak demand (CPD). In contractual relations,
the law allows the parties much leeway and considers their
CA-G.R. SP No. 128380 Page 12
Decision
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agreement or MOA to be the law between them (De Jayme vs. Court
of Appeals, 390 SCRA 380). Courts have no authority to alter a
contract by construction or to make a new contract for the parties;
their duty is confined to the interpretation of the contract which the
parties have made for themselves without regard to its wisdom or
folly as the courts cannot supply material stipulations, read into the
contract words it does not contain or, for that matter, read into it
another intention that would contradict its plain import (LVM
Construction Corporation vs. F.T. Sanchez Construction, et al., G.R.
No. 181961, December 5, 2011; National Power Corporation vs.
Premier Shipping Lines, Inc., 600 SCRA 153; Barrera vs. Lorenzo,
389 SCRA 329; German Marine Agencies, Inc. vs. NLRC, 350 SCRA
629).
“x x x x.
“x x x x.
“x x x x.
“x x x x.
“x x x x.
“x x x x.
“x x x x.
“(a) x x x x.
“(b) x x x x.
“(c) x x x x.
“(d) x x x x.
“(e) x x x x.
SO ORDERED.
ISAIAS DICDICAN
Associate Justice
CA-G.R. SP No. 128380 Page 17
Decision
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WE CONCUR:
MICHAEL P. ELBINIAS
Associate Justice
NINA G. ANTONIO-VALENZUELA
Associate Justice
CERTIFICATION
ISAIAS DICDICAN
Associate Justice
Chairperson, Thirteenth Division