Litonjua v. Ca
Litonjua v. Ca
Litonjua v. Ca
166299-300
Petitioner,
- versus
Present:
EDUARDO K. LITONJUA, SR., ROBERT T.
YANG, ANGLO PHILS. MARITIME, INC.,
CINEPLEX, INC., DDM GARMENTS, INC., PANGANIBAN, J., Chairman
EDDIE K. LITONJUA SHIPPING AGENCY, SANDOVAL- GUTIERREZ,
INC., EDDIE K. LITONJUA SHIPPING CO., CORONA,
INC., LITONJUA SECURITIES, INC. CARPIO MORALES and
(formerly E. K. Litonjua Sec), LUNETA GARCIA, JJ.
THEATER, INC., E & L REALTY, (formerly
E & L INTL SHIPPING CORP.), FNP CO.,
INC., HOME ENTERPRISES, INC., Promulgated:
BEAUMONT DEV. REALTY CO., INC.,
GLOED LAND CORP., EQUITY TRADING
CO., INC., 3D CORP., L DEV. CORP, LCM December 13, 2005
THEATRICAL ENTERPRISES, INC.,
LITONJUA SHIPPING CO. INC., MACOIL
INC., ODEON REALTY CORP., SARATOGA
REALTY, INC., ACT THEATER INC.
(formerly General Theatrical & Film
Exchange, INC.), AVENUE REALTY, INC.,
AVENUE THEATER, INC. and LVF
PHILIPPINES, INC., (Formerly VF
PHILIPPINES),
Respondents.
x-------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
GARCIA, J.:
In this petition for review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, petitioner Aurelio K. Litonjua, Jr. seeks to nullify
and set aside the Decision of the Court of Appeals (CA) dated March 31, 2004 [1] in consolidated cases C.A.
G.R. Sp. No. 76987 and C.A. G.R. SP. No 78774 and its Resolution dated December 07, 2004, [2] denying
petitioners motion for reconsideration.
The recourse is cast against the following factual backdrop:
Petitioner Aurelio K. Litonjua, Jr. (Aurelio) and herein respondent Eduardo K. Litonjua, Sr. (Eduardo) are
brothers. The legal dispute between them started when, on December 4, 2002, in the Regional Trial Court
(RTC) at Pasig City, Aurelio filed a suit against his brother Eduardo and herein respondent Robert T. Yang
(Yang) and several corporations for specific performance and accounting. In his complaint, [3] docketed as Civil
Case No. 69235 and eventually raffled to Branch 68 of the court, [4]Aurelio alleged that, since June 1973, he and
Eduardo are into a joint venture/partnership arrangement in the Odeon Theater business which had expanded
thru investment in Cineplex, Inc., LCM Theatrical Enterprises, Odeon Realty Corporation (operator of Odeon I
and II theatres), Avenue Realty, Inc., owner of lands and buildings, among other corporations. Yang is described
in the complaint as petitioners and Eduardos partner in their Odeon Theater investment. [5] The same complaint
also contained the following material averments:
3.01 On or about 22 June 1973, [Aurelio] and Eduardo entered into a joint venture/partnership
for the continuation of their family business and common family funds .
3.01.1 This joint venture/[partnership] agreement was contained in a memorandum addressed
by Eduardo to his siblings, parents and other relatives . Copy of this memorandum is attached
hereto and made an integral part as Annex A and the portion referring to [Aurelio] submarked
as Annex A-1.
3.02 It was then agreed upon between [Aurelio] and Eduardo that in consideration of [Aurelios]
retaining his share in the remaining family businesses (mostly, movie theaters, shipping and land
development) and contributing his industry to the continued operation of these businesses,
[Aurelio] will be given P1 Million or 10% equity in all these businesses and those to be
subsequently acquired by them whichever is greater. . . .
4.01 from 22 June 1973 to about August 2001, or [in] a span of 28 years, [Aurelio] and Eduardo
had accumulated in their joint venture/partnership various assets including but not limited to the
corporate defendants and [their] respective assets.
4.02 In addition . . . the joint venture/partnership had also acquired [various other assets], but
Eduardo caused to be registered in the names of other parties.
xxx xxx xxx
4.04 The substantial assets of most of the corporate defendants consist of real properties . A list
of some of these real properties is attached hereto and made an integral part as Annex B.
xxx xxx xxx
5.02 Sometime in 1992, the relations between [Aurelio] and Eduardo became sour so that
[Aurelio] requested for an accounting and liquidation of his share in the joint venture/partnership
[but these demands for complete accounting and liquidation were not heeded].
xxx xxx xxx
5.05 What is worse, [Aurelio] has reasonable cause to believe that Eduardo and/or the corporate
defendants as well as Bobby [Yang], are transferring . . . various real properties of the
corporations belonging to the joint venture/partnership to other parties in fraud of [Aurelio]. In
consequence, [Aurelio] is therefore causing at this time the annotation on the titles of these real
properties a notice of lis pendens . (Emphasis in the original; underscoring and words in bracket
added.)
For ease of reference, Annex A-1 of the complaint, which petitioner asserts to have been meant for him by his
brother Eduardo, pertinently reads:
10) JR. (AKL) [Referring to petitioner Aurelio K. Litonjua]:
You have now your own life to live after having been married. .
I am trying my best to mold you the way I work so you can follow the pattern . You will be the
only one left with the company, among us brothers and I will ask you to stay as I want you to run
this office every time I am away. I want you to run it the way I am trying to run it because I will
be all alone and I will depend entirely to you (sic). My sons will not be ready to help me yet until
about maybe 15/20 years from now. Whatever is left in the corporation, I will make sure that you
get ONE MILLION PESOS (P1,000,000.00) or ten percent (10%) equity, whichever is greater. We
two will gamble the whole thing of what I have and what you are entitled to. . It will be you and
me alone on this. If ever I pass away, I want you to take care of all of this. You keep my share
for my two sons are ready take over but give them the chance to run the company which I have
built.
xxx xxx xxx
Because you will need a place to stay, I will arrange to give you first ONE HUNDRED
THOUSANDS PESOS: (P100, 000.00) in cash or asset, like Lt. Artiaga so you can live better
there. The rest I will give you in form of stocks which you can keep. This stock I assure you is
good and saleable. I will also gladly give you the share of Wack-Wack and Valley Golf because
you have been good. The rest will be in stocks from all the corporations which I repeat, ten
percent (10%) equity. [6]
On December 20, 2002, Eduardo and the corporate respondents, as defendants a quo, filed a
joint ANSWER With Compulsory Counterclaim denying under oath the material allegations of the complaint,
more particularly that portion thereof depicting petitioner and Eduardo as having entered into a contract of
partnership. As affirmative defenses, Eduardo, et al., apart from raising a jurisdictional matter, alleged that the
complaint states no cause of action, since no cause of action may be derived from the actionable document, i.e.,
Annex A-1, being void under the terms of Article 1767 in relation to Article 1773 of the Civil Code, infra. It is
further alleged that whatever undertaking Eduardo agreed to do, if any, under Annex A-1, are unenforceable
under the provisions of the Statute of Frauds.[7]
For his part, Yang - who was served with summons long after the other defendants submitted their answer
moved to dismiss on the ground, inter alia, that, as to him, petitioner has no cause of action and the complaint
does not state any.[8] Petitioner opposed this motion to dismiss.
On January 10, 2003, Eduardo, et al., filed a Motion to Resolve Affirmative Defenses. [9] To this motion,
petitioner interposed an Opposition with ex-Parte Motion to Set the Case for Pre-trial. [10]
Acting on the separate motions immediately adverted to above, the trial court, in an Omnibus Order
dated March 5, 2003, denied the affirmative defenses and, except for Yang, set the case for pre-trial on April
10, 2003.[11]
In another Omnibus Order of April 2, 2003, the same court denied the motion of Eduardo, et al., for
reconsideration[12] and Yangs motion to dismiss. The following then transpired insofar as Yang is concerned:
1. On April 14, 2003, Yang filed his ANSWER, but expressly reserved the right to seek reconsideration
of the April 2, 2003 Omnibus Order and to pursue his failed motion to dismiss [13] to its full resolution.
2. On April 24, 2003, he moved for reconsideration of the Omnibus Order of April 2, 2003, but his
motion was denied in an Order of July 4, 2003.[14]
3. On August 26, 2003, Yang went to the Court of Appeals (CA) in a petition for certiorari under Rule 65
of the Rules of Court, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 78774,[15] to nullify the separate orders of the trial court,
the first denying his motion to dismiss the basic complaint and, the second, denying his motion for
reconsideration.
Earlier, Eduardo and the corporate defendants, on the contention that grave abuse of discretion and
injudicious haste attended the issuance of the trial courts aforementioned Omnibus Orders dated March 5, and
April 2, 2003, sought relief from the CA via similar recourse. Their petition for certiorari was docketed as CA
G.R. SP No. 76987.
Per its resolution dated October 2, 2003, [16] the CAs 14th Division ordered the consolidation of CA G.R.
SP No. 78774 with CA G.R. SP No. 76987.
Following the submission by the parties of their respective Memoranda of Authorities, the appellate
court came out with the herein assailed Decision dated March 31, 2004, finding for Eduardo and Yang, as lead
petitioners therein, disposing as follows:
WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered granting the issuance of the writ of certiorari
in these consolidated cases annulling, reversing and setting aside the assailed orders of the
court a quodated March 5, 2003, April 2, 2003 and July 4, 2003 and the complaint filed by
private respondent [now petitioner Aurelio] against all the petitioners [now herein respondents
Eduardo, et al.] with the court a quo is hereby dismissed.
SO ORDERED.[17] (Emphasis in the original; words in bracket added.)
Explaining its case disposition, the appellate court stated, inter alia, that the alleged partnership, as evidenced
by the actionable documents, Annex A and A-1 attached to the complaint, and upon which petitioner solely
predicates his right/s allegedly violated by Eduardo, Yang and the corporate defendants a quo is void or
legally inexistent.
In time, petitioner moved for reconsideration but his motion was denied by the CA in its equally
assailed Resolution of December 7, 2004.[18] .
Hence, petitioners present recourse, on the contention that the CA erred:
A. When it ruled that there was no partnership created by the actionable document because this
was not a public instrument and immovable properties were contributed to the partnership.
B. When it ruled that the actionable document did not create a demandable right in favor of
petitioner.
C. When it ruled that the complaint stated no cause of action against [respondent] Robert Yang;
and
D. When it ruled that petitioner has changed his theory on appeal when all that Petitioner had
done was to support his pleaded cause of action by another legal perspective/argument.
The petition lacks merit.
Petitioners demand, as defined in the petitory portion of his complaint in the trial court, is for delivery
or payment to him, as Eduardos and Yangs partner, of his partnership/joint venture share, after an accounting
has been duly conducted of what he deems to be partnership/joint venture property. [19]
A partnership exists when two or more persons agree to place their money, effects, labor, and skill in
lawful commerce or business, with the understanding that there shall be a proportionate sharing of the profits
and losses between them.[20] A contract of partnership is defined by the Civil Code as one where two or more
persons bound themselves to contribute money, property, or industry to a common fund with the intention of
dividing the profits among themselves.[21] A joint venture, on the other hand, is hardly distinguishable from,
and may be likened to, a partnership since their elements are similar, i.e., community of interests in the
business and sharing of profits and losses. Being a form of partnership, a joint venture is generally governed
by the law on partnership.[22]
The underlying issue that necessarily comes to mind in this proceedings is whether or not petitioner and
respondent Eduardo are partners in the theatre, shipping and realty business, as one claims but which the other
denies. And the issue bearing on the first assigned error relates to the question of what legal provision is
applicable under the premises, petitioner seeking, as it were, to enforce the actionable document - Annex A-
1 - which he depicts in his complaint to be the contract of partnership/joint venture between himself and
Eduardo. Clearly, then, a look at the legal provisions determinative of the existence, or defining the formal
requisites, of a partnership is indicated. Foremost of these are the following provisions of the Civil Code:
Art. 1771. A partnership may be constituted in any form, except where immovable property or
real rights are contributed thereto, in which case a public instrument shall be necessary.
Art. 1772. Every contract of partnership having a capital of three thousand pesos or more, in
money or property, shall appear in a public instrument, which must be recorded in the Office of
the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Failure to comply with the requirement of the preceding paragraph shall not affect the liability of
the partnership and the members thereof to third persons.
Art. 1773. A contract of partnership is void, whenever immovable property is contributed
thereto, if an inventory of said property is not made, signed by the parties, and attached to the
public instrument.
Annex A-1, on its face, contains typewritten entries, personal in tone, but is unsigned and undated. As
an unsigned document, there can be no quibbling that Annex A-1 does not meet the public instrumentation
requirements exacted under Article 1771 of the Civil Code. Moreover, being unsigned and doubtless referring
to a partnership involving more than P3,000.00 in money or property, Annex A-1 cannot be presented for
notarization, let alone registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), as called for under the
Article 1772 of the Code. And inasmuch as the inventory requirement under the succeeding Article 1773 goes
into the matter of validity when immovable property is contributed to the partnership, the next logical point of
inquiry turns on the nature of petitioners contribution, if any, to the supposed partnership.
The CA, addressing the foregoing query, correctly stated that petitioners contribution consisted of
immovables and real rights. Wrote that court:
A further examination of the allegations in the complaint would show that [petitioners]
contribution to the so-called partnership/joint venture was his supposed share in the family
business that is consisting of movie theaters, shipping and land development under paragraph
3.02 of the complaint. In other words, his contribution as a partner in the alleged
partnership/joint venture consisted of immovable properties and real rights. . [23]
Significantly enough, petitioner matter-of-factly concurred with the appellate courts observation that,
prescinding from what he himself alleged in his basic complaint, his contribution to the partnership consisted of
his share in the Litonjua family businesses which owned variable immovable properties. Petitioners assertion in
his motion for reconsideration[24] of the CAs decision, that what was to be contributed to the business [of the
partnership] was [petitioners] industry and his share in the family [theatre and land development]
business leaves no room for speculation as to what petitioner contributed to the perceived partnership.
Lest it be overlooked, the contract-validating inventory requirement under Article 1773 of the Civil
Code applies as long real property or real rights are initially brought into the partnership. In short, it is really of
no moment which of the partners, or, in this case, who between petitioner and his brother Eduardo, contributed
immovables. In context, the more important consideration is that real property was contributed, in which case
an inventory of the contributed property duly signed by the parties should be attached to the public instrument,
else there is legally no partnership to speak of.
Petitioner, in an obvious bid to evade the application of Article 1773, argues that the immovables in
question were not contributed, but were acquired after the formation of the supposed partnership. Needless to
stress, the Court cannot accord cogency to this specious argument. For, as earlier stated, petitioner himself
admitted contributing his share in the supposed shipping, movie theatres and realty development family
businesses which already owned immovables even before Annex A-1 was allegedly executed.
Considering thus the value and nature of petitioners alleged contribution to the purported partnership,
the Court, even if so disposed, cannot plausibly extend Annex A-1 the legal effects that petitioner so desires
and pleads to be given. Annex A-1, in fine, cannot support the existence of the partnership sued upon and
sought to be enforced. The legal and factual milieu of the case calls for this disposition. A partnership may be
constituted in any form, save when immovable property or real rights are contributed thereto or when the
partnership has a capital of at least P3,000.00, in which case a public instrument shall be necessary. [25] And if
only to stress what has repeatedly been articulated, an inventory to be signed by the parties and attached to the
public instrument is also indispensable to the validity of the partnership whenever immovable property is
contributed to it.
Given the foregoing perspective, what the appellate court wrote in its assailed Decision [26] about the
probative value and legal effect of Annex A-1 commends itself for concurrence:
Considering that the allegations in the complaint showed that [petitioner] contributed immovable
properties to the alleged partnership, the Memorandum (Annex A of the complaint) which purports to
establish the said partnership/joint venture is NOT a public instrument and there was NO inventory of
the immovable property duly signed by the parties. As such, the said Memorandum is null and void for
purposes of establishing the existence of a valid contract of partnership. Indeed, because of the failure
to comply with the essential formalities of a valid contract, the purported partnership/joint venture is
legally inexistent and it produces no effect whatsoever. Necessarily, a void or legally inexistent contract
cannot be the source of any contractual or legal right. Accordingly, the allegations in the complaint,
including the actionable document attached thereto, clearly demonstrates that [petitioner] has NO valid
contractual or legal right which could be violated by the [individual respondents] herein. As a
consequence, [petitioners] complaint does NOT state a valid cause of action because NOT all the
essential elements of a cause of action are present. (Underscoring and words in bracket added.)
Likewise well-taken are the following complementary excerpts from the CAs equally assailed Resolution of
December 7, 2004[27] denying petitioners motion for reconsideration:
Further, We conclude that despite glaring defects in the allegations in the complaint as well as the
actionable document attached thereto (Rollo, p. 191), the [trial] court did not appreciate and
apply the legal provisions which were brought to its attention by herein [respondents] in the
their pleadings. In our evaluation of [petitioners] complaint, the latter alleged inter alia to have
contributed immovable properties to the alleged partnership but the actionable document is not a
public document and there was no inventory of immovable properties signed by the parties. Both
the allegations in the complaint and the actionable documents considered, it is crystal clear that
[petitioner] has no valid or legal right which could be violated by [respondents]. (Words in
bracket added.)
Under the second assigned error, it is petitioners posture that Annex A-1, assuming its inefficacy or nullity as
a partnership document, nevertheless created demandable rights in his favor. As petitioner succinctly
puts it in this petition:
43. Contrariwise, this actionable document, especially its above-quoted provisions, established an
actionable contract even though it may not be a partnership. This actionable contract is what is
known as an innominate contract (Civil Code, Article 1307).
44. It may not be a contract of loan, or a mortgage or whatever, but surely the contract does create
rights and obligations of the parties and which rights and obligations may be enforceable and
demandable. Just because the relationship created by the agreement cannot be specifically
labeled or pigeonholed into a category of nominate contract does not mean it is void or
unenforceable.
Petitioner has thus thrusted the notion of an innominate contract on this Court - and earlier on the CA after he
experienced a reversal of fortune thereat - as an afterthought. The appellate court, however, cannot really be
faulted for not yielding to petitioners dubious stratagem of altering his theory of joint venture/partnership to an
innominate contract. For, at bottom, the appellate courts certiorari jurisdiction was circumscribed by what was
alleged to have been the order/s issued by the trial court in grave abuse of discretion. As respondent Yang
pointedly observed,[28] since the parties basic position had been well-defined, that of petitioner being that the
actionable document established a partnership/joint venture, it is on those positions that the appellate court
exercised its certiorari jurisdiction. Petitioners act of changing his original theory is an impermissible practice
and constitutes, as the CA aptly declared, an admission of the untenability of such theory in the first place.
[Petitioner] is now humming a different tune . . . . In a sudden twist of stance, he has now contended
that the actionable instrument may be considered an innominate contract. xxx Verily, this now
changes [petitioners] theory of the case which is not only prohibited by the Rules but also is an
implied admission that the very theory he himself has adopted, filed and prosecuted before the
respondent court is erroneous.
Be that as it may . . We hold that this new theory contravenes [petitioners] theory of the actionable
document being a partnership document. If anything, it is so obvious we do have to test the
sufficiency of the cause of action on the basis of partnership law xxx. [29] (Emphasis in the
original; Words in bracket added).
But even assuming in gratia argumenti that Annex A-1 partakes of a perfected innominate contract,
petitioners complaint would still be dismissible as against Eduardo and, more so, against Yang. It cannot be
over-emphasized that petitioner points to Eduardo as the author of Annex A-1. Withal, even on this
consideration alone, petitioners claim against Yang is doomed from the very start.
As it were, the only portion of Annex A-1 which could perhaps be remotely regarded as vesting petitioner with
a right to demand from respondent Eduardo the observance of a determinate conduct, reads:
xxx You will be the only one left with the company, among us brothers and I will ask you to stay as I
want you to run this office everytime I am away. I want you to run it the way I am trying to run it
because I will be alone and I will depend entirely to you, My sons will not be ready to help me
yet until about maybe 15/20 years from now. Whatever is left in the corporation, I will make
sure that you get ONE MILLION PESOS (P1,000,000.00) or ten percent (10%) equity, whichever
is greater. (Underscoring added)
It is at once apparent that what respondent Eduardo imposed upon himself under the above passage, if he
indeed wrote Annex A-1, is a promise which is not to be performed within one year from contract
execution on June 22, 1973. Accordingly, the agreement embodied in Annex A-1 is covered by the
Statute of Frauds and ergo unenforceable for non-compliance therewith.[30] By force of the statute of
frauds, an agreement that by its terms is not to be performed within a year from the making thereof
shall be unenforceable by action, unless the same, or some note or memorandum thereof, be in writing
and subscribed by the party charged. Corollarily, no action can be proved unless the requirement
exacted by the statute of frauds is complied with.[31]
Lest it be overlooked, petitioner is the intended beneficiary of the P1 Million or 10% equity of the family
businesses supposedly promised by Eduardo to give in the near future. Any suggestion that the stated
amount or the equity component of the promise was intended to go to a common fund would be to read
something not written in Annex A-1. Thus, even this angle alone argues against the very idea of a
partnership, the creation of which requires two or more contracting minds mutually agreeing to
contribute money, property or industry to a common fund with the intention of dividing the profits
between or among themselves.[32]
In sum then, the Court rules, as did the CA, that petitioners complaint for specific performance anchored on an
actionable document of partnership which is legally inexistent or void or, at best, unenforceable does not state
a cause of action as against respondent Eduardo and the corporate defendants. And if no of action can
successfully be maintained against respondent Eduardo because no valid partnership existed between him and
petitioner, the Court cannot see its way clear on how the same action could plausibly prosper against Yang.
Surely, Yang could not have become a partner in, or could not have had any form of business relationship with,
an inexistent partnership.
As may be noted, petitioner has not, in his complaint, provide the logical nexus that would tie Yang to him as his
partner. In fact, attendant circumstances would indicate the contrary. Consider:
1. Petitioner asserted in his complaint that his so-called joint venture/partnership with Eduardo was for
the continuation of their family business and common family funds which were theretofore being mainly
managed by Eduardo. [33] But Yang denies kinship with the Litonjua family and petitioner has not
disputed the disclaimer.
2. In some detail, petitioner mentioned what he had contributed to the joint venture/partnership with
Eduardo and what his share in the businesses will be. No allegation is made whatsoever about what
Yang contributed, if any, let alone his proportional share in the profits. But such allegation cannot,
however, be made because, as aptly observed by the CA, the actionable document did not contain such
provision, let alone mention the name of Yang. How, indeed, could a person be considered a partner
when the document purporting to establish the partnership contract did not even mention his name.
3. Petitioner states in par. 2.01 of the complaint that [he] and Eduardo are business partners in the
[respondent] corporations, while Bobby is his and Eduardos partner in their Odeon Theater investment
(par. 2.03). This means that the partnership between petitioner and Eduardo came first; Yang became
their partner in their Odeon Theater investment thereafter. Several paragraphs later, however,
petitioner would contradict himself by alleging that his investment and that of Eduardo and Yang in the
Odeon theater business has expanded through a reinvestment of profit income and direct investments in
several corporation including but not limited to [six] corporate respondents This simply means that the
Odeon Theatre business came before the corporate respondents. Significantly enough, petitioner refers
to the corporate respondents as progeny of the Odeon Theatre business. [34]
Needless to stress, petitioner has not sufficiently established in his complaint the legal vinculum whence he
sourced his right to drag Yang into the fray. The Court of Appeals, in its assailed decision, captured and
formulated the legal situation in the following wise:
[Respondent] Yang, is impleaded because, as alleged in the complaint, he is a partner of
[Eduardo] and the [petitioner] in the Odeon Theater Investment which expanded through
reinvestments of profits and direct investments in several corporations, thus:
xxx xxx xxx
Clearly, [petitioners] claim against Yang arose from his alleged partnership with petitioner and
the respondent. However, there was NO allegation in the complaint which directly alleged how
the supposed contractual relation was created between [petitioner] and Yang. More importantly,
however, the foregoing ruling of this Court that the purported partnership between [Eduardo] is
void and legally inexistent directly affects said claim against Yang. Since [petitioner] is trying to
establish his claim against Yang by linking him to the legally inexistent partnership . . . such
attempt had become futile because there was NOTHING that would contractually connect
[petitioner] and Yang. To establish a valid cause of action, the complaint should have a
statement of fact upon which to connect [respondent] Yang to the alleged partnership between
[petitioner] and respondent [Eduardo], including their alleged investment in the Odeon Theater.
A statement of facts on those matters is pivotal to the complaint as they would constitute the
ultimate facts necessary to establish the elements of a cause of action against Yang. [35]
Pressing its point, the CA later stated in its resolution denying petitioners motion for reconsideration the
following:
xxx Whatever the complaint calls it, it is the actionable document attached to the
complaint that is controlling. Suffice it to state, We have not ignored the actionable document As
a matter of fact, We emphasized in our decision that insofar as [Yang] is concerned, he is not
even mentioned in the said actionable document. We are therefore puzzled how a person not
mentioned in a document purporting to establish a partnership could be considered a partner.
[36]
(Words in bracket ours).
The last issue raised by petitioner, referring to whether or not he changed his theory of the case, as
peremptorily determined by the CA, has been discussed at length earlier and need not detain us long. Suffice it
to say that after the CA has ruled that the alleged partnership is inexistent, petitioner took a different tack.
Thus, from a joint venture/partnership theory which he adopted and consistently pursued in his complaint,
petitioner embraced the innominate contract theory. Illustrative of this shift is petitioners statement in par. #8
of his motion for reconsideration of the CAs decision combined with what he said in par. # 43 of this petition, as
follows:
8. Whether or not the actionable document creates a partnership, joint venture, or
whatever, is a legal matter. What is determinative for purposes of sufficiency of the
complainants allegations, is whether the actionable document bears out an actionable contract be
it a partnership, a joint venture or whatever or some innominate contract It may be noted that
one kind of innominate contract is what is known as du ut facias (I give that you may do).[37]
43. Contrariwise, this actionable document, especially its above-quoted provisions,
established an actionable contract even though it may not be a partnership. This actionable
contract is what is known as an innominate contract (Civil Code, Article 1307). [38]
Springing surprises on the opposing party is offensive to the sporting idea of fair play, justice and due process;
hence, the proscription against a party shifting from one theory at the trial court to a new and different theory
in the appellate court.[39] On the same rationale, an issue which was neither averred in the complaint cannot be
raised for the first time on appeal. [40] It is not difficult, therefore, to agree with the CA when it made short shrift
of petitioners innominate contract theory on the basis of the foregoing basic reasons.
Petitioners protestation that his act of introducing the concept of innominate contract was not a case of
changing theories but of supporting his pleaded cause of action that of the existence of a partnership - by
another legal perspective/argument, strikes the Court as a strained attempt to rationalize an untenable position.
Paragraph 12 of his motion for reconsideration of the CAs decision virtually relegates partnership as a fall-back
theory. Two paragraphs later, in the same notion, petitioner faults the appellate court for reading, with myopic
eyes, the actionable document solely as establishing a partnership/joint venture. Verily, the cited paragraphs
are a study of a party hedging on whether or not to pursue the original cause of action or altogether
abandoning the same, thus:
12. Incidentally, assuming that the actionable document created a partnership between [respondent]
Eduardo, Sr. and [petitioner], no immovables were contributed to this partnership. xxx
14. All told, the Decision takes off from a false premise that the actionable document attached to
the complaint does not establish a contractual relationship between [petitioner] and Eduardo, Sr.
and Roberto T Yang simply because his document does not create a partnership or a joint
venture. This is a myopic reading of the actionable document.
Per the Courts own count, petitioner used in his complaint the mixed words joint venture/partnership nineteen
(19) times and the term partner four (4) times. He made reference to the law of joint venture/partnership
[being applicable] to the business relationship between [him], Eduardo and Bobby [Yang] and to his rights in
all specific properties of their joint venture/partnership . Given this consideration, petitioners right of action
against respondents Eduardo and Yang doubtless pivots on the existence of the partnership between the three
of them, as purportedly evidenced by the undated and unsigned Annex A-1. A void Annex A-1, as an
actionable document of partnership, would strip petitioner of a cause of action under the premises. A complaint
for delivery and accounting of partnership property based on such void or legally non-existent actionable
document is dismissible for failure to state of action. So, in gist, said the Court of Appeals. The Court agrees.
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is DENIED and the impugned Decision and Resolution of the Court of
Appeals AFFIRMED.
Cost against the petitioner.
SO ORDERED.