Ayala Inc. vs. CA
Ayala Inc. vs. CA
Ayala Inc. vs. CA
*
G.R. No. 118305. February 12, 1998.
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35 Francel Realty Corporation vs. Court of Appeals, 252 SCRA 127, 134, January 22,
1996, per Mendoza, J.; citing Buan vs. Cama-ganacan, 16 SCRA 321, February 28, 1966.
* SECOND DIVISION.
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MARTINEZ, J.:
Under Article 161 of the Civil Code, what debts and obligations
contracted by the husband alone are considered “for the benefit of
the conjugal partnership” which are chargeable against the conjugal
partnership? Is a surety agreement or an accommodation contract
entered into by the husband in favor of his employer within the
contemplation of the said provision?
These are the issues which we will resolve in this petition for
review.
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The petitioner assails the decision dated April 14, 1994 of the
respondent Court of Appeals in “Spouses Alfredo and Encarnacion
Ching vs. Ayala Investment and Development
1
Corporation, et al.,”
docketed as CA-G.R. CV No. 29632, upholding the decision of the
Regional Trial Court of Pasig, Branch 168, which ruled that the
conjugal partnership of gains of respondents-spouses Alfredo and
Encarnacion Ching is not liable for the payment of the debts secured
by respondent-husband Alfredo Ching.
A chronology of the essential antecedent facts is necessary for a
clear understanding of the case at bar.
Philippine Blooming Mills (hereinafter referred to as PBM)
obtained a P50,300,000.00 loan from petitioner Ayala Investment
and Development Corporation (hereinafter referred to as AIDC). As
added security for the credit line extended to PBM, respondent
Alfredo Ching, Executive Vice President of PBM, executed security
agreements on December 10, 1980 and on March 20, 1981 making
himself jointly and severally answerable with PBM’s indebtedness
to AIDC.
PBM failed to pay the loan. Thus, on July 30, 1981, AIDC filed a
case for sum of money against PBM and respondent-husband
Alfredo Ching with the then Court of First Instance of Rizal (Pasig),
Branch VIII, entitled “Ayala Investment and Development
Corporation vs. Philippine Blooming Mills and Alfredo Ching,”
docketed as Civil Case No. 42228.
After trial, the court rendered judgment ordering PBM and
respondent-husband Alfredo Ching to jointly and severally pay
AIDC the principal amount of P50,300,000.00 with interests.
Pending appeal of the judgment in Civil Case No. 42228, upon
motion of AIDC, the lower court issued a writ of execution pending
appeal. Upon AIDC’s putting up of an
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“WHEREFORE, the petition for certiorari in this case is granted and the
challenged order of the respondent Judge dated June 14, 1982 in Civil Case
No. 46309 is hereby set aside and nullified. The same petition insofar as it
seeks to enjoin the respondent Judge from proceeding with Civil Case No.
46309 is, however, denied. No pronouncement is here made as to costs. x x
5
x x.”
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5 Pars. 4, 5, dispositive portion of the Decision in CA-G.R. No. SP-14404; p. 36, rollo.
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the two provisions are substantially the same. Nevertheless, We agree with
the trial court that the Family Code is the applicable law on the matter x x x
x x x.
Article 121 of the Family Code provides that ‘The conjugal partnership
shall be liable for: x x x (2) All debts and obligations contracted during the
marriage by the designated Administrator-Spouse for the benefit of the
conjugal partnership of gains x x x.’ The burden of proof that the debt was
contracted for the benefit of the conjugal partnership of gains, lies with the
creditor-party litigant claiming as such. In the case at bar, respondent-
appellant AIDC failed to prove that the debt was contracted by appellee-
husband, for the benefit of the conjugal partnership of gains.”
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“The wordings of Article 161 of the Civil Code is very clear: for the
partnership to be held liable, the husband must have contracted the debt ‘for
the benefit of’ the partnership, thus:
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9
the case of Cobb-Perez vs. Lantin, that the husband as head of the
family and as administrator of the conjugal partnership is presumed
to have contracted obligations for the benefit of the family or the
conjugal partnership.
Contrary to the contention of the petitioners, the case of Cobb-
Perez is not applicable in the case at bar. This Court has, on several
instances, interpreted the term “for the benefit of the conjugal
partnership.” 10
In the cases of Javier vs. Osmeña, Abella de Diaz vs. Erlanger
11 12
& Galinger, Inc., Cobb-Perez vs. Lantin and G-Tractors, Inc. vs.
13
Court of Appeals, cited by the petitioners, we held that:
“The debts contracted by the husband during the marriage relation, for and
in the exercise of the industry or profession by which he contributes toward
the support of his family, are not his personal and private debts, and the
products or income from the wife’s own property, which, like those of her
husband’s, are liable for the payment of the marriage expenses, cannot be
excepted from the payment of such debts.” (Javier)
“The husband, as the manager of the partnership (Article 1412, Civil
Code), has a right to embark the partnership in an ordinary commercial
enterprise for gain, and the fact that the wife may not approve of a venture
does not make it a private and personal one of the husband.” (Abella de
Diaz)
“Debts contracted by the husband for and in the exercise of the industry
or profession by which he contributes to the support of the family, cannot be
deemed to be his exclusive and private debts.” (Cobb-Perez)
“x x x if he incurs an indebtedness in the legitimate pursuit of his career
or profession or suffers losses in a legitimate business, the conjugal
partnership must equally bear the indebtedness and the
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“The fruits of the paraphernal property which form part of the assets of the
conjugal partnership, are subject to the payment of the debts and expenses
of the spouses, but not to the payment of the personal obligations (guaranty
agreements) of the husband, unless it be proved that such obligations were
productive of some benefit to the family.” (Ansaldo; parenthetical phrase
ours.)
“When there is no showing that the execution of an indemnity agreement
by the husband redounded to the benefit of his family, the undertaking is not
a conjugal debt but an obligation personal to him.” (Liberty Insurance)
“In the most categorical language, a conjugal partnership under Article
161 of the new Civil Code is liable only for such ‘debts and obligations
contracted by the husband for the benefit of the conjugal partnership.’ There
must be the requisite showing then of some advantage which clearly accrued
to the welfare of the spouses. Certainly, to make a conjugal partnership
respond for a liability that should appertain to the husband alone is to defeat
and frustrate the avowed objective of the new Civil Code to show the utmost
concern for the solidarity and well-being of the family as a unit. The
husband, therefore, is denied the power to assume unnecessary and
unwarranted risks to the financial stability of the conjugal partnership.”
(Luzon Surety, Inc.)
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“I concur in the result, but would like to make of record that, in my opinion,
the words ‘all debts and obligations contracted by the husband for the
benefit of the conjugal partnership’ used in Article 161 of the Civil Code of
the Philippines in describing the charges and obligations for which the
conjugal partnership is liable do not require that actual profit or benefit must
accrue to the conjugal partnership from the husband’s transaction; but it
suffices that the transaction should be one that normally would produce such
benefit for the partnership. This is the ratio behind our ruling in Javier vs.
Osmeña, 34 Phil. 336, that obligations incurred by the husband in the
practice of his profession are collectible from the conjugal partnership.”
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“No matter how one looks at it, the debt/credit extended by respondents-
appellants is purely a corporate debt granted to PBM, with petitioner-
appellee-husband merely signing as surety. While such petitioner-appellee-
husband, as such surety, is solidarily liable with the principal debtor AIDC,
such liability under the Civil Code provisions is specifically restricted by
Article 122 (par. 1) of the Family Code, so that debts for which the husband
is liable may not be charged against conjugal partnership properties. Article
122 of the Family Code is explicit—‘The payment of personal debts
contracted by the husband or the wife before or during the marriage shall
not be charged to the conjugal partnership except insofar as they redounded
to the benefit of the family.’
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18 Ansaldo, et al. vs. Liberty Insurance Company, Inc. & Luzon Surety Company,
supra.
286
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19 Court of Appeals Resolution of Nov. 28, 1994 denying the motion for
reconsideration, pp. 1-2; Annex “B”; p. 41, rollo.
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The fact that on several occasions the lending institutions did not
require the signature of the wife and the husband signed alone does
not mean that being a surety became part of his profession. Neither
could he be presumed to have acted for the conjugal partnership.
Article 121, paragraph 3, of the Family Code is emphatic that the
payment of personal debts contracted by the husband or the wife
before or during the marriage shall not be charged to the conjugal
partnership except to the extent that they redounded to the benefit of
the family.
Here, the property in dispute also involves the family home. The
loan is a corporate loan not a personal one. Signing as a surety is
certainly not an exercise of an industry or profession nor an act of
administration for the benefit of the family.
On the basis of the facts, the rules, the law and equity, the
assailed decision should be upheld as we now uphold it. This is, of
course, without prejudice to petitioner’s right to enforce the
obligation in its favor against the PBM receiver in accordance with
the rehabilitation program and payment schedule approved or to be
approved by the Securities & Exchange Commission.
WHEREFORE, the petition for review should be, as it is hereby,
DENIED for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.
Petition denied.
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