7 Gilat Satellite VS United Coconut Planters Bank

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3/4/23, 2:42 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 720

G.R. No. 189563. April 7, 2014.*


GILAT SATELLITE NETWORKS, LTD., petitioner, vs.
UNITED COCONUT PLANTERS BANK GENERAL
INSURANCE CO., INC., respondent.

Civil Law; Suretyship; Solidary Liability; In suretyship, the


oft-repeated rule is that a surety’s liability is joint and solidary
with that of the principal debtor.—In suretyship, the oft-repeated
rule is that a surety’s liability is joint and solidary with that of the
principal debtor. This undertaking makes a surety agreement an
ancillary contract, as it presupposes the existence of a principal
contract. Nevertheless, although the contract of a surety is in
essence secondary only to a valid principal obligation, its liability
to the creditor or “promise” of the principal is said to be direct,
primary and absolute; in other words, a surety is directly and
equally bound with the principal. He becomes liable for the debt
and duty of the principal obligor, even without possessing a direct
or personal interest in the obligations constituted by the latter.
Thus, a surety is not entitled to a separate notice of default or to
the benefit of excussion. It may in fact be sued separately or
together with the principal debtor.

Same; Same; Same; The acceptance of a surety agreement does


not change in any material way the creditor’s relationship with the
principal debtor nor does it make the surety an active party to the
principal creditor-debtor relationship.—We have held in
Stronghold Insurance Co., Inc. v. Tokyu Construction Co. Ltd.,
588 SCRA 410 (2009), that “[the] acceptance [of a surety
agreement], however, does

_______________

* FIRST DIVISION.

727

not change in any material way the creditor’s relationship with


the principal debtor nor does it make the surety an active party to
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the principal creditor-debtor relationship. In other words, the


acceptance does not give the surety the right to intervene
in the principal contract. The surety’s role arises only upon the
debtor’s default, at which time, it can be directly held liable by the
creditor for payment as a solidary obligor.” Hence, the surety
remains a stranger to the Purchase Agreement. We agree with
petitioner that respondent cannot invoke in its favor the
arbitration clause in the Purchase Agreement, because it is not a
party to that contract. An arbitration agreement being
contractual in nature, it is binding only on the parties thereto, as
well as their assigns and heirs.

Alternative Dispute Resolution Act of 2004 (Republic Act


[R.A.] No. 9285); Arbitration; Section 24 of Republic Act No. 9285
is clear in stating that a referral to arbitration may only take place
“if at least one party so requests not later than the pre-trial
conference, or upon the request of both parties thereafter.”—Section
24 of Republic Act No. 9285 is clear in stating that a referral to
arbitration may only take place “if at least one party so requests
not later than the pre-trial conference, or upon the request of both
parties thereafter.” Respondent has not presented even an iota of
evidence to show that either petitioner or One Virtual submitted
its contesting claim for arbitration.

Civil Law; Suretyship; Sureties do not insure the solvency of


the debtor, but rather the debt itself; The effect is that the creditor
is given the right to directly proceed against either principal debtor
or surety.—Sureties do not insure the solvency of the debtor, but
rather the debt itself. They are contracted precisely to mitigate
risks of non­performance on the part of the obligor. This
responsibility necessarily places a surety on the same level
as that of the principal debtor. The effect is that the creditor
is given the right to directly proceed against either principal
debtor or surety. This is the reason why excussion cannot be
invoked. To require the creditor to proceed to arbitration would
render the very essence of suretyship nugatory and diminish its
value in commerce. At any rate, as we have held in Palmares v.
Court of Appeals, 288 SCRA 422 (1998), “if the surety is
dissatisfied with the degree of activity displayed by the creditor in
the pursuit of his principal, he may pay the debt himself and
become subrogated to all the rights and remedies of the creditor.”

728

Same; Delay; Interest Rates; If an obligation consists in the


payment of a sum of money, and the debtor incurs a delay, the
indemnity for damages, there being no stipulation to the contrary,

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shall be the payment of the interest agreed upon, and in the


absence of stipulation, the legal interest.—Article 2209 of the Civil
Code is clear: “[i]f an obligation consists in the payment of a sum
of money, and the debtor incurs a delay, the indemnity for
damages, there being no stipulation to the contrary, shall be the
payment of the interest agreed upon, and in the absence of
stipulation, the legal interest.”

Same; Same; Delay arises from the time the obligee judicially
or extrajudicially demands from the obligor the performance of the
obligation, and the latter fails to comply.—Delay arises from the
time the obligee judicially or extrajudicially demands from the
obligor the performance of the obligation, and the latter fails to
comply. Delay, as used in Article 1169, is synonymous with
default or mora, which means delay in the fulfillment of
obligations. It is the nonfulfillment of an obligation with respect
to time. In order for the debtor (in this case, the surety) to be in
default, it is necessary that the following requisites be present: (1)
that the obligation be demandable and already liquidated; (2) that
the debtor delays performance; and (3) that the creditor requires
the performance judicially or extrajudicially.

Same; Same; The settled rule is that where there has been an
extrajudicial demand before an action for performance was filed,
interest on the amount due begins to run, not from the date of the
filing of the complaint, but from the date of that extrajudicial
demand.—As to the issue of when interest must accrue, our Civil
Code is explicit in stating that it accrues from the time judicial or
extrajudicial demand is made on the surety. This ruling is in
accordance with the provisions of Article 1169 of the Civil Code
and of the settled rule that where there has been an extrajudicial
demand before an action for performance was filed, interest on
the amount due begins to run, not from the date of the filing of
the complaint, but from the date of that extrajudicial demand.
Considering that respondent failed to pay its obligation on 30 May
2000 in accordance with the Purchase Agreement, and that the
extrajudicial demand of petitioner was sent on 5 June 2000, we
agree with the latter that interest must start to run from the time
petitioner sent its first demand letter (5 June 2000), because the
obligation was already due and demandable at that time.

729

PETITION for review on certiorari of the decision and


resolution of the Court of Appeals.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
  Sycip, Salazar, Hernandez & Gatmaitan for petitioner.

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  MCR Law Offices for respondent.

 
SERENO,  CJ.:
This is an appeal via a Petition for Review on Certiorari
[1] filed 6 November 2009 assailing the Decision[2] and
Resolution[3] of the Court of Appeals (CA) in C.A.-G.R. CV
No. 89263, which reversed the Decision[4] of the Regional
Trial Court (RTC), Branch 141, Makati City in Civil Case
No. 02-461, ordering respondent to pay petitioner a sum of
money.
The antecedent facts, as culled from the CA, are as
follows:
On September 15, 1999, One Virtual placed with GILAT
a purchase order for various telecommunications
equipment (sic), accessories, spares, services and software,
at a total purchase price of Two Million One Hundred
Twenty Eight Thousand Two Hundred Fifty Dollars
(US$2,128,250.00). Of the said purchase price for the goods
delivered, One Virtual promised to pay a portion thereof
totalling US$1.2 Million in accordance with the payment
schedule dated 22 November 1999. To ensure the prompt
payment of this amount, it obtained defendant UCPB
General Insurance Co., Inc.’s surety bond dated 3
December 1999, in favor of GILAT.
During the period between [sic] September 1999 and
June 2000, GILAT shipped and delivered to One Virtual
the purchased products and equipment, as evidenced by
airway bills/Bill of Lading (Exhibits “F,” “F­-1” to “F-8’’).
All of the equipment (including the

_______________  
[1] Rollo, pp. 45-77.
[2] Id., at pp. 12-21; CA Decision dated 6 October 2008, penned by
Associate Justice Magdangal M. De Leon and concurred in by Associate
Justices Josefina Guevara-Salonga and Ramon R. Garcia.
[3] Id., at pp. 23-24; CA Resolution dated 16 September 2009.
[4]  Id., at pp. 151-156; RTC Decision dated 28 December 2006 penned
by Pairing Judge Dina Pestaño Teves.

730

software components for which payment was secured by


the surety bond), was shipped by GILAT and duly received
by One Virtual. Under an endorsement dated December 23,
1999 (Exhibit “E’’), the surety issued, with One Virtual’s
conformity, an amendment to the surety bond, Annex “A”

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thereof, correcting its expiry date from May 30, 2001 to


July 30, 2001.
One Virtual failed to pay GILAT the amount of Four
Hundred Thousand Dollars (US$400,000.00) on the due
date of May 30, 2000 in accordance with the payment
schedule attached as Annex “A” to the surety bond,
prompting GILAT to write the surety defendant UCPB on
June 5, 2000, a demand letter (Exhibit “G”) for payment of
the said amount of US$400,000.00. No part of the amount
set forth in this demand has been paid to date by either
One Virtual or defendant UCPB. One Virtual likewise
failed to pay on the succeeding payment instalment date of
30 November 2000 as set out in Annex “A” of the surety
bond, prompting GILAT to send a second demand letter
dated January 24, 2001, for the payment of the full amount
of US$1,200,000.00 guaranteed under the surety bond, plus
interests and expenses (Exhibits “H’’) and which letter
was received by the defendant surety on January 25, 2001.
However, defendant UCPB failed to settle the amount of
US$1,200,000.00 or a part thereof, hence, the instant
complaint.”[5] (Emphases in the original)
On 24 April 2002, petitioner Gilat Satellite Networks,
Ltd., filed a Complaint[6] against respondent UCPB
General Insurance Co., Inc., to recover the amounts
supposedly covered by the surety bond, plus interests and
expenses. After due hearing, the RTC rendered its
Decision,[7] the dispositive portion of which is herein
quoted:
 

WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Court hereby renders


judgment for the plaintiff, and against the defendant, ordering, to
wit:
1.       The defendant surety to pay the plaintiff the amount of One
Million Two Hundred Thousand Dollars (US$1,200,000.00)
representing the principal debt under the Surety Bond, with

_______________
[5] Id., at pp. 14-15.
[6] Id., at pp. 100-104.
[7] Supra note 4.

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legal interest thereon at the rate of 12% per annum computed


from the time the judgment becomes final and executory until
the obligation is fully settled; and

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2.            The defendant surety to pay the plaintiff the amount of


Forty Four Thousand Four Dollars and Four Cents
(US$44,004.04) representing attorney’s fees and litigation
expenses.
Accordingly, defendant’s counterclaim is hereby dismissed for
want of merit.
SO ORDERED. (Emphasis in the original)

 
In so ruling, the RTC reasoned that there is “no dispute
that plaintiff [petitioner] delivered all the subject
equipments [sic] and the same was installed. Even with the
delivery and installation made, One Virtual failed to pay
any of the payments agreed upon. Demand
notwithstanding, defendant failed and refused and
continued to fail and refused to settle the obligation.”[8]
Considering that its liability was indeed that of a surety, as
“spelled out in the Surety Bond executed by and between
One Virtual as Principal, UCPB as Surety and GILAT as
Creditor/Bond Obligee,”[9] respondent agreed and bound
itself to pay in accordance with the Payment Milestones.
This obligation was not made dependent on any condition
outside the terms and conditions of the Surety Bond and
Payment Milestones.[10]
Insofar as the interests were concerned, the RTC denied
petitioner’s claim on the premise that while a surety can be
held liable for interest even if it becomes more onerous
than the principal obligation, the surety shall only accrue
when the delay or refusal to pay the principal obligation is
without any justifiable cause.[11] Here, respondent failed to
pay its surety obligation because of the advice of its
principal (One Virtual) not to pay.[12] The RTC then
obligated respondent to pay peti-

_______________
 [8] Id., at p. 155.
 [9] Id., at p. 154.
[10] Id., at p. 155.
[11] Id., at p. 156.
[12] Id.

732

tioner the amount of USD1,200,000.00 representing the


principal debt under the Surety Bond, with legal interest at
the rate of 12% per annum computed from the time the

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judgment becomes final and executory, and USD44,004.04


representing attorney’s fees and litigation expenses.
On 18 October 2007, respondent appealed to the CA.[13]
The appellate court rendered a Decision[14] in the following
manner:

WHEREFORE, this appealed case is DISMISSED for lack of


jurisdiction. The trial court’s Decision dated December 28, 2006 is
VACATED. Plaintiff-appellant Gilat Satellite Networks Ltd., and
One Virtual are ordered to proceed to arbitration, the outcome of
which shall necessary bind the parties, including the surety,
defendant-appellant United Coconut Planters Bank General
Insurance Co., Inc.
SO ORDERED. (Emphasis in the original)

 
The CA ruled that in “enforcing a surety contract, the
‘complementary-contracts-construed-together’ doctrine
finds application.” According to this doctrine, the accessory
contract must be construed with the principal agreement.
[15] In this case, the appellate court considered the
Purchase Agreement entered into between petitioner and
One Virtual as the principal contract,[16] whose
stipulations are also binding on the parties to the
suretyship.[17] Bearing in mind the arbitration clause
contained in the Purchase Agreement[18] and pursuant

_______________
[13] Id., at pp. 176-191.
[14] Supra note 2.
[15] Rollo, p. 90.
[16] Id.
[17] Id., at p. 91.
[18] Id., at p. 92. The arbitration clause reads:
“20.1.   In the event of a dispute between Buyer and Seller arising out
of, or relating to this Agreement, its interpretation or performance
hereunder, the parties shall exert their best efforts to resolve the dispute
amicably through negotiations.
20.2.   In the event that a dispute cannot be resolved amicably by the
parties through negotiations within sixty (60) days of the com-

733

to the policy of the courts to encourage alternative dispute


resolution methods,[19] the trial court’s Decision was
vacated; petitioner and One Virtual were ordered to
proceed to arbitration.

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On 9 September 2008, petitioner filed a Motion for


Reconsideration with Motion for Oral Argument. The
motion was denied for lack of merit in a Resolution[20]
issued by the CA on 16 September 2009.
Hence, the instant Petition.
On 31 August 2010, respondent filed a Comment[21] on
the Petition for Review. On 24 November 2010, petitioner
filed a Reply.[22]

Issues
From the foregoing, we reduce the issues to the
following:
1.     Whether or not the CA erred in dismissing the case
and ordering petitioner and One Virtual to arbitrate;
and
2.     Whether or not petitioner is entitled to legal interest
due to the delay in the fulfilment by respondent of
its obligation under the Suretyship Agreement.

_______________
mencement of such negotiations, the dispute shall be submitted to
arbitration in accordance with the laws of the United States, with such
arbitration to be held in New York, United States. Each party shall select
one arbitrator and then those two arbitrators shall in good faith select a
third arbitrator. The arbitration shall be conducted in English. Any
decision resulting from such arbitration shall be final and binding upon
the parties to this Agreement and on any other person participating in the
arbitration. Judgment upon the award may be entered in any court having
jurisdiction thereof.”
[19] Id., at p. 92.
[20] Supra note 3.
[21] Rollo, pp. 400-421.
[22] Id., at pp. 433-448.

734

The Court’s Ruling


The existence of a suretyship agree-
ment does not give the surety the right
to intervene in the principal contract,
nor can an arbitration clause between
the buyer and the seller be invoked by
a non-party such as the surety.
Petitioner alleges that arbitration laws mandate that no
court can compel arbitration, unless a party entitled to it
applies for this relief.[23] This referral, however, can only
be demanded by one who is a party to the arbitration
agreement.[24] Considering that neither petitioner nor One
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Virtual has asked for a referral, there is no basis for the


CA’s order to arbitrate.
Moreover, Articles 1216 and 2047 of the Civil Code[25]
clearly provide that the creditor may proceed against the
surety without having first sued the principal debtor.[26]
Even the Surety Agreement itself states that respondent
becomes liable upon “mere failure of the Principal to make
such prompt payment.”[27] Thus, petitioner should not be
ordered to make a separate claim against One Virtual (via
arbitration) before proceeding against respondent.[28]

_______________
[23] Id., at pp. 60-62.
[24] Id.
[25]  Civil Code, Art. 1216.  The creditor may proceed against any one
of the solidary debtors or some or all of them simultaneously. The demand
made against one of them shall not be an obstacle to those which may
subsequently be directed against the others, so long as the debt has not
been fully collected.
Civil Code, Art. 2047.  x  x  x If a person binds himself solidarily with
the principal debtor, the provisions of Section 4, Chapter 3, Title I of this
Book shall be observed. In such case the contract is called a suretyship.
[26] Rollo, p. 54.
[27] Id., at p. 57.
[28] Id., at p. 59.

735

On the other hand, respondent maintains that a surety


contract is merely an accessory contract, which cannot exist
without a valid obligation.[29] Thus, the surety may avail
itself of all the defenses available to the principal debtor
and inherent in the debt[30] — that is, the right to invoke
the arbitration clause in the Purchase Agreement.
We agree with petitioner.
In suretyship, the oft-repeated rule is that a surety’s
liability is joint and solidary with that of the principal
debtor. This undertaking makes a surety agreement an
ancillary contract, as it presupposes the existence of a
principal contract.[31] Nevertheless, although the contract
of a surety is in essence secondary only to a valid principal
obligation, its liability to the creditor or “promise” of the
principal is said to be direct, primary and absolute; in other
words, a surety is directly and equally bound with the
principal.[32] He becomes liable for the debt and duty of the
principal obligor, even without possessing a direct or
personal interest in the obligations constituted by the
latter.[33] Thus, a surety is not entitled to a separate notice
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of default or to the benefit of excussion.[34] It may in fact be


sued separately or together with the principal debtor.[35]

_______________
[29] Id., at p. 412.
[30] Id., at p. 413.
[31] Asset Builders Corporation v. Stronghold Insurance Co., Inc., G.R.
No. 187116, 18 October 2010, 633 SCRA 370, citing Security Pacific
Assurance Corporation v. Hon. Tria-Infante, 505 Phil. 609, 620; 468 SCRA
526, 536 (2005).
[32] Id., citing Stronghold Insurance Company, Inc. v. Republic-Asahi
Glass Corporation, 525 Phil. 270; 492 SCRA 179 (2006).
[33] Totanes v. China Banking Corporation, G.R. No. 179880, 19
January 2009, 576 SCRA 323, citing Tiu Hiong Guan v. Metropolitan
Bank and Trust Company, 530 Phil. 12; 498 SCRA 246 (2006).
[34] Intra-Strata Assurance Corporation & Philippine Home Assurance
Corp. v. Republic of the Philippines, 579 Phil. 631; 557 SCRA 363 (2008),
citing 74 Am. Jur. § 35, and Manila Surety & Fidelity Co., Inc. v. Batu
Construction & Co., 101 Phil. 494 (1957).
[35] Id., citing NASSCO v. Torrento, 126 Phil. 777; 20 SCRA 427 (1967);
Civil Code, Article 1216.

736

After a thorough examination of the pieces of evidence


presented by both parties,[36] the RTC found that
petitioner had delivered all the goods to One Virtual and
installed them. Despite these compliances, One Virtual still
failed to pay its obligation,[37] triggering respondent’s
liability to petitioner as the former’s surety. In other words,
the failure of One Virtual, as the principal debtor, to fulfill
its monetary obligation to petitioner gave the latter an
immediate right to pursue respondent as the surety.
Consequently, we cannot sustain respondent’s claim
that the Purchase Agreement, being the principal contract
to which the Suretyship Agreement is accessory, must take
precedence over arbitration as the preferred mode of
settling disputes.
First, we have held in Stronghold Insurance Co. Inc. v.
Tokyu Construction Co. Ltd.,[38] that “[the] acceptance [of a
surety agreement], however, does not change in any
material way the creditor’s relationship with the principal
debtor nor does it make the surety an active party to the
principal creditor-debtor relationship. In other words,
the acceptance does not give the surety the right to
intervene in the principal contract. The surety’s role
arises only upon the debtor’s default, at which time, it can
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be directly held liable by the creditor for payment as a


solidary obligor.” Hence, the surety remains a stranger to
the Purchase Agreement. We agree with petitioner that
respondent cannot invoke in its favor the arbitration clause
in the Purchase Agreement, because it is not a party to
that contract.[39] An arbitration agreement being

_______________
[36] Rollo, pp. 153-155.
[37] Id., at p. 155.
[38] G.R. Nos. 158820-21, 5 June 2009, 588 SCRA 410, 422.
[39] Rollo, p. 59.

 
737

contractual in nature,[40] it is binding only on the parties


thereto, as well as their assigns and heirs.[41]
Second, Section 24 of Republic Act No. 9285[42] is clear
in stating that a referral to arbitration may only take place
“if at least one party so requests not later than the pre-trial
conference, or upon the request of both parties thereafter.”
Respondent has not presented even an iota of evidence to
show that either petitioner or One Virtual submitted its
contesting claim for arbitration.
Third, sureties do not insure the solvency of the debtor,
but rather the debt itself.[43] They are contracted precisely
to mitigate risks of non­performance on the part of the
obligor. This responsibility necessarily places a
surety on the same level as that of the principal
debtor.[44] The effect is that the creditor is given the right
to directly proceed against either principal debtor or
surety. This is the reason why excussion cannot be invoked.
[45] To require the creditor to proceed to arbitration would
render the very essence of suretyship nugatory and
diminish its value in commerce. At any rate, as we have
held in Palmares v. Court of Appeals,[46] “if the surety is
dissatisfied with the degree of activity displayed by the
credi-

_______________
[40]  Gonzales v. Climax Mining Ltd., 541 Phil. 143; 512 SCRA 148
(2007). See also Manila Electric Company v. Pasay Transportation Co., 57
Phil. 600, 603 (1932).
[41] Heirs of Augusto L. Salas, Jr. v. Laperal Realty Corp., 378 Phil.
369; 320 SCRA 610 (1999), citing Civil Code, Art. 1311.

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[42] “An Act to Institutionalize the Use of an Alternative Dispute


Resolution System in the Philippines and to Establish the Office for
Alternative Dispute Resolution, and for Other Purposes” or the
“Alternative Dispute Resolution Act of 2004.”
[43] Totanes v. China Banking Corporation, supra note 33.
[44] See International Finance Corporation v. Imperial Textile Mills,
Inc., 511 Phil. 591; 475 SCRA 149 (2005).
[45] Intra-Strata Assurance Corp. v. Republic, 579 Phil. 631; 557 SCRA
363 (2008), citing Manila Surety & Fidelity Co., Inc. v. Batu Construction
& Co., 101 Phil. 494 (1957).
[46] 351 Phil. 664, 686; 288 SCRA 422, 441-442 (1998), citing 74 Am.
Jur. 2d, Principal and Surety, § 68, 53.

738

tor in the pursuit of his principal, he may pay the debt


himself and become subrogated to all the rights and
remedies of the creditor.”
 
Interest, as a form of indemnity, may
be awarded to a creditor for the delay
incurred by a debtor in the payment of
the latter’s obligation, provided that
the delay is inexcusable.
Anent the issue of interests, petitioner alleges that it
deserves to be paid legal interest of 12% per annum from
the time of its first demand on respondent on 5 June 2000
or at most, from the second demand on 24 January 2001
because of the latter’s delay in discharging its monetary
obligation.[47] Citing Article 1169 of the Civil Code,
petitioner insists that the delay started to run from the
time it demanded the fulfilment of respondent’s obligation
under the suretyship contract. Significantly, respondent
does not contest this point, but instead argues that it is
only liable for legal interest of 6% per annum from the date
of petitioner’s last demand on 24 January 2001.
In rejecting petitioner’s position, the RTC stated that
interests may only accrue when the delay or the refusal of a
party to pay is without any justifiable cause.[48] In this
case, respondent’s failure to heed the demand was due to
the advice of One Virtual that petitioner allegedly breached
its undertakings as stated in the Purchase Agreement.[49]
The CA, however, made no pronouncement on this matter.
We sustain petitioner.
Article 2209 of the Civil Code is clear: “[i]f an obligation
consists in the payment of a sum of money, and the debtor
incurs a delay, the indemnity for damages, there being no

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[47] Rollo, pp. 69-75.
[48] Id., at p. 156.
[49] Id.

739

stipulation to the contrary, shall be the payment of the


interest agreed upon, and in the absence of stipulation, the
legal interest.”
Delay arises from the time the obligee judicially or
extrajudicially demands from the obligor the performance
of the obligation, and the latter fails to comply.[50] Delay,
as used in Article 1169, is synonymous with default or
mora, which means delay in the fulfillment of obligations.
[51] It is the non-fulfillment of an obligation with respect to
time.[52] In order for the debtor (in this case, the surety) to
be in default, it is necessary that the following requisites be
present: (1) that the obligation be demandable and already
liquidated; (2) that the debtor delays performance; and (3)
that the creditor requires the performance judicially or
extrajudicially.[53]
Having held that a surety upon demand fails to pay, it
can be held liable for interest, even if in thus paying, its
liability becomes more than the principal obligation.[54]
The increased liability is not because of the contract, but
because of the default and the necessity ofjudicial
collection.[55]
However, for delay to merit interest, it must be
inexcusable in nature. In Guanio v. Makati-Shangri-la
Hotel,[56] citing RCPI v. Verchez,[57] we held thus:

_______________
[50] Social Security System v. Moonwalk Development & Housing Corp.,
G.R. No. 73345, 7 April 1993, 221 SCRA 119.
[51] Santos Ventura Hocorma Foundation, Inc. v. Santos, 484 Phil. 447;
441 SCRA 472 (2004), citing IV Arturo M. Tolentino, Civil Code of the
Philippines, p. 101 (1987 ed.).
[52] Id.
[53] Id., citing Tolentino at p. 102.
[54] Commonwealth Insurance Corporation v. Court of Appeals, 466
Phil. 104; 421 SCRA 367 (2004), citing Republic vs. Court of Appeals and
R & B Surety and Insurance Company, Inc., 406 Phil. 745; 354 SCRA 285
(2001).
[55] Id.
[56] G.R. No. 190601, 7 February 2011, 641 SCRA 591, 596-597.

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740

In culpa contractual x x x the mere proof of the existence of the


contract and the failure of its compliance justify, prima facie, a
corresponding right of relief. The law, recognizing the obligatory
force of contracts, will not permit a party to be set free from
liability for any kind of misperformance of the contractual
undertaking or a contravention of the tenor thereof. A breach
upon the contract confers upon the injured party a valid cause for
recovering that which may have been lost or suffered. The remedy
serves to preserve the interests of the promissee that may include
his “expectation interest,” which is his interest in having the
benefit of his bargain by being put in as good a position as he
would have been in had the contract been performed, or his
“reliance interest,” which is his interest in being reimbursed for
loss caused by reliance on the contract by being put in as good a
position as he would have been in had the contract not been made;
or his “restitution interest,” which is his interest in having
restored to him any benefit that he has conferred on the other
party. Indeed, agreements can accomplish little, either for their
makers or for society, unless they are made the basis for action.
The effect of every infraction is to create a new duty, that
is, to make RECOMPENSE to the one who has been
injured by the failure of another to observe his contractual
obligation unless he can show extenuating circumstances,
like proof of his exercise of due diligence x  x  x or of the
attendance of fortuitous event, to excuse him from his
ensuing liability. (Emphasis ours)

We agree with petitioner that records are bereft of proof


to show that respondent’s delay was indeed justified by the
circumstances — that is, One Virtual’s advice regarding
petitioner’s alleged breach of obligations. The lower court’s
Decision itself belied this contention when it said that
“plaintiff is not disputing that it did not complete
commissioning work on one of the two systems because One
Virtual at that time is already in default and has not paid
GILAT.”[58] Assuming arguendo that the commissioning
work was not completed,

_______________
[57] 516 Phil. 725; 481 SCRA 384 (2006), citing FGU Insurance Corp. v.
G.P. Sarmiento Trucking Corp., 435 Phil. 333, 341-342; 386 SCRA 312,
320 (2002).
[58] Rollo, p. 156.

741

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respondent has no one to blame but its principal, One


Virtual; if only it had paid its obligation on time, petitioner
would not have been forced to stop operations. Moreover,
the deposition of Mr. Erez Antebi, vice president of Gilat,
repeatedly stated that petitioner had delivered all
equipment, including the licensed software; and that the
equipment had been installed and in fact, gone into
operation.[59] Notwithstanding these compliances,
respondent still failed to pay.
As to the issue of when interest must accrue, our Civil
Code is explicit in stating that it accrues from the time
judicial or extrajudicial demand is made on the surety. This
ruling is in accordance with the provisions of Article 1169
of the Civil Code and of the settled rule that where there
has been an extrajudicial demand before an action for
performance was filed, interest on the amount due begins
to run, not from the date of the filing of the complaint, but
from the date of that extrajudicial demand.[60] Considering
that respondent failed to pay its obligation on 30 May 2000
in accordance with the Purchase Agreement, and that the
extrajudicial demand of petitioner was sent on 5 June
2000,[61] we agree with the latter that interest must start
to run from the time petitioner sent its first demand letter
(5 June 2000), because the obligation was already due and
demandable at that time.
With regard to the interest rate to be imposed, we take
cue from Nacar v. Gallery Frames,[62] which modified the
guidelines established in Eastern Shipping Lines v. CA[63]
in relation to Bangko Sentral-Monetary Board Circular No.
799 (Series of 2013), to wit:

_______________
[59] Id., at pp. 461-481.
[60]  Commonwealth Insurance Corporation v. Court of Appeals, supra
note 54, citing Tolentino, Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the Civil
Code of the Philippines, 1991 Reprint, Vol. IV, p. 103; Padilla, Civil Code
Annotated, 1987 Edition, Vol. IV, p. 61.
[61] Rollo, pp. 48, 495.
[62] G.R. No. 189871, 13 August 2013, 703 SCRA 439.
[63] G.R. No. 97412, 12 July 1994, 234 SCRA 78, 95-97.

742

 
1.            When the obligation is breached, and it consists in the
payment of a sum of money, i.e., a loan or forbearance of
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money, the interest due should be that which may have been
stipulated in writing. Furthermore, the interest due shall itself
earn legal interest from the time it is judicially demanded. In
the absence of stipulation, the rate of interest shall be 6% per
annum to be computed from default, i.e., from judicial or
extrajudicial demand under and subject to the provisions of
Article 1169 of the Civil Code.
x x x x
3.       When the judgment of the court awarding a sum of money
becomes final and executory, the rate of legal interest, whether
the case falls under paragraph 1 or paragraph 2, above, shall
be 6% per annum from such finality until its satisfaction, this
interim period being deemed to be by then an equivalent to a
forbearance of credit.

 
Applying the above-discussed concepts and in the
absence of an agreement as to interests, we are hereby
compelled to award petitioner legal interest at the rate of
6% per annum from 5 June 2000, its first date of
extrajudicial demand, until the satisfaction of the debt in
accordance with the revised guidelines enunciated in Nacar
.
WHEREFORE, the Petition for Review on Certiorari is
hereby GRANTED. The assailed Decision and Resolution
of the Court of Appeals in C.A.-G.R. CV No. 89263 are
REVERSED. The Decision of the Regional Trial Court,
Branch 141, Makati City is REINSTATED, with
MODIFICATION insofar as the award of legal interest is
concerned. Respondent is hereby ordered to pay legal
interest at the rate of 6% per annum from 5 June 2000
until the satisfaction of its obligation under the Suretyship
Contract and Purchase Agreement.
SO ORDERED.

Leonardo-De Castro, Bersamin, Villarama, Jr. and


Reyes, JJ., concur.

743

Petition granted, judgment and resolution reversed.

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