Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
The permission shall not be presumed, and its existence must be proven.
The Court of Appeals sustained the ruling of the trial court that Mike Abella could not have validly pledged the subject
tractor to petitioner since he was not the owner thereof, nor was he authorized by its owner to pledge the tractor.
ISSUE: Is it a valid deposit?
HELD: NO.
RATIO
Essentially, petitioner claims that the tractor in question was validly pledged to him by private respondent's son Mike
Abella to answer for the latter's monetary obligations to petitioner. In the alternative, petitioner asserts that the tractor
was left with him, in the concept of an innkeeper, on deposit and that he may validly hold on thereto until Mike Abella
pays his obligations.
There is likewise no valid deposit in this case. In a contract of deposit, a person receives an object belonging to
another with the obligation of safely keeping it and of returning the same.5 Petitioner himself states that he received
the tractor not to safely keep it but as a form of security for the payment of Mike Abella's obligations. There is no
deposit where the principal purpose for receiving the object is not safekeeping.
Consequently, petitioner had no right to refuse delivery of the tractor to its lawful owner. On the other hand, private
respondent, as owner, had every right to seek to repossess the tractor, including the institution of the instant action for
replevin.
Petitioner maintains that even if Mike Abella were not the owner of the tractor, a principal-agent relationship may be
implied between Mike Abella and private respondent. He contends that the latter failed to repudiate the alleged
agency, knowing that his son is acting on his behalf without authority when he pledged the tractor to petitioner.
Petitioner argues that, under Article 1911 of the Civil Code, private respondent is bound by the pledge, even if it were
beyond the authority of his son to pledge the tractor, since he allowed his son to act as though he had full powers.
On the other hand, private respondent asserts that respondent court had correctly ruled on the matter.
In a contract of pledge, the creditor is given the right to retain his debtor's movable property in his possession, or in
that of a third person to whom it has been delivered, until the debt is paid. For the contract to be valid, it is necessary
that: (1) the pledge is constituted to secure the fulfillment of a principal obligation; (2) the pledgor be the absolute
owner of the thing pledged; and (3) the person constituting the pledge has the free disposal of his property, and in the
absence thereof, that he be legally authorized for the purpose.2
As found by the trial court and affirmed by respondent court, the pledgor in this case, Mike Abella, was not the
absolute owner of the tractor that was allegedly pledged to petitioner. The tractor was owned by his father, private
respondent, who left the equipment with him for safekeeping. Clearly, the second requisite for a valid pledge, that the
pledgor be the absolute owner of the property, is absent in this case. Hence, there is no valid pledge.
"He who is not the owner or proprietor of the property pledged or mortgaged to guarantee the fulfillment of a principal
obligation, cannot legally constitute such a guaranty as may validly bind the property in favor of his creditor, and the
pledgee or mortgagee in such a case acquires no right whatsoever in the property pledged or mortgaged."3
There also does not appear to be any agency in this case. We agree with the Court of Appeals that:
"As indicated in Article 1869, for an agency relationship to be deemed as implied, the principal must know that another
person is acting on his behalf without authority. Here, appellee categorically stated that the only purpose for his
leaving the subject tractor in the care and custody of Mike Abella was for safekeeping, and definitely not for him to
pledge or alienate the same. If it were true that Mike pledged appeellee's tractor to appellant, then Mike was acting not
only without appellee's authority but without the latter's knowledge as well.
Article 1911, on the other hand, mandates that the principal is solidarily liable with the agent if the former allowed the
latter to act as though he had full powers. Again, in view of appellee's lack of knowledge of Mike's pledging the tractor
without any authority from him, it stands to reason that the former could not have allowed the latter to pledge the
tractor as if he had full powers to do so."
Eastern obtained a loan of Php73,000 from CBTC, for which loan Eastern issued PNs payable on demand at the order
of CBTC. Eastern also signed a hold-out agreement which provided that Eastern and Lim conferred upon CBTC
sufficient power to retain the account balance of the and account (current account of Lim and Velasco) and to apply
same for the purpose of liquidating the load of Php73,000 in respect of the principal and/or interest.
In the meantime, a case for the settlement of Velascos estate was filed in the RTC of Pasig. The RTC granted the
claim of the estate from the and account of Lim and Velasco and allowed the heirs to withdraw the amount of
Php331,261.44. When CBTC merged with BPI, the latter filed a complaint against Lim and Eastern demanding the
payment of the loan. Lim and Eastern filed a counterclaim against BPI for the return of the balance in the disputed
account subject of the holdout agreement; the balance of which and account was permitted by BPI to be withdrawn
by the heirs of Velasco.
Issue
Is BPI still liable to the private respondents on the and account subject of the holdout agreement after its withdrawal
by the heirs of Velasco?
Held
Yes. The award of Php331,264.44 in favor of private respondents shall bear interest at the rate of 12% per annum
from the filing of the counterclaim.
Ratio
The counterclaim of private respondents for the return of the Php331,261.44 was equivalent to a demand that they be
allowed to withdraw their deposit with the bank. Article 1980 of the Civil Code provides that fixed, savings, current
deposits of money in banks and similar institutions shall be governed by the provisions concerning simple loan.In
Serrano v. Central Bank, bank deposits are in the nature of irregular deposits; they are really loans because they earn
interest. The relationship then between a depositor and a bank is one of creditor and debtor. The deposit under the
questioned and account was an ordinary bank deposit; hence, it was payable on demand of the depositor.
The account was proven and established to belong to Eastern even it was deposited in the names of Lim and
Velasco. As the real creditor of the BPI, Eastern had the right to withdraw it or to demand payment thereof. BPI cannot
be relieved of its duty to pay Eastern simply because it already allowed the heirs of Velasco to withdraw the whole
balance of the account. The petitioner should have not allowed such withdrawal because it had admitted in the holdout
agreement the questioned ownership of the money deposited in the account. As early as May 12 1979, CBTC was
notified by the corporate secretary of Eastern that the deposit in the and account of Lim and Velasco was being
claimed by them and that one-half was being claimed by the heirs of Velasco.
Moreover, the order of the RTC of Pasig merely authorized the heirs of Velasco to withdraw the account. BPI was not
specifically ordered to release the account to the said heirs; hence, it was under no judicial compulsion to do so. The
authorization given to the heirs of Velasco cannot be construed as a final determination or adjudication that the
account belonged to Velasco. When the ownership of a particular property is disputed, the determination by a probate
court of whether that property is included in the estate of a deceased is merely provisional in character and cannot be
the subject of execution. Because the ownership of the deposit remained undetermined, BPI, as the debtor, had no
right to pay to persons other than those in whose favor the obligation was constituted or whose right or authority to
receive payment is indisputable. The payment of the money deposited with BPI that will extinguish its obligation to the
creditor-depositor is payment to the person of the creditor or to one authorized by him or by the law to receive it. The
payment of BPI to the heirs of Velasco even if done in good faith did not extinguish its obligation to the true depositor,
Eastern.
Bank of the Philippine Islands v. Intermediate Appellate Court, G.R. No. L-66826
Facts:Rizaldy T. Zshornack and his wife maintained in COMTRUST a dollar savings account and a peso current
account. An application for a dollar drat was accomplished by Virgillo Garcia branch manager of COMTRUST payable
to a certain LeovigildaDizon. In the application, Garcia indicated that the amount was to be charged to the dollar
savings account of the Zshornacks. There was no indication of the name of the purchaser of the dollar draft. Comtrust
issued a check payable to the order of Dizon. When Zshornack noticed the withdrawal from his account, he demanded
an explanation from the bank. In its answer, Comtrust claimed that the peso value of the withdrawal was given to Atty.
Ernesto Zshornack, brother of Rizaldy when he encashed with COMTRUST a cashiers check for P8450 issued by the
manila banking corporation payable to Ernesto.
Issue: Whether the contract between petitioner and respondent bank is a deposit?
Held: The document which embodies the contract states that the US$3,000.00 was received by the bank for
safekeeping. The subsequent acts of the parties also show that the intent of the parties was really for the bank to
safely keep the dollars and to return it to Zshornack at a later time. Thus, Zshornack demanded the return of the
money on May 10, 1976, or over five months later.
The above arrangement is that contract defined under Article 1962, New Civil Code, which reads:
Art. 1962. A deposit is constituted from the moment a person receives a thing belonging to another, with the obligation
of safely keeping it and of returning the same. If the safekeeping of the thing delivered is not the principal purpose of
the contract, there is no deposit but some other contract.
MPS received in Jan. 1960 shipments of Carnation evaporated milk for two consignees, Lua Kian and Cebu United.
According to their respective bills of lading, Luan Kian was supposed to receive 2,000 cases but only received 1,829
(171 short of 2,000) while Cebu United was supposed to receive 3,000 cases but received 3,171. The excess 171
cases were marked "Cebu United".
Accordingly this situation placed the defendant arrastre operator in a dilemma, for should it deliver them to Lua Kian
the goods could be claimed by the consignee Cebu United Enterprises whose markings they bore, and should it
deliver according to markings, to Cebu United Enterprises, it might be sued by the consignee, Lua Kian whose bill of
lading indicated that it should receive 171 cases more. The Management Contract even exempts exempts the arrastre
operator from responsibility for misdelivery or non-delivery due to improper or insufficient marking.
ISSUE:
Is MPS liable for the short-delivery to Lua Kian?
HELD:
Yes.
The legal relationship between an arrastre operator and the consignee is akin to that of a depositor and
warehouseman. As custodian of the goods discharged from the vessel, it was defendant arrastre operator's duty, like
that of any ordinary depositary, to take good care of the goods and to turn them over to the party entitled to their
possession. Under this particular set of circumstances, said defendant should have withheld delivery because of the
discrepancy between the bill of lading and the markings and conducted its own investigation, not unlike that under
Section 18 of the Warehouse Receipts Law, or called upon the parties, to interplead, such as in a case under Section
17 of the same law, in order to determine the rightful owner of the goods.
Notwithstanding Section 12 of the Management Contract exempting the arrastre from liability, the court cannot excuse
the defendant from liability because the bill of lading showed that only 3,000 cases were consigned to Cebu United
Enterprises. The fact that the excess of 171 cases were marked for Cebu United Enterprises and that the
consignment to Lua Kian was 171 cases less than the 2,000 in the bill of lading, should have been sufficient reason
for the MPS to withhold the goods pending determination of their rightful ownership.
RULING:
Contract of loan. This is based on the examination of the agreement and intention of the parties.
The obligation of the depositary to pay interest at the rate of 6 per cent to the depositor suffices to cause the
obligation to be considered as a loan and makes it likewise evident that it was the intention of the parties that
the depositary should have the right to make use of the amount deposited, since it was stimulated that the
amount could be collected after notice of two months in advance. Such being the case, the contract lost the
character of a deposit and acquired that of a loan.
Prescription has extinguished the contract of loan as provided in the old Civil Code.
All personal actions, such as those which arise from a contract of loan, cease to have legal effect after twenty
years according to the former law and after fifteen years according to the Civil Code now in force.
He who by laches in the exercise of his rights has caused a failure of proof has no right to complain if the
court does not apply the strict rules of evidence which are applicable in ordinary cases, and admits to a
certain extent the presumption to which the conduct of the interest party himself naturally gives rise.
There were absence of lack of evidence to other claims that would favorGavieres. The document dated Jan 8, 1869,
executed by Felix Garcia (husband of Ignacia) provides for the acknowledgment for the receipt of 1,224 pesos from
Felix de Tavera as balance from the sum of P2,000.
Agreeable to the foregoing, the errors assigned by the parties will in the main be overruled, with the result that the
judgment of the trial court will be modified by sentencing the defendant to pay the plaintiff the sum of P250, and the
costs of both instances.
Ramon Aboitiz
v.
Oquinena& Co. and Oquinena&Co.Ltd.
- G.R. No. 12407 / 39 Phil 926, 22 July 1919 Facts
Juan de Aldecoa maintained mercantile relations with Oquiena. When Aldecoa died, Anastacio de Aldecoa was
appointed administrator of the formers estate. At that time Anastacio was also the Cebu manager of Oquiena.
Anastacio committed suicide, thus Aboitiz was appointed as administrator of Juans estate in place of Anastacio.
For the first cause of action, plaintiff sought to recover from defendants the sum of Php9,011.58 with interest at the
rate 8% per annum beginning on Feb. 13, 1913; and for the second cause of action, the sum of Php5,000 with legal
interest from Feb. 5, 1915, the time the complaint was filed.
At the death of Juan, Anastacio collected from the New York Life Insurance the sum of Php9,011.58 which Anastacio
deposited with, and was receipted by, Oquiena& Co. .
After the death of Juan I. de Aldecoa, his business employees in Surigao continued said commercial relations with the
Oquiena& Co. in Cebu, whereby there resulted a balance, in favor of Jose I. de Aldecoa, of P2,312.79, and not
P5,000 as is alleged in the complaint.
The court rendered a judgment against defendant Oquiena& Co. in favor of the petitioner, and absolved defendant
Oquiena& Co. Ltd.
Both defendants appealed the decision of the trial court.
Issue
Did the trial court err when it
- overruled the demurrer interposed to the amended complaint?
- pronounced judgment against Oquiena& Co., a company already dissolved, and absolved Oquiena& Co. Ltd., the
successor and assignee of the former?
Held
No/Yes.
Ratio
The demurrer was based on the ground that the facts alleged in the complaint did not constitute a cause of action in
regard to the payment of the sum of Php9,011.58. It is said that, if this was in the hands of the defendants as a
deposit, the plaintiff cannot withdraw it without a judicial order, inasmuch as in the receipt no fixed time was given. The
document was in fact embodying a deposit, according to its terms, without a fixed time. But exactly for being such, the
sum deposited may be withdrawn at any time.
According to its by-laws, Oquiena& Co. ought to have bee dissolved ob July 30, 1912. However, in accordance with
the said by-laws this date was extended to July 1, 1913. On April 14, 1914, the creditors and shareholders of the
Oquiena& Co. began to organize a company called Oquiena& Co. Ltd. and was transferred with all the assets and
business of Oquiena& Co. In the articles of co-partnership, it was made to appear that Oquiena& Co. Ltd. had
assumed all the obligations of Oquiena& Co.; and that it appeared at its own request as defendant in this case and
appealed in order to assume all the obligations of Oquiena& Co. In fact and in law, Oquiena& Co. had not existed
since the organization of Oquiena& Co. Ltd. and there was no reason why the former should be declared liable
instead of Oquiena& Co. Ltd. to which had passed all said obligations and rights and by which all were assumed in
good faith.
FACTS: Go Tiong owned a rice mill and warehouse, located at Mabini, Urdaneta, Pangasinan. He obtained a license
of a bonded businessman with Luzon Surety Co., with conditions he failed to fulfill. The warehouse and palay
deposited therein were insured with the Alliance Surety and Insurance Company. Ramon Gonzales deposited palay
to Go Tiong even before he got the license who later demanded the value of his deposits. But Go Tiong failed to give
him his value until fire burned down the warehouse, with sacks in excess of that was authorized under his license.
The receipts issued to Gonzales were ordinary receipts and not the warehouse receipts as defined by Warehouse
receipts act. Plaintiff filed their claims with the Bureau of Commerce and with the proceeds of the insurance policy,
BOC paid off some claims. Plaintiffs counsel withdrew the claims, because according to court nothing came from
plaintiff's efforts to have his claim paid, inconsistent with what Go Tiong claimed that it was denied. Gonzales filed
claims both against Gonzales and Luzon Surety, and renewed his claim with BOC. Gonzales and Go Tiong entered
into a contract of amicable settlement to the effect that upon the settlement of all accounts, but upon failure to
comply, Gonzales prosecuted his court action. Court ruled in favor of Gonzales.
Hence, this appeal.
ISSUE: Is the plaintiffs claim covered by the Civil Law, and not Bonded Warehouse Act for the reason that, Go Tiong
issued to plaintiff were ordinary receipts, not the warehouse receipts contemplated by the Warehouse Receipts Law,
and because the deposits of palay of plaintiff were gratuitous?
RULING: Consequently, any deposit made with him as a bonded warehouseman must necessarily be governed by the
provisions of Act No. 3893. Though it is desirable that receipts issued by a bonded warehouseman should conform to
the provisions of the Warehouse Receipts Law, said provisions are not mandatory and indispensable in the sense
that if they fell short of the requirements of the Warehouse Receipts Act, then the commodities delivered for
storage become ordinary deposits and will not be governed by the provisions of the Bonded Warehouse Act. As the
trial court well observed, as far as Go Tiong was concerned, the fact that the receipts issued by him were not
"quedans" is no valid ground for defense because he was the principal obligor. Furthermore, as found by the trial
court, Go Tiong had repeatedly promised plaintiff to issue to him "quedans" and had assured him that he should not
worry; and that Go Tiong was in the habit of issuing ordinary receipts (not "quedans") to his depositors. Considering
the fact, as already stated, that prior to the burning of the warehouse, plaintiff demanded the payment of the value
of his palay from Go Tiong on two occasions but was put off without any valid reason, it is illogical and unreasonable
to hold that the presumption of negligence in case of this kind is rebutted by the bailee by simply proving that the
property bailed was destroyed by an ordinary fire which broke out on the bailee's own premises, without regard to
the care exercised by the latter to prevent the fire, or to save the property after the commencement of the fire.
Besides, as observed by the trial court, the defendant violated the terms of his license by accepting for deposit palay
in excess of the limit authorized by his license, which fact must have increased the risk. Appealed decision affirmed.
Sesbreno vs CA
GR No. 89252. May 24, 1993
Facts:
Raul Sesbreno made a money market placement in the amount of P300, 000 with the Philippine Underwriters
Finance Corporation (Philfinance), with a term of 32 days. Philfinance issued to Sesbreno the Certificate of
Confirmation of Sale of a Delta Motor Corporation Promissory Note, the Certificate of Securities Delivery Receipt
indicating the sale of the note with notation that said security was in the custody of Pilipinas Bank, and postdated
checks drawn against the Insular bank of Asia and America for P305, 533.33 payable on March 31, 1981. The checks
were dishonored for having been drawn against insufficient funds.
Pilipinas Bank never released the note, nor any instrument related thereto, to Sesbreno but Sesbreno learned
that the security was issued April 10, 1980, maturing on April 6, 1981, has the face value of P2, 300, 833.33 with
Philfinance as payee and Delta Motors as maker, and was stamped non-negotiable on its face. As Sesbreno was
unable to collect his investment and interest thereon, he filed an action for damages against Delta Motors and
Pilipinas Bank.
RTC: Dismissed the complaint
CA: Affirmed
Issue:
Whether or not Philfinance remains liable to petitioner under the terms of assignment made by Philfinance to
petitioner.
Ruling:
Yes.
Petitioner notified Delta of his rights as assignee after compensation had taken place by operation of law
because the offsetting instruments had both reached maturity. It is firmly settled doctrine that the rights of an assignee
are not only greater than the rights of the assignor, since the assignee is merely substituted in the place of the
assignor and that the assignee acquires right subject to equities.
The record is bare of any indication that Philfinance had itself notified Delta of assignment to petitioner, the
court is compelled to uphold the defense of compensation raised by private respondent Delta. Philfinance remains
liable to petitioner under the terms of the assignment made by Philfinance to petitioner.
Notes:
Money market
- It is a market dealing in standardized short-term credit instruments (involving large amounts) where lenders
and borrowers do not deal directly with each other by through a middle man or dealer in open market in a
money transaction, the investor is a lender who loans his money to a borrower through a middleman or
dealer.
atholic Bishop of Jaro v. Gregorio De La Pena, G.R. No. L-6913 / 26 Phil 144,21 November 1913;
-R / 58 OG 7693, 30 July 1962;
SILVESTRA BARON V. PABLO DAVID
G.R. Nos. L-26948 and L-26949
October 8, 1927
FACTS:
The defendant owns a rice mill, which was well patronized by the rice growers of the vicinity.
On January 17, 1921, a fire occurred that destroyed the mill and its contents, and it was some time before the mill
could be rebuilt and put in operation again.
Silvestra Baron (P1) and Guillermo Baron (P2) each filed an action for the recovery of the value of their palay
(P5,238 and P5,734, respectively) from the defendant, and alleged that: the cavans of palay have been sold by both
plaintiffs to the David in the year 1920 and the palay was delivered to him at his special request, with a promise of
compensation at the highest price per cavan.
David claims that the palay was deposited subject to future withdrawal by the depositors or to some future sale, which
was never effected. He also contended that in order for the plaintiffs to recover, it is necessary that they should be
able to establish that the plaintiffs' palay was delivered in the character of a sale, and that if, on the contrary, the
defendant should prove that the delivery was made in the character of deposit, the defendant should be absolved.
ISSUE:
WON there was deposit.
HELD:
NO. Art. 1978 states that when the depositary has permission to use the thing deposited, the contract loses the
concept of a deposit and becomes a loan or commodatum, except where safekeeping is still the principal purpose of
the contract. The permission shall not be presumed, and its existence must be proved.
When the palay in question was placed by the plaintiffs in the defendant's mill there was the understanding that the
defendant was at liberty to convert it into rice and dispose of it at his pleasure. The mill was actively running during the
entire season, and as palay was daily coming in from many customers and as rice was being constantly shipped by
the defendant to Manila, or other rice markets, it was impossible to keep the plaintiffs' palay segregated. In fact the
defendant admits that the plaintiffs' palay was mixed with that of others.
It is quite certain that all of the plaintiffs' palay, which was put in before June 1, 1920, been milled and disposed of long
prior to the fire of January 17, 1921. Furthermore, the proof shows that when the fire occurred there could not have
been more than about 360 cavans of palay in the mill, none of which by any reasonable probability could have been
any part of the palay delivered by the plaintiffs.
The defendant then is bound to account for the value of the subject palay, and his liability was not extinguished by the
occurence of the fire.
Dissenting:
Johns dissented to the weight given by the court on the perjured statements of David than those against the proofs of
two elderly individuals as to the price of the palay and who reposed their trust and confidence to their nephew.
DOCTRINE: General concept of letters of credit trust receipt. A contract of security and that the lender is only the
lender of a security title from advances made by the borrower.
SPOUSES TIRSO I. VINTOLA and LORETO DY VINTOLA, defendants-appellants,
vs.
INSULAR BANK OF ASIA AND AMERICA, plaintiff-appellee.
FACTS:
Spouses Vintola (VINTOLAS) applied for and were granted a domestic letter of credit by the Insular Bank
of Asia and America (IBAA). The Letter of Credit authorized the bank to negotiate for their account drafts drawn by
their supplier, one Stalin Tan, on Dax Kin International for the purchase of puka and olive seashells. VINTOLAS
received from Stalin Tan the puka and olive shells and executed a Trust Receipt agreement with IBAA. Under that
Agreement, the VINTOLAS agreed to hold the goods in trust for IBAA as the "latter's property with liberty to sell the
same for its account, and "incase of sale" to turn over the proceeds. Having defaulted on their obligation, IBAA
demanded payment from the VINTOLAS.
The VINTOLAS, who were unable to dispose of the shells, responded by offering to return the goods. IBAA
refused to accept the merchandise, and due to the continued refusal of the VINTOLAS to make good their
undertaking, IBAA charged them with Estafa for having misappropriated, misapplied and converted for their own
personal use and benefit the aforesaid goods.
The trial court acquitted the VINTOLAS of the offense charged as they turned over the seashells to the
custody of the trial court to disproved the claim of misappropriation. IBAA commenced a civil action to recover the
value of the goods. At first court dismissed the case holding that the complaint was barred by the judgment of acquittal
in the criminal but was granted through reconsideration. The CFI-Cebu certified the case to the SC as the issue
involves a question of law.
Contention of Vintolas:
(1) The obligation to IBAA has been extinguished since they were unable to dispose the seashells and they have
relinguished possession thereof to IBAA, as owner of the goods, by depositing them to court.
(2) The acquittal from the estafa case, also extinguishes civil liability since the IBAA did not reserved their right to
enforce a separate civil action.
ISSUE :
Whether or not the Vintolas can return the goods/ merchandise to IBAA as payment for the trust receipt?
RULINGS :
NO. The return or non disposal of the thing secured by the letter of credit dies not extinguish the liability of the
borrower to pay. The court affirmed the ruling of CFI-Cebu that favored the payment of 72,982.27 plus 14% interest.
A letter of credit-trust receipt arrangement is endowed with its own distinctive features and characteristics. Under that
set-up, a bank extends a loan covered by the Letter of Credit, with the
trust receipt as a security for the loan. In other words, the transaction involves a loan feature represented by the
letter of credit, and a security feature which is in the covering trust receipt.
A trust receipt, therefore, is a security agreement, pursuant to which a bank acquires a "security interest" in
the goods. "It secures an indebtedness and there can be no such thing as security interest that secures no
obligation.
DEFINITION:
"Security Interest" means a property interest in goods, documents or instruments to secure performance of
some obligations of the entrustee or of some third persons to the entruster and includes title, whether or not
expressed to be absolute, whenever such title is in substance taken or retained for security only.
As elucidated in Samo vs. People "a trust receipt is considered as a security transaction intended to aid in
financing importers and retail dealers who do not have sufficient funds or resources to finance the
importation or purchase of merchandise, and who may not be able to acquire credit except through
utilization, as collateral of the merchandise imported or purchased."
The trust receipt arrangement did not convert the IBAA into an investor; the latter remained a lender and creditor.
IBAA was merely the holder of a security title for the advances in made to Vintolas. The property acquired shall remain
to be owned by the Vintolas and should be disposed on their own risk. The IBAA is not the factual owner of the
goods, the VINTOLAS cannot justifiably claim that because they have surrendered the goods to IBAA and
subsequently deposited them in the custody of the court, they are absolutely relieved of their obligation to pay their
loan because of their inability to dispose of the goods. The fact that they were unable to sell the seashells in question
does not affect IBAA's right to recover the advances it had made under the Letter of Credit.
Triple-V Food Services, Inc. v. Filipino Merchants Insurance Company, Inc., G.R. No.160544
Facts:
On March 2, 1997, at around 2:15 o'clock in the afternoon, a certain Mary Jo-Anne De Asis (De Asis) dined at
petitioner's Kamayan Restaurant at 15 West Avenue, Quezon City. De Asis was using a Mitsubishi Galant Super
Saloon Model 1995 with plate number UBU 955, assigned to her by her employer Crispa Textile Inc. (Crispa). On said
date, De Asis availed of the valet parking service of petitioner and entrusted her car key to petitioner's valet counter. A
corresponding parking ticket was issued as receipt for the car. The car was then parked by petitioner's valet attendant,
a certain Madridano, at the designated parking area. Few minutes later, Madridano noticed that the car was not in its
parking slot and its key no longer in the box where valet attendants usually keep the keys of cars entrusted to them.
The car was never recovered. Thereafter, Crispa filed a claim against its insurer, herein respondent Filipino Merchants
Insurance Company, Inc. (FMICI). Having indemnified Crispa in the amount of P669.500 for the loss of the subject
vehicle, FMICI, as subrogee to Crispa's rights, filed with the RTC at Makati City an action for damages against
petitioner Triple-V Food Services, Inc.
In its answer, petitioner argued that the complaint failed to aver facts to support the allegations of recklessness and
negligence committed in the safekeeping and custody of the subject vehicle, claiming that it and its employees wasted
no time in ascertaining the loss of the car and in informing De Asis of the discovery of the loss. Petitioner further
argued that in accepting the complimentary valet parking service, De Asis received a parking ticket whereunder it is so
provided that "[Management and staff will not be responsible for any loss of or damage incurred on the vehicle nor of
valuables contained therein", a provision which, to petitioner's mind, is an explicit waiver of any right to claim
indemnity for the loss of the car; and that De Asis knowingly assumed the risk of loss when she allowed petitioner to
park her vehicle, adding that its valet parking service did not include extending a contract of insurance or warranty for
the loss of the vehicle.
The RTC issued its judgment in favor of the plaintiff (FMICI) and against the defendant Triple V (herein petitioner). On
appeal, petitioner contended that it was not a depositary of the subject car and that it exercised due diligence and
prudence in the safe keeping of the vehicle, in handling the car-napping incident and in the supervision of its
employees. It further argued that there was no valid subrogation of rights between Crispa and respondent FMICI. The
Court of Appeals dismissed petitioner's appeal and affirmed the appealed decision of the trial court.
Issue: Whether or not petitioner should be held liable for the loss of De Asis' car.
Held:
When De Asis entrusted the car in question to petitioners valet attendant while eating at petitioner's Kamayan
Restaurant, the former expected the car's safe return at the end of her meal. Thus, petitioner was constituted as a
depositary of the same car. Petitioner cannot evade liability by arguing that neither a contract of deposit nor that of
insurance, guaranty or surety for the loss of the car was constituted when De Asis availed of its free valet parking
service.
In a contract of deposit, a person receives an object belonging to another with the obligation of safely keeping it and
returning the same.alaw A deposit may be constituted even without any consideration. It is not necessary that the
depositary receives a fee before it becomes obligated to keep the item entrusted for safekeeping and to return it later
to the depositor.
The parking claim stub embodying the terms and conditions of the parking, including that of relieving petitioner from
any loss or damage to the car, is essentially a contract of adhesion, drafted and prepared as it is by the petitioner
alone with no participation whatsoever on the part of the customers, like De Asis, who merely adheres to the printed
stipulations therein appearing. While contracts of adhesion are not void in themselves, yet this Court will not hesitate
to rule out blind adherence thereto if they prove to be one-sided under the attendant facts and circumstances.
Hence, and as aptly pointed out by the Court of Appeals, petitioner must not be allowed to use its parking claim stub's
exclusionary stipulation as a shield from any responsibility for any loss or damage to vehicles or to the valuables
contained therein. Here, it is evident that De Asis deposited the car in question with the petitioner as part of the latter's
enticement for customers by providing them a safe parking space within the vicinity of its restaurant. In a very real
sense, a safe parking space is an added attraction to petitioner's restaurant business because customers are thereby
somehow assured that their vehicle are safely kept, rather than parking them elsewhere at their own risk. Having
entrusted the subject car to petitioner's valet attendant, customer De Asis, like all of petitioner's customers, fully
expects the security of her car while at petitioner's premises/designated parking areas and its safe return at the end of
her visit at petitioner's restaurant.
United States v. Jose M. Igpuara, G.R. No. L-7593
FACTS: That the defendant received P2,498 is a fact proven. The defendant drew up a document declaring that they
remained in his possession, which he could not have said had he not received them. They remained in his
possession, surely in no other sense than to take care of them, for they remained has no other purpose. They
remained in the defendant's possession at the disposal of Veraguth; but on August 23 of the same year Veraguth
demanded for him through a notarial instrument restitution of them, and to date he has not restored them.
The defendant therein is charged with the crime of estafa, for having swindled Juana Montilla and Eugenio Veraguth
out of P2,498 Philippine currency, which he had take on deposit from the former to be at the latter's disposal. The
document setting forth the obligation reads:
We hold at the disposal of Eugenio Veraguth the sum of two thousand four hundred and ninety-eight pesos (P2,498),
the balance from Juana Montilla's sugar. Iloilo, June 26, 1911, Jose Igpuara, for Ramirez and Co.
The Court of First Instance of Iloilo sentenced the defendant to two years of presidio correccional, to pay Juana
Montilla P2,498 Philippine currency, and in case of insolvency to subsidiary imprisonment at P2.50 per day, not to
exceed one-third of the principal penalty, and the costs.
The defendant appealed, alleging as errors: (1) Holding that the document executed by him was a certificate of
deposit; (2) holding the existence of a deposit, without precedent transfer or delivery of the P2,498; and (3) classifying
the facts in the case as the crime of estafa.
ISSUE: May he use the thing deposited?
HELD: NO.
RATIO
The appellant says: "Juana Montilla's agent voluntarily accepted the sum of P2,498 in an instrument payable on
demand, and as no attempt was made to cash it until August 23, 1911, he could indorse and negotiate it like any other
commercial instrument. There is no doubt that if Veraguth accepted the receipt for P2,498 it was because at that time
he agreed with the defendant to consider the operation of sale on commission closed, leaving the collection of said
sum until later, which sum remained as a loan payable upon presentation of the receipt."
Then, after averring the true facts: (1) that a sales commission was precedent; (2) that this commission was settled
with a balance of P2,498 in favor of the principal, Juana Montilla; and (3) that this balance remained in the possession
of the defendant, who drew up an instrument payable on demand, he has drawn two conclusions, both erroneous:
One, that the instrument drawn up in the form of a deposit certificate could be indorsed or negotiated like any other
commercial instrument; and the other, that the sum of P2,498 remained in defendant's possession as a loan.
It is also erroneous to assert that sum of money set forth in said certificate is, according to it, in the defendant's
possession as a loan. In a loan the lender transmits to the borrower the use of the thing lent, while in a deposit the use
of the thing is not transmitted, but merely possession for its custody or safe-keeping.
In order that the depositary may use or dispose of the things deposited, the depositor's consent is required, and then:
The rights and obligations of the depositary and of the depositor shall cease, and the rules and provisions applicable
to commercial loans, commission, or contract which took the place of the deposit shall be observed. (Art. 309, Code of
Commerce.)
The defendant has shown no authorization whatsoever or the consent of the depositary for using or disposing of the
P2,498, which the certificate acknowledges, or any contract entered into with the depositor to convert the deposit into
a loan, commission, or other contract.
That demand was not made for restitution of the sum deposited, which could have been claimed on the same or the
next day after the certificate was signed, does not operate against the depositor, or signify anything except the
intention not to press it. Failure to claim at once or delay for sometime in demanding restitution of the things
deposited, which was immediately due, does not imply such permission to use the thing deposited as would convert
the deposit into a loan.
Article 408 of the Code of Commerce of 1829, previous to the one now in force, provided:
The depositary of an amount of money cannot use the amount, and if he makes use of it, he shall be responsible for
all damages that may accrue and shall respond to the depositor for the legal interest on the amount.
Whereupon the commentators say:
In this case the deposit becomes in fact a loan, as a just punishment imposed upon him who abuses the sacred
nature of a deposit and as a means of preventing the desire of gain from leading him into speculations that may be
disastrous to the depositor, who is much better secured while the deposit exists when he only has a personal action
for recovery.
According to article 548, No. 5, of the Penal Code, those who to the prejudice of another appropriate or abstract for
their own use money, goods, or other personal property which they may have received as a deposit, on commission,
or for administration, or for any other purpose which produces the obligation of delivering it or returning it, and deny
having received it, shall suffer the penalty of the preceding article," which punishes such act as the crime of estafa.
The corresponding article of the Penal Code of the Philippines in 535, No. 5.
In a decision of an appeal, September 28, 1895, the principle was laid down that: "Since he commits the crime of
estafa under article 548 of the Penal Code of Spain who to another's detriment appropriates to himself or abstracts
money or goods received on commission for delivery, the court rightly applied this article to the appellant, who, to the
manifest detriment of the owner or owners of the securities, since he has not restored them, willfully and wrongfully
disposed of them by appropriating them to himself or at least diverting them from the purpose to which he was
charged to devote them."
It is unquestionable that in no sense did the P2,498 which he willfully and wrongfully disposed of to the detriments of
his principal, Juana Montilla, and of the depositor, Eugenio Veraguth, belong to the defendant.
Likewise erroneous is the construction apparently at tempted to be given to two decisions of this Supreme Court (U. S.
vs. Dominguez, 2 Phil. Rep., 580, and U. S. vs. Morales and Morco, 15 Phil. Rep., 236) as implying that what
constitutes estafa is not the disposal of money deposited, but denial of having received same. In the first of said cases
there was no evidence that the defendant had appropriated the grain deposited in his possession.
On the contrary, it is entirely probable that, after the departure of the defendant from Libmanan on September 20,
1898, two days after the uprising of the civil guard in Nueva Caceres, the rice was seized by the revolutionalists and
appropriated to their own uses.
In this connection it was held that failure to return the thing deposited was not sufficient, but that it was necessary to
prove that the depositary had appropriated it to himself or diverted the deposit to his own or another's benefit. He was
accused or refusing to restore, and it was held that the code does not penalize refusal to restore but denial of having
received. So much for the crime of omission; now with reference to the crime of commission, it was not held in that
decision that appropriation or diversion of the thing deposited would not constitute the crime of estafa.
In the second of said decisions, the accused "kept none of the proceeds of the sales. Those, such as they were, he
turned over to the owner;" and there being no proof of the appropriation, the agent could not be found guilty of the
crime of estafa.
No. Petitioners were directed, jointly and severally, to pay private respondent.
Ratio
For the main issue:
Article 2003 provides that the hotel-keeper cannot free himself from responsibility by posting notices to the effect that
he is not liable for the articles brought by the guest. Any stipulation between the hotel-keeper and the guest whereby
the reasonability of the former as set for the in articles 1998 to 2001 is suppressed or diminished shall be void. The
hotel business like the common carrier's business is imbued with public interest. Catering to the public, hotelkeepers
are bound to provide not only lodging for hotel guests and security to their persons and belongings. The twin duty
constitutes the essence of the business. The law in turn does not allow such duty to the public to be negated or diluted
by any contrary stipulation in so-called "undertakings" that ordinarily appear in prepared forms imposed by hotel
keepers on guests for their signature.
In an early case, to hold hotel-keepers or innkeepers liable for the effects of their guests, it is not necessary that they
be actually delivered to the innkeepers or their employees. It is enough that such effects are within the hotel or inn.
With greater reason should the liability of the hotelkeeper be enforced when the missing items are taken without the
guests knowledge and consent from a safety deposit box provided by the hotel itself. The undertaking manifestly
contravened Article 2003 of the Civil Code it allowed Tropicana to be released from liability arising from any loss in the
contents of the safety deposit box for any cause whatsoever. Evidently, the undertaking was intended to bar any claim
against Tropicana for any loss of the contents of the safety deposit box whether or not negligence was incurred by
Tropicana or its employees. The New Civil Code is explicit that the responsibility of the hotel-keeper shall extend to
loss of, or injury to, the personal property of the guests even if caused by servants or employees of the keepers of
hotels or inns as well as by strangers, except as it may proceed from any force majeure. It is the loss through force
majeure that may spare the hotel-keeper from liability. In the case at bar, there is no showing that the act of the thief
or robber was done with the use of arms or through an irresistible force to qualify the same as force majeure
_________________________________________________________
(for the benefit of all - Supplemental reasoning of the Court)
We are also not impressed by petitioners' argument that the finding of gross negligence by the lower court as affirmed by the appellate court is not
supported by evidence. The evidence reveals that two keys are required to open the safety deposit boxes of Tropicana. One key is assigned to the
guest while the other remains in the possession of the management. If the guest desires to open his safety deposit box, he must request the
management for the other key to open the same. In other words, the guest alone cannot open the safety deposit box without the assistance of the
management or its employees. With more reason that access to the safety deposit box should be denied if the one requesting for the opening of the
safety deposit box is a stranger. Thus, in case of loss of any item deposited in the safety deposit box, it is inevitable to conclude that the
management had at least a hand in the consummation of the taking, unless the reason for the loss is force majeure.
Noteworthy is the fact that Payam and Lainez, who were employees of Tropicana, had custody of the master key of the management when the loss
took place. In fact, they even admitted that they assisted Tan on three separate occasions in opening McLoughlin's safety deposit box. This only
proves that Tropicana had prior knowledge that a person aside from the registered guest had access to the safety deposit box. Yet the
management failed to notify McLoughlin of the incident and waited for him to discover the taking before it disclosed the matter to him. Therefore,
Tropicana should be held responsible for the damage suffered by McLoughlin by reason of the negligence of its employees.
The management should have guarded against the occurrence of this incident considering that Payam admitted in open court that she assisted Tan
three times in opening the safety deposit box of McLoughlin at around 6:30 A.M. to 7:30 A.M. while the latter was still asleep. In light of the
circumstances surrounding this case, it is undeniable that without the acquiescence of the employees of Tropicana to the opening of the safety
deposit box, the loss of McLoughlin's money could and should have been avoided.
The management contends, however, that McLoughlin, by his act, made its employees believe that Tan was his spouse for she was always with
him most of the time. The evidence on record, however, is bereft of any showing that McLoughlin introduced Tan to the management as his wife.
Such an inference from the act of McLoughlin will not exculpate the petitioners from liability in the absence of any showing that he made the
management believe that Tan was his wife or was duly authorized to have access to the safety deposit box. Mere close companionship and
intimacy are not enough to warrant such conclusion considering that what is involved in the instant case is the very safety of McLoughlin's deposit. If
only petitioners exercised due diligence in taking care of McLoughlin's safety deposit box, they should have confronted him as to his relationship
with Tan considering that the latter had been observed opening McLoughlin's safety deposit box a number of times at the early hours of the
morning. Tan's acts should have prompted the management to investigate her relationship with McLoughlin. Then, petitioners would have exercised
due diligence required of them. Failure to do so warrants the conclusion that the management had been remiss in complying with the obligations
imposed upon hotel-keepers under the law.
Under Article 1170 of the New Civil Code, those who, in the performance of their obligations, are guilty of negligence, are liable for damages. As to
who shall bear the burden of paying damages, Article 2180, paragraph (4) of the same Code provides that the owners and managers of an
establishment or enterprise are likewise responsible for damages caused by their employees in the service of the branches in which the latter are
employed or on the occasion of their functions. Also, this Court has ruled that if an employee is found negligent, it is presumed that the employer
was negligent in selecting and/or supervising him for it is hard for the victim to prove the negligence of such employer.Thus, given the fact that the
loss of McLoughlin's money was consummated through the negligence of Tropicana's employees in allowing Tan to open the safety deposit box
without the guest's consent, both the assisting employees and YHT Realty Corporation itself, as owner and operator of Tropicana, should be held
solidarily liable pursuant to Article 2193.
Petitioners likewise anchor their defense on Article 2002 which exempts the hotel-keeper from liability if the loss is due to the acts of his guest, his
family, or visitors. Even a cursory reading of the provision would lead us to reject petitioners' contention. The justification they raise would render
nugatory the public interest sought to be protected by the provision. What if the negligence of the employer or its employees facilitated the
consummation of a crime committed by the registered guest's relatives or visitor? Should the law exculpate the hotel from liability since the loss was
due to the act of the visitor of the registered guest of the hotel? Hence, this provision presupposes that the hotel-keeper is not guilty of concurrent
negligence or has not contributed in any degree to the occurrence of the loss. A depositary is not responsible for the loss of goods by theft, unless
his actionable negligence contributes to the loss.
In the case at bar, the responsibility of securing the safety deposit box was shared not only by the guest himself but also by the management since
two keys are necessary to open the safety deposit box. Without the assistance of hotel employees, the loss would not have occurred. Thus,
Tropicana was guilty of concurrent negligence in allowing Tan, who was not the registered guest, to open the safety deposit box of McLoughlin,
even assuming that the latter was also guilty of negligence in allowing another person to use his key. To rule otherwise would result in undermining
the safety of the safety deposit boxes in hotels for the management will be given imprimatur to allow any person, under the pretense of being a
family member or a visitor of the guest, to have access to the safety deposit box without fear of any liability that will attach thereafter in case such
person turns out to be a complete stranger. This will allow the hotel to evade responsibility for any liability incurred by its employees in conspiracy
with the guest's relatives and visitors.
Petitioners contend that McLoughlin's case was mounted on the theory of contract, but the trial court and the appellate court upheld the grant of the
claims of the latter on the basis of tort.There is nothing anomalous in how the lower courts decided the controversy for this Court has pronounced a
jurisprudential rule that tort liability can exist even if there are already contractual relations. The act that breaks the contract may also be tort.
FACTS:
CTI was the operator of a customs bonded warehouse located at Port Area, Manila. It received on deposit one
hundred ninety-three (193) bales of high density compressed raw cotton valued at P99,609.76. It was understood that
CTI would keep the cotton in behalf of Luzon Brokerage Corporation until the consignee thereof, Paramount Textile
Mills, Inc., had opened the corresponding letter of credit in favor of shipper, Adolph Hanslik Cotton of Corpus Christi,
Texas.
Allegedly by virtue of a forged permit to deliver imported goods, purportedly issued by the Bureau of Customs, Artex
was able to obtain delivery of the bales of cotton on November 5 and 6, 1964 after paying CTI P15,000 as storage and
handling charges. At the time the merchandise was released to Artex, the letter of credit had not yet been opened and
the customs duties and taxes due on the shipment had not been paid.
CTI in this appeal contends that, as warehouseman, it was entitled to the possession of the bales of cotton; that Artex
acted wrongfully in depriving CTI of the possession of the merchandise because Artex presented a falsified delivery
permit, and that Artex should pay damages to CTI.
ISSUE: Can CTI recover from Artex?
HELD:
No.
CTI was only a WHman. He was already paid by Artex of its handling and warehousing services. It was not the owner
of the cotton so it could not be entitled to claim the value of the shipment.
In other words, on the basis of the allegations of the amended complaint, the lower court could not render a valid
judgment in accordance with the prayer thereof. It could not render such valid judgment because the amended
complaint did not unequivocally allege what right of CTI was violated by Artex, or, to use the familiar language of
adjective law, what delict or wrong was committed by Artex against CTI which would justify the latter in recovering the
value of bales of cotton even if it was not the owner thereof.
That the manager of the Moncada Bonded Warehouse and respondent Faustino F. Galvan were duly served with
notice of the above resolutions, and that notwithstanding such service of notice and in spite of repeated demands, the
manager of the Moncada Bonded Warehouse and respondent Faustino F. Galvan refused and still refuse to comply
with the above orders of this Court, the former, for the reason that petitioners could not surrender to him the original of
the warehouse receipts issued for the palay in question, and the latter, because, as he alleged in his answer to the
motion for contempt, he could not locate any more said receipts "as they were scattered, misplaced, destroyed or lost
when the contents of the Office of said respondent-appellee, Faustino F. Galvan, in the Galvan-Cabrera Building in
Ylaya Street, Manila, were being desperately evacuated therefrom during the fire which burned the Divisoria market
and said Galvan-Cabrera Building in Ylaya Street, Manila, in the latter part of May, 1961."
The excuses respectively offered by the manager of the Moncada Bonded Warehouse and respondent Faustino F.
Galvan are not without some merits. The former unquestionably had the right to protect the interest of the bonded
warehouse of which he was manager, as the warehouse receipts issued for the palay in question might have been for
the value in favor of innocent third parties; and the latter, or Faustino F. Galvan, might have in fact lost said
warehouse receipts in the manner above stated, for his allegation to the effect in his answer to petitioners' motion for
contempt until now has not been contradicted.
Such incidents, however, do not constitute a valid excuse to evade compliance with the order of this Court that the
palay in question be delivered to the petitioners, and, considering that the petitioners, according to the manifestation
filed by their counsel under date of August 3, 1961, are in dire need of said palay for their subsistence, our order must
be carried out in the meantime that this cases have not been finally decided in order to ameliorate the precarious
situation in which said petitioners find themselves.
WHEREFORE, it is hereby ordered that the manager or the owner of the Moncada Bonded Warehouse in Moncada,
Tarlac, and respondent Faustino F. Galvan release and deliver to the petitioners the portion still remaining to be
delivered to them or their shares in the palay involved in these cases, i.e.,
(a) 10% of the net produce of the first crops minus P300.00; and
(b) 15% of the net produce of the second crops minus P200.00;
which was ordered deposited in said warehouse by the trial court, upon the issuance by said petitioners, or their duly
authorized representative, of the corresponding receipts, without the necessity of producing and surrendering the
original of the warehouse receipts issued therefore. It is so ordered.
la Railroad Company, G.R. No. L-23033 / 19 SCRA 5, 5 January 1967;
ly 1998;
-6342 / 94 Phil 255, 26January 1954;
PNB V. NOAHS ARK SUGAR REFINERY
G.R. No. 107243 / 226 SCRA 36. 1 September 1993
FACTS:
Present case is on the disposition of the Trial judge who did not put into effect the notice to the final and executory
judgment of the CA, to wit: ...that a summary judgment be rendered forthwith in favor of the PNB against Noah's Ark
Sugar Refinery, et al., as prayed for in petitioner's Motion for Summary Judgment. Instead he proceeded to render
judgment in favor of Noahs Ark. That judgment has been appealed by PNB to this Court "on pure questions of law."
No dispute exists about the facts (as FOLLOWS) which gave rise to the controversy at bar.
--Noah's Ark Sugar Refinery issued on several dates warehouse receipts (quedans) on different dates during the early
half of 1989 deposited by Rosa Sy or RNS Merchandising (4) and St. Therese Merchandising (1). The receipts are
substantially in the form, and contain the terms, prescribed for negotiable warehouse receipts by Section 2 of the law.
Subsequently, of said warehouse receipts, two were negotiated and indorsed to Luis T. Ramos and to three were
negotiated and indorsed to Cresencia K. Zoleta. Zoleta and Ramos then used the quedans as security for loans
which they obtained from the Philippine National Bank (PNB) in the amounts of P23.5 million and P15.6 million,
respectively. These quedans they indorsed to the bank.
Both Zoleta and Ramos failed to pay their loans. PNB demanded delivery of the sugar covered by the subject
quedans but Noah's Ark refused. PNB commenced an action with the Regional Trial Court of Manila, a verified
complaint for "Specific Performance with Damages and Application for Writ of Attachment" against Noah's Ark, Alberto
T. Looyuko, Jimmy T. Go, and Wilson T. Go, the last three being identified as "the Sole Proprietor, Managing Partner
and Executive Vice President of Noah's Ark, respectively."
It will later be found out, from the answer of Rosa Ng Sy and Teresita Ng to the third party complaint against them filed
by the owners of Noahs Ark, was essentially to the effect that the transaction between them and Jimmy T. Go
concerning the quedans and the sugar thereby covered was "bogus and simulated (being part of the latter's) complex
banking schemes and financial maneuvers;" that the simulated transaction "was just a tolling scheme to
avoid VAT payment and other BIR assessments (considering that) as . . . confidentially intimated (by said Jimmy Go) .
. . Noah's Ark is under sequestration by the PCGG," and that the quedans "were in fact used by Noah's Ark Executive
Director, Luis T. Ramos, and one Cresenciana K. Zoleta as security for their loans from the bank . . . . (in the
aggregate amount) of P39.1 million pesos."
The PNB filed a Motion for Summary Judgment asserting that there is no genuine issue as to a material fact proper
for trial and that plaintiff is entitled as a matter of law ... (to) a summary judgment... to which the CA agreed:
What is determinative of the propriety of summary judgment is not the existence of
conflicting claims for prior parties but ... the defenses as to the main issue do not tender
material questions of fact ... or the issues thus tendered are in fact sham, fictitious,
contrived, set up in bad faith or so unsubstantial as not to constitute genuine issues for
trial... The questioned Orders themselves do not specify what material facts are in issue.
The case was remanded to the Trial Court whose judge decided against the CA ruling.
ISSUE: WON the Trial judge committed grave abuse of discretion.
HELD:
Yes. The dispositive portion of the Courts decision follows:
WHEREFORE, the Trial Judge's Decision in Civil Case No. 90-53023 dated June 18, 1992 is REVERSED and SET
ASIDE and a new one rendered conformably with the final and executory Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
SP No. 25938, ordering the private respondents, Noah's Ark Sugar Refinery, Alberto T. Looyuko, Jimmy T. Go and
William T. Go, jointly and severally:
a) to deliver to the petitioner Philippine National Bank, "the sugar stocks covered by the Warehouse
Receipts/Quedans which are now in the latter's possession as holder for value and in due course; or alternatively, to
pay (said) plaintiff actual damages in the amount of P39.1 Million," with legal interest thereon from the filing of the
complaint until full payment; and
b) to pay plaintiff Philippine National Bank attorney's fees, litigation expenses and judicial costs hereby fixed at the
amount of one hundred fifty thousand pesos (150,000.00), as well as the costs.
Security Transactions
Aleida Saavedra v. W.S. Price, G.R. No. L-46702 / 68 Phil 699, 6 October 1939;
Insurance & Surety Co., Inc. v. Bacolod-Murcia Milling Co., Inc., G.R. No. L-12333 / 105 Phil 246, 28
February 1959;
Facts:
Ruling:
1. No.
The use of the term guarantee in a contract does not ipso facto mean that the contract is
one of guaranty. Even if the petitioner was a surety, the provisions on guarantee, other than the
benefit of excussion, are applicable and available.
2. Yes.
Granting arguendo that there was a modification as to the effectivity of the bonds,
petitioners would still not absolved from liability since they had authorized ISAC to consent to
the granting of any extension, modification, alteration and/or renewal of the subject bonds, as
expressly set out in the Indemnity Agreements.
The court held that an agreement whereby the sureties bound themselves to be liable in
case of an extension or renewal of the bond, without the necessity of executing another
indemnity agreement for the purpose and without the necessity of being notified of such
extension or renewal, is valid; and that there is nothing in it that militates against the law, good
customs, good morals, public order or public policy.
2008;
-158025 / 41 Phil 142, 5November 1920;
the sum of P6,465.00 under the condition that in case the plaintiff recovers judgment in the action, the defendant will, on
demand, redeliver the attached property so released to the officer of the court to be applied to the payment of the judgment or
in default thereof that the defendant and surety will, on demand, pay to the plaintiff the full value of the property released."
The main obligation of the surety was to redeliver the jeep so that it could be sold in case execution was issued against the
principal obligor. The amount of P6,465.00 was merely to fix the limit of the suretys liability in case the jeep could not be
reached. In the instant case, the jeep was made available for execution of the judgment by the surety. The surety had done its
part; the obligation of the bond had been discharged; the bond should be cancelled.
2. ID.; ID.; ID.; OBLIGATIONS OF SURETY; LIMITED BY WHAT IS STIPULATED. The impropriety of the orders of the respondent
judge is made more manifest by still another circumstance. The petitioners surety bond was for the amount of P6,465.00. So
even on the assumption that the bond was not discharged, since the sale of the jeep yielded P4,000.00, the surety can be held
liable at most for P2,465.00. But the respondent judge ordered the surety to pay P5,730.00 which is the entire deficiency and is
in excess of P2,465.00. It is axiomatic that the obligation of a surety cannot extend beyond what is stipulated.
Facts: For the amount of P6400, Ong Chi sued Reyes and also applied for a writ of attachement on the latters jeep.
Reyes executed a counterbond with petitioner as surety with the amount to cover his liability. The trial court ruled in
favor of Ong and ordered Reyes to pay the amount plus attorneys fee. The jeep was sold in a public auction at
P4000.
Central surety filed for the cancellation of the counterbond to which Ong objected saying that Central pay the
deficiency on the judgment in the amount of P5,700 to cover the cost of litigation less the amount of the jeep. The
motion for a deficiency judgment was opposed by the surety on the ground that it had fulfilled the condition of the
counterbond. Despite the opposition, the court ordered the surety to pay.
Issue:WON the petitioner is liable for the deficiency
Held: No. The stipulation in the counterbond executed by the petitioner is the law between the parties in this case
and not the provisions of the Rules of Court.
." The main obligation of the surety was to redeliver the jeep so that it could be sold in case execution was issued
against the principal obligor. The amount of P6,465.00 was merely to fix the limit of the suretys liability in case the
jeep could not be reached. In the instant case, the jeep was made available for execution of the judgment by the
surety. The surety had done its part; the obligation of the bond had been discharged; the bond should be cancelled.
general provisions of the Civil Code regarding obligations. Article 1158 provides that "payment may be made by any person,
whether he has an interest in the performance of the obligation or not, and whether the payment is known and approved by the
debtor or whether he is unaware of it. Any person who makes a payment for the account of another may recover from the
debtor the amount of the payment, unless it was made against the express will of the latter. In the latter case he can only
recover from the debtor in so far as the payment has been beneficial to the latter." According to this legal provision, it is evident
that the plaintiff-appellant is bound to pay to the plaintiff what the latter had advanced to the creditor upon the judgment, and
this is the more so because it appears, that although L. executed the bond without his knowledge, nevertheless he did not object
thereto or repudiate the same at any time. From the proven facts it cannot logically be deduced that the appellant did not have
knowledge of the bond, first, because his properties were attached and the attachment could not have been levied without his
knowledge, and, secondly, because the said properties were returned to him and in receiving them he was necessarily apprized
of the fact that a bond had been filed to discharge the attachment.
Facts:
Jerry O. Toole, Antonio Abad and Anastacio Santos formed a general mercantile partnership Philippine American
Construction Company with a capital of P14k, P10k of which was taken by way of loan from PaulinoCandelaria. The
partnership and the partners undertook and bound themselves to pay jointly and severally to the indebtedness.
Upon default, Paulino filed civil case against Phil-Am Construction Company and the partners for the recovery of
loan. The trial court ordered all Defendants to pay jointly and severally; CA affirmed. Plaintiff, in her capacity as
judicial administratrix of the deceased Santiago Lucero, in 1932, paid to the creditor PaulinoCandelaria the sum of
P5,665.55 on account of the judgment.Paulino obtained a writ of attachment against Defendants. The Sheriff
attached properties of 3 partners. Partnership of P10k.
Phil-Am Construction Company as principal then represented by the partner Antonio Abad, Santiago Lucero and
Meliton Carlos as guarantors offered to post and executed a bond of P10k in favour of Paulino for the lifting of the
attachment.After issuance of writ of execution, Sheriff found no property of the judgment debtors. Paulino moved
for the issuance of the writ of execution against the guarantors of Defendants.
Guarantor-Plaintiff and co-guarantor Meliton Carlos later paid the creditor and were able to recover from Antonio
Abad a sum of P3800, which they divided equally.
It appeared that the payment made by the plaintiff to Paulino was reduced to the sum of P3665. Plaintiff now
demands from Anastacio Santos the return of the aforesaid sum but Anastacio refused.
ISSUE: Whether or not Defendant is bound to pay Plaintiff what he had advanced to Paulino?
HELD: YES. Article 1838 provides that any guarantor who pays for the debtor shall be indemnified by the latter even
should the guaranty have been undertaken without the knowledge of the debtor.
In this case: the guarantor was the deceased Santiago Lucero, represented by the plaintiff in her capacity as judicial
administratrix, and the debtor is the defendant-appellant. Applying the provision cited, it is obvious that the
Defendant is legally bound to pay what the Plaintiff had advanced to the creditor upon the judgment,
notwithstanding the fact that the bond had been given without his knowledge.
Any person who makes a payment for the account of another may recover from the debtor the amount of the
payment, unless it was made against the express will of the latter. In the latter case, he can only recover from the
debtor in so far as the payment has been beneficial to the latter.
It is evident that Defendant is bound to pay to the plaintiff what the latter had advanced to the creditor upon the
judgment, and this is more so because it appears that although Lucero executed the bond without his knowledge,
nevertheless he did not object thereto or repudiate the same at any time.
-9434 / 100 Phil 1059, 29March 1957;
-30247 / 52 Phil 926, 11
March 1929;
-28030 / 111 SCRA 24,18 January 1982;
Finance Corporation v. Imperial Textile Mills, Inc., G.R. No. 160324 / 475SCRA 149, 15 November
2005;
-Strata Assurance Corporation v. Republic of the Philippines, G.R. No. 156571 / 557SCRA 363, 9 July 2008;
G.R. No. 145578 / 475 SCRA 398, 18 November2005;
-10168 / 34 Phil 589, 22 July1916;
-19493 / 45 Phil 107 , 27 August 1923;
Social Security System, G.R. No. L-33205 / 153 SCRA 338, 31August 1987;
-Quico v. Yap Chuan, G.R. No. L-5470 / 16 Phil 76, 22 March1910;
-26449 / 28 SCRA 58, 15 May 1969;
nila Railroad Company v. Hon. CarmelinoAlvendia, G.R. No. L-22137 / 17 SCRA 154, 19May 1966;
-27249 / 34 SCRA 136,31 July 1970;
pany, G.R. No. L-9353 / 101Phil 494, 21 May 1957;
Mira HermanosInc
Manila Tobacconiststs, Inc., et al
Provident Insurance Co.
Mira agreed to deliver to the Manila Tobacconists merchandise for sale on consignment.
Manila Tobacconist agreed to pay.
Mira required a bond of P3000.
Provident executed a bond to secure the fulfillment of the obligation of the Tobacconist
under the contract up to the sum of P3000.
The volume of the business of the Tobacconist having increased, Mira required an
additional bond of P2000.
Manila Compania de Seguros, in compliance with the requirement, executed a bond of
P2000.
A final and complete liquidation was made, as a result of which there was found a balance
due of P2272.79, which indebtedness was recognized by Tobacconist but was unable to
pay.
Provident paid only the sum of P1363.67 (60% of the amount owed).
Issue:
Whether or not Provident is entitled to the benefit of division.
Ruling:
No.
Article 1837. Should there be several sureties of only one debtor for the same debt, the
liability therefore shall be divided among them all. The creditor can claim from each surety only
his proportional part unless liability in solidum has been expressly stipulated.
The article refers to several sureties of only one debtor for the same debt. Although the
two bonds on their face appear to guarantee the same debt co-extensively up to P2000 that of
the Provident alone extending beyond that sum up to P3000 it was pleaded conclusively proven
that in reality said bonds, or the two sureties, do not guarantee the same debt because Provident
guarantees only the first P3000 and the Manila Compania de Seguros, only the excess over the
above said amount up to P5000. Article 1837 does not apply to this factual situation.
The bond of P3000 filed by Provident responded for the obligation of the Tobacconists up
to the sum of P3000, inasmuch as the bond of P2000 filed by the Manila Compania de Seguros
responded for the obligation only insofar as it might exceed P3000 up to P5000.
Ching further executed an Undertaking for each trust receipt binding himself to the contract and stipulating interests
therein. PBM later on obtained a P3,500,000 trust loan from TRB. Ching signed as co-maker in the notarized
Promissory Note evidencing this trust loan.
PBM defaulted. PBM and Ching filed for a suspension of payment of PBMs obligations before the SEC allow PBM to
continue its normal business operations free from the interference of its creditors. The SEC placed in receivership all
of PBMs assets, liabilities and obligations. TRB filed a complaint for collection from PBM and Ching.
RTC ruled in favor of TRB and found Ching liable to TRB for P19.3 million under the Deed of Suretyship:
[T]he liability of Ching as a surety attaches independently from his capacity as a stockholder of the Philippine
Blooming Mills. Indisputably, under the Deed of Suretyship defendant Ching unconditionally agreed to assume PBMs
liability to the plaintiff in the event PBM defaulted in the payment of the said obligation in addition to whatever
penalties, expenses and bank charges that may occur by reason of default. Clear enough, under the Deed of
Suretyship (Exh. J), defendant Ching bound himself jointly and severally with PBM in the payment of the latters
obligation to the plaintiff. The obligation being solidary, the plaintiff Bank can hold Ching liable upon default of the
principal debtor. This is explicitly provided in Article 1216 of the New Civil Code already quoted above.
CA affirmed as Ching did not deny the evidence presented (L/Cs, Trust Receipts, Undertaking, Deed of Surety, and
the 3.5 Million Peso Promissory Note upon which TRBs action rested.)but modified it as to the amount of his liability
to P15.7 Million.
Ching asserts that the Deed of Suretyship dated 21 July 1977 could not answer for obligations not yet in existence at
the time of its execution. Specifically, Ching maintained that the Deed of Suretyship could not answer for debts
contracted by PBM in 1980 and 1981. Ching contended that no accessory contract of suretyship could arise without
an existing principal contract of loan. Ching likewise argued that TRB could no longer claim on the trust receipts
because TRB had already taken the properties subject of the trust receipts. Ching likewise maintained that his
obligation as surety could not exceed the P1,373,415 apportioned to PBM under the SEC-approved rehabilitation
plan.
Issue: Is Ching liable as surety?
Held: Yes.
Ching is liable for credit obligations contracted by PBM against TRB before and after the execution of the 21 July
1977 Deed of Suretyship. This is evident from the tenor of the deed itself, referring to amounts PBM "may now be
indebted or may hereafter become indebted" to TRB.
The law expressly allows a suretyship for "future debts". Article 2053 provides: A guaranty may also be given as
security for future debts, the amount of which is not yet known; there can be no claim against the guarantor until
the debt is liquidated. A conditional obligation may also be secured.
Furthermore, this Court has ruled in Dio v. Court of Appeals that:
Art. 2053 is the basis for contracts denominated as continuing guaranty or suretyship.
A continuing guaranty is one which is not limited to a single transaction, but which contemplates a future course of
dealing, covering a series of transactions, generally for an indefinite time or until revoked. It is prospective in its
operation and is generally intended to provide security with respect to future transactions within certain limits, and
contemplates a succession of liabilities, for which, as they accrue, the guarantor becomes liable. Otherwise stated, a
continuing guaranty is one which covers all transactions, including those arising in the future, which are within the
description or contemplation of the contract of guaranty, until the expiration or termination thereof. A guaranty
shall be construed as continuing when by the terms thereof it is evident that the object is to give a standing credit to
the principal debtor to be used from time to time either indefinitely or until a certain period; especially if the right to
recall the guaranty is expressly reserved. Hence, where the contract states that the guaranty is to secure advances to
be made "from time to time," it will be construed to be a continuing one.
In granting the loan to PBM, TRB required Chings surety precisely to insure full recovery of the loan in case PBM
becomes insolvent or fails to pay in full. This was the very purpose of the surety. Thus, Ching cannot use PBMs failure
to pay in full as justification for his own reduced liability to TRB. As surety, Ching agreed to pay in full PBMs loan in
case PBM fails to pay in full for any reason, including its insolvency.
TRB, as creditor, has the right under the surety to proceed against Ching for the entire amount of PBMs loan. This is
clear from Article 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. (Emphasis supplied)
Thus, the following is the summary of Chings liability under the suretyship as of 13 May 1983, the date of filing of
TRBs complaint with the trial court:
1. On Trust Receipt No. 106 (Letter of Credit No. 479 AD)
Outstanding Principal P 959,611.96
Facts:
Pal-Fox was indebted to the BIR for forest charges and surcharges amounting to P11,
851.56 and Far Eastern Surety Insurance Co., Inc. was jointly and severally liable with the
lumber company for the payment of the said forest charges up to P5000.
CFI: Republic seeking to recover, jointly and severally, from Pal-Fox and Far Eastern
Surety Insurance Co., Inc the sum of P5000 plus interest from the filing of the complaint, and
from Pal-Fox alone the balance of P6841.56 plus legal interest.
Issue:
Whether or not the surety is liable for the said interest.
Ruling:
Yes.
The contract of guaranty executed by the appellant Company nowhere excludes this
interest, and Article 2055, paragraph 2 of the Civil Code is clearly applicable.
If it (guaranty) be simple or indefinite, it shall comprise not only the principal obligation
but also its accessories, including judicial costs incurred after he has been judicially required to
pay.
-49401 / 115 SCRA777, 30 July 1982;
No. L-16666 / 43 Phil 297, 10 April 1922;
Issue: Does said novation release the sureties from their liability as such?
Held: No.
1. The execution of the new promissory notes undoubtedly constituted and extension of time as to the obligation
included therein, such as would release a surety, even though of the solidary type, under article 1851 of the Civil
Code. Nevertheless it is to be borne in mind that said extension and novation related ONLY to the second instalment
of the original obligation and interest accrued up to that time. Furthermore, the total amount of these notes was
afterwards paid in full, and they are not now the subject of controversy. It results that the extension thus effected
could not discharge the sureties from their liability as to other instalments upon which alone they have been sued in
this action.
2. The rule that an extension of time granted to the debtor by the creditor, without the consent of the sureties,
extinguishes the latter's liability is common both to Spanish jurisprudence and the common law; and it is well settled
in English and American jurisprudence that where a surety is liable for different payments, such as instalments of
rent, or upon a series of promissory notes, an extension of time as to one or more will not affect the liability of the
surety for the others.
3. As to acceleration clauses for instalments. If the stipulation had been to the effect that the failure to pay any
instalment when due would ipso facto cause other instalments to fall due at once, the act of the creditor in
extending the time as to such instalment would interfere with the right of the surety to exercise his legal rights
against the debtor, and that the surety would in such case be discharged by the extension of time, in conformity with
articles 1851 and 1852 of the Civil Code. In the contract under consideration the stipulation is not that the maturity
of the later instalments shall be ipso facto accelerated by default in the payment of a prior instalment, but only that
it shall give the creditor a right to treat the subsequent instalments as due, and in this case it does not appear that
the creditor has exercised this election. On the contrary, this action was not instituted until after all of the
instalments had fallen due in conformity with the original contract.
4. The contention that the sureties were discharged by a fraud practiced by the plaintiff in failing to secure a
mortgage for the debt is untenable because neither the plaintiff nor her attorney in fact were parties to such
agreement and it was a suggestion that came from the principal debtor, and not from the side of the plaintiff.
Escano v. Rafael Ortigas, Jr., G.R. No. 151953 / 526 SCRA 26, 29 June2007;
2 / 42 Phil 733, 1February 1922;
-9306 / 99 Phil 263, 25 May 1956;
rk v. Cho Siong, G.R. No. L-29588 / 52 Phil 612, 29 December1928;
-9073 / 104 Phil 806, 17November 1958;
-22177 / 46 Phil 561, 2 December1924;
Doctrine: Continuing Guaranty. Intent of the parties is controlling(as to the prospectivity or retroactivity)
Willex Plastic Industries Corporation v. Hon. Court of Appeals, International Corporate Bank
G.R. No. 103066 / 256 SCRA 478, 25 April 1996
Facts:
Petitioner and Inter-Resin Industrial Corporation (IRIC) were ordered by the RTC, jointly and severally, to pay
respondent International Corporate Bank certain sums of money, and the appellate courts resolution of October 17, 1989
denying petitioners motion for reconsideration.
In 1978, IRIC entered opened a Letter of Credit with the Manila Banking Corporation (MBC). To secure payment of the
credit accommodation, Inter-Resin Industrial and the Investment and Underwriting Corporation of the Philippines (IUCP)
executed two documents of "Continuing Surety Agreement" binding themselves solidarily to pay Manilabank "obligations
of every kind, on which the IRIC may now be indebted or hereafter become indebted to the [Manilabank]." The two
agreements (Exhs. J and K) are the same in all respects, except as to the limit of liability of the surety, the first surety
agreement being limited to US$333,830.00, while the second one is limited to US$334,087.00
In 1979, IRIC, together with petitioner, executed a "Continuing Guaranty" in favor of IUCP to jointly and severally
guarantee "the prompt and punctual payment at maturity of the NOTE/S issued by the DEBTOR/S . . . to the extent of
the aggregate principal sum of FIVE MILLION PESOS (P5,000,000.00) ..."
In 1981, IUCP paid MBC P4,334,280.61 representing IRICs outstanding obligation. Atrium, which substituted IUCP
demanded payment from petitioner and IRIC, and filed a case against them upon their failure to comply.In 1982,
Interbank, which succeeded Atrium, received payment from IRIC in the amount of P687,500 representing the proceeds
from the fire insurance policy for the destruction of its property.
IRIC admitted that the "Continuing Guaranty" was intended to secure payment to Atrium of the amount of P4,334,280.61
which the latter had paid to Manilabank. It claimed, however, that it had already fully paid its obligation to Atrium
Capital.
Willex argues that the liability has been extinguished due to the accidental fire, its account is now very lesser than those
stated in the complaint because of some payments made; that is only a guarantor and thus only secondarily liable; and
Atrium/Interbank (substituted later as plaintiff) failed to exhaust the ultimate remedy in pursuing its claim against the
principal obligor.
Issue: Whether under the "Continuing Guaranty" signed on April 2, 1979 petitioner Willex Plastic may be held jointly and
severally liable with Inter-Resin Industrial for the amount by Interbank to Manilabank.
Held: Willex Plastic is liable as surety.
1. It has overlooked the fact that the original agreement itself showed the reason the Continuing Guaranty was executed
to actually secure payment to Interbank (formerly IUCP) of amounts paid by the latter to Manilabank.
2. The contention that a "Continuing Guaranty," being an accessory contract, cannot legally exist because of the absence
of a valid principal obligation is untenable. Willexscontention is based on the fact that it is not a party either to the
"Continuing Surety Agreement" or to the loan agreement between Manilabank and Inter-Resin Industrial.
But the consideration necessary to support a surety obligation need not pass directly to the surety, a consideration
moving to the principal alone being sufficient. For a "guarantor or surety is bound by the same consideration that makes
the contract effective between the principal parties thereto. . . . It is never necessary that a guarantor or surety should
receive any part or benefit, if such there be, accruing to his principal." In an analogous case, this Court held:
chanro b1es vi rt ual 1aw li brary
At the time the loan of P100,000.00 was obtained from petitioner by Daicor..., the comprehensive surety agreement was
admittedly in full force and effect. The loan was, therefore, covered by the said agreement, and private respondent, even
if he did not sign the promissory note, is liable by virtue of the surety agreement...The surety agreement which was
earlier signed by Enrique Go, Sr. and private respondent, is an accessory obligation, it being dependent upon a principal
one which, in this case is the loan obtained by Daicor as evidenced by a promissory note.
3. A CONTRACT OF SURETY IS ORDINARILY NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS RETROSPECTIVE, IN THE END THE INTENTION
OF THE PARTIES AS REVEALED BY THE EVIDENCE IS CONTROLLING. Willex Plastic contends that the "Continuing
Guaranty" cannot be retroactively applied so as to secure the payments made by Interbank under the two "Continuing
Surety Agreements."
The cases cited are, however, distinguishable from the present case. In El Vencedor v. Canlas we held that a contract of
suretyship "is not retrospective and no liability attaches for defaults occurring before it is entered into unless an intent to
be so liable is indicated." There we found nothing in the contract to show that the parties intended the surety bonds to
answer for the debts contracted previous to the execution of the bonds. In Dio v. Court of Appeals the issue was
whether the sureties could be held liable for an obligation contracted after the execution of the continuing surety
agreement.
In this case, the parties to the "Continuing Guaranty" clearly provided that the guaranty would cover "sums obtained
and/or to be obtained" by Inter-Resin Industrial from Interbank. By its very nature a continuing suretyship contemplates
a future course of dealing. "It is prospective in its operation and is generally intended to provide security with respect to
future transactions." By no means, however, was it meant in that case that in all instances a contract of guaranty or
suretyship should be prospective in application. Indeed, as we also held in Bank of the Philippine Islands v. Foerster, (49
Phil. 843 [1926]) although a contract of suretyship is ordinarily not to be construed as retrospective, in the
end the intention of the parties as revealed by the evidence is controlling.
4. Willex solidarily bound itself to the agreement which embodies a stipulation of an express renunciation of the right of
excussion. Thus in Art. 2059: Excussion shall not take place:
(1) If the guarantor has expressly renounced it;
(2) If he has bound himself solidarily with the debtor.