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141309
June 19, 2007
LIWAYWAY
VINZONS-CHATO, petitioner,
vs.
FORTUNE TOBACCO CORPORATION, respondent.
DECISION
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
Petitioner assails the May 7, 1999 Decision1 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
SP No. 47167, which affirmed the September 29, 1997 Order2 of the Regional
Trial Court (RTC) of Marikina, Branch 272, in Civil Case No. 97-341-MK,
denying petitioners motion to dismiss. The complaint filed by respondent sought
to recover damages for the alleged violation of its constitutional rights arising from
petitioners issuance of Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 37-93 (RMC 37-93),
which the Court declared invalid in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of
Appeals.3
Petitioner Liwayway Vinzons-Chato was then the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue while respondent Fortune Tobacco Corporation is an entity engaged in
the manufacture of different brands of cigarettes, among which are "Champion,"
"Hope," and "More" cigarettes.
On June 10, 1993, the legislature enacted Republic Act No. 7654 (RA 7654),
which took effect on July 3, 1993. Prior to its effectivity, cigarette brands
Champion," "Hope," and "More" were considered local brands subjected to an ad
valorem tax at the rate of 20-45%. However, on July 1, 1993, or two days before
RA 7654 took effect, petitioner issued RMC 37-93 reclassifying "Champion,"
"Hope," and "More" as locally manufactured cigarettes bearing a foreign
brand subject to the 55% ad valorem tax.4 RMC 37-93 in effect subjected
"Hope," "More," and "Champion" cigarettes to the provisions of RA 7654,
specifically, to Sec. 142,5 (c)(1) on locally manufactured cigarettes which
are currently classified and taxed at 55%, and which imposes an ad valorem tax
of "55% provided that the minimum tax shall not be less than Five Pesos (P5.00)
per pack."6
On July 2, 1993, at about 5:50 p.m., BIR Deputy Commissioner Victor A.
Deoferio, Jr. sent via telefax a copy of RMC 37-93 to Fortune Tobacco but it was
addressed to no one in particular. On July 15, 1993, Fortune Tobacco received, by
ordinary mail, a certified xerox copy of RMC 37-93. On July 20, 1993, respondent
filed a motion for reconsideration requesting the recall of RMC 37-93, but was
denied in a letter dated July 30, 1993.7 The same letter assessed respondent for ad
valorem tax deficiency amounting to P9,598,334.00 (computed on the basis of
RMC 37-93) and demanded payment within 10 days from receipt thereof.8 On
August 3, 1993, respondent filed a petition for review with the Court of Tax
Appeals (CTA), which on September 30, 1993, issued an injunction enjoining the
implementation of RMC 37-93.9 In its decision dated August 10, 1994, the CTA
ruled that RMC 37-93 is defective, invalid, and unenforceable and further enjoined
petitioner from collecting the deficiency tax assessment issued pursuant to RMC
No. 37-93. This ruling was affirmed by the Court of Appeals, and finally by this
Court in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of Appeals.10 It was held,
among others, that RMC 37-93, has fallen short of the requirements for a valid
administrative issuance.
On April 10, 1997, respondent filed before the RTC a complaint11 for damages
against petitioner in her private capacity. Respondent contended that the latter
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should be held liable for damages under Article 32 of the Civil Code considering
that the issuance of RMC 37-93 violated its constitutional right against deprivation
of property without due process of law and the right to equal protection of the
laws.
Petitioner filed a motion to dismiss12 contending that: (1) respondent has no cause
of action against her because she issued RMC 37-93 in the performance of her
official function and within the scope of her authority. She claimed that she acted
merely as an agent of the Republic and therefore the latter is the one responsible
for her acts; (2) the complaint states no cause of action for lack of allegation of
malice or bad faith; and (3) the certification against forum shopping was signed by
respondents counsel in violation of the rule that it is the plaintiff or the principal
party who should sign the same.
On September 29, 1997, the RTC denied petitioners motion to dismiss holding
that to rule on the allegations of petitioner would be to prematurely decide the
merits of the case without allowing the parties to present evidence. It further held
that the defect in the certification against forum shopping was cured by
respondents submission of the corporate secretarys certificate authorizing its
counsel to execute the certification against forum shopping. The dispositive portion
thereof, states:
WHEREFORE, foregoing premises considered, the motion to dismiss filed by the
defendant Liwayway Vinzons-Chato and the motion to strike out and expunge
from the record the said motion to dismiss filed by plaintiff Fortune Tobacco
Corporation are both denied on the grounds aforecited. The defendant is ordered to
file her answer to the complaint within ten (10) days from receipt of this Order.
SO ORDERED.13
The case was elevated to the Court of Appeals via a petition for certiorari under
Rule 65. However, same was dismissed on the ground that under Article 32 of the
Civil Code, liability may arise even if the defendant did not act with malice or bad
faith. The appellate court ratiocinated that Section 38, Book I of the Administrative
Code is the general law on the civil liability of public officers while Article 32 of
the Civil Code is the special law that governs the instant case. Consequently,
malice or bad faith need not be alleged in the complaint for damages. It also
sustained the ruling of the RTC that the defect of the certification against forum
shopping was cured by the submission of the corporate secretarys certificate
giving authority to its counsel to execute the same.
Undaunted, petitioner filed the instant recourse contending that the suit is grounded
on her acts done in the performance of her functions as a public officer, hence, it is
Section 38, Book I of the Administrative Code which should be applied. Under this
provision, liability will attach only when there is a clear showing of bad faith,
malice, or gross negligence. She further averred that the Civil Code, specifically,
Article 32 which allows recovery of damages for violation of constitutional rights,
is a general law on the liability of public officers; while Section 38, Book I of the
Administrative Code is a special law on the superior public officers liability, such
that, if the complaint, as in the instant case, does not allege bad faith, malice, or
gross negligence, the same is dismissible for failure to state a cause of action. As to
the defect of the certification against forum shopping, she urged the Court to
strictly construe the rules and to dismiss the complaint.
Conversely, respondent argued that Section 38 which treats in general the public
officers "acts" from which civil liability may arise, is a general law; while Article
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or negligence; or (2) where the public officer violated a constitutional right of the
plaintiff.
Anent the second issue, we hold that the complaint filed by respondent stated a
cause of action and that the decisive provision thereon is Article 32 of the Civil
Code.
A general statute is one which embraces a class of subjects or places and does not
omit any subject or place naturally belonging to such class. A special statute, as the
term is generally understood, is one which relates to particular persons or things of
a class or to a particular portion or section of the state only.19
A general law and a special law on the same subject are statutes in pari
materia and should, accordingly, be read together and harmonized, if possible,
with a view to giving effect to both. The rule is that where there are two acts, one
of which is special and particular and the other general which, if standing alone,
would include the same matter and thus conflict with the special act, the special
law must prevail since it evinces the legislative intent more clearly than that of a
general statute and must not be taken as intended to affect the more particular and
specific provisions of the earlier act, unless it is absolutely necessary so to construe
it in order to give its words any meaning at all.20
The circumstance that the special law is passed before or after the general act does
not change the principle. Where the special law is later, it will be regarded as an
exception to, or a qualification of, the prior general act; and where the general act
is later, the special statute will be construed as remaining an exception to its terms,
unless repealed expressly or by necessary implication.21
Thus, in City of Manila v. Teotico,22 the Court held that Article 2189 of the Civil
Code which holds provinces, cities, and municipalities civilly liable for death or
injuries by reason of defective conditions of roads and other public works, is a
special provision and should prevail over Section 4 of Republic Act No. 409, the
Charter of Manila, in determining the liability for defective street conditions.
Under said Charter, the city shall not be held for damages or injuries arising from
the failure of the local officials to enforce the provision of the charter, law, or
ordinance, or from negligence while enforcing or attempting to enforce the same.
As explained by the Court:
Manila maintains that the former provision should prevail over the latter, because
Republic Act 409 is a special law, intended exclusively for the City of Manila,
whereas the Civil Code is a general law, applicable to the entire Philippines.
The Court of Appeals, however, applied the Civil Code, and, we think, correctly. It
is true that, insofar as its territorial application is concerned, Republic Act No. 409
is a special law and the Civil Code a general legislation; but, as regards the subject
matter of the provisions above quoted, Section 4 of Republic Act 409 establishes a
general rule regulating the liability of the City of Manila for "damages or injury to
persons or property arising from the failure of" city officers "to enforce the
provisions of" said Act "or any other law or ordinance, or from negligence" of the
city "Mayor, Municipal Board, or other officers while enforcing or attempting to
enforce said provisions." Upon the other hand, Article 2189 of the Civil Code
constitutes a particular prescription making "provinces, cities and municipalities . .
. liable for damages for the death of, or injury suffered by, any person by reason"
specifically "of the defective condition of roads, streets, bridges, public
buildings, and other public works under their control or supervision." In other
words, said section 4 refers to liability arising from negligence, in general,
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regardless of the object thereof, whereas Article 2189 governs liability due to
"defective streets," in particular. Since the present action is based upon the
alleged defective condition of a road, said Article 2189 is decisive thereon.23
In the case of Bagatsing v. Ramirez,24 the issue was which law should govern the
publication of a tax ordinance, the City Charter of Manila, a special act which
treats ordinances in general and which requires their publication before enactment
and after approval, or the Tax Code, a general law, which deals in particular with
"ordinances levying or imposing taxes, fees or other charges," and which demands
publication only after approval. In holding that it is the Tax Code which should
prevail, the Court elucidated that:
There is no question that the Revised Charter of the City of Manila is a special act
since it relates only to the City of Manila, whereas the Local Tax Code is a general
law because it applies universally to all local governments. Blackstone defines
general law as a universal rule affecting the entire community and special law as
one relating to particular persons or things of a class. And the rule commonly said
is that a prior special law is not ordinarily repealed by a subsequent general law.
The fact that one is special and the other general creates a presumption that the
special is to be considered as remaining an exception of the general, one as a
general law of the land, the other as the law of a particular case. However, the rule
readily yields to a situation where the special statute refers to a subject in
general, which the general statute treats in particular. Th[is] exactly is the
circumstance obtaining in the case at bar. Section 17 of the Revised Charter of
the City of Manila speaks of "ordinance" in general, i.e., irrespective of the
nature and scope thereof, whereas, Section 43 of the Local Tax Code relates to
"ordinances levying or imposing taxes, fees or other charges" in particular. In
regard, therefore, to ordinances in general, the Revised Charter of the City of
Manila is doubtless dominant, but, that dominant force loses its continuity
when it approaches the realm of "ordinances levying or imposing taxes, fees
or other charges" in particular. There, the Local Tax Code controls. Here, as
always, a general provision must give way to a particular provision. Special
provision governs.
Let us examine the provisions involved in the case at bar. Article 32 of the Civil
Code provides:
ART. 32. Any public officer or employee, or any private individual, who directly
or indirectly obstructs, defeats, violates, or in any manner impedes or impairs any
of the following rights and liberties of another person shall be liable to the latter for
damages:
xxxx
(6) The right against deprivation of property without due process of law;
xxxx
(8) The right to the equal protection of the laws;
xxxx
The rationale for its enactment was explained by Dean Bocobo of the Code
Commission, as follows:
"DEAN BOCOBO. Article 32, regarding individual rights, Attorney Cirilo Paredes
proposes that Article 32 be so amended as to make a public official liable for
violation of another persons constitutional rights only if the public official acted
maliciously or in bad faith. The Code Commission opposes this suggestion for
these reasons:
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"The very nature of Article 32 is that the wrong may be civil or criminal. It is not
necessary therefore that there should be malice or bad faith. To make such a
requisite would defeat the main purpose of Article 32 which is the effective
protection of individual rights. Public officials in the past have abused their powers
on the pretext of justifiable motives or good faith in the performance of their
duties. Precisely, the object of the Article is to put an end to official abuse by the
plea of good faith. In the United States this remedy is in the nature of a tort.
"Mr. Chairman, this article is firmly one of the fundamental articles introduced in
the New Civil Code to implement democracy. There is no real democracy if a
public official is abusing and we made the article so strong and so comprehensive
that it concludes an abuse of individual rights even if done in good faith, that
official is liable. As a matter of fact, we know that there are very few public
officials who openly and definitely abuse the individual rights of the citizens. In
most cases, the abuse is justified on a plea of desire to enforce the law to comply
with ones duty. And so, if we should limit the scope of this article, that would
practically nullify the object of the article. Precisely, the opening object of the
article is to put an end to abuses which are justified by a plea of good faith, which
is in most cases the plea of officials abusing individual rights."25
The Code Commission deemed it necessary to hold not only public officers but
also private individuals civilly liable for violation of the rights enumerated in
Article 32 of the Civil Code. It is not necessary that the defendant under this
Article should have acted with malice or bad faith, otherwise, it would defeat its
main purpose, which is the effective protection of individual rights. It suffices that
there is a violation of the constitutional right of the plaintiff.26
Article 32 was patterned after the "tort" in American law.27 A tort is a wrong, a
tortious act which has been defined as the commission or omission of an act by
one, without right, whereby another receives some injury, directly or indirectly, in
person, property, or reputation.28 There are cases in which it has been stated that
civil liability in tort is determined by the conduct and not by the mental state of the
tortfeasor, and there are circumstances under which the motive of the defendant
has been rendered immaterial. The reason sometimes given for the rule is that
otherwise, the mental attitude of the alleged wrongdoer, and not the act itself,
would determine whether the act was wrongful.29 Presence of good motive, or
rather, the absence of an evil motive, does not render lawful an act which is
otherwise an invasion of anothers legal right; that is, liability in tort is not
precluded by the fact that defendant acted without evil intent.30
The clear intention therefore of the legislature was to create a distinct cause of
action in the nature of tort for violation of constitutional rights, irrespective of the
motive or intent of the defendant.31 This is a fundamental innovation in the Civil
Code, and in enacting the Administrative Code pursuant to the exercise of
legislative powers, then President Corazon C. Aquino, could not have intended to
obliterate this constitutional protection on civil liberties.
In Aberca v. Ver,32 it was held that with the enactment of Article 32, the principle
of accountability of public officials under the Constitution acquires added meaning
and assumes a larger dimension. No longer may a superior official relax his
vigilance or abdicate his duty to supervise his subordinates, secure in the thought
that he does not have to answer for the transgressions committed by the latter
against the constitutionally protected rights and liberties of the citizen. Part of the
factors that propelled people power in February 1986 was the widely held
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perception that the government was callous or indifferent to, if not actually
responsible for, the rampant violations of human rights. While it would certainly
be too naive to expect that violators of human rights would easily be deterred by
the prospect of facing damage suits, it should nonetheless be made clear in no
uncertain terms that Article 32 of the Civil Code makes the persons who are
directly, as well as indirectly, responsible for the transgression, joint tortfeasors.
On the other hand, Sections 38 and 39, Book I of the Administrative Code, laid
down the rule on the civil liability of superior and subordinate public officers for
acts done in the performance of their duties. For both superior and subordinate
public officers, the presence of bad faith, malice, and negligence are vital elements
that will make them liable for damages. Note that while said provisions deal in
particular with the liability of government officials, the subject thereof is
general, i.e., "acts" done in the performance of official duties, without specifying
the action or omission that may give rise to a civil suit against the official
concerned.
Contrarily, Article 32 of the Civil Code specifies in clear and unequivocal terms a
particular specie of an "act" that may give rise to an action for damages against a
public officer, and that is, a tort for impairment of rights and liberties. Indeed,
Article 32 is the special provision that deals specifically with violation of
constitutional rights by public officers. All other actionable acts of public officers
are governed by Sections 38 and 39 of the Administrative Code. While the Civil
Code, specifically, the Chapter on Human Relations is a general law, Article 32 of
the same Chapter is a special and specific provision that holds a public officer
liable for and allows redress from a particular class of wrongful acts that may be
committed by public officers. Compared thus with Section 38 of the
Administrative Code, which broadly deals with civil liability arising from errors in
the performance of duties, Article 32 of the Civil Code is the specific provision
which must be applied in the instant case precisely filed to seek damages for
violation of constitutional rights.
The complaint in the instant case was brought under Article 32 of the Civil Code.
Considering that bad faith and malice are not necessary in an action based on
Article 32 of the Civil Code, the failure to specifically allege the same will not
amount to failure to state a cause of action. The courts below therefore correctly
denied the motion to dismiss on the ground of failure to state a cause of action,
since it is enough that the complaint avers a violation of a constitutional right of
the plaintiff.
Anent the issue on non-compliance with the rule against forum shopping, the
subsequent submission of the secretarys certificate authorizing the counsel to sign
and execute the certification against forum shopping cured the defect of
respondents complaint. Besides, the merits of the instant case justify the liberal
application of the rules.33
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the petition is DENIED. The Decision
of the Court of Appeals dated May 7, 1999 which affirmed the Order of the
Regional Trial Court of Marikina, Branch 272, denying petitioners motion to
dismiss, is AFFIRMED. The Presiding Judge, Regional Trial Court of Marikina,
Branch 272, is herebyDIRECTED to continue with the proceedings in Civil Case
No. 97-341-MK with dispatch.
With costs.
SO ORDERED.
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shall be inviolable, and no search warrant or warrant of arrest shall issue except
upon probable cause to be determined personally by the judge after examination
under oath or affirmation of the complainant and the witnesses he may produce,
and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be
seized.
This provision protects not only those who appear to be innocent but also those
who appear to be guilty but are nevertheless to be presumed innocent until the
contrary is proved. 6 In the case at bench, the seizure was made without any
warrant. Under the Rules of Court, 7 a warrantless search can only be undertaken
under the following circumstance:
Sec. 12. Search incident to a lawful arrest. - A person lawfully arrested may be
searched for dangerous weapons or anything which may be used as proof of the
commission of an offense, without a search warrant.
We hold that the evidence did not justify the warrantless search and seizure of
private respondents' goods. Petitioner corporation received information that private
respondents were illegally selling Boy Scouts items and paraphernalia in October
1983. The specific date and time are not established in the evidence adduced by the
parties. Petitioner de Guzman then made a surveillance of the stores of private
respondents. They reported to the Philippine Constabulary and on October 25,
1983, the raid was made on the stores of private respondents and the supposed
illicit goods were seized. The progression of time between the receipt of the
information and the raid of the stores of private respondents shows there was
sufficient time for petitioners and the PC raiding party to apply for a judicial
warrant. Despite the sufficiency of time, they did not apply for a warrant and
seized the goods of private respondents. In doing so, they took the risk of a suit for
damages in case the seizure would be proved to violate the right of private
respondents against unreasonable search and seizure. In the case at bench, the
search and seizure were clearly illegal. There was no probable cause for the
seizure. Probable cause for a search has been defined as "such facts and
circumstances which would lead a reasonably discreet and prudent man to believe
that an offense has been committed and that the objects sought in connection with
the offense are in the place sought to be searched." 8 These facts and circumstances
were not in any way shown by the petitioners to justify their warrantless search and
seizure. Indeed, after a preliminary investigation, the Provincial Fiscal of Rizal
dismissed their complaint for unfair competition and later ordered the return of the
seized goods.
Petitioners would deflect their liability with the argument that it was the Philippine
Constabulary that conducted the raid and their participation was only to report the
alleged illegal activity of private respondents.
While undoubtedly, the members of the PC raiding team should have been
included in the complaint for violation of the private respondents' constitutional
rights, still, the omission will not exculpate petitioners.
In the case of Lim vs. Ponce de Leon, 9 we ruled for the recovery of damages for
violation of constitutional rights and liberties from public officer or private
individual, thus:
Art. 32. Any public officer or employee, or any private individual, who directly or
indirectly obstructs, defeats, violates or in any manner impedes or impairs any of
the following rights and liberties of another person shall be liable to the latter for
damages.
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I felt very nervous. I was crying to loss (sic) my goods and capital because I am
doing business with borrowed money only, there was commotion created by the
raiding team and they even stepped on some of the pants and dresses on display for
sale. All passersby stopped to watch and stared at me with accusing expressions. I
was trembling and terribly ashamed, sir. 18
Respondent Lugatiman testified:
I felt very nervous. I was crying and I was very much ashamed because many
people have been watching the PC soldiers hauling my items, and many/I (sic)
heard say "nakaw pala ang mga iyan" for which I am claiming P25,000.00 for
damages. 19
While respondent Gonzalez stated thus:
I do not like the way the raid was conducted by the team sir because it looked like
that what I have been selling were stolen items that they should be confiscated by
uniformed soldiers. Many people were around and the more the confiscation was
made in a scandalous manner; every clothes, T-shirts, pants and dresses even those
not wrapped dropped to the ground. I was terribly shamed in the presence of
market goers that morning. 20
Needles to state, the wantonness of the wrongful seizure justifies the award of
exemplary damages. 21 It will also serve as a stern reminder to all and sundry that
the constitutional protection against unreasonable search and seizure is a virile
reality and not a mere burst of rhetoric. The all encompassing protection extends
against intrusions directly done both by government and indirectly by private
entities.
IN VIEW WHEREOF, the appealed decision is AFFIRMED WITH
MODIFICATION. We impose a SIX PERCENT (6%) interest from January 9,
1987 on the TWO THOUSAND PESOS (P2,000.00) for the unreturned twenty-six
(26) pieces of girl scouts items and a TWELVE PERCENT (12%) interest, in lieu
of SIX PERCENT (6%), on the said amount upon finality of this Decision until the
payment thereof. 22 Costs against petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. L-69866 April 15, 1988
ROGELIO ABERCA, RODOLFO BENOSA, NESTOR BODINO NOEL
ETABAG DANILO DE LA FUENTE, BELEN DIAZ-FLORES, MANUEL
MARIO GUZMAN, ALAN JAZMINEZ, EDWIN LOPEZ, ALFREDO
MANSOS, ALEX MARCELINO, ELIZABETH PROTACIO-MARCELINO,
JOSEPH OLAYER, CARLOS PALMA, MARCO PALO, ROLANDO
SALUTIN, BENJAMIN SESGUNDO, ARTURO TABARA, EDWIN
TULALIAN
and
REBECCA
TULALIAN petitioners,
vs.
MAJ. GEN. FABIAN VER, COL. FIDEL SINGSON, COL. ROLANDO
ABADILLA, COL. GERARDO B. LANTORIA, COL. GALILEO
KINTANAR, 1ST LT. COL. PANFILO M. LACSON, MAJ. RODOLFO
AGUINALDO, CAPT. DANILO PIZARRO, 1ST LT. PEDRO TANGO, 1ST
LT. ROMEO RICARDO, 1ST LT. RAUL BACALSO, MSGT BIENVENIDO
BALABA and REGIONAL TRIAL COURT, National Capital Judicial
Region, Branch XCV (95), Quezon City, respondents.
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YAP, J.:
This petition for certiorari presents vital issues not heretofore passed upon by this
Court. It poses the question whether the suspension of the privilege of the writ of
habeas corpus bars a civil action for damages for illegal searches conducted by
military personnel and other violations of rights and liberties guaranteed under the
Constitution. If such action for damages may be maintained, who can be held liable
for such violations: only the military personnel directly involved and/or their
superiors as well.
This case stems from alleged illegal searches and seizures and other violations of
the rights and liberties of plaintiffs by various intelligence units of the Armed
Forces of the Philippines, known as Task Force Makabansa (TFM) ordered by
General Fabian Ver "to conduct pre-emptive strikes against known communistterrorist (CT) underground houses in view of increasing reports about CT plans to
sow disturbances in Metro Manila," Plaintiffs allege, among others, that complying
with said order, elements of the TFM raided several places, employing in most
cases defectively issued judicial search warrants; that during these raids, certain
members of the raiding party confiscated a number of purely personal items
belonging to plaintiffs; that plaintiffs were arrested without proper warrants issued
by the courts; that for some period after their arrest, they were denied visits of
relatives and lawyers; that plaintiffs were interrogated in violation of their rights to
silence and counsel; that military men who interrogated them employed threats,
tortures and other forms of violence on them in order to obtain incriminatory
information or confessions and in order to punish them; that all violations of
plaintiffs constitutional rights were part of a concerted and deliberate plan to
forcibly extract information and incriminatory statements from plaintiffs and to
terrorize, harass and punish them, said plans being previously known to and
sanctioned by defendants.
Plaintiffs sought actual/compensatory damages amounting to P39,030.00; moral
damages in the amount of at least P150,000.00 each or a total of P3,000,000.00;
exemplary damages in the amount of at least P150,000.00 each or a total of
P3,000,000.00; and attorney's fees amounting to not less than P200,000.00.
A motion to dismiss was filed by defendants, through their counsel, then SolicitorGeneral Estelito Mendoza, alleging that (1) plaintiffs may not cause a judicial
inquiry into the circumstances of their detention in the guise of a damage suit
because, as to them, the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus is suspended; (2)
assuming that the courts can entertain the present action, defendants are immune
from liability for acts done in the performance of their official duties; and (3) the
complaint states no cause of action against the defendants. Opposition to said
motion to dismiss was filed by plaintiffs Marco Palo, Danilo de la Fuente,
Benjamin Sesgundo, Nel Etabag, Alfredo Mansos and Rolando Salutin on July 8,
1983, and by plaintiffs Edwin Lopez, Manuel Mario Guzman, Alan Jasminez,
Nestor Bodino, Carlos Palma, Arturo Tabara, Joseph Olayer, Rodolfo Benosa,
Belen Diaz, Flores, Rogelio Aberca, Alex Marcelino and Elizabeth Marcelino on
July 21, 1983. On November 7, 1983, a Consolidated Reply was filed by
defendants' counsel.
Then, on November 8, 1983, the Regional Trial Court, National Capital Region,
Branch 95, Judge Willelmo C. Fortun, Presiding, 1 issued a resolution granting the
motion to dismiss. I sustained, lock, stock and barrel, the defendants' contention (1)
the plaintiffs may not cause a judicial inquiry into the circumstances of their
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detention in the guise of a damage suit because, as to them, the privilege of the writ
of habeas corpus is suspended; (2) that assuming that the court can entertain the
present action, defendants are immune from liability for acts done in the
performance of their official duties; and (3) that the complaint states no cause of
action against defendants, since there is no allegation that the defendants named in
the complaint confiscated plaintiffs' purely personal properties in violation of their
constitutional rights, and with the possible exception of Major Rodolfo Aguinaldo
and Sergeant Bienvenido Balabo committed acts of torture and maltreatment, or
that the defendants had the duty to exercise direct supervision and control of their
subordinates or that they had vicarious liability as employers under Article 2180 of
the Civil Code. The lower court stated, "After a careful study of defendants'
arguments, the court finds the same to be meritorious and must, therefore, be
granted. On the other hand, plaintiffs' arguments in their opposition are lacking in
merit."
A motion to set aside the order dismissing the complaint and a supplemental
motion for reconsideration was filed by the plaintiffs on November 18, 1983, and
November 24, 1983, respectively. On December 9, 1983, the defendants filed a
comment on the aforesaid motion of plaintiffs, furnishing a copy thereof to the
attorneys of all the plaintiffs, namely, Attys. Jose W. Diokno, Procopio Beltran,
Rene Sarmiento, Efren Mercado, Auguso Sanchez, Antonio L. Rosales, Pedro B.
Ella Jr., Arno V. Sanidad, Alexander Padilla, Joker Arroyo, Rene Saguisag, Ramon
Esguerra and Felicitas Aquino.
On December 15, 1983, Judge Fortun issued an order voluntarily inhibiting himself
from further proceeding in the case and leaving the resolution of the motion to set
aside the order of dismissal to Judge Lising, "to preclude any suspicion that he
(Judge Fortun) cannot resolve [the] aforesaid pending motion with the cold
neutrality of an impartial judge and to put an end to plaintiffs assertion that the
undersigned has no authority or jurisdiction to resolve said pending motion." This
order prompted plaintiffs to reesolve an amplificatory motion for reconsideration
signed in the name of the Free Legal Assistance Group (FLAG) of Mabini Legal
Aid Committee, by Attys. Joker P. Arroyo, Felicitas Aquino and Arno Sanidad on
April 12, 1984. On May 2,1984, the defendants filed a comment on said
amplificatory motion for reconsideration.
In an order dated May 11, 1984, the trial court, Judge Esteban Lising, Presiding,
without acting on the motion to set aside order of November 8, 1983, issued an
order, as follows:
It appearing from the records that, indeed, the following plaintiffs, Rogelio Aberca,
Danilo de la Fuente and Marco Palo, represented by counsel, Atty. Jose W.
Diokno, Alan Jasminez represented by counsel, Atty. Augusta Sanchez, Spouses
Alex Marcelino and Elizabeth Protacio-Marcelino, represented by counsel, Atty.
Procopio Beltran, Alfredo Mansos represented by counsel, Atty. Rene Sarmiento,
and Rolando Salutin, represented by counsel, Atty. Efren Mercado, failed to file a
motion to reconsider the Order of November 8, 1983, dismissing the complaint,
nor interposed an appeal therefrom within the reglementary period, as prayed for
by the defendants, said Order is now final against said plaintiffs.
Assailing the said order of May 11, 1984, the plaintiffs filed a motion for
reconsideration on May 28,1984, alleging that it was not true that plaintiffs
Rogelio Aberca, Danilo de la Fuente, Marco Palo, Alan Jasminez, Alex Marcelino,
Elizabeth Protacio-Marcelino, Alfredo Mansos and Rolando Salutin failed to file a
15! !
16!
18!
officers in the performance of official duties written the ambit of their powers. As
held in Forbes, etc. vs. Chuoco Tiaco and Crossfield: 4
No one can be held legally responsible in damages or otherwise for doing in a legal
manner what he had authority, under the law, to do. Therefore, if the GovernorGeneral had authority, under the law to deport or expel the defendants, and
circumstances justifying the deportation and the method of carrying it out are left
to him, then he cannot be held liable in damages for the exercise of this power.
Moreover, if the courts are without authority to interfere in any manner, for the
purpose of controlling or interferring with the exercise of the political powers
vested in the chief executive authority of the Government, then it must follow that
the courts cannot intervene for the purpose of declaring that he is liable in damages
for the exeercise of this authority.
It may be that the respondents, as members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines,
were merely responding to their duty, as they claim, "to prevent or suppress
lawless violence, insurrection, rebellion and subversion" in accordance with
Proclamation No. 2054 of President Marcos, despite the lifting of martial law on
January 27, 1981, and in pursuance of such objective, to launch pre- emptive
strikes against alleged communist terrorist underground houses. But this cannot be
construed as a blanket license or a roving commission untramelled by any
constitutional restraint, to disregard or transgress upon the rights and liberties of
the individual citizen enshrined in and protected by the Constitution. The
Constitution remains the supreme law of the land to which all officials, high or
low, civilian or military, owe obedience and allegiance at all times.
Article 32 of the Civil Code which renders any public officer or employee or any
private individual liable in damages for violating the Constitutional rights and
liberties of another, as enumerated therein, does not exempt the respondents from
responsibility. Only judges are excluded from liability under the said article,
provided their acts or omissions do not constitute a violation of the Penal Code or
other penal statute.
This is not to say that military authorities are restrained from pursuing their
assigned task or carrying out their mission with vigor. We have no quarrel with
their duty to protect the Republic from its enemies, whether of the left or of the
right, or from within or without, seeking to destroy or subvert our democratic
institutions and imperil their very existence. What we are merely trying to say is
that in carrying out this task and mission, constitutional and legal safeguards must
be observed, otherwise, the very fabric of our faith will start to unravel. In the
battle of competing Ideologies, the struggle for the mind is just as vital as the
struggle of arms. The linchpin in that psychological struggle is faith in the rule of
law. Once that faith is lost or compromised, the struggle may well be abandoned.
We do not find merit in respondents' suggestion that plaintiffs' cause of action is
barred by the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus. Respondents
contend that "Petitioners cannot circumvent the suspension of the privilege of the
writ by resorting to a damage suit aimed at the same purpose-judicial inquiry into
the alleged illegality of their detention. While the main relief they ask by the
present action is indemnification for alleged damages they suffered, their causes of
action are inextricably based on the same claim of violations of their constitutional
rights that they invoked in the habeas corpus case as grounds for release from
detention. Were the petitioners allowed the present suit, the judicial inquiry barred
by the suspension of the privilege of the writ will take place. The net result is that
19! !
what the courts cannot do, i.e. override the suspension ordered by the President,
petitioners will be able to do by the mere expedient of altering the title of their
action."
We do not agree. We find merit in petitioners' contention that the suspension of the
privilege of the writ of habeas corpus does not destroy petitioners' right and cause
of action for damages for illegal arrest and detention and other violations of their
constitutional rights. The suspension does not render valid an otherwise illegal
arrest or detention. What is suspended is merely the right of the individual to seek
release from detention through the writ of habeas corpus as a speedy means of
obtaining his liberty.
Moreover, as pointed out by petitioners, their right and cause of action for damages
are explicitly recognized in P.D. No. 1755 which amended Article 1146 of the
Civil Code by adding the following to its text:
However, when the action (for injury to the rights of the plaintiff or for a quasidelict) arises from or out of any act, activity or conduct of any public officer
involving the exercise of powers or authority arising from Martial Law including
the arrest, detention and/or trial of the plaintiff, the same must be brought within
one (1) year.
Petitioners have a point in contending that even assuming that the suspension of
the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus suspends petitioners' right of action for
damages for illegal arrest and detention, it does not and cannot suspend their rights
and causes of action for injuries suffered because of respondents' confiscation of
their private belongings, the violation of their right to remain silent and to counsel
and their right to protection against unreasonable searches and seizures and against
torture and other cruel and inhuman treatment.
However, we find it unnecessary to address the constitutional issue pressed upon
us. On March 25, 1986, President Corazon C. Aquino issued Proclamation No. 2,
revoking Proclamation Nos. 2045 and 2045-A and lifting the suspension of the
privilege of the writ of habeas corpus. The question therefore has become moot
and academic.
This brings us to the crucial issue raised in this petition. May a superior officer
under the notion of respondent superior be answerable for damages, jointly and
severally with his subordinates, to the person whose constitutional rights and
liberties have been violated?
Respondents contend that the doctrine of respondent superior is applicable to the
case. We agree. The doctrine of respondent superior has been generally limited in
its application to principal and agent or to master and servant (i.e. employer and
employee) relationship. No such relationship exists between superior officers of
the military and their subordinates.
Be that as it may, however, the decisive factor in this case, in our view, is the
language of Article 32. The law speaks of an officer or employee or person
'directly' or "indirectly" responsible for the violation of the constitutional rights and
liberties of another. Thus, it is not the actor alone (i.e. the one directly responsible)
who must answer for damages under Article 32; the person indirectly responsible
has also to answer for the damages or injury caused to the aggrieved party.
By this provision, the principle of accountability of public officials under the
Constitution 5 acquires added meaning and asgilrnes a larger dimension. No longer
may a superior official relax his vigilance or abdicate his duty to supervise his
subordinates, secure in the thought that he does not have to answer for the
!
20!
the ambit of its provisions those directly, as well as indirectly, responsible for its
violation.
The responsibility of the defendants, whether direct or indirect, is amply set forth
in the complaint. It is well established in our law and jurisprudence that a motion
to dismiss on the ground that the complaint states no cause of action must be based
on what appears on the face of the complaint. 6 To determine the sufficiency of the
cause of action, only the facts alleged in the complaint, and no others, should be
considered. 7 For this purpose, the motion to dismiss must hypothetically admit the
truth of the facts alleged in the complaint. 8
Applying this test, it is difficult to justify the trial court's ruling, dismissing for lack
of cause of action the complaint against all the defendants, except Major Rodolfo
Aguinaldo and Master Sgt. Bienvenido Balaba. The complaint contained
allegations against all the defendants which, if admitted hypothetically, would be
sufficient to establish a cause or causes of action against all of them under Article
32 of the Civil Code.
This brings us to the last issue. Was the trial court correct in dismissing the
complaint with respect to plaintiffs Rogelio Aberca, Danilo de la Puente, Marco
Palo, Alan Jazminez, Alex Marcelino, Elizabeth Protacio-Marcelino, Alfredo
Mansos and Rolando Salutin, on the basis of the alleged failure of said plaintiffs to
file a motion for reconsideration of the court's resolution of November 8, 1983,
granting the respondent's motion to dismiss?
It is undisputed that a timely motion to set aside said order of November 8, 1983
was filed by 'plaintiffs, through counsel. True, the motion was signed only by Atty.
Joker P. Arroyo, counsel for Benjamin Sesgulido; Atty. Antonio Rosales, counsel
for Edwin Lopez and Manuel Martin Guzman; Atty. Pedro B. Ella, Jr., counsel for
Nestor Bodino and Carlos Palma; Atty. Arno V. Sanidad, counsel for Arturo
Tabara; Atty. Felicitas S. Aquino, counsel for Joseph Olayer; and Atty. Alexander
Padilla, counsel for Rodolfo Benosa.
But the body of the motion itself clearly indicated that the motion was filed on
behalf of all the plaintiffs. And this must have been also the understanding of
defendants' counsel himself for when he filed his comment on the motion, he
furnished copies thereof, not just to the lawyers who signed the motion, but to all
the lawyers of plaintiffs, to wit: Attys. Jose Diokno, Procopio Beltran, Rene
Sarmiento, Efren Mercado, Augusto Sanchez, Antonio Rosales, Pedro Efla Jr.,
Arno Sanidad, Alexander Padilla, Joker Arroyo, Rene Saguisag, Ramon Esguerra
and Felicitas S. Aquino.
In filing the motion to set aside the resolution of November 8, 1983, the signing
attorneys did so on behalf of all the plaintiff. They needed no specific authority to
do that. The authority of an attorney to appear for and in behalf of a party can be
assumed, unless questioned or challenged by the adverse party or the party
concerned, which was never done in this case. Thus, it was grave abuse on the part
of respondent judge to take it upon himself to rule that the motion to set aside the
order of November 8, 1953 dismissing the complaint was filed only by some of the
plaintiffs, when by its very language it was clearly intended to be filed by and for
the benefit of all of them. It is obvious that the respondent judge took umbrage
under a contrived technicality to declare that the dismissal of the complaint had
already become final with respect to some of the plaintiffs whose lawyers did not
sign the motion for reconsideration. Such action tainted with legal infirmity cannot
be sanctioned.
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22!
Accordingly, we grant the petition and annul and set aside the resolution of the
respondent court, dated November 8, 1983, its order dated May 11, 1984 and its
resolution dated September 21, 1984. Let the case be remanded to the respondent
court for further proceedings. With costs against private respondents.
SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. L-34529 January 27, 1983
MAXIMO MARCIA, AMALIA MOJICA, TIRSO YAP, DAMIANA
MARCIA,
EDGAR
MARCIA,
and
RENATO
YAP,petitioners,
vs.
COURT OF APPEALS, FELARDO PAJE, and VICTORY LINER,
INC., respondents.
Ricardo J. Francisco, for petitioners.
Flors, Macapagal, Ocampo & Dizon for private respondents.
RELOVA, J.:
Appeal by certiorari from the decision of the Court of Appeals affirming the
judgment of the Court of First Instance of Rizal, which dismissed the complaint
filed by tile petitioners against private respondents in the concept of an
independent civil action for damages for physical injuries resulting from reckless
imprudence.
On December 23, 1956, in the municipality of Lubao, Pampanga, a passenger bus
operated by private respondent Victory Liner, Inc. and driven by its employee.
private respondent Felardo Paje, collided with a jeep driven by Clemente Marcia,
resulting in the latter's death and in physical injuries to herein petitioners, Edgar
Marcia and Renato Yap. Thereupon, an information for homicide and serious
physical injuries thru reckless imprudence was filed against Felardo Paje in the
Court of First Instance of Pampanga (Criminal Case No. 2745).
On January 23, 1957, an action for damages (Civil Case No. 4425) was filed in the
Court of First Instance of Rizal by Edgar Marcia and Renato Yap, together with
their respective parents. against the Victory Liner, Inc. and Felardo Paje, alleging
that, the mishap was due to the reckless imprudence and negligence of the latter in
driving the passenger bus.
While said Civil Case No. 4425 was in progress in the Court of First Instance of
Rizal, the criminal action proceeded in the Court of First Instance of Pampanga
(Criminal Case No. 2745). The accused Felardo Paje was convicted of the offense
charged. However, on appeal to the Court of Appeals, he was acquitted in a
decision promulgated on November 3, 1982, based on the findings, to wit:
1 That the Victory Liner bus left its post, kilometer post no. 156, in San Marcelino,
Zambales, at about 2:00 AM
2 That on the highway at Lubao, Pampanga, between Posts Nos. 83 and 84, the
appellant driver thereof, saw a cargo truck parked in the middle of the right lane of
the road to Manila, without
3 That appellant slackened the speed of his truck from 60 km. p.h. to 35 or 40 km.
p. h. in order to pass said truck;
4 That the appellant did not see the oncoming jeep until it swerved to the left.
5 That the jeep was still far so appellant attempted to pass the truck but before he
could do so, the jeep came very fast at the center of the road and out of its lane.
23! !
6 That the passengers of the bus shouted at the appellant to bring the bus to the side
so as to avoid a frontal collision with he jeep, and appellant brought his bus to the
right shoulder of the road going to Bataan;
7 That the jeep driven by the deceased Clemente Marcia was running at a fast pace
for which reason the driver lost control and veered sharply to the right shoulder of
the road and crashed into the bus, parked thereat a few seconds before.
8 That appellant was not speeding, was diligent, and hence, not liable for the
collision which at the least, was a fortuitous event for which no one was
responsible.
and the conclusion that "CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE is WANTING in this case, and
that appellant was NOT even guilty of CIVIL NEGLIGENCE, Insofar as appellant
was concerned, it was a case of PURE ACCIDENT."
As a consequence, herein private respondents, defendants in Civil Case No. 4425
of the Court of First Instance of Rizal, moved for the dismissal of the complaint
invoking the decision of the Court of Appeals acquitting Felardo Paje and citing
Section I (d), Rule 107 of the Rules of Court now Section 3 (c), Rule I I I of the
New Rules of Court), which reads:
SECTION 1. Rules governing civil actions arising from offenses. Except as
otherwise provided by law, the following rules shall be observed:
xxx xxx xxx
(d) Extinction of the penal action does not carry with it extinction of the civil,
unless the extinction proceeds from a declaration in a final judgment that the fact
from which the civil might arise did not exist. In the other cases, the persons
entitled to the civil action may institute it in the jurisdiction and in the manner
provided by law against the person who may be liable for restitution of the thing
and reparation or indemnity for the damages suffered.
The trial court denied the motion to dismiss and, thereafter, continued to hear
defendants' (herein private respondents) evidence. The following were presented as
defendants' evidence in chief:
(a) the whole record of Criminal Case No. 2745 of the Court of First Instance of
Pampanga in which defendant Felardo Paje was by reason of the occurrence
prosecuted criminally and convicted of homicide with serious physical injuries thru
reckless imprudence;
(b) the decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. No. 01691 Cr, acquitting the
accused; and
(c) copy of the brief of the said defendant as accused-appellant in the said Court of
Appeals case.
On August 10, 1966, the Court of First Instance of Rizal rendered a decision
dismissing plaintiffs' complaint against the defendants Victory Liner, Inc. and
Felardo Paje, without pronouncement as to costs.
Petitioners appealed the case to the (Court of Appeals CA-G.R. No. 38964-R)
alleging that the acquittal of Paje in the criminal action for homicide and serious
physical injuries thru reckless imprudence "is not a ground for dismissing the
complaint in the instant civil action; that the instant civil action is entirely separate
and distinct from the criminal action and shall proceed independently of the
criminal prosecution, so that whatever may have been the result of the criminal
action is irrelevant to this civil action; that Section 2 of Rule 111 of the Rules of
Court and not Section 3, paragraph (c) of the said rule applies; that the statement in
the decision of the Court of Appeals in the criminal action that defendant Paje as
!
24!
accused therein was not guilty of civil negligence is without the jurisdiction of the
said Court to make and is to be completely disregarded as an extraneous, officious
and void statement which cannot affect in any way the instant civil action; that the
records of the criminal action against defendant Paje are inadmissible evidence;
that it has been established in the case at bar, not only by preponderance of
evidence but by uncontradicted, conclusive evidence that petitioners suffered
damages as a proximate result of the negligence of respondent Paje and that it has
been established, not only by preponderance of evidence but by uncontradicted,
conclusive evidence, that the damages suffered by petitioners as a result of the
negligence of private respondents is in the amount of P250,817.96, and that the
latter should be sentenced, jointly and severally, to pay the same to petitioner.
In the meantime, the heirs of Clemente Marcia who, as aforesaid, died as a result
of the collision, instituted a separate civil action in the Court of First Instance of
Rizal (Civil Case No. 6880) for damages based on the alleged reckless imprudence
of bus driver Felardo Paje, praying that the driver and the Victory Liner, Inc. be
ordered to pay jointly and severally the amount of damages claimed. The
complaint of the heirs of Clemente Marcia was dismissed by the trial court. Appeal
on questions of law was taken to this Court (Laura Corpus et al vs. Felardo Paje at
al, 28 SCRA 1062) which, however, affirmed the order for the reason, among
others, that "(1) The acquittal of the defendant Felardo Paje by the Court of
Appeals in the criminal action on the ground that the reckless imprudence or
criminal negligence charged against him did not exist and that the collision was a
case of pure accident, was a bar to the civil action for damages for the death of
Clemente Marcia, which action was based upon the same criminal negligence of
which the defendant Felardo Paje was acquitted in the criminal action."
Following the ruling of this Court in the Corpus vs. Paje decision, respondent
Court of Appeals held that the private respondents Cannot be held civilly liable
after it had ruled in the criminal action that negligence was wanting and that the
collision was a case of pure accident.
Dissatisfied with the decision, petitioners have come to US alleging that the Court
of Appeals erred:
I.
IN NOT HOLDING THAT PETITIONERS INSTANT CIVIL ACTION FOR
DAMAGES AGAINST PRIVATE RESPONDENTS FOR PHYSICAL INJURIES
RESULTING FROM NEGLIGENCE IS AN INDEPENDENT ONE, ENTIRELY
SEPARATE AND DISTINCT FROM THE CRIMINAL ACTION, UNDER THE
PROVISIONS OF ARTICLES 33, 2176 AND 2177 OF THE NEW (CIVIL CODE
AND SECTION 2 OF RULE 111 OF THE RULES OF COURT. AND IN
INSTEAD HOLDING THAT THE INSTANT ACTION IS NOT AMONG THE
INDEPENDENT CIVIL ACTIONS AUTHORIZED BY THE SAID
PROVISIONS.
II.
IN NOT HOLDING THAT THE ACQUITTAL OF RESPONDENT FELARDO
PAJE, DRIVER OF RESPONDENT VICTORY LINER, INC., IN THE
CRIMINAL ACTION BASED ON THE SAID PHYSICAL INJURIES AND
NEGLIGENCE IS ENTIRELY IRRELEVANT TO THE INSTANT CIVIL
ACTION FOR DAMAGES BY VIRTUE OF THE AFORECITED PROVISIONS
OF THE NEW CIVIL CODE AND THE RULES OF COURT, AND IN
INSTEAD HOLDING THAT THE SAID ACQUITTAL IS A BAR TO THE
25! !
26!
civil liability is barred under section 1 (d) Rule 107 of the Rules of Court." And,
in De Mesa vs. Priela 24 SCRA 582, this Court, speaking through then Chief
Justice Roberto Concepcion, ruled that extinction of the penal action does not carry
with it extinction of the civil, unless the extinction proceeds from a declaration in a
final judgment that the fact from which the civil might arise did not exist. In other
cases, the person entitled to the civil action may institute it in the jurisdiction and
in the manner provided by law against the person who may be liable for restitution
of the thing and reparation or indemnity for the damage suffered (Sec. 3 [c], Rule
111, Rules of Court.)"
As held in Corpus vs. Paje, supra, reckless imprudence or criminal negligence is
not one of the three crimes mentioned in Article 33 of the Civil Code, which
provides:
ART. 33. In cases of defamation, fraud, and physical injuries, a civil action for
damages, entirely separate and distinct from the criminal action may be brought by
the injured party. Such civil action shall proceed independently of the criminal
prosecution, and shall require only a preponderance of evidence.
The above article speaks only of defamation, fraud and physical injuries. The
injuries suffered by herein petitioners were alleged to be the result of criminal
negligence; they were not inflicted with malice. Hence, no independent civil action
for damages may be instituted in connection therewith. Further, Section 3 (c), Rule
111 of the Rules of Court states that "(c) Extinction of the penal action does not
carry with it extinction of the civil, unless the extinction proceeds from a
declaration in a final judgment that the fact from which the civil might arise did not
exist." Otherwise stated, unless the act from which the civil liability arises is
declared to be nonexistent in the final judgment, the extinction of the criminal
liability will not carry with it the extinction of the civil liability. Thus, if a person is
charged with homicide and successfully pleaded self-defense, his acquittal by
reason thereof will extinguish his civil liability. He has not incurred any criminal
liability. On the other hand, if his acquittal is, for instance, due to the fact that he
was not sufficiently Identified to be the assailant, a civil action for damages may be
maintained. His acquittal is not due to non-existence of the crime from which civil
liability might arise, but because he was not, in the eyes of the court, sufficiently
Identified as the perpetrator of the crime.
In People vs. Buan, 22 SCRA 1383, this Court, speaking through Mr. Justice J.B.L.
Reyes, said that "the essence of the quasi offense of criminal negligence under
Article 365 of the Revised Penal Code lies in the execution of an imprudent or
negligent act that, if intentionally done, would be punishable as a felony. The law
penalizes the negligent or careless act, not the result thereof. The gravity of the
consequence is only taken into account to determine the penalty; it does not qualify
the substance of the offense.
The charge against Felardo Paje was not for homicide and physical injuries but for
reckless imprudence or criminal negligence resulting in homicide (death of
Clemente Marcia) and physical injuries suffered by Edgar Marcia and Renato Yap.
They are not one of the three (3) crimes mentioned in Article 33 of the Civil Code
and, therefore, no civil action shall proceed independently of the criminal
prosecution.
The case of Laura Corpus vs. Felardo Paje (supra) is the same as the case at bar,
the only difference being the party-plaintiffs or petitioners. Clemente Marcia died,
while Edgar Marcia and Renato Yap suffered physical injuries in the same
27! !
accident. The heirs of Clemente Marcia filed Civil Case No. 6880 in the Court of
First Instance of Rizal against herein respondents. The case was dismissed and
appealed directly to this Court.1wph1.t The order appealed from was affirmed,
as recorded in Laura Corpus vs. Felardo Paje, 28 SCRA 1062.
The case at bar (Civil Case No. 4425) was filed by Edgar Marcia and Renato Yap
against the same defendants in the Court of First Instance of Rizal. After trial, the
case was dismissed and affirmed by the Court of Appeals. It is now before Us on
appeal by certiorari from the said decision.
Relative to the admissibility of the documents, to wit; (a) the records of the
criminal case against Paje, (b) the decision of the Court of Appeals acquitting the
latter; and (c) copy of the brief of the respondent Paje as accused-appellant, suffice
it to say that since petitioners' cause of action is based on the alleged recklessness
and imprudence of respondent Paje it necessarily follows that his acquittal by the
Court of Appeals and its declaration that the mishap was "pure accident" are
relevant and material evidence. In fact, the lower court may even take judicial
notice of the decision of the Court of Appeals in said criminal case.
Finally, with respect to the findings of fact of the Court of Appeals, well settled is
the rule that the same are final and cannot be disturbed by Us, particularly where
they are based, as they are in the case at bar, upon substantial evidence.
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is hereby AFFIRMED in toto. With
costs against the petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. L-51183 December 21, 1983
CARMEN
L.
MADEJA, petitioner,
vs.
HON. FELIX T. CARO and EVA ARELLANO-JAPZON, respondents.
Ernesto P. Miel for petitioner.
Gorgonio T. Alvarez for respondents.
ABAD SANTOS, J.:+.wph!1
In Criminal Case No. 75-88 of the defunct Court of First Instance of Eastern
Samar, DR. EVA A. JAPZON is accused of homicide through reckless imprudence
for the death of Cleto Madeja after an appendectomy. The complaining witness is
the widow of the deceased, Carmen L. Madeja. The information states that: "The
offended party Carmen L. Madeja reserving her right to file a separate civil action
for damages." (Rollo, p. 36.)
The criminal case still pending, Carmen L. Madeja sued Dr. Eva A. Japzon for
damages in Civil Case No. 141 of the same court. She alleged that her husband
died because of the gross negligence of Dr. Japzon. The respondent judge granted
the defendant's motion to dismiss which motion invoked Section 3(a) of Rule 111
of the Rules of Court which reads:t.hqw
Sec. 3. Other civil actions arising from offenses. In all cases not included in the
preceding section the following rules shall be observed:
(a) Criminal and civil actions arising from the same offense may be instituted
separately, but after the criminal action has been commenced the civil action can
not be instituted until final judgment has been rendered in the criminal action. ...
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28!
According to the respondent judge, "under the foregoing Sec. 3 (a), Rule 111, New
Rules of Court, the instant civil action may be instituted only after final judgment
has been rendered in the criminal action." (Rollo, p. 33.)
The instant petition which seeks to set aside the order of the respondent judge
granting the defendant's motion to dismiss Civil Case No. 141 is highly impressed
with merit.
Section 2, Rule 111 of the Rules of Court in relation to Article 33 of the Civil Code
is the applicable provision. The two
enactments are quoted
hereinbelow:t.hqw
Sec. 2. Independent civil action. In the cases provided for in Articles 31,32, 33,
34 and 2177 of the Civil Code of the Philippines, an independent civil action
entirely separate and distinct from the criminal action, may be brought by the
injured party during the pendency of the criminal case, provided the right is
reserved as required in the preceding section. Such civil action shall proceed
independently of the criminal prosecution, and shall require only a preponderance
of evidence." (Rule 111, Rules of Court.)
Art. 33. In cases of defamation, fraud, and physical injuries, a civil action for
damages, entirely separate and distinct from the criminal action, may be brought
by the injured party. Such civil action shall proceed independently of the criminal
prosecution, and shall require only a preponderance of evidence. (Civil Code,)
There are at least two things about Art. 33 of the Civil Code which are worth
noting, namely:
1. The civil action for damages which it allows to be instituted is ex-delicto. This is
manifest from the provision which uses the expressions "criminal action" and
"criminal prosecution." This conclusion is supported by the comment of the Code
Commission, thus:t.hqw
The underlying purpose of the principle under consideration is to allow the citizen
to enforce his rights in a private action brought by him, regardless of the action of
the State attorney. It is not conducive to civic spirit and to individual self-reliance
and initiative to habituate the citizens to depend upon the government for the
vindication of their own private rights. It is true that in many of the cases referred
to in the provision cited, a criminal prosecution is proper, but it should be
remembered that while the State is the complainant in the criminal case, the injured
individual is the one most concerned because it is he who has suffered directly. He
should be permitted to demand reparation for the wrong which peculiarly affects
him. (Report, p. 46.)
And Tolentino says:t.hqw
The general rule is that when a criminal action is instituted, the civil action for
recovery of civil liability arising from the offense charged is impliedly instituted
with the criminal action, unless the offended party reserves his right to institute it
separately; and after a criminal action has been commenced, no civil action arising
from the same offense can be prosecuted. The present articles creates an exception
to this rule when the offense is defamation, fraud, or physical injuries, In these
cases, a civil action may be filed independently of the criminal action, even if there
has been no reservation made by the injured party; the law itself in this article
makes such reservation; but the claimant is not given the right to determine
whether the civil action should be scheduled or suspended until the criminal action
has been terminated. The result of the civil action is thus independent of the result
of the civil action." (I Civil Code, p. 144 [1974.])
29! !
2. The term "physical injuries" is used in a generic sense. It is not the crime of
physical injuries defined in the Revised Penal Code. It includes not only physical
injuries but consummated, frustrated and attempted homicide.t.hqw
The Article in question uses the words 'defamation', 'fraud' and 'physical injuries.'
Defamation and fraud are used in their ordinary sense because there are no specific
provisions in the Revised Penal Code using these terms as means of offenses
defined therein, so that these two terms defamation and fraud must have been used
not to impart to them any technical meaning in the laws of the Philippines, but in
their generic sense. With this apparent circumstance in mind, it is evident that the
terms 'physical injuries' could not have been used in its specific sense as a crime
defined in the Revised Penal Code, for it is difficult to believe that the Code
Commission would have used terms in the same article-some in their general and
another in its technical sense. In other words, the term 'physical injuries' should be
understood to mean bodily injury, not the crime of physical injuries, bacause the
terms used with the latter are general terms. In any case the Code Commission
recommended that the civil action for physical injuries be similar to the civil action
for assault and battery in American Law, and this recommendation must hove been
accepted by the Legislature when it approved the article intact as recommended. If
the intent has been to establish a civil action for the bodily harm received by the
complainant similar to the civil action for assault and battery, as the Code
Commission states, the civil action should lie whether the offense committed is
that of physical injuries, or frustrated homicide, or attempted homicide, or even
death," (Carandang vs. Santiago, 97 Phil. 94, 96-97 [1955].)
Corpus vs. Paje, L-26737, July 31, 1969, 28 SCRA 1062, which states that
reckless imprudence or criminal negligence is not included in Article 33 of the
Civil Code is not authoritative. Of eleven justices only nine took part in the
decision and four of them merely concurred in the result.
In the light of the foregoing, it is apparent that the civil action against Dr. Japzon
may proceed independently of the criminal action against her.
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby granted; the order dismissing Civil Case No.
141 is hereby set aside; no special pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. 135306
January 28, 2003
MVRS PUBLICATIONS, INC., MARS C. LACONSAY, MYLA C. AGUJA
and
AGUSTINO
G.
BINEGAS,
JR.,petitioners,
vs.
ISLAMIC DA'WAH COUNCIL OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.,
ABDULRAHMAN R.T. LINZAG, IBRAHIM F.P. ARCILLA, ABDUL
RASHID DE GUZMAN, AL-FARED DA SILVA and IBRAHIM B.A.
JUNIO, respondents.
BELLOSILLO, J.:
I may utterly detest what you write, but I shall fight to the death to make it possible
for you to continue writing it.
Voltaire
VOLTAIRE'S PONTIFICAL VERSE bestirs once again the basic liberties to free
speech and free press liberties that belong as well, if not more, to those who
!
30!
question, who do not conform, who differ. For the ultimate good which we all
strive to achieve for ourselves and our posterity can better be reached by a free
exchange of ideas, where the best test of truth is the power of the thought to get
itself accepted in the competition of the free market not just the ideas we desire,
but including those thoughts we despise.1
ISLAMIC DA'WAH COUNCIL OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC., a local federation
of more than seventy (70) Muslim religious organizations, and individual Muslims
ABDULRAHMAN R.T. LINZAG, IBRAHIM F.P. ARCILLA, ABDUL RASHID
DE GUZMAN, AL-FARED DA SILVA and IBRAHIM B.A. JUNIO, filed in the
Regional Trial Court of Manila a complaint for damages in their own behalf and as
a class suit in behalf of the Muslim members nationwide against MVRS
PUBLICATIONS, INC., MARS C. LACONSAY, MYLA C. AGUJA and
AGUSTINO G. BINEGAS, JR., arising from an article published in the 1 August
1992 issue of Bulgar, a daily tabloid. The article reads:
"ALAM BA NINYO?
Na ang mga baboy at kahit anong uri ng hayop sa Mindanao ay hindi kinakain ng
mga Muslim?
Para sa kanila ang mga ito ay isang sagradong bagay. Hindi nila ito kailangang
kainin kahit na sila pa ay magutom at mawalan ng ulam sa tuwing sila ay kakain.
Ginagawa nila itong Diyos at sinasamba pa nila ito sa tuwing araw ng kanilang
pangingilin lalung-lalo na sa araw na tinatawag nilang 'Ramadan'."
The complaint alleged that the libelous statement was insulting and damaging to
the Muslims; that these words alluding to the pig as the God of the Muslims was
not only published out of sheer ignorance but with intent to hurt the feelings, cast
insult and disparage the Muslims and Islam, as a religion in this country, in
violation of law, public policy, good morals and human relations; that on account
of these libelous words Bulgar insulted not only the Muslims in the Philippines but
the entire Muslim world, especially every Muslim individual in non-Muslim
countries.
MVRS PUBLICATIONS, INC., and AGUSTINO G. BINEGAS, JR., in their
defense, contended that the article did not mention respondents as the object of the
article and therefore were not entitled to damages; and, that the article was merely
an expression of belief or opinion and was published without malice nor intention
to cause damage, prejudice or injury to Muslims.2
On 30 June 1995 the trial court dismissed the complaint holding that the plaintiffs
failed to establish their cause of action since the persons allegedly defamed by the
article were not specifically identified
It must be noted that the persons allegedly defamed, the herein plaintiffs, were not
identified with specificity. The subject article was directed at the Muslims without
mentioning or identifying the herein plaintiffs x x x. It is thus apparent that the
alleged libelous article refers to the larger collectivity of Muslims for which the
readers of the libel could not readily identify the personalities of the persons
defamed. Hence, it is difficult for an individual Muslim member to prove that the
defamatory remarks apply to him. The evidence presented in this case failed to
convince this court that, indeed, the defamatory remarks really applied to the
herein plaintiffs.3
On 27 August 1998 the Court of Appeals reversed the decision of the trial court. It
opined that it was "clear from the disputed article that the defamation was directed
to all adherents of the Islamic faith. It stated that pigs were sacred and idolized as
31! !
32!
individual in the class or group can prove that the defamatory statement
specifically pointed to him, so that he can bring the action separately, if need be x
x x x The case at bar is not a class suit. It is not a case where one or more may sue
for the benefit of all, or where the representation of class interest affected by the
judgment or decree is indispensable to make each member of the class an actual
party. We have here a case where each of the plaintiffs has a separate and distinct
reputation in the community. They do not have a common or general interest in the
subject matter of the controversy.
In the present case, there was no fairly identifiable person who was allegedly
injured by the Bulgar article. Since the persons allegedly defamed could not be
identifiable, private respondents have no individual causes of action; hence, they
cannot sue for a class allegedly disparaged. Private respondents must have a cause
of action in common with the class to which they belong to in order for the case to
prosper.
An individual Muslim has a reputation that is personal, separate and distinct in the
community. Each Muslim, as part of the larger Muslim community in the
Philippines of over five (5) million people, belongs to a different trade and
profession; each has a varying interest and a divergent political and religious view
some may be conservative, others liberal. A Muslim may find the article
dishonorable, even blasphemous; others may find it as an opportunity to strengthen
their faith and educate the non-believers and the "infidels." There is no injury to
the reputation of the individual Muslims who constitute this community that can
give rise to an action for group libel. Each reputation is personal in character to
every person. Together, the Muslims do not have a single common reputation that
will give them a common or general interest in the subject matter of the
controversy.
In Arcand v. The Evening Call Publishing Company,14 the United States Court of
Appeals held that one guiding principle of group libel is that defamation of a large
group does not give rise to a cause of action on the part of an individual unless it
can be shown that he is the target of the defamatory matter.
The rule on libel has been restrictive. In an American case,15 a person had allegedly
committed libel against all persons of the Jewish religion. The Court held that there
could be no libel against an extensive community in common law. In an English
case, where libel consisted of allegations of immorality in a Catholic nunnery, the
Court considered that if the libel were on the whole Roman Catholic Church
generally, then the defendant must be absolved.16 With regard to the largest sectors
in society, including religious groups, it may be generally concluded that no
criminal action at the behest of the state, or civil action on behalf of the individual,
will lie.
In another case, the plaintiffs claimed that all Muslims, numbering more than 600
million, were defamed by the airing of a national television broadcast of a film
depicting the public execution of a Saudi Arabian princess accused of adultery, and
alleging that such film was "insulting and defamatory" to the Islamic
religion.17 The United States District Court of the Northern District of California
concluded that the plaintiffs' prayer for $20 Billion in damages arising from "an
international conspiracy to insult, ridicule, discredit and abuse followers of Islam
throughout the world, Arabs and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia" bordered on the
"frivolous," ruling that the plaintiffs had failed to demonstrate an actionable claim
for defamation. The California Court stressed that the aim of the law on
33! !
34!
The foregoing are in essence the same view scholarly expressed by Mr. Justice
Reynato S. Puno in the course of the deliberations in this case. We extensively
reproduce hereunder his comprehensive and penetrating discussion on group libel
Defamation is made up of the twin torts of libel and slander the one being, in
general, written, while the other in general is oral. In either form, defamation is an
invasion of the interest in reputation and good name. This is a "relational interest"
since it involves the opinion others in the community may have, or tend to have of
the plaintiff.
The law of defamation protects the interest in reputation the interest in
acquiring, retaining and enjoying one's reputation as good as one's character and
conduct warrant. The mere fact that the plaintiff's feelings and sensibilities have
been offended is not enough to create a cause of action for defamation. Defamation
requires that something be communicated to a third person that may affect the
opinion others may have of the plaintiff. The unprivileged communication must be
shown of a statement that would tend to hurt plaintiff's reputation, to impair
plaintiff's standing in the community.
Although the gist of an action for defamation is an injury to reputation, the focus of
a defamation action is upon the allegedly defamatory statement itself and its
predictable effect upon third persons. A statement is ordinarily considered
defamatory if it "tend[s] to expose one to public hatred, shame, obloquy,
contumely, odium, contempt, ridicule, aversion, ostracism, degradation or
disgracex x x." The Restatement of Torts defines a defamatory statement as one
that "tends to so harm the reputation of another as to lower him in the estimation of
the community or to deter third persons from associating or dealing with him."
Consequently as a prerequisite to recovery, it is necessary for the plaintiff to prove
as part of his prima faciecase that the defendant (1) published a statement that was
(2) defamatory (3) of and concerning the plaintiff.
The rule in libel is that the action must be brought by the person against whom the
defamatory charge has been made. In the American jurisdiction, no action lies by a
third person for damages suffered by reason of defamation of another person, even
though the plaintiff suffers some injury therefrom. For recovery in defamation
cases, it is necessary that the publication be "of and concerning the plaintiff." Even
when a publication may be clearly defamatory as to somebody, if the words have
no personal application to the plaintiff, they are not actionable by him. If no one is
identified, there can be no libel because no one's reputation has been injured x x x
x
In fine, in order for one to maintain an action for an alleged defamatory statement,
it must appear that the plaintiff is the person with reference to whom the statement
was made. This principle is of vital importance in cases where a group or class is
defamed since, usually, the larger the collective, the more difficult it is for an
individual member to show that he was the person at whom the defamation was
directed.
If the defamatory statements were directed at a small, restricted group of persons,
they applied to any member of the group, and an individual member could
maintain an action for defamation. When the defamatory language was used
toward a small group or class, including every member, it has been held that the
defamatory language referred to each member so that each could maintain an
action. This small group or class may be a jury, persons engaged in certain
35! !
36!
scarcely claim to having been singled out for social censure pointedly resulting in
damages.
A contrary view is expressed that what is involved in the present case is an
intentional tortious act causing mental distress and not an action for libel. That
opinion invokes Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire22 where the U.S. Supreme Court
held that words heaping extreme profanity, intended merely to incite hostility,
hatred or violence, have no social value and do not enjoy constitutional protection;
and Beauharnais v. Illinois23 where it was also ruled that hate speech which
denigrates a group of persons identified by their religion, race or ethnic origin
defames that group and the law may validly prohibit such speech on the same
ground as defamation of an individual.
We do not agree to the contrary view articulated in the immediately preceding
paragraph. Primarily, an "emotional distress" tort action is personal in nature, i.e.,
it is a civil action filed by an individual24 to assuage the injuries to his emotional
tranquility due to personal attacks on his character. It has no application in the
instant case since no particular individual was identified in the disputed article
of Bulgar. Also, the purported damage caused by the article, assuming there was
any, falls under the principle of relational harm which includes harm to social
relationships in the community in the form of defamation; as distinguished from
the principle of reactive harm which includes injuries to individual emotional
tranquility in the form of an infliction of emotional distress. In their complaint,
respondents clearly asserted an alleged harm to the standing of Muslims in the
community, especially to their activities in propagating their faith in Metro Manila
and in other non-Muslim communities in the country.25It is thus beyond cavil that
the present case falls within the application of the relational harm principle of tort
actions for defamation, rather than the reactive harm principle on which the
concept of emotional distress properly belongs.
Moreover, under the Second Restatement of the Law, to recover for the intentional
infliction of emotional distress the plaintiff must show that: (a) The conduct of the
defendant was intentional or in reckless disregard of the plaintiff; (b) The conduct
was extreme and outrageous; (c) There was a causal connection between the
defendant's conduct and the plaintiff's mental distress; and, (d) The plaintiff's
mental distress was extreme and severe.26
"Extreme and outrageous conduct" means conduct that is so outrageous in
character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of
decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in civilized
society. The defendant's actions must have been so terrifying as naturally to
humiliate, embarrass or frighten the plaintiff.27 Generally, conduct will be found to
be actionable where the recitation of the facts to an average member of the
community would arouse his resentment against the actor, and lead him or her to
exclaim, "Outrageous!" as his or her reaction.28
"Emotional distress" means any highly unpleasant mental reaction such as extreme
grief, shame, humiliation, embarrassment, anger, disappointment, worry, nausea,
mental suffering and anguish, shock, fright, horror, and chagrin.29 "Severe
emotional distress," in some jurisdictions, refers to any type of severe and
disabling emotional or mental condition which may be generally recognized and
diagnosed by professionals trained to do so, including posttraumatic stress
disorder, neurosis, psychosis, chronic depression, or phobia.30 The plaintiff is
required to show, among other things, that he or she has suffered emotional distress
37! !
so severe that no reasonable person could be expected to endure it; severity of the
distress is an element of the cause of action, not simply a matter of damages.31
Any party seeking recovery for mental anguish must prove more than mere worry,
anxiety, vexation, embarrassment, or anger. Liability does not arise from mere
insults, indignities, threats, annoyances, petty expressions, or other trivialities. In
determining whether the tort of outrage had been committed, a plaintiff is
necessarily expected and required to be hardened to a certain amount of criticism,
rough language, and to occasional acts and words that are definitely inconsiderate
and unkind; the mere fact that the actor knows that the other will regard the
conduct as insulting, or will have his feelings hurt, is not enough.32
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell33 illustrates the test case of a civil action for damages
on intentional infliction of emotional distress. A parody appeared in Hustler
magazine featuring the American fundamentalist preacher and evangelist Reverend
Jerry Falwell depicting him in an inebriated state having an incestuous, sexual
liaison with his mother in an outhouse. Falwell sued Hustler and its publisher Larry
Flynt for damages. The United States District Court for the Western District of
Virginia ruled that the parody was not libelous, because no reasonable reader
would have understood it as a factual assertion that Falwell engaged in the act
described. The jury, however, awarded $200,000 in damages on a separate count of
"intentional infliction of emotional distress," a cause of action that did not require a
false statement of fact to be made. The United States Supreme Court in a
unanimous decision overturned the jury verdict of the Virginia Court and held
that Reverend Falwell may not recover for intentional infliction of emotional
distress. It was argued that the material might be deemed outrageous and may have
been intended to cause severe emotional distress, but these circumstances were not
sufficient to overcome the free speech rights guaranteed under the First
Amendment of the United States Constitution. Simply stated, an intentional tort
causing emotional distress must necessarily give way to the fundamental right to
free speech.
It must be observed that although Falwell was regarded by the U.S. High Court as
a "public figure," he was anindividual particularly singled out or identified in the
parody appearing on Hustler magazine. Also, the emotional distress allegedly
suffered by Reverend Falwell involved a reactive interest an emotional response
to the parody which supposedly injured his psychological well-being.
Verily, our position is clear that the conduct of petitioners was not extreme or
outrageous. Neither was the emotional distress allegedly suffered by respondents
so severe that no reasonable person could be expected to endure it. There is no
evidence on record that points to that result.
Professor William Prosser, views tort actions on intentional infliction of emotional
distress in this manner34
There is virtually unanimous agreement that such ordinary defendants are not
liable for mere insult, indignity, annoyance, or even threats, where the case is
lacking in other circumstances of aggravation. The reasons are not far to seek. Our
manners, and with them our law, have not yet progressed to the point where we are
able to afford a remedy in the form of tort damages for all intended mental
disturbance. Liability of course cannot be extended to every trivial indignity x x x
x The plaintiff must necessarily be expected and required to be hardened to a
certain amount of rough language, and to acts that are definitely inconsiderate and
unkind x x x The plaintiff cannot recover merely because of hurt feelings.
!
38!
Professor Calvert Magruder reinforces Prosser with this succinct observation, viz:35
There is no occasion for the law to intervene in every case where someone's
feelings are hurt. There must still be freedom to express an unflattering opinion,
and some safety valve must be left through which irascible tempers may blow off
relatively harmless steam.
Thus, it is evident that even American courts are reluctant to adopt a rule of
recovery for emotional harm that would "open up a wide vista of litigation in the
field of bad manners," an area in which a "toughening of the mental hide" was
thought to be a more appropriate remedy.36 Perhaps of greater concern were the
questions of causation, proof, and the ability to accurately assess damages for
emotional harm, each of which continues to concern courts today.37
In this connection, the doctrines in Chaplinsky and Beauharnais had largely been
superseded by subsequent First Amendment doctrines. Back in simpler times in the
history of free expression the Supreme Court appeared to espouse a theory, known
as the Two-Class Theory, that treated certain types of expression as taboo forms of
speech, beneath the dignity of the First Amendment. The most celebrated statement
of this view was expressed in Chaplinsky:
There are certain well-defined and narrowly limited classes of speech, the
prevention and punishment of which have never been thought to raise any
Constitutional problem. These include the lewd and obscene, the profane, the
libelous, and the insulting or "fighting" words those which by their very
utterance inflict injury or tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace. It has
been well observed that such utterances are no essential part of any exposition of
ideas, and are of such slight social value as a step to truth that any benefit that may
be derived from them is clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and
morality.
Today, however, the theory is no longer viable; modern First Amendment
principles have passed it by. American courts no longer accept the view that
speech may be proscribed merely because it is "lewd," "profane," "insulting" or
otherwise vulgar or offensive.38 Cohen v. California39 is illustrative: Paul Robert
Cohen wore a jacket bearing the words "Fuck the Draft" in a Los Angeles
courthouse in April 1968, which caused his eventual arrest. Cohen was convicted
for violating a California statute prohibiting any person from "disturb[ing] the
peace x x x by offensive conduct." The U.S. Supreme Court conceded that Cohen's
expletive contained in his jacket was "vulgar," but it concluded that his speech was
nonetheless protected by the right to free speech. It was neither considered an
"incitement" to illegal action nor "obscenity." It did not constitute insulting or
"fighting" words for it had not been directed at a person who was likely to retaliate
or at someone who could not avoid the message. In other words, no one was
present in the Los Angeles courthouse who would have regarded Cohen's speech as
a direct personal insult, nor was there any danger of reactive violence against him.
No specific individual was targeted in the allegedly defamatory words printed on
Cohen's jacket. The conviction could only be justified by California's desire to
exercise the broad power in preserving the cleanliness of discourse in the public
sphere, which the U.S. Supreme Court refused to grant to the State, holding that no
objective distinctions can be made between vulgar and nonvulgar speech, and that
the emotive elements of speech are just as essential in the exercise of this right as
the purely cognitive. As Mr. Justice Harlan so eloquently wrote: "[O]ne man's
vulgarity is another man's lyric x x x words are often chosen as much for their
39! !
emotive as their cognitive force."40 With Cohen, the U.S. Supreme Court finally
laid the Constitutional foundation for judicial protection of provocative and
potentially offensive speech.
Similarly, libelous speech is no longer outside the First Amendment protection.
Only one small piece of the Two-Class Theory in Chaplinsky survives U.S.
courts continue to treat "obscene" speech as not within the protection of the First
Amendment at all. With respect to the "fighting words" doctrine, while it remains
alive it was modified by the current rigorous clear and present danger test.41 Thus,
in Cohen the U.S. Supreme Court in applying the test held that there was no
showing that Cohen's jacket bearing the words "Fuck the Draft" had threatened to
provoke imminent violence; and that protecting the sensibilities of onlookers was
not sufficiently compelling interest to restrain Cohen's speech.
Beauharnais, which closely followed the Chaplinsky doctrine, suffered the same
fate as Chaplinsky. Indeed, whenBeauharnais was decided in 1952, the Two-Class
Theory was still flourishing. While concededly the U.S. High Tribunal did not
formally abandon Beauharnais, the seminal shifts in U.S. constitutional
jurisprudence substantially undercut Beauharnais and seriously undermined what
is left of its vitality as a precedent. Among the cases that dealt a crushing impact
on Beauharnais and rendered it almost certainly a dead letter case law
are Brandenburg v. Ohio,42 and, again, Cohen v. California.43 These decisions
recognize a much narrower set of permissible grounds for restricting speech than
did Beauharnais.44
In Brandenburg, appellant who was a leader of the Ku Klux Klan was convicted
under the Ohio Criminal Syndicalism Statute for advocating the necessity, duty
and propriety of crime, sabotage, violence, or unlawful methods of terrorism as a
means of accomplishing industrial or political reforms; and for voluntarily
assembling with a group formed to teach or advocate the doctrines of criminal
syndicalism. Appellant challenged the statute and was sustained by the U.S.
Supreme Court, holding that the advocacy of illegal action becomes punishable
only if such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action
and is likely to incite or produce such action.45 Except in unusual
instances, Brandenburg protects the advocacy of lawlessness as long as such
speech is not translated into action.
The importance of the Brandenburg ruling cannot be overemphasized. Prof.
Smolla
affirmed
that
"Brandenburgmust
be
understood
as
overruling Beauharnais and eliminating the possibility of treating group libel
under the same First Amendment standards as individual libel."46 It may well be
considered as one of the lynchpins of the modern doctrine of free speech, which
seeks to give special protection to politically relevant speech.
In any case, respondents' lack of cause of action cannot be cured by the filing of a
class suit. As correctly pointed out by Mr. Justice Jose C. Vitug during the
deliberations, "an element of a class suit is the adequacy of representation. In
determining the question of fair and adequate representation of members of a class,
the court must consider (a) whether the interest of the named party is coextensive
with the interest of the other members of the class; (b) the proportion of those
made parties as it so bears to the total membership of the class; and, (c) any other
factor bearing on the ability of the named party to speak for the rest of the class.47
The rules require that courts must make sure that the persons intervening should be
sufficiently numerous to fully protect the interests of all concerned. In the present
!
40!
41! !
42!
with the Circuit Criminal Court of the Fifth Judicial District at San Fernando,
Pampanga, Criminal Case No. CCCV-668, for violation of the Anti-Graft and
Corrupt Practices Act.
In the criminal case, the Court, on motion to dismiss filed by the defense, after the
prosecution has rested, granted the motion in a 64-page Resolution, the dispositive
portion of which reads:
CONFORMABLY WITH ALL THE FOREGOING, therefore, the Motion to
Dismiss (Demurrer) to Evidence) should be as it is hereby granted and accused
ALMARIO T. SALTA ACQUITTED of the offense charged in the Information the
prosecution having failed to prove the essential ingredience and/or elements of the
crime charged,. with costs de oficio. 1
With his acquittal in the criminal case, petitioner filed Motions to Dismiss in each
of the two civil cases, based on Section 3(c), Rule I I I of the Revised Rules of
Court which provides:
(c) extinction of the penal action does not carry with it extinction of the civil,
unless the extinction proceeds from a declaration in a final judgment that the fact
from which the civil might arise did not exist. ... 2
It is in the resolution of the motions to dismiss that Judges de Veyra and Purisima
of the CFI of Manila took diametrically opposing views, the former denying the
motion, the latter granting it.
We sustain the order denying the motion to dismiss as issued by Judge de Veyra,
which, for its brevity, but clear and convincing, We quote as follows:
Having been acquitted by the Circuit Court of the charges of violation of the AntiGraft Law, Defendant now seeks the dismissal of the civil case which arose from
the same set of facts. The motion to dismiss must be denied for the reason that
acquittal in the criminal case will not be an obstacle for the civil case to prosper
unless in the criminal case the Court makes a finding that even civilly the accused
would not be liable-there is no such a finding. Apart from this, Plaintiff in this
present civil case bases its case either on fraud or negligence-evidence that only
requires a preponderance, unlike beyond reasonable doubt which is the requisite in
criminal cases.
The motion to dismiss is, therefore, denied for lack of merit. 3
To begin with, the filing in this case of a civil action separate from the criminal
action is fully warranted under the provision of Article 33 of the New Civil
Code. 4 The criminal case is for the prosecution of an offense the main element of
which is fraud, one of the kinds of crime mentioned in the aforecited provision.
Based on the same acts for which the criminal action was filed, the civil actions
very clearly alleged fraud and negligence as having given rise to the cause of
action averred in the complaints. It needs hardly any showing to demonstrate this
fact, which petitioner disputes, particularly as to the sufficiency of the allegation of
fraud in the civil complaints. Definitely, We hold that the following allegation in
the complaints unmistakably shows that the complaints do contain sufficient
averment of fraud:
13. That there was fraud committed by the defendant in granting the aforesaid
loans which rendered him liable for his acts, which fraud is positively and easily
Identifiable in the manner and scheme aforementioned. 5
That there is allegation of negligence is also unmistakably shown when the
complaint states that "the defendant as manager of Malolos Branch, in gross
violation of the bank rules and regulations, and without exercising necessary
43! !
44!
and convicted of the crime charged in the information. Said defendant appealed the
judgment of conviction to the Court of Appeals. On November 21, 1961, while
defendant's appeal was pending decision in the Court of Appeals, Clemente
Marcia's heirs, namely, his widow, Laura Corpus, and their minor children,
instituted in the Court of First Instance of Rizal a separate civil action (Civil Case
No. 6880) for damages based upon the criminal act of reckless imprudence against
Felardo Paje and the Victory Liner Transportation Co., Inc., defendants, praying
that said defendants be ordered to pay jointly and severally the amounts of
damages claimed by the plaintiffs. On November 9, 1962, the Court of Appeals
promulgated its decision in the appeal of Felardo Paje reversing the appealed
judgment and acquitting the appellant after finding that the reckless imprudence
charged against him did not exist, and that the collision was a case of pure
accident.
On December 29, 1962, the defendants filed in the civil action a motion to dismiss
on the ground that the action was barred by the acquittal by the Court of Appeals
of the defendant Felardo Paje in the criminal action. The motion was denied.
At the pre-trial of the civil case, the defendants asked the court to rule on their
special defense that plaintiffs' cause of action based upon a quasi-delict had
prescribed considering that the complaint was brought four years and eleven
months after the collision and that according to Article 1144 of the Civil Code an
action based upon a quasi-delict must be instituted within four years. The lower
court, in its order of May 31, 1966, dismissed the complaint on the ground that
plaintiffs' action was based upon a quasi-delict and that it had prescribed. The
plaintiffs appealed direct to this Court on questions of law from the order
dismissing the complaint.
Plaintiffs-appellants contend that the lower court erred in dismissing the complaint.
The contention is unmeritorious in view of the following considerations.
(1) The acquittal of the defendant Felardo Paje by the Court of Appeals in the
criminal action on the ground that the reckless imprudence or criminal negligence
charged against him did not exist and that the collision was a case of pure accident,
was a bar to the civil action for damages for the death of Clemente Marcia, which
action was based upon the same criminal negligence of which the defendant
Felardo Paje was acquitted in the criminal action. In the celebrated case
of Chantangco vs. Abaroa, which was an appeal from the Philippine Supreme
Court to the United States Supreme Court, 218 U.S. 476; 54 L. Ed. 1116; 40 Phil.
1056, Mr. Justice Lurton, speaking for the Supreme Court of the United States,
said:
It is true that one of the plaintiffs in the present case reserved whatever right he
may have had to bring a civil action. This was obviously of no avail, inasmuch as
there resulted a judgment for the defendant, and the plain inference from the
foregoing is that a verdict of acquittal must carry with it exemption from civil
responsibility.
Criminal negligence, that is, reckless imprudence, is not one of the three crimes
mentioned in Article 33 of the Civil Code which authorizes the institution of an
independent civil action, that is, of an entirely separate and distinct civil action for
damages, which shall proceed independently of the criminal prosecution and shall
be proved only by a preponderance of evidence. Said article mentions only the
crimes of defamation, fraud (estafa) and physical injuries. Although in the case
of Dyogi, et al. vs. Yatco, et al., G.R. No. L-9623, January 22, 1957, this Court
!
46!
held that the term "physical injuries" used in article 33 of the Civil Code includes
homicide, 1 it is to be borne in mind that the charge against Felardo Paje was for
reckless imprudence resulting in homicide, and not for homicide and physical
injuries. In the case of People vs. Buan, G.R. No. L-25366, March 29, 1968, Mr.
Justice J.B.L. Reyes, speaking for the Supreme Court, said that the "offense of
criminal negligence under article 365 of the Revised Penal Code lies in the
execution of an imprudent or negligent act that, if intentionally done, would be
punishable as a felony. The law penalizes thus the negligent or careless act, not the
result thereof. The gravity of the consequence is only taken into account to
determine the penalty; it does not qualify the substance of the offense." It is,
therefore, clear that the charge against Felardo Paje was not for homicide but for
reckless imprudence, that is, criminal negligence resulting in homicide (death of
Clemente Marcia) and double physical injuries suffered by two other persons. As
reckless imprudence or criminal negligence is not one of the three crimes
mentioned in Article 33 of the Civil Code, there is no independent civil action for
damages that may be instituted in connection with said offense. Hence, homicide
through reckless imprudence or criminal negligence comes under the general rule
that the acquittal of the defendant in the criminal action is a bar to his civil liability
based upon the same criminal act notwithstanding that the injured party
reserved 2 his right to institute a separate civil action (Chantangco vs.
Abaroa, supra). In the language of the Rules of Court (Rule 111, Sec. 3) the
extinction of the criminal action by acquittal of the defendant on the ground that
the criminal act charged against him did not exist, necessarily extinguished also the
civil action for damages based upon the same act.
(2) Assuming, arguendo, that the civil action for damages for the death of
Clemente Marcia was based upon a quasi-delict, 3 the trial court's finding that on
that basis the action had prescribed is correct. An action upon a quasi-delict must
be instituted within four (4) years (Article 1146, Civil Code). The four-year
prescriptive period began to run from the day the quasi-delict was committed, or
from December 23, 1956, and the running of the said period was not interrupted by
the institution of the criminal action for reckless imprudence. (Paulan vs. Sarabia,
G.R. No. L-10542, July 31, 1958.)
PREMISES CONSIDERED, the order appealed from is affirmed, with special
pronouncement as to costs.
G.R. No. 108017 April 3, 1995
MARIA BENITA A. DULAY, in her own behalf and in behalf of the minor
children KRIZTEEN ELIZABETH, BEVERLY MARIE and NAPOLEON II,
all
surnamed
DULAY, petitioners,
vs.
THE COURT OF APPEALS, Former Eighth Division, HON. TEODORO P.
REGINO, in his capacity as Presiding Judge of the Regional Trial Court
National Capital Region, Quezon City, Br. 84, SAFEGUARD
INVESTIGATION AND SECURITY CO., INC., and SUPERGUARD
SECURITY CORPORATION, respondents.
BIDIN, J.:
47! !
This petition for certiorari prays for the reversal of the decision of the Court of
Appeals dated October 29, 1991 in CA-G.R. CV No. 24646 which affirmed the
order of the Regional Trial Court dismissing Civil Case No. Q-89-1751, and its
resolution dated November 17, 1991 denying herein, petitioner's motion for
reconsideration.
The antecedent facts of the case are as follows:
On December 7, 1988, an altercation between Benigno Torzuela and Atty.
Napoleon Dulay occurred at the "Big Bang Sa Alabang," Alabang Village,
Muntinlupa as a result of which Benigno Torzuela, the security guard on duty at
the said carnival, shot and killed Atty. Napoleon Dulay.
Herein petitioner Maria Benita A. Dulay, widow of the deceased Napoleon Dulay,
in her own behalf and in behalf of her minor children, filed on February 8, 1989 an
action for damages against Benigno Torzuela and herein private respondents
Safeguard Investigation and Security Co., Inc., ("SAFEGUARD") and/or
Superguard Security Corp. ("SUPERGUARD"), alleged employers of defendant
Torzuela. The complaint, docketed as Civil Case No. Q-89-1751 among others
alleges the following:
1. . . .
Defendants SAFEGUARD INVESTIGATION AND SECURITY CO., INC.,
(Defendant Safeguard) and SUPERGUARD SECURITY CORPORATION
(Defendant Superguard) are corporations duly organized and existing in
accordance with Philippine laws, with offices at 10th Floor, Manufacturers
Building, Inc., Plaza Santa Cruz, Manila. They are impleaded as alternative
defendants for, while the former appears to be the employer of defendant
BENIGNO TORZUELA (defendant TORZUELA), the latter impliedly
acknowledged responsibility for the acts of defendant TORZUELA by extending
its sympathies to plaintiffs.
Defendant BENIGNO TORZUELA is of legal age, an employee of defendant
SAFEGUARD and/or defendant SUPERGUARD and, at the time of the incident
complained of, was under their control and supervision. . . .
3. On December 7, 1988 at around 8:00 a.m., defendant TORZUELA, while he
was on duty as security guard at the "Big Bang sa Alabang," Alabang Village,
Muntinlupa, Metro Manila shot and killed NAPOLEON V. DULAY with a .38
caliber revolver belonging to defendant SAFEGUARD, and/or SUPERGUARD
(per Police Report dated January 7, 1989, copy attached as Annex A);
4. The incident resulting in the death of NAPOLEON V. DULAY was due to the
concurring negligence of the defendants. Defendant TORZUELA'S wanton and
reckless discharge of the firearm issued to him by defendant SAFEGUARD and/or
SUPERGUARD was the immediate and proximate cause of the injury, while the
negligence of defendant SAFEGUARD and/or SUPERGUARD consists in its
having failed to exercise the diligence of a good father of a family in the
supervision and control of its employee to avoid the injury.
xxx xxx xxx
(Rollo, pp. 117-118)
Petitioners prayed for actual, compensatory, moral and exemplary damages, and
attorney's fees. The said Civil Case No. Q-89-1751 was raffled to Branch 84 of the
Regional Trial Court of Quezon City, presided by respondent Judge Teodoro
Regino.
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48!
Penal Code as distinguished from those arising from, quasi-delict. The dispositive
portion of the order dated April 13, 1989 states:
WHEREFORE, this Court holds that in view of the material and ultimate facts
alleged in the verified complaint and in accordance with the applicable law on the
matter as well as precedents laid down by the Supreme Court, the complaint
against the alternative defendants Superguard Security Corporation and Safeguard
Investigation and Security Co., Inc., must be and (sic) it is hereby dismissed.
(Rollo, p. 110)
The above order was affirmed by the respondent court and petitioners' motion for
reconsideration thereof was denied.
Petitioners take exception to the assailed decision and insist that quasi-delicts are
not limited to acts of negligence but also cover acts that are intentional and
voluntary, citing Andamo v. IAC (191 SCRA 195 [1990]). Thus, petitioners insist
that Torzuela' s act of shooting Napoleon Dulay constitutes a quasi-delict
actionable under Article 2176 of the New Civil Code.
Petitioners further contend that under Article 2180 of the New Civil Code, private
respondents are primarily liable for their negligence either in the selection or
supervision of their employees. This liability is independent of the employee's own
liability for fault or negligence and is distinct from the subsidiary civil liability
under Article 103 of the Revised Penal Code. The civil action against the employer
may therefore proceed independently of the criminal action pursuant to Rule 111
Section 3 of the Rules of Court. Petitioners submit that the question of whether
Torzuela is an employee of respondent SUPERGUARD or SAFEGUARD would
be better resolved after trial.
Moreover, petitioners argue that Torzuela's act of shooting Dulay is also actionable
under Article 33 of the New Civil Code, to wit:
Art. 33. In cases of defamation, fraud, and physical injuries, a civil action for
damages, entirely separate and distinct from the criminal action, may be brought
by the injured party. Such civil action shall proceed independently of the criminal
prosecution, and shall require only a preponderance of evidence. (Emphasis
supplied)
In the same vein, petitioners cite Section 3, Rule 111 of the Rules of Court which
provides:
Rule 111. . . . .
Sec. 3. When civil action may proceed independently In the cases provided for
in Articles 32, 33, 34 and 2176 of the Civil Code of the Philippines, the
independent civil action which has been reserved may be brought by the offended
party, shall proceed independently of the criminal action, and shall require only a
preponderance of evidence. (Emphasis supplied)
The term "physical injuries" under Article 33 has been held to include
consummated, frustrated and attempted homicide. Thus, petitioners maintain that
Torzuela's prior conviction is unnecessary since the civil action can proceed
independently of the criminal action. On the other hand, it is the private
respondents' argument that since the act was not committed with negligence, the
petitioners have no cause of action under Articles 2116 and 2177 of the New Civil
Code. The civil action contemplated in Article 2177 is not applicable to acts
committed with deliberate intent, but only applies to quasi-offenses under Article
365 of the Revised Penal Code. Torzuela's act of shooting Atty. Dulay to death,
aside from being purely personal, was done with deliberate intent and could not
!
50!
have been part of his duties as security guard. And since Article 2180 of the New
Civil Code covers only: acts done within the scope of the employee's assigned
tasks, the private respondents cannot be held liable for damages.
We find for petitioners.
It is undisputed that Benigno Torzuela is being prosecuted for homicide for the
fatal shooting of Napoleon Dulay. Rule 111 of the Rules on Criminal Procedure
provides:
Sec. 1. Institution of criminal and civil actions. When a criminal action is
instituted, the civil action for the recovery of civil liability is impliedly instituted
with the criminal action, unless the offended party waives the civil action , reserves
his right to institute it separately or institutes the civil action prior to the criminal
action.
Such civil action includes recovery of indemnity under the Revised Penal Code,
and damages under Articles 32, 33, 34, and 2176 of the Civil Code of the
Philippines arising from the same act or omission of the accused. (Emphasis
supplied)
It is well-settled that the filing of an independent civil action before the prosecution
in the criminal action presents evidence is even far better than a compliance with
the requirement of express reservation (Yakult Philippines v. Court of Appeals,
190 SCRA 357 [1990]). This is precisely what the petitioners opted to do in this
case. However, the private respondents opposed the civil action on the ground that
the same is founded on a delict and not on a quasi-delict as the shooting was not
attended by negligence. What is in dispute therefore is the nature of the petitioner's
cause of action.
The nature of a cause of action is determined by the facts alleged in the complaint
as constituting the cause of action (Republic v. Estenzo, 158 SCRA 282 [1988]).
The purpose of an action or suit and the law to govern it is to be determined not by
the claim of the party filing the action, made in his argument or brief, but rather by
the complaint itself, its allegations and prayer for relief. (De Tavera v. Philippine
Tuberculosis Society, 112 SCRA 243 [1982]). An examination of the complaint in
the present case would show that the plaintiffs, petitioners herein, are invoking
their right to recover damages against the private respondents for their vicarious
responsibility for the injury caused by Benigno Torzuela's act of shooting and
killing Napoleon Dulay, as stated in paragraphs 1 and 2 of the complaint.
Article 2176 of the New Civil Code provides:
Art. 2176. Whoever by act or omission causes damage to another, there being fault
or negligence, is obliged to pay for the damage done. Such fault or negligence, if
there is no pre-existing contractual relation between the parties is called a quasidelict and is governed by the provisions of this Chapter.
Contrary to the theory of private respondents, there is no justification for limiting
the scope of Article 2176 of the Civil Code to acts or omissions resulting from
negligence. Well-entrenched is the doctrine that article 2176 covers not only acts
committed with negligence, but also acts which are voluntary and intentional. As
far back as the definitive case of Elcano v. Hill (77 SCRA 98 [1977]), this Court
already held that:
. . . Article 2176, where it refers to "fault or negligence," covers not only acts "not
punishable by law" but also acts criminal in character; whether intentional and
voluntary or negligent. Consequently, a separate civil action against the offender
in a criminal act, whether or not he is criminally prosecuted and found guilty or
51! !
acquitted, provided that the offended party is not allowed, if he is actually charged
also criminally, to recover damages on both scores, and would be entitled in such
eventuality only to the bigger award of the two, assuming the awards made in the
two cases vary. In other words, the extinction of civil liability referred to in Par. (e)
of Section 3, Rule 111, refers exclusively to civil liability founded on Article 100
of the Revised Penal Code, whereas the civil liability for the same act considered
as quasi-delict only and not as a crime is not extinguished even by a declaration in
the criminal case that the criminal act charged has not happened or has not been
committed by the accused. Briefly stated, We here hold, in reiteration of Garcia,
that culpa aquiliana includes voluntary and negligent acts which may be
punishable by law. (Emphasis supplied)
The same doctrine was echoed in the case of Andamo v. Intermediate Appellate
Court (191 SCRA 195 [1990]), wherein the Court held:
Article 2176, whenever it refers to "fault or negligence," covers not only acts
criminal in character, whether intentional and voluntary or negligent.
Consequently, a civil action lies against the offender in a criminal act, whether or
not he is prosecuted or found guilty or acquitted, provided that the offended party
is not allowed, (if the tortfeasor is actually also charged criminally), to recover
damages on both scores, and would be entitled in such eventuality only to the
bigger award of the two, assuming the awards made in the two cases vary. [citing
Virata v. Ochoa, 81 SCRA 472] (Emphasis supplied)
Private respondents submit that the word "intentional" in the Andamo case is
inaccurate obiter, and should be read as "voluntary" since intent cannot be coupled
with negligence as defined by Article 365 of the Revised Penal Code. In the
absence of more substantial reasons, this Court will not disturb the above doctrine
on the coverage of Article 2176.
Private respondents further aver that Article 33 of the New Civil Code applies only
to injuries intentionally committed pursuant to the ruling in Marcia v. CA (120
SCRA 193 [1983]), and that the actions for damages allowed thereunder are exdelicto. However, the term "physical injuries" in Article 33 has already been
construed to include bodily injuries causing death (Capuno v. Pepsi-Cola Bottling
Co. of the Philippines, 121 Phil. 638 [1965); Carandang v. Santiago, 97 Phil. 94
[1955]). It is not the crime of physical injuries defined in the Revised Penal Code.
It includes not only physical injuries but also consummated, frustrated, and
attempted homicide (Madeja v. Caro, 126 SCRA 293 [1983]). Although in the
Marcia case (supra), it was held that no independent civil action may be filed
under Article 33 where the crime is the result of criminal negligence, it must be
noted however, that Torzuela, the accused in the case at bar, is charged with
homicide, not with reckless imprudence, whereas the defendant in Marcia was
charged with reckless imprudence. Therefore, in this case, a civil action based on
Article 33 lies.
Private respondents also contend that their liability is subsidiary under the Revised
Penal Code; and that they are not liable for Torzuela's act which is beyond the
scope of his duties as a security guard. It having been established that the instant
action is not ex-delicto, petitioners may proceed directly against Torzuela and the
private respondents. Under Article 2180 of the New Civil Code as aforequoted,
when an injury is caused by the negligence of the employee, there instantly arises a
presumption of law that there was negligence on the part of the master or employer
either in the selection of the servant or employee, or in supervision over him after
!
52!
[1969]). Since the petitioners clearly sustained an injury to their rights under the
law, it would be more just to allow them to present evidence of such injury.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the petition for review is hereby GRANTED.
The decision of the Court of Appeals as well as the Order of the Regional Trial
Court dated April 13, 1989 are hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE. Civil Case
No. Q-89-1751 is remanded to the Regional Trial Court for trial on the merits. This
decision is immediately executory.
SO ORDERED.
54!
Petitioners contend that they could not be made liable for damages in the lawful
exercise of their right to dismiss private respondent.
On the other hand, private respondent contends that because of petitioners' abusive
manner in dismissing him as well as for the inhuman treatment he got from them,
the Petitioners must indemnify him for the damage that he had suffered.
One of the more notable innovations of the New Civil Code is the codification of
"some basic principles that are to be observed for the rightful relationship between
human beings and for the stability of the social order." [REPORT ON THE CODE
COMMISSION ON THE PROPOSED CIVIL CODE OF THE PHILIPPINES, p.
39]. The framers of the Code, seeking to remedy the defect of the old Code which
merely stated the effects of the law, but failed to draw out its spirit, incorporated
certain fundamental precepts which were "designed to indicate certain norms that
spring from the fountain of good conscience" and which were also meant to serve
as "guides for human conduct [that] should run as golden threads through society,
to the end that law may approach its supreme ideal, which is the sway and
dominance of justice" (Id.) Foremost among these principles is that pronounced in
Article 19 which provides:
Art. 19. Every person must, in the exercise of his rights and in the performance of
his duties, act with justice, give everyone his due, and observe honesty and good
faith.
This article, known to contain what is commonly referred to as the principle of
abuse of rights, sets certain standards which must be observed not only in the
exercise of one's rights but also in the performance of one's duties. These standards
are the following: to act with justice; to give everyone his due; and to observe
honesty and good faith. The law, therefore, recognizes a primordial limitation on
all rights; that in their exercise, the norms of human conduct set forth in Article 19
must be observed. A right, though by itself legal because recognized or granted by
law as such, may nevertheless become the source of some illegality. When a right
is exercised in a manner which does not conform with the norms enshrined in
Article 19 and results in damage to another, a legal wrong is thereby committed for
which the wrongdoer must be held responsible. But while Article 19 lays down a
rule of conduct for the government of human relations and for the maintenance of
social order, it does not provide a remedy for its violation. Generally, an action for
damages under either Article 20 or Article 21 would be proper.
Article 20, which pertains to damage arising from a violation of law, provides that:
Art. 20. Every person who contrary to law, wilfully or negligently causes damage
to another, shall indemnify the latter for the same.
However, in the case at bar, petitioners claim that they did not violate any
provision of law since they were merely exercising their legal right to dismiss
private respondent. This does not, however, leave private respondent with no relief
because Article 21 of the Civil Code provides that:
Art. 21. Any person who wilfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner that
is contrary to morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the latter for
the damage.
This article, adopted to remedy the "countless gaps in the statutes, which leave so
many victims of moral wrongs helpless, even though they have actually suffered
material and moral injury" [Id.] should "vouchsafe adequate legal remedy for that
untold number of moral wrongs which it is impossible for human foresight to
!
56!
provide for specifically in the statutes" [Id. it p. 40; See also PNB v. CA, G.R. No.
L-27155, May 18,1978, 83 SCRA 237, 247].
In determining whether or not the principle of abuse of rights may be invoked,
there is no rigid test which can be applied. While the Court has not hesitated to
apply Article 19 whether the legal and factual circumstances called for its
application [See for e.g., Velayo v. Shell Co. of the Phil., Ltd., 100 Phil. 186
(1956); PNB v. CA, supra;Grand Union Supermarket, Inc. v. Espino, Jr., G.R. No.
L-48250, December 28, 1979, 94 SCRA 953; PAL v. CA, G.R. No. L-46558, July
31,1981,106 SCRA 391; United General Industries, Inc, v. Paler G.R. No. L30205, March 15,1982,112 SCRA 404; Rubio v. CA, G.R. No. 50911, August 21,
1987, 153 SCRA 183] the question of whether or not the principle of abuse of
rights has been violated resulting in damages under Article 20 or Article 21 or
other applicable provision of law, depends on the circumstances of each case. And
in the instant case, the Court, after examining the record and considering certain
significant circumstances, finds that all petitioners have indeed abused the right
that they invoke, causing damage to private respondent and for which the latter
must now be indemnified.
The trial court made a finding that notwithstanding the fact that it was private
respondent Tobias who reported the possible existence of anomalous transactions,
petitioner Hendry "showed belligerence and told plaintiff (private respondent
herein) that he was the number one suspect and to take a one week vacation leave,
not to communicate with the office, to leave his table drawers open, and to leave
his keys to said defendant (petitioner Hendry)" [RTC Decision, p. 2; Rollo, p. 232].
This, petitioners do not dispute. But regardless of whether or not it was private
respondent Tobias who reported the anomalies to petitioners, the latter's reaction
towards the former upon uncovering the anomalies was less than civil. An
employer who harbors suspicions that an employee has committed dishonesty
might be justified in taking the appropriate action such as ordering an investigation
and directing the employee to go on a leave. Firmness and the resolve to uncover
the truth would also be expected from such employer. But the high-handed
treatment accorded Tobias by petitioners was certainly uncalled for. And this
reprehensible attitude of petitioners was to continue when private respondent
returned to work on November 20, 1972 after his one week forced leave. Upon
reporting for work, Tobias was confronted by Hendry who said. "Tobby, you are
the crook and swindler in this company." Considering that the first report made by
the police investigators was submitted only on December 10, 1972 [See Exh. A]
the statement made by petitioner Hendry was baseless. The imputation of guilt
without basis and the pattern of harassment during the investigations of Tobias
transgress the standards of human conduct set forth in Article 19 of the Civil Code.
The Court has already ruled that the right of the employer to dismiss an employee
should not be confused with the manner in which the right is exercised and the
effects flowing therefrom. If the dismissal is done abusively, then the employer is
liable for damages to the employee [Quisaba v. Sta. Ines-Melale Veneer and
Plywood Inc., G.R. No. L-38088, August 30, 1974, 58 SCRA 771; See
also Philippine Refining Co., Inc. v. Garcia, G.R. No. L-21871, September
27,1966, 18 SCRA 107] Under the circumstances of the instant case, the
petitioners clearly failed to exercise in a legitimate manner their right to dismiss
Tobias, giving the latter the right to recover damages under Article 19 in relation to
Article 21 of the Civil Code.
57! !
But petitioners were not content with just dismissing Tobias. Several other tortious
acts were committed by petitioners against Tobias after the latter's termination
from work. Towards the latter part of January, 1973, after the filing of the first of
six criminal complaints against Tobias, the latter talked to Hendry to protest the
actions taken against him. In response, Hendry cut short Tobias' protestations by
telling him to just confess or else the company would file a hundred more cases
against him until he landed in jail. Hendry added that, "You Filipinos cannot be
trusted." The threat unmasked petitioner's bad faith in the various actions taken
against Tobias. On the other hand, the scornful remark about Filipinos as well as
Hendry's earlier statements about Tobias being a "crook" and "swindler" are clear
violations of 'Tobias' personal dignity [See Article 26, Civil Code].
The next tortious act committed by petitioners was the writing of a letter to
RETELCO sometime in October 1974, stating that Tobias had been dismissed by
GLOBE MACKAY due to dishonesty. Because of the letter, Tobias failed to gain
employment with RETELCO and as a result of which, Tobias remained
unemployed for a longer period of time. For this further damage suffered by
Tobias, petitioners must likewise be held liable for damages consistent with Article
2176 of the Civil Code. Petitioners, however, contend that they have a "moral, if
not legal, duty to forewarn other employers of the kind of employee the plaintiff
(private respondent herein) was." [Petition, p. 14; Rollo, p. 15]. Petitioners further
claim that "it is the accepted moral and societal obligation of every man to advise
or warn his fellowmen of any threat or danger to the latter's life, honor or property.
And this includes warning one's brethren of the possible dangers involved in
dealing with, or accepting into confidence, a man whose honesty and integrity is
suspect" [Id.]. These arguments, rather than justify petitioners' act, reveal a
seeming obsession to prevent Tobias from getting a job, even after almost two
years from the time Tobias was dismissed.
Finally, there is the matter of the filing by petitioners of six criminal complaints
against Tobias. Petitioners contend that there is no case against them for malicious
prosecution and that they cannot be "penalized for exercising their right and
prerogative of seeking justice by filing criminal complaints against an employee
who was their principal suspect in the commission of forgeries and in the
perpetration of anomalous transactions which defrauded them of substantial sums
of money" [Petition, p. 10, Rollo, p. 11].
While sound principles of justice and public policy dictate that persons shall have
free resort to the courts for redress of wrongs and vindication of their rights
[Buenaventura v. Sto. Domingo, 103 Phil. 239 (1958)], the right to institute
criminal prosecutions can not be exercised maliciously and in bad faith [Ventura v.
Bernabe, G.R. No. L-26760, April 30, 1971, 38 SCRA 5871.] Hence, in Yutuk V.
Manila Electric Co., G.R. No. L-13016, May 31, 1961, 2 SCRA 337, the Court
held that the right to file criminal complaints should not be used as a weapon to
force an alleged debtor to pay an indebtedness. To do so would be a clear
perversion of the function of the criminal processes and of the courts of justice.
And in Hawpia CA, G.R. No. L-20047, June 30, 1967. 20 SCRA 536 the Court
upheld the judgment against the petitioner for actual and moral damages and
attorney's fees after making a finding that petitioner, with persistence, filed at least
six criminal complaints against respondent, all of which were dismissed.
To constitute malicious prosecution, there must be proof that the prosecution was
prompted by a design to vex and humiliate a person and that it was initiated
!
58!
deliberately by the defendant knowing that the charges were false and groundless
[Manila Gas Corporation v. CA, G.R. No. L-44190, October 30,1980, 100 SCRA
602]. Concededly, the filing of a suit by itself, does not render a person liable for
malicious prosecution [Inhelder Corporation v. CA, G.R. No. 52358, May
301983122 SCRA 576]. The mere dismissal by the fiscal of the criminal complaint
is not a ground for an award of damages for malicious prosecution if there is no
competent evidence to show that the complainant had acted in bad faith [Sison v.
David, G.R. No. L-11268, January 28,1961, 1 SCRA 60].
In the instant case, however, the trial court made a finding that petitioners acted in
bad faith in filing the criminal complaints against Tobias, observing that:
xxx
Defendants (petitioners herein) filed with the Fiscal's Office of Manila a total of six
(6) criminal cases, five (5) of which were for estafa thru falsification of
commercial document and one for violation of Art. 290 of the Revised Penal Code
"discovering secrets thru seizure of correspondence," and all were dismissed for
insufficiency or lack of evidence." The dismissal of four (4) of the cases was
appealed to the Ministry of Justice, but said Ministry invariably sustained the
dismissal of the cases. As above adverted to, two of these cases were refiled with
the Judge Advocate General's Office of the Armed Forces of the Philippines to
railroad plaintiffs arrest and detention in the military stockade, but this was
frustrated by a presidential decree transferring criminal cases involving civilians to
the civil courts.
xxx
To be sure, when despite the two (2) police reports embodying the findings of Lt.
Dioscoro Tagle, Chief Document Examiner of the Manila Police Department,
clearing plaintiff of participation or involvement in the fraudulent transactions
complained of, despite the negative results of the lie detector tests which
defendants compelled plaintiff to undergo, and although the police investigation
was "still under follow-up and a supplementary report will be submitted after all
the evidence has been gathered," defendants hastily filed six (6) criminal cases
with the city Fiscal's Office of Manila, five (5) for estafa thru falsification of
commercial document and one (1) for violation of Art. 290 of the Revised Penal
Code, so much so that as was to be expected, all six (6) cases were dismissed, with
one of the investigating fiscals, Asst. Fiscal de Guia, commenting in one case that,
"Indeed, the haphazard way this case was investigated is evident. Evident likewise
is the flurry and haste in the filing of this case against respondent Tobias," there
can be no mistaking that defendants would not but be motivated by malicious and
unlawful intent to harass, oppress, and cause damage to plaintiff.
xxx
[RTC Decision, pp. 5-6; Rollo, pp. 235-236].
In addition to the observations made by the trial court, the Court finds it significant
that the criminal complaints were filed during the pendency of the illegal dismissal
case filed by Tobias against petitioners. This explains the haste in which the
complaints were filed, which the trial court earlier noted. But petitioners, to prove
their good faith, point to the fact that only six complaints were filed against Tobias
when they could have allegedly filed one hundred cases, considering the number of
anomalous transactions committed against GLOBE MACKAY. However,
petitioners' good faith is belied by the threat made by Hendry after the filing of the
first complaint that one hundred more cases would be filed against Tobias. In
59! !
effect, the possible filing of one hundred more cases was made to hang like the
sword of Damocles over the head of Tobias. In fine, considering the haste in which
the criminal complaints were filed, the fact that they were filed during the
pendency of the illegal dismissal case against petitioners, the threat made by
Hendry, the fact that the cases were filed notwithstanding the two police reports
exculpating Tobias from involvement in the anomalies committed against GLOBE
MACKAY, coupled by the eventual dismissal of all the cases, the Court is led into
no other conclusion than that petitioners were motivated by malicious intent in
filing the six criminal complaints against Tobias.
Petitioners next contend that the award of damages was excessive. In the complaint
filed against petitioners, Tobias prayed for the following: one hundred thousand
pesos (P100,000.00) as actual damages; fifty thousand pesos (P50,000.00) as
exemplary damages; eight hundred thousand pesos (P800,000.00) as moral
damages; fifty thousand pesos (P50,000.00) as attorney's fees; and costs. The trial
court, after making a computation of the damages incurred by Tobias [See RTC
Decision, pp. 7-8; Rollo, pp. 154-1551, awarded him the following: eighty
thousand pesos (P80,000.00) as actual damages; two hundred thousand pesos
(P200,000.00) as moral damages; twenty thousand pesos (P20,000.00) as
exemplary damages; thirty thousand pesos (P30,000.00) as attorney's fees; and,
costs. It must be underscored that petitioners have been guilty of committing
several actionable tortious acts, i.e., the abusive manner in which they dismissed
Tobias from work including the baseless imputation of guilt and the harassment
during the investigations; the defamatory language heaped on Tobias as well as the
scornful remark on Filipinos; the poison letter sent to RETELCO which resulted in
Tobias' loss of possible employment; and, the malicious filing of the criminal
complaints. Considering the extent of the damage wrought on Tobias, the Court
finds that, contrary to petitioners' contention, the amount of damages awarded to
Tobias was reasonable under the circumstances.
Yet, petitioners still insist that the award of damages was improper, invoking the
principle of damnum absqueinjuria. It is argued that "[t]he only probable actual
damage that plaintiff (private respondent herein) could have suffered was a direct
result of his having been dismissed from his employment, which was a valid and
legal act of the defendants-appellants (petitioners herein).lwph1.t " [Petition, p.
17; Rollo, p. 18].
According to the principle of damnum absque injuria, damage or loss which does
not constitute a violation of a legal right or amount to a legal wrong is not
actionable [Escano v. CA, G.R. No. L-47207, September 25, 1980, 100 SCRA
197; See also Gilchrist v. Cuddy 29 Phil, 542 (1915); The Board of Liquidators v.
Kalaw, G.R. No. L-18805, August 14, 1967, 20 SCRA 987]. This principle finds
no application in this case. It bears repeating that even granting that petitioners
might have had the right to dismiss Tobias from work, the abusive manner in
which that right was exercised amounted to a legal wrong for which petitioners
must now be held liable. Moreover, the damage incurred by Tobias was not only in
connection with the abusive manner in which he was dismissed but was also the
result of several other quasi-delictual acts committed by petitioners.
Petitioners next question the award of moral damages. However, the Court has
already ruled in Wassmer v. Velez, G.R. No. L-20089, December 26, 1964, 12
SCRA 648, 653, that [p]er express provision of Article 2219 (10) of the New Civil
Code, moral damages are recoverable in the cases mentioned in Article 21 of said
!
60!
62!
returned to petitioners unless some of them have been conveyed to innocent third
persons."5
But by the time the Supreme Court promulgated the abovementioned Decision,
respondents' house had already been destroyed, supposedly in accordance with a
Writ of Demolition ordered by the lower court.
Thus, a Complaint for damages in connection with the destruction of their house
was filed by respondents against petitioner before the RTC on December 15, 1989.
In its January 27, 1993 Decision, the RTC dismissed respondents' suit. On appeal,
the CA set aside the lower court's ruling and ordered petitioner to pay respondents
P250,000 as actual damages. Petitioner then filed a Motion for Reconsideration,
which was also denied.
The Issue
In his Memorandum,7 petitioner submits this lone issue for our consideration:
"Whether or not the Court of Appeals was correct was correct in deciding that the
petition [was] liable to the respondents for damages."8
The Court's Ruling
The Petition has no merit.
Main Issue:
Petitioner's Liability
Well-settled is the maxim that damage resulting from the legitimate exercise of a
person's rights is a loss without injury- damnum absque injuria - for which the law
gives no remedy.9 In other words, one who merely exercises one's rights does no
actionable injury and cannot be held liable for damages.
Petitioner invokes this legal precept in arguing that he is not liable for the
demolition of respondents' house. He maintains that he was merely acting in
accordance with the Writ of Demolition ordered by the RTC.
We reject this submission. Damnum absque injuria finds no application to this
case.
True, petitioner commenced the demolition of respondents' house on May 30, 1986
under the authority of a Writ of Demolition issued by the RTC. But the records
show that a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO), enjoining the demolition of
respondents' house, was issued by the Supreme Court on June 2, 1986. The CA
also found, based on the Certificate of Service of the Supreme Court process
server, that a copy of the TRO was served on petitioner himself on June 4, 1986.
Petitioner, howeverm, did not heed the TRO of this Court. We agree with the CA
that he unlawfully pursued the demolition of respondents' house well until the
middle of 1987. This is clear from Respondent Angela Gutierrez's testimony. The
appellate court quoted the following pertinent portion thereof:10
"Q.
On May 30, 1986, were they able to destroy your house?
"A.
Not all, a certain portion only
xxx
xxx
xxx
"Q.
Was your house completely demolished?
"A.
No, sir.
xxx
xxx
xxx
"Q.
Until when[,] Mrs. Witness?
"A.
Until 1987.
"Q.
About what month of 1987?
"A.
Middle of the year.
"Q.
Can you tell the Honorable Court who completed the demolition?
63! !
A.
The men of Fiscal Amonoy."11
The foregoing disproves the claim of petitioner that the demolition, which
allegedly commenced only on May 30, 1986, was completed the following day. It
likewise belies his allegation that the demolitions had already ceased when he
received notice of the TRO.
Although the acts of petitioner may have been legally justified at the outsset, their
continuation after the issuance of the TRO amounted to an insidious abuse of his
right. Indubitably, his actions were tainted with bad faith. Had he not insisted on
completing the demolition, respondents would not have suffered the loss that
engendered the suit before the RTC. Verily, his acts constituted not only an abuse
of a right, but an invalid exercise of a right that had been suspended when he
received thae TRO from this Court on June 4, 1986. By then he was no longer
entitled to proceed with the demolition.
A commentator on this topic explains:
"The exercise of a right ends when the right disappears, and it disappears when it is
abused, especially to the prejudice of others. The mask of a right without the spirit
of justcie which gives it life, is repugnant to the modern concept of social law. It
cannot be said that a person exercises a right when he unnecessarily prejudices
another xxx. Over and above the specific precepts of postive law are the supreme
norms of justice xxx; and he who violates them violates the law. For this reason it
is not permissible to abuse our rights to prejudice others."12
Likewise, in Albenson Enterprises Corp. v. CA,13 the Court discussed the concept
of abuse of rights as follows:
"Artilce 19, known to contain what is commonly referred to as the principle of
abuse of rights, sets certain standards which may be observed not only in the
exercise of one's rights but also in the performance of one's duties.These standards
are the following: to act with justice; to give everyone his due; recognizes the
primordial limitation on all rights: that in their exercise, the norms of human
conduct set forth in Article 19 and results in damage to another, a legal wrong is
thereby committed for which the wrongdoer must be held responsible xxx."
Clearly then, the demolition of respondents' house by petitioner, despite his receipt
of the TRO, was not only an abuse but also an unlawful exercise of such right. In
insisting on his alleged right, he wantonly violated this Court's Order and wittingly
caused the destruction of respondents; house.1wphi1.nt
Obviously, petitioner cannot invoke damnum absque injuria, a principle premised
on the valid exercise of a right.14 Anything less or beyond such exercise will not
give rise to the legal protection that the principle accords. And when damage or
prejudice to another is occasioned thereby, liability cannot be obscured, much less
abated.
In the ultimate analysis, petitioner's liability is premised on the obligation to repair
or to make whole the damage caused to another by reason of one's act or omission,
whether done intentionally or negligently and whether or not punishable by law.15
WHEREFORE,
the
Petition
is DENIED and
the
appealed
Decision AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. 132344
!
UNIVERSITY
OF
THE
EAST, petitioner,
vs.
ROMEO A. JADER, respondent.
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
May an educational institution be held liable for damages for misleading a student
into believing that the latter had satisfied all the requirements for graduation when
such is not the case? This is the issue in the instant petition for review premised on
the following undisputed facts as summarized by the trial court and adopted by the
Court of Appeals (CA),1 to wit:
Plaintiff was enrolled in the defendants' College of Law from 1984 up to 1988. In
the first semester of his last year (School year 1987-1988), he failed to take the
regular final examination in Practice Court I for which he was given an incomplete
grade (Exhibits "2", also Exhibit "H"). He enrolled for the second semester as
fourth year law student (Exhibit "A") and on February 1, 1988 he filed an
application for the removal of the incomplete grade given him by Professor Carlos
Ortega (Exhibits "H-2", also Exhibit "2") which was approved by Dean Celedonio
Tiongson after payment of the required fee. He took the examination on March 28,
1988. On May 30, 1988, Professor Carlos Ortega submitted his grade. It was a
grade of five (5). (Exhibits "H-4", also Exhibits "2-L", "2-N").1wphi1.nt
In the meantime, the Dean and the Faculty Members of the College of Law met to
deliberate on who among the fourth year students should be allowed to graduate.
The plaintiff's name appeared in the Tentative List of Candidates for graduation for
the Degree of Bachelor of Laws (LL.B) as of Second Semester (1987-1988) with
the following annotation:
JADER ROMEO A.
Def. Conflict of Laws x-1-87-88, Practice Court I Inc., 1-87-88 C-1 to submit
transcript with S.O. (Exhibits "3", "3-C-1", "3-C-2").
The 35th Investitures & Commencement Ceremonies for the candidates of
Bachelor of Laws was scheduled on the 16th of April 1988 at 3:00 o'clock in the
afternoon, and in the invitation for that occasion the name of the plaintiff appeared
as one of the candidates. (Exhibits "B", "B-6", "B-6-A"). At the foot of the list of
the names of the candidates there appeared however the following annotation:
This is a tentative list Degrees will be conferred upon these candidates who
satisfactorily complete requirements as stated in the University Bulletin and as
approved of the Department of Education, Culture and Sports (Exhibit "B-7-A").
The plaintiff attended the investiture ceremonies at F. dela Cruz Quadrangle, U.E.,
Recto Campus, during the program of which he went up the stage when his name
was called, escorted by her (sic) mother and his eldest brother who assisted in
placing the Hood, and his Tassel was turned from left to right, and he was
thereafter handed by Dean Celedonio a rolled white sheet of paper symbolical of
the Law Diploma. His relatives took pictures of the occasion (Exhibits "C" to "C6", "D-3" to "D-11").
He tendered a blow-out that evening which was attended by neighbors, friends and
relatives who wished him good luck in the forthcoming bar examination. There
were pictures taken too during the blow-out (Exhibits "D" to "D-1").
He thereafter prepared himself for the bar examination. He took a leave of absence
without pay from his job from April 20, 1988 to September 30, 1988 (Exhibit "G")
and enrolled at the pre-bar review class in Far Eastern University. (Exhibits "F" to
65! !
"F-2"). Having learned of the deficiency he dropped his review class and was not
able to take the bar examination.2
Consequently, respondent sued petitioner for damages alleging that he suffered
moral shock, mental anguish, serious anxiety, besmirched reputation, wounded
feelings and sleepless nights when he was not able to take the 1988 bar
examinations arising from the latter's negligence. He prayed for an award of moral
and exemplary damages, unrealized income, attorney's fees, and costs of suit.
In its answer with counterclaim, petitioner denied liability arguing mainly that it
never led respondent to believe that he completed the requirements for a Bachelor
of Laws degree when his name was included in the tentative list of graduating
students. After trial, the lower court rendered judgment as follows:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing judgment is hereby rendered in favor of
the plaintiff and against the defendant ordering the latter to pay plaintiff the sum of
THIRTY FIVE THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED SEVENTY PESOS
(P35,470.00) with legal rate of interest from the filing of the complaint until fully
paid, the amount of FIVE THOUSAND PESOS (P5,000.00) as attorney's fees and
the cost of suit.
Defendant's counterclaim is, for lack of merit, hereby dismissed.
SO ORDERED.3
which on appeal by both parties was affirmed by the Court of Appeals (CA) with
modification. The dispositive portion of the CA decision reads:
WHEREFORE, in the light of the foregoing, the lower Court's Decision is hereby
AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATION that defendant-appellee, in addition to the
sum adjudged by the lower court in favor of plaintiff-appellant, is also ORDERED
to pay plaintiff-appellant the amount of FIFTY THOUSAND (P50,000.00) PESOS
for moral damages. Costs against defendant-appellee.
SO ORDERED.4
Upon the denial of its motion for reconsideration, petitioner UE elevated the case
to this Court on a petition for review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, arguing
that it has no liability to respondent Romeo A. Jader, considering that the
proximate and immediate cause of the alleged damages incurred by the latter arose
out of his own negligence in not verifying from the professor concerned the result
of his removal exam.
The petition lacks merit.
When a student is enrolled in any educational or learning institution, a contract of
education is entered into between said institution and the student. The professors,
teachers or instructors hired by the school are considered merely as agents and
administrators tasked to perform the school's commitment under the contract. Since
the contracting parties are the school and the student, the latter is not duty-bound to
deal with the former's agents, such as the professors with respect to the status or
result of his grades, although nothing prevents either professors or students from
sharing with each other such information. The Court takes judicial notice of the
traditional practice in educational institutions wherein the professor directly
furnishes his/her students their grades. It is the contractual obligation of the school
to timely inform and furnish sufficient notice and information to each and every
student as to whether he or she had already complied with all the requirements for
the conferment of a degree or whether they would be included among those who
will graduate. Although commencement exercises are but a formal ceremony, it
nonetheless is not an ordinary occasion, since such ceremony is the educational
!
66!
institution's way of announcing to the whole world that the students included in the
list of those who will be conferred a degree during the baccalaureate ceremony
have satisfied all the requirements for such degree. Prior or subsequent to the
ceremony, the school has the obligation to promptly inform the student of any
problem involving the latter's grades and performance and also most importantly,
of the procedures for remedying the same.
Petitioner, in belatedly informing respondent of the result of the removal
examination, particularly at a time when he had already commenced preparing for
the bar exams, cannot be said to have acted in good faith. Absence of good faith
must be sufficiently established for a successful prosecution by the aggrieved party
in a suit for abuse of right under Article 19 of the Civil Code. Good faith connotes
an honest intention to abstain from taking undue advantage of another, even though
the forms and technicalities of the law, together with the absence of all information
or belief of facts, would render the transaction unconscientious.5 It is the school
that has access to those information and it is only the school that can compel its
professors to act and comply with its rules, regulations and policies with respect to
the computation and the prompt submission of grades. Students do not exercise
control, much less influence, over the way an educational institution should run its
affairs, particularly in disciplining its professors and teachers and ensuring their
compliance with the school's rules and orders. Being the party that hired them, it is
the school that exercises general supervision and exclusive control over the
professors with respect to the submission of reports involving the students'
standing. Exclusive control means that no other person or entity had any control
over the instrumentality which caused the damage or injury.6
The college dean is the senior officer responsible for the operation of an academic
program, enforcement of rules and regulations, and the supervision of faculty and
student services.7 He must see to it that his own professors and teachers, regardless
of their status or position outside of the university, must comply with the rules set
by the latter. The negligent act of a professor who fails to observe the rules of the
school, for instance by not promptly submitting a student's grade, is not only
imputable to the professor but is an act of the school, being his employer.
Considering further, that the institution of learning involved herein is a university
which is engaged in legal education, it should have practiced what it inculcates in
its students, more specifically the principle of good dealings enshrined in Articles
19 and 20 of the Civil Code which states:
Art. 19. Every person must, in the exercise of his rights and in the performance of
his duties, act with justice, give everyone his due, and observe honesty and good
faith.
Art. 20. Every person who, contrary to law, wilfully or negligently causes damage
to another, shall indemnify the latter for the same.
Art. 19 was intended to expand the concept of torts by granting adequate legal
remedy for the untold number of moral wrongs which is impossible for human
foresight to provide specifically in statutory law.8 In civilized society, men must be
able to assume that others will do them no intended injury that others will
commit no internal aggressions upon them; that their fellowmen, when they act
affirmatively will do so with due care which the ordinary understanding and moral
sense of the community exacts and that those with whom they deal in the general
course of society will act in good faith. The ultimate thing in the theory of liability
is justifiable reliance under conditions of civilized society.9 Schools and professors
67! !
cannot just take students for granted and be indifferent to them, for without the
latter, the former are useless.
Educational institutions are duty-bound to inform the students of their academic
status and not wait for the latter to inquire from the former. The conscious
indifference of a person to the rights or welfare of the person/persons who may be
affected by his act or omission can support a claim for damages.10 Want of care to
the conscious disregard of civil obligations coupled with a conscious knowledge of
the cause naturally calculated to produce them would make the erring party
liable.11 Petitioner ought to have known that time was of the essence in the
performance of its obligation to inform respondent of his grade. It cannot feign
ignorance that respondent will not prepare himself for the bar exams since that is
precisely the immediate concern after graduation of an LL.B. graduate. It failed to
act seasonably. Petitioner cannot just give out its student's grades at any time
because a student has to comply with certain deadlines set by the Supreme Court
on the submission of requirements for taking the bar. Petitioner's liability arose
from its failure to promptly inform respondent of the result of an examination and
in misleading the latter into believing that he had satisfied all requirements for the
course. Worth quoting is the following disquisition of the respondent court:
It is apparent from the testimony of Dean Tiongson that defendant-appellee
University had been informed during the deliberation that the professor in Practice
Court I gave plaintiff-appellant a failing grade. Yet, defendant-appellee still did not
inform plaintiff-appellant of his failure to complete the requirements for the degree
nor did they remove his name from the tentative list of candidates for graduation.
Worse, defendant-appellee university, despite the knowledge that plaintiffappellant failed in Practice Court I, againincluded plaintiff-appellant's name in the
"tentative list of candidates for graduation which was prepared after the
deliberation and which became the basis for the commencement rites program.
Dean Tiongson reasons out that plaintiff-appellant's name was allowed to remain in
the tentative list of candidates for graduation in the hope that the latter would still
be able to remedy the situation in the remaining few days before graduation day.
Dean Tiongson, however, did not explain how plaintiff appellant Jader could have
done something to complete his deficiency if defendant-appellee university did not
exert any effort to inform plaintiff-appellant of his failing grade in Practice Court
I.12
Petitioner cannot pass on its blame to the professors to justify its own negligence
that led to the delayed relay of information to respondent. When one of two
innocent parties must suffer, he through whose agency the loss occurred must bear
it.13 The modern tendency is to grant indemnity for damages in cases where there is
abuse of right, even when the act is not illicit.14 If mere fault or negligence in one's
acts can make him liable for damages for injury caused thereby, with more reason
should abuse or bad faith make him liable. A person should be protected only when
he acts in the legitimate exercise of his right, that is, when he acts with prudence
and in good faith, but not when he acts with negligence or abuse.15
However, while petitioner was guilty of negligence and thus liable to respondent
for the latter's actual damages, we hold that respondent should not have been
awarded moral damages. We do not agree with the Court of Appeals' findings that
respondent suffered shock, trauma and pain when he was informed that he could
not graduate and will not be allowed to take the bar examinations. At the very
least, it behooved on respondent to verify for himself whether he has completed all
!
68!
1954; and the dismissal was affirmed by this Court on July 7, 1955, in G.R. No. L8638. Civil Case No. 26601 was also dismissed on September 13, 1955. On appeal,
this Court reversed the order of dismissal, under the impression that the real
controversy was confined merely between defendant Panlilio and plaintiffs Ruiz
and Herrera over the 15% of the contract price, which was retained by the
Department of National Defense. The retention of the 15% of the contract price in
the sum of P34,740.00 was made to answer for any claim or lien that might arise,
in the course of the construction. The last case, however, was remanded to the
court of origin, for further proceedings. Panlilio and the corporation filed their
amended answers, stating that the amount retained by the Department of National
Defense was already paid to defendant corporation, as sought for by the plaintiffs
in their complaint. In view of this development, the trial court invited the parties to
a conference, in which the plaintiffs indicated their conformity, to the dismissal of
the complaint with respect to the retention of the 15% of the contract price; but
insisted upon the hearing of the second question, which sought the declaration and
recognition of plaintiffs Ruiz and Herrera, as two of the three architects of the
hospital. The trial court, nevertheless, dismissed the complaint, for being already
academic and moot. Hence, this appeal by plaintiffs-appellants, who alleged in
their lone assignment of error that "the lower court grievously erred in ordering the
dismissal of the case, with costs against the plaintiffs".
Plaintiffs-appellants contend that the only ground relied upon by the lower court to
dismiss the case without any trial is the allegation contained in pars. 4 and (e) of
the answers of the appellees Panlilio and Allied Technologists, Inc., respectively;
that the amount retained by the Department of National Defense had already been
paid; that except for this bare allegation of the appellees, no evidence was adduced
to prove the truth of the same; that even assuming, for the sake of argument, that
the same is true, nevertheless the first part of the first cause of action still remains,
for which they had insisted upon a hearing in order to establish their right to be
recognized as two of the three architects of the hospital; that because the pleadings
do not show any ground which might legally justify the action taken by the lower
court, the latter should not have ordered the dismissal of the entire case but should
have ordered only the striking out of the moot portion of appellants' first cause of
action, citing Pacal v. Ramos, 81 Phil. 30, 33; 27 C.J.S. 209-210; Bush v. Murray,
205 N.Y.S. 21, 26, 209 App. Div. 563; Bearden v. Longino. 190 S.E. 12, 183 Ga.
819. Appellants further argue in their brief that they base their cause of action on
article 21, New Civil Code.
The appeal has no merit. The order appealed from, states
Considering the manifestation of counsel for plaintiffs that the latter would insist
on the hearing of the above-entitled case for the purpose of establishing their right
to be recognized as the architects of the Veterans Hospital together with defendant
Pablo D. Panlilio, and it appearing that plaintiffs' Amended Complaint with
Injunction prays, among others, "That this Honorable Court order defendants
Secretary of National Defense, Col. Nicolas Jimenez, and the Finance Officer and
Auditor of the Department of National Defense to pay the Allied Technologists,
Inc., the balance unpaid by virtue of the contract executed on September 11, 1950
(Annex "C" hereof) for services rendered under Title I and to be rendered under
Title II of said contract; that paragraph 4 of defendant Pablo Panlilio's Amended
Answer to said complaint alleges "That whatever amounts were retained by the
Dept. of National Defense on the contract price, which retention was authorized by
!
70!
the contract, was paid by the Dept. of National Defense to the Allied Technologists
Inc. as sought by the plaintiffs; that paragraph (e) of the ANSWER TO THE
AMENDED COMPLAINT of defendant Allied Technologists, Inc., also alleges
"That whatever amounts were retained by the Department of National Defense, per
the stipulations contained in the contract, have already been paid by the Allied
Technologists, Inc. and, therefore, the present action seeking to compel the
aforementioned Department of National Defense to pay to defendant Allied
Technologists, Inc. the amounts retained by the Department of National Defense is
academic, groundless, unfounded and malicious"; that the said allegations of the
separate answers of defendants Pablo Panlilio and Allied Technologists, Inc., are
not and can not be denied by plaintiffs, and that it is this Court's understanding that
defendant has no objection to the dismissal of this case it is ordered that this
case be, as it is hereby DISMISSED, with costs against plaintiffs.
A cursory reading of pars. 18 and 19 of the amended complaint with injunction and
prayers (1) and (2) thereof, reveals that appellants' first cause of action is
composed of two parts, as follows:
(a) A judicial declaration or recognition that appellants Ruiz and Herrera, together
with appellee Panlilio, were the architects of the Veterans Hospital; and
(b) An injunction restraining the appellee government officials paying their coappellee Panlilio the sum retained by the former, as per stipulation contained in the
contract for the construction of the hospital because "they will not only be deprived
of the monetary value of the services legally due them, but that their professional
prestige and standing will be seriously impaired".lawphil.net
As appellants admitted, they no longer consider the Secretary and other officials of
the Department of National Defense, as parties-defendants in the case, said
officials can no longer be compelled to recognize the appellants, Ruiz and Herrera,
as co-architects with appellee Panlilio of the Veterans Hospital. And, as the
amount retained by the Department on the contract price, which retention was
authorized by the contract, was, as sought by the appellants, already paid to the
Allied Technologists, Inc., there is nothing more for the trial court to decide, even
without first ruling on the special defenses of appellees Panlilio and the
corporation.
Moreover, by discarding the Secretary and other officials of the Department of
National Defense, as parties-defendants, appellants could not expect the trial court
to order them to recognize and declare appellants as co-architects in the
construction of the hospital. And this must be so, because the construction
agreement expressly provides that the architect being contracted by the
Government was appellee Pablo Panlilio. The said agreement states that the same
was entered into by the government, party of the first part and "Allied
Technologists, Inc. . . . and Mr. Pablo D. Panlilio, architect, hereinafter called the
party of the second part" and "The Allied Technologists, Inc. for rendering
engineering services and Mr. Pablo D. Panlilio, architect, for rendering
architectural services". And the contract was signed for the Government by
"Ramon Magsaysay, Secretary of National Defense (party of the first part," and
"Allied Technologists, Inc., by Enrique J. L. Ruiz, President, Contractor, Pablo D.
Panlilio, Architect".
Appellants maintain that their claim for recognition is divisible and separable from
their allegations regarding the non-payment by the government of a portion of the
architectural fees; thereby concluding that what the lower court should have done,
71! !
should have been merely to order the striking out of the moot portion of appellants'
cause of action, and should have proceeded with hearing their claim for
recognition. But the allegations in pars. 18 and 19 of the amended complaint, show
otherwise. There is an indivisible and single cause of action which is primarily to
prevent payment exclusively to defendant Panlilio of the amount of P34,740.00,
which said appellants contend should be paid to appellee Allied Technologists,
Inc.; the matter recognizing them together with Pablo Panlilio as architects of the
hospital, being merely incidental thereto. The case of Pacal v. Ramos, 81 Phil. 30,
cited by appellants is not applicable. In this case, the grounds for quo warranto are
separable from the grounds for election irregularities which are distinct and
separate causes of action, entitling the petitioner to separate and unrelated reliefs.
These two grounds were alleged under separate paragraphs and they were two
independent actions improperly joined in one proceeding. In the case at bar, in one
paragraph (par. 19 of the amended complaint), as first cause of action, the claim for
recognition is inseparably linked with their allegations regarding alleged threatened
payment of P34,740.00 to Panlilio alone, because "they will not only be deprived
of the monetary value of the services legally due them, but that their professional
prestige and standing will be seriously impaired". When the very defendant Allied
Technologists, Inc. itself asserted in its answer the amended complaint, that the
amount was paid to it, an assertion which was not at all denied, plaintiffsappellants' cause of action under said par. 19 dissipated entirely.
There is a veiled insinuation that appellants, thesis would fall under the provisions
of the Rules on declaratory relief, because appellants wanted merely a declaration
of their rights in a contract in which they were interested. The trial court, however,
was correct in refusing to make such declaration, because it was not necessary and
proper under the circumstances (sec. 6, Rule 66). Appellants were not parties to the
construction agreement. The sole object the appeal is only to secure for them a
recognition, that they were allegedly the co-architects of Panlilio, in the
construction of the hospital, so as to enhance their professional prestige and not to
impair their standing. If this is the goal of appellants, a judicial declaration to the
effect would seem unnecessary. Let us ponder over the thought that a brilliant
professional enjoys the respect and esteem of his fellowmen, even without any
court declaration of such fact, and that an incompetent one may summon all the
tribunals in the world, to proclaim his genius in vain.
But appellants invoke Article 21 of the Civil Code, which states
Any person who willfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner that is
contrary to morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the latter for
the damages.
contending that the word "injury" in the said article, refers not only to any
indeterminate right or property, but also to honor or credit (I Tolentino Civil Code,
p. 67). It may be added, however, that this article also envisions a situation where a
person has a legal right, and such right is violated by another in a manner contrary
to morals, good customs or public policy; it presupposes losses or injuries, material
or otherwise, which one may suffer as a result of said violation. The pleadings do
not show that damages were ever asked or alleged, in connection with this case,
predicated upon the article aforecited. And under the facts and circumstances
obtaining in this case, one cannot plausibly sustain the contention that the failure or
refusal to extend the recognition was an act contrary to morals, good customs or
public policy.
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72!
IN VIEW HEREOF, the order appealed from is affirmed, with costs against
plaintiffs-appellants.
G.R. No. L-20089
December 26, 1964
BEATRIZ
P.
WASSMER, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
FRANCISCO X. VELEZ, defendant-appellant.
Jalandoni
&
Jamir
for
defendant-appellant.
Samson S. Alcantara for plaintiff-appellee.
BENGZON, J.P., J.:
The facts that culminated in this case started with dreams and hopes, followed by
appropriate planning and serious endeavors, but terminated in frustration and, what
is worse, complete public humiliation.
Francisco X. Velez and Beatriz P. Wassmer, following their mutual promise of
love, decided to get married and set September 4, 1954 as the big day. On
September 2, 1954 Velez left this note for his bride-to-be:
Dear Bet
Will have to postpone wedding My mother opposes it. Am leaving on the
Convair today.
Please do not ask too many people about the reason why That would only create
a scandal.
Paquing
But the next day, September 3, he sent her the following telegram:
NOTHING CHANGED REST ASSURED RETURNING VERY SOON
APOLOGIZE MAMA PAPA LOVE .
PAKING
Thereafter Velez did not appear nor was he heard from again.
Sued by Beatriz for damages, Velez filed no answer and was declared in default.
Plaintiff adduced evidence before the clerk of court as commissioner, and on April
29, 1955, judgment was rendered ordering defendant to pay plaintiff P2,000.00 as
actual damages; P25,000.00 as moral and exemplary damages; P2,500.00 as
attorney's fees; and the costs.
On June 21, 1955 defendant filed a "petition for relief from orders, judgment and
proceedings and motion for new trial and reconsideration." Plaintiff moved to
strike it cut. But the court, on August 2, 1955, ordered the parties and their
attorneys to appear before it on August 23, 1955 "to explore at this stage of the
proceedings the possibility of arriving at an amicable settlement." It added that
should any of them fail to appear "the petition for relief and the opposition thereto
will be deemed submitted for resolution."
On August 23, 1955 defendant failed to appear before court. Instead, on the
following day his counsel filed a motion to defer for two weeks the resolution on
defendants petition for relief. The counsel stated that he would confer with
defendant in Cagayan de Oro City the latter's residence on the possibility of
an amicable element. The court granted two weeks counted from August 25, 1955.
Plaintiff manifested on June 15, 1956 that the two weeks given by the court had
expired on September 8, 1955 but that defendant and his counsel had failed to
appear.
73! !
Another chance for amicable settlement was given by the court in its order of July
6, 1956 calling the parties and their attorneys to appear on July 13, 1956. This
time. however, defendant's counsel informed the court that chances of settling the
case amicably were nil.
On July 20, 1956 the court issued an order denying defendant's aforesaid petition.
Defendant has appealed to this Court. In his petition of June 21, 1955 in the court a
quo defendant alleged excusable negligence as ground to set aside the judgment by
default. Specifically, it was stated that defendant filed no answer in the belief that
an amicable settlement was being negotiated.
A petition for relief from judgment on grounds of fraud, accident, mistake or
excusable negligence, must be duly supported by an affidavit of merits stating facts
constituting a valid defense. (Sec. 3, Rule 38, Rules of Court.) Defendant's
affidavit of merits attached to his petition of June 21, 1955 stated: "That he has a
good and valid defense against plaintiff's cause of action, his failure to marry the
plaintiff as scheduled having been due to fortuitous event and/or circumstances
beyond his control." An affidavit of merits like this stating mere conclusions or
opinions instead of facts is not valid. (Cortes vs. Co Bun Kim, L-3926, Oct. 10,
1951; Vaswani vs. P. Tarrachand Bros., L-15800, December 29, 1960.)
Defendant, however, would contend that the affidavit of merits was in fact
unnecessary, or a mere surplusage, because the judgment sought to be set aside
was null and void, it having been based on evidence adduced before the clerk of
court. In Province of Pangasinan vs. Palisoc, L-16519, October 30, 1962, this
Court pointed out that the procedure of designating the clerk of court as
commissioner to receive evidence is sanctioned by Rule 34 (now Rule 33) of the
Rules of Court. Now as to defendant's consent to said procedure, the same did not
have to be obtained for he was declared in default and thus had no standing in
court (Velez vs. Ramas, 40 Phil. 787; Alano vs. Court of First Instance, L-14557,
October 30, 1959).
In support of his "motion for new trial and reconsideration," defendant asserts that
the judgment is contrary to law. The reason given is that "there is no provision of
the Civil Code authorizing" an action for breach of promise to marry. Indeed, our
ruling in Hermosisima vs. Court of Appeals (L-14628, Sept. 30, 1960), as reiterated
in Estopa vs. Biansay (L-14733, Sept. 30, 1960), is that "mere breach of a promise
to marry" is not an actionable wrong. We pointed out that Congress deliberately
eliminated from the draft of the new Civil Code the provisions that would have it
so.
It must not be overlooked, however, that the extent to which acts not contrary to
law may be perpetrated with impunity, is not limitless for Article 21 of said Code
provides that "any person who wilfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner
that is contrary to morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the
latter for the damage."
The record reveals that on August 23, 1954 plaintiff and defendant applied for a
license to contract marriage, which was subsequently issued (Exhs. A, A-1). Their
wedding was set for September 4, 1954. Invitations were printed and distributed to
relatives, friends and acquaintances (Tsn., 5; Exh. C). The bride-to-be's trousseau,
party drsrses and other apparel for the important occasion were purchased (Tsn., 78). Dresses for the maid of honor and the flower girl were prepared. A matrimonial
bed, with accessories, was bought. Bridal showers were given and gifts received
(Tsn., 6; Exh. E). And then, with but two days before the wedding, defendant, who
!
74!
was then 28 years old,: simply left a note for plaintiff stating: "Will have to
postpone wedding My mother opposes it ... " He enplaned to his home city in
Mindanao, and the next day, the day before the wedding, he wired plaintiff:
"Nothing changed rest assured returning soon." But he never returned and was
never heard from again.
Surely this is not a case of mere breach of promise to marry. As stated, mere
breach of promise to marry is not an actionable wrong. But to formally set a
wedding and go through all the above-described preparation and publicity, only to
walk out of it when the matrimony is about to be solemnized, is quite different.
This is palpably and unjustifiably contrary to good customs for which defendant
must be held answerable in damages in accordance with Article 21 aforesaid.
Defendant urges in his afore-stated petition that the damages awarded were
excessive. No question is raised as to the award of actual damages. What defendant
would really assert hereunder is that the award of moral and exemplary damages,
in the amount of P25,000.00, should be totally eliminated.
Per express provision of Article 2219 (10) of the New Civil Code, moral damages
are recoverable in the cases mentioned in Article 21 of said Code. As to exemplary
damages, defendant contends that the same could not be adjudged against him
because under Article 2232 of the New Civil Code the condition precedent is that
"the defendant acted in a wanton, fraudulent, reckless, oppressive, or malevolent
manner." The argument is devoid of merit as under the above-narrated
circumstances of this case defendant clearly acted in a "wanton ... , reckless [and]
oppressive manner." This Court's opinion, however, is that considering the
particular circumstances of this case, P15,000.00 as moral and exemplary damages
is deemed to be a reasonable award.
PREMISES CONSIDERED, with the above-indicated modification, the lower
court's judgment is hereby affirmed, with costs.
G.R. No. L-18630
December 17, 1966
APOLONIO
TANJANCO, petitioner,
vs.
HON. COURT OF APPEALS and ARACELI SANTOS, respondents.
P.
Carreon
and
G.
O.
Veneracion,
Jr.
for
petitioner.
Antonio V. Bonoan for respondents.
REYES, J.B.L., J.:
Appeal from a decision of the Court of Appeals (in its Case No. 27210-R) revoking
an order of the Court of First Instance of Rizal (in Civil Case No. Q-4797)
dismissing appellant's action for support and damages.
The essential allegations of the complaint are to the effect that, from December,
1957, the defendant (appellee herein), Apolonio Tanjanco, courted the plaintiff,
Araceli Santos, both being of adult age; that "defendant expressed and professed
his undying love and affection for plaintiff who also in due time reciprocated the
tender feelings"; that in consideration of defendant's promise of marriage plaintiff
consented and acceded to defendant's pleas for carnal knowledge; that regularly
until December 1959, through his protestations of love and promises of marriage,
defendant succeeded in having carnal access to plaintiff, as a result of which the
latter conceived a child; that due to her pregnant condition, to avoid embarrassment
and social humiliation, plaintiff had to resign her job as secretary in IBM
75! !
Philippines, Inc., where she was receiving P230.00 a month; that thereby plaintiff
became unable to support herself and her baby; that due to defendant's refusal to
marry plaintiff, as promised, the latter suffered mental anguish, besmirched
reputation, wounded feelings, moral shock, and social humiliation. The prayer was
for a decree compelling the defendant to recognize the unborn child that plaintiff
was bearing; to pay her not less than P430.00 a month for her support and that of
her baby, plus P100,000.00 in moral and exemplary damages, plus P10,000.00
attorney's fees.
Upon defendant's motion to dismiss, the court of first instance dismissed the
complaint for failure to state a cause of action.
Plaintiff Santos duly appealed to the Court of Appeals, and the latter ultimately
decided the case, holding with the lower court that no cause of action was shown to
compel recognition of a child as yet unborn, nor for its support, but decreed that
the complaint did state a cause of action for damages, premised on Article 21 of
the Civil Code of the Philippines, prescribing as follows:
ART. 21. Any person who wilfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner that
is contrary to morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the latter for
the damage.
The Court of Appeals, therefore, entered judgment setting aside the dismissal and
directing the court of origin to proceed with the case.
Defendant, in turn, appealed to this Court, pleading that actions for breach of a
promise to marry are not permissible in this jurisdiction, and invoking the rulings
of this Court in Estopa vs. Piansay, L-14733, September 30, 1960; Hermosisima
vs. Court of Appeals, L-14628, January 29, 1962; and De Jesus vs. SyQuia, 58 Phil.
886.
We find this appeal meritorious.
In holding that the complaint stated a cause of action for damages, under Article 21
above mentioned, the Court of Appeals relied upon and quoted from the
memorandum submitted by the Code Commission to the Legislature in 1949 to
support the original draft of the Civil Code. Referring to Article 23 of the draft
(now Article 21 of the Code), the Commission stated:
But the Code Commission has gone farther than the sphere of wrongs defined or
determined by positive law. Fully sensible that there are countless gaps in the
statutes, which leave so many victims of moral wrongs helpless, even though they
have actually suffered material and moral injury, the Commission has deemed it
necessary, in the interest of justice, to incorporate in the proposed Civil Code the
following rule:
"ART. 23. Any person who wilfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner
that is contrary to morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the
latter for the damage."
An example will illustrate the purview of the foregoing norm: "A" seduces the
nineteen-year old daughter of "X". A promise of marriage either has not been
made, or can not be proved. The girl becomes pregnant. Under the present laws,
there is no crime, as the girl is above eighteen years of age. Neither can any civil
action for breach of promise of marriage be filed. Therefore, though the grievous
moral wrong has been committed, and though the girl and her family have suffered
incalculable moral damage, she and her parents cannot bring any action for
damages. But under the proposed article, she and her parents would have such a
right of action.
!
76!
The Court of Appeals seems to have overlooked that the example set forth in the
Code Commission's memorandum refers to a tort upon a minor who has
been seduced. The essential feature is seduction, that in law is more than mere
sexual intercourse, or a breach of a promise of marriage; it connotes essentially the
idea of deceit, enticement, superior power or abuse of confidence on the part of the
seducer to which the woman has yielded (U.S. vs. Buenaventura, 27 Phil. 121;
U.S. vs. Arlante, 9 Phil. 595).
It has been ruled in the Buenaventura case (supra) that
To constitute seduction there must in all cases be some sufficient promise or
inducement and the woman must yield because of the promise or other inducement.
If she consents merely from carnal lust and the intercourse is from mutual desire,
there is no seduction (43 Cent. Dig. tit. Seduction, par. 56). She must be induced to
depart from the path of virtue by the use of some species of arts, persuasions and
wiles, which are calculated to have and do have that effect, and which result in her
ultimately submitting her person to the sexual embraces of her seducer (27 Phil.
123).
And in American Jurisprudence we find:
On the other hand, in an action by the woman, the enticement, persuasion or
deception is the essence of the injury; and a mere proof of intercourse is
insufficient to warrant a recover.
Accordingly it is not seduction where the willingness arises out of sexual desire or
curiosity of the female, and the defendant merely affords her the needed
opportunity for the commission of the act. It has been emphasized that to allow a
recovery in all such cases would tend to the demoralization of the female sex, and
would be a reward for unchastity by which a class of adventuresses would be swift
to profit." (47 Am. Jur. 662)
Bearing these principles in mind, let us examine the complaint. The material
allegations there are as follows:
I. That the plaintiff is of legal age, single, and residing at 56 South E. Diliman,
Quezon City, while defendant is also of legal age, single and residing at 525 Padre
Faura, Manila, where he may be served with summons;
II. That the plaintiff and the defendant became acquainted with each other
sometime in December, 1957 and soon thereafter, the defendant started visiting
and courting the plaintiff;
III. That the defendant's visits were regular and frequent and in due time the
defendant expressed and professed his undying love and affection for the plaintiff
who also in due time reciprocated the tender feelings;
IV. That in the course of their engagement, the plaintiff and the defendant as are
wont of young people in love had frequent outings and dates, became very close
and intimate to each other and sometime in July, 1958, in consideration of the
defendant's promises of marriage, the plaintiff consented and acceded to the
former's earnest and repeated pleas to have carnal knowledge with him;
V. That subsequent thereto and regularly until about July, 1959 except for a short
period in December, 1958 when the defendant was out of the country, the
defendant through his protestations of love and promises of marriage succeeded in
having carnal knowledge with the plaintiff;
VI. That as a result of their intimate relationship, the plaintiff started conceiving
which was confirmed by a doctor sometime in July, 1959;
77! !
VII. That upon being certain of her pregnant condition, the plaintiff informed the
defendant and pleaded with him to make good his promises of marriage, but
instead of honoring his promises and righting his wrong, the defendant stopped and
refrained from seeing the plaintiff since about July, 1959 has not visited the
plaintiff and to all intents and purposes has broken their engagement and his
promises.
Over and above the partisan allegations, the facts stand out that for one whole year,
from 1958 to 1959, the plaintiff-appellee, a woman of adult age, maintained
intimate sexual relations with appellant, with repeated acts of intercourse. Such
conduct is incompatible with the idea of seduction. Plainly there is here
voluntariness and mutual passion; for had the appellant been deceived, had she
surrendered exclusively because of the deceit, artful persuasions and wiles of the
defendant, she would not have again yielded to his embraces, much less for one
year, without exacting early fulfillment of the alleged promises of marriage, and
would have cut chart all sexual relations upon finding that defendant did not intend
to fulfill his promises. Hence, we conclude that no case is made under Article 21 of
the Civil Code, and no other cause of action being alleged, no error was committed
by the Court of First Instance in dismissing the complaint.
Of course, the dismissal must be understood as without prejudice to whatever
actions may correspond to the child of the plaintiff against the defendant-appellant,
if any. On that point, this Court makes no pronouncement, since the child's own
rights are not here involved.
FOR THE FOREGOING REASONS, the decision of the Court of Appeals is
reversed, and that of the Court of First Instance is affirmed. No costs.
G.R. No. 101749 July 10, 1992
CONRADO
BUNAG,
vs.
HON. COURT OF APPEALS, First
CIRILO, respondents.
JR., petitioner,
Division,
and
ZENAIDA
B.
REGALADO, J.:
Petitioner appeals for the reversal of the decision 1 of respondent Court of Appeals
promulgated on May 17, 1991 in CA-G.R. CV No. 07054, entitled "Zenaida B.
Cirilo vs. Conrado Bunag, Sr. and Conrado Bunag, Jr.," which affirmed in toto the
decision of the Regional Trial Court, Branch XI at Bacoor, Cavite, and, implicitly,
respondent court's resolution of September 3, 1991 2 denying petitioner's motion
for reconsideration.
Respondent court having assiduously discussed the salient antecedents of this
case, vis-a-vis the factual findings of the court below, the evidence of record and
the contentions of the parties, it is appropriate that its findings, which we approve
and adopt, be extensively reproduced hereunder:
Based on the evidence on record, the following facts are considered indisputable:
On the afternoon of September 8, 1973, defendant-appellant Bunag, Jr. brought
plaintiff-appellant to a motel or hotel where they had sexual intercourse. Later that
evening, said defendant-appellant brought plaintiff-appellant to the house of his
grandmother Juana de Leon in Pamplona, Las Pias, Metro Manila, where they
lived together as husband and wife for 21 days, or until September 29, 1973. On
!
78!
Monday, she and Bunag, Jr. would go to Bacoor, to apply for a marriage license,
which they did. They filed their applications for marriage license (Exhibits "A" and
"C") and after that plaintiff and defendant Bunag, Jr. returned to the house of Juana
de Leon and lived there as husband and wife from September 8, 1973 to September
29, 1973.
On September 29, 1973 defendant Bunag, Jr. left and never returned, humiliating
plaintiff and compelled her to go back to her parents on October 3, 1973. Plaintiff
was ashamed when she went home and could not sleep and eat because of the
deception done against her by defendants-appellants (t.s.n., p. 35, Nov. 5, 1974).
The testimony of plaintiff was corroborated in toto by her uncle, Vivencio
Bansagan who declared that on September 8, 1973 when plaintiff failed to arrive
home at 9:00 o'clock in the evening, his sister who is the mother of plaintiff asked
him to look for her but his efforts proved futile, and he told his sister that plaintiff
might have married (baka nag-asawa, t.s.n., pp. 5-6, March 18, 1976). However, in
the afternoon of the next day (Sunday), his sister told him that Francisco Cabrera,
accompanied by barrio captain Jacinto Manalili of Ligas, Bacoor, Cavite, informed
her that plaintiff and Bunag, Jr. were in Cabrera's house, so that her sister requested
him to go and see the plaintiff, which he did, and at the house of Mrs. Juana de
Leon in Pamplona, Las Pias, Metro Manila he met defendant Conrado Bunag, Sr.,
who told him, "Pare, the children are here already. Let us settle the matter and have
them married."
He conferred with plaintiff who told him that as she had already lost her honor, she
would bear her sufferings as Boy Bunag, Jr. and his father promised they would be
married.
Defendants-appellants, on the other hand, deny that defendant-appellant Conrado
Bunag, Jr. abducted and raped plaintiff-appellant on September 8, 1973. On the
contrary, plaintiff-appellant and defendant-appellant Bunag, Jr. eloped on that date
because of the opposition of the latter's father to their relationship.
Defendant-appellants claim that defendant-appellant Bunag, Jr. and plaintiffappellant had earlier made plans to elope and get married, and this fact was known
to their friends, among them, Architect Chito Rodriguez. The couple made good
their plans to elope on the afternoon of September 8, 1973, when defendantappellant Bunag, Jr., accompanied by his friend Guillermo Ramos, Jr., met
plaintiff-appellant and her officemate named Lydia in the vicinity of the San Juan
de Dios Hospital. The foursome then proceeded to (the) aforesaid hospital's
canteen where they had some snacks. Later, Guillermo Ramos, Jr. took Lydia to
Quirino Avenue where she could get a ride home, thereby leaving the defendantappellant Bunag, Jr. and plaintiff-appellant alone. According to defendantappellant Bunag, Jr., after Guillermo Ramos, Jr. and Lydia left, he and plaintiffappellant took a taxi to the Golden Gate and Flamingo Hotels where they tried to
get a room, but these were full. They finally got a room at the Holiday Hotel,
where defendant-appellant registered using his real name and residence certificate
number. Three hours later, the couple check out of the hotel and proceeded to the
house of Juana de Leon at Pamplona, Las Pias, where they stayed until September
19, 1873. Defendant-appellant claims that bitter disagreements with the plaintiffappellant over money and the threats made to his life prompted him to break off
their plan to get married.
During this period, defendant-appellant Bunag, Sr. denied having gone to the
house of Juan de Leon and telling plaintiff-appellant that she would be wed to
!
80!
The issue raised primarily and ineluctably involves questions of fact. We are,
therefore, once again constrained to stress the well-entrenched statutory and
jurisprudential mandate that findings of fact of the Court of Appeals are, as a rule,
conclusive upon this Court. Only questions of law, distinctly set forth, may be
raised in a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court,
subject to clearly settled exceptions in case law.
Our jurisdiction in cases brought to us from the Court of Appeals is limited to
reviewing and revising the errors of law imputed to the latter, its findings of fact
being conclusive. This Court has emphatically declared that it is not its function to
analyze or weigh such evidence all over again, its jurisdiction being limited to
reviewing errors of law that might have been committed by the lower court.
Barring, therefore, a showing that the findings complained of are totally devoid of
support in the record, or that they are so glaringly erroneous as to constitute serious
abuse of discretion, such findings must stand, for this Court is not expected or
required to examine or contrast the oral and documentary evidence submitted by
the parties. 7 Neither does the instant case reveal any feature falling within, any of
the exceptions which under our decisional rules may warrant a review of the
factual findings of the Court of Appeals. On the foregoing considerations and our
review of the records, we sustain the holding of respondent court in favor of
private respondent.
Petitioner likewise asserts that since action involves a breach of promise to marry,
the trial court erred in awarding damages.
It is true that in this jurisdiction, we adhere to the time-honored rule that an action
for breach of promise to marry has no standing in the civil law, apart from the right
to recover money or property advanced by the plaintiff upon the faith of such
promise. 8 Generally, therefore, a breach of promise to marry per se is not
actionable, except where the plaintiff has actually incurred expenses for the
wedding and the necessary incidents thereof.
However, the award of moral damages is allowed in cases specified in or
analogous to those provided in Article 2219 of the Civil Code. Correlatively, under
Article 21 of said Code, in relation to paragraph 10 of said Article 2219, any
person who wilfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner that is contrary to
morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the latter for moral
damages. 9 Article 21 was adopted to remedy the countless gaps in the statutes
which leave so many victims of moral wrongs helpless even though they have
actually suffered material and moral injury, and is intended to vouchsafe adequate
legal remedy for that untold number of moral wrongs which is impossible for
human foresight to specifically provide for in the statutes. 10
Under the circumstances obtaining in the case at bar, the acts of petitioner in
forcibly abducting private respondent and having carnal knowledge with her
against her will, and thereafter promising to marry her in order to escape criminal
liability, only to thereafter renege on such promise after cohabiting with her for
twenty-one days, irremissibly constitute acts contrary to morals and good customs.
These are grossly insensate and reprehensible transgressions which indisputably
warrant and abundantly justify the award of moral and exemplary damages,
pursuant to Article 21 in relation to paragraphs 3 and 10, Article 2219, and Article
2229 and 2234 of Civil Code.
Petitioner would, however, belabor the fact that said damages were awarded by the
trial court on the basis of a finding that he is guilty of forcible abduction with rape,
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82!
despite the prior dismissal of the complaint therefor filed by private respondent
with the Pasay City Fiscal's Office.
Generally, the basis of civil liability from crime is the fundamental postulate of our
law that every person criminally liable for a felony is also civilly liable. In other
words, criminal liability will give rise to civil liability ex delicto only if the same
felonious act or omission results in damage or injury to another and is the direct
and proximate cause thereof. 11 Hence, extinction of the penal action does not carry
with it the extinction of civil liability unless the extinction proceeds from a
declaration in a final judgment that the fact from which the civil might arise did not
exist. 12
In the instant case, the dismissal of the complaint for forcible abduction with rape
was by mere resolution of the fiscal at the preliminary investigation stage. There is
no declaration in a final judgment that the fact from which the civil case might
arise did not exist. Consequently, the dismissal did not in any way affect the right
of herein private respondent to institute a civil action arising from the offense
because such preliminary dismissal of the penal action did not carry with it the
extinction of the civil action.
The reason most often given for this holding is that the two proceedings involved
are not between the same parties. Furthermore, it has long been emphasized, with
continuing validity up to now, that there are different rules as to the competency of
witnesses and the quantum of evidence in criminal and civil proceedings. In a
criminal action, the State must prove its case by evidence which shows the guilt of
the accused beyond reasonable doubt, while in a civil action it is sufficient for the
plaintiff to sustain his cause by preponderance of evidence only. 13 Thus, in Rillon,
et al. vs. Rillon, 14 we stressed that it is not now necessary that a criminal
prosecution for rape be first instituted and prosecuted to final judgment before a
civil action based on said offense in favor of the offended woman can likewise be
instituted and prosecuted to final judgment.
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby DENIED for lack of merit, and the assailed
judgment and resolution are hereby AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. L-17396
May 30, 1962
CECILIO
PE,
ET
AL., plaintiffs-appellants,
vs.
ALFONSO PE, defendant-appellee.
Cecilio L. Pe for and in his own behalf as plaintiff-appellant.
Leodegario L. Mogol for defendant-appellee.
BAUTISTA ANGELO, J.:
Plaintiffs brought this action before the Court of First Instance of Manila to recover
moral, compensatory, exemplary and corrective damages in the amount of
P94,000.00 exclusive of attorney's fees and expenses of litigation.
Defendant, after denying some allegations contained in the complaint, set up as a
defense that the facts alleged therein, even if true, do not constitute a valid cause of
action.
After trial, the lower court, after finding that defendant had carried on a love affair
with one Lolita Pe, an unmarried woman, being a married man himself, declared
that defendant cannot be held liable for moral damages it appearing that plaintiffs
83! !
failed to prove that defendant, being aware of his marital status, deliberately and in
bad faith tried to win Lolita's affection. So it rendered decision dismissing the
complaint.1wph1.t
Plaintiffs brought this case on appeal before this Court on the ground that the
issues involved are purely of law.
The facts as found by the trial court are: Plaintiffs are the parents, brothers and
sisters of one Lolita Pe. At the time of her disappearance on April 14, 1957, Lolita
was 24 years old and unmarried. Defendant is a married man and works as agent of
the La Perla Cigar and Cigarette Factory. He used to stay in the town of Gasan,
Marinduque, in connection with his aforesaid occupation. Lolita was staying with
her parents in the same town. Defendant was an adopted son of a Chinaman named
Pe Beco, a collateral relative of Lolita's father. Because of such fact and the
similarity in their family name, defendant became close to the plaintiffs who
regarded him as a member of their family. Sometime in 1952, defendant
frequented the house of Lolita on the pretext that he wanted her to teach him how
to pray the rosary. The two eventually fell in love with each other and conducted
clandestine trysts not only in the town of Gasan but also in Boac where Lolita used
to teach in a barrio school. They exchanged love notes with each other the contents
of which reveal not only their infatuation for each other but also the extent to
which they had carried their relationship. The rumors about their love affairs
reached the ears of Lolita's parents sometime, in 1955, and since then defendant
was forbidden from going to their house and from further seeing Lolita. The
plaintiffs even filed deportation proceedings against defendant who is a Chinese
national. The affair between defendant and Lolita continued nonetheless.
Sometime in April, 1957, Lolita was staying with her brothers and sisters at their
residence at 54-B Espaa Extension, Quezon City. On April 14, 1957, Lolita
disappeared from said house. After she left, her brothers and sisters checked up her
thing and found that Lolita's clothes were gone. However, plaintiffs found a note
on a crumpled piece of paper inside Lolita's aparador. Said note, written on a
small slip of paper approximately 4" by 3" in size, was in a handwriting recognized
to be that of defendant's. In English it reads:
Honey, suppose I leave here on Sunday night, and that's 13th of this month and we
will have a date on the 14th, that's Monday morning at 10 a.m.
Reply
Love
The disappearance of Lolita was reported to the police authorities and the NBI but
up to the present there is no news or trace of her whereabouts.
The present action is based on Article 21 of the New Civil Code which provides:
Any person who wilfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner which is
contrary to morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the latter for
the damage.
There is no doubt that the claim of plaintiffs for damages is based on the fact that
defendant, being a married man, carried on a love affair with Lolita Pe thereby
causing plaintiffs injury in a manner contrary to morals, good customs and public
policy. But in spite of the fact that plaintiffs have clearly established that in illicit
affair was carried on between defendant and Lolita which caused great damage to
the name and reputation of plaintiffs who are her parents, brothers and sisters, the
trial court considered their complaint not actionable for the reason that they failed
to prove that defendant deliberately and in bad faith tried to win Lolita's affection
!
84!
Thus, the trial court said: "In the absence of proof on this point, the court may not
presume that it was the defendant who deliberately induced such relationship. We
cannot be unmindful of the uncertainties and sometimes inexplicable mysteries of
the human emotions. It is a possibility that the defendant and Lolita simply fell in
love with each other, not only without any desire on their part, but also against
their better judgment and in full consciousness of what it will bring to both of
them. This is specially so with respect to Lolita, being an unmarried woman,
falling in love with defendant who is a married man."
We disagree with this view. The circumstances under which defendant tried to win
Lolita's affection cannot lead, to any other conclusion than that it was he who, thru
an ingenious scheme or trickery, seduced the latter to the extent of making her fall
in love with him. This is shown by the fact that defendant frequented the house of
Lolita on the pretext that he wanted her to teach him how to pray the rosary.
Because of the frequency of his visits to the latter's family who was allowed free
access because he was a collateral relative and was considered as a member of her
family, the two eventually fell in love with each other and conducted clandestine
love affairs not only in Gasan but also in Boac where Lolita used to teach in a
barrio school. When the rumors about their illicit affairs reached the knowledge of
her parents, defendant was forbidden from going to their house and even from
seeing Lolita. Plaintiffs even filed deportation proceedings against defendant who
is a Chinese national. Nevertheless, defendant continued his love affairs with
Lolita until she disappeared from the parental home. Indeed, no other conclusion
can be drawn from this chain of events than that defendant not only deliberately,
but through a clever strategy, succeeded in winning the affection and love of Lolita
to the extent of having illicit relations with her. The wrong he has caused her and
her family is indeed immeasurable considering the fact that he is a married man.
Verily, he has committed an injury to Lolita's family in a manner contrary to
morals, good customs and public policy as contemplated in Article 21 of the new
Civil Code.
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is reversed. Defendant is hereby
sentenced to pay the plaintiffs the sum of P5,000.00 as damages and P2,000.00 as
attorney's fees and expenses of litigations. Costs against appellee.
G.R. No. 47013
February 17, 2000
ANDRES
LAO, petitioner,
vs.
COURT OF APPEALS, THE ASSOCIATED ANGLO-AMERICAN
TOBACCO CORPORATION and ESTEBAN CO, respondents.
----------------------------G.R. No. 60647
February 17, 2000
ESTEBAN
CO, petitioner,
vs.
COURT OF APPEALS and ANDRES LAO, respondents.
----------------------------G.R. No. 60958-59
February 17, 2000
THE
ASSOCIATED
ANGLO-AMERICAN
TOBACCO
CORPORATION, petitioner,
vs.
85! !
86!
the Corporation from Lao's clients. From then on, Lao no longer received
shipments from the Corporation which transferred its vehicles to another
compound controlled by Ngo Kheng. Shipments of cigarettes and the
corresponding invoices were also placed in the name of Ngo Kheng.
On May 21, 1970, Andres, Jose and Tomas Lao brought a complaint for
accounting and damages with writ of preliminary injunction3 against the
Corporation, docketed as Civil Case No. 4452 before the then Court of First
Instance of Leyte, Branch I in Tacloban City, which court4 came out with its
decision5 on March 26, 1975, disposing as follows:
IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING PREMISES, and upon a clear
preponderance of evidence in favor of the plaintiffs, the court hereby renders
judgment as follows:
1. Ordering both the plaintiffs and defendant corporation to undergo a Court
supervised accounting of their respective account with the view of establishing
once and for all, by a reconciliation of their respective books of accounts, the true
and correct accountability of Andres Lao to the defendant corporation. Pursuant
thereto, both plaintiff Andres Lao and the defendant The Associated AngloAmerican Tobacco Corporation are directed to make available all their records
pertainting [sic] to their business transactions with each other under the contract of
sales agent, from 1965 up to the time Andres Lao ceased being the agent of the
defendant. A Committee on Audit is hereby formed to be composed of three (3)
members, one member to be nominated by the plaintiffs, another to be nominated
by the defendant corporation and the third member who shall act as the Committee
Chairman to be appointed by this Court. As Committee Chairman, the Court
hereby appoints the Branch Clerk of Court of this Court, Atty. Victorio Galapon,
who shall immediately convene the Committee upon appointment of the other two
members, and undertake to finish their assigned task under his decision within two
(2) months.
2. Ordering the defendant corporation to pay Plaintiffs the amount of P180,000
representing actual loss of earnings.
3. Ordering the defendant to pay plaintiffs moral damages in the amount of
P130,000.00.
4. Ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiffs, exemplary damages in the
amount of P50,000.00.
5. Ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiffs, attorney's fees in the amount of
P40,000.00.
6. Ordering the plaintiffs and the defendant to pay the compensation of the
commissioners pro-rata.
7. Finally ordering the defendant to pay the cost of this suit.
SO ORDERED.
The Committee of Audit that was eventually constituted was composed of Atty.
Victorio L. Galapon, Jr., as chairman, Wilfredo Madarang, Jr. and Cesar F.P.
Corcuera, as representatives of the Corporation, and Lao himself. On September
16, 1976, said committee submitted a report6 with the following findings:
87! !
9,110,777.
88!
126,950.00
The Corporation presented a motion for reconsideration9 of the said Decision but
the same was denied in a Resolution dated May 18, 1982.10 A motion for leave to
file a second motion for reconsideration was likewise denied.11
Meanwhile, on June 24, 1974 and during the pendency of Civil Case No. 4452,
Esteban Co, representing the Corporation as its new vice-president, filed an
affidavit of complaint12 with the Pasay City Fiscal's Office under I.S. No. 90994;
alleging that Lao failed to remit the amount of P224,585.82 which he allegedly
misappropriated and converted to his personal use. Although the amount
supposedly defalcated was put up as a counterclaim in Civil Case No. 4452 for
accounting, the Corporation averted that it reserved the right to institute a criminal
case against Lao.
On July 31, 1974, after finding a prima facie case against Lao, the Pasay City
Fiscal filed an information13 for estafa against Lao, docketed as Criminal Case No.
2650-P before the then Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XXVII. Lao sought
a reinvestigation14 of the case, contending that he was never served a subpoena or
notice of preliminary investigation that was considered mandatory in cases
cognizable by Court of First Instance, now Regional Trial Court. Apparently, the
preliminary investigation proceeded ex-parte because Esteban Co made it appear
that Lao could not be located.
On December 17, 1974, without awaiting the termination of the criminal case, Lao
lodged a complaint15 for malicious prosecution against the Corporation and
Esteban Co, praying for an award of damages for violation of Articles 20 and 21 of
the Civil Code. The case was docketed as Civil Case No. 5528 before Branch I of
the then Court of First Instance in Cotabato City.
In his resolution dated January 3, 1975,16 then Pasay City Fiscal Jose Flaminiano
found merit in the petition for reinvestigation of the estafa case. He opined that Lao
had not committed estafa as his liability was essentially civil in nature. The Fiscal
entertained doubts about the motive of the Corporation in instituting the criminal
case against Lao because of the undue delay in its filing, aside from the fact that
the estafa case involved the same subject matter the Corporation sued upon by way
of counterclaim in Civil Case No. 4452. Eventually, on May 13, 1976, the Court of
First Instance of Rizal, Branch XXVII, in Pasay City, promulgated a
decision17 acquitting Lao of the crime charged and adopting in toto the said
Resolution of Fiscal Flaminiano.
On March 18, 1977, the Court of First Instance of Samar18 handed down a decision
in Civil Case No. 5528, the action for damages arising from malicious prosecution,
disposing thus:
WHEREFORE, the Court declares that the defendants filed Criminal Case No.
2650-P against the plaintiff for estafa before the Court of First Instance of Rizal,
Branch XXVII, Pasay City, without probable cause and with malice and therefore
orders the defendants Associated Anglo-American Tobacco Corporation and
Esteban Co to jointly and severally pay the plaintiff:
a. P30,000 as actual damages;
b. P150,000.00 as moral damages;
c. P100,000.00 as exemplary damages;
d. P50,000.00 as attorney's fees and costs.
SO ORDERED.
The Corporation and Esteban Co both appealed the aforesaid decision to the Court
of Appeals under CA-G.R. No. 61925-R.
89! !
On April 18, 1977, Lao presented a motion for execution pending appeal19 before
the trial court. The opposition of the Corporation notwithstanding, on June 8, 1977
the trial court issued a special order granting the motion for execution pending
appeal,20 and on the following day, the corresponding writ of execution issued.21
On June 10, 1977, the Court of Appeals issued a Restraining Order enjoining the
execution of subject judgment.22 The said order was issued on account of a petition
for certiorari, prohibition and mandamus with preliminary injunction23 filed by the
Corporation and Esteban Co with the said appellate court. Docketed as CA-G.R.
No. 06761, the petition was received by the Court of Appeals on June 9, 1977. A
supplemental to the petition and a "compliance" were also received on the same
time and date.24 On June 21, 1977, Lao moved to lift the restraining order.
On September 14, 1977, the Court of Appeals resolved in CA-G.R. No. 06761
thus:
WHEREFORE, the petition for certiorari is hereby granted, the special order
granting execution pending appeal is annulled and the restraining order heretofore
issued is made permanent.
No pronouncement as to costs.
On October 21, 1981, the Court of Appeals likewise rendered a Decision25 in CAG.R. No. 62532-R, affirming the trial court's finding that Criminal Case No. 2650P was filed without probable cause and with malice; and held the Corporation and
Esteban Co solidarily liable for damages, attorney's fees and costs.
The Corporation and Esteban Co moved to reconsider26 the said decision in CAG.R. No. 61925-R but to no avail. The motion for reconsideration was denied in a
Resolution promulgated on May 18, 1992. A motion for leave of court to file a
second motion for reconsideration27 met the same fate. It was likewise denied in a
Resolution28 dated June 23, 1982.
From the said cases sprung the present petitions which were ordered consolidated
in the Resolutions of December 15, 1982 and November 11, 1985.29 Subject
petitions are to be passed upon in the order they were filed.
G.R. No. 47013
A petition for review on certiorari of the Decision of the Court of Appeals in CAG.R. No. 06761 that Lao filed, contending that:
1. The Court of Appeals cannot validly give due course to an original action
for certiorari, prohibition andmandamus where the petition is fatally defective for
not being accompanied by a copy of the trial court's questioned process/order.
2. The Court of Appeals, cannot, in a petition for certiorari, prohibition
and mandamus, disregard, disturb and substitute its own judgment for the findings
of facts of the trial court, particularly as in the present case, where the trial court
did not exceed nor abuse its discretion.
3. The Court of Appeals did not act in accordance with established jurisprudence
when it overruled the trial court's holding that the posting of a good and solvent
bond is a good or special reason for execution pending appeal.
For clarity, the petition for review on certiorari questioning the Decision of the
Court of Appeals that nullified the special order granting execution pending appeal
is anchored on the antecedent facts as follows:
After the Court of First Instance of Samar had decided in favor of Lao in the action
for damages by reason of malicious prosecution, Lao filed a motion for execution
pending appeal30 even as the Corporation and Co had interposed an appeal from
the said decision. In that motion, Lao theorized that the appeal had no merit and the
!
90!
All court personnel are enjoined to do their jobs properly and according to law.
Should they notice anything in the performance of their duties that may generate
even a mere suspicion of irregularity, they are duty-bound to correct the same. In
this case, more diligence on the part of the personnel handling the receiving
machine could have prevented the stamping on the pleadings with erroneous date
and time of receipt and would have averted suspicion of an anomaly in the filing of
pleadings. Persons responsible for the negligence should be taken to task.
However, since this is not the proper forum for whatever administrative measures
may be taken under the premises, the Court opts to discuss the merits of the
petition for review on certiorari at bar rather than tarry more on an administrative
matter that is fundamentally extraneous to the petition.
Petitioner Lao maintains that the Court of Appeals should not have been given due
course to the petition forcertiorari, prohibition and mandamus considering that it
was fatally defective for failure of the petitioners to attach thereto a copy of the
questioned writ of execution. On their part, private respondents concede the
mandatory character of the requirement of Section 1, Rule 65 of the Rules of Court
that the petition "shall be accompanied by a certified true copy of the judgment
or order subject thereof, together with copies of all pleadings and documents
relevant and pertinent thereto." However, private respondents asked that their
submission of a certified true copy of the special order granting execution pending
appeal attached to their "compliance" dated June 9, 197738 be taken as substantial
compliance with the rule.
The Court gives due consideration to private respondents' stance. Strict adherence
to procedural rules must at all times be observed. However, it is not the end-all and
be-all of litigation. As this Court said:
. . . adjective law is not to be taken lightly for, without it, the enforcement of
substantive law may not remain assured. The Court must add, nevertheless, that
technical rules of procedure are not ends in themselves but primarily devised and
designed to help in the proper and expedient dispensation of justice. In appropriate
cases, therefore, the rules may have to be so construed liberally as to meet and
advance the cause of substantial justice.39
Thus, in holding that the Court of Appeals may entertain a second motion for
reconsideration of its decision although the filing of such motion violates a
prohibition thereof, the Court said:
. . . (I)t is within the power of this Court to temper rigid rules in favor of substantial
justice. While it is desirable that the Rules of Court be faithfully and even
meticulously observed, courts should not be so strict about procedural lapses that
do not really impair the proper administration of justice. If the rules are intended to
ensure the orderly conduct of litigation, it is because of the higher objective they
seek which is the protection of substantive rights of the parties.40
In the case under consideration, private respondents substantially complied with
the Rules of Court when they submitted a copy of the writ of execution sought to
be enjoined on the same day they filed the petition forcertiorari, prohibition
and mandamus. Petitioner Co's allegation of irregularity as to the time of receipt of
the "compliance" to which copy of the writ was attached being unsubstantiated, the
presumption of regularity of its receipt on the day the original petition was filed
should prevail.
Petitioner Co argues that the Court of Appeals cannot disturb the factual findings
of the trial court and substitute its own in a petition for certiorari, prohibition
!
92!
and mandamus where the basic issue is one of jurisdiction or grave abuse of
discretion.
It
is
well-settled,
however,
that
in
a
petition
for certiorari and mandamus, the Court of Appeals, when inevitable, may examine
the factual merits of the case.41 In the present case, it was necessary and inevitable
for the Court of Appeals to look into the diverse factual allegations of the parties. It
is worthy to note that petitioner's motion for execution pending appeal was
premised on his contention that the award of damages in his favor would be
meaningless on account of respondent Corporation's precarious financial status. On
the other hand, respondent Corporation countered that it was operating at a profit,
an assurance that at the time, it was a stable business entity that could answer for
its obligations. In the face of these contradictory allegations, the appellate court
correctly opted to make its own finding of facts on the issue of the propriety of the
issuance of the writ of execution pending appeal. It should be stressed that what
was at issue was not the award of damages itself but the issuance of said writ.
Petitioner Lao's position that the posting of a good and solvent bond is a special
reason for the issuance of the writ of execution pending appeal is utterly barren of
merit. Mere posting of a bond to answer for damages does not suffice as a good
reason for the granting of execution pending appeal, within the context of "good
reasons" under Section 2, Rule 39 of the Rules of Court.42 In Roxas v. Court of
Appeals,43 the Court held:
It is not intended obviously that execution pending appeal shall issue as a matter of
course. "Good reasons, special, important, pressing reasons must exist to justify it;
otherwise, instead of an instrument of solicitude and justice, it may well become a
tool of oppression and inequity. But to consider the mere posting of a bond a "good
reason" would precisely make immediate execution of a judgment pending appeal
routinary, the rule rather than the exception. Judgments would be executed
immediately, as a matter of course, once rendered, if all that the prevailing party
needed to do was to post a bond to answer for damages that might result therefrom.
This is a situation, to repeat, neither contemplated nor intended by law.44
G.R. No. 60647
From the decision of the Court of First Instance of Samar in Civil Case No. 5528,
finding that they are liable for malicious prosecution and therefore, they must pay
Lao damages, the Corporation and Co appealed to the Court of Appeals. In
affirming the lower court's decision, the Court of Appeals deduced from the facts
established that the Corporation knew all along that Lao's liability was civil in
nature. However, after around four (4) years had elapsed and sensing that Civil
Case No. 4452 would result in a decision against them, they instituted the criminal
case for estafa. In awarding damages in the total amount of P330,000, the Court of
Appeals took into account Lao's social and business standing.45
From the Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. No. 61925-R, Co filed the
instant petition for review oncertiorari; contending that the Court of Appeals erred
in affirming the decision of the Samar Court of First Instance because when the
case for malicious prosecution was commenced there was as yet no cause of action
as the criminal case was still pending decision. Co also asserted that he should not
be held jointly and severally liable with the Corporation because in filing the
affidavit-complaint against respondent Lao, he was acting as the executive vicepresident of the Corporation and his action was within the scope of his authority as
such corporate officer.
93! !
The issue of whether the Court of Appeals correctly ruled that the Corporation and
petitioner Co should be held liable for damages on account of malicious
prosecution shall be ratiocinated upon and resolved with the issues submitted for
resolution in G.R. Nos. 60958-59. What should concern the Court here is whether
petitioner Co should be held solidarily liable with the Corporation for whatever
damages would be imposed upon them for filing the complaint for malicious
prosecution.
Petitioner Co argues that following the dictum in agency, the suit should be against
his principal unless he acted on his own or exceeded the limits of his agency.
A perusal of his affidavit-complaint reveals that at the time he filed the same on
June 24, 1974, petitioner Co was the vice-president of the Corporation. As a
corporate officer, his power to bind the Corporation as its agent must be sought
from statute, charter, by-laws, a delegation of authority to a corporate officer, or
from the acts of the board of directors formally expressed or implied from a habit
or custom of doing business.46 In this case, no such sources of petitioner's authority
from which to deduce whether or not he was acting beyond the scope of his
responsibilities as corporate vice-president are mentioned, much less proven. It is
thus logical to conclude that the board of directors or by laws- of the corporation
vested petitioner Co with certain executive duties47 one of which is a case for the
Corporation.
That petitioner Co was authorized to institute the estafa case is buttressed by the
fact that the Corporation failed to make an issue out of his authority to file said
case. Upon well-established principles of pleading, lack of authority of an officer
of a corporation to bind it by contract executed by him in its name, is a defense
which should have been specially pleaded by the Corporation.48 The Corporation's
failure to interpose such a defense could only mean that the filing of the affidavitcomplaint by petitioner Co was with the consent and authority of the Corporation.
In the same vein, petitioner Co may not be held personally liable for acts
performed in pursuance of an authority and therefore, holding him solidarily liable
with the Corporation for the damages awarded to respondent Lao does accord with
law and jurisprudence.
G.R. No. 606958-59
In this petition for review on certiorari of the Decisions of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. No. 61925-R, regarding Lao's claim for damages on account of malicious
prosecution, and in CA-G.R. No. 62532-R that arose from Lao's complaint for
accounting and damages, petitioner Corporation assigns as errors, that:
1. The respondent Court of Appeals erred and/or committed a grave abuse of
discretion in affirming the erroneous decision of the lower court. The civil case for
malicious prosecution was filed during the pendency of the criminal case upon
which the civil suit was based. There is as yet no cause of action. . . . .
2. The respondent Court of Appeals erred and/or committed a grave abuse of
discretion when it reversed or set aside the supplemental decision of the lower
court in Civil Case No. 4452, which reversal was merely based on surmises and
conjectures. . . . .
3. The respondent Court of Appeals erred and/or committed grave abuse of
discretion when it awarded moral damages in Civil Case No. 4452 which was not
prayed for because Andres Lao prayed for moral damages and was already
awarded in Civil Case No. 5528. Moral damages must be specifically prayed for. . .
. .49
!
94!
issue in the detainer case, which is still pending. Until final determination of said
case, plaintiff herein cannot, and does not, have, therefore, a cause of action if
any, on which we do not express our opinion against the herein defendants. In
short, the lower court has correctly held that the present action is premature, and,
that, consequently, the complain herein does not set forth a cause of action against
the defendants.53
A similar ruling was laid down in Cabacungan v. Corrales54 where the Court
sustained the dismissal of an action for damages on the ground of prematurity. The
records disclosed that the alleged false and malicious complaint charging plaintiffs
with malicious mischief was still pending trial when the action for damages based
on the subject complaint was brought.
Premises studiedly viewed in proper perspective, the contention of Lao that the
elements of an action for malicious prosecution are evidentiary in nature and
should be determined at the time the plaintiff offers evidence and rests his case, is
untenable. To rule otherwise would, in effect, sanction the filing of actions without
a cause of action. The existence of a cause of action is determined solely by the
facts alleged in the complaint. Consideration of other facts is proscribed and any
attempt to prove extraneous circumstances is not allowed.55 As this Court said
in Surigao Mine Exploration Co., Inc. v. Harris,56 "unless the plaintiff has a valid
and subsisting cause of action at the time his action is commenced, the defect
cannot be cured or remedied by the acquisition or accrual of one while the action is
pending, and a supplemental complaint or an amendment setting up such afteraccrued cause of action is not permissible."57 Thus, the circumstance that the estafa
case concluded in respondent Lao's acquittal during the pendency of the complaint
for malicious prosecution did not cure the defect of lack of cause of action at the
time of filing of the complaint.
Neither does the Court find merit in respondent Lao's submission that the
complaint for malicious prosecution is viable inasmuch as it is also anchored on
Articles 20 and 21 of the Civil Code. This may appear to be a persuasive argument
since there is no hard and fast rule which can be applied in the determination of
whether or not the principle of abuse of rights has been violated, resulting in
damages under the said articles of the Civil Code on Human Relations. Indeed, a
party injured by the filing of a court case against him, even if he is later on
absolved, may file a case for damages grounded either on the principle of abuse of
rights or on malicious prosecution.58 However, whether based on the principle of
abuse of rights or malicious prosecution, a reading of the complaint here reveals
that it is founded on the mere filing of the estafa charge against respondent Lao. As
such, it was prematurely filed and it failed to allege a cause of action. Should the
action for malicious prosecution be entertained and the estafa charge would result
in respondent Lao's conviction during the pendency of the damage suit, even if it is
based on Articles 20 and 21, such suit would nonetheless become groundless and
unfounded. To repeat; that the estafa case, in fact, resulted in respondent Lao's
acquittal would not infuse a cause of action on the malicious prosecution case
already commenced and pending resolution.
The complaint for damages based on malicious prosecution and/or on Articles 20
and 21 should have been dismissed for lack of cause of action and therefore, the
Court of Appeals erred in affirming the decision of the trial court of origin. It
should be stressed, however, that the dismissal of subject complaint should not be
!
96!
taken as an adjudication on the merits, the same being merely grounded on the
failure of the complaint to state a cause of action.59
As regards the Decision in CA-G.R. No. 62532-R which was spawned by
respondent Lao's complaint for accounting, petitioner contends that the appellate
court erred when it reversed and set aside the supplemental decision in Civil Case
No. 4452 and directed the corporation to reimburse the amount of P556,444.20,
representing Lao's overpayment to the Corporation. The Court would normally
have restricted itself to questions of law and shunned away from questions of fact
were it not for the conflicting findings of fact by the trial court and appellate court
on the matter. The Court is therefore constrained to relax the rule on
conclusiveness of factual findings of the Court of Appeals and, on the basis of the
facts on record, make its own findings.60
It is significant to note that as per decision of the trial court dated March 26, 1975,
a court-supervised accounting was directed so as to ascertain the true and correct
accountability of Andres Lao to the defendant corporation. Thus, a three-man audit
committee was formed with the branch of clerk of court, Atty. Victorio Galapon,
as chairman, and two other certified public accountants respectively nominated by
the parties, as members.
On September 16, 1976, the said Audit Committee submitted its report61 and in the
hearing of November 25, 1976, the parties interposed no objection thereto and
unanimously accepted the Audit Committee Report. The Committee found that
Andres Lao has made a total overpayment to defendant corporation in the amount
of P556 ,444.20.
Trial by commissioners is allowed by the Rules of Court when a) the trial of an
issue of fact requires the examination of a long account on either side, in which
case the commissioner may be directed to hear and report upon the whole issue or
any specific question involved therein; b) when the taking of an account is
necessary for the information of the court before judgment, or for carrying a
judgment or order into effect; and c) when a question of fact, other than upon the
pleadings, arises upon motion or otherwise, at any stage of a case, or for carrying a
judgment or order into effect.62 Ultimately, the trial court, in the exercise of its
sound discretion, may either adopt, modify, or reject in whole or in part, the
commissioners' report or it may recommit the same with instructions, or require the
parties to present additional evidence before the commissioners or before the
court.63
In the case under consideration, it is thus within the power of the trial court to refer
the accounting to court-appointed commissioners because a true and correct
accounting is necessary for the information of the court before it can render
judgment. Moreover, the technical nature of the audit procedure necessitates the
assistance of a certified public accountant. And since both parties offered no
objection to the commissioners' report, they are deemed to have accepted and
admitted the findings therein contained.
There is no discernible cause for veering from the findings of the Audit
Committee. In arriving at its conclusion, the Audit Committee subtracted the total
remittances of Lao in the amount of P13,686,148.80 from the entire volume of
shipments made by the corporation. In determining the total volume of shipments
made by the corporation, the Audit Committee did not include the shipments
covered by bills of lading and factory consignment invoices but without the
corresponding delivery receipts. These included shipments in the amount of
97! !
P597,239.40 covered by bills of lading and factory consignment invoices but with
no supporting delivery receipts, and shipments worth P126,950.00 with factory
consignment invoices but not covered by bills of lading and delivery receipts.
However, the Audit Committee considered shipments made by the corporation to
Lao in the amount of P9,110,777.00 covered by bills of lading and factory invoices
but without the corresponding delivery receipts because subject shipments were
duly reported in Lao's monthly sales report.
The Audit Committee correctly excluded the shipments not supported by delivery
receipts, albeit covered by bills of lading and factory consignment invoices. Under
Article 1497 of the Civil Code, a thing sold shall be understood as delivered when
it is placed in the control or possession of the vendee. Unless possession or control
has been transferred to the vendee, the thing or goods sold cannot be considered as
delivered. Thus, in the present case, the Audit Committee was correct when it
adopted as guideline that accountability over the goods shipped was transferred
from the corporation to Andres Lao only upon actual delivery of the goods to him.
For it is only when the goods were actually delivered to and received by Lao, did
Lao have control and possession over subject goods, and only when he had control
and possession over said goods could he sell the same.
Delivery is generally evidenced by a written acknowledgement of a person that he
or she has actually received the thing or the goods, as in delivery receipts. A bill of
lading cannot substitute for a delivery receipt. This is because it is a written
acknowledgement of the receipt of the goods by the carrier and an agreement to
transport and deliver them at a specific place to a person named or upon his
order.64 It does not evidence receipt of the goods by the consignee or the person
named in the bill of lading; rather, it is evidence of receipt by the carrier of the
goods from the shipper for transportation and delivery.
Likewise, a factory consignment invoice is not evidence of actual delivery of the
goods. An invoice is nothing more than a detailed statement of the nature, quantity
and cost of the thing sold.65 It is not proof that the thing or goods were actually
delivered to the vendee or the consignee. As admitted by the witness for the
corporation:
A:
Factory consignment invoices represents what the company billed the
plaintiff Mr. Lao and the bill of lading represents the goods which were supposed
to have been shipped.
xxx
xxx
xxx
A:
Shipments covered by factory consignment invoices simply meant these
are billings made again by the Associated Anglo-American Tobacco Corporation
to plaintiff Andres Lao. (t.s.n., November 25, 1976, pp. 45-47 as cited in
Respondent Lao's Comment, Rollo, p. 259)
Thus, in the absence of proof that the goods were actually received by Lao as
evidenced by delivery receipts, the shipments allegedly made by the corporation in
the amount of P597,239.40 and P126,950.00 covered only by bills of lading and
factory consignment invoices cannot be included in Lao's accountability.
However, as to the shipments worth P4,018,927.60 likewise covered only by bills
of lading and factory consignment invoices, the Audit Committee correctly
considered them in Lao's account because such shipments were reported in the
latter's sales reports. The fact that Lao included them in his sales reports is an
implied admission that subject goods were actually delivered to him, and that he
received the said goods for resale.
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As regards the award of moral damages, petitioner Corporation faults the Court of
Appeals for awarding such damages not specifically prayed for in the complaint
for accounting and damages in Civil Case No. 4452. Petitioner Corporation argues
that moral damages were prayed for and duly awarded in Civil Case No. 5528 and
therefore, it would be unfair and unjust to allow once again, recovery of moral
damages on similar grounds.
Contrary to the allegation of the petitioner Corporation, the award of moral
damages was specifically prayed for in the complaint albeit it left the amount of
the same to the discretion of the court.66 Moreover, Civil Case Nos. 4452 and 5528
were on varied causes of action. While the award for moral damages in Civil Case
No. 4452 was based on the evident bad faith of the petitioner Corporation in
unilaterally rescinding respondent Lao's sales agency through his immediate
replacement by Ngo Kheng, the claim for moral damages in Civil Case No. 5528
was anchored on the supposed malice that attended the filing of the criminal case
for estafa.
Petitioner Corporation also opposes for being conjectural, the award of
P150,000.00 in Civil Case No. 4452, representing actual damages for loss of
earnings. True, damages cannot be presumed or premised on conjecture or even
logic. A party is entitled to adequate compensation only for duly substantiated
pecuniary loss actually suffered by him or her.67 In this case, however, the trial
court correctly found that an award for actual damages was justified because
several months before their contract of agency was due to expire in 1969, the
petitioner Corporation replaced Lao with Ngo Kheng as sales agent for the areas of
Leyte and Samar. This, despite the fact that they had already agreed that Lao
would continue to act as the corporation's sales agent provided that he would
reduce his accountability to P200,000.00, the amount covered by his bond, and
engaged the services of an independent accounting firm to do an audit to establish
Lao's true liability. Due to his ouster as sales agent, Lao failed to realize a net
income from his sales agency in the amount of P30,000,00 a year.
However, the amount of actual damages should be reduced to P30,000.00 only
instead of the P150,000.00 awarded by the appellate court. Since the contract of
sales agency was on a yearly basis, the actual damages Lao suffered should be
limited to the annual net income he failed to realize due to his unjust termination as
sales agent prior to the expiration of his contract in 1969. Unrealized income for
the succeeding years cannot be awarded to Lao because the corporation is deemed
to have opted not to renew the contract with Lao for the succeeding years.
As to the award of exemplary damages, suffice it to state that in contracts and
quasi-contracts, the court may award exemplary damages if the defendant acted in
a wanton, fraudulent, reckless, oppressive, or malevolent manner.68 In the case
under scrutiny, the Court finds the award of exemplary damages unjustified or
unwarranted in the absence of any proof that the petitioner Corporation acted in a
wanton, fraudulent, reckless, oppressive, and malevolent manner. For the same
reasons, the award for attorney's fees should be deleted.1wphi1.nt
WHEREFORE,
In G.R. No. L-47013, the petition for review on certiorari is DENIED for lack of
merit;
In G.R. No. 60647, the petition is GRANTED and the assailed decision is SET
ASIDE; and the Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. No. 61925-R,
finding Esteban Co solidarity liable with the respondent Associated Anglo99! !
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otherwise known as the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act. It was not a suit for
malicious prosecution.
Private respondent is taking us for a ride. A cursory perusal of the complaint filed
by Adaza before respondent Judge George Macli-ing reveals that it is one for
malicious prosecution against the petitioners for the latter's filing of the charge
against him of rebellion with murder and frustrated murder. An examination of the
records would show that this latest posture as to the nature of his cause of action is
only being raised for the first time on appeal. Nowhere in his complaint filed with
the trial court did respondent Adaza allege that his action is one based on tort or on
Section 3 (e) or Republic Act No. 3019. Such a change of theory cannot be
allowed. When a party adopts a certain theory in the court below, he will not be
permitted to change his theory on appeal, for to permit him to do so would not only
be unfair to the other party but it would also be offensive to the basic rules of fair
play, justice and due process. 15 Any member of the Bar, even if not too schooled
in the art of litigation, would easily discern that Adaza's complaint is no doubt a
suit for damages for malicious prosecution against the herein petitioners.
Unfortunately, however, his complaint filed with the trial court suffers from a fatal
infirmity that of failure to state a cause of action and should have been
dismissed right from the start. We shall show why.
The term malicious prosecution has been defined in various ways. In American
jurisdiction, it is defined as:
One begun in malice without probable cause to believe the charges can be
sustained (Eustace v. Dechter, 28 Cal. App. 2d. 706, 83 P. 2d. 525). Instituted with
intention of injuring defendant and without probable cause, and which terminates
in favor of the person prosecuted. For this injury an action on the case lies, called
the action of malicious prosecution (Hicks v. Brantley, 29 S.E. 459, 102 Ga. 264;
Eggett v. Allen, 96 N.W. 803, 119 Wis. 625). 16
In Philippine jurisdiction, it has been defined as:
An action for damages brought by one against whom a criminal prosecution, civil
suit, or other legal proceeding has been instituted maliciously and without probable
cause, after the termination of such prosecution, suit, or other proceeding in favor
of the defendant therein. The gist of the action is the putting of legal process in
force, regularly, for the mere purpose of vexation or injury (Cabasaan v. Anota,
14169-R, November 19, 1956). 17
The statutory basis for a civil action for damages for malicious prosecution are
found in the provisions of the New Civil Code on Human Relations and on
damages particularly Articles 19, 20, 21, 26, 29, 32, 33, 35, 2217 and 2219
(8). 18 To constitute malicious prosecution, however, there must be proof that the
prosecution was prompted by a sinister design to vex and humiliate a person, and
that it was initiated deliberately by the defendant knowing that his charges were
false and groundless. Concededly, the mere act of submitting a case to the
authorities for prosecution does not make one liable for malicious
prosecution. 19 Thus, in order for a malicious prosecution suit to prosper, the
plaintiff must prove three (3) elements: (1) the fact of the prosecution and the
further fact that the defendant was himself the prosecutor and that the action finally
terminated with an acquittal; (2) that in bringing the action, the prosecutor acted
without probable cause; and (3) that the prosecutor was actuated or impelled by
legal malice, that is by improper or sinister motive. 20 All these requisites must
concur.
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102!
Judging from the face of the complaint itself filed by Adaza against the herein
petitioners, none of the foregoing requisites have been alleged therein, thus
rendering the complaint dismissible on the ground of failure to state a cause of
action under Section 1 (g), Rule 16 of the Revised Rules of Court.
There is nothing in the records which shows, and the complaint does not allege,
that Criminal Case No. Q-90-11855, filed by the petitioners against respondent
Adaza for Rebellion with Murder and Frustrated Murder, has been finally
terminated and therein accused Adaza acquitted of the charge. Not even Adaza
himself, thru counsel, makes any positive asseveration on this aspect that would
establish his acquittal. Insofar as Criminal Case No. Q-90-11855 is concerned,
what appears clear from the records only is that respondent has been discharged on
a writ of habeas corpus and granted bail. 21 This is not, however, considered the
termination of the action contemplated under Philippine jurisdiction to warrant the
institution of a malicious prosecution suit against those responsible for the filing of
the information against him.
The complaint likewise does not make any allegation that the prosecution acted
without probable cause in filing the criminal information dated April 18, 1990 for
rebellion with murder and frustrated murder. Elementarily defined, probable cause
is the existence of such facts and circumstances as would excite the belief, in a
reasonable mind, acting on the facts within the knowledge of the prosecutor, that
the person charged was guilty of the crime for which he was prosecuted. It is wellsettled that one cannot be held liable for maliciously instituting a prosecution
where one has acted with probable cause. Elsewise stated, a suit for malicious
prosecution will lie only in cases where a legal prosecution has been carried on
without probable cause. The reason for this rule is that it would be a very great
discouragement to public justice, if prosecutors, who had tolerable ground of
suspicion, were liable to be sued at law when their indictment miscarried. 22
In the case under consideration, the decision of the Special Team of Prosecutors to
file the information for rebellion with murder and frustrated murder against
respondent Adaza, among others, cannot be dismissed as the mere product of whim
or caprice on the part of the prosecutors who conducted the preliminary
investigation. Said decision was fully justified in an eighteen (18)-page Resolution
dated April 17, 1990. 23 While it is true that the petitioners were fully aware of the
prevailing jurisprudence enunciated in People v. Hernandez, 24 which proscribes
the complexing of murder and other common crimes with rebellion, petitioners
were of the honest conviction that the Hernandez Case can be differentiated from
the present case. The petitioners thus argued:
Of course we are aware of the ruling in People vs. Hernandez, 99 Phil. 515, which
held that common crimes like murder, arson, etc. are absorbed by rebellion.
However, the Hernandez case is different from the present case before us. In the
Hernandez case, the common crimes of murder, arson, etc. were found by the fiscal
to have been committed as a necessary means to commit rebellion, or in
furtherance thereof. Thus, the fiscal filed an information for rebellion alleging
those common crimes as a necessary means of committing the offense charged
under the second part of Article 48, RPC.
We, however, find no occasion to apply the Hernandez ruling since as intimated
above, the crimes of murder and frustrated murder in this case were absolutely
unnecessary to commit rebellion although they were the natural consequences of
103!!
the unlawful bombing. Hence, the applicable provision is the first part of Article 48
of the RPC. 25
While the Supreme Court in the case of Enrile v. Salazar, 26 addressing the issue of
whether or not the Hernandez doctrine is still good law, in a 10-3 vote, did not
sustain the position espoused by the herein petitioners on the matter, three
justices 27 felt the need to re-study the Hernandez ruling in light of present-day
developments, among whom was then Chief Justice Marcelo Fernan who wrote a
dissenting opinion in this wise:
I am constrained to write this separate opinion on what seems to be a rigid
adherence to the 1956 ruling of the Court. The numerous challenges to the doctrine
enunciated in the case of People vs.Hernandez, 99 Phil. 515 (1956), should at once
demonstrate the need to redefine the applicability of said doctrine so as to make it
conformable with accepted and well-settled principles of criminal law and
jurisprudence.
To my mind, the Hernandez doctrine should not be interpreted as an all-embracing
authority for the rule that all common crimes committed on the occasion, or in
furtherance of, or in connection with, rebellion are absorbed by the latter. To that
extent, I cannot go along with the view of the majority in the instant case that
"Hernandez remains binding doctrine operating to prohibit the complexing of
rebellion with any other offense committed on the occasion thereof, either as a
means necessary to its commission or as an unintended effect of an activity that
constitutes rebellion" (p. 9, Decision).
The Hernandez doctrine has served the purpose for which it was applied by the
Court in 1956 during the communist-inspired rebellion of the Huks. The changes in
our society in the span of 34 years since then have far-reaching effects on the allembracing applicability of the doctrine considering the emergence of alternative
modes of seizing the powers of the duly-constituted Government not contemplated
in Articles 134 and 135 of the Revised Penal Code and their consequent effects on
the lives of our people. The doctrine was good law then, but I believe that there is a
certain aspect of the Hernandez doctrine that needs clarification. 28
Apparently, not even the Supreme Court then was of one mind in debunking the
theory being advanced by the petitioners in this case, some of whom were also the
petitioners in the Enrile case. Nevertheless, we held in Enrilethat the Information
filed therein properly charged an offense that of simple rebellion 29 and
thereupon ordered the remand of the case to the trial court for the prosecution of
the named accused 30 in the Information therein. Following this lead, the
Information against Adaza in Criminal Case No. Q-90-11855 was not quashed, but
was instead treated likewise as charging the crime of simple rebellion.
A doubtful or difficult question of law may become the basis of good faith and, in
this regard, the law always accords to public officials the presumption of good
faith and regularity in the performance of official duties. 31 Any person who seeks
to establish otherwise has the burden of proving bad faith or ill-motive. Here, since
the petitioners were of the honest conviction that there was probable cause to hold
respondent Adaza for trial for the crime of rebellion with murder and frustrated
murder, and since Adaza himself, through counsel, did not allege in his complaint
lack of probable cause, we find that the petitioners cannot be held liable for
malicious prosecution. Needless to say, probable cause was not wanting in the
institution of Criminal Case No. Q-90-11855 against Adaza.
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