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Agency, Trusts, and Partnerships Session 6 Page |1

G.R. No. 206147. January 13, 2016.* Answer despite the defective summons. Thus, jurisdiction over its person
was acquired through voluntary appearance.
MICHAEL C. GUY, petitioner, vs. ATTY. GLENN C. GACOTT,
respondent. Same; Same; Judgments; Parties; The principle that a person cannot be
prejudiced by a ruling rendered in an action or proceeding in which he has
Remedial Law; Civil Procedure; Service of Summons; Under Section 11, Rule
not been made a party conforms to the constitutional guarantee of due
14 of the 1997 Revised Rules of Civil Procedure, when the defendant is a
process of law.—Although a partnership is based on delectus personae or
corporation, partnership or association organized under the laws of the
mutual agency, whereby any partner can generally represent the partnership
Philippines with a juridical personality, the service of summons may be made
in its business affairs, it is non sequitur that a suit against the partnership is
on the president, managing partner, general manager, corporate secretary,
necessarily a suit impleading each and every partner. It must be
treasurer, or in-house counsel.—Jurisdiction over the person, or jurisdiction
remembered that a partnership is a juridical entity that has a distinct and
in personam — the power of the court to render a personal judgment or to separate personality from the persons composing it. In relation to the rules
subject the parties in a particular action to the judgment and other rulings
of civil procedure, it is elementary that a judgment of a court is conclusive
rendered in the action — is an element of due process that is essential in all
and binding only upon the parties and their successors-in-interest after the
actions, civil as well as criminal, except in actions in rem or quasi in rem.
commencement of the action in court. A decision rendered on a complaint in
Jurisdiction over the person of the plaintiff is acquired by the mere filing of
a civil action or proceeding does not bind or prejudice a person not
the complaint in court. As the initiating party, the plaintiff in a civil action
impleaded therein, for no person shall be adversely affected by the outcome
voluntarily submits himself to the jurisdiction of the court. As to the
of a civil action or proceeding in which he is not a party. The principle that a
defendant, the court acquires jurisdiction over his person either by the
person cannot be prejudiced by a ruling rendered in an action or proceeding
proper service of the summons, or by his voluntary appearance in the action.
in which he has not been made a party conforms to the constitutional
Under Section 11, Rule 14 of the 1997 Revised Rules of Civil Procedure, guarantee of due process of law.
when the defendant is a corporation, partnership or association organized
under the laws of the Philippines with a juridical personality, the service of Same; Same; Same; Same; In the spirit of fair play, it is a better rule that a
summons may be made on the president, managing partner, general partner must first be impleaded before he could be prejudiced by the
manager, corporate secretary, treasurer, or in-house counsel. Jurisprudence judgment against the partnership.—In the spirit of fair play, it is a better rule
is replete with pronouncements that such provision provides an exclusive that a partner must first be impleaded before he could be prejudiced by the
enumeration of the persons authorized to receive summons for juridical judgment against the partnership. As will be discussed later, a partner may
entities. raise several defenses during the trial to avoid or mitigate his obligation to
the partnership liability. Necessarily, before he could present evidence during
Same; Same; Same; While proper service of summons is necessary to vest the trial, he must first be impleaded and informed of the case against him. It
the court jurisdiction over the defendant, the same is merely procedural in
would be the height of injustice to rob an innocent partner of his hard-
nature and the lack of or defect in the service of summons may be cured by
earned personal belongings without giving him an opportunity to be heard.
the defendant’s subsequent voluntary submission to the court’s jurisdiction
Without any showing that Guy himself acted maliciously on behalf of the
through his filing a responsive pleading such as an answer.—While proper
company, causing damage or injury to the complainant, then he and his
service of summons is necessary to vest the court jurisdiction over the
personal properties cannot be made directly and solely accountable for the
defendant, the same is merely procedural in nature and the lack of or defect
liability of QSC, the judgment debtor, because he was not a party to the
in the service of summons may be cured by the defendant’s subsequent
case.
voluntary submission to the court’s jurisdiction through his filing a responsive
pleading such as an answer. In this case, it is not disputed that QSC filed its
Agency, Trusts, and Partnerships Session 6 Page |2

Same; Same; Same; Same; Resort to the properties of a partner may be Princesa City, Palawan (RTC), in Civil Case No. 3108, a case for damages.
made only after efforts in exhausting partnership assets have failed or that The assailed RTC orders denied Guy’s Motion to Lift Attachment Upon
such partnership assets are insufficient to cover the entire obligation.—The Personalty5 on the ground that he was not a judgment debtor.
partners’ obligation with respect to the partnership liabilities is subsidiary in
nature. It provides that the partners shall only be liable with their property The Facts
after all the partnership assets have been exhausted. To say that one’s It appears from the records that on March 3, 1997, Atty. Glenn Gacott
liability is subsidiary means that it merely becomes secondary and only arises (Gacott) from Palawan purchased two (2) brand new transreceivers from
if the one primarily liable fails to sufficiently satisfy the obligation. Resort to Quantech Systems Corporation (QSC) in Manila through its employee Rey
the properties of a partner may be made only after efforts in exhausting Medestomas (Medestomas), amounting to a total of P18,000.00. On May 10,
partnership assets have failed or that such partnership assets are insufficient 1997, due to major defects, Gacott personally returned the transreceivers to
to cover the entire obligation. The subsidiary nature of the partners’ liability QSC and requested that they be replaced. Medestomas received the returned
with the partnership is one of the valid defenses against a premature transreceivers and promised to send him the replacement units within two
execution of judgment directed to a partner. (2) weeks from May 10, 1997.
Civil Law; Obligations; Joint Obligations; Partnerships; Article 1816 provides Time passed and Gacott did not receive the replacement units as promised.
that the partners’ obligation to third persons with respect to the partnership QSC informed him that there were no available units and that it could not
liability is pro rata or joint.—Article 1816 provides that the partners’ refund the purchased price. Despite several demands, both oral and written,
obligation to third persons with respect to the partnership liability is pro rata Gacott was never given a replacement or a refund. The demands caused
or joint. Liability is joint when a debtor is liable only for the payment of only Gacott to incur expenses in the total amount of P40,936.44. Thus, Gacott
a proportionate part of the debt. In contrast, a solidary liability makes a filed a complaint for damages. Summons was served upon QSC and
debtor liable for the payment of the entire debt. In the same vein, Article Medestomas, after which they filed their Answer, verified by Medestomas
1207 does not presume solidary liability unless: 1) the obligation expressly so himself and a certain Elton Ong (Ong). QSC and Medestomas did not present
states; or 2) the law or nature requires solidarity. With regard to any evidence during the trial.6
partnerships, ordinarily, the liability of the partners is not solidary. The joint
liability of the partners is a defense that can be raised by a partner In a Decision,7 dated March 16, 2007, the RTC found that the two (2)
impleaded in a complaint against the partnership. transreceivers were defective and that QSC and Medestomas failed to
replace the same or return Gacott’s money. The dispositive portion of the
PETITION for review on certiorari of the decision and resolution of the Court decision reads:
of Appeals.
WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiff, ordering
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court. the defendants to jointly and
Andres, Padernal & Paras Law Offices for petitioner. severally pay plaintiff the following:
MENDOZA, J.: The decision became final as QSC and Medestomas did not interpose an
appeal. Gacott then secured a Writ of Execution,8 dated September 26,
Before this Court is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the
2007.
Rules of Court filed by petitioner Michael C. Guy (Guy), assailing the June 25,
2012 Decision1 and the March 5, 2013 Resolution2 of the Court of Appeals During the execution stage, Gacott learned that QSC was not a corporation,
(CA) in C.A.-G.R. CV No. 94816, which affirmed the June 28, 20093 and but was in fact a general partnership registered with the Securities and
February 19, 20104 Orders of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 52, Puerto Exchange Commission (SEC).
Agency, Trusts, and Partnerships Session 6 Page |3

In the articles of partnership,9 Guy was appointed as General Manager of WHEREFORE, with the ample discussion of the matter, this Court finds and
QSC. so holds that the property of movant Michael Guy may be validly attached in
satisfaction of the liabilities adjudged by this Court against Quantech Co., the
To execute the judgment, Branch Sheriff Ronnie L. Felizarte (Sheriff
latter being an ostensible Corporation and the movant being considered by
Felizarte) went to the main office of the Department of Transportation and this Court as a general partner therein in accordance with the order of this
Communications-Land Transportation Office (DOTC-LTO), Quezon City, and
court impressed in its decision to this case imposing joint and several liability
verified whether Medestomas, QSC and Guy had personal properties
to the defendants. The Motion to Lift Attachment Upon Personalty submitted
registered therein.10 Upon learning that Guy had vehicles registered in his
by the movant is therefore DENIED for lack of merit.
name, Gacott instructed the sheriff to proceed with the attachment of one of
the motor vehicles of Guy based on the certification issued by the DOTC- SO ORDERED.15
LTO.11
Not satisfied, Guy moved for reconsideration of the denial of his motion. He
On March 3, 2009, Sheriff Felizarte attached Guy’s vehicle by virtue of the argued that he was neither impleaded as a defendant nor validly served with
Notice of Attachment/Levy upon Personalty12 served upon the record summons and, thus, the trial court did not acquire jurisdiction over his
custodian of the DOTC-LTO of Mandaluyong City. A similar notice was served person; that under Article 1824 of the Civil Code, the partners were only
to Guy through his housemaid at his residence. solidarily liable for the partnership liability under exceptional circumstances;
and that in order for a partner to be liable for the debts of the partnership, it
Thereafter, Guy filed his Motion to Lift Attachment Upon Personalty, arguing
must be shown that all partnership assets had first been exhausted.16
that he was not a judgment debtor and, therefore, his vehicle could not be
attached.13 Gacott filed an opposition to the motion. On February 19, 2010, the RTC issued an order17 denying his motion.

The RTC’s Order The denial prompted Guy to seek relief before the CA.

On June 28, 2009, the RTC issued an order denying Guy’s motion. It The CA’s Ruling
explained that considering QSC was not a corporation, but a registered
On June 25, 2012, the CA rendered the assailed decision dismissing Guy’s
partnership, Guy should be treated as a general partner pursuant to Section
appeal for the same reasons given by the trial court. In addition thereto, the
21 of the Corporation Code, and he may be held jointly and severally liable
appellate court stated:
with QSC and Medestomas. The trial court wrote:
We hold that Michael Guy, being listed as a general partner of QSC during
All persons who assume to act as a corporation knowing it to be without
authority to do so shall be liable as general partners for all debts, liabilities that time, cannot feign ignorance of the existence of the court summons.
The verified Answer filed by one of the partners, Elton Ong, binds him as a
and damages incurred or arising as a result thereof x x x. Where, by any
partner because the Rules of Court does not require that summons be served
wrongful act or omission of any partner acting in the ordinary course of the
on all the partners. It is sufficient that service be made on the “president,
business of the partnership x x x, loss or injury is caused to any person, not
managing partner, general manager, corporate secretary, treasurer or in-
being a partner in the partnership, or any penalty is incurred, the partnership
house counsel.” To Our mind, it is immaterial whether the summons to QSC
is liable therefore to the same extent as the partner so acting or omitting to
was served on the theory that it was a corporation. What is important is that
act. All partners are liable solidarily with the partnership for everything
the summons was served on QSC’s authorized officer x x x.18
chargeable to the partnership under Articles 1822 and 1823.14
The CA stressed that Guy, being a partner in QSC, was bound by the
Accordingly, it disposed:
summons served upon QSC based on Article 1821 of the Civil Code. The CA
further opined that the law did not require a partner to be actually involved
Agency, Trusts, and Partnerships Session 6 Page |4

in a suit in order for him to be made liable. He remained “solidarily liable Jurisdiction over the person, or jurisdiction in personam — the power of the
whether he participated or not, whether he ratified it or not, or whether he court to render a personal judgment or to subject the parties in a particular
had knowledge of the act or omission.”19 action to the judgment and other rulings rendered in the action — is an
element of due process that is essential in all actions, civil as well as criminal,
Aggrieved, Guy filed a motion for reconsideration but it was denied by the CA except in actions in rem or quasi in rem.23 Jurisdiction over the person of
in its assailed resolution, dated March 5, 2013.
the plaintiff is acquired by the mere filing of the complaint in court. As the
Hence, the present petition raising the following: initiating party, the plaintiff in a civil action voluntarily submits himself to the
jurisdiction of the court. As to the defendant, the court acquires jurisdiction
Issue over his person either by the proper service of the summons, or by his
voluntary appearance in the action.24
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR IN
HOLDING THAT PETITIONER GUY IS SOLIDARILY LIABLE WITH THE Under Section 11, Rule 14 of the 1997 Revised Rules of Civil Procedure,
PARTNERSHIP FOR DAMAGES ARISING FROM THE BREACH OF THE when the defendant is a corporation, partnership or association organized
CONTRACT OF SALE WITH RESPONDENT GACOTT.20 under the laws of the Philippines with a juridical personality, the service of
summons may be made on the president, managing partner, general
Guy argues that he is not solidarily liable with the partnership because the
manager, corporate secretary, treasurer, or in-house counsel. Jurisprudence
solidary liability of the partners under Articles 1822, 1823 and 1824 of the
is replete with pronouncements that such provision provides an exclusive
Civil Code only applies when it stemmed from the act of a partner. In this
enumeration of the persons authorized to receive summons for juridical
case, the alleged lapses were not attributable to any of the partners. Guy
entities.25
further invokes Article 1816 of the Civil Code which states that the liability of
the partners to the partnership is merely joint and subsidiary in nature. The records of this case reveal that QSC was never shown to have been
served with the summons through any of the enumerated authorized
In his Comment,21 Gacott countered, among others, that because Guy was a
persons to receive such, namely: president, managing partner, general
general and managing partner of QSC, he could not feign ignorance of the
manager, corporate secretary, treasurer or in-house counsel. Service of
transactions undertaken by QSC. Gacott insisted that notice to one partner
summons upon persons other than those officers enumerated in Section 11
must be considered as notice to the whole partnership, which included the
is invalid. Even substantial compliance is not sufficient service of
pendency of the civil suit against it.
summons.26 The CA was obviously mistaken when it opined that it was
In his Reply,22 Guy contended that jurisdiction over the person of the immaterial whether the summons to QSC was served on the theory that it
partnership was not acquired because the summons was never served upon was a corporation.27
it or through any of its authorized office. He also reiterated that a partner’s
Nevertheless, while proper service of summons is necessary to vest the court
liability was joint and subsidiary, and not solidary.
jurisdiction over the defendant, the same is merely procedural in nature and
The Court’s Ruling the lack of or defect in the service of summons may be cured by the
defendant’s subsequent voluntary submission to the court’s jurisdiction
The petition is meritorious. through his filing a responsive pleading such as an answer. In this case, it is
The service of summons was not disputed that QSC filed its Answer despite the defective summons. Thus,
jurisdiction over its person was acquired through voluntary appearance.
flawed; voluntary appearance
A partner must be separately
cured the defect
and distinctly impleaded
Agency, Trusts, and Partnerships Session 6 Page |5

before he can be bound by a juridical personality was being used for fraudulent, unfair, or illegal
purposes.34
judgment
Here, Guy was never made a party to the case. He did not have any
The next question posed is whether the trial court’s jurisdiction over QSC
participation in the entire proceeding until his vehicle was levied upon and he
extended to the person of Guy insofar as holding him solidarily liable with the
suddenly became QSC’s “codefendant debtor” during the judgment execution
partnership. After a thorough study of the relevant laws and jurisprudence,
stage. It is a basic principle of law that money judgments are enforceable
the Court answers in the negative.
only against the property incontrovertibly belonging to the judgment
Although a partnership is based on delectus personae or mutual agency, debtor.35 Indeed, the power of the court in executing judgments extends
whereby any partner can generally represent the partnership in its business only to properties unquestionably belonging to the judgment debtor alone.
affairs, it is non sequitur that a suit against the partnership is necessarily a An execution can be issued only against a party and not against one who did
suit impleading each and every partner. It must be remembered that a not have his day in court. The duty of the sheriff is to levy the property of
partnership is a juridical entity that has a distinct and separate personality the judgment debtor not that of a third person. For, as the saying goes, one
from the persons composing it.28 man’s goods shall not be sold for another man’s debts.36

In relation to the rules of civil procedure, it is elementary that a judgment of In the spirit of fair play, it is a better rule that a partner must first be
a court is conclusive and binding only upon the parties and their successors- impleaded before he could be prejudiced by the judgment against the
in-interest after the commencement of the action in court.29 A decision partnership. As will be discussed later, a partner may raise several defenses
rendered on a complaint in a civil action or proceeding does not bind or during the trial to avoid or mitigate his obligation to the partnership liability.
prejudice a person not impleaded therein, for no person shall be adversely Necessarily, before he could present evidence during the trial, he must first
affected by the outcome of a civil action or proceeding in which he is not a be impleaded and informed of the case against him. It would be the height
party.30 The principle that a person cannot be prejudiced by a ruling of injustice to rob an innocent partner of his hard-earned personal
rendered in an action or proceeding in which he has not been made a party belongings without giving him an opportunity to be heard. Without any
conforms to the constitutional guarantee of due process of law.31 showing that Guy himself acted maliciously on behalf of the company,
causing damage or injury to the complainant, then he and his personal
In Muñoz v. Yabut, Jr.,32 the Court declared that a person not impleaded properties cannot be made directly and solely accountable for the liability of
and given the opportunity to take part in the proceedings was not bound by QSC, the judgment debtor, because he was not a party to the case.
the decision declaring as null and void the title from which his title to the
property had been derived. The effect of a judgment could not be extended Further, Article 1821 of the Civil Code does not state that there is no need to
to nonparties by simply issuing an alias writ of execution against them, for implead a partner in order to be bound by the partnership liability. It
no man should be prejudiced by any proceeding to which he was a stranger. provides that:

In Aguila, Jr. v. Court of Appeals,33 the complainant had a cause of action Notice to any partner of any matter relating to partnership affairs, and the
against the partnership. Nevertheless, it was the partners themselves that knowledge of the partner acting in the particular matter, acquired while a
were impleaded in the complaint. The Court dismissed the complaint and partner or then present to his mind, and the knowledge of any other partner
held that it was the partnership, not its partners, officers or agents, which who reasonably could and should have communicated it to the acting
should be impleaded for a cause of action against the partnership itself. The partner, operate as notice to or knowledge of the partnership, except in the
Court added that the partners could not be held liable for the obligations of case of fraud on the partnership, committed by or with the consent of that
the partnership unless it was shown that the legal fiction of a different partner.

[Emphases and underscoring supplied]


Agency, Trusts, and Partnerships Session 6 Page |6

A careful reading of the provision shows that notice to any partner, under the valid defenses against a premature execution of judgment directed to a
certain circumstances, operates as notice to or knowledge to the partnership partner.
only. Evidently, it does not provide for the reverse situation, or that notice to
In this case, had he been properly impleaded, Guy’s liability would only arise
the partnership is notice to the partners. Unless there is an unequivocal law
which states that a partner is automatically charged in a complaint against after the properties of QSC would have been exhausted. The records,
however, miserably failed to show that the partnership’s properties were
the partnership, the constitutional right to due process takes precedence and
exhausted. The report37 of the sheriff showed that the latter went to the
a partner must first be impleaded before he can be considered as a
main office of the DOTC-LTO in Quezon City and verified whether
judgment debtor. To rule otherwise would be a dangerous precedent,
Medestomas, QSC and Guy had personal properties registered therein.
harping in favor of the deprivation of property without ample notice and
Gacott then instructed the sheriff to proceed with the attachment of one of
hearing, which the Court certainly cannot countenance.
the motor vehicles of Guy.38 The sheriff then served the Notice of
Partners’ liability is subsidiary Attachment/Levy upon Personalty to the record custodian of the DOTC-LTO
of Mandaluyong City. A similar notice was served to Guy through his
and generally joint; immediate
housemaid at his residence.
levy upon the property of a
Clearly, no genuine efforts were made to locate the properties of QSC that
partner cannot be made could have been attached to satisfy the judgment — contrary to the clear
mandate of Article 1816. Being subsidiarily liable, Guy could only be held
Granting that Guy was properly impleaded in the complaint, the execution of personally liable if properly impleaded and after all partnership assets had
judgment would be improper. Article 1816 of the Civil Code governs the been exhausted.
liability of the partners to third persons, which states that:
Second, Article 1816 provides that the partners’ obligation to third persons
Article 1816. All partners, including industrial ones, shall be liable pro rata with respect to the partnership liability is pro rata or joint. Liability is joint
with all their property and after all the partnership assets have been when a debtor is liable only for the payment of only a proportionate part of
exhausted, for the contracts which may be entered into in the name and for the debt. In contrast, a solidary liability makes a debtor liable for the
the account of the partnership, under its signature and by a person payment of the entire debt. In the same vein, Article 1207 does not presume
authorized to act for the partnership. However, any partner may enter into a solidary liability unless: 1) the obligation expressly so states; or 2) the law or
separate obligation to perform a partnership contract. nature requires solidarity. With regard to partnerships, ordinarily, the liability
of the partners is not solidary.39 The joint liability of the partners is a
[Emphasis supplied]
defense that can be raised by a partner impleaded in a complaint against the
This provision clearly states that, first, the partners’ obligation with respect partnership.
to the partnership liabilities is subsidiary in nature. It provides that the
In other words, only in exceptional circumstances shall the partners’ liability
partners shall only be liable with their property after all the partnership
be solidary in nature. Articles 1822, 1823 and 1824 of the Civil Code provide
assets have been exhausted. To say that one’s liability is subsidiary means
for these exceptional conditions, to wit:
that it merely becomes secondary and only arises if the one primarily liable
fails to sufficiently satisfy the obligation. Resort to the properties of a partner Article 1822. Where, by any wrongful act or omission of any partner acting
may be made only after efforts in exhausting partnership assets have failed in the ordinary course of the business of the partnership or with the
or that such partnership assets are insufficient to cover the entire obligation. authority of his copartners, loss or injury is caused to any person, not being
The subsidiary nature of the partners’ liability with the partnership is one of a partner in the partnership, or any penalty is incurred, the partnership is
liable therefor to the same extent as the partner so acting or omitting to act.
Agency, Trusts, and Partnerships Session 6 Page |7

Article 1823. The partnership is bound to make good the loss: persons. Accordingly, whether QSC was an alleged ostensible corporation or
a duly registered partnership, the liability of Guy, if any, would remain to be
(1) Where one partner acting within the scope of his apparent authority joint and subsidiary because, as previously stated, all partners shall be liable
receives money or property of a third person and misapplies it; and
pro rata with all their property and after all the partnership assets have been
(2) Where the partnership in the course of its business receives money or exhausted for the contracts which may be entered into in the name and for
property of a third person and the money or property so received is the account of the partnership.
misapplied by any partner while it is in the custody of the partnership.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The June 25, 2012 Decision and the
Article 1824. All partners are liable solidarily with the partnership for March 5, 2013 Resolution of the Court of Appeals in C.A.--G.R. CV No. 94816
everything chargeable to the partnership under Articles 1822 and 1823. are hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE. Accordingly, the Regional Trial Court,
Branch 52, Puerto Princesa City, is ORDERED TO RELEASE Michael C. Guy’s
[Emphases supplied] Suzuki Grand Vitara subject of the Notice of Levy/Attachment upon
Personalty.
In essence, these provisions articulate that it is the act of a partner which
caused loss or injury to a third person that makes all other partners solidarily SO ORDERED.
liable with the partnership because of the words “any wrongful act or
omission of any partner acting in the ordinary course of the business,” “one Carpio (Chairperson), Brion, Del Castillo and Leonen, JJ., concur.
partner acting within the scope of his apparent authority” and “misapplied by
Petition granted, judgment and resolution reversed and set aside.
any partner while it is in the custody of the partnership.” The obligation is
solidary because the law protects the third person, who in good faith relied Notes.—Personal service of summons should and always be the first option,
upon the authority of a partner, whether such authority is real or and it is only when the said summons cannot be served within a reasonable
apparent.40 time can the process server resort to substituted service. (Planters
Development Bank vs. Chandumal, 680 SCRA 269 [2012])
In the case at bench, it was not shown that Guy or the other partners did a
wrongful act or misapplied the money or property he or the partnership Service of summons is not required in a habeas corpus petition, be it under
received from Gacott. A third person who transacted with said partnership Rule 102 of the Rules of Court or A.M. No. 03-04-04-SC. (Tujan-Militante vs.
can hold the partners solidarily liable for the whole obligation if the case of Cada-Deapera, 731 SCRA 194 [2014])
the third person falls under Articles 1822 or 1823.41 Gacott’s claim stemmed
——o0o—— Guy vs. Gacott, 780 SCRA 579, G.R. No. 206147 January 13,
from the alleged defective transreceivers he bought from QSC, through the
latter’s employee, Medestomas. It was for a breach of warranty in a 2016
contractual obligation entered into in the name and for the account of QSC,
not due to the acts of any of the partners. For said reason, it is the general
rule under Article 1816 that governs the joint liability of such breach, and not
the exceptions under Articles 1822 to 1824. Thus, it was improper to hold
Guy solidarily liable for the obligation of the partnership.

Finally, Section 21 of the Corporation Code,42 as invoked by the RTC, cannot


be applied to sustain Guy’s liability. The said provision states that a general
partner shall be liable for all debts, liabilities and damages incurred by an
ostensible corporation. It must be read, however, in conjunction with Article
1816 of the Civil Code, which governs the liabilities of partners against third
Agency, Trusts, and Partnerships Session 6 Page |8

FIRST DIVISION rents in the amount of P5,856,803.53 which was received by SAFA Law
Office on November 10, 2003.
G.R. No. 193138, August 20, 2018
In a letter12 to PNB dated June 9, 2004, SAFA Law Office expressed its
ANICETO G. SALUDO, JR., Petitioner, v. PHILIPPINE NATIONAL intention to negotiate. It claimed that it was enticed by the former
BANK, Respondent. management of PNB into renting the leased premises by promising to: (1)
give it a special rate due to the large area of the place; (2) endorse PNB's
cases to the firm with rents to be paid out of attorney's fees; and (3) retain
DECISION
the firm as one of PNB's external counsels. When new management took
over, it allegedly agreed to uphold this agreement to facilitate rental
JARDELEZA, J.: payments. However, not a single case of significance was referred to the
firm. SAFA Law Office then asked PNB to review and discuss its billings,
In this petition, we emphasize that a partnership for the practice of law, evaluate the improvements in the area and agree on a compensatory sum to
constituted in accordance with the Civil Code provisions on partnership, be applied to the unpaid rents, make good its commitment to endorse or
acquires juridical personality by operation of law. Having a juridical refer cases to SAFA Law Office under the intended terms and conditions, and
personality distinct and separate from its partners, such partnership is the book the rental payments due as receivables payable every time attorney's
real party-in-interest in a suit brought in connection with a contract entered fees are due from the bank on the cases it referred. The firm also asked PNB
into in its name and by a person authorized to act on its behalf. to give a 50% discount on its unpaid rents, noting that while it was waiting
for case referrals, it had paid a total amount of P13,457,622.56 from January
Petitioner Aniceto G. Saludo, Jr. (Saludo) filed this petition for review 1999 to December 2002, which included the accelerated rates of 10% per
on certiorari1 assailing the February 8, 2010 Decision2 and August 2, 2010 annum beginning August 1999 until July 2003.
Resolution3 issued by the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 98898.
The CA affirmed with modification the January 11, 2007 Omnibus In February 2005, SAFA Law Office vacated the leased premises.13 PNB sent
Order4 issued by Branch 58 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Makati City a demand letter14 dated July 7, 2005 requiring the firm to pay its rental
in Civil Case No. 06-678, and ruled that respondent Philippine National arrears in the total amount of P10,951,948.32. In response, SAFA Law Office
Bank's (PNB) counterclaims against Saludo and the Saludo Agpalo Fernandez sent a letter dated June 8, 2006, proposing a settlement by providing a
and Aquino Law Office (SAFA Law Office) should be reinstated in its answer. range of suggested computations of its outstanding rental obligations, with
deductions for the value of improvements it introduced in the premises,
Records show that on June 11, 1998, SAFA Law Office entered into a professional fees due from Macroasia Corporation, and the 50% discount
Contract of Lease5 with PNB, whereby the latter agreed to lease 632 square allegedly promised by Dr. Lucio Tan.15 PNB, however, declined the
meters of the second floor of the PNB Financial Center Building in Quezon settlement proposal in a letter16 dated July 17, 2006, stating that it was not
City for a period of three years and for a monthly rental fee of P189,600.00. amenable to the settlement's terms. Besides, PNB also claimed that it cannot
The rental fee is subject to a yearly escalation rate of 10%. 6 SAFA Law Office assume the liabilities of Macroasia Corporation to SAFA Law Office as
then occupied the leased premises and paid advance rental fees and security Macroasia Corporation has a personality distinct and separate from the bank.
deposit in the total amount of P1,137,600.00. 7 PNB then made a final demand for SAFA Law Office to pay its outstanding
rental obligations in the amount of P25,587,838.09.
On August 1, 2001, the Contract of Lease expired. 8 According to PNB, SAFA
Law Office continued to occupy the leased premises until February 2005, but On September 1, 2006, Saludo, in his capacity as managing partner of SAFA
discontinued paying its monthly rental obligations after December Law Office, filed an amended complaint17 for accounting and/or
2002.9 Consequently, PNB sent a demand letter10 dated July 17, 2003 for recomputation of unpaid rentals and damages against PNB in relation to the
SAFA Law Office to pay its outstanding unpaid rents in the amount of Contract of Lease.
P4,648,086.34. PNB sent another letter11 demanding the payment of unpaid
Agency, Trusts, and Partnerships Session 6 Page |9

On October 4, 2006, PNB filed a motion to include an indispensable party as principal party to the contract of lease, the one that occupied the leased
plaintiff,18 praying that Saludo be ordered to amend anew his complaint to premises, and paid the monthly rentals and security deposit. In other words,
include SAFA Law Office as principal plaintiff. PNB argued that the lessee in it was the main actor and direct beneficiary of the contract. Hence, it is the
the Contract of Lease is not Saludo but SAFA Law Office, and that Saludo real party-in-interest.27 The RTC, however, denied the motion for
merely signed the Contract of Lease as the managing partner of the law firm. reconsideration in an Order28 dated March 8, 2007.
Thus, SAFA Law Office must be joined as a plaintiff in the complaint because
it is considered an indispensable party under Section 7, Rule 3 of the Rules Consequently, PNB filed a petition for certiorari29 with the CA. On February 8,
of Court.19 2010, the CA rendered its assailed Decision,30 the dispositive portion of which
reads:
On October 13, 2006, PNB filed its answer.20 By way of compulsory WHEREFORE, the petition is PARTIALLY GRANTED. The assailed
counterclaim, it sought payment from SAFA Law Office in the sum of Omnibus Order dated 11 January 2007 and Order dated 8 March 2007,
P25,587,838.09, representing overdue rentals. 21 PNB argued that as a matter issued by respondent Court in Civil Case No. 06-678, respectively,
of right and equity, it can claim that amount from SAFA Law Office in are AFFIRMED with MODIFICATION in that petitioner's counterclaims
solidum with Saludo.22 should be reinstated in its Answer.

On October 23, 2006, Saludo filed his motion to dismiss SO ORDERED.31


counterclaims,23 mainly arguing that SAFA Law Office is neither a legal entity The CA ruled that an order granting Saludo's motion to dismiss counterclaim,
nor party litigant. As it is only a relationship or association of lawyers in the
being interlocutory in nature, is not appealable until after judgment shall
practice of law and a single proprietorship which may only be sued through
have been rendered on Saludo's complaint. Since the Omnibus Order is
its owner or proprietor, no valid counterclaims may be asserted against it. 24
interlocutory, and there was an allegation of grave abuse of discretion, a
petition for certiorari is the proper remedy.32
On January 11, 2007, the RTC issued an Omnibus Order denying PNB's
motion to include an indispensable party as plaintiff and granting Saludo's
On the merits, the CA held that Saludo is estopped from claiming that SAFA
motion to dismiss counterclaims in this wise: Law Office is his single proprietorship. Under the doctrine of estoppel, an
admission or representation is rendered conclusive upon the person making
The Court DENIES the motion of PNB to include the SAFA Law it, and cannot be denied or disproved as against the person relying thereon.
Offices. Plaintiff has shown by documents attached to his pleadings that Here, SAFA Law Office was the one that entered into the lease contract and
indeed SAFA Law Offices is a mere single proprietorship and not a not Saludo. In fact, the latter signed the contract as the firm's managing
commercial and business partnership. More importantly, plaintiff has partner. The alleged Memorandum of Understanding33 (MOU) executed by
admitted and shown sole responsibility in the affairs entered into by the the partners of SAFA Law Office, .which states, among others, that Saludo
SAFA Law Office. PNB has even admitted that the SAFA Law Office, being a alone would be liable for the firm's losses and liabilities, and the letter of
partnership in the practice of law, is a non-legal entity. Being a non-legal Saludo to PNB confirming that SAFA Law Office is his single proprietorship
entity, it cannot be a proper party, and therefore, it cannot sue or be sued. did not convert the firm to a single proprietorship. Moreover, SAFA Law
Office sent a letter to PNB regarding its unpaid rentals which Saludo signed
Consequently, plaintiff's Motion to Dismiss Counterclaims (claimed by as a managing partner. The firm is also registered as a partnership with the
defendant PNB) should be GRANTED. The counterclaims prayed for to Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).34
the effect that the SAFA Law Offices be made to pay in solidum with plaintiff
the amounts stated in defendant's Answer is disallowed since no On the question of whether SAFA Law Office is an indispensable party, the
counterclaims can be raised against a non-legal entity.25 CA held that it is not. As a partnership, it may sue or be sued in its name or
PNB filed its motion for reconsideration26 dated February 5, 2007, alleging by its duly authorized representative. Saludo, as managing partner, may
that SAFA Law Office should be included as a co-plaintiff because it is the execute all acts of administration, including the right to sue. Furthermore,
the CA found that SAFA Law Office is not a legal entity. A partnership for the
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practice of law is not a legal entity but a mere relationship or association for pleadings and not to compulsory counterclaims. Lastly, it is claimed that
a particular purpose. Thus, SAFA Law Office cannot file an action in court. since the alleged obligations of the SAFA Law Office is solidary with the
Based on these premises, the CA held that the RTC did not gravely abuse its Private Respondent, there is no need to make the former a defendant to the
discretion in denying PNB's motion to include an indispensable party as counterclaim.
plaintiff.35
We disagree with the reasoning of the Private Respondent. That a
Nonetheless, the CA ruled that PNB's counterclaims against SAFA Law Office compulsory counterclaim can only be brought against an opposing party is
should not be dismissed. While SAFA Law Office is not a legal entity, it can belied by considering one of the requisites of a compulsory counterclaim it
still be sued under Section 15,36 Rule 3 of the Rules of Court considering that does not require for its adjudication the presence of third parties of whom
it entered into the Contract of Lease with PNB. 37 the court cannot acquire jurisdiction. This shows that non-parties to a suit
may be brought in as defendants to such a counterclaim. x x x
The CA further ruled that while it is true that SAFA Law Office's liability is
not in solidum with Saludo as PNB asserts, it does not necessarily follow that xxxx
both of them cannot be made parties to PNB's counterclaims. Neither should
the counterclaims be dismissed on the ground that the nature of the alleged In the case at bench, the trial court below can acquire jurisdiction over the
liability is solidary. According to the CA, the presence ofSAFA Law Office is SAFA Law Office considering the amount and the nature of the counterclaim.
required for the granting of complete relief in the determination of PNB's Furthermore, the inclusion of the SAFA Law Office as a defendant to the
counterclaim. The court must, therefore, order it to be brought in as counterclaim will enable the granting of complete relief in view [of] the
defendant since jurisdiction over it can be obtained pursuant to Section liability of a partner to the partnership's creditors under the law.43
12,38 Rule 6 of the Rules of Court.39
Hence, this petition, where Saludo raises the following issues for our
resolution:
Finally, the CA emphasized that PNB's counterclaims are compulsory, as they (1)
arose from the filing of Saludo's complaint. It cannot be made subject of a Whether the CA erred in including SAFA Law Office as defendant to PNB's
separate action but should be asserted in the same suit involving the same counterclaim despite its holding that SAFA Law Office is neither an
transaction. Thus, the Presiding Judge of the RTC gravely abused his indispensable party nor a legal entity;
discretion in dismissing PNB's counterclaims as the latter may forever be (2)
barred from collecting overdue rental fees if its counterclaims were not Whether the CA went beyond the issues in the petition for certiorari and
allowed.40 prematurely dealt with the merits of PNB's counterclaim; and
(3)
Saludo and PNB filed their respective motions for partial reconsideration Whether the CA erred when it gave due course to PNB's petition
dated February 25, 201041 and February 26, 2010.42 In a Resolution dated for certiorari to annul and set aside the RTC's Omnibus Order dated January
August 2, 2010, the CA denied both motions on the ground that no new or
11, 2007.44
substantial matters had been raised therein. Nonetheless, the CA addressed
the issue on the joining of SAFA Law Office as a defendant in PNB's The petition is bereft of merit.
compulsory counterclaim. Pertinent portions of the CA Resolution read:
The Private Respondent claims that a compulsory counterclaim is one We hold that SAFA Law Office is a juridical entity and the real party-in-
directed against an opposing party. The SAFA Law Office is not a party to the interest in the suit filed with the RTC by Saludo against PNB. Hence, it should
case below and to require it to be brought in as a defendant to the be joined as plaintiff in that case.
compulsory counterclaim would entail making it a co-plaintiff. Otherwise, the
compulsory counterclaim would be changed into a third-party complaint. The I.
Private Respondent also argues that Section 15, Rule 3 of the Rules of Court
(on entities without juridical personality) is only applicable to initiatory Contrary to Saludo's submission, SAFA Law Office is a partnership and not a
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 11

single proprietorship. firm in which "the partners shall have equal interest in the conduct of [its]
affairs."51 Moreover, it provided for the cause and manner of dissolution of
Article 1767 of the Civil Code provides that by a contract of partnership, two the partnership.52 These provisions would not have been necessary if what
or more persons bind themselves to contribute money, property, or industry had been established was a sole proprietorship. Indeed, it may only be
to a common fund, with the intention of dividing the profits among concluded from the circumstances that, for all intents and purposes, SAFA
themselves. Two or more persons may also form a partnership for the Law Office is a partnership created and organized in accordance with the
exercise of a profession. Under Article 1771, a partnership may be Civil Code provisions on partnership.
constituted in any form, except where immovable property or real rights are
contributed thereto, in which case a public instrument shall be necessary. Saludo asserts that SAFA Law Office is a sole proprietorship on the basis of
Article 1784, on the other hand, provides that a partnership begins from the the MOU executed by the partners of the firm. The MOU states in full:53
moment of the execution of the contract, unless it is otherwise stipulated. MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING

Here, absent evidence of an earlier agreement, SAFA Law Office was WHEREAS, the undersigned executed and filed with the SEC the Articles of
constituted as a partnership at the time its partners signed the Articles of Incorporation of SALUDO, AGPALO, FERNANDEZ and AQUINO on March 13,
Partnership45 wherein they bound themselves to establish a partnership for 1997;
the practice of law, contribute capital and industry for the purpose, and
receive compensation and benefits in the course of its operation. The WHEREAS, among the provisions of said Articles of Incorporation are the
opening paragraph of the Articles of Partnership reveals the unequivocal following:
intention of its signatories to form a partnership, to wit:
WE, the undersigned ANICETO G. SALUDO, JR., RUBEN E. AGPALO, 1. That partners R. E. Agpalo, F. L. Fernandez and A. D. Aquino shall be
FILEMON L. FERNANDEZ, AND AMADO D. AQUINO, all of legal age, Filipino industrial partners, and they shall not contribute capital to the partnership
citizens and members of the Philippine Bar, have this day voluntarily and shall not in any way be liable for any loss or liability that may be
associated ourselves for the purpose of forming a partnership engaged in the incurred by the law firm in the course of its operation.
practice of law, effective this date, under the terms and conditions hereafter
set forth, and subject to the provisions of existing laws[.]46 2. That the partnership shall be dissolved by agreement of the partners or
The subsequent registration of the Articles of Partnership with the SEC, on
for any cause as and in accordance with the manner provided by law, in
the other hand, was made in compliance with Article 1772 of the Civil Code, which event the Articles of Dissolution of said partnership shall be filed with
since the initial capital of the partnership was P500,000.00. 47 Said provision
the Securities and Exchange Commission. All remaining assets upon
states: dissolution shall accrue exclusively to A. G. Saludo, Jr. and all liabilities shall
Art. 1772. Every contract of partnership having a capital ofThree thousand
be solely for his account.
pesos or more, in money or property, shall appear in a public instrument,
which must be recorded in the Office of the Securities and Exchange
WHEREAS, the SEC has not approved the registration of the Articles of
Commission.
Incorporation and its Examiner required that the phrase "shall not in any way
be liable for any loss or liability that may be incurred by the law firm in the
xxxx course of its operation" in Article VII be deleted;

The other provisions of the Articles of Partnership also positively identify WHEREAS, the SEC Examiner likewise required that the sentence "All
SAFA Law Office as a partnership. It constantly used the words "partners" remaining assets upon dissolution shall accrue exclusively to A. G. Saludo, Jr.
and "partnership." It designated petitioner Saludo as managing and all liabilities shall be solely for his account" in Article X be likewise
partner,48 and Attys. Ruben E. Agpalo, Filemon L. Fernandez, and Amado D. deleted;
Aquino as industrial partners.49 It also provided for the term of the
partnership,50 distribution of net profits and losses, and management of the WHEREAS, in order to meet the objections of said Examiner, the
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objectionable provisions have been deleted and new Articles of Incorporation organization of SAFA Law Office but only excused the industrial partners
deleting said objectionable provisions have been executed by the parties and from liability.
filed with the SEC.
The law, in its wisdom, recognized the possibility that partners in a
NOW, THEREFORE, for and in consideration of the premises and the mutual partnership may decide to place a limit on their individual accountability.
covenant of the parties, the parties hereby agree as follows: Consequently, to protect third persons dealing with the partnership, the law
provides a rule, embodied in Article 1816 of the Civil Code, which states:
1. Notwithstanding the deletion of the portions objected to by the said Art. 1816. All partners, including industrial ones, shall be liable pro rata with
Examiner, by reason of which entirely new Articles of Incorporation have all their property and after all the partnership assets have been exhausted,
been executed by the parties removing the objected portions, the actual and for the contract which may be entered into in the name and for the account
real intent of the parties is still as originally envisioned, namely: of the partnership, under its signature and by a person authorized to act for
the partnership. However, any partner may enter into a separate obligation
a) That partners R. E. Agpalo, F. L. Fernandez and A. D. Aquino shall not in to perform a partnership contract.
any way be liable for any loss or liability that may be incurred by the law firm The foregoing provision does not prevent partners from agreeing to limit
in the course of its operation; their liability, but such agreement may only be valid as among them. Thus,
Article 1817 of the Civil Code provides:
b) That all remaining assets upon dissolution shall accrue exclusively to A. G. Art. 1817. Any stipulation against the liability laid down in the preceding
Saludo, Jr. and all liabilities shall be solely for his account. article shall be void, except as among the partners.
2. That the parties hereof hereby bind and obligate themselves to adhere The MOU is an agreement forged under the foregoing provision.
and observe the real intent of the parties as above-stated, any provisions in Consequently, the sole liability being undertaken by Saludo serves to bind
the Articles of Incorporation as filed to meet the objections of the SEC only the parties to the MOU, but never third persons like PNB.
Examiner to the contrary notwithstanding.
Considering that the MOU is sanctioned by the law on partnership, it cannot
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have set our hands this _____ day of May, 1997 change the nature of a duly-constituted partnership. Hence, we cannot
at Makati City, Philippines. sustain Saludo's position that SAFA Law Office is a sole proprietorship.

[Sgd.] II.
A.G. SALUDO, JR.
[Sgd.] Having settled that SAFA Law Office is a partnership, we hold that it acquired
[Sgd.] juridical personality by operation of law. The perfection and validity of a
[Sgd.] contract of partnership brings about the creation of a juridical person
RUBEN E. AGPALO separate and distinct from the individuals comprising the partnership. Thus,
FILEMON L. FERNANDEZ Article 1768 of the Civil Code provides:
AMADO D. AQUINO Art. 1768. The partnership has a juridical personality separate and distinct
from that of each of the partners, even in case of failure to comply with the
The foregoing evinces the parties' intention to entirely shift any liability that
requirements of Article 1772, first paragraph.
may be incurred by SAFA Law Office in the course of its operation to Saludo,
who shall also receive all the remaining assets of the firm upon its Article 44 of the Civil Code likewise provides that partnerships are juridical
dissolution. This MOU, however, does not serve to convert SAFA Law Office persons, to wit:
into a sole proprietorship. As discussed, SAFA Law Office was manifestly Art. 44. The following are juridical persons:
established as a partnership based on the Articles of Partnership. The MOU,
from its tenor, reinforces this fact. It did not change the nature of the (1)
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The State and its political subdivisions; practice of law is not a legal entity. It is a mere relationship or association for
(2) a particular purpose. x x x It is not a partnership formed for the purpose of
Other corporations, institutions and entities for public interest or purpose, carrying on trade or business or of holding property."60 These are direct
created by law; their personality begins as soon as they have been quotes from the US case of In re Crawford's Estate.61 We hold, however, that
constituted according to law; our reference to this US case is an obiter dictum which cannot serve as a
(3) binding precedent.62
Corporations, partnerships and associations for private interest or purpose
to which the law grants a juridical personality, separate and distinct from An obiter dictum is an opinion of the court upon a question which was not
that of each shareholder, partner or member.54 necessary to the decision of the case before it. It is an opinion uttered by the
It is this juridical personality that allows a partnership to enter into business way, not upon the point or question pending, as if turning aside from the
main topic of the case to collateral subjects, or an opinion that does not
transactions to fulfill its purposes. Article 46 of the Civil Code provides that
"[j]uridical persons may acquire and possess property of all kinds, as well as embody the court's determination and is made without argument or full
consideration of the point. It is not a professed deliberate determination of
incur obligations and bring civil or criminal actions, in conformity with the
the judge himself.63
laws and regulations of their organization."
The main issue raised for the court's determination in the Sycip case is
SAFA Law Office entered into a contract of lease with PNB as a juridical
person to pursue the objectives of the partnership. The terms of the contract whether the two petitioner law firms may continue using the names of their
deceased partners in their respective firm names. The court decided the
and the manner in which the parties implemented it are a glaring recognition
issue in the negative on the basis of "legal and ethical impediments." 64 To be
of SAFA Law Office's juridical personality. Thus, the contract stated that it is
sure, the pronouncement that a partnership for the practice of law is not a
being executed by PNB as the lessor and "SALUDO AGPALO FERNANDEZ &
legal entity does not bear on either the legal or ethical obstacle for the
AQUINO, a partnership organized and existing under the laws of the Republic
of the Philippines," as the lessee.55 It also provided that the lessee, i.e., SAFA continued use of a deceased partner's name, inasmuch as it merely describes
the nature of a law firm. The pronouncement is not determinative of the
Law Office, shall be liable in case of default. 56
main issue. As a matter of fact, if deleted from the judgment, the rationale of
the decision is neither affected nor altered.
Furthermore, subsequent communications between the parties have always
been made for or on behalf ofPNB and SAFA Law Office, respectively.57
Moreover, reference of the Sycip case to the In re Crawford's Estate case
was made without a full consideration of the nature of a law firm as a
In view of the above, we see nothing to support the position of the RTC and
the CA, as well as Saludo, that SAFA Law Office is not a partnership and a partnership possessed with legal personality under our Civil Code. First, we
note that while the Court mentioned that a partnership for the practice of
legal entity. Saludo's claims that SAFA Law Office is his sole proprietorship
law is not a legal entity, it also identified petitioner law firms as partnerships
and not a legal entity fail in light of the clear provisions of the law on
over whom Civil Code provisions on partnership apply.65 The Court thus
partnership. To reiterate, SAFA Law Office was created as a partnership, and
cannot hold that a partnership for the practice of law is not a legal entity
as such, acquired juridical personality by operation of law. Hence, its rights
and obligations, as well as those of its partners, are determined by law and without running into conflict with Articles 44 and 1768 of the Civil Code
which provide that a partnership has a juridical personality separate and
not by what the partners purport them to be.
distinct from that of each of the partners.
III.
Second, our law on partnership does not exclude partnerships for the
In holding that SAFA Law Office, a partnership for the practice of law, is not practice of law from its coverage. Article 1767 of the Civil Code provides that
a legal entity, the CA cited58 the case of Petition for Authority to Continue "[t]wo or more persons may also form a partnership for the exercise of a
Use of the Firm Name "Sycip, Salazar, Feliciano, Hernandez & profession." Article 1783, on the other hand, states that "[a] particular
Castillo"59 (Sycip case) wherein the Court held that "[a] partnership for the partnership has for its object determinate things, their use or fruits, or a
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 14

specific undertaking, or the exercise of a profession or vocation." Since the also the real party-in-interest in the case filed by Saludo against PNB.
law uses the word "profession" in the general sense, and does not
distinguish which professional partnerships are covered by its provisions and Section 2, Rule 3 of the Rules of Court defines a real party-in-interest as the
which are not, then no valid distinction may be made. one "who stands to be benefited or injured by the judgment in the suit, or
the party entitled to the avails of the suit." In Lee v. Romillo, Jr.,73 we held
Finally, we stress that unlike Philippine law, American law does not treat of that the "real [party-in-interest]-plaintiffis one who has a legal right[,]
partnerships as forming a separate juridical personality for all purposes. In while a real [party-in-interest]-defendant is one who has a correlative legal
the case of Bellis v. United States,66 the US Supreme Court stated that law obligation whose act or omission violates the legal rights of the former."74
firms, as a form of partnership, are generally regarded as distinct entities for
specific purposes, such as employment, capacity to be sued, capacity to hold SAFA Law Office is the party that would be benefited or injured by the
title to property, and more.67 State and federal laws, however, do not treat judgment in the suit before the RTC. Particularly, it is the party interested in
partnerships as distinct entities for all purposes. 68 the accounting and/or recomputation of unpaid rentals and damages in
relation to the contract of lease. It is also the party that would be liable for
Our jurisprudence has long recognized that American common law does not payment to PNB of overdue rentals, if that claim would be proven. This is
treat of partnerships as a separate juridical entity unlike Philippine law. because it is the one that entered into the contract of lease with PNB. As an
Hence, in the case of Campos Rueda & Co. v. Pacific Commercial entity possessed of a juridical personality, it has concomitant rights and
Co.,69 which was decided under the old Civil Code, we held: obligations with respect to the transactions it enters into. Equally important,
Unlike the common law, the Philippine statutes consider a limited partnership the general rule under Article 1816 of the Civil Code is that partnership
as a juridical entity for all intents and purposes, which personality is assets are primarily liable for the contracts entered into in the name of the
recognized in all its acts and contracts (art. 116, Code of Commerce). This partnership and by a person authorized to act on its behalf. All partners,
being so and the juridical personality of a limited partnership being different including industrial ones, are only liable pro rata with all their property after
from that of its members, it must, on general principle, answer for, and all the partnership assets have been exhausted.
suffer, the consequence of its acts as such an entity capable of being the
subject of rights and obligations.70 x x x In Guy v. Gacott,75 we held that under Article 1816 of the Civil Code, the
partners' obligation with respect to the partnership liabilities is subsidiary in
On the other hand, in the case of Commissioner of Internal Revenue v.
nature. It is merely secondary and only arises if the one primarily liable fails
Suter.71 which was decided under the new Civil Code, we held:
It being a basic tenet of the Spanish and Philippine law that the partnership to sufficiently satisfy the obligation. Resort to the properties of a partner may
be made only after efforts in exhausting partnership assets have failed or if
has a juridical personality of its own, distinct and separate from that of its
partners (unlike American and English law that does not recognize such such partnership assets are insufficient to cover the entire
obligation.76 Consequently, considering that SAFA Law Office is primarily
separate juridical personality), the bypassing of the existence of the limited
liable under the contract of lease, it is the real party-in-interest that should
partnership as a taxpayer can only be done by ignoring or disregarding clear
be joined as plaintiff in the RTC case.
statutory mandates and basic principles of our law.72 x x x
Indeed, under the old and new Civil Codes, Philippine law has consistently Section 2, Rule 3 of the Rules of Court requires that every action must be
treated partnerships as having a juridical personality separate from its prosecuted or defended in the name of the real party-in-interest. As the one
partners. In view of the clear provisions of the law on partnership, as primarily affected by the outcome of the suit, SAFA Law Office should have
enriched by jurisprudence, we hold that our reference to In re Crawford's filed the complaint with the RTC and should be made to respond to any
Estate in the Sycip case is an obiter dictum. counterclaims that may be brought in the course of the proceeding.

IV. In Aguila, Jr. v. Court of Appeals,77 a case for declaration of nullity of a deed
of sale was filed against a partner of A.C. Aguila & Sons, Co. We dismissed
Having settled that SAFA Law Office is a juridical person, we hold that it is the complaint and held that it was the partnership, not its partners, which
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 15

should be impleaded for a cause of action against the partnership itself.


Moreover, the partners could not be held liable for the obligations of the In view of the above discussion, we find it unnecessary to discuss the other
partnership unless it was shown that the legal fiction of a different juridical issues raised in the petition. It is unfortunate that the case has dragged on
personality was being used for fraudulent, unfair, or illegal purposes. We for more than 10 years even if it involves an issue that may be resolved by a
held: simple application of Civil Code provisions on partnership. It is time for trial
Rule 3, §2 of the Rules of Court of 1964, under which the complaint in this to proceed so that the parties' substantial rights may be adjudicated without
case was filed, provided that "every action must be prosecuted and defended further unnecessary delay.
in the name of the real party in interest." A real party in interest is one who
would be benefited or injured by the judgment, or who is entitled to the WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. Petitioner is hereby ordered to
avails of the suit. This ruling is now embodied in Rule 3, §2 of the 1997 amend his complaint to include SAFA Law Office as plaintiff in Civil Case No.
Revised Rules of Civil Procedure. Any decision rendered against a person 06-678 pending before Branch 58 of the Regional Trial Court of Makati City,
who is not a real party in interest in the case cannot be executed. Hence, a it being the real party-in-interest.
complaint filed against such a person should be dismissed for failure to state
a cause of action. SO ORDERED.

Under Art. 1768 of the Civil Code, a partnership "has a juridical personality Peralta,*(Acting Chairperson), Del Castillo, Tijam, and Gesmundo,**JJ.,
separate and distinct from that of each of the partners." The partners cannot concur.
be held liable for the obligations of the partnership unless it is shown that
the legal fiction of a different juridical personality is being used for
fraudulent, unfair, or illegal purposes. In this case, private respondent has
not shown that A.C. Aguila & Sons, Co., as a separate juridical entity, is
being used for fraudulent, unfair, or illegal purposes. Moreover, the title to
the subject property is in the name of A.C. Aguila & Sons, Co. and the
Memorandum of Agreement was executed between private respondent, with
the consent of her late husband, and A.C. Aguila & Sons, Co., represented by
petitioner. Hence, it is the partnership, not its officers or agents, which
should be impleaded in any litigation involving property registered in its
name. A violation of this rule will result in the dismissal of the complaint.78
In this case, there is likewise no showing that SAFA Law Office, as a separate
juridical entity, is being used for fraudulent, unfair, or illegal purposes.
Hence, its partners cannot be held primarily liable for the obligations of the
partnership. As it was SAFA Law Office that entered into a contract of lease
with respondent PNB, it should also be impleaded in any litigation concerning
that contract.

Accordingly, the complaint filed by Saludo should be amended to include


SAFA Law Office as plaintiff. Section 11,79 Rule 3 of the Rules of Court gives
power to the court to add a party to the case on its own initiative at any
stage of the action and on such tenns as are just. We have also held in
several cases80 that the court has full powers, apart from that power and
authority which are inherent, to amend processes, pleadings, proceedings,
and decisions by substituting as party-plaintiff the real party-in-interest.
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 16

No. L-39780. November 11, 1985.* under the law to third persons for contracts executed in connection with
partnership business is only pro rata under Art. 1816, of the Civil Code.
ELMO MUÑASQUE, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS, CELESTINO
GALAN, TROPICAL COMMERCIAL COMPANY and RAMON PONS, Same; Same; Same; While the liability of partners are merely joint in
respondents. transactions entered into by the partnership, the partners are liable to third
persons solidarily for the whole obligation if the case involves loss or injury
Civil Law; Partnership; Fact that there was a misunderstanding between the
caused to any person not a partner in the partnership, and misapplication of
partners does not convert the partnership into a sham organization.—There
money or property of a third person received by a partner or the
is nothing in the records to indicate that the partnership organized by the
partnership.—While it is true that under Article 1816 of the Civil Code, "AII
two men was not a genuine one. If there was a falling out or
partners, including industrial ones, shall be liable pro rata with all their
misunderstanding between the partners, such does not convert the
property and after all the partnership assets have been exhausted, for the
partnership into a sham organization. contracts which may be entered into the name and for the account of the
Same; Same; Payments made to the partnership, valid where the recipient partnership, under its signature and by a person authorized to act for the
made it appear that he and another were true partners in the partnership.— partnership. x x x", this provision should be construed together with Article
Likewise, when Muñasque received the first payment of Tropical in the 1824 which provides that: "All partners are liable solidarily with the
amount of P7,000.00 with a check made out in his name, he indorsed the partnership for everything chargeable to the partnership under Articles 1822
check in favor of Galan. Respondent Tropical therefore, had every right to and 1823." In short, while the liability of the partners are merely joint in
presume that the petitioner and Galan were true partners. If they were not transactions entered into by the partnership, a third person who transacted
partners as petitioner claims, then he has only himself to blame for making with said partnership can hold the partners solidarily liable for the whole
the relationship appear otherwise, not only to Tropical but to their other obligation if the case of the third person falls under Articles 1822 or 1823.
creditors as well. The payments made to the partnership were, therefore,
Same; Same; Same: Same; Solidary obligation of partners to third persons;
valid payments.
Rationale.—The obligation is solidary because the law protects him, who in
Same; Same; Liability of partners to third persons who extended credit to the good faith relied upon the authority of a partner, whether such authority is
partnership.—No error was committed by the appellate court in holding that real or apparent. That is why under Article 1824 of the Civil Code all
the payment made by Tropical to Galan was a good payment which binds partners, whether innocent or guilty, as well as the legal entity which is the
both Galan and the petitioner. Since the two were partners when the debts partnership, are solidarily liable.
were incurred, they are also both liable to third persons who extended credit
Same; Same; Same; Same; Solidary liability of all partners and the
to their partnership.
partnership as a whole for the consequences of any wrongful act committed
Same; Same, Remedial Law; Civil Procedure; Pre-trial; Delimitation of issues by any of the partners.—ln the case at bar the respondent Tropical had every
during the pre-trial agreed upon by one party binds said party to the reason to believe that a partnership existed between the petitioner and
delimitation.—The petitioner, therefore, should be bound by the delimitation Galan and no fault or error can be imputed against it for making payments to
of the issues during the pre-trial because he himself agreed to the same. "Galan and Associates" and delivering the same to Galan because as far as it
was concerned, Galan was a true partner with real authority to transact on
Same; Same; Liability of partners to third persons for contracts executed in behalf of the partnership with which it was dealing. This is even more true in
connection with the partnership business is pro-rata.—We, however, take the cases of Cebu Southern Hardware and Blue Diamond Glass Palace who
exception to the ruling of the appellate court that the trial court's ordering supplied materials on credit to the partnership. Thus, it is but fair that the
petitioner and Galan to pay the credits of Blue Diamond and Cebu Southern consequences of any wrongful act committed by any of the partners therein
Hardware "jointly and severally" is plain error since the liability of partners
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 17

should be answered solidarily by all the partners and the partnership as a persuading the latter that the same be deposited in a joint account; that on
whole. January 26, 1967, when the second check for P6,000.00 was due, petitioner
refused to indorse said check presented to him by Galan but through later
PETITION for certiorari to review the decision of the Court of Appeals.
manipulations, respondent Pons succeeded in changing the payee's name
The f acts are stated in the opinion of the Court. from Elmo Muñasque to Galan and Associates, thus enabling Galan to cash
the same at the Cebu Branch of the Philippine Commercial and Industrial
John T. Borromeo for petitioner. Bank (PCIB) placing the petitioner in great financial difficulty in his
construction business and subjecting him to demands of creditors to pay for
Juan D, Astete for respondent C. Galan.
construction materials, the payment of which should have been made from
Paul Gornes for respondent R. Pons. the P13,000.00 received by Galan; that petitioner undertook the construction
at his own expense completing it prior to the March 16, 1967 deadline; that
Viu Montecillo for respondent Tropical. because of the unauthorized disbursement by respondents Tropical and Pons
Paterno P. Natinga for Intervenor Blue Diamond Glass Palace. of the sum of P13,000.00 to Galan, petitioner demanded that said amount be
paid to him by respondents under the terms of the written contract between
GUTIERREZ, JR., J.: the petitioner and respondent company.

In this petition for certiorari, the petitioner seeks to annul and set aside the The respondents answered the complaint by denying some and admitting
decision of the Court of Appeals aff irming the existence of a partnership some of the material averments and setting up counterclaims.
between petitioner and one of the respondents, Celestino Galan and holding
both of them liable to the two intervenors which extended credit to their During the pre-trial conference, the petitioners and respondents agreed that
partnership. The petitioner wants to be excluded from the liabilities of the the issues to be resolved are:
partnership. (1)Whether or not there existed a partnership between Celestino Galan and
Elmo Muñasque; and

Petitioner Elmo Muñasque filed a complaint for payment of sum of money (2)Whether or not there existed a justifiable cause on the part of respondent
and damages against respondents Celestino Galan, Tropical Commercial, Co., Tropical to disburse money to respondent Galan.
Inc. (Tropical) and Ramon Pons, alleging that the petitioner entered into a The business firms Cebu Southern Hardware Company and Blue Diamond
contract with respondent Tropical through its Cebu Branch Manager Pons for Glass Palace were allowed to intervene, both having legal interest in the
remodelling a portion of its building without exchanging or expecting any matter in litigation.
consideration from Galan although the latter was casually named as partner
in the contract; that by virtue of his having introduced the petitioner to the After trial, the court rendered judgment, the dispositive portion of which
employing company (Tropical), Galan would receive some kind of states:
compensation in the form of some percentages or commission; that Tropical,
"IN VIEW WHEREOF, Judgment is hereby rendered:
under the terms of the contract, agreed to give petitioner the amount of
P7,000.00 soon after the construction began and thereafter the amount of "(1)ordering plaintiff Muñasque and defendant Galan to pay jointly and
P6,000.00 every fifteen (15) days during the construction to make a total severally the intervenors Cebu and Southern Hardware Company and Blue
sum of P25,000.00; that on January 9, 1967, Tropical and/or Pons delivered Diamond Glass Palace the amount of P6,229.34 and P2,213.51, respectively;
a check for P7,000.00 not to the plaintiff but to a stranger to the contract,
Galan, who succeeded in getting petitioner's indorsement on the same check
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 18

"(2)absolving the defendants Tropical Commercial Company and Ramon contract and the balance thereof divided into three equal installments at the
Pons from any liability. rate of Six Thousand Pesos (P6,000.00) every fifteen (15) working days.

"No damages awarded whatsoever." The first payment made by respondent Tropical was in the form of a check
for P7,000.00 in the name of the petitioner. Petitioner, however, indorsed
The petitioner and intervenor Cebu Southern Company and its proprietor,
the check in favor of respondent Galan to enable the latter to deposit it in
Tan Siu filed motions for reconsideration.
the bank and pay for the materials and labor used in the project.
On January 15, 1971, the trial court issued another order amending its
Petitioner alleged that Galan spent P6,183.37 out of the P7,000.00 for his
judgment to make it read as follows: personal use so that when the second check in the amount of P6,000.00
"IN VIEW WHEREOF, Judgment is hereby rendered: came and Galan asked the petitioner to indorse it again, the petitioner
refused.
"(1)ordering plaintiff Muñasque and defendant Galan to pay jointly and
severally the intervenors Cebu Southern Hardware Company and Blue The check was withheld from the petitioner. Since Galan informed the Cebu
Diamond Glass Palace the amount of P6,229.34 and P2,213.51, respectively, branch of Tropical that there was a "misunderstanding" between him and
petitioner, respondent Tropical changed the name of the payee in the second
"(2)ordering plaintiff and defendant Galan to pay Intervenor Cebu Southern check from Muñasque to "Galan and Associates'' which was the duly
Hardware Company and Tan Siu jointly and severally interest at 12% per registered name of the partnership between Galan and petitioner and under
annum of the sum of P6,229.34 until the amount is fully paid; which name a permit to do construction business was issued by the mayor of
Cebu City, This enabled Galan to encash the second check.
"(3)ordering plaintiff and defendant Galan to pay P500.00 representing
attorney's fees jointly and severally to Intervenor Cebu Southern Hardware Meanwhile, as alleged by the petitioner, the construction continued through
Company; his sole efforts. He stated that he borrowed some P12,000.00 from his
friend, Mr. Espina and although the expenses had reached the amount of
"(4)absolving the defendants Tropical Commercial Company and Ramon
P29,000.00 because of the failure of Galan to pay what was partly due the
Pons from any liability.
laborers and partly due for the materials, the construction work was finished
"No damages awarded whatsoever." ahead of schedule with the total expenditure reaching P34,000.00.

On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court with The two remaining checks, each in the amount of P6,000.00, were
the sole modification that the liability imposed in the dispositive part of the subsequently given to the petitioner alone with the last check being given
decision on the credit of Cebu Southern Hardware and Blue Diamond Glass pursuant to a court order.
Palace was changed from "jointly and severally" to "jointly."
As stated earlier, the petitioner filed a complaint for payment of sum of
Not satisfied, Mr. Muñasque filed this petition. money and damages against the respondents, seeking to recover the
following: the amounts covered by the first and second checks which fell into
The present controversy began when petitioner Muñasque in behalf of the the hands of respondent Galan, the additional expenses that the petitioner
partnership of "Galan and Muñasque" as Contractor entered into a written incurred in the construction, moral and exemplary damages, and attorney's
contract with respondent Tropical for remodelling the respondent's Cebu fees.
branch building. A total amount of P25,000.00 was to be paid under the
contract for the entire services of the Contractor. The terms of payment were Both the trial and appellate courts not only absolved respondents Tropical
as follows: thirty percent (30%) of the whole amount upon the signing of the and its Cebu Manager, Pons, from any liability but they also held the
petitioner together with respondent Galan, liable to the intervenors Cebu
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 19

Southern Hardware Company and Blue Diamond Glass Palace for the credit partners as petitioner claims, then he has only himself to blame for making
which the intervenors extended to the partnership of petitioner and Galan, the relationship appear otherwise, not only to Tropical but to their other
creditors as well. The payments made to the partnership were, therefore,
In this petition, the legal questions raised by the petitioner are as follows:
valid payments.
(1) Whether or not the appellate court erred in holding that a partnership
existed between petitioner and respondent Galan. (2) Assuming that there In the case of Singsong v. Isabela Sawmill (88 SCRA 643), we ruled:
was such a partnership, whether or not the court erred in not finding Galan
" Although it may be presumed that Margarita G. Saldajeno had acted in
guilty of malversing the P13,000.00 covered by the first and second checks
good faith, the appellees also acted in good faith in extending credit to the
and therefore, accountable to the petitioner for the said amount; and (3)
partnership. Where one of two innocent persons must suffer. that person
Whether or not the court committed grave abuse of discretion in holding that
who gave occasion for the damages to be caused must bear the
the payment made by Tropical through its manager Pons to Galan was'
"good payment." consequences,''

No error was committed by the appellate court in holding that the payment
Petitioner contends that the appellate court erred in holding that he and
made by Tropical to Galan was a good payment which binds both Galan and
respondent Galan were partners, the truth being that Galan was a sham and
the petitioner. Since the two were partners when the debts were incurred,
a perfidious partner who misappropriated the amount of P1 3,000.00 due to
they are also both liable to third persons who extended credit to their
the petitioner. Petitioner also contends that the appellate court committed
partnership. In the case of George Litton v. Hill and Ceron, et al., (67 Phil.
grave abuse of discretion in holding that the payment made by Tropical to
Galan was "good" payment when the same gave occasion for the latter to 513, 514), we ruled:
misappropriate the proceeds of such payment. "There is a general presumption that each individual partner is an authorized
agent for the firm and that he has authority to bind the firm in carrying on
The contentions are without merit.
the partnership transactions." (Mills vs. Riggle, 112 Pac., 617).
The records will show that the petitioner entered into a contract with
"The presumption is sufficient to permit third persons to hold the firm liable
Tropical for the renovation of the latter's building on behalf of the
partnership of "Galan and Muñasque." This is readily seen in the first on transactions entered into by one of members of the firm acting apparently
in its behalf and within the scope of his authority." (Le Roy vs. Johnson, 7
paragraph of the contract where it states:
U.S. (Law. ed.), 391.)
'This agreement made this 20th day of December in the year 1966 by Galan
Petitioner also maintains that the appellate court committed grave abuse of
and Muñasque hereinafter called the Contractor, and Tropical Commercial
discretion in not holding Galan liable f or the amounts which he "malversed''
Co., Inc., hereinafter called the owner do hereby for and in consideration
to the prejudice of the petitioner. He adds that although this was not one of
agree on the following: x x x."
the issues agreed upon by the parties during the pre-trial, he, nevertheless,
There is nothing in the records to indicate that the partnership organized by alleged the same in his amended complaint which was duly admitted by the
the two men was not a genuine one. If there was a falling out or court.
misunderstanding between the partners, such does not convert the
When the petitioner amended his complaint, it was only for the purpose of
partnership into a sham organization.
impleading Ramon Pons in his personal capacity. Although the petitioner
Likewise, when Muñasque received the first payment of Tropical in the made allegations as to the alleged malversations of Galan. these were the
amount of P7,000.00 with a check made out in his name, he indorsed the same allegations in his original complaint. The malversation by one partner
check in favor of Galan. Respondent Tropical therefore, had every right to was not an issue actually raised in the amended complaint but the alleged
presume that the petitioner and Galan were true partners. If they were not
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 20

connivance of Pons with Galan as a means to serve the latter's personal that: "All partners are liable solidarily with the partnership for everything
purposes. chargeable to the partnership under Articles 1822 and 1823." In short, while
the liability of the partners are merely joint in transactions entered into by
The petitioner, therefore, should be bound by the delimitation of the issues
the partnership, a third person who transacted with said partnership can hold
during the pre-trial because he himself agreed to the same. In Permanent the partners solidarily liable for the whole obligation if the case of the third
Concrete Products, Inc. v. Teodoro, (26 SCRA 336), we ruled:
person falls under Articles 1822 or 1823.
xxx xxx xxx
Articles 1822 and 1823 of the Civil Code provide:
"x x x The appellant is bound by the delimitation of the issues contained in "Art. 1822. Where, by any wrongful act or omission of any partner acting in
the trial court's order issued on the very day the pre-trial conference was
the ordinary course of the business of the partnership or with the authority
held. Such an order controls the subsequent course of the action, unless
of his co-partners, loss or injury is caused to any person, not being a partner
modified before trial to prevent manifest injustice. In the case at bar,
in the partnership or any penalty is incurred, the partnership is liable therefor
modification of the pre-trial order was never sought at the instance of any
to the same extent as the partner so acting or omitting to act."
party.''
'' Art. 1823. The partnership is bound to make good the loss:
Petitioner could have asked at least for a modification of the issues if he
really wanted to include the determination of Galan's personal liability to "(1)Where one partner acting within the scope of his apparent authority
their partnership but he chose not to do so, as he vehemently denied the receives money or property of a third person and misapplies it; and
existence of the partnership. At any rate, the issue raised in this petition is
"(2)Where the partnership in the course of its business receives money or
the contention of Muñasque that the amounts payable to the intervenors
property of a third person and the money or property so received is
should be shouldered exclusively by Galan. We note that the petitioner is not
misapplied by any partner while it is in the custody of the partnership."
solely burdened by the obligations of their illstarred partnership. The records
show that there is an existing judgment against respondent Galan, holding The obligation is solidary because the law protects him, who in good faith
him liable for the total amount of P7,000.00 in favor of Eden Hardware which relied upon the authority of a partner, whether such authority is real or
extended credit to the partnership aside from the P2,000.00 he already paid apparent. That is why under Article 1824 of the Civil Code all partners,
to Universal Lumber. whether innocent or guilty, as well as the legal entity which is the
partnership, are solidarily liable.
We, however, take exception to the ruling of the appellate court that the trial
court's ordering petitioner and Galan to pay the credits of Blue Diamond and In the case at bar the respondent Tropical had every reason to believe that a
Cebu Southern Hardware "jointly and severally" is plain error since the partnership existed between the petitioner and Galan and no fault or error
liability of partners under the law to third persons for contracts executed in can be imputed against it for making payments to "Galan and Associates"
connection with partnership business is only pro rata under Art. 1816, of the and delivering the same to Galan because as far as it was concerned, Galan
Civil Code. was a true partner with real authority to transact on behalf of the
partnership with which it was dealing. This is even more true in the cases of
While it is true that under Article 1816 of the Civil Code, "All partners,
Cebu Southern Hardware and Blue Diamond Glass Palace who supplied
including industrial ones, shall be liable pro rata with all their property and
materials on credit to the partnership, Thus, it is but fair that the
after all the partnership assets have been exhausted, for the contracts which
consequences of any wrongful act committed by any of the partners therein
may be entered into the name and for the account of the partnership, under
its signature and by a person authorized to act for the partnership. x x x", should be answered solidarily by all the partners and the partnership as a
whole.
this provision should be construed together with Article 1824 which provides
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 21

However, as between the partners Muñasque and Galan, justice also dictates partnerships or with private individuals. However, the majority view is that a
that Muñasque be reimbursed by Galan for the payments made by the corporation cannot become a partner on grounds of public policy, since
former representing the liability of their partnership to herein intervenors, as otherwise parties other that its officers may be able to bind it. (Idem, p. 5.)
it was satisfactorily established that Galan acted in bad faith in his dealings
with Muñasque as a partner. ———o0o——— Muñasque vs. Court of Appeals, 139 SCRA 533, No. L-39780
November 11, 1985
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is hereby AFFIRMED with the
MODIFICATION that the liability of petitioner and respondent Galan to
intervenors Blue Diamond Glass and Cebu Southern Hardware is declared to
be joint and solidary. Petitioner may recover from respondent Galan any
amount that he pays, in his capacity as a partner, to the above intervenors.

SO ORDERED.

Teehankee (Chairman), Melencio-Herrera, De la Fuente and Patajo, JJ.,


concur.

Plana, J., no part.

Relova, J., on leave.

Decision affirmed with modification.

Notes.—In order that a contract of partnership may exist, the parties must
bind themselves to contribute money, property, or industry to a common
fund. Without such a common fund or a reciprocal undertaking by the parties
to constitute the same, there can be no partnership. Thus, Manresa cited a
case where the parties had contributed nothing of a realizable value but a
mere obligation, that of responding up to a certain amount for the losses
which the supposed partnership might incur, none of the parties having
contributed to a common fund any money, or any other kind of property, or
any existing industry or service. When the juridical existence of the supposed
partnership was questioned, the French Court decided that there was no
partnership for lack of common fund. (Caguioa, Comments and Cases on
Civil Law, Vol VI, p. 3, First Edition.)

In order to become a partner, a party must have capacity to enter into


contract. An emancipated minor, therefore, may become a partner but the
consent of his parents or guardian is necessary in order to contribute real or
immovable property. A married woman may become a partner without the
consent of her husband. Both natural and juridical persons can become
partners; hence, a partnership can enter into a partnership with other
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 22

[No. L-7991. May 21, 1956] PARÁS, C. J.:

PAUL MACDONALD, ET AL., petitioners, vs. THE NATIONAL CITY This is an appeal by certiorari from the decision of the Court of Appeals from
BANK OF NEW YORK, respondent. which we are reproducing the following basic findings of fact:

1.PARTNERSHIP; UNREGISTERED PARTNERSHIP; PERSONS COMPOSING IT "STASIKINOCEY is a partnership doing business at No. 58, Aurora Boulevard,
ARE PARTNERS; ASSOCIATION is PARTNERSHIP.—While an uregistered San Juan, Rizal, and formed by Alan W. Gorcey, Louis F. da Costa, Jr.,
commercial partnership has no juridical personality, nevertheless, where two William Kusik and Emma Badong Gavino. This partnership was denied
or more persons, attempt to create a partnership failing to comply with all registration in the Securities and Exchange Commission, and while it is
the legal formalities, the law considers them as partners and the association confusing to see in this case that the CARDINAL RATTAN, sometimes called
is a partnership in so far as it is favorable to third persons, by reason of the the CARDINAL RATTAN FACTORY, is treated as a copartnership, of which
equitable principle of estoppel. defendants Gorcey and da Costa are considered general partners, we are
satisfied that, as alleged in various instruments appearing of record, said
2.ID.; ID.; ID.; "De Facto" EXISTENCE; DOMICILE AS TO THIRD
Cardinal Rattan is merely the business name or style used by the partnership
PERSONS.—If the law recognizes a defectively organized partnership as de
Stasikinocey.
facto as far as third persons are concerned, for purposes of its de facto
existence it should have such attribute of a partnership as domicile. Although "Prior to June 3, 1949, defendant Stasikinocey had an overdraft account with
it has no legal standing, it is a partnership de facto and the general The National City Bank of New York, a foreign banking association duly
provisions of the code applicable to all partnership apply to it. licensed to do business in the Philippines. On June 3, 1949, the overdraft
showed a balance of P6,134.92 against the defendant Stasikinocey or the
3.CHATTEL MORTGAGE; VALIDITY GENERALLY; AFFIDAVIT IN GOOD
Cardinal Rattan (Exhibit D), which account, due to the failure of the
FAITH; CANNOT BE DESTROYED BY BIASED TESTIMONY.—The chattel
partnership to make the required payment, was converted into an ordinary
mortgage in question is in the form required by law, and there is therefore
loan for which the corresponding promissory 'joint note—non-negotiable' was
the presumption of its due execution which cannot be easily destroyed by
executed on June 3, 1949, by Louis F. da Costa for and in the name of the
the biased testimony of the one who executed it. The interested version that
Cardinal Rattan, Louis F. da Costa and Alan Gorcey (Exhibit D). This
the affidavit of good faith appearing in the chattel mortgage was executed in
promissory note was secured on June 7, 1949, by a chattel mortgage
Quezon City before a notary public for and in the city of Manila was correctly
executed by Louis F. da Costa, Jr,, General Partner for and in the name of
rejected by the trial court and the Court of Appeals. Indeed, cumbersome Stasikinocey, alleged to be a duly registered Philippine partnership, doing
legal formalities are imposed to prevent fraud. If the biased and interested
business under the name and style of Cardinal Rattan, with principal office at
testimony of a grantor and the vague and uncertain testimony of his son are
69 Riverside, San Juan, Rizal (Exhibit A). The chattels mortgaged were the
deemed sufficient to overcome a public instrument drawn up with all the
following motor vehicles:
formalities prescribed by law then there will have been established a very
dangerous doctrine which would throw wide open the doors to fraud. "(a)Fargo truck with motor No. T-1 18-202839, Serial No. 81410206 and with
plate No. T-7333 (1949);
PETITION for review by certiorari of a decision of the Court of Appeals.
"(b)Plymouth Sedan automobile motor No. T-5638876, Serial No. 11872718
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
and with plate No. 10372; and
Jose W. Diokno for petitioners.
"(c)Fargo Pick-up FKI-16, with motor No. T-112800032,
Ross, Selph, Carrascoso & Janda for respondent
Serial No. 8869225 and with plate No. T-7222 (1949). The mortgage deed
was fully registered by the mortgagee on June 11, 1949, in the Office of the
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 23

Register of Deeds for the province of Rizal, at Pasig, (Exhibit A), and among promissory note involved; sentencing the petitioner, Gonzales to deliver the
other provisions it contained the following: vehicles in question to the respondent for sale at public auction if Da Costa
and Gorcey should fail to pay the money judgment; and sentencing Da
" '(a)That the mortgagor shall not sell or otherwise dispose of the said
Costa, Gorcey and Shaeffers to pay to the respondent jointly and severally
chattels without the mortgagee's written consent; and any deficiency that may remain unpaid should the proceeds of the sale not
" '(b)That the mortgagee may foreclose the mortgage at any time, after be sufficient; and sentencing Gorcey, Da Costa, McDonald and Shaeffer to
breach of any condition thereof, the mortgagor waiving the 30-day notice of pay the costs. Only Paul McDonald and Benjamin Gonzales appealed to the
foreclosure.' Court of Appeals which rendered a decision the dispositive part of which
reads as follows:
"On June 7, 1949, the same day of the execution of the chattel mortgage
aforementioned, Gorcey and Da Costa executed an agreement purporting to "WHEREFORE,, the decision appealed from is hereby modified, relieving
convey and transfer all their rights, title and participation in defendant appellant William Shaeffer of the obligation of paying, jointly and severally,
partnership to Shaeffer, allegedly in consideration of the cancellation of an together with Alan W. Gorcey and Louis F. da Costa, Jr., any deficiency that
indebtedness of P25,000 owed by them and defendant partnership to the may remain unpaid after applying the proceeds of the sale of the said motor
latter (Exhibit J), which transaction is said to be in violation of the Bulk Sales vehicles which shall be undertaken upon the lapse of 90 days from the date
Law (Act No. 3952 of the Philippine Legislature). this decision becomes final, if by then defendants Louis F. da Costa, Jr., and
Alan W. Gorcey had not paid the amount of the judgment debt. With this
"While the said loan was still unpaid and the chattel mortgage subsisting, modification the decision appealed from is in all other respects affirmed, with
defendant partnership, through defendants Gorcey and Da Costa, transferred costs against appellants. This decision is without prejudice to whatever
to defendant McDonald the Fargo truck and Plymouth sedan on June 24, action Louis F. da Costa, Jr., and Alan W. Gorcey may take against their co-
1949 (Exhibit L). The Fargo pickup was also sold on June 28, 1949., by partners in the Stasikinocey unregistered partnership."
William Shaeffer to Paul McDonald.
This appeal by certiorari was taken by Paul McDonald and Benjamin
"On or about July 19, 1944, Paul McDonald, notwithstanding plaintiff's Gonzales, petitioners herein, who have assigned the following errors:
existing mortgage lien, in turn transferred the Fargo truck and the Plymouth
sedan to Benjamin Gonzales." "I "IN RULING THAT AN UNREGISTERED COMMERCIAL CO-PARTNERSHIP
WHICH HAS NO INDEPENDENT JURIDICAL PERSONALITY CAN HAVE A
The National City Bank of New York, respondent herein, upon learning of the 'DOMICILE' SO THAT A CHATTEL MORTGAGE REGISTERED IN THAT
transfers made by the partnership Stasikinocey to William Shaeffer, from the 'DOMICILE' WOULD BIND THIRD PERSONS WHO ARE INNOCENT
latter to Paul McDonald, and from Paul McDonald to Benjamin Gonzales, of PURCHASERS FOR VALUE.
the vehicles previously pledged by Stasikinocey to the respondent, filed an
action against Stasikinocey and its alleged partners Gorcey and Da Costa, as "II"IN RULING THAT, WHEN A CHATTEL MORTGAGE IS EXECUTED BY ONE
well as Paul McDonald and Benjamin Gonzales, to recover its credit and to OF THE MEMBERS OF AN UNREGISTERED COMMERCIAL CO-PARTNERSHIP
foreclose the corresponding' chattel mortgage. McDonald and Gonzales were WITHOUT JURIDICAL PERSONALITY INDEPENDENT OF ITS MEMBERS, IT
made defendants because they claimed to have a better right over the NEED NOT BE REGISTERED IN THE ACTUAL RESIDENCE OF THE MEMBERS
pledged vehicle. WHO EXECUTED SAME; AND, AS A CONSEQUENCE THEREOF, IN NOT
MAKING ANY FINDING OF FACT AS TO THE ACTUAL RESIDENCE OF SAID
After trial the Court of First Instance of Manila rendered judgment in favor of CHATTEL MORTGAGOR, DESPITE APPELLANTS' RAISING THAT QUESTION
the respondent, annulling the sale of the vehicles in question to Benjamin PROPERLY BEFORE IT AND REQUESTING A RULING THEREON.
Gonzales; sentencing Da Costa and Gorcey to pay to the respondent jointly
and severally the sum of P6,134.92, with legal interest from the debt of the
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 24

"III"IN NOT RULING THAT, WHEN A CHATTEL MORTGAGOR EXECUTES AN vehicles in question through Gorcey and Da Costa. As was held in Behn
AFFIDAVIT OF GOOD FAITH BEFORE A NOTARY PUBLIC OUTSIDE OF THE Meyer & Co. vs. Rosatzin, 5 Phil., 660, where a partnership not duly
TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION OF THE LATTER, THE AFFIDAVIT IS VOID organized has been recognized as such in its dealings with certain persons, it
AND THE CHATTEL, MORTGAGE IS NOT BINDING ON THIRD PERSONS WHO shall be considered as "partnership by estoppel" and the persons dealing
ARE INNOCENT PURCHASERS FOR VALUE; AND, AS A CONSEQUENCE with it are estopped from denying its partnership existence. The sale of the
THEREOF, IN NOT MAKING ANY FINDING OF FACT AS TO WHERE THE vehicles in question being void as to petitioner McDonald, the transfer from
DEED WAS IN FACT EXECUTED, DESPITE APPELLANTS' RAISING THAT the latter to petitioner Benjamin Gonzales is also void, as the buyer cannot
QUESTION PROPERLY BEFORE IT AND EXPRESSLY REQUESTING A RULING have a better right than the seller.
THEREON.
It results that if the law recognizes a defectively organized partnership as de
"IV"IN RULING THAT A LETTER AUTHORIZING ONE MEMBER OF AN facto as far as third persons are concerned, for purposes of its de facto
UNREGISTERED COMMERCIAL CO-PARTNERSHIP 'TO MAKE ALL OFFICIAL, existence it should have such attribute of a partnership as domicile. In Hung-
AND BUSINESS ARRANGEMENTS . . . WITH THE NATIONAL CITY BANK OF Man Yoc vs. Kieng-Chiong-Seng, 6 Phil., 498, it was held that although "it
NEW YORK' IN ORDER 'TO SIMPLIFY ALL MATTERS RELATIVE TO LCS has no legal standing, it is a partnership de facto and the general provisions
CABLE TRANSFERS. DRAFTS, OR OTHER BANKING MEDIUMS,' WAS of the Code applicable to all partnerships apply to it." The registration of the
SUFFICIENT AUTHORITY FOR THE SAID MEMBER TO EXECUTE A CHATTEL chattel mortgage in question with the Office of the Register of Deeds of
MORTGAGE IN ORDER TO GIVE THE BANK SECURITY FOR A PRE-EXISTING Rizal, the residence or place of business of the partnership Stasikinocey
OVERDRAFT, GRANTED WITHOUT SECURITY, WHICH THE BANK HAD being San Juan, Rizal, was therefore in accordance with section 4 of the
CONVERTED INTO A DEMAND LOAN UPON FAILURE TO PAY SAME AND Chattel Mortgage Law.
BEFORE THE CHATTEL MORTGAGE WAS EXECUTED."
The second question propounded by the petitioners is: "If not, is a chattel
This is the first question propounded by the petitioners: "Since an mortgage executed by only one of the 'partners' of an unregistered
unregistered commercial partnership unquestionably has no juridical commercial partnership validly registered so as to constitute notice to the
personality, can it have a domicile so that the registration of a chattel world if it is not registered at the place where the aforesaid 'partner' actually
mortgage therein is notice to the world?" resides but only in the place where the deed states that he resides, which is
not his real residence?" And the third question is as follows: "If the actual
While an unregistered commercial partnership has no juridical personality,
residence of the chattel mortgagor—not the residence stated in the deed of
nevertheless, where two or more persons attempt to create a partnership
chattel mortgage—is controlling, may the Court of Appeals refuse to make a
failing to comply with all the legal formalities, the law considers them as
finding of fact as to where the mortgagor resided despite your petitioners'
partners and the association is a partnership in so far as it is a favorable to having properly raised that question before it and expressly requested a
third persons, by reason of the equitable principle of estoppel. In Jo Chung
ruling thereon?"
Chang vs. Pacific Commercial Co., 45 Phil., 145, it was held "that although
the partnership with the firm name of 'Teck Seing and Co. Ltd./ could not be These two questions have become academic by reason of the answer to the
regarded as a partnership de jure, yet with respect to third persons it will be first question, namely, that as a de facto partnership, Stasikinocey had its
considered a partnership with all the consequent obligations for the purpose domicile in San Juan, Rizal.
of enforcing the rights of such third persons." Da Costa and Gorcey cannot
deny that they are partners of the partnership Stasikinocey, because in all The fourth question asked by the petitioners is as follows: "Is a chattel
mortgage executed by only one of the 'partners' of an unregistered
their transactions with the respondent they represented themselves as such.
commercial partnership valid as to third persons when that 'partner'
Petitioner McDonald cannot disclaim knowledge of the partnership
executed the affidavit of good faith in Quezon City before a notary public
Stasikinocey because he dealt with said entity in purchasing two of the
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 25

whose appointment is only for the City of Manila? If not, may the Court of 24 of the Code of Commerce in arguing that an unregistered commercial
Appeals refuse to make a finding of fact as to where the deed was executed, partnership has no juridical personality and cannot execute any act that
despite your petitioners' having properly raised that issue before it and would adversely affect innocent third persons. Petitioners forget that the
expressly requested a ruling thereon?" respondent is a third person with respect to the partnership, and the chattel
mortgage executed by Da Costa cannot therefore be impugned by Gorcey on
It is noteworthy that the chattel mortgage in question is in the form required
the ground that there is no partnership between them and that the vehicles
by law, and there is therefore the presumption of its due execution which
in question belonged to them in common. As a matter of fact, the
cannot be easily destroyed by the biased testimony of the one who executed
respondent and the petitioners are all third persons as regards the
it. The interested version of Da Costa that the affidavit of good faith
partnership Stasikinocey; and even assuming that the petitioners are
appearing in the chattel mortgage was executed in Quezon City before a
purchasers in good faith and for value, the respondent having transacted
notary public for and in the City of Manila was correctly rejected by the trial
with Stasikinocey earlier than the petitioners, it should enjoy and be given
court and the Court of Appeals. Indeed, cumbersome legal formalities are
priority.
imposed to prevent fraud. As aptly pointed out in El Hogar Filipino vs. Olviga,
60 Phil., 17, "If the biased and interested testimony of a grantor and the Wherefore, the appealed decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed with
vague and uncertain testimony of his son are deemed sufficient to overcome costs against the petitioners.
a public instrument drawn up with all the formalities prescribed by the law
Bengzon, Montemayor, Reyes, A., Jugo, Bautista Angelo Labrador,
then there will have been established a very dangerous doctrine which would
Concepcion, Reyes, J. B. L., and Endencia, JJ., concur.
throw wide open the doors to fraud."
Decision affirmed.
The last question raised by the petitioners is as follows: "Does only one of
several 'partners' of an unregistered commercial partnership have authority,
by himself alone, to execute a valid chattel mortgage over property owned
by the unregistered commercial partnership in order to guarantee a pre- _____________ MacDonald, et al. vs. Nat. City Bank of N.Y., 99 Phil. 156,
existing overdraft previously granted, without guaranty, by the bank?" No. L-7991 May 21, 1956

In view of the conclusion that Stasikinocey is a de facto partnership, and Da


Costa appears as a co-manager in the letter of Gorcey to the respondent and
in the promissory note executed by Da Costa, and that even the partners
considered him as such, as stated in the affidavit of April 21, 1948, to the
effect that "That we as the majority partners hereby agree to appoint Louis
da Costa co-managing partner of Alan W. Gorcey, duly approved managing
partner of the said firm," the "partner" who executed the chattel mortgage in
question must be deemed to be so fully authorized. Section 6 of the Chattel
Mortgage Law provides that when a partnership is a party to the mortgage,
the affidavit may be made and subscribed by one member thereof. In this
case the affidavit was executed and subscribed by Da Costa, not only as a
partner but as a managing partner.

There is no merit in petitioners' pretense that the motor vehicles in question


are the common property of Da Costa and Gorcey. Petitioners invoke article
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 26

[No. 26937. October 5, 1927] name and for the account of the partnership, under the signature of the
latter and by a person authorized to use it. (Sec. 127, Code of Commerce.)
PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK, plaintiff and appellee, vs. SEVERO
EUGENIO Lo ET AL., defendants. SEVERO EuGENIO Lo, NG KHEY APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of First Instance of Iloilo. Salas, J.
LING and YEP SENG, appellants.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
1.ASSOCIATIONS; GENERAL PARTNERSHIPS; LIABILITY.—The anomalous
Jose Lopez Vito for appellants.
adoption of a firm name by the defendant partners cannot be set up by them
as a defense so as to evade a liability contracted by them, inasmuch as such Roman Lacson for appellee.
anomaly does not affect the liability of the general partners to third persons
under article 127 of the Code of Commerce. (See Hung-Man-Yoc vs. VlLLAMOR, J.:
KiengChiong-Seng, 6 Phil., 498.)
On September 29, 1916, the appellants Severo Eugenio Lo and Ng Khey
2.ID.; ID.; ID.—The object of article 126 of the Code of Commerce in Ling, together with J. A. Say Lian Ping, Ko Tiao Hun, On Yem Ke Lam and Co
requiring a general partnership to transact business under the name of all its Sieng Peng formed a commercial partnership under the name of "Tai Sing &
members, of several of them, or of one only, is to protect the public from Co.," with a capital of P40,000 contributed by said partners. In the articles of
imposition and fraud. The provision of said article 126 is for the protection of copartnership, Exhibit A, it appears that the partnership was to last for five
the creditors rather than of the partners themselves. The doctrine formerly years from and after the date of its organization, and that its purpose was to
enunciated by this court is that the law must be construed as rendering do business in the City of Iloilo, Province of Iloilo, or in any other part of the
contracts made in violation of it, unlawful and unenforceable only as Philippine Islands the partners might desire, under the name of "Tai Sing &
between the partners and at the instance of the infringer, but not in the Co.," for the purchase and sale of merchandise, goods, and native, as well as
sense of depriving innocent parties of their rights, who may have dealt with Chinese and Japanese, products, and to carry on such business and
the guilty parties in ignorance of the latter's having violated the law; and that speculations as they might consider profitable. One of the partners, J. A. Say
contracts entered into by mercantile associations defectively organized are Lian Ping was appointed general manager of the partnership, with the
valid when voluntarily executed by the parties and the only question is powers specified in said articles of copartnership.
whether or not they complied with the agreement. (Jo Chung Cang vs.
On June 4, 1917, general manager A. Say Lian Ping executed a power of
Pacific Commercial Co., 45 Phil., 142.)
attorney (Exhibit C-1) in favor of A. Y. Kelam, authorizing him to act in his
3.ID. ; ID. ; ID.—Appellants' contention that such parts of their property as stead as manager and administrator of "Tai Sing & Co." On July 26, 1918, A.
are not included in the partnership assets cannot be levied upon for the Y. Kelam, acting under such power of attorney, applied for, and obtained a
payment of the partnership obligations, except after the partnership property loan of P8,000 in current account from the plaintiff bank (Exhibit C). As
has been exhausted is untenable, for the partnership property described in security for said loan, he mortgaged certain personal property of Tai Sing &
the mortgage no longer existed at the time of the filing of the herein Co. (Exhibit C.)
complaint, nor has its existence been proved, nor was it offered to the
This credit was renewed several times and on March 25, 1919, A. Y. Kelam,
plaintiff for sale. Hence article 237 of the Code of Commerce invoked by the
as attorney-in-fact of Tai Sing & Co., executed a chattel mortgage in favor of
appellants can in no way be applicable to this case.
plaintiff bank as security for a loan of P20,000 with interest (Exhibit D). This
4.ID. ; ID. ; ID.—All the members of a general partnership, be they mortgage was again renewed on April 16, 1920, and A. Y. Kelam, as
managing partners of the same or not, shall be personally and solidarily attorney-in-fact of Tai Sing & Co., executed another chattel mortgage for the
liable with all their property for the results of the transactions made in the said sum of P20,000 in favor of the plaintiff bank. (Exhibit E.) According to
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 27

this mortgage contract, the P20,000 loan was to earn 9 per cent interest per account of the partnership Tai Sing & Co. for the sum of P16,518.74 until
annum. September 9, 1922;

On April 20, 1920, Yap Seng, Severo Eugenio Lo, A. Y. Kelam and Ng Khey (2)Said defendants are ordered jointly and severally to pay the Philippine
Ling, the latter represented by M. Pineda Tayenko, executed a power of National Bank the sum of P22,727.74 up to August 31, 1926, and from that
attorney in favor of Sy Tit by virtue of which Sy Tit, representing Tai Sing & date, P4.14 daily interest on the principal; and
Co. obtained a credit of P20,000 from plaintiff bank on January 7, 1921,
(3)The defendants are furthermore ordered to pay the costs of the action.
executing a chattel mortgage on certain personal property belonging to Tai
Sing & Co. Defendants appealed, making the following assignments of error:
Defendants had been using this commercial credit in a current account with "I.The trial court erred in finding that article 126 of the Code of Commerce at
the plaintiff bank, from the year 1918 to May 22,1921, and the debit balance present in force is not mandatory.
of this account, with interest to December 31, 1924, is as follows:
"II.The trial court erred in finding that the partnership agreement of Tai Sing
TAI SING & Co. & Co. (Exhibit A), is in accordance with the requirements of article 125 of the
Code of Commerce for the organization of a regular partnership.
To your outstanding account (C. O. D.) with us on June 30, 1922
...............................................................................................P16,518.74 "III.The trial court erred in not admitting J. A. Sai Lian Ping's death in China
in November, 1917, as a proven fact.
Interest on same from June 30, 1922 to December 31, 1924, at 9 per cent
per annum..................................................................................3,720.86 "IV.The trial court erred in finding that the death of J. A. Sai Lian Ping cannot
extinguish the defendants' obligation to the plaintiff bank, because the last
Total .................................................................................20,239.60
debt incurred by the commercial partnership Tai Sing & Co. was that
This total is the sum claimed in the complaint, together with interest on the evidenced by Exhibit F, signed by Sy Tit as attorneyin-fact of the members of
P16,518.74 debt, at 9 per cent per annum from January 1, 1925 until fully Tai Sing & Co., by virtue of Exhibit G.
paid, with the costs of the trial.
"V.The trial court erred in not finding that plaintiff bank was not able to
Defendant Eugenio Lo sets up, as a general defense, that Tai Sing & Co., collect its credit from the goods of Tai Sing & Co. given as security therefor
was not a general partnership, and that the commercial credit in current through its own fault and negligence; and that the action brought by plaintiff
account which Tai Sing & Co. obtained from the plaintiff bank had not been is a manifest violation of article 237 of the present Code of Commerce.
authorized by the board of directors of the company, nor was the person
"VI.The trial court erred in finding that the current account of Tai Sing & Co.
who subscribed said contract authorized to make the same, under the
with plaintiff bank shows a debit balance of P16,518.74, which in addition to
articles of copartnership. The other defendants, Yap Sing and Ng Khey Ling,
interest at 9 per cent per annum from July 29, 1926, amounts to P16,595.26,
answered the complaint denying each and every one of the allegations
contained therein. with a daily interest of P4.14 on the sum of P16,518.74.

"VII.The trial court erred in ordering the defendantsappellants to pay jointly


After the hearing, the court found:
and severally to the Philippine National Bank the sum of P22,727.74 up to
(1)That defendants Severo Eugenio Lo, Ng Khey Ling and Yap Seng & Co., August 31, 1926, and interest on P16,518.74 from that date until fully paid,
Sieng Peng are indebted to plaintiff Philippine National Bank in the sum of with the costs of the action.
P22,595.26 to July 29, 1926, with a daily interest of P4.14 on the balance on
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 28

"VIII.The trial court erred in denying the motion for a new trial filed by As to the alleged death of the manager of the company, Say Lian Ping,
defendants-appellants." before the attorney-in-fact Ou Yong Kelam executed Exhibits C, D and E, the
trial court did not find this fact proven at the hearing. But even supposing
Appellants admit, and it appears from the context of Exhibit A, that the
that the court had erred, such an error would not justify the reversal of the
defendant association formed by the defendants is a general partnership, as judgment, for two reasons at least: (1) Because Ou Yong Kelam was a
defined in article 126 of the Code of Commerce. This partnership was
partner who contracted in the name of the partnership, without any
registered in the mercantile register of the Province of Iloilo. The only
objection of the other partners; and (2) because it appears in the record that
anomaly noted in its organization is that instead of adopting for their firm
the appellant-partners Severo Eugenio Lo, Ng Khey Ling and Yap Seng,
name the names of all of the partners, of several of them, or only one of
appointed Sy Tit as manager, and he obtained from the plaintiff bank the
them, to be followed in the last two cases, by the words "and company," the
credit in current account, the debit balance of which is sought to be
partners agreed upon "Tai Sing & Co." as the firm name.
recovered in this action.
In the case of Hung-Man-Yoc, under the name of KwongWo-Sing vs. Kieng-
Appellants allege that such of their property as is not included in the
Chiong-Seng (6 Phil., 498), cited by appellants, this court held that, as the
partnership assets cannot be seized for the payment of the debts contracted
company formed by defendants had existed in fact, though not in law due to
by the partnership until after the partnership property has been exhausted.
the fact that it was not recorded in the register, and having operated and
The court found that the partnership property described in the mortgage
contracted debts in favor of the plaintiff, the same must be paid by
Exhibit F no longer existed at the time of the filing of the herein complaint
someone. This applies more strongly to the obligations contracted by the
nor has its existence been proven, nor was it offered to the plaintiff for sale.
defendants, for they formed a partnership which was registered in the
We find no just reason to reverse this conclusion of the trial court, and this
mercantile register, and carried on business contracting debts with the
being so, it follows that article 237 of the Code of Commerce, invoked by the
plaintiff bank. The anomalous adoption of the firm name above noted does appellants, can in no way have any application here.
not affect the liability of the general partners to third parties under article
127 of the Code of Commerce. And the Supreme Court so held in the case of Appellants also assign error to the action of the trial court in ordering them
Jo Chung Cang vs. Pacific Commercial Co. (45 Phil., 142), in which it said to pay plaintiff, jointly and severally, the sums claimed with 9 per cent
that the object of article 126 of the Code of Commerce in requiring a general interest on P16,518.74, owing from them.
partnership to transact business under the name of all its members, of
The judgment against the appellants is in accordance with article 127 of the
several of them, or of one only, is to protect the public from imposition and
Code of Commerce which provides that all the members of a general
fraud; and that the provision of said article 126 is f or the protection of the
partnership, be they managing partners thereof or not, shall be personally
creditors rather than of the partners themselves. And consequently the
doctrine was enunciated that the law must be construed as rendering and solidarily liable with all their property, for the results of the transactions
made in the name and for the account of the partnership, under the
contracts made in violation of it unlawful and unenforceable only as between
signature of the latter, and by a person authorized to use it.
the partners and at the instance of the violating party, but not in the sense
of depriving innocent parties of their rights who may have dealt with the As to the amount of the interest suffice it to remember that the credit in
offenders in ignorance of the latter having violated the law; and that current account sued on in this case has been renewed by the parties in such
contracts entered into by commercial associations defectively organized are a way that while it appears in the mortgage Exhibit D executed on March 25,
valid when voluntarily executed by the parties, and the only question is 1919 by the attorney-in-fact Ou Yong Kelam, that the P20,000 credit would
whether or not they complied with the agreement. Therefore, the defendants earn 8 per cent interest annually, yet from that executed on April 16, 1920,
cannot invoke in their defense the anomaly in the firm name which they Exhibit E, it appears that the P20,000 would earn 9 per cent interest per
themselves adopted. annum. The credit was renewed in January, 1921, and in the deed of pledge,
A g e n c y , T r u s t s , a n d P a r t n e r s h i p s S e s s i o n 6 P a g e | 29

Exhibit F, executed by "Tai Sing & Co." represented by the attorney-in-fact


Sy Tit, it appears that this security is for the payment of the sums received
by the partnership, not to exceed P20,000 with interest and collection fees.
There can be no doubt that the parties agreed upon the rate of interest fixed
in the document Exhibit E, namely, 9 per cent per annum.

The judgment appealed from is in accordance with the law, and must
therefore be, as it is hereby, affirmed with costs against the appellants. So
ordered.

Avanceña, C. J., Johnson, Street, Malcolm, Johns, and Romualdez, JJ.,


concur.

Judgment affirmed.

National Bank vs. Lo, 50 Phil. 802, No. 26937 October 5, 1927

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