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8/18/2020 G.R. No.

115324

SECOND DIVISION

G.R. No. 115324 February 19, 2003

PRODUCERS BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES (now FIRST INTERNATIONAL BANK), petitioner,


vs.
HON. COURT OF APPEALS AND FRANKLIN VIVES, respondents.

DECISION

CALLEJO, SR., J.:

This is a petition for review on certiorari of the Decision1 of the Court of Appeals dated June 25, 1991 in CA-G.R. CV
No. 11791 and of its Resolution2 dated May 5, 1994, denying the motion for reconsideration of said decision filed by
petitioner Producers Bank of the Philippines.

Sometime in 1979, private respondent Franklin Vives was asked by his neighbor and friend Angeles Sanchez to help
her friend and townmate, Col. Arturo Doronilla, in incorporating his business, the Sterela Marketing and Services
("Sterela" for brevity). Specifically, Sanchez asked private respondent to deposit in a bank a certain amount of
money in the bank account of Sterela for purposes of its incorporation. She assured private respondent that he could
withdraw his money from said account within a month’s time. Private respondent asked Sanchez to bring Doronilla to
their house so that they could discuss Sanchez’s request.3

On May 9, 1979, private respondent, Sanchez, Doronilla and a certain Estrella Dumagpi, Doronilla’s private
secretary, met and discussed the matter. Thereafter, relying on the assurances and representations of Sanchez and
Doronilla, private respondent issued a check in the amount of Two Hundred Thousand Pesos (₱200,000.00) in favor
of Sterela. Private respondent instructed his wife, Mrs. Inocencia Vives, to accompany Doronilla and Sanchez in
opening a savings account in the name of Sterela in the Buendia, Makati branch of Producers Bank of the
Philippines. However, only Sanchez, Mrs. Vives and Dumagpi went to the bank to deposit the check. They had with
them an authorization letter from Doronilla authorizing Sanchez and her companions, "in coordination with Mr. Rufo
Atienza," to open an account for Sterela Marketing Services in the amount of ₱200,000.00. In opening the account,
the authorized signatories were Inocencia Vives and/or Angeles Sanchez. A passbook for Savings Account No. 10-
1567 was thereafter issued to Mrs. Vives.4

Subsequently, private respondent learned that Sterela was no longer holding office in the address previously given to
him. Alarmed, he and his wife went to the Bank to verify if their money was still intact. The bank manager referred
them to Mr. Rufo Atienza, the assistant manager, who informed them that part of the money in Savings Account No.
10-1567 had been withdrawn by Doronilla, and that only ₱90,000.00 remained therein. He likewise told them that
Mrs. Vives could not withdraw said remaining amount because it had to answer for some postdated checks issued
by Doronilla. According to Atienza, after Mrs. Vives and Sanchez opened Savings Account No. 10-1567, Doronilla
opened Current Account No. 10-0320 for Sterela and authorized the Bank to debit Savings Account No. 10-1567 for
the amounts necessary to cover overdrawings in Current Account No. 10-0320. In opening said current account,
Sterela, through Doronilla, obtained a loan of ₱175,000.00 from the Bank. To cover payment thereof, Doronilla
issued three postdated checks, all of which were dishonored. Atienza also said that Doronilla could assign or
withdraw the money in Savings Account No. 10-1567 because he was the sole proprietor of Sterela.5

Private respondent tried to get in touch with Doronilla through Sanchez. On June 29, 1979, he received a letter from
Doronilla, assuring him that his money was intact and would be returned to him. On August 13, 1979, Doronilla
issued a postdated check for Two Hundred Twelve Thousand Pesos (₱212,000.00) in favor of private respondent.
However, upon presentment thereof by private respondent to the drawee bank, the check was dishonored. Doronilla
requested private respondent to present the same check on September 15, 1979 but when the latter presented the
check, it was again dishonored.6

Private respondent referred the matter to a lawyer, who made a written demand upon Doronilla for the return of his
client’s money. Doronilla issued another check for ₱212,000.00 in private respondent’s favor but the check was again
dishonored for insufficiency of funds.7

Private respondent instituted an action for recovery of sum of money in the Regional Trial Court (RTC) in Pasig,
Metro Manila against Doronilla, Sanchez, Dumagpi and petitioner. The case was docketed as Civil Case No. 44485.
He also filed criminal actions against Doronilla, Sanchez and Dumagpi in the RTC. However, Sanchez passed away
on March 16, 1985 while the case was pending before the trial court. On October 3, 1995, the RTC of Pasig, Branch
157, promulgated its Decision in Civil Case No. 44485, the dispositive portion of which reads:
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IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, judgment is hereby rendered sentencing defendants Arturo J. Doronila, Estrella
Dumagpi and Producers Bank of the Philippines to pay plaintiff Franklin Vives jointly and severally –

(a) the amount of ₱200,000.00, representing the money deposited, with interest at the legal rate from the filing
of the complaint until the same is fully paid;

(b) the sum of ₱50,000.00 for moral damages and a similar amount for exemplary damages;

(c) the amount of ₱40,000.00 for attorney’s fees; and

(d) the costs of the suit.

SO ORDERED.8

Petitioner appealed the trial court’s decision to the Court of Appeals. In its Decision dated June 25, 1991, the
appellate court affirmed in toto the decision of the RTC.9 It likewise denied with finality petitioner’s motion for
reconsideration in its Resolution dated May 5, 1994.10

On June 30, 1994, petitioner filed the present petition, arguing that –

I.

THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN UPHOLDING THAT THE TRANSACTION


BETWEEN THE DEFENDANT DORONILLA AND RESPONDENT VIVES WAS ONE OF SIMPLE
LOAN AND NOT ACCOMMODATION;

II.

THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN UPHOLDING THAT PETITIONER’S BANK


MANAGER, MR. RUFO ATIENZA, CONNIVED WITH THE OTHER DEFENDANTS IN DEFRAUDING
PETITIONER (Sic. Should be PRIVATE RESPONDENT) AND AS A CONSEQUENCE, THE
PETITIONER SHOULD BE HELD LIABLE UNDER THE PRINCIPLE OF NATURAL JUSTICE;

III.

THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN ADOPTING THE ENTIRE RECORDS OF THE
REGIONAL TRIAL COURT AND AFFIRMING THE JUDGMENT APPEALED FROM, AS THE
FINDINGS OF THE REGIONAL TRIAL COURT WERE BASED ON A MISAPPREHENSION OF
FACTS;

IV.

THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN DECLARING THAT THE CITED DECISION IN
SALUDARES VS. MARTINEZ, 29 SCRA 745, UPHOLDING THE LIABILITY OF AN EMPLOYER FOR
ACTS COMMITTED BY AN EMPLOYEE IS APPLICABLE;

V.

THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN UPHOLDING THE DECISION OF THE LOWER
COURT THAT HEREIN PETITIONER BANK IS JOINTLY AND SEVERALLY LIABLE WITH THE
OTHER DEFENDANTS FOR THE AMOUNT OF P200,000.00 REPRESENTING THE SAVINGS
ACCOUNT DEPOSIT, P50,000.00 FOR MORAL DAMAGES, P50,000.00 FOR EXEMPLARY
DAMAGES, P40,000.00 FOR ATTORNEY’S FEES AND THE COSTS OF SUIT.11

Private respondent filed his Comment on September 23, 1994. Petitioner filed its Reply thereto on September 25,
1995. The Court then required private respondent to submit a rejoinder to the reply. However, said rejoinder was filed
only on April 21, 1997, due to petitioner’s delay in furnishing private respondent with copy of the reply12 and several
substitutions of counsel on the part of private respondent.13 On January 17, 2001, the Court resolved to give due
course to the petition and required the parties to submit their respective memoranda.14 Petitioner filed its
memorandum on April 16, 2001 while private respondent submitted his memorandum on March 22, 2001.

Petitioner contends that the transaction between private respondent and Doronilla is a simple loan (mutuum) since
all the elements of a mutuum are present: first, what was delivered by private respondent to Doronilla was money, a
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consumable thing; and second, the transaction was onerous as Doronilla was obliged to pay interest, as evidenced
by the check issued by Doronilla in the amount of ₱212,000.00, or ₱12,000 more than what private respondent
deposited in Sterela’s bank account.15 Moreover, the fact that private respondent sued his good friend Sanchez for
his failure to recover his money from Doronilla shows that the transaction was not merely gratuitous but "had a
business angle" to it. Hence, petitioner argues that it cannot be held liable for the return of private respondent’s
₱200,000.00 because it is not privy to the transaction between the latter and Doronilla.16

It argues further that petitioner’s Assistant Manager, Mr. Rufo Atienza, could not be faulted for allowing Doronilla to
withdraw from the savings account of Sterela since the latter was the sole proprietor of said company. Petitioner
asserts that Doronilla’s May 8, 1979 letter addressed to the bank, authorizing Mrs. Vives and Sanchez to open a
savings account for Sterela, did not contain any authorization for these two to withdraw from said account. Hence,
the authority to withdraw therefrom remained exclusively with Doronilla, who was the sole proprietor of Sterela, and
who alone had legal title to the savings account.17 Petitioner points out that no evidence other than the testimonies of
private respondent and Mrs. Vives was presented during trial to prove that private respondent deposited his
₱200,000.00 in Sterela’s account for purposes of its incorporation.18 Hence, petitioner should not be held liable for
allowing Doronilla to withdraw from Sterela’s savings account. 1a\^/phi1.net

Petitioner also asserts that the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s decision since the findings of fact
therein were not accord with the evidence presented by petitioner during trial to prove that the transaction between
private respondent and Doronilla was a mutuum, and that it committed no wrong in allowing Doronilla to withdraw
from Sterela’s savings account.19

Finally, petitioner claims that since there is no wrongful act or omission on its part, it is not liable for the actual
damages suffered by private respondent, and neither may it be held liable for moral and exemplary damages as well
as attorney’s fees.20

Private respondent, on the other hand, argues that the transaction between him and Doronilla is not a mutuum but
an accommodation,21 since he did not actually part with the ownership of his ₱200,000.00 and in fact asked his wife
to deposit said amount in the account of Sterela so that a certification can be issued to the effect that Sterela had
sufficient funds for purposes of its incorporation but at the same time, he retained some degree of control over his
money through his wife who was made a signatory to the savings account and in whose possession the savings
account passbook was given.22

He likewise asserts that the trial court did not err in finding that petitioner, Atienza’s employer, is liable for the return
of his money. He insists that Atienza, petitioner’s assistant manager, connived with Doronilla in defrauding private
respondent since it was Atienza who facilitated the opening of Sterela’s current account three days after Mrs. Vives
and Sanchez opened a savings account with petitioner for said company, as well as the approval of the authority to
debit Sterela’s savings account to cover any overdrawings in its current account.23

There is no merit in the petition.

At the outset, it must be emphasized that only questions of law may be raised in a petition for review filed with this
Court. The Court has repeatedly held that it is not its function to analyze and weigh all over again the evidence
presented by the parties during trial.24 The Court’s jurisdiction is in principle limited to reviewing errors of law that
might have been committed by the Court of Appeals.25 Moreover, factual findings of courts, when adopted and
confirmed by the Court of Appeals, are final and conclusive on this Court unless these findings are not supported by
the evidence on record.26 There is no showing of any misapprehension of facts on the part of the Court of Appeals in
the case at bar that would require this Court to review and overturn the factual findings of that court, especially since
the conclusions of fact of the Court of Appeals and the trial court are not only consistent but are also amply
supported by the evidence on record.

No error was committed by the Court of Appeals when it ruled that the transaction between private respondent and
Doronilla was a commodatum and not a mutuum. A circumspect examination of the records reveals that the
transaction between them was a commodatum. Article 1933 of the Civil Code distinguishes between the two kinds of
loans in this wise:

By the contract of loan, one of the parties delivers to another, either something not consumable so that the latter may
use the same for a certain time and return it, in which case the contract is called a commodatum; or money or other
consumable thing, upon the condition that the same amount of the same kind and quality shall be paid, in which case
the contract is simply called a loan or mutuum.

Commodatum is essentially gratuitous.


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Simple loan may be gratuitous or with a stipulation to pay interest.

In commodatum, the bailor retains the ownership of the thing loaned, while in simple loan, ownership passes to the
borrower.

The foregoing provision seems to imply that if the subject of the contract is a consumable thing, such as money, the
contract would be a mutuum. However, there are some instances where a commodatum may have for its object a
consumable thing. Article 1936 of the Civil Code provides:

Consumable goods may be the subject of commodatum if the purpose of the contract is not the consumption of the
object, as when it is merely for exhibition.

Thus, if consumable goods are loaned only for purposes of exhibition, or when the intention of the parties is to lend
consumable goods and to have the very same goods returned at the end of the period agreed upon, the loan is a
commodatum and not a mutuum.

The rule is that the intention of the parties thereto shall be accorded primordial consideration in determining the
actual character of a contract.27 In case of doubt, the contemporaneous and subsequent acts of the parties shall be
considered in such determination.28

As correctly pointed out by both the Court of Appeals and the trial court, the evidence shows that private respondent
agreed to deposit his money in the savings account of Sterela specifically for the purpose of making it appear "that
said firm had sufficient capitalization for incorporation, with the promise that the amount shall be returned within thirty
(30) days."29 Private respondent merely "accommodated" Doronilla by lending his money without consideration, as a
favor to his good friend Sanchez. It was however clear to the parties to the transaction that the money would not be
removed from Sterela’s savings account and would be returned to private respondent after thirty (30) days.

Doronilla’s attempts to return to private respondent the amount of ₱200,000.00 which the latter deposited in Sterela’s
account together with an additional ₱12,000.00, allegedly representing interest on the mutuum, did not convert the
transaction from a commodatum into a mutuum because such was not the intent of the parties and because the
additional ₱12,000.00 corresponds to the fruits of the lending of the ₱200,000.00. Article 1935 of the Civil Code
expressly states that "[t]he bailee in commodatum acquires the use of the thing loaned but not its fruits." Hence, it
was only proper for Doronilla to remit to private respondent the interest accruing to the latter’s money deposited with
petitioner.

Neither does the Court agree with petitioner’s contention that it is not solidarily liable for the return of private
respondent’s money because it was not privy to the transaction between Doronilla and private respondent. The
nature of said transaction, that is, whether it is a mutuum or a commodatum, has no bearing on the question of
petitioner’s liability for the return of private respondent’s money because the factual circumstances of the case
clearly show that petitioner, through its employee Mr. Atienza, was partly responsible for the loss of private
respondent’s money and is liable for its restitution.

Petitioner’s rules for savings deposits written on the passbook it issued Mrs. Vives on behalf of Sterela for Savings
Account No. 10-1567 expressly states that—

"2. Deposits and withdrawals must be made by the depositor personally or upon his written authority duly
authenticated, and neither a deposit nor a withdrawal will be permitted except upon the production of the depositor
savings bank book in which will be entered by the Bank the amount deposited or withdrawn."30

Said rule notwithstanding, Doronilla was permitted by petitioner, through Atienza, the Assistant Branch Manager for
the Buendia Branch of petitioner, to withdraw therefrom even without presenting the passbook (which Atienza very
well knew was in the possession of Mrs. Vives), not just once, but several times. Both the Court of Appeals and the
trial court found that Atienza allowed said withdrawals because he was party to Doronilla’s "scheme" of defrauding
private respondent:

XXX

But the scheme could not have been executed successfully without the knowledge, help and cooperation of Rufo
Atienza, assistant manager and cashier of the Makati (Buendia) branch of the defendant bank. Indeed, the evidence
indicates that Atienza had not only facilitated the commission of the fraud but he likewise helped in devising the
means by which it can be done in such manner as to make it appear that the transaction was in accordance with
banking procedure.

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To begin with, the deposit was made in defendant’s Buendia branch precisely because Atienza was a key officer
therein. The records show that plaintiff had suggested that the ₱200,000.00 be deposited in his bank, the Manila
Banking Corporation, but Doronilla and Dumagpi insisted that it must be in defendant’s branch in Makati for "it will be
easier for them to get a certification". In fact before he was introduced to plaintiff, Doronilla had already prepared a
letter addressed to the Buendia branch manager authorizing Angeles B. Sanchez and company to open a savings
account for Sterela in the amount of ₱200,000.00, as "per coordination with Mr. Rufo Atienza, Assistant Manager of
the Bank x x x" (Exh. 1). This is a clear manifestation that the other defendants had been in consultation with Atienza
from the inception of the scheme. Significantly, there were testimonies and admission that Atienza is the brother-in-
law of a certain Romeo Mirasol, a friend and business associate of Doronilla. 1awphi1.nét

Then there is the matter of the ownership of the fund. Because of the "coordination" between Doronilla and Atienza,
the latter knew before hand that the money deposited did not belong to Doronilla nor to Sterela. Aside from such
foreknowledge, he was explicitly told by Inocencia Vives that the money belonged to her and her husband and the
deposit was merely to accommodate Doronilla. Atienza even declared that the money came from Mrs. Vives.

Although the savings account was in the name of Sterela, the bank records disclose that the only ones empowered
to withdraw the same were Inocencia Vives and Angeles B. Sanchez. In the signature card pertaining to this account
(Exh. J), the authorized signatories were Inocencia Vives &/or Angeles B. Sanchez. Atienza stated that it is the usual
banking procedure that withdrawals of savings deposits could only be made by persons whose authorized signatures
are in the signature cards on file with the bank. He, however, said that this procedure was not followed here because
Sterela was owned by Doronilla. He explained that Doronilla had the full authority to withdraw by virtue of such
ownership. The Court is not inclined to agree with Atienza. In the first place, he was all the time aware that the
money came from Vives and did not belong to Sterela. He was also told by Mrs. Vives that they were only
accommodating Doronilla so that a certification can be issued to the effect that Sterela had a deposit of so much
amount to be sued in the incorporation of the firm. In the second place, the signature of Doronilla was not authorized
in so far as that account is concerned inasmuch as he had not signed the signature card provided by the bank
whenever a deposit is opened. In the third place, neither Mrs. Vives nor Sanchez had given Doronilla the authority to
withdraw.

Moreover, the transfer of fund was done without the passbook having been presented. It is an accepted practice that
whenever a withdrawal is made in a savings deposit, the bank requires the presentation of the passbook. In this
case, such recognized practice was dispensed with. The transfer from the savings account to the current account
was without the submission of the passbook which Atienza had given to Mrs. Vives. Instead, it was made to appear
in a certification signed by Estrella Dumagpi that a duplicate passbook was issued to Sterela because the original
passbook had been surrendered to the Makati branch in view of a loan accommodation assigning the savings
account (Exh. C). Atienza, who undoubtedly had a hand in the execution of this certification, was aware that the
contents of the same are not true. He knew that the passbook was in the hands of Mrs. Vives for he was the one
who gave it to her. Besides, as assistant manager of the branch and the bank official servicing the savings and
current accounts in question, he also was aware that the original passbook was never surrendered. He was also
cognizant that Estrella Dumagpi was not among those authorized to withdraw so her certification had no effect
whatsoever.

The circumstance surrounding the opening of the current account also demonstrate that Atienza’s active participation
in the perpetration of the fraud and deception that caused the loss. The records indicate that this account was
opened three days later after the ₱200,000.00 was deposited. In spite of his disclaimer, the Court believes that
Atienza was mindful and posted regarding the opening of the current account considering that Doronilla was all the
while in "coordination" with him. That it was he who facilitated the approval of the authority to debit the savings
account to cover any overdrawings in the current account (Exh. 2) is not hard to comprehend.

Clearly Atienza had committed wrongful acts that had resulted to the loss subject of this case. x x x.31

Under Article 2180 of the Civil Code, employers shall be held primarily and solidarily liable for damages caused by
their employees acting within the scope of their assigned tasks. To hold the employer liable under this provision, it
must be shown that an employer-employee relationship exists, and that the employee was acting within the scope of
his assigned task when the act complained of was committed.32 Case law in the United States of America has it that
a corporation that entrusts a general duty to its employee is responsible to the injured party for damages flowing from
the employee’s wrongful act done in the course of his general authority, even though in doing such act, the employee
may have failed in its duty to the employer and disobeyed the latter’s instructions.33

There is no dispute that Atienza was an employee of petitioner. Furthermore, petitioner did not deny that Atienza was
acting within the scope of his authority as Assistant Branch Manager when he assisted Doronilla in withdrawing
funds from Sterela’s Savings Account No. 10-1567, in which account private respondent’s money was deposited,
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and in transferring the money withdrawn to Sterela’s Current Account with petitioner. Atienza’s acts of helping
Doronilla, a customer of the petitioner, were obviously done in furtherance of petitioner’s interests34 even though in
the process, Atienza violated some of petitioner’s rules such as those stipulated in its savings account passbook.35 It
was established that the transfer of funds from Sterela’s savings account to its current account could not have been
accomplished by Doronilla without the invaluable assistance of Atienza, and that it was their connivance which was
the cause of private respondent’s loss.

The foregoing shows that the Court of Appeals correctly held that under Article 2180 of the Civil Code, petitioner is
liable for private respondent’s loss and is solidarily liable with Doronilla and Dumagpi for the return of the
₱200,000.00 since it is clear that petitioner failed to prove that it exercised due diligence to prevent the unauthorized
withdrawals from Sterela’s savings account, and that it was not negligent in the selection and supervision of Atienza.
Accordingly, no error was committed by the appellate court in the award of actual, moral and exemplary damages,
attorney’s fees and costs of suit to private respondent.

WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby DENIED. The assailed Decision and Resolution of the Court of Appeals are
AFFIRMED.

SO ORDERED.

Bellosillo, (Chairman), Mendoza, Quisumbing and Austria-Martinez, JJ., concur.

Footnotes
1
Justice Asaali S. Isnani, Ponente, with Justices Rodolfo A. Nocon, Presiding Justice, and Antonio M.
Martinez, concurring.
2
Rollo, pp. 54-55.
3
Id. at 37.
4
Ibid.
5
Id. at 37-38.
6
Id. at 38.
7
Id.
8
Id. at 63.
9
Id. at 35-47.
10
Id. at 54-55.
11
Id. at 18-19.
12
Id. at 148, 181.
13
Id. at 176, 199.
14
Id. at 227.
15
Id. at 21.
16
Id. at 22.
17
Id. at 24-27.
18
Id. at 23.
19
Id. at 28.

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20
Rollo, Petitioner’s Memorandum, pp. 13-14.
21
Id. at 11-12.
22
Rollo, p. 75; Private respondent’s Memorandum, pp. 8-9.
23
Id. at 75-77; Id. at 12-16.
24
Flores v. Uy, G.R. No. 121492, October 26, 2001; Lim v. People, G.R. No. 143231, October 26, 2001.
25
Section 1, Rule 45, Revised Rules of Civil Procedure.
26
Bañas, Jr. v. Court of Appeals, 325 SCRA 259 (2000); Philippine National Construction Corporation v. Mars
Construction Enterprises, Inc., 325 SCRA 624 (2000).
27
Tanguilig v. Court of Appeals, 266 SCRA 78, 83-84 (1997), citing Kasilag v. Rodriguez, 69 Phil. 217; 17A Am
Jur 2d 27 Contracts, § 5, citing Wallace Bank & Trust Co. v. First National Bank, 40 Idaho 712, 237 P 284, 50
ALR 316.
28
Tanguilig v. Court of Appeals, supra, p. 84.
29
Rollo, pp. 40-41, 60.
30
Exhibit "B," Folder of Exhibits, p. 3, emphasis supplied.
31
Rollo, pp. 43-47, citing the Decision of the Regional Trial Court, pp. 5-8.
32
Castilex Industrial Corporation v. Vasquez, Jr., 321 SCRA 393 (1999).
33
18B Am Jur 2d, p. 947, Corporations § 2125, citing Pittsburgh, C.C. & S.L.R. Co. v. Sullivan, 40 NE 138.
34
See note 31.
35
Exhibit "B," Folder of Exhibits, p. 3.

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