56850, C.F.I., Manila, Authorizing Alfonso Tan To Withdraw
56850, C.F.I., Manila, Authorizing Alfonso Tan To Withdraw
56850, C.F.I., Manila, Authorizing Alfonso Tan To Withdraw
62 dated
February 20, 1964 with the understanding that the said check
will remain in the possession of Mendoza until the cotton
materials are finally manufactured into garments after which
time Mendoza will sell the finished products for the Bernals.
Meanwhile, the said check matured without having been
cashed and Mendoza demanded the issuance of another
check 4 in the same amount without a date.
On the other hand, on February 28, 1964, defendant Mendoza
issued two (2) PNB checks 5 in favor of Tan in the total
amount of P 80,796.62. He informed the Bernals of the same
and told them that they are indebted to him and asked the
latter to sign an instrument whereby Mendoza assigned the
said amount to Insular Products Inc. Tan had the two checks
issued by Mendoza discounted in a bank. However, the said
checks were later returned to Tan with the words stamped
"stop payment" which appears to have been ordered by
Mendoza for failure of the Bernals to deposit sufficient funds
for the check that the Bernals issued in favor of Mendoza.
Hence, as adverted to above, Tan brought an action against
Mendoza docketed as Civil Case No. Q-8303 6 while the
Bernals brought an action for interpleader docketed as Civil
Case No. 56850 7 for not knowing whom to pay. While both
actions were pending resolution by the trial court, on March
20, 1966, Tan assigned in favor of George Litton, Sr. his
litigatious credit * in Civil Case No. 56850 against Mendoza,
duly submitted to the court, with notice to the parties. 8 The
deed of assignment was framed in the following tenor:
DEED OF ASSIGNMENT
I, ALFONSO TAN, of age, Chinese, married to UY CHAY
UA, residing at No. 6 Kanlaon, Quezon City, doing business
under the name and style ALTA COMMERCIAL by way of
securing or guaranteeing my obligation to Mr. GEORGE
LITTON, SR., do by these presents CEDE, ASSIGN,
TRANSFER AND CONVEY unto the said Mr. GEORGE
LITTON, SR., my claim against C.B.M. Products, Inc.,
personally guaranteed by Mr. Ciriaco B. Mendoza, in the
amount of Eighty-Thousand Seven Hundred Ninety Six Pesos
and Sixty-two centavos (P 80,796.62) the balance of which, in
principal, and excluding, interests, costs, damages and
attorney's fees now stands at P 76,000.00, P 4,796.62, having
already been received by the assignor on December 23, 1965,
pursuant to the order of the court in Civil Case No.
56850, C.F.I., Manila, authorizing Alfonso Tan to withdraw
the amount of P 4,796.62 then on deposit with the court. All
rights, and interests in said net amount, plus interests and
costs, and less attorney's fees, in case the amount allowed
therefor be less than the amounts claimed in the relief in Civil
Case 56850 (C.F.I., Manila) and Q-8503 (C.F.I., Quezon City)
are by these presents covered by this assignment.
I further undertake to hold in trust any and all amounts which
may hereafter be realized from the aforementioned cases for
the ASSIGNEE, Mr. GEORGE LITTON, SR., and to turn over
to him such amounts in application to my liability to him, as
his interest may then show, and I further undertake to
cooperate towards the successful prosecution of the
5.
6.
Issues:
SO ORDERED.
Ratio:
Assignment of credit:
-
Bidin, J. | 1989
1.
2.
3.
4.
2.
DISMISSED.
Republic
SUPREME
Manila
of
the
Philippines
COURT
FIRST DIVISION
G.R. No. L-78519 September 26, 1989
VICTORIA YAU CHU, assisted by her husband
MICHAEL
CHU, petitioners,
vs.
HON. COURT OF APPEALS, FAMILY SAVINGS BANK
and/or
CAMS
TRADING
ENTERPRISES,
INC.,respondents.
Francisco A. Lara, Jr. for petitioner.
D. T. Ramos and Associates for respondent Family Savings
Bank.
Romulo T. Santos for respondent CAMS Trading.
GRINO-AQUINO, J.:
This is a petition for review on certiorari to annul and set
aside the Court of Appeals' decision dated October 28, 1986 in
CA-G.R. CV No. 03269 which affirmed the decision of the
trial court in favor of the private respondents in an action to
recover the petitioners' time deposits in the respondent Family
Savings Bank.
Since 1980, the petitioner, Victoria Yau Chu, had been
purchasing cement on credit from CAMS Trading Enterprises,
Inc. (hereafter "CAMS Trading" for brevity). To guaranty
payment for her cement withdrawals, she executed in favor of
Cams Trading deeds of assignment of her time deposits in the
total sum of P320,000 in the Family Savings Bank (hereafter
the Bank). Except for the serial numbers and the dates of the
time deposit certificates, the deeds of assignment, which were
prepared by her own lawyer, uniformly provided
... That the assignment serves as a collateral or guarantee for
the payment of my obligation with the said CAMS TRADING
ENTERPRISES, INC. on account of my cement withdrawal
from said company, per separate contract executed between
us.
On July 24,1980, Cams Trading notified the Bank that Mrs.
Chu had an unpaid account with it in the sum of P314,639.75.
It asked that it be allowed to encash the time deposit
certificates which had been assigned to it by Mrs. Chu. It
submitted to the Bank a letter dated July 18, 1980 of Mrs. Chu
admitting that her outstanding account with Cams Trading was
P404,500. After verbally advising Mrs. Chu of the assignee's
request to encash her time deposit certificates and obtaining
her verbal conformity thereto, the Bank agreed to encash the
certificates.It delivered to Cams Trading the sum of
P283,737.75 only, as one time deposit certificate (No.
0048120954) lacked the proper signatures. Upon being
informed of the encashment, Mrs. Chu demanded from the
Bank and Cams Trading that her time deposit be restored.
When neither complied, she filed a complaint to recover the
sum of P283,737.75 from them. The case was docketed in the
Regional Trial Court of Makati, Metro Manila (then CFI of
Rizal, Pasig Branch XIX), as Civil Case No. 38861.
In a decision dated December 12, 1983, the trial court
dismissed the complaint for lack of merit.
Chu appealed to the Court of Appeals (CA-G.R. CV No.
03269) which affirmed the dismissal of her complaint.
In this petition for review, she alleges that the Court of
Appeals erred:
1. In not annulling the encashment of her time deposit
certificates as a pactum commissorium; and
2. In not finding that the obligations secured by her time
deposits had already been paid.
We find no merit in the petition for review.
The Court of Appeals found that the deeds of assignment were
contracts of pledge, but, as the collateral was also money or an
exchange of "peso for peso," the provision in Article 2112 of
the Civil Code for the sale of the thing pledged at public
auction to convert it into money to satisfy the pledgor's
obligation, did not have to be followed. All that had to be done
to convert the pledgor's time deposit certificates into cash was
to present them to the bank for encashment after due notice to
the debtor.
The encashment of the deposit certificates was not a pacto
commissorio which is prohibited under Art. 2088 of the Civil
Code.
A pacto
commissorio is
a
provision
for
the automatic appropriation of the pledged or mortgaged