ARTICLE 1319 - Laudico - Batangan
ARTICLE 1319 - Laudico - Batangan
ARTICLE 1319 - Laudico - Batangan
vs.
ISIDRA COJUANGCO, defendant-appellee.
On October 29, 1943, Atty. Marcelino Lontok, who has represented the herein appellant,
sent Isidra Cojuangco a missive with three postal money orders for P800, stating that he
was remitting that amount in behalf of his client "in accordance with your agreement,"
and promising to pay the balance "at the shortest possible time." The amount was
rejected by Mrs. Cojuangco, who told she had not had any agreement with his client.
Atty. Lontok sent a letter through a messenger to Mrs. Cojuangco's counsel, Atty. Antonio
Lucero, in Manila, enclosing the same money orders for P800 and P708.30 in paper
money. This tender was also refused.
Attorney Lontok came to this court with a motion to order the appellee to comply with
the offer she had made in her brief. That motion was "rejected" in a resolution for having
been filed after the entry of judgment."
The lower court declared that "the statement contained in the brief of the defendant
herein and footnoted in the decision of the Supreme Court (was) a promise on the part of
the defendant herein to resell the land in question to the plaintiff herein." Nevertheless it
found that "the time for him (Batagan) to accept the promise was from the date of the
brief of the defendant herein until the entry of judgment," and that the acceptance
having been made after the judgment had been rendered, it came too late.
The question of the conclusiveness of our resolution referred to is not pressed in this
appeal. Apparently abandoning her plea in this regard, the appellee makes no reference
in her brief to her former contention that this action is res adjudicata. And she seems to
take for granted that the signification in her brief of her willingness to allow the
repurchase of the property constituted a formal offer that could have served as basis for
the creation of legal relations.
ISSUE: whether the appellee's offer has been duly accepted by the appellant.
HELD:
We are of the opinion that the acceptance was tardy. An offer of compromise settlement
must be accepted within a reasonable time. And acceptance or rejection of an offer of
compromise may be inferred from circumstances. The appellant's failure to act on the
offer before the judgment was entered was an implied rejection of said offer.
In pushing the appeal to final conclusion the appellant made it clear that he was not
interested in his creditor's liberal concession. A compromise has for its purpose the
avoidance or termination of a law suit. With the rendition of judgment the reason which
induced the appellee to make her proposition ceased to exist.
Again, acceptance in order to conclude the agreement must in every respect meet and
correspond with the terms and conditions of the offer. Granting that the appellant acted
on time, payment of P800 fell short of the appellee's requirement. The appellee wanted
P1,508.28 in cash. This was the least she was entitled to, being the amount which the
court below had found to be due her. In her proposition she did not even include any
interest.
The substantial variance between the amount in the offer and the amount tendered not
only made the purported acceptance inoperative but "put an end to the negotiations
without forming a contract unless the party making the offer agreed to the suggested
modification."
Otherwise, as the trial judge aptly observed, "promisors would be tied to their promises
indefinitely and would not be able to dispose of the property involved" in the promise or
offer. In addition, the promisor would be placed in a position where he would always lose
without anything to gain. The promisee could wait until judgment is rendered and
accepted the offer of compromise if the judgment happened to be more onerous to him..
then in existence, the same having already been withdrawn. There was no meeting of
the minds, through offer and acceptance, which is the essence of the contract. While
there was an offer, there was no acceptance, and when the latter was made and could
have a binding effect, the offer was then lacking. Though both the offer and the
acceptance existed, they did not meet to give birth to a contract.