Tai Tong Chuache & Co. V. The Insurance Commission and Travellers Multi-Indemnity
Tai Tong Chuache & Co. V. The Insurance Commission and Travellers Multi-Indemnity
Tai Tong Chuache & Co. V. The Insurance Commission and Travellers Multi-Indemnity
THE
INSURANCE COMMISSION and
TRAVELLERS MULTI-INDEMNITY
FACTS:
Complainants acquired from a certain
Rolando Gonzales a parcel of land and
a building located at San Rafael
Village, Davao City. Complainants
assumed the mortgage of the building
in favor of S.S.S., which building was
insured with respondent S.S.S.
Accredited Group of Insurers
forP25,000.00.On April 19, 1975,
Azucena Palomo obtained a loan from
Tai Tong Chuache Inc. in the amount of
P100,000.00. To secure the payment
of the loan, a mortgage was executed
over the land and the building in favor
of Tai Tong Chuache & Co. On April 25,
1975, Arsenio Chua, representative of
Thai Tong Chuache & Co. insured the
latter's interest with Travellers MultiIndemnity Corporation for P100,000.00
(P70,000.00 for the building and
P30,000.00 for the contents
thereof).On June 11, 1975, Pedro
Palomo secured a Fire Insurance Policy
No. F- 02500, covering the building for
P50,000.00 with respondent Zenith
Insurance Corporation. On July 16,
1975,another Fire Insurance Policy No.
8459 was procured from respondent
Philippine
British Assurance Company, covering t
he same building for P50,000.00 and t
he contents thereof forP70,000.00.On
July 31, 1975, the building and the
contents were totally razed by fire.
Based on the computation of the loss,
including the Travellers MultiIndemnity, respondents, Zenith
Insurance, Phil. British Assurance and
S.S.S. Accredited Group of Insurers,
paid their corresponding shares of the
loss. Complainants were paid the
following: P41,546.79 by Philippine
British Assurance Co., P11,877.14 by
Zenith Insurance Corporation, and
P5,936.57by S.S.S. Group of
Accredited Insurers (Par. 6. Amended
PNB v. LO
FACTS: In September 1916,
Severo Eugenio Lo and Ling, together
with Ping, Hun, Lam and Peng formed
a commercial partnership under the
name of Tai Sing and Co., with a
capital of P40,000 contributed by said
partners. The firm name was
registered in the mercantile registrar
in the Province of Iloilo. Ping, in the
articles of partnership, was assigned
as the general manager. However, in
1917, he executed a special power of
attorney in favor of Lam to act in his
behalf as the manager of the firm.
Subsequently, Lam obtained
aloan from PNB the loan was under
the firms name. In the same year,
Ping died in China. From 1918 to 1920,
the firm, via GM Lam, incurred
other loans from PNB. The loans were
not objected by any of the partners.
Later, PNB sued the firm for nonpayment. Lo, in his defense, argued
that he cannot be liable as a partner
because the partnership, according to
him, is void; that it is void because the
firms name did not comply with the
requirement of the Code of Commerce
that a firm name should contain the
names of all of the partners, of
several of them, or only one of them.
Lo also argued that the acts of Lam
after the death of Ping is not binding
upon the other partners because the
special power of attorney shall have
already ceased.
ISSUE: Whether or not Lo is correct in
both arguments.
HELD: No. The anomalous adoption of
the firm name above noted does not
affect the liability of the general
partners to third parties under Article
127 of the Code of Commerce. The
object of the Code of Commerce in
requiring a general partnership to
transact business under the name of
Held:
While an unregistered commercial
partnership has no juridical
personality, nevertheless, where two
or more persons attempt to create a
partnership failing to comply with all
the legal formalities, the law considers
them as partners and the association
is a partnership in so far as it is a
favorable to third persons, by reason
of the equitable principle of estoppel.
Where a partnership not duly
organized has been
recognizedas such in its dealings with
certain persons, it shall beconsidered
as partnership by estoppel and the p
ersonsdealing with it are
estopped from denying its partnership
existence