Carolyn M. Garcia - Vs-Rica Marie S. Thio GR No. 154878, 16 March 2007 Facts
Carolyn M. Garcia - Vs-Rica Marie S. Thio GR No. 154878, 16 March 2007 Facts
Carolyn M. Garcia - Vs-Rica Marie S. Thio GR No. 154878, 16 March 2007 Facts
Garcia
-vsRica Marie S. Thio
GR No. 154878, 16 March 2007
FACTS
Respondent Thio received from petitioner Garcia two crossed checks
which amount to US$100,000 and US$500,000, respectively, payable to the
order of Marilou Santiago. According to petitioner, respondent failed to pay
the principal amounts of the loans when they fell due and so she filed a
complaint for sum of money and damages with the RTC. Respondent denied
that she contracted the two loans and countered that it was Marilou Satiago
to whom petitioner lent the money. She claimed she was merely asked y
petitioner to give the checks to Santiago. She issued the checks for P76,000
and P20,000 not as payment of interest but to accommodate petitioners
request that respondent use her own checks instead of Santiagos.
RTC ruled in favor of petitioner. CA reversed RTC and ruled that there
was no contract of loan between the parties.
ISSUE
(1) Whether or not there was a contract of loan between petitioner and
respondent.
(2) Who borrowed money from petitioner, the respondent or Marilou Santiago?
HELD
(1)
The Court held in the affirmative. A loan is a real contract, not
consensual, and as such I perfected only upon the delivery of the object of
the contract. Upon delivery of the contract of loan (in this case the money
received by the debtor when the checks were encashed) the debtor acquires
ownership of such money or loan proceeds and is bound to pay the creditor
an equal amount. It is undisputed that the checks were delivered to
respondent.
(2)
However, the checks were crossed and payable not to the
order of the respondent but to the order of a certain Marilou Santiago.
Delivery is the act by which the res or substance is thereof placed within the
actual or constructive possession or control of another. Although respondent
did not physically receive the proceeds of the checks, these instruments
were placed in her control and possession under an arrangement whereby
she actually re-lent the amount to Santiago.
Facts: Saura Inc. applied to the Rehabilitation Finance Corp (before its
conversion to DBP) for a loan of 500k secured by a first mortgage of
the factory building to finance for the construction of a jute mill factory
and purchase of factory implements. RFC accepted and approved the
loan application subject to some conditions which Saura admitted it
could not comply with. Without having received the amount being
loaned, and sensing that it could not at anyway obtain the full amount
of loan, Saura Inc. then asked for cancellation of the mortgage which
RFC also approved. Nine years after the cancellation of the mortgage,
Saura sued RFC for damages for its non-fulfillment of obligations
arguing that there was indeed a perfected consensual contract
between them.
Issue: Was there a perfected consensual contract? Was there a real
contract of loan which would warrant recovery of damages arising out
of breach of such contract?
Held: On the first issue, yes, there was indeed a perfected consensual
contract, as recognized in Article 1934 of the Civil Code. There was
undoubtedly offer and acceptance in this case: the application of
Saura, Inc. for a loan of P500,000.00 was approved by resolution of
the defendant, and the corresponding mortgage was executed and
registered. But this fact alone falls short of resolving the second issue
and the basic claim that the defendant failed to fulfill its obligation and
the plaintiff is therefore entitled to recover damages. The action thus
taken by both partiesSaura's request for cancellation and RFC's
subsequent approval of such cancellationwas in the nature of mutual
desistance what Manresa terms "mutuo disenso" which is a mode
of extinguishing obligations. It is a concept derived from the principle
that since mutual agreement can create a contract, mutual
disagreement by the parties can cause its extinguishment. In view of
such extinguishment, said perfected consensual contract to deliver did
not constitute a real contract of loan.
FACTS:
Frank Roa obtained a loan at 16 1/4% interest rate per annum from
Ayala Investment and Development Corporation. For security, Roa's
house and lot were mortgaged. Later, Roa sold the house and lot to
ALS and Antonio Litonjua, who assumed Roa's debt to Ayala
Investment. Ayala Investment, however, granted a new loan to be
applied to Roa's debt, secured by the same property at a different
interest rate of 20% per annum.
When ALS and Litonjua failed to pay, BPIIC, successor to Ayala
Investment, filed for foreclosure of mortgage.
ISSUE:
o
1st
digests
1.
G.R.
memo
in
from
credit
Saura
Import
&Export
No.
L-24968
the
transactions
Co.,
April
Inc
27,
Ant...
(partial)
v.
DBP
1972
Facts: Saura Inc. applied to the Rehabilitation Finance Corp (before its
conversion to DBP) for a loan of 500k secured by a first mortgage of
the factory building to finance for the construction of a jute mill factory
and purchase of factory implements. RFC accepted and approved the
loan application subject to some conditions which Saura admitted it
could not comply with. Without having received the amount being
loaned, and sensing that it could not at anyway obtain the full amount
of loan, Saura Inc. then asked for cancellation of the mortgage which
RFC also approved. Nine years after the cancellation of the mortgage,
Saura sued RFC for damages for its non-fulfillment of obligations
arguing that there was indeed a perfected consensual contract
between
them.
Issue: Was there a perfected consensual contract? Was there a real
contract of loan which would warrant recovery of damages arising out
of
breach
of
such
contract?
Held: On the first issue, yes, there was indeed a perfected consensual
No.
Bonnevie
L-49101
v.
October
CA
1983
24,
Was
there
perfected
contract
of
loan?
Held: Yes. From the recitals of the mortgage deed itself, it is clearly
seen that the mortgage deed was executed for and on condition of the
loan granted to the Lozano spouses. The fact that the latter did not
collect from the respondent Bank the consideration of the mortgage on
the date it was executed is immaterial. A contract of loan being a
consensual contract, the herein contract of loan was perfected at the
same time the contract of mortgage was executed. The promissory
note executed on December 12, 1966 is only an evidence of
indebtedness and does not indicate lack of consideration of the
mortgage
at
the
time
of
its
execution.
4.
GR
No.
Pajuyo
146364
v.
June
3,
CA
2004