Filcar Transport Services, Vs Espinas
Filcar Transport Services, Vs Espinas
Filcar Transport Services, Vs Espinas
Supreme Court
Manila
SECOND DIVISION
Promulgated:
JOSE A. ESPINAS,
Respondent. June 20, 2012
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DECISION
BRION, J.:
After verifying with the Land Transportation Office, Espinas learned that the
owner of the other car, with plate number UCF-545, is Filcar.
Espinas sent several letters to Filcar and to its President and General
Manager Carmen Flor, demanding payment for the damages sustained by his
car. On May 31, 2001, Espinas filed a complaint for damages against Filcar
and Carmen Flor before the Metropolitan Trial Court (MeTC) of Manila, and
the case was raffled to Branch 13. In the complaint, Espinas demanded that
Filcar and Carmen Flor pay the amount of P97,910.00, representing actual
damages sustained by his car.
Filcar argued that while it is the registered owner of the car that hit
and bumped Espinas car, the car was assigned to its Corporate Secretary
Atty. Candido Flor, the husband of Carmen Flor. Filcar further stated that
when the incident happened, the car was being driven by Atty. Flors
personal driver, Timoteo Floresca.
Atty. Flor, for his part, alleged that when the incident occurred, he
was attending a birthday celebration at a nearby hotel, and it was only later
that night when he noticed a small dent on and the cracked signal light of the
car. On seeing the dent and the crack, Atty. Flor allegedly asked Floresca
what happened, and the driver replied that it was a result of a hit and run
while the car was parked in front of Bogota on Pedro Gil Avenue, Manila.
Filcar denied any liability to Espinas and claimed that the incident
was not due to its fault or negligence since Floresca was not its employee
but that of Atty. Flor. Filcar and Carmen Flor both said that they always
exercised the due diligence required of a good father of a family in leasing
or assigning their vehicles to third parties.
The MeTC, in its decision dated January 20, 2004,[4] ruled in favor of
Espinas, and ordered Filcar and Carmen Flor, jointly and severally, to pay
Espinas P97,910.00 as actual damages, representing the cost of repair, with
interest at 6% per annum from the date the complaint was filed; P50,000.00
as moral damages; P20,000.00 as exemplary damages; and P20,000.00 as
attorneys fees. The MeTC ruled that Filcar, as the registered owner of the
vehicle, is primarily responsible for damages resulting from the vehicles
operation.
The Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Manila, Branch 20, in the exercise of its
appellate jurisdiction, affirmed the MeTC decision.[5] The RTC ruled that
Filcar failed to prove that Floresca was not its employee as no proof was
adduced that Floresca was personally hired by Atty. Flor. The RTC agreed
with the MeTC that the registered owner of a vehicle is directly and
primarily liable for the damages sustained by third persons as a consequence
of the negligent or careless operation of a vehicle registered in its name. The
RTC added that the victim of recklessness on the public highways is without
means to discover or identify the person actually causing the injury or
damage. Thus, the only recourse is to determine the owner, through the
vehicles registration, and to hold him responsible for the damages.
The CA Decision
The CA did not accept Filcars argument that it cannot be held liable
for damages because the driver of the vehicle was not its employee. In so
ruling, the CA cited the case of Villanueva v. Domingo[8] where the Court
said that the question of whether the driver was authorized by the actual
owner is irrelevant in determining the primary and direct responsibility of
the registered owner of a vehicle for accidents, injuries and deaths caused by
the operation of his vehicle.
The Issue
Simply stated, the issue for the consideration of this Court is: whether
Filcar, as registered owner of the motor vehicle which figured in an
accident, may be held liable for the damages caused to Espinas.
Our Ruling
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Under Article 2176, in relation with Article 2180, of the Civil Code,
an action predicated on an employees act or omission may be instituted
against the employer who is held liable for the negligent act or omission
committed by his employee.
Although the employer is not the actual tortfeasor, the law makes him
vicariously liable on the basis of the civil law principle of pater familias for
failure to exercise due care and vigilance over the acts of ones subordinates
to prevent damage to another.[10] In the last paragraph of Article 2180 of the
Civil Code, the employer may invoke the defense that he observed all the
diligence of a good father of a family to prevent damage.
As its core defense, Filcar contends that Article 2176, in relation with
Article 2180, of the Civil Code is inapplicable because it presupposes the
existence of an employer-employee relationship. According to Filcar, it
cannot be held liable under the subject provisions because the driver of its
vehicle at the time of the accident, Floresca, is not its employee but that of
its Corporate Secretary, Atty. Flor.
Thus, it is clear that for the purpose of holding the registered owner of
the motor vehicle primarily and directly liable for damages under Article
2176, in relation with Article 2180, of the Civil Code, the existence of an
employer-employee relationship, as it is understood in labor relations law, is
not required. It is sufficient to establish that Filcar is the registered owner of
the motor vehicle causing damage in order that it may be held vicariously
liable under Article 2180 of the Civil Code.
The rationale for the rule that a registered owner is vicariously liable
for damages caused by the operation of his motor vehicle is explained by the
principle behind motor vehicle registration, which has been discussed by this
Court in Erezo, and cited by the CA in its decision:
Neither can Filcar use the defenses available under Article 2180 of the
Civil Code - that the employee acts beyond the scope of his assigned task or
that it exercised the due diligence of a good father of a family to prevent
damage - because the motor vehicle registration law, to a certain extent,
modified Article 2180 of the Civil Code by making these defenses
unavailable to the registered owner of the motor vehicle. Thus, for as long as
Filcar is the registered owner of the car involved in the vehicular accident, it
could not escape primary liability for the damages caused to Espinas.
The public interest involved in this case must not be underestimated.
Road safety is one of the most common problems that must be addressed in
this country. We are not unaware of news of road accidents involving
reckless drivers victimizing our citizens. Just recently, such pervasive
recklessness among most drivers took the life of a professor of our state
university.[14] What is most disturbing is that our existing laws do not seem
to deter these road malefactors from committing acts of recklessness.
We understand that the solution to the problem does not stop with
legislation. An effective administration and enforcement of the laws must be
ensured to reinforce discipline among drivers and to remind owners of motor
vehicles to exercise due diligence and vigilance over the acts of their drivers
to prevent damage to others.
Thus, whether the driver of the motor vehicle, Floresca, is an employee of
Filcar is irrelevant in arriving at the conclusion that Filcar is primarily and
directly liable for the damages sustained by Espinas. While Republic Act
No. 4136 or the Land Transportation and Traffic Code does not contain any
provision on the liability of registered owners in case of motor vehicle
mishaps, Article 2176, in relation with Article 2180, of the Civil Code
imposes an obligation upon Filcar, as registered owner, to answer for the
damages caused to Espinas car. This interpretation is consistent with the
strong public policy of maintaining road safety, thereby reinforcing the aim
of the State to promote the responsible operation of motor vehicles by its
citizens.
This does not mean, however, that Filcar is left without any recourse against
the actual employer of the driver and the driver himself. Under the civil law
principle of unjust enrichment, the registered owner of the motor vehicle has
a right to be indemnified by the actual employer of the driver of the amount
that he may be required to pay as damages for the injury caused to another.
The set-up may be inconvenient for the registered owner of the motor
vehicle, but the inconvenience cannot outweigh the more important public
policy being advanced by the law in this case which is the protection of
innocent persons who may be victims of reckless drivers and irresponsible
motor vehicle owners.
SO ORDERED.
ARTURO D. BRION
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Senior Associate Justice
Chairperson
BIENVENIDO L. REYES
Associate Justice
CERTIFICATION
I certify that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in
consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the
Courts Division.
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Senior Associate Justice
(Per Section 12, R.A. 296,
The Judiciary Act of 1948, as amended)
[1]
Filed under Rule 45 of the Revised Rules of Court; rollo, pp. 10-19.
[2]
Dated February 16, 2006; penned by Associate Justice Rosalinda Asuncion-Vicente, and concurred in by
Associate Justices Edgardo P. Cruz and Sesinando E. Villon. Id. at 21-28.
[3]
Dated July 6, 2006, id. at 30-31.
[4]
Id. at 71-78.
[5]
Id. at 52-57.
[6]
102 Phil. 103 (1957).
[7]
Id. at 108.
[8]
481 Phil. 837, 851 (2004).
[9]
Hector S. de Leon and Hector M. de Leon, Jr., Comments and Cases on Torts and Damages (2004), p.
329.
[10]
Id. at 330.
[11]
437 Phil. 244, 252 (2002).
[12]
Id. at 255.
[13]
Ibid.
[14]
Veteran journalist-professor dies in vehicular accident on killer
highway http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/metro/view/20110513-336347/Veteran-journalist-
professor-dies-in-vehicular-accident-on-killer-highway.