Purita S. Mapa, Carmina S. Mapa and Cornelio P. MAPA, Petitioners, vs. COURT OF APPEALS and TRANS-WORLD AIRLINES INC., Respondents
Purita S. Mapa, Carmina S. Mapa and Cornelio P. MAPA, Petitioners, vs. COURT OF APPEALS and TRANS-WORLD AIRLINES INC., Respondents
Purita S. Mapa, Carmina S. Mapa and Cornelio P. MAPA, Petitioners, vs. COURT OF APPEALS and TRANS-WORLD AIRLINES INC., Respondents
DECISION
DAVIDE, JR., J.:
The main issue in this petition for review under Rule 45 of the Rules of
Court is the applicability of Article 28(1) of the Warsaw Convention, which [1]
provides as follows:
ARTICLE 28. (1) An action for damages must be brought, at the option of the
plaintiff, in the territory of one of the High Contracting Parties, either before the
court of the domicile of the carrier or of his principal place of business, or where
he has a place of business through which the contract has been made, or before the
court at the place of destination.
Order of the Regional Trial Court of Quezon City, Branch 102, which
dismissed Civil Case No. Q-91-9620 on the ground of lack of jurisdiction in
[3]
Plaintiffs Cornelio P. Mapa and Purita S. Mapa are respectable members of the
society. Mr. Mapa is an established businessman and currently the Regional
General Manager of Akerlund and Rausing, a multinational packaging material
manufacturer based in Manila. He was previously the Senior Vice President of
Phimco Industries, an affiliate company of Swedish Match Company. Mrs. Mapa
is a successful businesswoman engaged in the commercial transactions of high
value antique and oriental arts decor items originating from Asian
countries. Carmina S. Mapa is the daughter of plaintiffs Purita and Cornelio and is
a graduate of the International School in Bangkok, Thailand, now presently
enrolled at the Boston University where she is majoring in communication.
Plaintiffs Mapa entered into contract of air transportation with defendant TWA as
evidenced by TWA ticket Nos. 015:9475:153:304 and 015:9475:153:305,
purchased in Bangkok, Thailand. Said TWA tickets are for Los Angeles-New
York-Boston-St. Louis-Chicago ....
Domicile of carrier TWA is Kansas City, Missouri, USA. Its principal place of
business is Kansas City, Missouri, USA. TWAs place of business through which
the contracts were made is Bangkok, Thailand.The place of destination is
Chicago, USA.
On August 10, 1990, plaintiffs Carmina and Purita left Manila on board PAL
flight No. 104 for Los Angeles. Carmina was to commence schooling and thus
was accompanied by Purita to assist her in settling down at the University.
They arrived in Los Angeles on the same date and stayed there until August 14,
1990 when they left for New York City.
On August 14, 1990, plaintiffs Purita and Carmina S. Mapa arrived at the John F.
Kennedy (JFK) Airport, New York, on TWA Flight No. 904.
On August 27, 1990, plaintiffs Purita and Carmina S. Mapa departed for Boston,
taking a connecting flight on TWAs carrier, TW 0901, from JFK Airport, New
York, to Bostons Logan Airport, checking in seven (7) pieces of luggage at the
TWA counter in the JFK Airport. The seven baggages were received by a porter
who issued seven TWA baggage receipts numbered 17-8270, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75,
and 76therefor.
From the entrance gate of the terminal building, plaintiffs Purita and Carmina
proceeded to TWAs ticket counter and presented their confirmed TWA tickets
numbered 015:9475:153:304 and 015:9475:153:305 with a 3:00 p.m. departure
time. They were issued their boarding passes and were instructed to proceed to
gate 35 for boarding. At about 2:40 p.m., plaintiffs noticed that there was still no
instruction to board the aircraft so they made inquiries. The TWA ground
stewardess informed plaintiffs that they were at the wrong gate because their
flight was boarding at gate 1. Upon hearing this, plaintiffs rushed to gate 1 which
was in another building terminal. At gate 1, they were told by a TWA ground
stewardess that flight 901 had just departed. However, they were consoled that
another TWA flight was leaving for Boston after 30 minutes and plaintiffs could
use the same boarding pass for the next flight. At around 3:15 p.m., plaintiffs
Purita and Carmina were able to board the next flight.However, the plane was not
immediately cleared for take off on account of a thunderstorm. The passengers
were instructed to stay inside the aircraft until 6:00 p.m. when the plane finally
left for Boston.
Upon arriving in Boston, plaintiffs Purita and Carmina proceeded to the carousel
to claim their baggages and found only three out of the seven they checked in, to
wit: one Samsonite on the carousel, another Samsonite lying on the floor near the
carousel and a third baggage, an American Tourister, inside the unclaimed
baggage office. Plaintiffs immediately reported the loss of their four baggages to
the TWA Baggage Office at Logan Airport. TWAs representative confidently
assured them that their baggages would be located within 24 hours and not more
than 48 hours.
On September 2, 1990, plaintiffs received a letter from TWA, signed by Mr. J.A.
Butler, Customer Relations-Baggage Service, apologizing for TWAs failure to
locate the missing luggage and requesting plaintiffs to accomplish a passenger
property questionnaire to facilitate a further intensive and computerized search for
the lost luggage. Plaintiffs duly accomplished the passenger property
questionnaire, taking pains to write down in detail the contents of each missing
baggage. The total value of the lost items amounted to $11, 283.79.
On September 20, 1990, plaintiffs counsel wrote TWA thru its General Sales
Manager in the Philippines, Daniel Tuason, with office address at Ground Floor,
Saville Building, Sen. Gil J. Puyat Avenue corner Paseo de Roxas, Makati, Metro
Manila demanding indemnification for the grave damage and injury suffered by
the plaintiffs.
TWA again assured plaintiffs that intensive search was being conducted.
On October 8, 1990, TWA offered to amicably settle the case by giving plaintiffs-
appellants two options: (a) transportation credit for future TWA travel or (b) cash
settlement. Five months lapsed without any result on TWAs intensive search.
On January 11, 1991, TWA disregarded plaintiffs option and unilaterally declared
the payment of $2,560.00 as constituting full satisfaction of the plaintiffs claim.
On July 19, 1991, plaintiffs accepted the check for $2,560.00, as partial payment
for the actual cost of their lost baggages and their contents.
Despite demands by plaintiffs, TWA failed and refused without just cause to
indemnify and redress plaintiffs for the grave injury and damages they have
suffered.[4]
gave the petitioners five days within which to file a reply memorandum; and
TWA, two days from receipt of the latter to file its comment thereon. The [14]
petitioners then filed their Opposition (by way of Reply Memorandum) to [15]
On 24 July 1992, the trial court issued an Order dismissing the case
[19]
It is plaintiffs' theory that the Warsaw Convention does not apply to the instant
case because plaintiffs' contract of transportation does not constitute "international
transportation" as defined in said convention.This however is belied by the
Passenger Property Questionnaire which is Annex C of plaintiffs' amended
complaint. Page two of said questionnaire accomplished by plaintiffs under the
heading "Your Complete Itinerary" shows that the TWA tickets issued to the
plaintiffs form part of the contract of transportation to be performed from Manila
to the United States. Since the Philippines and the United States are parties to the
convention, plaintiffs' contracts of transportation come within the meaning of
International Transportation.
...
On the basis of the foregoing, the Court holds that the Warsaw Convention is
applicable to the case at bar, even if the basis of plaintiffs' present action is breach
of contract of carriage under the New Civil Code.
The next question to be resolved is whether or not the Court has jurisdiction to try
the present case in the light of the provision of Art. 28(1) above-quoted.
Under Art. 28(1) supra, a complaint for damages against an air carrier can be
instituted only in any of the following places/courts:
Venue and jurisdiction are entirely distinct matters. Jurisdiction may not be
conferred by consent or waiver upon a court which otherwise would have no
jurisdiction over the subject-matter of an action; but the venue of an action as
fixed by statute may be changed by the consent of the parties and an objection that
the plaintiff brought his suit in the wrong country may be waived by the failure of
the defendant to make a timely objection. In either case, the court may render a
valid judgment. Rules as to jurisdiction can never be left to the consent or
agreement of the parties, whether or not a prohibition exists against their
alteration.
...
It has been shown by the defendant that the domicile of the defendant Trans
World Airlines, Inc. is Kansas City, Missouri, its principal place of business is
also in Kansas City, Missouri, the carrier's place of business through which the
contracts were made is Bangkok (Annexes A and A-1, Amended Complaint), and
the place of destination was Boston.
The Philippines not being one of the places specified in Art. 28(1) above-quoted
where the complaint may be instituted, this Court therefore, does not have
jurisdiction over the present case.
actions for damages, whether based on tort, code law or common law,
arising from loss of baggage under Article 18 of the Warsaw Convention,
can only be brought subject to the conditions and limits set forth in the
Warsaw Convention. Article 28(1) thereof sets forth conditions and limits in
that the action for damages may be instituted only in the territory of one of
the High Contracting Parties, before the court of (1) the domicile of the
carrier, (2) the carriers principal place of business, (3) the place of business
through which the contract has been made, or (4) the place of
destination. Since the Philippines is not one of these places, a Philippine
Court, like the RTC, has no jurisdiction over the complaint for damages.
Respondent Court of Appeals likewise held that the petitioners could not
claim application of Articles 1733, 1734, 1735, 1755, and 1756 of the New
Civil Code on common carriers without taking into consideration Article 1753
of the same Code, which provides that the law of the country to which the
goods are to be transported shall govern the liability of the common carrier
for their loss, destruction, or deterioration. Since the country of ultimate
destination is Chicago, the law of Chicago shall govern the liability of TWA
for the loss of the four pieces of baggage. Neither is Article 2176 of the New
Civil Code on torts or quasi-delicts applicable in view of the private
international law principle of lex loci delicti commissi. In addition,
[22]
We resolved to give due course to the petition after the filing by TWA of
its Comment on the petition and noted without action for the reasons stated
in the resolution of 25 September 1996 petitioners Reply and Rejoinder. We
then required the parties to submit their respective memoranda. They did in
due time.
The petitioners insist that the Warsaw Convention is not applicable to
their case because the contracts they had with TWA did not involve
an international transportation. Whether the contracts were of international
transportation is to be solely determined from the TWA tickets issued to
them in Bangkok, Thailand, which showed that their itinerary was Los
Angeles-New York-Boston-St. Louis-Chicago. Accordingly, since the place
of departure (Los Angeles) and the place of destination (Chicago) are both
within the territory of one High Contracting Party, with no agreed stopping
place in a territory subject to the sovereignty, mandate, suzerainty or
authority of another Power, the contracts did not constitute international
transportation as defined by the convention. They also claim to be without
legal basis the contention of TWA that their transportation contracts were of
international character because of the handwritten notations in the tickets
re INTL TKT #079-4402956821-2 and INTL TKT #079-
4402956819. Notwithstanding such notations, the TWA tickets, viz., (a) No.
015.9475:153:304 and (b) No. 015:9475:153:305 did not cease to be for the
itinerary therein designated. Besides, it is a fact that petitioners Purita and
Carmina Mapa traveled from Manila to Los Angeles via Philippine Airlines
(PAL) by virtue of PAL tickets issued independently of the TWA tickets.
The pith issue to be resolved under the petitioners first assigned error is
whether the contracts of transportation between Purita and Carmina Mapa,
on the one hand, and TWA, on the other, were contracts of international
transportation under the Warsaw Convention. If they were, then we should
sustain the trial court and the Court of Appeals in light of our ruling in Santos
v. Northwest Orient Airlines. It appears clear to us that TWA itself, the trial
[25]
court, and the Court of Appeals impliedly admit that if the sole basis were
the two TWA tickets for Los Angeles-New York-Boston-St. Louis-Chicago,
the contracts cannot be brought within the term international transportation,
as defined in Article I(2) of the Warsaw Convention. As provided therein, a
contract is one of international transportation only if
according to the contract made by the parties, the place of departure and the place
of destination, whether or not there be a break in the transportation or a
transshipment, are situated either within the territories of two High Contracting
Parties, or within the territory of a single High Contracting Party, if there is an
agreed stopping place within a territory subject to the sovereignty, mandate or
authority of another power, even though that power is not a party to this
convention.
There are then two categories of international transportation, viz., (1)
that where the place of departure and the place of destination are situated
within the territories of two High Contracting Parties regardless of whether
or not there be a break in the transportation or a transshipment; and (2) that
where the place of departure and the place of destination are within the
territory of a single High Contracting Party if there is an agreed stopping
place within a territory subject to the sovereignty, mandate, or authority of
another power, even though the power is not a party to the Convention.
The High Contracting Parties referred to in the Convention are the
signatories thereto and those which subsequently adhered to it. In the case
of the Philippines, the Convention was concurred in by the Senate, through
Resolution No. 19, on 16 May 1950. The Philippine instrument of accession
was signed by President Elpidio Quirino on 13 October 1950 and was
deposited with the Polish Government on 9 November 1950. The
Convention became applicable to the Philippines on 9 February 1951. Then,
on 23 September 1955, President Ramon Magsaysay issued Proclamation
No. 201, declaring the Philippines formal adherence thereto, to the end that
the same and every article and clause thereof may be observed and fulfilled
in good faith by the Republic of the Philippines and the citizens thereof. [26]
The flaw of respondents position is the presumption that the parties have
regarded as an undivided carriage or as a single operation the carriage from
Manila to Los Angeles through PAL then to New York-Boston- St. Louis-
Chicago through TWA. The dismissal then of the second Amended
Complaint by the trial court and the Court of Appeals affirmance of the
dismissal were not based on indubitable facts or grounds, but on inferences
without established factual basis.
TWA should have offered evidence for its affirmative defenses at the
preliminary hearing therefor. Section 5 of Rule 16 of the Rules of Court
expressly provides:
SEC. 3. Hearing and order. -- After hearing the court may deny or grant the
motion or allow amendment of pleading, or may defer the hearing and
determination of the motion until the trial if the ground alleged therein does not
appear to be indubitable.