02 Republic vs. Bagtas
02 Republic vs. Bagtas
02 Republic vs. Bagtas
263
The Court of Appeals certified this case to this Court because only
questions of law are raised.
On 8 May 1948 Jose V. Bagtas borrowed from the Republic of
the Philippines through the Bureau of Animal Industry three bulls: a
Red Sindhi with a book value of P1,176.46, a Bhagnari, of
P1,320.56 and a Sahiniwal, of P744.46, for a period of one year
from 8 May 1948 to 7 May 1949 for breeding purposes subject to a
government charge of breeding fee of 10% of the book value of the
bulls. Upon the expiration on 7 May 1949 of the contract, the
borrower asked for a renewal for another period of one year.
However, the Secretary of Agriculture and Natural Resources
approved a renewal thereof of only one bull for another year from 8
May 1949 to 7 May 1950 and requested the return of the other two.
On 25 March 1950 Jose V. Bagtas wrote to the Director of Animal
Industry that he would pay the value of the three bulls. On 17
October 1950 he reiterated his desire to buy them at a value with a
deduction of yearly depreciation to be approved by the Auditor
General. On 19 October 1950 the Director of Animal Industry
advised him that the book value of the three bulls could not be
reduced and that they either be returned or their book value paid not
later than 31 October 1950. Jose V. Bagtas failed to pay the book
value of the three bulls or to return them. So, on 20 December 1950
in the Court of First Instance of Manila the Republic of the
Philippines commenced an action against him praying that he be
ordered to return the three bulls loaned to him or to pay their book
value in the total sum of P3,241.45 and the unpaid breeding fee in
the sum of P199.62, both with interests, and costs; and that other just
and equitable relief be granted in (civil No. 12818).
On 5 July 1951 Jose V. Bagtas, through counsel Navarro, Rosete
and Manalo, answered that because of the bad peace and order
situation in Cagayan Valley, particularly in the barrio of Baggao, and
of the pending appeal he had taken to the Secretary of Agriculture
and Natural Resources and the President of the Philippines from the
refusal by the Director of Animal Industry to deduct from the book
value
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x x x sentencing the latter (defendant) to pay the sum of P3, 625.09 the total
value of the three bulls plus the breeding fees in the amount of P626.17 with
interest on both sums of (at) the legal rate from the filing of this complaint
and costs.
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quash the writ of execution the appellee prays “that another writ of
execution in the sum of P859.53 be issued against the estate of
defendant deceased Jose V. Bagtas.” She cannot be held liable for
the two bulls which already had been returned to and received by the
appellee.
The appellant contends that the Sahiniwal bull was accidentally
killed during a raid by the Huks in November 1953 upon the
surrounding barrios of Hacienda Felicidad Intal, Baggao, Cagayan,
where the animal was kept, and that as such death was due to force
majeure she is relieved from the duty of returning the bull or paying
its value to the appellee. The contention is without merit. The loan
by the appellee to the late defendant Jose V. Bagtas of the three bulls
for breeding purposes for a period of one year from 8 May 1948 to 7
May 1949, later on renewed for another year as regards one bull,
was subject to the payment by the borrower of breeding fee of 10%
of the book value of the bulls. The appellant contends that the
contract was commodatum and that, for that reason, as the appellee
retained ownership or title to the bull it should suffer its loss due to
1
force majeure. A contract of commodatum is essentially gratuitous.
If the breeding fee be considered a compensation, then the contract
would be a lease of the bull. Under article 1671 of the Civil Code
the lessee would be subject to the responsibilities of a possessor in
bad faith, because she had continued possession of the bull after the
expiry of the contract. And even if the contract be commodatum, still
the appellant is liable, because article 1942 of the Civil Code
provides that a bailee in a contract of commodatum—
The original period of the loan was from 8 May 1948 to 7 May
1949. The loan of one bull was renewed for another period of one
year to end on 8 May 1950. But the
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appellant kept and used the bull until November 1953 when during a
Huk raid it was killed by stray bullets. Furthermore, when lent and
delivered to the deceased husband of the appellant the bulls had each
an appraised book value, to wit: the Sindhi, at P1,176.46, the
Bhagnari, at P1,320.56 and the Sahiniwal, at P744.46. It was not
stipulated that in case of loss of the bull due to fortuitous event the
late husband of the appellant would be exempt from liability. The
appellant’s contention that the demand or prayer by the appellee for
the return of the bull or the payment of its value being a money
claim should be presented or filed in the intestate proceedings of the
defendant who died on 23 October 1951, is not altogether without
merit. However, the claim that his civil personality having ceased to
exist the trial court lost jurisdiction over the case against him, is
untenable, because section 17 of Rule 3 of the Rules of Court
provides that—
After a party dies and the claim is not thereby extinguished, the court shall
order, upon proper notice, the legal representative of the deceased to appear
and to be substituted for the deceased, within a period of thirty (30) days, or
within such time as may be granted. x x x.
The notice by the probate court and its publication in the Voz de
Manila that Felicidad M. Bagtas had been issued letters of
administration of the estate of the late Jose V. Bagtas and that “all
persons having claims for money against the deceased Jose V.
Bagtas, arising from contract, express or implied, whether the same
be due not due, or contingent, for funeral expenses and expenses of
the last sickness of the said decedent, and judgment for money
against him, to file said claims with the Clerk of this Court at the
City Hall Bldg., Highway 54, Quezon City, within
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six (6) months from the date of the first publication of this order,
serving a copy thereof upon the aforementioned Felicidad M.
Bagtas, the appointed administratrix of the estate of the said
deceased,” is not a notice to the court and the appellee who were to
be notified of the defendant’s death in accordance with the above-
quoted rule, and there was no reason for such failure to notify,
because the attorney who appeared for the defendant was the same
who represented the administratrix in the special proceedings
instituted for the administration and settlement of his estate. The
appellee or its attorney or representative could not be expected to
know of the death of the defendant or of the administration
proceedings of his estate instituted in another court, if the attorney
for the deceased defendant did not notify the plaintiff or its attorney
of such death as required by the rule.
As the appellant already had returned the two bulls to the
appellee, the estate of the late defendant is only liable for the sum of
P859.63, the value of the bull which has not been returned to the
appellee, because it was killed while in the custody of the
administratrix of his estate. This is the amount prayed for by the
appellee in its objection on 31 January 1959 to the motion filed on 7
January 1959 by the appellant for the quashing of the writ of
execution.
Special proceedings for the administration and settlement of the
estate of the deceased Jose V. Bagtas having been instituted in the
Court of First Instance of Rizal (Q-200), the money judgment
rendered in favor of the appellee cannot be enforced by means of a
writ of execution but must be presented to the probate court for
payment by the appellant, the administratrix appointed by the court.
ACCORDINGLY, the writ of execution appealed from is set
aside, without pronouncement as to costs.
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