Petitioners Vs Vs Respondents Florimundo C. Rous Castro Biñas Samillano & Mangrobang
Petitioners Vs Vs Respondents Florimundo C. Rous Castro Biñas Samillano & Mangrobang
Petitioners Vs Vs Respondents Florimundo C. Rous Castro Biñas Samillano & Mangrobang
SYNOPSIS
SYLLABUS
DECISION
VITUG , J : p
Before the Court is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court,
assailing the decision and resolutions of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 34594,
entitled "Security Bank and Trust Co. vs. Tolomeo Ligutan, et al."
Petitioners Tolomeo Ligutan and Leonidas dela Llana obtained on 11 May 1981 a loan in
the amount of P120,000.00 from respondent Security Bank and Trust Company.
Petitioners executed a promissory note binding themselves, jointly and severally, to pay
the sum borrowed with an interest of 15.189% per annum upon maturity and to pay a
penalty of 5% every month on the outstanding principal and interest in case of default. In
addition, petitioners agreed to pay 10% of the total amount due by way of attorney's fees if
the matter were indorsed to a lawyer for collection or if a suit were instituted to enforce
payment. The obligation matured on 8 September 1981; the bank, however, granted an
extension but only up until 29 December 1981.
Despite several demands from the bank, petitioners failed to settle the debt which, as of
20 May 1982, amounted to P114,416.10. On 30 September 1982, the bank sent a final
demand letter to petitioners informing them that they had five days within which to make
full payment. Since petitioners still defaulted on their obligation, the bank filed on 3
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November 1982, with the Regional Trial Court of Makati, Branch 143, a complaint for
recovery of the due amount.
After petitioners had filed a joint answer to the complaint, the bank presented its evidence
and, on 27 March 1985, rested its case. Petitioners, instead of introducing their own
evidence, had the hearing of the case reset on two consecutive occasions. In view of the
absence of petitioners and their counsel on 28 August 1985, the third hearing date, the
bank moved, and the trial court resolved, to consider the case submitted for decision.
Two years later, or on 23 October 1987, petitioners filed a motion for reconsideration of
the order of the trial court declaring them as having waived their right to present evidence
and prayed that they be allowed to prove their case. The court a quo denied the motion in
an order, dated 5 September 1988, and on 20 October 1989, it rendered its decision, 1 the
dispositive portion of which read:
"WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against
the defendants, ordering the latter to pay, jointly and severally, to the plaintiff, as
follows:
"1. The sum of P114,416.00 with interest thereon at the rate of
15.189% per annum, 2% service charge and 5% per month penalty
charge, commencing on 20 May 1982 until fully paid;
"2. To pay the further sum equivalent to 10% of the total amount of
indebtedness for and as attorney's fees; and
"3. To pay the costs of the suit." 2
Petitioners interposed an appeal with the Court of Appeals, questioning the rejection by
the trial court of their motion to present evidence and assailing the imposition of the 2%
service charge, the 5% per month penalty charge and 10% attorney's fees. In its decision 3
of 7 March 1996, the appellate court affirmed the judgment of the trial court except on the
matter of the 2% service charge which was deleted pursuant to Central Bank Circular No.
783. Not fully satisfied with the decision of the appellate court, both parties filed their
respective motions for reconsideration. 4 Petitioners prayed for the reduction of the 5%
stipulated penalty for being unconscionable. The bank, on the other hand, asked that the
payment of interest and penalty be commenced not from the date of filing of complaint
but from the time of default as so stipulated in the contract of the parties.
On 28 October 1998, the Court of Appeals resolved the two motions thusly:
"We find merit in plaintiff-appellee's claim that the principal sum of P114,416.00
with interest thereon must commence not on the date of filing of the complaint as
we have previously held in our decision but on the date when the obligation
became due.
"Default generally begins from the moment the creditor demands the performance
of the obligation. However, demand is not necessary to render the obligor in
default when the obligation or the law so provides.
"In the case at bar, defendants-appellants executed a promissory note where they
undertook to pay the obligation on its maturity date 'without necessity of
demand.' They also agreed to pay the interest in case of non-payment from the
date of default.
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"xxx xxx xxx
"While we maintain that defendants-appellants must be bound by the contract
which they acknowledged and signed, we take cognizance of their plea for the
application of the provisions of Article 1229 . . . .
"Considering that defendants-appellants partially complied with their obligation
under the promissory note by the reduction of the original amount of P120,000.00
to P114,416.00 and in order that they will finally settle their obligation, it is our
view and we so hold that in the interest of justice and public policy, a penalty of
3% per month or 36% per annum would suffice.
"xxx xxx xxx
Respondent bank, which did not take an appeal, would, however, have it that the penalty
sought to be deleted by petitioners was even insufficient to fully cover and compensate
for the cost of money brought about by the radical devaluation and decrease in the
purchasing power of the peso, particularly vis-a-vis the U.S. dollar, taking into account the
time frame of its occurrence. The Bank would stress that only the amount of P5,584.00
had been remitted out of the entire loan of P120,000.00. 9
A penalty clause, expressly recognized by law, 10 is an accessory undertaking to assume
greater liability on the part of an obligor in case of breach of an obligation. It functions to
strengthen the coercive force of the obligation 11 and to provide, in effect, for what could
be the liquidated damages resulting from such a breach. The obligor would then be bound
to pay the stipulated indemnity without the necessity of proof on the existence and on the
measure of damages caused by the breach. 12 Although a court may not at liberty ignore
the freedom of the parties to agree on such terms and conditions as they see fit that
contravene neither law nor morals, good customs, public order or public policy, a
stipulated penalty, nevertheless, may be equitably reduced by the courts if it is iniquitous
or unconscionable or if the principal obligation has been partly or irregularly complied with.
13
The question of whether a penalty is reasonable or iniquitous can be partly subjective and
partly objective. Its resolution would depend on such factors as, but not necessarily
confined to, the type, extent and purpose of the penalty, the nature of the obligation, the
mode of breach and its consequences, the supervening realities, the standing and
relationship of the parties, and the like, the application of which, by and large, is addressed
to the sound discretion of the court. In Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. vs. Court of
Appeals, 14 just an example, the Court has tempered the penalty charges after taking into
account the debtor's pitiful situation and its offer to settle the entire obligation with the
creditor bank. The stipulated penalty might likewise be reduced when a partial or irregular
performance is made by the debtor. 15 The stipulated penalty might even be deleted such
as when there has been substantial performance in good faith by the obligor, 16 when the
penalty clause itself suffers from fatal infirmity, or when exceptional circumstances so
exist as to warrant it. 17
The Court of Appeals, exercising its good judgment in the instant case, has reduced the
penalty interest from 5% a month to 3% a month which petitioner still disputes. Given the
circumstances, not to mention the repeated acts of breach by petitioners of their
contractual obligation, the Court sees no cogent ground to modify the ruling of the
appellate court.
Anent the stipulated interest of 15.189% per annum, petitioners, for the first time, question
its reasonableness and prays that the Court reduce the amount. This contention is a fresh
issue that has not been raised and ventilated before the courts below. In any event, the
interest stipulation, on its face, does not appear as being that excessive. The essence or
rationale for the payment of interest, quite often referred to as cost of money, is not
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exactly the same as that of a surcharge or a penalty. A penalty stipulation is not
necessarily preclusive of interest, if there is an agreement to that effect, the two being
distinct concepts which may separately be demanded. 18 What may justify a court in not
allowing the creditor to impose full surcharges and penalties, despite an express
stipulation therefor in a valid agreement, may not equally justify the nonpayment or
reduction of interest. Indeed, the interest prescribed in loan financing arrangements is a
fundamental part of the banking business and the core of a bank's existence. 19
Petitioners next assail the award of 10% of the total amount of indebtedness by way of
attorney's fees for being grossly excessive, exorbitant and unconscionable vis-a-vis the
time spent and the extent of services rendered by counsel for the bank and the nature of
the case. Bearing in mind that the rate of attorney's fees has been agreed to by the parties
and intended to answer not only for litigation expenses but also for collection efforts as
well, the Court, like the appellate court, deems the award of 10% attorney's fees to be
reasonable.
Neither can the appellate court be held to have erred in rejecting petitioners' call for a new
trial or to admit newly discovered evidence. As the appellate court so held in its resolution
of 14 May 1999 —
"Under Section 2, Rule 52 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure, no second motion
for reconsideration of a judgment or final resolution by the same party shall be
entertained. Considering that the instant motion is already a second motion for
reconsideration, the same must therefore be denied.
"Furthermore, it would appear from the records available to this court that the
newly-discovered evidence being invoked by defendants-appellants have actually
been existent when the case was brought on appeal to this court as well as when
the first motion for reconsideration was filed. Hence, it is quite surprising why
defendants-appellants raised the alleged newly-discovered evidence only at this
stage when they could have done so in the earlier pleadings filed before this
court.
"The propriety or acceptability of such a second motion for reconsideration is not
contingent upon the averment of 'new' grounds to assail the judgment, i.e.,
grounds other than those theretofore presented and rejected. Otherwise,
attainment of finality of a judgment might be stayed off indefinitely, depending
on the party's ingeniousness or cleverness in conceiving and formulating
'additional flaws' or 'newly discovered errors' therein, or thinking up some injury or
prejudice to the rights of the movant for reconsideration." 2 0
At any rate, the subsequent execution of the real estate mortgage as security for the
existing loan would not have resulted in the extinguishment of the original contract of
loan because of novation. Petitioners acknowledge that the real estate mortgage
contract does not contain any express stipulation by the parties intending it to
supersede the existing loan agreement between the petitioners and the bank. 21
Respondent bank has correctly postulated that the mortgage is but an accessory
contract to secure the loan in the promissory note. SAHEIc
Extinctive novation requires, first, a previous valid obligation; second, the agreement of all
the parties to the new contract; third, the extinguishment of the obligation; and fourth, the
validity of the new one. 22 In order that an obligation may be extinguished by another which
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substitutes the same, it is imperative that it be so declared in unequivocal terms, or that
the old and the new obligation be on every point incompatible with each other. 23 An
obligation to pay a sum of money is not extinctively novated by a new instrument which
merely changes the terms of payment or adding compatible covenants or where the old
contract is merely supplemented by the new one. 24 When not expressed, incompatibility is
required so as to ensure that the parties have indeed intended such novation despite their
failure to express it in categorical terms. The incompatibility, to be sure, should take place
in any of the essential elements of the obligation, i.e., (1) the juridical relation or tie, such as
from a mere commodatum to lease of things, or from negotiorum gestio to agency, or
from a mortgage to antichresis, 25 or from a sale to one of loan; 26 (2) the object or
principal conditions, such as a change of the nature of the prestation; or (3) the subjects,
such as the substitution of a debtor 2 7 or the subrogation of the creditor. Extinctive
novation does not necessarily imply that the new agreement should be complete by itself;
certain terms and conditions may be carried, expressly or by implication, over to the new
obligation.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Melo, Panganiban, Sandoval-Gutierrez and Carpio, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1 Rollo, p. 114.
2 Rollo, pp. 117-118.
3 Rollo, p. 39.
4 Rollo, pp. 55, 58.
5. Rollo, pp. 48-49.
6. Rollo, p. 67.
7. Rollo, p. 52.
8. Rollo, pp. 17-18.
9. Memorandum for Respondent.
10. Art. 1226. In obligations with a penal clause, the penalty shall substitute the
indemnity for damages and the payment of interests in case of noncompliance, if there
is no stipulation to the contrary. Nevertheless, damages shall be paid if the obligor
refuses to pay the penalty or is guilty of fraud in the fulfillment of the obligation.
The penalty may be enforced only when it is demandable in accordance with the
provisions of this Code. (1152a)
11. SSS vs. Moonwalk Development and Housing Corporation, 221 SCRA 119.
12. Article 1228, Civil Code; Manila Racing Club vs. Manila Jockey Club, 69 Phil. 55.
22. Velasquez vs. Court of Appeals, 309 SCRA 539; Ong vs. Court of Appeals, 310 SCRA 1;
Bautista vs. Pilar Development Corporation, 312 SCRA 611.
23. See Article 1292, Civil Code; Pacific Mills, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals, 206 SCRA 317;
Quinto vs. People, 305 SCRA 708; Cruz vs. Court of Appeals, 293 SCRA 239.
24. Magdalena Estates, Inc. vs. Rodriguez, 18 SCRA 967, as reiterated in Velasquez vs.
Court of Appeals, 309 SCRA 539.
25. Jagunap vs. Mirasol, [CA], 48 O.G. 3911.
26. Soncuya vs. Azarraga, 65 Phil. 635.
27. Azarraga vs. Rodriguez, 9 Phil. 637.