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Bordador Vs Luz

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1. JOSE BORDADOR and LYDIA BORDADOR, vs. BRIGIDA D.

LUZ, ERNESTO
M. LUZ and NARCISO DEGANOS, G.R. No. 130148. December 15, 1997
FACTS:
Petitioners were engaged in the business of purchase and sale of jewelry and respondent
Brigida Luz, also known as Aida Luz, was their regular customer.
On several occasions, respondent Deganos, brother of Luz, received several pieces of gold
and jewelry from petitioners amounting to P382, 816. These items and their prices were indicated in
seventeen receipts covering the same. 11 of the receipts stated that they were received for a certain
Aquino, a niece of Deganos, and the remaining 6 receipts indicated that they were received for Luz.
Deganos was supposed to sell the items at a profit and thereafter remit the proceeds and return
the unsold items to Bordador. Deganos remitted only the sum of P53, 207. He neither paid the balance
of the sales proceeds, nor did he return any unsold item to petitioners.
The total of his unpaid account to Bordador, including interest, reached the sum of P725,
463.98. Petitioners eventually filed a complaint in the barangay court against Deganos to recover said
amount.
In the barangay proceedings, Luz, who was not impleaded in the cases, appeared as a witness
for Deganos and ultimately, she and her husband, together with Deganos signed a compromise
agreement with petitioners.
In that compromise agreement, Deganos obligated himself to pay petitioners, on installment
basis , the balance of his account plus interest thereon. However, he failed to comply with his
aforestated undertakings.
Petitioners instituted a complaint for recovery of sum of money and damages, with an
application for preliminary attachment against Deganos and Luz.
Deganos and Luz was also charged with estafa
During the trial of the civil cae, petitioners claimed that Deganos acted as agent of Luz when
received the subject items of jewelry, and because he failed to pay for the same, Luz, as principal, and
her spouse are solidarily liable with him
Trial court ruled that only Deganos was liable to Bordador for the amount and damages
claimed. It held that while Luz did have transactions with petitioners in the past, the items involved
were already paid for and all that Luz owed Bordador was the sum or P21, 483 representing interest
on the principal account which she had previously paid for.
CA affirmed RTC’s decision
ISSUE: Whether or not Luz are liable to petitioners for the latter’s claim for money and
damages?
RULING: No
Evidence does not support the theory of Bordador that Deganos was an agent of Luz and that
the latter should consequently be held solidarily liable with Deganos in his obligation to petitioners.
The basis for agency is representation. Here, there is no showing that Luz consented to the
acts of Deganos or authorized him to act on her behalf, much less with respect to the particular
transactions involved.
It was grossly and inexcusably negligent of petitioner to entrust to Deganos, not once or twice
but on at least six occasions as evidenced by 6 receipts, several pieces of jewelry of substantial value
without requiring a written authorization from his alleged principal.
A person dealing with an agent is put upon inquiry and must discover upon his peril the
authority of the agent.
Records show that neither an express nor an implied agency was proven to have existed
between Deganos and Luz. Evidently, Bordador who were negligent in their transactions with
Deganos cannot seek relief from the effects of their negligence by conjuring a supposed agency
relation between the two respondents where no evidence supports such claim.
The trial court also found that it was petitioner Lydia Bordador who indicated in the receipts
that the items were received by Deganos for Evelyn Aquino and Brigida D. Luz. [7]Said court was
persuaded that Brigida D. Luz was behind Deganos, but because there was no memorandum to this
effect, the agreement between the parties was unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds. Absent the
required memorandum or any written document connecting the respondent Luz spouses with the
subject receipts, or authorizing Deganos to act on their behalf, the alleged agreement between
petitioners and Brigida D. Luz was unenforceable.

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