Enriquez Vs The Mercantile Insurance Co. Inc. Digest
Enriquez Vs The Mercantile Insurance Co. Inc. Digest
Enriquez Vs The Mercantile Insurance Co. Inc. Digest
MILAGROS P. ENRIQUEZ, Petitioner,
v.
FACTS:
Enriquez filed a Complaint for Replevin against Wilfred Asuten for the recovery of her
Toyota Hi-Ace van which Asuten refused to return, claiming that it was given by
Enriquez's son as a consequence of a gambling deal.
Enriquez applied for a replevin bond from Mercantile Insurance Enriquez also executed
an indemnity agreement with Mercantile Insurance, where she agreed to indemnify the
latter "for all damages, payments, advances, losses, costs, taxes, penalties, charges,
attorney's fees and expenses of whatever kind and nature" that it would incur as surety
of the replevin bond.
RTC dismissed the Complaint without prejudice due to Enriquez's continued failure to
present evidence
The RTC found that Enriquez surrendered the van to the Bank of the Philippine Islands,
San Fernando Branch but did not comply when ordered to return it to the sheriff. She
also did not comply with prior court orders to prove payment of her premiums on the
replevin bond or to post a new bond. Thus, the Regional Trial Court declared Bond
forfeited. Mercantile Insurance was given 10 days to produce the van or to show cause
why judgment should not be rendered against it for the amount of the bond.
RTC found that Mercantile Insurance failed to produce the van, and that Bond had
already expired. The RTC directed Mercantile Insurance to pay Asuten
Enriquez claimed that her daughter-in-law, Asela, filed the Complaint for Replevin in her
name and that Asela forged her signature in the indemnity agreement. She also argued
that she could not be held liable since the replevin bond had already expired.
ENRIQUEZ argues that when THE MERCANTILE INSURANCE paid Asuten, the indemnity
agreement was no longer in force and effect since the bond expired. She claims that
the indemnity agreement was a contract of adhesion, and that respondent "intended
the agreement to be so comprehensive and all-encompassing to the point of being
ambiguous."
ISSUE:
RULING:
In applying for the replevin bond, petitioner voluntarily undertook with respondent an
Indemnity Agreement
Basically a contract of indemnity, an insurance contract is the law between the parties.
Its terms and conditions constitute the measure of the insurer's liability and compliance
therewith is a condition precedent to the insured's right to recovery from the insurer. As
it is also a contract of adhesion, an insurance contract should be liberally construed in
favor of the insured and strictly against the insurer company which usually prepares it.
THE MERCANTILE INSURANCE, however, does not seek to recover an amount which
exceeds the amount of the bond or any "damages, payments, advances, losses, costs,
taxes, penalties, charges, attorney's fees and expenses of whatever kind and nature," all
of which it could have sought under the Indemnity Agreement. It only seeks to recover
from petitioner the amount of the bond
THE MERCANTILE INSURANCE paid Asuten pursuant to a lawful order of the RTC.
It is clear from the antecedents that any losses which petitioner has suffered were due
to the consequences of her actions, or more accurately, her inactions.
Civil Case No. 10846, which she filed, was dismissed due to her failure to prosecute.
The Regional Trial Court forfeited the replevin bond which she had filed because she
refused to return the property. She is now made liable for the replevin bond because she
failed to appeal its forfeiture.
(in other words, the indemnity that THE MERCANTILE INSURANCE is seeking is about
the payment it made to Asuten pursuant to the lawful order of the RTC not about the
recovery from the indemnity agreement between THE MERCANTILE INSURANCE and
MILAGROS P. ENRIQUEZ)