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103.tomimbang Vs - Tomimbang

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THIRD DIVISION

[G.R. No. 165116. August 4, 2009.]

MARIA SOLEDAD TOMIMBANG, petitioner, vs. ATTY. JOSE


TOMIMBANG, respondent.

DECISION

PERALTA, J : p

This resolves the petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the
Rules of Court, praying that the Decision 1 dated July 1, 2004 and Resolution
2 dated August 31, 2004 promulgated by the Court of Appeals (CA), be

reversed and set aside.


The antecedent facts are as follows.
Petitioner and respondent are siblings. Their parents donated to
petitioner an eight-door apartment located at 149 Santolan Road, Murphy,
Quezon City, with the condition that during the parents' lifetime, they shall
retain control over the property and petitioner shall be the administrator
thereof.
In 1995, petitioner applied for a loan from PAG-IBIG Fund to finance the
renovations on Unit H, of said apartment which she intended to use as her
residence. Petitioner failed to obtain a loan from PAG-IBIG Fund, hence,
respondent offered to extend a credit line to petitioner on the following
conditions: (1) petitioner shall keep a record of all the advances; (2)
petitioner shall start paying the loan upon the completion of the renovation;
(3) upon completion of the renovation; a loan and mortgage agreement
based on the amount of the advances made shall be executed by petitioner
and respondent; and (4) the loan agreement shall contain comfortable terms
and conditions which petitioner could have obtained from PAG-IBIG. 3
Petitioner accepted respondent's offer of a credit line and work on the
apartment units began. Renovations on Units B to G were completed, and
the work has just started on Unit A when an altercation broke out between
herein parties. In view of said conflict, respondent and petitioner, along with
some family members, held a meeting in the house of their brother Genaro
sometime in the second quarter of 1997. Respondent and petitioner entered
into a new agreement whereby petitioner was to start making monthly
payments on her loan. Upon respondent's demand, petitioner turned over to
respondent all the records of the cash advances for the renovations.
Subsequently, or from June to October of 1997, petitioner made monthly
payments of P18,700.00, or a total of P93,500.00. Petitioner never denied
the fact that she started making such monthly payments.
In October of 1997, a quarrel also occurred between respondent and
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another sister, Maricion, who was then defending the actions of petitioner.
Because of said incident, they had a hearing at the Barangay. At said
hearing, respondent had the occasion to remind petitioner of her monthly
payment. Petitioner allegedly answered, "Kalimutan mo na ang pera mo wala
tayong pinirmahan. Hindi ako natatakot sa 'yo!" Thereafter, petitioner left
Unit H and could no longer be found. Petitioner being the owner of the
apartments, renovations on Unit A were discontinued when her whereabouts
could not be located. She also stopped making monthly payments and
ignored the demand letter dated December 2, 1997 sent by respondent's
counsel. DSETcC

On February 2, 1998, respondent filed a Complaint against petitioner,


demanding the latter to pay the former the net amount of P3,989,802.25
plus interest of 12% per annum from date of default.
At the pre-trial conference, the issues were narrowed down as follows:
1. Whether or not a loan was duly constituted between the plaintiff
and the defendant in connection with the improvements or
renovations on apartment units A-H, which is in the name of the
defendant [herein petitioner];

2. Assuming that such a loan was duly constituted in favor of


plaintiff [herein respondent], whether or not the same is already
due and payable;

3. Assuming that said loan is already due and demandable,


whether or not it is to be paid out of the rental proceeds from the
apartment units mentioned, presuming that such issue was
raised in the Answer of the Defendant;

4. Assuming that the said loan was duly constituted in favor of


plaintiff [herein respondent], whether or not it is in the amount of
P3,909,802.20 and whether or not it will earn legal interest at the
rate of 12% per annum, compounded, as provided in Article 2212
of the Civil Code of the Philippines, from the date of the
extrajudicial demand; and
5. Whether or not the plaintiff [herein respondent] is entitled to the
reliefs prayed for in his Complaint or whether or not it is the
defendant [herein petitioner] who is entitled to the reliefs prayed
for in her Answer with Counterclaim. 4

On November 15, 2002, the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Quezon City,
Branch 82, rendered a Decision, 5 the dispositive portion of which reads as
follows:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, judgment is hereby rendered
in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant ordering the latter to
pay the former the following:

1. The sum of P3,989,802.25 with interest thereon at the


legal rate of 12% per annum computed from the date of
default until the whole obligation is fully paid;

2. The sum of P50,000.00 as and by way of attorney's fees;


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and

3. The cost of suit.


SO ORDERED. 6

Petitioner appealed the foregoing RTC Decision to the CA, but on July 1,
2004, the Court of Appeals promulgated its Decision affirming in toto said RTC
judgment. A motion for reconsideration of the CA Decision was denied per
Resolution dated August 31, 2004.
Hence, this petition where petitioner alleges that:
I.

THE COURT OF APPEALS ACTED NOT IN ACCORD WITH LAW AND


APPLICABLE JURISPRUDENCE OF THE SUPREME COURT WHEN IT
AFFIRMED THE LOWER COURT'S FINDING THAT THE LOAN BETWEEN
PETITIONER AND RESPONDENT IS ALREADY DUE AND DEMANDABLE.

II.
THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED BY DEPARTING FROM THE ACCEPTED
AND USUAL COURSE OF JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS — OF AFFIRMING THE
DUE AND DEMANDABILITY OF THE LOAN CONTRARY TO THE EVIDENCE
PRESENTED IN THE LOWER COURT — AND SANCTIONING SUCH
DEPARTURE BY THE LOWER COURT IN THE INSTANT CASE. CIaHDc

III.

THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED FROM THE ACCEPTED AND USUAL


COURSE OF JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS — OF AFFIRMING THE AWARD OF
ATTORNEY'S FEES TO THE RESPONDENT WITHOUT ANY BASIS — AND
SANCTIONING SUCH DEPARTURE BY THE LOWER COURT IN THE
INSTANT CASE. 7

The main issues in this case boil down to (1) whether petitioner's
obligation is due and demandable; (2) whether respondent is entitled to
attorney's fees; and (3) whether interest should be imposed on petitioner's
indebtedness and, if in the affirmative, at what rate.
Petitioner does not deny that she obtained a loan from respondent.
She, however, contends that the loan is not yet due and demandable
because the suspensive condition — the completion of the renovation of the
apartment units — has not yet been fulfilled. She also assails the award of
attorney's fees to respondent as baseless.
For his part, respondent admits that initially, they agreed that payment
of the loan shall be made upon completion of the renovations. However,
respondent claims that during their meeting with some family members in
the house of their brother Genaro sometime in the second quarter of 1997,
he and petitioner entered into a new agreement whereby petitioner was to
start making monthly payments on her loan, which she did from June to
October of 1997. In respondent's view, there was a novation of the original
agreement, and under the terms of their new agreement, petitioner's
obligation was already due and demandable.
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Respondent also maintains that when petitioner disappeared from the
family compound without leaving information as to where she could be
found, making it impossible to continue the renovations, petitioner thereby
prevented the fulfillment of said condition. He claims that Article 1186 of the
Civil Code, which provides that "the condition shall be deemed fulfilled when
the obligor voluntarily prevents its fulfillment", is applicable to this case.
In his Comment to the present petition, respondent raised for the first
time, the issue that the loan contract between him and petitioner is actually
one with a period, not one with a suspensive condition. In his view, when
petitioner began to make partial payments on the loan, the latter waived the
benefit of the term, making the loan immediately demandable.
Respondent also believes that he is entitled to attorney's fees, as
petitioner allegedly showed bad faith by absconding and compelling him to
litigate.
The Court finds the petition unmeritorious.
It is undisputed that herein parties entered into a valid loan contract.
The only question is, has petitioner's obligation become due and
demandable? The Court resolves the question in the affirmative.
The evidence on record clearly shows that after renovation of seven
out of the eight apartment units had been completed, petitioner and
respondent agreed that the former shall already start making monthly
payments on the loan even if renovation on the last unit (Unit A) was still
pending. Genaro Tomimbang, the younger brother of herein parties, testified
that a meeting was held among petitioner, respondent, himself and their
eldest sister Maricion, sometime during the first or second quarter of 1997,
wherein respondent demanded payment of the loan, and petitioner agreed
to pay. Indeed, petitioner began to make monthly payments from June to
October of 1997 totalling P93,500.00. 8 In fact, petitioner even admitted in
her Answer with Counterclaim that she had "started to make payments
to plaintiff [herein respondent] as the same was in accord with her
commitment to pay whenever she was able; . . . ." 9 cDTACE

Evidently, by virtue of the subsequent agreement, the parties mutually


dispensed with the condition that petitioner shall only begin paying after the
completion of all renovations. There was, in effect, a modificatory or partial
novation, of petitioner's obligation. Article 1291 of the Civil Code provides,
thus:
Art. 1291. Obligations may be modified by:
(1) Changing their object or principal conditions;

(2) Substituting the person of the debtor;


(3) Subrogating a third person in the rights of the creditor.
(Emphasis supplied)

In Iloilo Traders Finance, Inc. v. Heirs of Sps. Soriano, 10 the Court expounded
on the nature of novation, to wit:
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Novation may either be extinctive or modificatory, much
being dependent on the nature of the change and the intention of the
parties. Extinctive novation is never presumed; there must be an
express intention to novate; . . .
An extinctive novation would thus have the twin effects of, first,
extinguishing an existing obligation and, second, creating a new one in
its stead. This kind of novation presupposes a confluence of four
essential requisites: (1) a previous valid obligation; (2) an agreement of
all parties concerned to a new contract; (3) the extinguishment of the
old obligation; and (4) the birth of a new valid obligation. Novation is
merely modificatory where the change brought about by any
subsequent agreement is merely incidental to the main
obligation (e.g., a change in interest rates or an extension of
time to pay); in this instance, the new agreement will not have
the effect of extinguishing the first but would merely
supplement it or supplant some but not all of its provisions. 11

In Ong v. Bogñalbal, 12 the Court also stated, thus:


. . . the effect of novation may be partial or total. There is
partial novation when there is only a modification or change in some
principal conditions of the obligation. It is total, when the obligation is
completely extinguished. Also, the term principal conditions in Article
1291 should be construed to include a change in the period to comply
with the obligation. Such a change in the period would only be a partial
novation since the period merely affects the performance, not the
creation of the obligation. 13

As can be gleaned from the foregoing, the aforementioned four


essential elements and the requirement that there be total incompatibility
between the old and new obligation, apply only to extinctive novation. In
partial novation, only the terms and conditions of the obligation are altered,
thus, the main obligation is not changed and it remains in force.
Petitioner stated in her Answer with Counterclaim 14 that she agreed
and complied with respondent's demand for her to begin paying her loan,
since she believed this was in accordance with her commitment to pay
whenever she was able. Her partial performance of her obligation is
unmistakable proof that indeed the original agreement between her and
respondent had been novated by the deletion of the condition that payments
shall be made only after completion of renovations. Hence, by her very own
admission and partial performance of her obligation, there can be no other
conclusion but that under the novated agreement, petitioner's obligation is
already due and demandable.
With the foregoing finding that petitioner's obligation is due and
demandable, there is no longer any need to discuss whether petitioner's
disappearance from the family compound prevented the fulfillment of the
original condition, necessitating application of Article 1186 of the Civil Code,
or whether the obligation is one with a condition or a period.
As to attorney's fees, however, the award therefor cannot be allowed
by the Court. It is an oft-repeated rule that the trial court is required to state
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the factual, legal or equitable justification for awarding attorney's fees. 15
The Court explained in Buñing v. Santos, 16 to wit:
. . . While Article 2208 of the Civil Code allows attorney's fees to
be awarded if the claimant is compelled to litigate with third persons or
to incur expenses to protect his interest by reason of an unjustified act
or omission of the party from whom it is sought, there must be a
showing that the losing party acted willfully or in bad faith and
practically compelled the claimant to litigate and incur
litigation expenses. In view of the declared policy of the law
that awards of attorney's fees are the exception rather than
the rule, it is necessary for the trial court to make express
findings of facts and law that would bring the case within the
exception and justify the grant of such award. . . . . HCDAac

Thus, the matter of attorney's fees cannot be touched upon only


in the dispositive portion of the decision. The text itself must state the
reasons why attorney's fees are being awarded. . . . 17

In the above-quoted case, there was a finding that defendants therein had
no intention of fulfilling their obligation in complete disregard of the
plaintiff's right, and yet, the Court did not deem this as sufficient justification
for the award of attorney's fees. Verily, in the present case, where it is
understandable that some misunderstanding could arise as to when the
obligation was indeed due and demandable, the Court must likewise disallow
the award of attorney's fees.
We now come to a discussion of whether interest should be imposed on
petitioner's indebtedness. In Royal Cargo Corp. v. DFS Sports Unlimited, Inc.,
18 the Court reiterated the settled rule on imposition of interest, thus:

As to computation of legal interest, the seminal ruling in Eastern


Shipping Lines, Inc. v. Court of Appeals controls, to wit:
xxx xxx xxx

II. With regard particularly to an award of interest in the


concept of actual and compensatory damages, the rate of
interest, as well as the accrual thereof, is imposed, as follows:
1. When an obligation is breached, and it consists in the
payment of a sum of money, i.e., a loan or forbearance of money,
the interest due should be that which may have been stipulated
in writing. Furthermore, the interest due shall itself earn legal
interest from the time it is judicially demanded. In the absence of
stipulation, the rate of interest shall be 12% per annum to be
computed from default, i.e., from judicial or extrajudicial demand
under and subject to the provisions of Article 1169 of the Civil
Code.
2. When an obligation, not constituting a loan or
forbearance of money, is breached, an interest on the amount of
damages awarded may be imposed at the discretion of the court
at the rate of 6% per annum. No interest, however, shall be
adjudged on unliquidated claims or damages except when or
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until the demand can be established with reasonable certainty.
Accordingly, where the demand is established with reasonable
certainty, the interest shall begin to run from the time the claim
is made judicially or extrajudicially (Art. 1169, Civil Code), but
when such certainty cannot be so reasonably established at the
time the demand is made, the interest shall begin to run only
from the date the judgment of the court is made (at which time
the quantification of damages may be deemed to have been
reasonably ascertained). The actual base for the computation of
legal interest shall, in any case, be on the amount finally
adjudged.
3. When the judgment of the court awarding a sum of
money becomes final and executory, the rate of legal interest,
whether the case falls under paragraph 1 or paragraph 2, above,
shall be 12% per annum from such finality until its satisfaction,
this interim period being deemed to be by then an equivalent to
a forbearance of credit.

The foregoing rule on legal interest was explained in Sunga-Chan v. Court of


Appeals, 19 in this wise:
Eastern Shipping Lines, Inc. synthesized the rules on the
imposition of interest, if proper, and the applicable rate, as follows:
The 12% per annum rate under CB Circular No. 416 shall apply
only to loans or forbearance of money, goods, or credits, as
well as to judgments involving such loan or forbearance of
money, goods, or credit, while the 6% per annum under Art. 2209 of
the Civil Code applies "when the transaction involves the payment of
indemnities in the concept of damage arising from the breach or a
delay in the performance of obligations in general", with the
application of both rates reckoned "from the time the complaint was
filed until the [adjudged] amount is fully paid". In either instance, the
reckoning period for the commencement of the running of the legal
interest shall be subject to the condition "that the courts are vested
with discretion, depending on the equities of each case, on the award
of interest". 20 ISDCaT

In accordance with the above ruling, since the obligation in this case involves
a loan and there is no stipulation in writing as to interest due, the rate of
interest shall be 12% per annum computed from the date of extrajudicial
demand.
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the petition is AFFIRMED with the
MODIFICATION that the award for attorney's fees is DELETED.

SO ORDERED.
Ynares-Santiago, Chico-Nazario, Velasco, Jr. and Nachura, JJ., concur.

Footnotes
1. Penned by Associate Justice Japar B. Dimaampao, with Associate Justices
Josefina Guevara-Salonga and Edgardo F. Sundiam (now deceased),
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concurring; rollo, pp. 27-36.
2. Id. at 37-38.
3. Rollo, pp. 136, 156.
4. Records, p. 153.
5. Rollo, pp. 100-107.
6. Id. at 107.
7. Id. at 9-10.

8. TSN, August 17, 1999, pp. 18-20.


9. Record, p. 109. (Emphasis supplied).
10. 452 Phil. 82 (2003).
11. Id. at 89-90. (Emphasis supplied.)
12. G.R. No. 149140, September 12, 2006, 501 SCRA 490.
13. Id. at 508. (Emphasis supplied.)
14. See note 8.
15. Zacharias De los Santos v. Consuelo B. Papa, et al., G.R. No. 154427, May
8, 2009; Sebastian Siga-an v. Alicia Villanueva, G.R. No. 173227, January 20,
2009.
16. G.R. No. 152544, September 19, 2006, 502 SCRA 315.
17. Id. at 322-323. (Emphasis supplied.)
18. G.R. No. 158621, December 10, 2008.
19. G.R. No. 164401, June 25, 2008, 555 SCRA 275.

20. Id. at 288.

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