Case 3
Case 3
Case 3
MICABALO
Case 3
ISSUES:
• If a party to a contract is implicitly released if the other fails to adhere to a
specific clause on or before the deadline for performance.
RULING:
• It must be decided in regard to the parties' intentions as inferred from the
contract itself in light of the circumstances surrounding the contract's
formation.
• The accomplishment of that requirement was necessary for all scenarios
regarding the rehabilitation of the Benguet mining property. Therefore,
there can be no question that the parties saw Hanlon's adherence to this
agreement as being the key element in the overall scheme.
• Given that the profit-sharing agreement already contained an
unambiguous resolutory provision, it must have felt unnecessary to include
one in the subsequent contract. Therefore, any extension of time granted by
the mining corporation after the initial six months would have been
completely out of goodwill and not something that Hanlon could have
demanded as a matter of right.
• According to the equitable doctrine, if the parties to the agreement have
treated time as being of the essence of the agreement, then the delinquency
will not be excused and specific performance will not be granted; however,
if it appears that time has not been made to be of the essence of the
agreement, then equity will excuse the delinquency and specific
performance will be granted, due compensation being made for the damage
caused by the delay
RULING:
• The fact that Pang Lim had been a partner with Lo Seng and Benito Galvez
a worker previous to the acquisition of this property starkly reveals the bad
faith of the plaintiffs in their attempt to deny the defendant of this lease. As
a result, both had developed trusting relationships with Lo Seng and, as a
result, had knowledge of the property's potential and perhaps even
experience that would have allowed them to profitably use the distillery in
the event that they had acquired ownership.
• The partner who secures the renewal is deemed to be a constructive trustee
of the firm with regard to the lease if it is done in his or her own name and
for their own benefit and begins at a later date than the firm's lease
expiration. Benito Galvez or Pang Lim cannot force Lo Seng out because he
has the possessory right over Pang Lim. Having lawful possession as
against one cotenant, he is entitled to retain it against both
ISSUES:
• Whether or not Catalan’s redemption of the properties makes him the
absolute owner of the lands?
RULING:
• Under Article 1807 of the NCC every partner becomes a trustee for his
copartner with relation to any benefits or profits arising from his act as a
partner. Consequently, when Catalan redeemed the properties in dispute,
he became a trustee and held the property on behalf of his business partner
Gatchalian, with the power to demand that Gatchalian pay his share of the
redemption price.
ISSUES:
• Regardless of whether the plaintiff and the defendants are business
partners.
RULING:
• It was merely an employment contract. In the administration of the
company's operations, the plaintiff had neither a voice nor a vote. In no way
did the fact that the pay he received was to be based on the profits generated
by the defendants in their business constitute him a partner therein.
According to the defendants' articles of partnership, the proceeds were to
be distributed in a specific way among the listed partners.
• This provision of the articles of partnership was not altered or modified in
any way by the contract that was formed between the plaintiff and the
defendant partnership's management at the time. According to the norm,
receiving a portion of a company's revenues serves as prima facie proof that
a person is a partner. The only exception is if the profit is used to pay an
employee's wages.
ISSUES:
• Whether Ishram can recover the entire properties subject in the litigation.
RULING:
• Choithram then made the decision to make a real estate investment. In his
capacity as Ishwar's actual agent, he acquired the two (2) parcels of land in
question from Ortigas. He borrowed money in addition to the remaining
funds given to him and utilized it to construct two buildings rather than
paying for the lots in full up front. Despite the fact that the structures were
later set on fire, Choithram was still able to erect two other structures there.
Rent was collected once he rented them out. Through the industry and
genius of Choithram, Ishwar's property was developed and improved into
what it is now. Justice and equality demand that the two equitably split the
rewards of their combined work and investment.