Article 1378
When it is
absolutely impossible to settle doubts by the rules established in the
preceding articles, and the doubts refer to incidental circumstances of a
gratuitous contract, the least transmission of rights and interests shall
prevail. If the contract is onerous, the doubt shall be settled in favor of the
greatest reciprocity of interests.
If the doubts are cast upon the principal
object of the contract in such a way that it cannot be known what may have been
the intention or will of the parties, the contract shall be null and void.
Kung talagang imposibleng pagkasunduan ang
pagdududa gamit ang mga probisyon sa nakaraang artikulo, at ang pagdududa ay
napapatungkol sa mga incidental na pangyayari sa gratuitous na kontrata,
ang may pinakakukonti ang paglilipat ng karapatan at interes ang masusunod.
Kung ang kontrata ay onerous, ang pagdududa ay isasaayos na ang pabor ay
sa dalawang may interes.
Kung may
pagdududa sa mga principal na dahilan ng kontrata sa pamamaraan na hindi
na maaring malaman kung ano ang intensyon at lakas ng loob ng mga
partido, ang kontrata ay magiging labag sa batas.
Doubts in contract refer only to incidental
circumstances but cannot be settled in accordance with previous provisions.
If doubts refer to incidental circumstances
of a gratuitous
contract,
such interpretation should be made which would result in the least transmission
of rights and interests.
Example:
Ana gave her car to Ben. It is
not clear in the contract whether it is commodatum or a pure donation.
The Contract should be presumed
as a mere commodatum because it would transmit lesser rights than a donation
since Ana retains ownership of her car.
If the contract in question is onerous, the doubt should be settled in
favor of the greatest reciprocity of interests.
Example:
Ana borrowed from Ben P 5,000.00 at
12% interest. It cannot be determined from the terms of contract whether the
loan is payable in six months or in one year.
It must be assumed that the
period agreed upon is one year which results in a greater reciprocity of interests
since Ana can use the money for one year, and Ben, on the other hand, can earn
interest due for one year instead of only six months.
If the doubt refers to the principal object of the contract and such doubt cannot be
resolved thereby leaving the intention of the parties unknown, the contract
shall be null and void.
Example:
Ana sold her land to Ben. Ana has
many lands. It cannot be determined which land was intended by the parties to
be the subject of the sale.
Therefore, the contract shall be
null and void and it is as if the parties have not entered into any contract at
all.
G.R. No.
L-11827 July 31, 1961
FERNANDO A. GAITE, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
ISABELO FONACIER, GEORGE KRAKOWER, LARAP MINES & SMELTING CO., INC., SEGUNDINA VIVAS, FRNACISCO DANTE, PACIFICO ESCANDOR and FERNANDO TY, defendants-appellants.
vs.
ISABELO FONACIER, GEORGE KRAKOWER, LARAP MINES & SMELTING CO., INC., SEGUNDINA VIVAS, FRNACISCO DANTE, PACIFICO ESCANDOR and FERNANDO TY, defendants-appellants.
Alejo Mabanag for plaintiff-appellee.
Simplicio U. Tapia, Antonio Barredo and Pedro Guevarra for defendants-appellants.
Simplicio U. Tapia, Antonio Barredo and Pedro Guevarra for defendants-appellants.
REYES, J.B.L., J.:
This appeal comes to us directly from the
Court of First Instance because the claims involved aggregate more than
P200,000.00.
Defendant-appellant Isabelo Fonacier was the
owner and/or holder, either by himself or in a representative capacity, of 11
iron lode mineral claims, known as the Dawahan Group, situated in the
municipality of Jose Panganiban, province of Camarines Norte.
By a "Deed of Assignment" dated
September 29, 1952(Exhibit "3"), Fonacier constituted and appointed
plaintiff-appellee Fernando A. Gaite as his true and lawful attorney-in-fact to
enter into a contract with any individual or juridical person for the
exploration and development of the mining claims aforementioned on a royalty
basis of not less than P0.50 per ton of ore that might be extracted therefrom.
On March 19, 1954, Gaite in turn executed a general assignment (Record on
Appeal, pp. 17-19) conveying the development and exploitation of said mining
claims into the Larap Iron Mines, a single proprietorship owned solely by and
belonging to him, on the same royalty basis provided for in Exhibit
"3". Thereafter, Gaite embarked upon the development and exploitation
of the mining claims in question, opening and paving roads within and outside
their boundaries, making other improvements and installing facilities therein
for use in the development of the mines, and in time extracted therefrom what
he claims and estimated to be approximately 24,000 metric tons of iron ore.
For some reason or another, Isabelo Fonacier
decided to revoke the authority granted by him to Gaite to exploit and develop
the mining claims in question, and Gaite assented thereto subject to certain
conditions. As a result, a document entitled "Revocation of Power of
Attorney and Contract" was executed on December 8, 1954 (Exhibit
"A"),wherein Gaite transferred to Fonacier, for the consideration of
P20,000.00, plus 10% of the royalties that Fonacier would receive from the
mining claims, all his rights and interests on all the roads, improvements, and
facilities in or outside said claims, the right to use the business name
"Larap Iron Mines" and its goodwill, and all the records and
documents relative to the mines. In the same document, Gaite transferred to
Fonacier all his rights and interests over the "24,000 tons of iron ore,
more or less" that the former had already extracted from the mineral
claims, in consideration of the sum of P75,000.00, P10,000.00 of which was paid
upon the signing of the agreement, and
b. The balance of SIXTY-FIVE THOUSAND PESOS (P65,000.00) will be paid
from and out of the first letter of credit covering the first shipment of iron
ores and of the first amount derived from the local sale of iron ore made by
the Larap Mines & Smelting Co. Inc., its assigns, administrators, or
successors in interests.
To secure the payment of the said balance of
P65,000.00, Fonacier promised to execute in favor of Gaite a surety bond, and
pursuant to the promise, Fonacier delivered to Gaite a surety bond dated
December 8, 1954 with himself (Fonacier) as principal and the Larap Mines and
Smelting Co. and its stockholders George Krakower, Segundina Vivas, Pacifico
Escandor, Francisco Dante, and Fernando Ty as sureties (Exhibit
"A-1"). Gaite testified, however, that when this bond was presented
to him by Fonacier together with the "Revocation of Power of Attorney and
Contract", Exhibit "A", on December 8, 1954, he refused to sign
said Exhibit "A" unless another bond under written by a bonding
company was put up by defendants to secure the payment of the P65,000.00
balance of their price of the iron ore in the stockpiles in the mining claims.
Hence, a second bond, also dated December 8, 1954 (Exhibit "B"),was
executed by the same parties to the first bond Exhibit "A-1", with
the Far Eastern Surety and Insurance Co. as additional surety, but it provided
that the liability of the surety company would attach only when there had been
an actual sale of iron ore by the Larap Mines & Smelting Co. for an amount
of not less then P65,000.00, and that, furthermore, the liability of said surety
company would automatically expire on December 8, 1955. Both bonds were
attached to the "Revocation of Power of Attorney and Contract",
Exhibit "A", and made integral parts thereof.
On the same day that Fonacier revoked the
power of attorney he gave to Gaite and the two executed and signed the
"Revocation of Power of Attorney and Contract", Exhibit
"A", Fonacier entered into a "Contract of Mining
Operation", ceding, transferring, and conveying unto the Larap Mines and
Smelting Co., Inc. the right to develop, exploit, and explore the mining claims
in question, together with the improvements therein and the use of the name
"Larap Iron Mines" and its good will, in consideration of certain
royalties. Fonacier likewise transferred, in the same document, the complete
title to the approximately 24,000 tons of iron ore which he acquired from
Gaite, to the Larap & Smelting Co., in consideration for the signing by the
company and its stockholders of the surety bonds delivered by Fonacier to Gaite
(Record on Appeal, pp. 82-94).
Up to December 8, 1955, when the bond Exhibit
"B" expired with respect to the Far Eastern Surety and Insurance
Company, no sale of the approximately 24,000 tons of iron ore had been made by
the Larap Mines & Smelting Co., Inc., nor had the P65,000.00 balance of the
price of said ore been paid to Gaite by Fonacier and his sureties payment of
said amount, on the theory that they had lost right to make use of the period
given them when their bond, Exhibit "B" automatically expired (Exhibits
"C" to "C-24"). And when Fonacier and his sureties failed
to pay as demanded by Gaite, the latter filed the present complaint against
them in the Court of First Instance of Manila (Civil Case No. 29310) for the
payment of the P65,000.00 balance of the price of the ore, consequential
damages, and attorney's fees.
All the defendants except Francisco Dante set
up the uniform defense that the obligation sued upon by Gaite was subject to a
condition that the amount of P65,000.00 would be payable out of the first letter
of credit covering the first shipment of iron ore and/or the first amount
derived from the local sale of the iron ore by the Larap Mines & Smelting
Co., Inc.; that up to the time of the filing of the complaint, no sale of the
iron ore had been made, hence the condition had not yet been fulfilled; and
that consequently, the obligation was not yet due and demandable. Defendant
Fonacier also contended that only 7,573 tons of the estimated 24,000 tons of
iron ore sold to him by Gaite was actually delivered, and counterclaimed for
more than P200,000.00 damages.
At the trial of the case, the parties agreed
to limit the presentation of evidence to two issues:
(1) Whether or not the obligation of Fonacier
and his sureties to pay Gaite P65,000.00 become due and demandable when the
defendants failed to renew the surety bond underwritten by the Far Eastern
Surety and Insurance Co., Inc. (Exhibit "B"), which expired on
December 8, 1955; and
(2) Whether the estimated 24,000 tons of iron
ore sold by plaintiff Gaite to defendant Fonacier were actually in existence in
the mining claims when these parties executed the "Revocation of Power of
Attorney and Contract", Exhibit "A."
On the first question, the lower court held
that the obligation of the defendants to pay plaintiff the P65,000.00 balance
of the price of the approximately 24,000 tons of iron ore was one with a term:
i.e., that it would be paid upon the sale of sufficient iron ore by defendants,
such sale to be effected within one year or before December 8, 1955; that the
giving of security was a condition precedent to Gait's giving of credit to
defendants; and that as the latter failed to put up a good and sufficient
security in lieu of the Far Eastern Surety bond (Exhibit "B") which
expired on December 8, 1955, the obligation became due and demandable under
Article 1198 of the New Civil Code.
As to the second question, the lower court
found that plaintiff Gaite did have approximately 24,000 tons of iron ore at
the mining claims in question at the time of the execution of the contract
Exhibit "A."
Judgment was, accordingly, rendered in favor
of plaintiff Gaite ordering defendants to pay him, jointly and severally,
P65,000.00 with interest at 6% per annum from December 9, 1955 until payment,
plus costs. From this judgment, defendants jointly appealed to this Court.
During the pendency of this appeal, several
incidental motions were presented for resolution: a motion to declare the
appellants Larap Mines & Smelting Co., Inc. and George Krakower in
contempt, filed by appellant Fonacier, and two motions to dismiss the appeal as
having become academic and a motion for new trial and/or to take judicial
notice of certain documents, filed by appellee Gaite. The motion for contempt
is unmeritorious because the main allegation therein that the appellants Larap
Mines & Smelting Co., Inc. and Krakower had sold the iron ore here in
question, which allegedly is "property in litigation", has not been
substantiated; and even if true, does not make these appellants guilty of
contempt, because what is under litigation in this appeal is appellee Gaite's
right to the payment of the balance of the price of the ore, and not the iron
ore itself. As for the several motions presented by appellee Gaite, it is
unnecessary to resolve these motions in view of the results that we have
reached in this case, which we shall hereafter discuss.
The main issues presented by appellants in
this appeal are:
(1) that the lower court erred in holding
that the obligation of appellant Fonacier to pay appellee Gaite the P65,000.00
(balance of the price of the iron ore in question)is one with a period or term
and not one with a suspensive condition, and that the term expired on December
8, 1955; and
(2) that the lower court erred in not holding
that there were only 10,954.5 tons in the stockpiles of iron ore sold by
appellee Gaite to appellant Fonacier.
The first issue involves an interpretation of
the following provision in the contract Exhibit "A":
7. That Fernando Gaite or Larap Iron Mines hereby transfers to Isabelo F.
Fonacier all his rights and interests over the 24,000 tons of iron ore, more or
less, above-referred to together with all his rights and interests to operate
the mine in consideration of the sum of SEVENTY-FIVE THOUSAND PESOS
(P75,000.00) which the latter binds to pay as follows:
a. TEN THOUSAND PESOS (P10,000.00) will be paid upon the signing of this
agreement.
b. The balance of SIXTY-FIVE THOUSAND PESOS (P65,000.00) will be paid
from and out of the first letter of credit covering the first shipment of iron
ore made by the Larap Mines & Smelting Co., Inc., its assigns,
administrators, or successors in interest.
We find the court below to be legally correct
in holding that the shipment or local sale of the iron ore is not a condition
precedent (or suspensive) to the payment of the balance of P65,000.00, but was
only a suspensive period or term. What characterizes a conditional obligation
is the fact that its efficacy or obligatory force (as distinguished from its
demandability) is subordinated to the happening of a future and uncertain
event; so that if the suspensive condition does not take place, the parties
would stand as if the conditional obligation had never existed. That the
parties to the contract Exhibit "A" did not intend any such state of
things to prevail is supported by several circumstances:
1) The words of the contract express no
contingency in the buyer's obligation to pay: "The balance of Sixty-Five
Thousand Pesos (P65,000.00) will be paid out of the first
letter of credit covering the first shipment of iron ores . . ." etc.
There is no uncertainty that the payment will have to be made sooner or later;
what is undetermined is merely the exact date at which it will
be made. By the very terms of the contract, therefore, the existence of the
obligation to pay is recognized; only its maturity or demandability is
deferred.
2) A contract of sale is normally commutative
and onerous: not only does each one of the parties assume a correlative
obligation (the seller to deliver and transfer ownership of the thing sold and
the buyer to pay the price),but each party anticipates performance by the other
from the very start. While in a sale the obligation of one party can be
lawfully subordinated to an uncertain event, so that the other understands that
he assumes the risk of receiving nothing for what he gives (as in the case of a
sale of hopes or expectations, emptio spei), it is not in the usual
course of business to do so; hence, the contingent character of the obligation
must clearly appear. Nothing is found in the record to evidence that Gaite
desired or assumed to run the risk of losing his right over the ore without
getting paid for it, or that Fonacier understood that Gaite assumed any such
risk. This is proved by the fact that Gaite insisted on a bond a to guarantee
payment of the P65,000.00, an not only upon a bond by Fonacier, the Larap Mines
& Smelting Co., and the company's stockholders, but also on one by a surety
company; and the fact that appellants did put up such bonds indicates that they
admitted the definite existence of their obligation to pay the balance of
P65,000.00.
3) To subordinate the obligation to pay the
remaining P65,000.00 to the sale or shipment of the ore as a condition
precedent, would be tantamount to leaving the payment at the discretion of the
debtor, for the sale or shipment could not be made unless the appellants took
steps to sell the ore. Appellants would thus be able to postpone payment
indefinitely. The desireability of avoiding such a construction of the contract
Exhibit "A" needs no stressing.
4) Assuming that there could be doubt whether
by the wording of the contract the parties indented a suspensive condition or a
suspensive period (dies ad quem) for the payment of the P65,000.00, the
rules of interpretation would incline the scales in favor of "the greater
reciprocity of interests", since sale is essentially onerous. The Civil
Code of the Philippines, Article 1378, paragraph 1, in fine, provides:
If the contract is onerous, the doubt shall be settled in favor of the
greatest reciprocity of interests.
and there can be no question that greater
reciprocity obtains if the buyer' obligation is deemed to be actually existing,
with only its maturity (due date) postponed or deferred, that if such
obligation were viewed as non-existent or not binding until the ore was sold.
The only rational view that can be taken is
that the sale of the ore to Fonacier was a sale on credit, and not an aleatory
contract where the transferor, Gaite, would assume the risk of not being paid
at all; and that the previous sale or shipment of the ore was not a suspensive
condition for the payment of the balance of the agreed price, but was intended
merely to fix the future date of the payment.
This issue settled, the next point of inquiry
is whether appellants, Fonacier and his sureties, still have the right to
insist that Gaite should wait for the sale or shipment of the ore before
receiving payment; or, in other words, whether or not they are entitled to take
full advantage of the period granted them for making the payment.
We agree with the court below that the
appellant have forfeited the right court below that the appellants have
forfeited the right to compel Gaite to wait for the sale of the ore before
receiving payment of the balance of P65,000.00, because of their failure to
renew the bond of the Far Eastern Surety Company or else replace it with an
equivalent guarantee. The expiration of the bonding company's undertaking on
December 8, 1955 substantially reduced the security of the vendor's rights as
creditor for the unpaid P65,000.00, a security that Gaite considered essential
and upon which he had insisted when he executed the deed of sale of the ore to
Fonacier (Exhibit "A"). The case squarely comes under paragraphs 2
and 3 of Article 1198 of the Civil Code of the Philippines:
"ART. 1198. The debtor shall lose every right to make use of the
period:
(1) . . .
(2) When he does not furnish to the creditor the guaranties or
securities which he has promised.
(3) When by his own acts he has impaired said guaranties or securities
after their establishment, and when through fortuitous event they disappear,
unless he immediately gives new ones equally satisfactory.
Appellants' failure to renew or extend the
surety company's bond upon its expiration plainly impaired the securities given
to the creditor (appellee Gaite), unless immediately renewed or replaced.
There is no merit in appellants' argument
that Gaite's acceptance of the surety company's bond with full knowledge that
on its face it would automatically expire within one year was a waiver of its
renewal after the expiration date. No such waiver could have been intended, for
Gaite stood to lose and had nothing to gain barely; and if there was any, it
could be rationally explained only if the appellants had agreed to sell the ore
and pay Gaite before the surety company's bond expired on December 8, 1955. But
in the latter case the defendants-appellants' obligation to pay became absolute
after one year from the transfer of the ore to Fonacier by virtue of the deed
Exhibit "A.".
All the alternatives, therefore, lead to the
same result: that Gaite acted within his rights in demanding payment and
instituting this action one year from and after the contract (Exhibit
"A") was executed, either because the appellant debtors had impaired
the securities originally given and thereby forfeited any further time within
which to pay; or because the term of payment was originally of no more than one
year, and the balance of P65,000.00 became due and payable thereafter.
Coming now to the second issue in this
appeal, which is whether there were really 24,000 tons of iron ore in the
stockpiles sold by appellee Gaite to appellant Fonacier, and whether, if there
had been a short-delivery as claimed by appellants, they are entitled to the
payment of damages, we must, at the outset, stress two things: first,
that this is a case of a sale of a specific mass of fungible goods for a single
price or a lump sum, the quantity of "24,000 tons of iron ore, more or
less," stated in the contract Exhibit "A," being a mere estimate
by the parties of the total tonnage weight of the mass; and second,
that the evidence shows that neither of the parties had actually measured of
weighed the mass, so that they both tried to arrive at the total quantity by
making an estimate of the volume thereof in cubic meters and then multiplying
it by the estimated weight per ton of each cubic meter.
The sale between the parties is a sale of a
specific mass or iron ore because no provision was made in their contract for
the measuring or weighing of the ore sold in order to complete or perfect the
sale, nor was the price of P75,000,00 agreed upon by the parties based upon any
such measurement.(see Art. 1480, second par., New Civil Code). The subject
matter of the sale is, therefore, a determinate object, the mass, and not the
actual number of units or tons contained therein, so that all that was required
of the seller Gaite was to deliver in good faith to his buyer all of the ore
found in the mass, notwithstanding that the quantity delivered is less than the
amount estimated by them (Mobile Machinery & Supply Co., Inc. vs. York
Oilfield Salvage Co., Inc. 171 So. 872, applying art. 2459 of the Louisiana
Civil Code). There is no charge in this case that Gaite did not deliver to
appellants all the ore found in the stockpiles in the mining claims in
questions; Gaite had, therefore, complied with his promise to deliver, and
appellants in turn are bound to pay the lump price.
But assuming that plaintiff Gaite undertook
to sell and appellants undertook to buy, not a definite mass, but approximately
24,000 tons of ore, so that any substantial difference in this quantity
delivered would entitle the buyers to recover damages for the short-delivery,
was there really a short-delivery in this case?
We think not. As already stated, neither of
the parties had actually measured or weighed the whole mass of ore cubic meter
by cubic meter, or ton by ton. Both parties predicate their respective claims
only upon an estimated number of cubic meters of ore multiplied by the average
tonnage factor per cubic meter.
Now, appellee Gaite asserts that there was a
total of 7,375 cubic meters in the stockpiles of ore that he sold to Fonacier,
while appellants contend that by actual measurement, their witness Cirpriano
ManlaƱgit found the total volume of ore in the stockpiles to be only 6.609
cubic meters. As to the average weight in tons per cubic meter, the parties are
again in disagreement, with appellants claiming the correct tonnage factor to
be 2.18 tons to a cubic meter, while appellee Gaite claims that the correct
tonnage factor is about 3.7.
In the face of the conflict of evidence, we
take as the most reliable estimate of the tonnage factor of iron ore in this
case to be that made by Leopoldo F. Abad, chief of the Mines and Metallurgical
Division of the Bureau of Mines, a government pensionado to the States and a
mining engineering graduate of the Universities of Nevada and California, with
almost 22 years of experience in the Bureau of Mines. This witness placed the
tonnage factor of every cubic meter of iron ore at between 3 metric tons as
minimum to 5 metric tons as maximum. This estimate, in turn, closely
corresponds to the average tonnage factor of 3.3 adopted in his corrected
report (Exhibits "FF" and FF-1") by engineer Nemesio Gamatero,
who was sent by the Bureau of Mines to the mining claims involved at the
request of appellant Krakower, precisely to make an official estimate of the
amount of iron ore in Gaite's stockpiles after the dispute arose.
Even granting, then, that the estimate of
6,609 cubic meters of ore in the stockpiles made by appellant's witness
Cipriano ManlaƱgit is correct, if we multiply it by the average tonnage factor
of 3.3 tons to a cubic meter, the product is 21,809.7 tons, which is not very
far from the estimate of 24,000 tons made by appellee Gaite, considering that
actual weighing of each unit of the mass was practically impossible, so that a
reasonable percentage of error should be allowed anyone making an estimate of
the exact quantity in tons found in the mass. It must not be forgotten that the
contract Exhibit "A" expressly stated the amount to be 24,000
tons, more or less. (ch. Pine River Logging & Improvement Co.
vs U.S., 279, 46 L. Ed. 1164).
There was, consequently, no short-delivery in
this case as would entitle appellants to the payment of damages, nor could
Gaite have been guilty of any fraud in making any misrepresentation to
appellants as to the total quantity of ore in the stockpiles of the mining
claims in question, as charged by appellants, since Gaite's estimate appears to
be substantially correct.
WHEREFORE, finding no error in the decision
appealed from, we hereby affirm the same, with costs against appellants.
Bengzon, C.J., Padilla, Labrador, Concepcion,
Barrera, Paredes, Dizon, De Leon and Natividad, JJ., concur.
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