Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Facts:
The spouses Francisco and Demetria Culaba were engaged in the sale and distribution of San Miguel
Corporations (SMC) beer products. SMC sold beer products on credit to the Culaba spouses in the
amount of P28,650.00. thereafter, the Culaba spouses made a partial payment of P3,740.00, leaving an
unpaid balance of P24,910.00. As they failed to pay despite repeated demands, SMC filed an action for
collection of a sum of money against them before the RTC.
The defendant-spouses denied any liability, claiming that they had already paid the plaintiff in full on
four separate occasions. To substantiate this claim, the defendants presented 4 Temporary Charge
Sales (TCS) Liquidation Receipts: 27331, 27318, 27339, 27346. Defendant Francisco Culaba testified
that he made payments to an SMC supervisor who came in an SMC van. The defendant, in good faith,
then paid to the said supervisor, and he was, in turn, issued genuine SMC liquidation receipts.
SMC, for its part, submitted a publishers affidavit to prove that the entire booklet of TCSL Receipts
bearing Nos. 27301-27350 were reported lost by it, and that it caused the publication of the notice of
loss.
Issue:
W/N petitioners obligation is extinguished. No
Held:
Payment is a mode of extinguishing an obligation. Article 1240 of the Civil Code provides that payment
shall be made to the person in whose favor the obligation has been constituted, or his successor-ininterest, or any person authorized to receive it. In this case, the payments were purportedly made to a
supervisor of the private respondent, who was clan in an SMC uniform and drove an SMC van. He
appeared to be authorized to accept payment as he showed a list of customers accountabilities and
issued SMC liquidation receipts which looked genuine. Unfortunately for petitioner Francisco Culaba, he
did not ascertain the identity and authority of the said supervisor, nor did he ask to be shown any
identification to prove that the latter was, indeed, an SMC supervisor. The petitioners relied solely on the
mans representation that he was collecting payments for SMC. Thus, the payments the petitioners
claimed they made were not the payments that discharged their obligation to private respondents.
The basis of agency is representation. A person dealing with an agent is put upon an inquiry and must
discover upon his peril the authority of the agent. In the instant case, the petitioners loss could have
been avoided if they had simply exercised due diligence in ascertaining the identity of the person to
whom they allegedly made the payments. The fact that they were parting with valuable consideration
should have made them more circumspect in handling their business transactions. Persons dealing with
an assumed agent are bound at their peril to ascertain not only the fact agency but also the nature and
extent of authority, and in case either is controverted, the burden of proof is upon them to establish it.
the petitioners in this case failed to discharge this burden, considering that the private respondent
vehemently denied that the payments were accepted by it, and were made to its authorized
representative.
[G.R. No. 115838. July 18, 2002] CONSTANTE AMOR DE CASTRO and CORAZON AMOR
DE CASTRO,
petitioners
,
vs.
COURT OF APPEALS and FRANCISCO ARTIGO,
respondents.
Facts:
The Case: An appeal from a judgment of the Court of First Instance of the Province of
Pangasinan, wherein it was held that the land and camarin in question were the property of
Salvador Panganiban, and the defendant, Agustin Cuevas, was ordered to return the said
property to the plaintiff, Panganiban, and to pay the costs of proceedings, the court
reserving to the said plaintiff the right to bring an action for damages against the
defendant and holding that the deposit in the hands of the clerk, amounting to 200 pesos,
Mexican currency, made by Cuevas was improperly made, which said sum the court
ordered refunded to the said Cuevas.
De castro were co-owners of four (4) lots. In a letter, Artigo was authorized by appellants to
act as real estate broker in the sale of these properties and five percent(5%) of which will be
given to the agent as commission. It was appellee who first found Times Transit Corporation,
who bought 2 lots. Artigo felt short of his commission. Hence, he sued below to collect the
balance. De castros then moved for the dismissal for failure to implead other co-owners as
indispensable parties. The De Castros claim that Artigo always knew that the two lots were
co-owned with their other siblings and failure to implead such indispensable parties is fatal to
the complaint since Artigo, as agent of all the four co-owners, would be paid with funds coowned by the four co-owners.
The Facts: The plaintiff, on December 10, 1897, sold under pacto de retro1 a camarin and
lot to one Gonzales, with agreement that if the plaintiff did not repurchase within six
months, the property will pass to Gonzales upon paying an additional sum of Php 200. In
the month of May 1898, plaintiff sought to repurchase the property, but he could not locate
Gonzales due to the revolutionary war. The revolutionary government then seized the land
and camarin from Gonzales. Plaintiff redeemed the property to the revolutionary
government on November 12, 1898 by paying the repurchase price. On the other hand, on
August 1, 1900, Gonzales sold the property to the defendant, who, on the 10 th of the said
month attempted to pay Php 200 to plaintiff, who refused to receive the same.
Issue:
Issue: Whether the repurchase made by plaintiff from the revolutionary government
vested in him the title to the property.
WON the complaint merits dismissal for failure to implead other co-owners as indispensable
parties
Ruling:
Devoid of merit. Art. 1915. If two or more persons have appointed an agent for a common
transaction or undertaking, they shall be solidarily liable to the agent for all the consequences
of the agency. The rule in this article applies even when the appointments were made by the
principals in separate acts, provided that they are for the same transaction.
The solidarity arises from the common interest of the principals, and not from the act of
constituting the agency. By virtue of this solidarity, the agent can recover from any principal
the whole compensation and indemnity owing to him by the others.
The parties, however, may, by express agreement, negate this solidary responsibility. The
solidarity does not disappear by the mere partition effected by the principals after the
accomplishment of the agency. When the law expressly provides for solidarity of the
obligation, as in the liability of co-principals in a contract of agency, each obligor may be
compelled to pay the entire obligation.The agent may recover the whole compensation from
any one of the co-principals, as in this case.
The essence of a pacto de retro sale is that title and ownership of the property sold is immediately
vested in the vendee a retro, subject to the restrictive condition of repurchase by the vendor a retro
within the period provided in Article 1606 of the New Civil Code.
2 Article 1242. Payment made in good faith to any person in possession of the credit shall release the
debtor.
3 Article 1241. Payment to a person who is incapacitated to administer his property shall be valid if he
has kept the thing delivered, or insofar as the payment has been beneficial to him.Payment made to a
third person shall also be valid insofar as it has redounded to the benefit of the creditor. Such benefit
to the creditor need not be proved in the following cases.
Such payment, therefore, did not extinguish the obligation of plaintiff to pay the
repurchase price. Since the defendant did not make the additional payment of Php 200 in
the manner agreed upon in the contract and did not make a consignation in the manner
provided by law, the right of the plaintiff to redeem still exists, and he may repurchase the
property upon paying to defendant the repurchase price.