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39. PALISOC v.

BRILLANTES
G.R. No. L-29025

FACTS: Deceased Dominador Palisoc and defendant Virgilio Daffon were automotivemechanics
students at the Manila Technical Institute (MTI). In the afternoon of March 10, 1966 during recess,
an altercation transpired between the deceased and the defendant. At the time of the incident,
Dominador was sixteen years old while Virgilio was already of age. Virgilio was working on a
machine with Dominador looking at them. The situation prompted Virgilio to remark that
Dominador was acting like a foreman. As a result, Dominador slapped Virgilio on the face. Virgilio
retaliated by inflicting severe blows upon Dominador’s stomach, which caused the latter to
stumble upon an engine block and faint. The latter died, the cause of death being “shock due to
traumatic fracture of the ribs”. The parents of Dominador filed an action for damages against (1)
Virgilio, (2) Valenton, the head/president of MTI, (3) Quibule who was the teacher in charge at
the time of the incident, and (4) Brillantes who is a member of the board of directors and former
sole proprietor of MTI.
The trial court held Virgilio liable but absolved the other defendants-officials. It stated that the
clause “so long as they remain in their custody” contained in Article 2180 of the
Civil Code applies only where the pupil lives and boards with the teachers, such that the control
or influence on the pupil supersedes those of the parents., and such control and responsibility for
the pupil’s actions would pass from the father and mother to the teachers. The trial court held that
Article 2180 was not applicable in this case, as defendant Virgilio did not live with the defendants-
officials at the time of the incident. Hence, this petition.
ISSUE: Who must be held liable for damages for the death of Dominador together with the
defendant?
HELD: The head/president and teacher of MTI (Valenton and Quibule respectively) were held
liable jointly and severally with the Virgilio for damages. No liability attaches to Brillantes as a
mere member of the MTI board of directors. Similarly, MTI may not be held liable since it had
not been properly impleaded as party defendant.
The phrase used in Article 2180, “so long as the students remain in their custody” means the
protective and supervisory custody that the school and its heads and teachers exercise over the
pupils and students for as long as they are at attendance in the school, including recess time. There
is nothing in the law that requires that for such liability to attach the pupil or student who commits
the tortuous act must live and board in the school. The rationale of such liability of school heads
and teachers for the tortious acts of their pupils and students, so long as they remain in their
custody, is that they stand, in loco parentis to a certain extent to their pupils and students and are
called upon to “exercise reasonable supervision over the conduct of the child.” In this case, the
unfortunate death resulting from the fight between the protagonists-students could have been
avoided, had said defendants complied with their duty of providing adequate supervision over the
activities of the students in the school premises to protect their students from harm. Since Valenton
and Quibule failed to prove that they observed all the diligence of a good father of a family to
prevent damage, they cannot likewise avail of the exemption to the liability. The judgment of the
appellate court was modified, while claim for compensatory damages was increased in accordance
with recent jurisprudence and the claim for exemplary damages denied in the absence of gross
negligence on the part of the said defendants

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