Unimasters Vs CA On VENUE
Unimasters Vs CA On VENUE
Unimasters Vs CA On VENUE
FACTS:
1. Under a "Dealership Agreement for Sales and Services" KUBOTA and UNIMASTERS for the products of the
2.
latter contains a. a stipulation reading: " ** All suits arising out of this Agreement shall be filed with / in the proper Courts of Quezon City," b. a provision binding UNIMASTERS to obtain (as it did in fact obtain) a credit line with Metropolitan Bank and Trust Co.-Tacloban Branch in the amount of P2,000,000.00 to answer for its obligations to KUBOTA. Some five years later, UNIMASTERS filed an action in the RTC Tacloban City against KUBOTA, a certain Reynaldo Go, and Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company-Tacloban Branch (hereafter, simply METROBANK) for damages for breach of contract and injunction with prayer for temporary restraining order - GRANTED hearing, but the trial proceeded and KUBOTA's motion to dismiss was DENIED, holding that: The proper venue therefore pursuant to Rules of Court would either be Quezon City or Tacloban City at the election of the plaintiff. Quezon City and Manila (sic), as agreed upon by the parties in the Dealership Agreement, are additional places other than the place stated in the Rules of Court. The filing, therefore, of this complaint in the Regional Trial Court in Tacloban City is proper."
3. KUBOTA: sought dismissal on ground of improper venue and motion for the transfer of the injunction
4. On appeal, the Appellate court agreed with KUBOTA. That the Dealership Agreement limit the
venue of all suits arising thereunder only and exclusively to "the proper courts of Quezon City."
5. UNIMASTERS filed MR: DENIED. Appeal to SC that CA erred "in concluding, contrary to decisions of
this ** Court, that the agreement on venue between petitioner (UNIMASTERS) and private respondent (KUBOTA) limited to the proper courts of Quezon City the venue of any complaint filed arising from the dealership agreement between them.
ISSUE: WON the stipulation had the effect of effectively eliminating the latter as an optional venue and limiting litigation between UNIMASTERS and KUBOTA only and exclusively to Quezon City. HELD: NO. CA is wrong. RTC decision REINSTATED 1. Written stipulations as to venue may be restrictive in the sense that the suit may be filed only in the place agreed upon, or merely permissive in that the parties may file their suit not only in the place agreed upon but also in the places fixed by law (Rule 4, specifically). As in any other agreement, what is essential is the ascertainment of the intention of the parties respecting the matter. 2. Since convenience is the raison d'etre of the rules of venue,[13] it is easy to accept the proposition that normally, venue stipulations should be deemed permissive merely, and that interpretation should be adopted which most serves the parties' convenience. In other words, stipulations designating venues other than those assigned by Rule 4 should be interpreted as designed to make it more convenient for the parties to institute actions arising from or in relation to their agreements; that is to say, as simply adding to or expanding the venues indicated in said Rule 4. 3. Absent additional words and expressions definitely and unmistakably denoting the parties' desire and intention that actions between them should be ventilated only at the place selected by them, Quezon City -- or other contractual provisions clearly evincing the same desire and intention -- the stipulation should be construed, not as confining suits between the parties only to that one place, Quezon City, but as allowing suits either in Quezon City or Tacloban City, at the option of the plaintiff (UNIMASTERS in this case). 4. One last word, respecting KUBOTA's theory that the Regional Trial Court had "no jurisdiction to take cognizance of ** (UNIMASTERS') action considering that venue was improperly laid." This is not an accurate statement of legal principle. It equates venue with jurisdiction; but venue has nothing to do
with jurisdiction, except in criminal actions. This is fundamental. The action at bar, for the recovery of damages in an amount considerably in excess of P20,000.00, is assuredly within the jurisdiction of a Regional Trial Court. Assuming that venue were improperly laid in the Court where the action was instituted, the Tacloban City RTC, that would be a procedural, not a jurisdictional impediment -precluding ventilation of the case before that Court of wrong venue notwithstanding that the subject matter is within its jurisdiction. However, if the objection to venue is waived by the failure to set it up in a motion to dismiss, the RTC would proceed in perfectly regular fashion if it then tried and decided the action.