BPI v. FMIC

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G.R. No.

132390

May 21, 2004

BPI FAMILY SAVINGS BANK, INC., petitioner, vs. FIRST METRO INVESTMENT CORPORATION, respondent.

SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ, J.:

FACTS:
First Metro Investment Corporation (FMIC), respondent, is an investment house organized under Philippine laws.
Petitioner, Bank of Philippine Islands Family Savings Bank, Inc. is a banking corporation also organized under Philippine
laws.

On August 25, 1989, FMIC, through its Executive Vice President Antonio Ong, opened current account no. 840107473-0 and deposited METROBANK check no. 898679 of P100 million with BPI Family Bank* (BPI FB) San Francisco
del Monte Branch (Quezon City). Ong made the deposit upon request of his friend, Ador de Asis, a close acquaintance of
Jaime Sebastian, then Branch Manager of BPI FB San Francisco del Monte Branch. Sebastians aim was to increase the
deposit level in his Branch.

BPI FB, through Sebastian, guaranteed the payment of P14,667,687.01 representing 17% per annum interest
of P100 million deposited by FMIC. The latter, in turn, assured BPI FB that it will maintain its deposit of P100 million for a
period of one year on condition that the interest of 17% per annum is paid in advance.

This agreement between the parties was reached through their communications in writing.

Subsequently, BPI FB paid FMIC 17% interest or P14,667,687.01 upon clearance of the latters check deposit.

However, on August 29, 1989, on the basis of an Authority to Debit signed by Ong and Ma. Theresa David, Senior
Manager of FMIC, BPI FB transferred P80 million from FMICs current account to the savings account of Tevesteco
Arrastre Stevedoring, Inc. (Tevesteco).

FMIC denied having authorized the transfer of its funds to Tevesteco, claiming that the signatures of Ong and
David were falsified. Thereupon, to recover immediately its deposit, FMIC, on September 12, 1989, issued BPI FB check
no. 129077 for P86,057,646.72 payable to itself and drawn on its deposit with BPI FB SFDM branch. But upon
presentation for payment on September 13, 1989, BPI FB dishonored the check as it was "drawn against insufficient
funds" (DAIF).

PROCEDURE:
FMIC filed with the Regional Trial Court, Branch 146, Makati City Civil Case No. 89-5280 against BPI FB. FMIC
likewise caused the filing by the Office of the State Prosecutors of an Information for estafa against Ong, de Asis,
Sebastian and four others. However, the Information was dismissed on the basis of a demurrer to evidence filed by the
accused.

The facts as found by the trial court and affirmed by the Court of Appeals.

ISSUES:
1) W/N in validating a clearly illegal and void agreement between FMIC and an overstepping branch manager of
BPI FB, the CA decided the appealed case in a manner not in accordance with law or the applicable decisions of the
Honorable Court.

2) W/N BPI FB clothed its branch manager with apparent authority to enter into such a patently illegal
arrangement.

DECISION:
The Supreme Court held that the parties did not intend the deposit to be treated as a demand deposit but rather
as an interest-earning time deposit not withdrawable any time. This is quite obvious from the communications between
Jaime Sebastian, petitioners Branch Manager, and Antonio Ong, respondents Executive Vice President. Both agreed that
the deposit of P100 million was non-withdrawable for one year upon payment in advance of the 17% per annum
interest. Respondents time deposit of P100 million was accepted by petitioner as shown by a deposit slip prepared and
signed by Ong himself who indicated therein the account number to which the deposit is to be credited, the name of FMIC
as depositor or account holder, the date of deposit, and the amount of P100 million as deposit in check. Clearly, when
respondent FMIC invested its money with petitioner BPI FB, they intended the P100 million as a time deposit, to earn 17%
per annum interest and to remain intact until its maturity date one year thereafter.

REASONING:
Ordinarily, a time deposit is defined as "one the payment of which cannot legally be required within such a
specified number of days."

In contrast, demand deposits are "all those liabilities of the Bangko Sentral and of other banks which are
denominated in Philippine currency and are subject to payment in legal tender upon demand by the presentation of
(depositors) checks."

While it may be true that barely one month and seven days from the date of deposit, respondent FMIC demanded
the withdrawal of P86,057,646.72 through the issuance of a check payable to itself, the same was made as a result of the
fraudulent and unauthorized transfer by petitioner BPI FB of its P80 million deposit to Tevestecos savings account.
Certainly, such was a normal reaction of respondent as a depositor to petitioners failure in its fiduciary duty to treat its
account with the highest degree of care.

Under this circumstance, the withdrawal of deposit by respondent FMIC before the one-year maturity date did not
change the nature of its time deposit to one of demand deposit.

Going back to the unauthorized transfer of respondents funds to Tevesteco, in its attempt to evade any liability
therefor, petitioner now impugns the validity of the subject agreement on the ground that its Branch Manager, Jaime
Sebastian, overstepped the limits of his authority in accepting respondents deposit with 17% interest per annum. We
have held that if a corporation knowingly permits its officer, or any other agent, to perform acts within the scope of an
apparent authority, holding him out to the public as possessing power to do those acts, the corporation will, as against any
person who has dealt in good faith with the corporation through such agent, be estopped from denying such authority. We
reiterated this doctrine in Prudential Bank vs. Court of Appeals, thus:

"A bank holding out its officers and agent as worthy of confidence will not be permitted to profit by the
frauds they may thus be enabled to perpetrate in the apparent scope of their employment; nor will it be permitted
to shirk its responsibility for such frauds, even though no benefit may accrue to the bank therefrom. Accordingly, a
banking corporation is liable to innocent third persons where the representation is made in the course of its
business by an agent acting within the general scope of his authority even though the agent is secretly abusing
his authority and attempting to perpetrate a fraud upon his principal or some other person for his own ultimate
benefit."

Petitioner maintains that respondent should have first inquired whether the deposit of P100 Million and the fixing
of the interest rate were pursuant to its (petitioners) internal procedures. Petitioners stance is a futile attempt to evade an
obligation clearly established by the intent of the parties. What transpires in the corporate board room is entirely an
internal matter. Hence, petitioner may not impute negligence on the part of respondents representative in failing to find
out the scope of authority of petitioners Branch Manager. Indeed, the public has the right to rely on the trustworthiness of
bank managers and their acts. Obviously, confidence in the banking system, which necessarily includes reliance on bank
managers, is vital in the economic life of our society.

Significantly, the transaction was actually acknowledged and ratified by petitioner when it paid respondent in
advance the interest for one year. Thus, petitioner is estopped from denying that it authorized its Branch Manager to enter
into an agreement with respondents Executive Vice President concerning the deposit with the corresponding 17% interest
per annum.

RULING:
At this point, we must emphasize that this Court is not a trier of facts. Thus, we uphold the finding of both lower
courts that petitioner failed to exercise that degree of diligence required by the nature of its obligations to its depositors. A
bank is under obligation to treat the accounts of its depositors with meticulous care, whether such account consists only of
a few hundred pesos or of million of pesos. Here, petitioner cannot claim it exercised such a degree of care required of it
and must, therefore, bear the consequence.

WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The assailed Decision dated July 4, 1997 and the Resolution dated
January 28, 1998 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 44986 are hereby AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioner.

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