Banas Vs Asia Pacific

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BAAS, C.G DIZON CONSTRUCTION INC. & CENEN DIZON VS. ASIA PACIFIC FINANCE CORPORATION substituted by INTERNATIONAL CORPORATE BANK now known as UNION BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES GR NO 128703 OCT. 18, 2000 FACTS: March 20, 1981 Asia Pacific filed a complaint for a sum of money with prayer for a writ of replevin against petitioners August 1980 BAAS executed a Promissory Note in favor of CG DIZON CONSTRUCTION whereby for value received he promised to pay to the order of CG DIZON the sum of P390, 000 in installments of P32, 500 every 25th day of the month starting from September 25, 1980 up to August 25, 1981 CG DIZON endorsed with recourse the Promissory Note to ASIA PACIFIC. To secure payment, CG DIZON, through its corporate officers and one of them is Cenen Dizon as the president, executed a Deed of Chattel Mortgage covering 3 heavy equipment units of Caterpillar Bulldozer Crawler Tractors [Model nos. D814A & D8H] in favor of ASIA PACIFIC August 25, 1980 Cenen Dizon executed a Continuing Undertaking wherein he bound himself to pay the obligation jointly and severally with CG DIZON

CG DIZON made the following installment payments to ASIA PACIFIC: 1] P32, 500 September 25, 1980 2] P32, 500 October 27, 1980 3] P65, 000 February 27, 1981 Thereafter, CG DIZON defaulted in the payment of the remaining installments; thus ASIA PACIFIC sent a Statement of Account to CENEN DIZON for the : 1] Unpaid balance of P267, 737.50 inclusive of interests and charges, and 2] P66, 909.38 representing attorneys fees As the demand was unheeded, ASIA PACIFIC sued Teodoro Baas, C. G. Dizon Construction and Cenen Dizon While defendants (herein petitioners) admitted the genuineness and due execution of the Promissory Note, the Deed of Chattel Mortgage and the Continuing Undertaking, they nevertheless maintained that these documents were never intended by the parties to be legal, valid and binding but a mere subterfuge to conceal the loan of P390,000.00 with usurious interests October 1980: Cenen Dizon informed ASIA PACIFIC that he would be delayed in meeting his monthly amortization on account of business reverses and promised to pay instead in February 1981. Cenen Dizon made good his promise and tendered payment to ASIA PACIFIC in an amount

equivalent to two (2) monthly amortizations. But ASIA PACIFIC attempted to impose a 3% interest for every month of delay, which he flatly refused to pay for being usurious. Afterwards, ASIA PACIFIC allegedly made a verbal proposal to Cenen Dizon to surrender to it the ownership of the two (2) bulldozer crawler tractors and, in turn, the latter would treat the former's account as closed and the loan fully paid. Cenen Dizon supposedly agreed and accepted the offer. Petitioners contend that the parties already had a verbal understanding wherein ASIA PACIFIC actually agreed to consider petitioners' account closed and the principal obligation fully paid in exchange for the ownership of the two (2) bulldozer crawler tractors. ISSUE[S]: 1] W/N THE SURRENDER OF THE BULLDOZER CRAWLER TRACTORS TO RESPONDENT RESULTED IN THE EXTINGUISHMENT OF PETITIONERS OBLIGATION 2] W/N THE ATTORNEYS FEE IS PROPER AND THE STIPULATION IS A PENAL CLAUSE RULING: 1] NO. The records are bereft of any evidence of the supposed agreement. it is unbelievable that the parties entirely neglected to write down such an important agreement.

Equally incredulous is the fact that petitioner Cenen Dizon, a seasoned businessman, readily consented to deliver the bulldozers to respondent without a corresponding receipt of acquittance. Indeed, even the testimony of petitioner Cenen Dizon himself negates the supposed verbal understanding between the parties Q: You said and is it not a fact that you surrendered the bulldozers to APCOR by virtue of the seizure order? A: There was no seizure order. Atty. Carag during that time said if I surrender the two equipment, we might finally close a deal if the equipment would come up to the balance of the loan. So I voluntarily surrendered, I pulled them from the job site and returned them to APCOR x x x x Q: You mentioned a certain Atty. Carag, who is he? A: He was the former legal counsel of APCOR. They were handling cases. In fact, I talked with Atty. Carag, we have a verbal agreement if I surrender the equipment it might suffice to pay off the debt so I did just that (underscoring ours) In other words, there was no binding and perfected contract between petitioners and respondent regarding the settlement of the obligation, but only a conditional one, a mere conjecture [inference] in fact, depending on whether the value of the tractors to be surrendered

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would equal the balance of the loan plus interests. And since the bulldozer crawler tractors were sold at the foreclosure sale for only P180, 000.00, which was not enough to cover the unpaid balance of P267, 637.50, petitioners are still liable for the deficiency. 2] YES. On the amount of attorney's fees which under the Promissory Note is equivalent to 25% of the principal obligation and interests due, it is not, strictly speaking, the attorney's fees recoverable as between the attorney and his client regulated by the Rules of Court. Rather, the attorney's fees here are in the nature of liquidated damages and the stipulation therefore is aptly called a penal clause. It has been said that so long as such stipulation does not contravene the law, morals and public order, it is strictly binding upon the obligor. It is the litigant, not the counsel, who is the judgment creditor entitled to enforce the judgment by execution. Nevertheless, it appears that petitioners' failure to fully comply with their part of the bargain was not motivated by ill will or malice, but due to financial distress occasioned by legitimate business reverses. Petitioners in fact paid a total of P130,000.00 in three (3) installments, and even went to the extent of voluntarily turning over to respondent their heavy

equipment consisting of two (2) bulldozer crawler tractors, all in a bona fide effort to settle their indebtedness in full. Article 1229 of the New Civil Code specifically empowers the judge to equitably reduce the civil penalty when the principal obligation has been partly or irregularly complied with. Upon the foregoing premise, we hold that the reduction of the attorney's fees from 25% to 15% of the unpaid principal plus interests is in order.

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