Filipinas Life Assurance Vs Nava

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Republic of the Philippines

SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
G.R. No. L-20552
FILIPINAS LIFE ASSURANCE CO., ET AL., petitioners,
vs.
GONZALO P. NAVA, respondent.
Araneta, Mendoza and Papa for petitioners.
Bengzon, Villegas and Zarraga and G. Advincula for respondent.
BAUTISTA ANGELO, J.:
This is a petition for review of a decision of the Court of Appeals which affirms that of
the court a quo (1) rescinding the insurance contracts entered into between plaintiff and
defendants; (2) ordering defendant Filipinas Life Assurance Co. to pay plaintiff the
amount of P32,072.60 as the total amount paid by said plaintiff on his insurance
policies; and (3) ordering defendant Insular Life Assurance Co., Ltd. to pay plaintiff the
amount of P2,574.00 as the total amount paid by plaintiff on account of his insurance
policy.
On January 1, 1936, plaintiff and defendant Insular Life Assurance Co., Ltd. entered into
a contract of life insurance with a face value of P5,000.00 for which the insurer issued
Policy No. 58999.
On February 28, 1939, plaintiff and defendant Filipinas Life Assurance Co. entered into
17 separate contracts of life insurance for which the insurer issued 17 life insurance
policies, one of said policies having a face value of P10,000.00 while the rest a face
value of P5,000.00 each, or a total of P90,000.00. Each and everyone of the 18 policies
issued by defendants to plaintiff contains a loan clause of the following tenor:
Policy loans. After three full years' premiums have been paid upon this Policy, if
no premium payment is in default, the Company, subject to its then existing rules,
will advance on proper assignment and delivery of this Policy and on the sole
security thereof a sum equal to, or at the option of the owner less than, the cash
value specified in the Schedule of Policy Values, less any existing indebtedness
on or secured by this Policy and any unpaid balance of the premium for the
current policy-year; provided interest at six per centum per annum on the whole
amount of the loan is paid in advance to the end of the current policy-year. At the
end of the current policy-year interest at the same rate for one year in advance
will be due and payable, and annually thereafter, and if not so paid will be added
to the principal and bear the same rate of interest. Failure to repay any such loan
or interest shall not avoid this Policy unless the total indebtedness shall equal or
exceed the full amount of the loan value available hereunder.
Any indebtedness on this Policy shall first be deducted from any money payable
or in any settlement under this Policy.

OnACCOUNT of the policies abovementioned, plaintiff had so far paid to defendant


Insular Life Assurance Co., Ltd. the following amounts: from 1936 to December, 1941,
P1,544.40, and from January, 1942 to January, 1945, P1,029.60, or a total of
P2,574.00; and to defendant Filipinas Life Assurance Co. plaintiff had paid the following
amounts: from February, 1939 to December, 1941, P13,976.40, and from January, 1942
to January, 1945, P18,096.20, or a total of P32,072.60. In other words, the total amount
paid by plaintiff to defendants on the 18 policies before the war and during the
Japanese occupation is P34,646.60.
On April 28, 1948, plaintiffAPPLIED to defendants for a loan in the sum of P5,000.00 in
line with the loan clause contained in said policies, but defendants refused to grant the
loan on the excuse that certain regulations issued by the Insurance Commissioner on
May 20, 1946 required theINSURANCE COMPANIES to withhold the payments on
premiums made during the Japanese occupation because the same shall be subject to
future adjustments " as soon as debtor-creditor relationship is established" and because
of such process of "withholding" plaintiff was not entitled to borrow any amount until
such adjustment has been made.
On September 30, 1948, plaintiff called the attention of the insurance companies to the
decision of our Supreme Court in the case of Haw Pia v. China Banking
Corporation1 establishing and recognizing the relationship of debtor and creditor with
respect to payments in fiat currency made during the Japanese occupation on pre-war
obligations, but in spite of that fact the insurance companies refused to give to plaintiff
the loan he solicited giving as reason the excuse that said decision of our Supreme
Court was not applicable to transactions undertaken during Japanese occupation when
they relate to life insurance policies. On February 4, 1949, plaintiff reiterated his request
for his much-needed loan of P5,000.00, and as said request was again refused by the
insurance companies notwithstanding the fact that the total amount of the cash
surrender values of the 18 policies issued in his favor reached the sum of P9,468.29,
plaintiff commenced the present action on February 10, 1949 before the Court of First
Instance of Manila praying for the rescission of the abovementioned 18 policies and for
the refund to him of all the premiums so far paid by him to defendants in the amount of
P31,633.80, plus 6% interest thereon as damages, and the costs of action.
On November 28, 1951, defendants passed a resolution which was approved by the
Insurance Commissioner, giving full credit to all premium payments made by their
policyholders in fiat currency during the Japanese occupation onACCOUNT of pre-war
policies for which reason they filed an amended answer offering toPAY plaintiff the
amount of P9,468.29 which represents the aggregate cash surrender values of all the
policies in question as of February 10, 1949, but apparently this offer was refused.
After trial, the court a quo rendered judgment the dispositive part of which already
appears recited in the early part of this decision. This is the decision that was later
affirmed by the Court of Appeals in its decision of November 14, 1962, from which
defendants interposed the present petition for review.
In the present petition for review, petitioners now contend that the Court of Appeals
erred (1) in ruling that as a consequence of the decision in the Haw Pia case petitioners
violated the loan clause contained in the insurance policies thereby entitling respondent
to their rescission; (2) in ruling that by virtue of Article 1295 of the old Civil Code

petitioners should refund to defendant all the premiums paid on his insurance policies
as a consequence of their rescission; and (3) in not ruling that, even if respondent is
entitled to the rescission of said insurance policies, he can only recover their cash
surrender value at the time the complaint was filed on February 10, 1949.
The issues raised will be the subject of separate consideration.
1. It is contended that the failure of petitioners to give to respondent the loan of
P5,000.00APPLIED for by him on April 28, 1948 was justified in view of certain
regulations issued by the Insurance Commissioner on May 20, 1946 which, among
other things, provide that the amount corresponding to occupation premiums paid on
pre-war policies as well as those paid on pre-war loans should be withheld subject to
adjustment "as soon as debtor-creditor relationship is established", for which reason
petitioners were not in a position to grant the loan considering the amount of the fiat
currency employed by respondent to pay the premiums during the Japanese
occupation, and since this eventuality has not yet occurred it stands to reason that
petitioners cannot be made responsible to respondent for their alleged non-compliance
with the loan clause contained in the insurance policies issued to respondent.
But, as correctly stated by the Court of Appeals, even assuming the validity of the
regulations issued by the Insurance Commissioner which required the withholding of the
payments made in fiat currency of the premiums on insurance policies issued before the
war subject to whatever adjustment that may be made after the relationship between
debtor and creditor shall have been established, the fact however is that such
requirement has already lost its legal effect and value when on April 9, 1948 our
Supreme Court rendered its decision in the Haw Pia case wherein it was declared,
among others, that all payments made in fiat currency during the Japanese occupation
in relation with any contractual obligation executed before the war were valid to all
intents and purposes, and yet petitioners apparently did not give any importance to such
decision for in their opinion it does not have any application to transactions which have
any relation to payment of premiums on life insurance policies. In other words,
petitioners maintain that the Haw Pia case did not settle the question of valuation or
premium payments in Japanese military notes during the war on life insurance policies
because what said case merely settled was the validity of payments in fiat currency by a
debtor to a creditor. Stated in another way, petitioners are of the opinion that the Haw
Pia case did not settle the question of the valuation or premium payments in Japanese
military notes during the war on life insurance policies because the insured is by no
means a debtor of the insurer, nor is the insurer his creditor, considering that there is
absolutely no obligation on his part to pay the premiums.
There is no merit in this contention. In the Haw Pia case it was ruled in a clear manner
that payments made in Japanese military notes on account of contractual obligations
entered into before the war are valid payments for all legal intents and purposes, and
this ruling was reiterated in other similar cases. 2 And it cannot be denied that a life
insurance policy involves a contractual obligation wherein the insured becomes duty
bound to pay the premiums agreed upon, lest he runs the risk of having his insurance
policy lapse if he fails to pay such premiums. The fact that if the insured had paid in full
the premiums corresponding to the first three years of the life of his policy he cannot be
considered delinquent that would cause the lapse of his policy if the same contains an
automatic premium payment clause cannot divest such policy of its contractual nature,

for the result of such failure would only be for him to pay later the premium plus the
corresponding interest depending upon the condition of the policy. But certainly it does
not cease to be a contractual liability insofar as the payment of that premium is
concerned for whether he likes it or not that premium has to be paid lest he allows the
lapse of his policy. Consequently, the payment of premiums on the life insurance
policies made by herein respondent before and during the war up to the time he applied
for the loan in question with petitioners should be considered likewise as valid payments
upon the theory that such insurance policies are in the nature of a contractual obligation
within the meaning of the civil law. In effect, therefore, those payments were made by a
debtor to a creditor within the meaning of the requirement of the regulations of the
Insurance Commissioner and as such they can offer no excuse to petitioners for
refusing to grant the loan as contemplated in the loan clause embodied in the policies in
question. 1wph1.t
The fact, however, is that the oft-repeated regulations of the Insurance Commissioner
are of doubtful validity if their effect is to suspend the effectivity of a provision or clause
embodied in a valid insurance policy for that would partake of the nature of a regulation
the effect of which would be to infringe or impair a contractual obligation in violation of
Section 1(10), Article III, of our Constitution. In the case of Lim, et al. vs. Register of
Deeds of Rizal,3 this Court has held that an administrative official has no power to issue
a circular or a regulation the effect for that would be violative of our Constitution.
It is, therefore, clear from the foregoing that the petitioners violated the loan clause
embodied in each of the 18 life insurance policies issued to respondent to rescind all
said policies under Section 69 of the Insurance Act, which provides: "The violation of a
material warranty, or other material provision of a policy, on the part of either party
thereto, entitles the other to rescind."
The citation that petitioners make from Vance on Insurance to the effect that "The
general rule is that a breach of the agreement to make the loan does not entitle the
insured to rescind the contract," is not controlling in this jurisdiction. Firstly, it was not
shown that the insurance laws in the states where said ruling prevails contain a
provision identical to Section 69 of our Insurance Law we quoted above, and secondly,
the rule cited by Vance is not a rule uniformly followed by all states in the United States,
for on this matter there is a marked divergence of opinion. In fact, in a case that occured
in the State of Texas, held that the insured had the right to ask for the rescission of said
contract and ordered the insurer to refund all premiums paid by him. 4
2. Petitioners likewise contend that even if respondent is entitled to rescind the policies
in question he is not entitled to recover all premiums paid by him to petitioners
onACCOUNT of the 18LIFE INSURANCE policies question but merely to their cash
surrender value upon the theory that the respondent had fully enjoyed the protection of
the insurance on his life during the period of the policies to the extent that during that
time petitioners had assumed the risk of the death of said respondent. Petitioners in
effect lay stress on the fact that had respondent died in the meantime they would have
paid total sum of P95,000.00 onACCOUNT of his policies.
This contention has no basis. Considering that our Insurance Law does not contain an
express provision as to what the court should do in cases of rescission of an insurance
policy under Section 69, the provision that shouldAPPLY is that embodied in Article

1225 of the old Civil Code, as postulated in Article 16 of the same Code, which provides
that on matters which are not governed by special laws the provisions of said Code
shall supplement its deficiency. And said Article 1295 provides:
ART. 1295. Rescission makes necessary the return of the things which were the
subject-matter of the contract, with their fruits, and of the price paid, with interest
thereon. ...xxx
We find, therefore, correct the ruling of the Court of Appeals which orders petitioners to
refund to respondent all premiums paid by him up to the filing of the action amounting to
P34,644.60.
Petitioners, however, insist that the correct ruling is not what the Court of Appeals has
stated but what is hereinafter quoted because such is the weight of authority on that
matter. Said the petitioners: "Recovery of the full amount of the premium after the
insurer has sustained for sometime the risk of the insurance and the insured has
enjoyed the benefit of protection is obviously unjust and is so recognized by the better
authorities."
Again we find this statement incorrect, for according to American Law Reports
Annotated, the ruling above quoted merely represents the minority rule in the United
States, the majority rule being that the insured can recover all premiums paid, in some
cases withINTEREST IN case of wrongful cancellation, repudiation, termination or
rescission of the contract of life insurance.5
Nor do we find tenable the contention that because respondent cannot restore to
petitioners the "value of the benefit of protection" which he might have received under
the 18 life insurance policies in question he is not entitled to rescind them under the
provision of Article 1295 of the old Civil Code, because it should be here stated that said
article only contemplates a transaction whether material things are involved, and do not
refer to intangible ones which cannot be the subject of restoration, for to interpret it
otherwise would be to defeat the law itself with the result that rescission can never be
had under Section 69 of our Insurance Law. And it cannot be denied that petitioners had
in turn already derived material benefits from the use of premiums paid to them by
respondent before, during and after the last war from which they must have realized
huge PROFITS , and in this light alone petitioners cannot claim prejudice or unfairness
if they are ordered to refund the premiums paid by respondents.
3. Anent this issue, petitioners point out that the Court of Appeals erred in not ruling that
even if respondent is entitled to the rescission of his 18 life insurance policies he can
only recover legally and equitably their cash surrender value at the time the complaint
was filed on February 10, 1949.
Inasmuch as this contention is but a corollary to the conclusion we have reached in the
discussion of the preceding assignment of error, we believe that further refutation
thereof is unnecessary.
Wherefore, the decision appealed from is affirmed. Cost against petitioners.

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