AMAY BISAYA and Gabeto Vs Araneta
AMAY BISAYA and Gabeto Vs Araneta
AMAY BISAYA and Gabeto Vs Araneta
154259
2005
February 28,
FACTS:
This is a petition for review on certiorari
of the resolution and the decision of the
Court of Appeals whereby making the
petitioners liable for moral and exemplary
damages.
Amay Bisaya was having a
coffee at the lobby of Hotel Nikko when an
old friend, Dr. Filart, asked him to join the
party of the former manager of the said
hotel, Mr. Tsuruoka. When he was helping
himself at the buffet table, Ms. Lim
approached him and said to leave the
party for it was intended for a number of
guests. Amay Bisaya claimed that he was
humiliated by the manner Ms. Lim asked
him to leave. He alleged that Ms. Lim
asked him to leave in a loud voice enough
to be heard by the other guests. He was
accompanied by a Makati policeman in
leaving the penthouse. He was more
embarrassed when Dr. Filart denied that
she invited him on the said party.
ISSUE: WHETHER OR NOT THE ACT OF MS.
LIM CONSTITUTES AN ABUSE OF
RIGHT TO MAKE THE PETITIONERS
LIABLE FOR DAMAGES CAUSED TO
AMAY BISAYA.
HELD:
No. The Supreme Court ruled that any
damage which Amay Bisaya might have
suffered through Ms. Lims exercise of a
legitimate right done within the bounds of
propriety and good faith, must be his to
bear alone.
It is unlikely to happen that Ms.
Lim exposed him to ridicule and shame
DISCUSSION
INJURIA :
ON
VOLENTI
NON
FIT
October 17,
FACTS:
In 1918, Basilio Ilano and Proceso
Gayetano took a carromata with a view to
going to a cockpit. When the driver of the
carromata had started in the direction
indicated, the defendant, Agaton Araneta,
stopped the horse, at the same time
protesting to the driver that he himself
had called this carromata first. The driver,
Julio Pagnaya, replied that he had not
heard or seen the call of Araneta. Pagnaya
pulled on the reins of the bridle to free the
horse from the control of Araneta, in order
that the vehicle might pass on. Owing to
the looseness of the bridle on the horse's
head or to the rottenness of the material
of which it was made, the bit came out of
the horse's mouth; and it became
necessary for the driver to get out in order
to find the bridle. Meanwhile one of the
passengers, Ilano, had alighted but the
other,
Gayetano,
had
unfortunately
retained his seat, and after the runaway
horse had proceeded up the street
Gayetano jumped or fell from the rig, and