Sun Insurance V CA
Sun Insurance V CA
Sun Insurance V CA
Same; Prescription; A stipulation in an insurance policy that claims must be brought within
one year after rejection is not only a procedural requirement but an important matter
essential to a prompt settlement of insurance claims. It is also important to note the
principle laid down by this Court in the case of Ang v Fulton Fire Insurnace Co., (2 SCRA 945
[1961]), to wit: The condition contained in an insurance policy that claims must be
presented within one year after rejection is not merely a procedural requirement but an
important matter essential to a prompt settlement of claims against insurance companies as
it demands that insurance suits be brought by the insured while the evidence as to the
origin and cause of destruction have not yet disappeared.. In enunciating the above-cited
principle, this Court had definitely settled the rationale for the necessity of bringing suits
against the Insurer within one year from the rejection of the claim. The contention of the
respondents that the one-year prescriptive period does not start to run until the petition for
reconsideration had been resolved by the insurer, runs counter to the declared purpose for
requiring that an action or suit be filed in the Insurance Commission or in a court of
competent jurisdiction from the denial of the claim. To uphold respondents contention would
contradict and defeat the very principle which this Court had laid down. Moreover, it can
easily be used by insured persons as a scheme or device to waste time until any evidence
which may be considered against them is destroyed.
Same Same; Actions; Cause of Actions; The insureds right to file claim either in the
Insurance Commission or in a court of competent jurisdiction commences from the time of
the denial of his claim by the Insurer, either expressly or impliedly. In support of private
respondents view, two rulings of this Court have been cited, namely, the case of Eagle Star
Insurance Co. vs. Chia Yu (96 Phil. 696 [1955]), where the Court held: The right of the
insured to the payment of his loss accrues from the happening of the loss. However, the
cause of action in an insurance contract does not accrue until the insureds claim is finally
rejected by the insurer. This is because before such final rejection there is no real necessity
for bringing suit and the case of ACCFA vs. Alpha Insurance & Surety Co., Inc.)24 SCRA 151
[1968]), holding that: Since cause of action requires as essential elements not only a legal
right of the plaintiff and a correlated obligation of the defendant in violation of the daid legal
right, the cause of action does not accrue until the party obligated (surety) refuses,
expressly or impliedly, to comply with its duty (in this case to pay the amount of the bond).
Indisputably, the above-cited pronouncements of this Court may be taken to mean that the
insureds cause of action or his right to file a claim either in the Insurance Commission or in
a court of competent jurisdiction commences from the time of the denial of his claim by the
Insurer, either expressly or impliedly. But as pointed out by the petitioner insurance
company, the rejection referred to should be construed as the rejection, in the first instance,
for if what is being referred to is a reiterated rejection conveyed in a resolution of a petition
for reconsideration, such should have been expressly stipulated.
FACTS:
Emilio Tan took from Sun Insurance Office a P300,000.00 property insurance policy to
cover his interest in the electrical supply store of his brother. Four days after the issuance of
the policy, the building was burned including the insured store. On August 20, 1983, Tan filed
his claim for fire loss with Sun Insurance Office, but on February 29, 1984, Sun Insurance
Office wrote Tan denying the latters claim. On April 3, 1984, Tan wrote Sun Insurance Office,
seeking reconsideration of the denial of his claim. Sun Insurance Office answered the letter,
advising Tans counsel that the Insurers denial of Tans claim remained unchanged.
ISSUES:
(1) WON the filing of a motion for reconsideration interrupts the 12 months
prescriptive period to contest the denial of the insurance claim; and
(2) WON the rejection of the claim shall be deemed final only of it contains words to
the effect that the denial is final;
HELD:
(1) No. In this case, Condition 27 of the Insurance Policy of the parties reads:
As the terms are very clear and free from any doubt or ambiguity whatsoever, it must
be taken and understood in its plain, ordinary and popular sense.
Tan, in his letter addressed to Sun Insurance Office dated April 3, 1984, admitted that
he received a copy of the letter of rejection on April 2, 1984. Thus, the 12-month prescriptive
period started to run from the said date of April 2, 1984, for such is the plain meaning and
intention of Section 27 of the insurance policy.
The condition contained in an insurance policy that claims must be presented within
one year after rejection is not merely a procedural requirement but an important matter
essential to a prompt settlement of claims against insurance companies as it demands that
insurance suits be brought by the insured while the evidence as to the origin and cause of
destruction have not yet disappeared.
It also begs to ask, when does the cause of action accrue? The insureds cause of
action or his right to file a claim either in the Insurance Commission or in a court of
competent jurisdiction commences from the time of the denial of his claim by the Insurer,
either expressly or impliedly. But the rejection referred to should be construed as the
rejection in the first instance (i.e. at the first occasion or for the first time), not rejection
conveyed in a resolution of a petition for reconsideration. Thus, to allow the filing of a motion
for reconsideration to suspend the running of the prescriptive period of twelve months, a
whole new body of rules on the matter should be promulgated so as to avoid any conflict
that may be brought by it, such as:
(2) No. The Eagle Star case cited by Tan to defend his theory that the rejection of the
claim shall be deemed final only of it contains words to the effect that the denial is final is
inapplicable in the instant case. Final rejection or denial cannot be taken to mean the
rejection of a petition for reconsideration. The Insurance policy in the Eagle Star case
provides that the insured should file his claim, first, with the carrier and then with the
insurer. The final rejection being referred to in said case is the rejection by the insurance
company.