Solar Harvest vs. Davao Corrugated Carton
Solar Harvest vs. Davao Corrugated Carton
Solar Harvest vs. Davao Corrugated Carton
Supreme Court
Manila
SECOND DIVISION
CARPIO, J.,
Chairperson,
- versus - NACHURA,
PERALTA,
ABAD, and
MENDOZA, JJ.
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DECISION
NACHURA, J.:
[1]
Petitioner seeks a review of the Court of Appeals (CA) Decision dated September 21,
[2]
2006 and Resolution dated February 23, 2007, which denied petitioners motion for
reconsideration. The assailed Decision denied petitioners claim for reimbursement for
the amount it paid to respondent for the manufacture of corrugated carton boxes.
In the first quarter of 1998, petitioner, Solar Harvest, Inc., entered into an agreement
with respondent, Davao Corrugated Carton Corporation, for the purchase of corrugated
carton boxes, specifically designed for petitioners business of exporting fresh bananas,
at US$1.10 each. The agreement was not reduced into writing. To get the production
underway, petitioner deposited, on March 31, 1998, US$40,150.00 in respondents US
Dollar Savings Account with Westmont Bank, as full payment for the ordered boxes.
Despite such payment, petitioner did not receive any boxes from respondent. On
January 3, 2001, petitioner wrote a demand letter for reimbursement of the amount paid.
[3]
On February 19, 2001, respondent replied that the boxes had been completed as
early as April 3, 1998 and that petitioner failed to pick them up from the formers
warehouse 30 days from completion, as agreed upon. Respondent mentioned that
petitioner even placed an additional order of 24,000 boxes, out of which, 14,000 had
been manufactured without any advanced payment from petitioner. Respondent then
demanded petitioner to remove the boxes from the factory and to pay the balance of
US$15,400.00 for the additional boxes and P132,000.00 as storage fee.
On August 17, 2001, petitioner filed a Complaint for sum of money and damages
against respondent. The Complaint averred that the parties agreed that the boxes will be
delivered within 30 days from payment but respondent failed to manufacture and deliver
the boxes within such time. It further alleged
6. That repeated follow-up was made by the plaintiff for the immediate production of the
ordered boxes, but every time, defendant [would] only show samples of boxes and ma[k]e
repeated promises to deliver the said ordered boxes.
7. That because of the failure of the defendant to deliver the ordered boxes, plaintiff ha[d]
to cancel the same and demand payment and/or refund from the defendant but the latter
refused to pay and/or refund the US$40,150.00 payment made by the former for the
[4]
ordered boxes.
respondent only manufactured a sample of the ordered boxes and that respondent could
[6]
not have produced 14,000 boxes without the required pre-payments.
During trial, petitioner presented Que as its sole witness. Que testified that he ordered
[7]
the boxes from respondent and deposited the money in respondents account. He
specifically stated that, when he visited respondents factory, he saw that the boxes had
[8]
no print of petitioners logo. A few months later, he followed-up the order and was
told that the company had full production, and thus, was promised that production of the
order would be rushed. He told respondent that it should indeed rush production because
the need for the boxes was urgent. Thereafter, he asked his partner, Alfred Ong, to
For respondent, Bienvenido Estanislao (Estanislao) testified that he met Que in Davao in
October 1998 to inspect the boxes and that the latter got samples of them. In February
2000, they inspected the boxes again and Que got more samples. Estanislao said that
[11]
petitioner did not pick up the boxes because the ship did not arrive. Jaime Tan (Tan),
president of respondent, also testified that his company finished production of the
36,500 boxes on April 3, 1998 and that petitioner made a second order of 24,000 boxes.
He said that the agreement was for respondent to produce the boxes and for petitioner to
[12]
pick them up from the warehouse. He also said that the reason why petitioner did
[13]
not pick up the boxes was that the ship that was to carry the bananas did not arrive.
According to him, during the last visit of Que and Estanislao, he asked them to
withdraw the boxes immediately because they were occupying a big space in his plant,
but they, instead, told him to sell the cartons as rejects. He was able to sell 5,000 boxes
at P20.00 each for a total of P100,000.00. They then told him to apply the said amount
to the unpaid balance.
In its March 2, 2004 Decision, the Regional Trial Court (RTC) ruled that respondent did
not commit any breach of faith that would justify rescission of the contract and the
consequent reimbursement of the amount paid by petitioner. The RTC said that
respondent was able to produce the ordered boxes but petitioner failed to obtain
[15]
On September 21, 2006, the CA denied the appeal for lack of merit. The appellate
court held that petitioner failed to discharge its burden of proving what it claimed to be
the parties agreement with respect to the delivery of the boxes. According to the CA, it
was unthinkable that, over a period of more than two years, petitioner did not even
demand for the delivery of the boxes. The CA added that even assuming that the
agreement was for respondent to deliver the boxes, respondent would not be liable for
breach of contract as petitioner had not yet demanded from it the delivery of the boxes.
[16]
[17]
Petitioner moved for reconsideration, but the motion was denied by the CA in its
[18]
Resolution of February 23, 2007.
In this petition, petitioner insists that respondent did not completely manufacture the
boxes and that it was respondent which was obliged to deliver the boxes to TADECO.
We find no reversible error in the assailed Decision that would justify the grant of this
petition.
Petitioners claim for reimbursement is actually one for rescission (or resolution) of
contract under Article 1191 of the Civil Code, which reads:
Art. 1191. The power to rescind obligations is implied in reciprocal ones, in case one of
the obligors should not comply with what is incumbent upon him.
The injured party may choose between the fulfillment and the rescission of the obligation,
The right to rescind a contract arises once the other party defaults in the
performance of his obligation. In determining when default occurs, Art. 1191 should be
taken in conjunction with Art. 1169 of the same law, which provides:
Art. 1169. Those obliged to deliver or to do something incur in delay from the time the
obligee judicially or extrajudicially demands from them the fulfillment of their obligation.
However, the demand by the creditor shall not be necessary in order that delay may exist:
(2) When from the nature and the circumstances of the obligation it appears
that the designation of the time when the thing is to be delivered or the service is
to be rendered was a controlling motive for the establishment of the contract; or
(3) When demand would be useless, as when the obligor has rendered it
beyond his power to perform.
In reciprocal obligations, neither party incurs in delay if the other does not comply or is
not ready to comply in a proper manner with what is incumbent upon him. From the
moment one of the parties fulfills his obligation, delay by the other begins.
In reciprocal obligations, as in a contract of sale, the general rule is that the fulfillment
of the parties respective obligations should be simultaneous. Hence, no demand is
generally necessary because, once a party fulfills his obligation and the other party does
not fulfill his, the latter automatically incurs in delay. But when different dates for
performance of the obligations are fixed, the default for each obligation must be
[19]
determined by the rules given in the first paragraph of the present article, that is, the
other party would incur in delay only from the moment the other party demands
fulfillment of the formers obligation. Thus, even in reciprocal obligations, if the period
As correctly observed by the CA, aside from the pictures of the finished boxes and the
production report thereof, there is ample showing that the boxes had already been
manufactured by respondent. There is the testimony of Estanislao who accompanied
Que to the factory, attesting that, during their first visit to the company, they saw the pile
of petitioners boxes and Que took samples thereof. Que, petitioners witness, himself
In fact, we note that respondents counsel manifested in court, during trial, that his client
was willing to shoulder expenses for a representative of the court to visit the plant and
[22]
see the boxes. Had it been true that the boxes were not yet completed, respondent
would not have been so bold as to challenge the court to conduct an ocular inspection of
their warehouse. Even in its Comment to this petition, respondent prays that petitioner
[23]
be ordered to remove the boxes from its factory site, which could only mean that the
boxes are, up to the present, still in respondents premises.
We also believe that the agreement between the parties was for petitioner to pick up the
boxes from respondents warehouse, contrary to petitioners allegation. Thus, it was due
to petitioners fault that the boxes were not delivered to TADECO.
Petitioner had the burden to prove that the agreement was, in fact, for respondent to
deliver the boxes within 30 days from payment, as alleged in the Complaint. Its sole
witness, Que, was not even competent to testify on the terms of the agreement and,
therefore, we cannot give much credence to his testimony. It appeared from the
testimony of Que that he did not personally place the order with Tan, thus:
Q. No, my question is, you went to Davao City and placed your order there?
A. I made a phone call.
Q. So, your first statement that you were the one who placed the order is not true?
A. Thats true. The Solar Harvest made a contact with Mr. Tan and I deposited the money
in the bank.
Q. Is it not a fact that the cartons were ordered through Mr. Bienvenido Estanislao?
[25]
A. Yes, sir.
Moreover, assuming that respondent was obliged to deliver the boxes, it could not
have complied with such obligation. Que, insisting that the boxes had not been
manufactured, admitted that he did not give respondent the authority to deliver the
boxes to TADECO:
Q. Did you give authority to Mr. Tan to deliver these boxes to TADECO?
A. No, sir. As I have said, before the delivery, we must have to check the carton, the
quantity and quality. But I have not seen a single carton.
Q. Are you trying to impress upon the [c]ourt that it is only after the boxes are completed,
will you give authority to Mr. Tan to deliver the boxes to TADECO[?]
A. Sir, because when I checked the plant, I have not seen any carton. I asked Mr. Tan to
[26]
rush the carton but not
Q. Did you give any authority for Mr. Tan to deliver these boxes to TADECO?
A. Because I have not seen any of my carton.
Surely, without such authority, TADECO would not have allowed respondent to deposit
the boxes within its premises.
In sum, the Court finds that petitioner failed to establish a cause of action for rescission,
the evidence having shown that respondent did not commit any breach of its contractual
SO ORDERED.
WE CONCUR:
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
Chairperson
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
Chairperson, Second Division
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution and the Division Chairperson's
Attestation, I certify that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in
consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Courts
Division.
RENATO C. CORONA
Chief Justice
[1]
Penned by Associate Justice Rebecca de Guia-Salvador, with Associate Justices Magdangal M. de Leon and Ramon R.
Garcia, concurring; rollo, pp. 103-114.
[2]
Id. at 127.
[3]
Records, p. 96.
[4]
Rollo, p. 27.
[5]
Id. at 33-36.
[6]
Records, 31-32.
[7]
TSN, July 10, 2003, p. 5.
[8]
Id. at 7.
[9]
Id. at 9-10.