Jose C. Tupaz Iv and Petronila C. Tupaz vs. Ca and Bpi
Jose C. Tupaz Iv and Petronila C. Tupaz vs. Ca and Bpi
Jose C. Tupaz Iv and Petronila C. Tupaz vs. Ca and Bpi
CA and BPI
To finance the raw materials, petitioners applied with BPI for 2 letters of
credit. The letters of credit were in favor of El Oro Corporation’s
suppliers, Tanchaoco Manufacturing and Maresco Rubber and
Retreading Co. Respondent bank granted petitioners’ application and
issued Letter of Credit for P500K to Tanchaoco and Letter of Credit
P294,000 to Maresco.
Petitioners did not comply with their undertaking under the trust receipts
and that it could not fully pay its debt because the AFP had delayed
paying for the survival bolos. BPI charged petitioners with estafa.
RULING: YES. The petioner had bound itself solidarily with the principal,
the deceased defendant Felicisimo Reyes. In accordance with Article
2059, par. 2 of the Civil Code, excussion (previous exhaustion of the
property of the debtor) shall not take place "if he (the guarantor) has
bound himself solidarily with the debtor."
The sheriff filed a return stating that he was unable to locate any
property of Macrogen, except its bank deposit of P20,242.33.
Petitioner: benefit of excussion was still available to him since he had set
it up prior to any judgment against him and the respondent failed to
exhaust all legal remedies to collect from Macrogen the amount due
under the Compromise Agreement, considering that Macrogen still had
uncollected credits which were more than enough to pay for the same.
The sheriff’s return stating that the only property of Macrogen which he
found was its deposit of P20,242.23 with the Planters Bank.
Article 2059(5) of the Civil Code thus finds application and precludes
petitioner from interposing the defense of excussion.
Petitioner had not genuinely controverted the return made by the Sheriff
who affirmed that, after exerting diligent efforts, he was not able to locate
any property belonging to the Macrogen, except for a bank deposit with
the Planter’s Bank. It is axiomatic that the liability of the guarantor arises
when the insolvency or inability of the debtor to pay the amount of debt
is proven by the return of the writ of execution that had not been
unsatisfied.
The CA ordered that his claim against Malayan be heard before the
RTC. The RTC then directed Malayan to pay Fernando the damages
which it had adjudged against Makati Motor Sales.
RTC has jurisdiction for the application for the recovery of damages on
the surety's replevin bond because Fernando seasonably filed his
application for damages in the CA. It was not his fault that the damages
claimed by him against the surety were not included in the judgment of
the CA affirming the trial court's award of damages to Fernando. The
facts of this case make it an exception to the settled rule that the surety's
liability for damages should be included in the final judgment to prevent
duplicity of suits.
SC held that if the surety was not given notice when the claim for
damages against the principal in the replevin bond was heard, then as a
matter of procedural due process the surety is entitled to be heard when
the judgment for damages against the principal is sought to be enforced
against the surety's replevin bond.
RULING: NO. When a surety pays for the party under bond, he has a
right of action against such party for the recovery of the amount paid by
him. A surety who pays for a debtor shall be identified by the latter. (Art.
1838, Civil Code.)
The surety is subrogated by the payment in all the rights that the creditor
had against the debtor. Being as it is an action of indemnity it is not
conceived how, the damage not yet caused can be anticipated. When
surety has suffered no loss, to sue the debtor in order that he provide
funds for the surety in expectancy of the action of the creditor, is not to
ask an indemnity, but to demand a guaranty to recover the loss when it
may occur, and this guaranty is that already obtained by the surety
Vizmanos from Engracio on the latter's placing beforehand four parties
in his stead in order that they may the proper time ensure him of the
restitution, the reimbursement of what he shall have paid. To ask an
indemnity of twenty, when the loss to be indemnified is but eight,
can in no wise be authorized either by law or by reason.