Tuason v. Marquez

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SECOND DIVISION

[G.R. No. 20659. November 3, 1923.]

MARIANO S. TUASON , plaintiff-appellant, vs . CRISANTO MARQUEZ ,


defendant-appellee.

Ramon Sotelo for appellant.


Emiliano T. Tirona for appellee.

SYLLABUS

1. CONTRACTS; RESCISSION FOR MISREPRESENTATION AND FRAUD;


CAVEAT EMPTOR." — The innocent non-disclosure of fact does not necessarily affect
the formation of a contract or operate to discharge the parties from their agreement.
Caveat emptor.
2. ID.; ID.; ESTOPPEL BY LACHES. — Inexcusable delay in asserting a right
and acquiescence in existing conditions are a bar to legal action.
3. ID.; ID.; ID. — The equitable doctrine termed with questionable propriety "
estoppel by laches " applied to the facts of the case at bar.

DECISION

MALCOLM , J : p

Out of the vicissitudes of the unfortunate Electric Light Company of Lucena,


Tayabas, has arisen the present litigation between Mariano S. Tuason, plaintiff and
appellant, and Crisanto Marquez, defendant and appellee. The facts are not dispute, and
the legal phases of the case are fairly evident.
On March 5, 1921, Crisanto Marquez, the owner of the electric light plant of
Lucena, Tayabas, called Sucesores del Lucena Electric, gave an option to Antonio
Tuason for the purchase of the plant for P14,400. The option was taken advantage of
by Mariano S. Tuason, the real principal, on the 9th of the same month and year, and the
contract as then formulated was rati ed before a notary public on the 18th of that
month and year. The agreement was, that Tuason was to pay Marquez a total of
P14,400; P2,400 within sixty days, and the remainder, P12,000, within a year. The rst
installment was paid subsequent to the sixty-day period; the second installment has
not been paid.
Tuason being once in possession of the electric light plant, it was run under the
management of the Consolidated Electric Company for about sixteen months, that is,
from March 20, 1921, to July 19, 1922. On the date last mentioned, the property was
sold under execution by reason of a judgment in the case of Levy Hermanos vs. The
Philippine Electric Light Company. The purchaser at said sale was Gregorio Marquez,
brother of Crisanto Marquez, who paid P5,50157 for the property.
With this the general background of the controversy, we have to give special
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attention to one clause in the contract and its antecedents. The contract Exhibit B
entered into by Tuason and Marquez included as a portion of the property sold by
Marquez to Tuason " el derecho a la franquicia concedido a la Compania para la
explotacion de la industria a que la misma esta dedicada."
It appears that originally in either 1913 or 1914, a franchise for thirty- ve years
was granted the Lucena Electric Company. The rights of this company passed to
Crisanto Marquez at a sheriff's sale on September 10, 1919. The company seems never
to have functioned very e ciently either at the time or at any other time, as appears
from the constant complaint of the municipal authorities of Lucena. Evidently, Marquez
became disgusted with the business, with the result that on February 28, 1921, that is
prior to the accomplishment of the contract, he announced to the Public Utility
Commissioner his intention to give up the franchise. On March 29, 1921, that is,
subsequent to the accomplishment of the contract, the Public Utility Commissioner
took action and declared cancelled the franchise acquired by Crisanto Marquez from
the Lucena Electric, Light, Ice & Water Company.
Tuason and his out t were permitted to operate the company pursuant to a
special license which was to continue until they obtained a new franchise. The new
franchise was nally granted by the Public Utility Commissioner with certain conditions,
which amounted to a renovation of the entire plant. It was then, following a knowledge
of what was expected by the Government, and following the execution sale, That
Tuason conceived the idea of bringing action against Marquez for a rescission of the
contract.
In the complaint led in the Court of the First Instance of Manila, Mariano S.
Tuason, the plaintiff asked, for judgment against Crisanto Marquez, defendant, for a
total of P37,400. The answer and cross-complaint of the defendant asked for dismissal
of the action and for an allowance of a total of P12,654.50 from the plaintiff. The case
was submitted on an agreed statement of facts in relation with certain telegrams of
record. Judgment was rendered, absolving the defendant from the complaint and
permitting the defendant to recover from the plaintiff P12,240, with legal interest from
August 1, 1922. Parenthetically, it may be explained that P12,000 of this judgment
represented the amount still due on the contract, and P240 represented rent which the
plaintiff was expected to pay the defendant.
The plaintiff claims in effect that the contract should be rescinded and that he
should be allowed his damages, on account of the misrepresentation and fraud
perpetrated by the defendant in selling an electric light plant with a franchise, when the
defendant had already given up his rights to that franchise. In this connection, however,
it should be emphasized that the contract, in making mention of the property of the
electric light company, merely renewed a previous inventory of the property. The
franchise therefore, was not the determining cause of the purchase. Indeed, the
franchise was then in force and either party could easily have ascertained its status by
applying at the o ce of the Public Utility Commissioner. The innocent non-disclosure
of a fact does not affect the formation of the contract or operate to discharge the
parties from their agreement. The maxim caveat emptor should be recalled.
The equitable doctrine termed with questionable propriety " estoppel by laches "
has particular applicability to the acquiescence in existing conditions are a bar to legal
action. The plaintiff operated the electric light plant for about sixteen months without
question; he made the rst payment on the contract without protest; he bestirred
himself secure what damages he could from the defendant only after the venture had
proven disastrous and only after the property had passed into the hands of a third
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party.
We nd no proof of fraud on the part of the defendant and nd the plaintiff in
estoppel to press his action.
In accordance with the foregoing, we are clearly of the opinion that judgment
should be, as it is hereby, affirmed, with costs against the appellant. So ordered.
Johnson, Street, Avanceña, Villamor, Johns, and Romualdez, JJ., concur.

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