Vanguard Vs CA
Vanguard Vs CA
Vanguard Vs CA
SYNOPSIS
SYLLABUS
DECISION
ESGUERRA , J : p
Petitioner likewise claims that the Court of Appeals erred in not considering its
defense showing full payment by defendant of the obligation sought to be enforced
against the counterbond.
On the issue of full payment by defendant of the obligation, the trial court made
the following findings:
"As it appears that defendant has not yet paid to plaintiff the amount of
P21,000.00, being the balance of the judgment which the latter secured against
the former by virtue of their Compromise Agreement approved by this Court on
October 28, 1964, it follows that the said counterbond is still liable for the said
unpaid balance.
"The said liability may only be avoided if there is collusion between
plaintiff and defendant in securing the said judgment to the prejudice of the
surety on the counter-bond, or if the said judgment has already been paid by
defendant. There is no showing whatsoever of such collusion, nor was defendant
presented as a witness that he has fully said judgment." (Record on Appeal pp.
78-79)
It must be noted that the decision of the trial court was a rmed in toto by the
Court of Appeals. In other words, the above ndings of the trial court that there was
really no full payment of the judgment debt was also found correct by the Court of
Appeals when it fully a rmed the decision appealed from. Besides, the petitioner's
evidence to that effect partook of the nature of hearsay evidence, considering that the
defendant was never presented to testify thereon.
As regards the last issue, we are not prepared to say that the Court of Appeals
erred in dismissing the appeal of the petitioner on the ground that the same was
manifestly frivolous and instituted merely for delay. On the face of the record before Us
We could not see any prospect of the decision appealed from being reversed or
modi ed, in view of the clear and unequivocal provisions of Sections 12 and 17 of Rule
57 of the Rules of Court regarding the liability of a surety on a counter-bond in
attachment proceedings. To entertain the instant appeal by remanding the case to the
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Court of Appeals for further proceedings would entail too much time and effort which
would impair the speedy administration of justice. The instant appeal is manifestly
frivolous and completely devoid of merit. Thus:
". . . Although, as a general rule, an appeal should not be dismissed on a
ground which goes to the merits of the case or to the right of plaintiff or
defendant to recover, yet, in exceptional instance, an appellate court may order
the dismissal when the appeal appears to be manifestly and palpably frivolous.
And where, as in the instant case, the dismissal has been ordered by the trial
court, it will not be disturbed in the appellate court if the latter nds the appeal to
have been interposed ostensibly for delay. It has been held that a frivolous appeal
is one presenting no justiciable question, or one so readily recognizable as devoid
of merit on the face of the record that there is little, if any, prospect that it can ever
succeed. The instant case is one such instance in which the appeal is evidently
without merit, taken manifestly for delay." (De la Cruz, et al. vs. Blanco, et al., 73
Phil. 956, cited in Keater Huang, et al. vs. Associated Realty Development Co., Inc.,
G.R. No. L-26421, October 29, 1966).