Petitioners Vs Vs Respondent: First Division
Petitioners Vs Vs Respondent: First Division
Petitioners Vs Vs Respondent: First Division
DECISION
CARPIO , J : p
The Case
Before the Court is a petition for review 1 assailing the 6 March 2000 Decision 2 and the 26
July 2000 Resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 54737. The Court of
Appeals set aside the Order 3 of 3 May 1996 of the Regional Trial Court of Makati, Branch
63 (“RTC-Branch 63”), in Civil Case No. 88-2643 and reinstated the Decision 4 of 12 January
1996 in respondent’s favor.
The Facts
Petitioners Republic Glass Corporation (“RGC”) and Gervel, Inc. (“Gervel”) together with
respondent Lawrence C. Qua (“Qua”) were stockholders of Ladtek, Inc. (“Ladtek”). Ladtek
obtained loans from Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company (“Metrobank”) 5 and Private
Development Corporation of the Philippines 6 (“PDCP”) with RGC, Gervel and Qua as
sureties. Among themselves, RGC, Gervel and Qua executed Agreements for Contribution,
Indemnity and Pledge of Shares of Stocks (“Agreements”). 7
The Agreements all state that in case of default in the payment of Ladtek’s loans, the
parties would reimburse each other the proportionate share of any sum that any might pay
to the creditors. 8 Thus, a common provision appears in the Agreements:
RGC, GERVEL and QUA each covenant that each will respectively reimburse the
party made to pay the Lenders to the extent and subject to the limitations set
forth herein, all sums of money which the party made to pay the Lenders shall
pay or become liable to pay by reason of any of the foregoing, and will make such
payments within five (5) days from the date that the party made to pay the
Lenders gives written notice to the parties hereto that it shall have become liable
therefor and has advised the Lenders of its willingness to pay whether or not it
shall have already paid out such sum or any part thereof to the Lenders or to the
persons entitled thereto. (Emphasis supplied)
Under the same Agreements, Qua pledged 1,892,360 common shares of stock of General
Milling Corporation (“GMC”) in favor of RGC and Gervel. The pledged shares of stock
served as security for the payment of any sum which RGC and Gervel may be held liable
under the Agreements.
Ladtek defaulted on its loan obligations to Metrobank and PDCP. Hence, Metrobank filed a
collection case against Ladtek, RGC, Gervel and Qua docketed as Civil Case No. 8364
(“Collection Case No. 8364”) which was raffled to the Regional Trial Court of Makati,
Branch 149 (“RTC-Branch 149”). During the pendency of Collection Case No. 8364, RGC
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and Gervel paid Metrobank P7 million. Later, Metrobank executed a waiver and quitclaim
dated 7 September 1988 in favor of RGC and Gervel. Based on this waiver and quitclaim, 9
Metrobank, RGC and Gervel filed on 16 September 1988 a joint motion to dismiss
Collection Case No. 8364 against RGC and Gervel. Accordingly, RTC-Branch 149 dismissed
the case against RGC and Gervel, leaving Ladtek and Qua as defendants. 1 0
In a letter dated 7 November 1988, RGC and Gervel’s counsel, Atty. Antonio C. Pastelero,
demanded that Qua pay P3,860,646, or 42.22% of P8,730,543.55, 1 1 as reimbursement of
the total amount RGC and Gervel paid to Metrobank and PDCP. Qua refused to reimburse
the amount to RGC and Gervel. Subsequently, RGC and Gervel furnished Qua with notices
of foreclosure of Qua’s pledged shares.
Qua filed a complaint for injunction and damages with application for a temporary
restraining order, docketed as Civil Case No. 88-2643 (“Foreclosure Case No. 88-2643”),
with RTC-Branch 63 to prevent RGC and Gervel from foreclosing the pledged shares.
Although it issued a temporary restraining order on 9 December 1988, RTC-Branch 63
denied on 2 January 1989 Qua’s “Urgent Petition to Suspend Foreclosure Sale.” RGC and
Gervel eventually foreclosed all the pledged shares of stock at public auction. Thus, Qua’s
application for the issuance of a preliminary injunction became moot. 1 2
Trial in Foreclosure Case No. 88-2643 ensued. RGC and Gervel offered Qua’s Motion to
Dismiss 1 3 in Collection Case No. 8364 as basis for the foreclosure of Qua’s pledged
shares. Qua’s Motion to Dismiss states:
8. The foregoing facts show that the payment of defendants Republic Glass
Corporation and Gervel, Inc. was for the entire obligation covered by the
Continuing Surety Agreements which were Annexes “B” and “C” of the
Complaint, and that the same naturally redound[ed] to the benefit of
defendant Qua herein, as provided for by law, specifically Article 1217 of
the Civil Code, which states that:
xxx xxx xxx
10. It is very clear that the payment of defendants Republic Glass Corporation
and Gervel, Inc. was much more than the amount stipulated in the
Continuing Surety Agreement which is the basis for the action against
them and defendant Qua, which was just SIX MILLION TWO HUNDRED
[THOUSAND] PESOS (P6,200,000.00), hence, logically the said alleged
obligation must now be considered as fully paid and extinguished.
RGC and Gervel likewise offered as evidence in Foreclosure Case No. 88-2643 the Order
dismissing Collection Case No. 8364, 1 4 which RTC-Branch 149 subsequently reversed on
Metrobank’s motion for reconsideration. Thus, RTC-Branch 149 reinstated Collection Case
No. 8364 against Qua.
On 12 January 1996, RTC-Branch 63 rendered a Decision in Foreclosure Case No. 88-2643
(“12 January 1996 Decision”) ordering RGC and Gervel to return the foreclosed shares of
stock to Qua. The dispositive portion of the 12 January 1996 Decision reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, this Court hereby renders judgment ordering
defendants jointly and severally liable to return to plaintiff the 1,892,360 shares of
common stock of General Milling Corporation which they foreclosed on December
9, 1988, or should the return of these shares be no longer possible then to pay to
plaintiff the amount of P3,860,646.00 with interest at 6% per annum from
December 9, 1988 until fully paid and to pay plaintiff P100,000.00 as and for
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attorney’s fees. The costs will be for defendants’ account.
SO ORDERED. 1 5
However, on RGC and Gervel’s Motion for Reconsideration, RTC-Branch 63 issued its Order
of 3 May 1996 (“3 May 1996 Order”) reconsidering and setting aside the 12 January 1996
Decision. The 3 May 1996 Order states:
After a thorough review of the records of the case, and an evaluation of the
evidence adduced by the parties as well as their contentions, the issues to be
resolved boil down to the following:
Regarding the first issue, a closer scrutiny of the pertinent provisions of the
Indemnity Agreements executed by the parties would not reveal any significant
indication that the parties’ liabilities are indeed premised on the payment by any
of them of the entire obligation. These agreements clearly provide that the parties’
obligation to reimburse accrues upon mere advice that one of them has paid or
will so pay the obligation. It is not specified whether the payment is for the entire
obligation or not.
Accordingly, the Court stands corrected in this regard. The obvious conclusion
that can be seen now is that payment of the entire obligation is not a condition
sine qua non for the paying party to demand reimbursement. The parties have
expressly contracted that each will reimburse whoever is made to pay the
obligation whether entirely or just a portion thereof.
On the second issue, plaintiff’s apprehension that he would be made to pay twice
for the single obligation is unfounded. Under the above-mentioned Indemnity
Agreements, in the event that the creditors are able to collect from him, he has the
right to ask defendants to pay their proportionate share, in the same way
defendants had collected from the plaintiff, by foreclosing his pledged shares of
stock, his proportionate share, after they had made payments. From all
indications, the provisions of the Indemnity Agreements have remained binding
between the parties.
On the third issue, there is merit to defendants’ assertion that plaintiff has
benefited from the payments made by defendants. As alleged by defendants, and
this has not been denied by plaintiff, in Civil Case No. 8364 filed before Branch
149 of this Court, where the creditors were enforcing the parties’ liabilities as
sureties, plaintiff succeeded in having the case dismissed by arguing that
defendants’ payments [were] for the entire obligation, hence, the obligation should
be considered fully paid and extinguished. With the dismissal of the case, the
indications are that the creditors are no longer running after plaintiff to enforce
his liabilities as surety of Ladtek.
Whether or not the surety agreements signed by the parties and the creditors were
novated is not material in this controversy. The fact is that there was payment of
the obligation. Hence, the Indemnity Agreements govern.
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In the final analysis, defendants’ payments gave rise to plaintiff’s obligation to
reimburse the former. Having failed to do so, upon demand, defendants were
justified in foreclosing the pledged shares of stocks.
xxx xxx xxx
Qua filed a motion for reconsideration of the 3 May 1996 Order which RTC-Branch 63
denied.
Aggrieved, Qua appealed to the Court of Appeals. During the pendency of the appeal, Qua
filed a Manifestation 1 7 with the Court of Appeals attaching the Decision 1 8 of 21
November 1996 rendered in Collection Case No. 8364. The dispositive portion of the
decision reads:
The Counterclaims of the defendants Ladtek, Inc. and Lawrence C. Qua against
the plaintiff are hereby dismissed.
Likewise, the cross-claims of the defendants are dismissed.
On 6 March 2000, the Court of Appeals rendered the questioned Decision setting aside the
3 May 1996 Order of RTC-Branch 63 and reinstating the 12 January 1996 Decision
ordering RGC and Gervel to return the foreclosed shares of stock to Qua. 2 0
Hence, this petition.
The Ruling of the Court of Appeals
In reversing the 3 May 1996 Order and reinstating the 12 January 1996 Decision, the
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appellate court quoted the RTC-Branch 63’s 12 January 1996 Decision:
The liability of each party under the indemnity agreements therefore is premised
on the payment by any of them of the entire obligation. Without such payment,
there would be no corresponding share to reimburse. Payment of the entire
obligation naturally redounds to the benefit of the other solidary debtors who
must then reimburse the paying co-debtors to the extent of his corresponding
share.
In the case at bar, Republic Glass and Gervel made partial payments only, and so
they did not extinguish the entire obligation. But Republic Glass and Gervel
nevertheless obtained quitclaims in their favor and so they ceased to be solidarily
liable with plaintiff for the balance of the debt (Exhs. “D”, “E”, and “I”). Plaintiff
thus became solely liable for the unpaid portion of the debt even as he is being
held liable for reimbursement on the said portion.
What happened therefore, was that Metrobank and PDCP in effect enforced the
Suretyship Agreements jointly as against plaintiff and defendants. Consequently,
the solidary obligation under the Suretyship Agreements was novated by the
substantial modification of its principal conditions. . . . The resulting change was
from one with three solidary debtors to one in which Lawrence Qua became the
sole solidary co-debtor of Ladtek.
Defendants cannot simply pay off a portion of the debt and then absolve
themselves from any further liability when the obligation has not been totally
extinguished.
xxx xxx xxx
In the final reckoning, this Court finds that the foreclosure and sale of the shares
pledged by plaintiff was totally unjustified and without basis because the
obligation secured by the underlying pledge had been extinguished by novation. . .
21
The Court of Appeals further held that there was an implied novation or substantial
incompatibility in the surety’s mode or manner of payment from one for the entire
obligation to one merely of proportionate share. The appellate court ruled that RGC and
Gervel’s payment to the creditors only amounted to their proportionate shares of the
obligation, considering the following evidence:
The letter of the Republic to the appellant, Exhibit “G”, dated June 25, 1987, which
mentioned the letter from PDCP confirming its willingness to release the joint and
solidary obligation of the Republic and Gervel subject to some terms and
conditions, one of which is the appellant’s acceptable repayment plan of his “pro-
rata share”; and the letter of PDCP to the Republic, Exhibit “H”, mentioning full
payment of the “pro rata share” of the Republic and Gervel, and the need of the
appellant to submit an acceptable repayment plan covering his “pro-rata share”’,
the release from solidary liability by PDCP, Exhibit “J”, mentioning full payment by
the Republic and Gervel of their “pro rata share” in the loan, as solidary obligors,
subject however to the terms and conditions of the hold out agreement; and the
non-payment in full of the loan, subject of the May 10, 1984 Promissory Note,
except the 7 million payment by both Republic and Gervel, as mentioned in the
Decision (Case No. 8364, Metrobank vs. Ladtek, et al). Precisely, Ladtek and the
appellant, in said Decision were directed to pay Metrobank the balance of
P9,560,798, supposedly due and unpaid.
The essential elements of estoppel in pais are considered in relation to the party to be
estopped, and to the party invoking the estoppel in his favor. On the party to be estopped,
such party (1) commits conduct amounting to false representation or concealment of
material facts or at least calculated to convey the impression that the facts are
inconsistent with those which the party subsequently attempts to assert; (2) has the
intent, or at least expectation that his conduct shall at least influence the other party; and
(3) has knowledge, actual or constructive, of the real facts. On the party claiming the
estoppel, such party (1) has lack of knowledge and of the means of knowledge of the truth
on the facts in question; (2) has relied, in good faith, on the conduct or statements of the
party to be estopped; (3) has acted or refrained from acting based on such conduct or
statements as to change the position or status of the party claiming the estoppel, to his
injury, detriment or prejudice. 2 4
In this case, the essential elements of estoppel are inexistent.
While Qua’s statements in Collection Case No. 8364 conflict with his statements in
Foreclosure Case No. 88-2643, RGC and Gervel miserably failed to show that Qua, in
making those statements, intended to falsely represent or conceal the material facts. Both
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parties undeniably know the real facts.
Nothing in the records shows that RGC and Gervel relied on Qua’s statements in Collection
Case No. 8364 such that they changed their position or status, to their injury, detriment or
prejudice. RGC and Gervel repeatedly point out that it was the presiding judge 2 5 in
Collection Case No. 8364 who relied on Qua’s statements in Collection Case No. 8364.
RGC and Gervel claim that Qua “deliberately led the Presiding Judge to believe” that their
payment to Metrobank was for the entire obligation. As a result, the presiding judge
ordered the dismissal of Collection Case No. 8364 against Qua. 2 6
RGC and Gervel further invoke Section 4 of Rule 129 of the Rules of Court to support their
stance:
Sec. 4. Judicial admissions. — An admission, verbal or written, made by a
party in the course of the proceedings in the same case, does not require proof.
The admission may be contradicted only by showing that it was made through
palpable mistake or that no such admission was made.
A party may make judicial admissions in (a) the pleadings led by the parties, (b) during
the trial either by verbal or written manifestations or stipulations, or (c) in other stages
of the judicial proceeding. 2 7
The elements of judicial admissions are absent in this case. Qua made conflicting
statements in Collection Case No. 8364 and in Foreclosure Case No. 88-2643, and not in
the “same case” as required in Section 4 of Rule 129. To constitute judicial admission, the
admission must be made in the same case in which it is offered. If made in another case or
in another court, the fact of such admission must be proved as in the case of any other
fact, although if made in a judicial proceeding it is entitled to greater weight. 2 8
RGC and Gervel introduced Qua’s Motion to Dismiss and the Order dismissing Collection
Case No. 8364 to prove Qua’s claim that the payment was for the entire obligation. Qua
does not deny making such statement but explained that he “honestly believed and
pleaded in the lower court and in CA-G.R. CV No. 58550 that the entire debt was fully
extinguished when the petitioners paid P7 million to Metrobank.” 2 9
We find Qua’s explanation substantiated by the evidence on record. As stated in the
Agreements, Ladtek’s original loan from Metrobank was only P6.2 million. Therefore, Qua
reasonably believed that RGC and Gervel’s P7 million payment to Metrobank pertained to
the entire obligation. However, subsequent facts indisputably show that RGC and Gervel’s
payment was not for the entire obligation. RTC-Branch 149 reinstated Collection Case No.
8364 against Qua and ruled in Metrobank’s favor, ordering Qua to pay P6.2 million.
The Agreements are contracts of indemnity not only against actual loss but against liability
as well. In Associated Insurance & Surety Co., Inc. v. Chua, 3 1 we distinguished between a
contract of indemnity against loss and a contract of indemnity against liability, thus: 3 2
The agreement here sued upon is not only one of indemnity against loss but of
indemnity against liability. While the first does not render the indemnitor liable
until the person to be indemnified makes payment or sustains loss, the second
becomes operative as soon as the liability of the person indemnified arises
irrespective of whether or not he has suffered actual loss. (Emphasis supplied)
Therefore, whether the solidary debtor has paid the creditor, the other solidary debtors
should indemnify the former once his liability becomes absolute. However, in this case,
the liability of RGC, Gervel and Qua became absolute simultaneously when Ladtek
defaulted in its loan payment. As a result, RGC, Gervel and Qua all became directly liable
at the same time to Metrobank and PDCP. Thus, RGC and Gervel cannot automatically
claim for indemnity from Qua because Qua himself is liable directly to Metrobank and
PDCP.
If we allow RGC and Gervel to collect from Qua his proportionate share, then Qua would
pay much more than his stipulated liability under the Agreements. In addition to the
P3,860,646 claimed by RGC and Gervel, Qua would have to pay his liability of P6.2 million
to Metrobank and more than P1 million to PDCP. Since Qua would surely exceed his
proportionate share, he would then recover from RGC and Gervel the excess payment. This
situation is absurd and circuitous.
Contrary to RGC and Gervel’s claim, payment of any amount will not automatically result in
reimbursement. If a solidary debtor pays the obligation in part, he can recover
reimbursement from the co-debtors only in so far as his payment exceeded his share in
the obligation. 3 3 This is precisely because if a solidary debtor pays an amount equal to his
proportionate share in the obligation, then he in effect pays only what is due from him. If
the debtor pays less than his share in the obligation, he cannot demand reimbursement
because his payment is less than his actual debt.
To determine whether RGC and Gervel have a right to reimbursement, it is indispensable to
ascertain the total obligation of the parties. At this point, it becomes necessary to
consider the decision in Collection Case No. 8364 on the parties’ obligation to Metrobank.
To repeat, Metrobank filed Collection Case No. 8364 against Ladtek, RGC, Gervel and Qua
to collect Ladtek’s unpaid loan.
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RGC and Gervel assail the Court of Appeals’ consideration of the decision in Collection
Case No. 8364 3 4 because Qua did not offer the decision in evidence during the trial in
Foreclosure Case No. 88-2643 subject of this petition. RTC-Branch 62 3 5 rendered the
decision in Collection Case No. 8364 on 21 November 1996 while Qua filed his Notice of
Appeal of the 3 May 1996 Order on 19 June 1996. Qua could not have possibly offered in
evidence the decision in Collection Case No. 8364 because RTC-Branch 62 rendered the
decision only after Qua elevated the present case to the Court of Appeals. Hence, Qua
submitted the decision in Collection Case No. 8364 during the pendency of the appeal of
Foreclosure Case No. 88-2643 in the Court of Appeals.
As found by RTC-Branch 62, RGC, Gervel and Qua’s total obligation was P14,200,854.37 as
of 31 October 1987. 3 6 During the pendency of Collection Case No. 8364, RGC and Gervel
paid Metrobank P7 million. Because of the payment, Metrobank executed a quitclaim 3 7 in
favor of RGC and Gervel. By virtue of Metrobank’s quitclaim, RTC-Branch 62 dismissed
Collection Case No. 8364 against RGC and Gervel, leaving Ladtek and Qua as defendants.
Considering that RGC and Gervel paid only P7 million out of the total obligation of
P14,200,854.37, which payment was less than RGC and Gervel’s combined shares in the
obligation, 3 8 it was clearly partial payment. Moreover, if it were full payment, then the
obligation would have been extinguished. Metrobank would have also released Qua from
his obligation.
RGC and Gervel also made partial payment to PDCP. Proof of this is the Release from
Solidary Liability that PDCP executed in RGC and Gervel’s favor which stated that their
payment of P1,730,543.55 served as “full payment of their corresponding proportionate
share” in Ladtek’s foreign currency loan. 3 9 Moreover, PDCP filed a collection case against
Qua alone, docketed as Civil Case No. 2259, in the Regional Trial Court of Makati, Branch
150. 4 0
Since they only made partial payments, RGC and Gervel should clearly and convincingly
show that their payments to Metrobank and PDCP exceeded their proportionate shares in
the obligations before they can seek reimbursement from Qua. This RGC and Gervel failed
to do. RGC and Gervel, in fact, never claimed that their payments exceeded their shares in
the obligations. Consequently, RGC and Gervel cannot validly seek reimbursement from
Qua.
Whether there was novation of the Agreements
RGC and Gervel contend that there was no novation of the Agreements. RGC and Gervel
further contend that any novation of the Agreements is immaterial to this case. RGC and
Gervel disagreed with the Court of Appeals on the effect of the “implied novation” which
supposedly transpired in this case. The Court of Appeals found that “there was an implied
novation or substantial incompatibility in the mode or manner of payment by the surety
from the entire obligation, to one merely of proportionate share.” RGC and Gervel claim
that if it is true that an implied novation occurred, then the effect “would be to release
respondent (Qua) as the entire obligation is considered extinguished by operation of law.”
Thus, Qua should now reimburse RGC and Gervel his proportionate share under the surety
agreements.
Novation extinguishes an obligation by (1) changing its object or principal conditions; (2)
substituting the person of the debtor; and (3) subrogating a third person in the rights of
the creditor. Article 1292 of the Civil Code clearly provides that in order that an obligation
may be extinguished by another which substitutes the same, it should be declared in
unequivocal terms, or that the old and new obligations be on every point incompatible with
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each other. 4 1 Novation may either be extinctive or modificatory. Novation is extinctive
when an old obligation is terminated by the creation of a new obligation that takes the
place of the former. Novation is merely modificatory when the old obligation subsists to
the extent it remains compatible with the amendatory agreement. 4 2
We find that there was no novation of the Agreements. The parties did not constitute a
new obligation to substitute the Agreements. The terms and conditions of the Agreements
remain the same. There was also no showing of complete incompatibility in the manner of
payment of the parties’ obligations. Contrary to the Court of Appeals’ ruling, the mode or
manner of payment by the parties did not change from one for the entire obligation to one
merely of proportionate share. The creditors, namely Metrobank and PDCP, merely
proceeded against RGC and Gervel for their proportionate shares only. 4 3 This preference
is within the creditors’ discretion which did not necessarily affect the nature of the
obligations as well as the terms and conditions of the Agreements. A creditor may choose
to proceed only against some and not all of the solidary debtors. The creditor may also
choose to collect part of the debt from some of the solidary debtors, and the remaining
debt from the other solidary debtors.
In sum, RGC and Gervel have no legal basis to seek reimbursement from Qua.
Consequently, RGC and Gervel cannot validly foreclose the pledge of Qua’s GMC shares of
stock which secured his obligation to reimburse. 4 4 Therefore, the foreclosure of the
pledged shares of stock has no leg to stand on.
WHEREFORE, we DENY the petition. The Decision dated 6 March 2000 of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 54737 is AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C .J ., Quisumbing and Azcuna, JJ ., concur
Ynares-Santiago, J ., took no part.
Footnotes
2. Penned by Associate Justice Bernardo LL. Salas with Associate Justices Salome A.
Montoya and Presbitero J. Velasco, Jr. concurring.
7. The Agreements were executed on 9 December 1981, November 1982 and 19 September
1983.
RGC — 35.557%
Gervel — 22.223%
Qua — 42.220%
It is the intention that as between the parties hereto, each party would be liable for any
default by the Company under the Credit Agreements only to the extent of the percentage
that the stockholdings of each in the Company bears to the aggregate stockholdings in
the Company of all the parties hereto. (Emphasis supplied)
9. Exhibit “D,” Records, p. 316.
10. Exhibit “F,” Records, p. 319.
11. RGC and Gervel paid Metrobank P7 million and PDCP P1,730,543.55.
28. Ibid.
29. Rollo, p. 239.
30. This is in accordance with Art. 1217 of the Civil Code which expressly provides:
Payment made by one of the solidary debtors extinguishes the obligation. If two or
more solidary debtors offer to pay, the creditor may choose which offer to accept.
He who made the payment may claim from his co-debtors only the share which
corresponds to each, with interest for the payment already made. If the payment is made
before the debt is due, no interest for the intervening period may be demanded.
xxx xxx xxx
See also Malayan Insurance Co., Inc. v. Court of Appeals, No. L-36413, 26 September
1988, 165 SCRA 536; Camus v. Hon. Court of Appeals, et al., 107 Phil. 4 (1960).
31. L-15656, 31 January 1963, 7 SCRA 52. In Associated Insurance, the insurance company
put up a bail bond for the provisional liberty of the accused. An indemnity agreement in
favor of the insurance company was in turn signed by appellant, solidarily with accused.
Accused failed to appear in court for trial, thus, the bail bond was ordered confiscated.
After judgment on the bond was rendered, the insurance company filed an action
against appellant on the indemnity agreement. The Court ruled that the stipulation in the
indemnity agreement allowing the insurance company to proceed against appellant for
indemnification even prior to actual satisfaction of the judgment on the bond is valid
and not contrary to public policy.
32. Guerrero v. Court of Appeals, No. L-22366, 30 October 1969, 29 SCRA 791.
33. ARTURO M. TOLENTINO, COMMENTARIES AND JURISPRUDENCE ON THE CIVIL CODE
OF THE PHILIPPINES, VOLUME IV, 1997, 244.
34. The decision in Case No. 8364 became final on 15 March 2004. The Court denied Qua’s
petition for review and the motion for reconsideration of the Court of Appeals’ decision
affirming the decision of the Regional Trial Court of Makati, Branch 62.
35. Case No. 8364 was later assigned to RTC-Branch 62.
36. As stated in the decision in Case No. 8364, which was affirmed by the Court of Appeals.
38. RGC’s share is 35.557% while Gervel’s share is 22.223% of the obligation.
RGC — 35.557%
+ Gervel — 22.223%
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Total — 57.780%
42. Quinto v. People, G.R. No. 126712, 14 April 1999, 305 SCRA 708. See also Bautista v.
Pilar Development Corporation, G.R. No. 135046, 17 August 1999, 312 SCRA 611.
43. Art. 1216 of the Civil Code states:
Art. 1216. The creditor may proceed against any one of the solidary debtors or
some or all of them simultaneously. The demand made against one of them shall not be
an obstacle to those which may subsequently be directed against the others, so long as
the debt has not been fully collected.
See also Guerrero v. Court of Appeals, No. L-22366, 30 October 1969, 29 SCRA 791.