Colinares & Veloso v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 90828, 5 September 2000, 339 SCRA 609
Colinares & Veloso v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 90828, 5 September 2000, 339 SCRA 609
Colinares & Veloso v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 90828, 5 September 2000, 339 SCRA 609
DECISION
DAVIDE, JR., C.J.:
In 1979 Melvin Colinares and Lordino Veloso (hereafter Petitioners) were contracted for a
consideration of ₱40,000 by the Carmelite Sisters of Cagayan de Oro City to renovate the latter’s
convent at Camaman-an, Cagayan de Oro City.
On 30 October 1979, Petitioners obtained 5,376 SF Solatone acoustical board 2’x4’x½", 300 SF
tanguile wood tiles 12"x12", 260 SF Marcelo economy tiles and 2 gallons UMYLIN cement adhesive
from CM Builders Centre for the construction project. The following day, 31 October 1979,
1
Petitioners applied for a commercial letter of credit with the Philippine Banking Corporation,
2
Cagayan de Oro City branch (hereafter PBC) in favor of CM Builders Centre. PBC approved the
letter of credit for ₱22,389.80 to cover the full invoice value of the goods. Petitioners signed a pro-
3
forma trust receipt as security. The loan was due on 29 January 1980.
4
On 31 October 1979, PBC debited ₱6,720 from Petitioners’ marginal deposit as partial payment of
the loan. 5
On 7 May 1980, PBC wrote to Petitioners demanding that the amount be paid within seven days
6
from notice. Instead of complying with PBC’s demand, Veloso confessed that they lost ₱19,195.83 in
the Carmelite Monastery Project and requested for a grace period of until 15 June 1980 to settle the
account. 7
PBC sent a new demand letter to Petitioners on 16 October 1980 and informed them that their
8
outstanding balance as of 17 November 1979 was ₱20,824.40 exclusive of attorney’s fees of 25%. 9
On 2 December 1980, Petitioners proposed that the terms of payment of the loan be modified as
10
follows: ₱2,000 on or before 3 December 1980, and ₱1,000 per month starting 31 January 1980 until
the account is fully paid. Pending approval of the proposal, Petitioners paid ₱1,000 to PBC on 4
December 1980, and thereafter ₱500 on 11 February 1981, 16 March 1981, and 20 April
11 12 13
1981. Concurrently with the separate demand for attorney’s fees by PBC’s legal counsel, PBC
14
On 14 January 1983, Petitioners were charged with the violation of P.D. No. 115 (Trust Receipts
Law) in relation to Article 315 of the Revised Penal Code in an Information which was filed with
Branch 18, Regional Trial Court of Cagayan de Oro City. The accusatory portion of the Information
reads:
That on or about October 31, 1979, in the City of Cagayan de Oro, Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused entered into a trust receipt
agreement with the Philippine Banking Corporation at Cagayan de Oro City wherein the accused, as
entrustee, received from the entruster the following goods to wit:
Solatone Acoustical board
Tanguile Wood Tiles
Marcelo Cement Tiles
Umylin Cement Adhesive
with a total value of P22,389.80, with the obligation on the part of the accused-entrustee to hold the
aforesaid items in trust for the entruster and/or to sell on cash basis or otherwise dispose of the said
items and to turn over to the entruster the proceeds of the sale of said goods or if there be no sale to
return said items to the entruster on or before January 29, 1980 but that the said accused after
receipt of the goods, with intent to defraud and cause damage to the entruster, conspiring,
confederating together and mutually helping one another, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and
feloniously fail and refuse to remit the proceeds of the sale of the goods to the entruster despite
repeated demands but instead converted, misappropriated and misapplied the proceeds to their own
personal use, benefit and gain, to the damage and prejudice of the Philippine Banking Corporation,
in the aforesaid sum of P22,389.80, Philippine Currency.
During trial, petitioner Veloso insisted that the transaction was a "clean loan" as per verbal
guarantee of Cayo Garcia Tuiza, PBC’s former manager. He and petitioner Colinares signed the
documents without reading the fine print, only learning of the trust receipt implication much later.
When he brought this to the attention of PBC, Mr. Tuiza assured him that the trust receipt was a
mere formality. 17
On 7 July 1986, the trial court promulgated its decision convicting Petitioners of estafa for violating
18
P.D. No. 115 in relation to Article 315 of the Revised Penal Code and sentencing each of them to
suffer imprisonment of two years and one day of prision correccional as minimum to six years and
one day of prision mayor as maximum, and to solidarily indemnify PBC the amount of ₱20,824.44,
with legal interest from 29 January 1980, 12 % penalty charge per annum, 25% of the sums due as
attorney’s fees, and costs.
The trial court considered the transaction between PBC and Petitioners as a trust receipt transaction
under Section 4, P.D. No. 115. It considered Petitioners’ use of the goods in their Carmelite
monastery project an act of "disposing" as contemplated under Section 13, P.D. No. 115, and
treated the charge invoice for goods issued by CM Builders Centre as a "document" within the
19
meaning of Section 3 thereof. It concluded that the failure of Petitioners to turn over the amount they
owed to PBC constituted estafa.
Petitioners appealed from the judgment to the Court of Appeals which was docketed as CA-G.R. CR
No. 05408. Petitioners asserted therein that the trial court erred in ruling that they violated the Trust
Receipt Law, and in holding them criminally liable therefor. In the alternative, they contend that at
most they can only be made civilly liable for payment of the loan.
In its decision 6 March 1989, the Court of Appeals modified the judgment of the trial court by
20
increasing the penalty to six years and one day of prision mayor as minimum to fourteen years eight
months and one day of reclusion temporal as maximum. It held that the documentary evidence of
the prosecution prevails over Veloso’s testimony, discredited Petitioners’ claim that the documents
they signed were in blank, and disbelieved that they were coerced into signing them.
On 25 March 1989, Petitioners filed a Motion for New Trial/Reconsideration alleging that the
21
them and Tuiza was suppressed by PBC during the trial. That document would have proved that the
transaction was indeed a loan as it bears a 14% interest as opposed to the trust receipt which does
not at all bear any interest. Petitioners further maintained that when PBC allowed them to pay in
installment, the agreement was novated and a creditor-debtor relationship was created.
In its resolution of 16 October 1989 the Court of Appeals denied the Motion for New
23
Trial/Reconsideration because the alleged newly discovered evidence was actually forgotten
evidence already in existence during the trial, and would not alter the result of the case.
Hence, Petitioners filed with us the petition in this case on 16 November 1989. They raised the
following issues:
1. WHETHER OR NOT THE DENIAL OF THE MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL ON THE
GROUND OF NEWLY DISCOVERED EVIDENCE, NAMELY, "DISCLOSURE ON
LOAN/CREDIT TRANSACTION," WHICH IF INTRODUCED AND ADMITTED, WOULD
CHANGE THE JUDGMENT, DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A DENIAL OF DUE PROCESS.
In its Comment of 22 January 1990, the Office of the Solicitor General urged us to deny the petition
for lack of merit.
On 28 February 1990 Petitioners filed a Motion to Dismiss the case on the ground that they had
already fully paid PBC on 2 February 1990 the amount of ₱70,000 for the balance of the loan,
including interest and other charges, as evidenced by the different receipts issued by PBC, and that
24
In its Comment of 30 July 1990, the Solicitor General opined that payment of the loan was akin to a
voluntary surrender or plea of guilty which merely serves to mitigate Petitioners’ culpability, but does
not in any way extinguish their criminal liability.
In the Resolution of 13 August 1990, we gave due course to the Petition and required the parties to
file their respective memoranda.
It was only on 18 May 1999 when this case was assigned to the ponente. Thereafter, we required
the parties to move in the premises and for Petitioners to manifest if they are still interested in the
further prosecution of this case and inform us of their present whereabouts and whether their bail
bonds are still valid.
The grant or denial of a motion for new trial rests upon the discretion of the judge. New trial may be
granted if: (1) errors of law or irregularities have been committed during the trial prejudicial to the
substantial rights of the accused; or (2) new and material evidence has been discovered which the
accused could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced at the trial, and which, if
introduced and admitted, would probably change the judgment. 26
For newly discovered evidence to be a ground for new trial, such evidence must be (1) discovered
after trial; (2) could not have been discovered and produced at the trial even with the exercise of
reasonable diligence; and (3) material, not merely cumulative, corroborative, or impeaching, and of
such weight that, if admitted, would probably change the judgment. It is essential that the offering
27
party exercised reasonable diligence in seeking to locate the evidence before or during trial but
nonetheless failed to secure it.
28
We find no indication in the pleadings that the Disclosure Statement is a newly discovered evidence.
Petitioners could not have been unaware that the two-page document exists. The Disclosure
Statement itself states, "NOTICE TO BORROWER: YOU ARE ENTITLED TO A COPY OF THIS
PAPER WHICH YOU SHALL SIGN." Assuming Petitioners’ copy was then unavailable, they could
29
have compelled its production in court, which they never did. Petitioners have miserably failed to
30
Petitioners themselves admitted that "they searched again their voluminous records, meticulously
and patiently, until they discovered this new and material evidence" only upon learning of the Court
of Appeals’ decision and after they were "shocked by the penalty imposed." Clearly, the alleged
31
newly discovered evidence is mere forgotten evidence that jurisprudence excludes as a ground for
new trial.
32
Section 4, P.D. No. 115, the Trust Receipts Law, defines a trust receipt transaction as any
transaction by and between a person referred to as the entruster, and another person referred to as
the entrustee, whereby the entruster who owns or holds absolute title or security interest over certain
specified goods, documents or instruments, releases the same to the possession of the entrustee
upon the latter’s execution and delivery to the entruster of a signed document called a "trust receipt"
wherein the entrustee binds himself to hold the designated goods, documents or instruments with
the obligation to turn over to the entruster the proceeds thereof to the extent of the amount owing to
the entruster or as appears in the trust receipt or the goods, documents or instruments themselves if
they are unsold or not otherwise disposed of, in accordance with the terms and conditions specified
in the trust receipt.
There are two possible situations in a trust receipt transaction. The first is covered by the provision
which refers to money received under the obligation involving the duty to deliver it (entregarla) to the
owner of the merchandise sold. The second is covered by the provision which refers to merchandise
received under the obligation to "return" it (devolvera) to the owner.33
Failure of the entrustee to turn over the proceeds of the sale of the goods, covered by the trust
receipt to the entruster or to return said goods if they were not disposed of in accordance with the
terms of the trust receipt shall be punishable as estafa under Article 315 (1) of the Revised Penal
Code, without need of proving intent to defraud.
34
A thorough examination of the facts obtaining in the case at bar reveals that the transaction intended
by the parties was a simple loan, not a trust receipt agreement.
Petitioners received the merchandise from CM Builders Centre on 30 October 1979. On that day,
ownership over the merchandise was already transferred to Petitioners who were to use the
materials for their construction project. It was only a day later, 31 October 1979, that they went to the
bank to apply for a loan to pay for the merchandise.
This situation belies what normally obtains in a pure trust receipt transaction where goods are owned
by the bank and only released to the importer in trust subsequent to the grant of the loan. The bank
acquires a "security interest" in the goods as holder of a security title for the advances it had made to
the entrustee. The ownership of the merchandise continues to be vested in the person who had
35
advanced payment until he has been paid in full, or if the merchandise has already been sold, the
proceeds of the sale should be turned over to him by the importer or by his representative or
successor in interest. To secure that the bank shall be paid, it takes full title to the goods at the very
36
beginning and continues to hold that title as his indispensable security until the goods are sold and
the vendee is called upon to pay for them; hence, the importer has never owned the goods and is
not able to deliver possession. In a certain manner, trust receipts partake of the nature of a
37
conditional sale where the importer becomes absolute owner of the imported merchandise as soon
as he has paid its price. 38
Trust receipt transactions are intended to aid in financing importers and retail dealers who do not
have sufficient funds or resources to finance the importation or purchase of merchandise, and who
may not be able to acquire credit except through utilization, as collateral, of the merchandise
imported or purchased. 39
The antecedent acts in a trust receipt transaction consist of the application and approval of the letter
of credit, the making of the marginal deposit and the effective importation of goods through the
efforts of the importer.40
PBC attempted to cover up the true delivery date of the merchandise, yet the trial court took notice
even though it failed to attach any significance to such fact in the judgment. Despite the Court of
Appeals’ contrary view that the goods were delivered to Petitioners previous to the execution of the
letter of credit and trust receipt, we find that the records of the case speak volubly and this fact
remains uncontroverted. It is not uncommon for us to peruse through the transcript of the
stenographic notes of the proceedings to be satisfied that the records of the case do support the
conclusions of the trial court. After such perusal Grego Mutia, PBC’s credit investigator, admitted
41
thus:
Q Do you know if the goods subject matter of this letter of credit and trust receipt agreement were
received by the accused?
A Yes, sir
Q Do you have evidence to show that these goods subject matter of this letter of credit and trust
receipt were delivered to the accused?
A Yes, sir.
Q I am showing to you this charge invoice, are you referring to this document?
A Yes, sir.
xxx
COURT:
Make it of record as appearing in Exhibit D, the zero in 30 has been superimposed with numeral 1. 42
During the cross and re-direct examinations he also impliedly admitted that the transaction was
indeed a loan. Thus:
Q In short the amount stated in your Exhibit C, the trust receipt was a loan to the accused you admit
that?
xxx
A Loan is a promise of a borrower from the value received. The borrower will pay the bank on a
certain specified date with interest
43
Petitioner Veloso’s claim that they were made to believe that the transaction was a loan was also not
denied by PBC. He declared:
Q Testimony was given here that that was covered by trust receipt. In short it was a special kind of
loan. What can you say as to that?
1âwphi1
A I don’t think that would be a trust receipt because we were made to understand by the manager
who encouraged us to avail of their facilities that they will be granting us a loan
44
PBC could have presented its former bank manager, Cayo Garcia Tuiza, who contracted with
Petitioners, to refute Veloso’s testimony, yet it only presented credit investigator Grego Mutia.
Nowhere from Mutia’s testimony can it be gleaned that PBC represented to Petitioners that the
transaction they were entering into was not a pure loan but had trust receipt implications.
The Trust Receipts Law does not seek to enforce payment of the loan, rather it punishes the
dishonesty and abuse of confidence in the handling of money or goods to the prejudice of another
regardless of whether the latter is the owner. Here, it is crystal clear that on the part of Petitioners
45
there was neither dishonesty nor abuse of confidence in the handling of money to the prejudice of
PBC. Petitioners continually endeavored to meet their obligations, as shown by several receipts
issued by PBC acknowledging payment of the loan.
The Information charges Petitioners with intent to defraud and misappropriating the money for their
personal use. The mala prohibita nature of the alleged offense notwithstanding, intent as a state of
mind was not proved to be present in Petitioners’ situation. Petitioners employed no artifice in
dealing with PBC and never did they evade payment of their obligation nor attempt to abscond.
Instead, Petitioners sought favorable terms precisely to meet their obligation.
Also noteworthy is the fact that Petitioners are not importers acquiring the goods for re-sale, contrary
to the express provision embodied in the trust receipt. They are contractors who obtained the
fungible goods for their construction project. At no time did title over the construction materials pass
to the bank, but directly to the Petitioners from CM Builders Centre. This impresses upon the trust
receipt in question vagueness and ambiguity, which should not be the basis for criminal prosecution
in the event of violation of its provisions.
46
The practice of banks of making borrowers sign trust receipts to facilitate collection of loans and
place them under the threats of criminal prosecution should they be unable to pay it may be unjust
and inequitable, if not reprehensible. Such agreements are contracts of adhesion which borrowers
have no option but to sign lest their loan be disapproved. The resort to this scheme leaves poor and
hapless borrowers at the mercy of banks, and is prone to misinterpretation, as had happened in this
case. Eventually, PBC showed its true colors and admitted that it was only after collection of the
money, as manifested by its Affidavit of Desistance.
WHEREFORE, the challenged Decision of 6 March 1989 and the Resolution of 16 October 1989 of
the Court of Appeals in CA-GR. No. 05408 are REVERSED and SET ASIDE. Petitioners are hereby
ACQUITTED of the crime charged, i.e., for violation of P.D. No. 115 in relation to Article 315 of the
Revised Penal Code.
No costs.