Ejercito v. Oriental Assurance
Ejercito v. Oriental Assurance
Ejercito v. Oriental Assurance
DECISION
SERENO, C.J.:
3. Costs of suit.
SO ORDERED.[4]
The Facts
FFV Travel & Tours, Inc. has been declared in default for failure to pay its
obligations amounting to P5,484,086.97 and USD 18,760.98 as of 31 July 2000.
Consequently, IATA demanded payment of the bond, and respondent heeded the
demand on 28 November 2000 as evidenced by China Bank Check No. 104949.
IATA executed a Release of Claim on 29 November 2000 acknowledging payment
of the surety bond.
After trial, the RTC rendered a Decision dismissing the complaint against
petitioners for lack of merit and pronouncing Somes liable to pay the amount of P3
million and interest per annum at the rate of 12% of the principal obligation from
the date the complaint was filed up to the date the obligation would have been
fully paid.
The RTC found that there was no written agreement to show the intention of
petitioners to renew the Deed of Indemnity. The absence thereof was evidenced by
the nonappearance of any signature on the Renewal Notice, which was not signed
by Somes. However, she was held liable to pay the surety value of the cost of
tickets as she had paid the premium for the renewal of the Surety Bond and used
the renewed bond by submitting it to IATA.
The CA Ruling
The CA reversed the finding of the RTC and ruled that petitioners could not escape
liability, as they had authorized respondent to grant any renewals or extensions
pursuant to the indemnity agreement. The Deed of Indemnity contained a
stipulation that the signatories (petitioners) were authorizing the Company
(respondent) to grant or consent to the grant of any extension, continuation,
increase, modification, change or alteration, and/or renewal of the original bond.
Petitioners voluntarily signed the agreement and, are educated persons (Paulino,
being a lawyer), so they could not have misunderstood the legal effects of the
undertaking they had signed.
Issues
The contract of indemnity is the law between the parties.[6] It is a cardinal rule in
the interpretation of a contract that if its terms are clear and leave nodoubt on the
intention of the contracting parties, the literal meaning of its stipulation shall
control.[7] The CA aptly found provisions in the contract that could not exonerate
petitioners from their liability.
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INCONTESTABILITY OF PAYMENTS MADE BY THE COMPANY:
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WAIVER: — The undersigned hereby waive all the rights, privileges, and
benefits that they have or may have under Articles 2077, 2078, 2079,
2080 and 2081 of the Civil Code.
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The intention of Somes to renew the bond cannot be denied, as she paid the
renewal premium and even submitted the renewed bond to IATA.[9]
The claim of petitioners that they only consented to the one-year validity of the
surety bond must be directed against Somes in a separate action. She allegedly
convinced them that the bond was valid for one year only. The allegation of
petitioners is an agreement outside of the contract. In other words, respondent is
not privy to the alleged agreement between Somes and petitioners. For
respondent, there was a valid indemnity agreement executed by the parties, and
contained a proviso that became the basis for the authority to renew the original
bond.
With regard to the contention that the Deed of Indemnity is a contract of adhesion,
the Court has consistently held that contracts of adhesion are not invalid per
se and that their binding effects have been upheld on numerous occasions.[10] The
pretension that petitioners did not consent to the renewal of the bond is belied by
the fact that the terms of the contract which they voluntarily entered into
contained a clause granting authority to the Company to grant or consent to the
renewal of the bond. Having entered into the contract with full knowledge of its
terms and conditions, petitioners are estopped from asserting that they did so
under the ignorance of the legal effect of the contract or the undertaking.
It is true that on some occasions, the Court has struck down such contract as void
when the weaker party is imposed upon in dealing with the dominant party and is
reduced to the alternative of accepting the contract or leaving it, completely
deprived of the opportunity to bargain on equal footing.[11] This reasoning cannot
be used in the instant case. One of the petitioners, Paulino M. Ejercito, is a lawyer
who cannot feign ignorance of the legal effect of his undertaking. Petitioners could
have easily inserted a remark in the clause granting authority to the Company to
renew the original bond, if the renewal thereof was not their intention.
The rule that ignorance of the contents of an instrument does not ordinarily affect
the liability of the one who signs it[12] may also be applied to this Indemnity
Agreement. And the mistake of petitioners as to the legal effect of their obligation
is ordinarily no reason for relieving them of liability.[13]
SO ORDERED.