RCBC Savings Bank v. Odrada

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SECOND DIVISION

[G.R. No. 219037. October 19, 2016.]

RCBC SAVINGS BANK, petitioner, vs. NOEL M. ODRADA,


respondent.

DECISION

CARPIO, J : p

The Case
Before the Court is a petition for review, on certiorari 1 assailing the 26
March 2014 Decision 2 and the 18 June 2015 Resolution 3 of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 94890.
The Facts
In April 2002, respondent Noel M. Odrada (Odrada) sold a second-hand
Mitsubishi Montero (Montero) to Teodoro L. Lim (Lim) for One Million Five
Hundred Ten Thousand Pesos (P1,510,000). Of the total consideration, Six
Hundred Ten Thousand Pesos (P610,000) was initially paid by Lim and the
balance of Nine Hundred Thousand Pesos (P900,000) was financed by
petitioner RCBC Savings Bank (RCBC) through a car loan obtained by Lim. 4
As a requisite for the approval of the loan, RCBC required Lim to submit the
original copies of the Certificate of Registration (CR) and Official Receipt
(OR) in his name. Unable to produce the Montero's OR and CR, Lim
requested RCBC to execute a letter addressed to Odrada informing the latter
that his application for a car loan had been approved.
On 5 April 2002, RCBC issued a letter that the balance of the loan
would be delivered to Odrada upon submission of the OR and CR. Following
the letter and initial down payment, Odrada executed a Deed of Absolute
Sale on 9 April 2002 in favor of Lim and the latter took possession of the
Montero. 5
When RCBC received the documents, RCBC issued two manager's
checks dated 12 April 2002 payable to Odrada for Nine Hundred Thousand
Pesos (P900,000) and Thirteen Thousand Five Hundred Pesos (P13,500). 6
After the issuance of the manager's checks and their turnover to Odrada but
prior to the checks' presentation, Lim notified Odrada in a letter dated 15
April 2002 that there was an issue regarding the roadworthiness of the
Montero. The letter states: CAIHTE

April 15, 2002


Mr. Noel M. Odrada
C/o Kotse Pilipinas
Fronting Ultra, Pasig City
Thru: Shan Mendez
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Dear Mr. Odrada,
Please be inform[ed] that I am going to cancel or exchange the (1)
one unit Montero that you sold to me thru Mr. Shan Mendez because
it did not match your representations the way Mr. Shan Mendez
explained to me like:
1. You told me that the said vehicle has not
experience[d] collision. However, it is hidden, when you
open its engine cover there is a trace of a head-on
collision. The condenser is smashed, the fender support is
not align[ed], both bumper support[s] connecting [the]
chassis were crippled and welded, the hood support was
repaired, etc.
2. The 4-wheel drive shift is not functioning. When Mr.
Mendez was asked about it, he said it would not function
until you can reach the speed of 30 miles.
3. During Mr. Mendez['s] representation, he said the
odometer has still an original mileage data but found
tampered.
4. You represented the vehicle as model 1998
however; it is indicated in the front left A-pillar inscribed
at the identification plate [as] model 1997.
Therefore, please show your sincerity by personally inspecting the
said vehicle at RCBC, Pacific Bldg. Pearl Drive, Ortigas Center, Pasig
City. Let us meet at the said bank at 10:00 A.M., April 17, 2002.
Meanwhile, kindly hold or do not encash the manager's check[s]
issued to you by RCBC until you have clarified and satisfied my
complaints.
Sincerely yours,
Teodoro L. Lim
Cc: Dario E. Santiago, RCBC loan
Legal 7
Odrada did not go to the slated meeting and instead deposited the
manager's checks with International Exchange Bank (Ibank) on 16 April 2002
and redeposited them on 19 April 2002 but the checks were dishonored both
times apparently upon Lim's instruction to RCBC. 8 Consequently, Odrada
filed a collection suit 9 against Lim and RCBC in the Regional Trial Court of
Makati. 10
In his Answer, 11 Lim alleged that the cancellation of the loan was at
his instance, upon discovery of the misrepresentations by Odrada about the
Montero's roadworthiness. Lim claimed that the cancellation was not done
ex parte but through a letter 12 dated 15 April 2002. 13 He further alleged
that the letter was delivered to Odrada prior to the presentation of the
manager's checks to RCBC. 14
On the other hand, RCBC contended that the manager's checks were
dishonored because Lim had cancelled the loan. RCBC claimed that the
cancellation of the loan was prior to the presentation of the manager's
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checks. Moreover, RCBC alleged that despite notice of the defective
condition of the Montero, which constituted a failure of consideration,
Odrada still proceeded with presenting the manager's checks.
It was later disclosed during trial that RCBC also sent a formal notice of
cancellation of the loan on 18 April 2002 to both Odrada and Lim. 15 DETACa

The Regional Trial Court's Ruling


In its Decision 16 dated 1 October 2009, the trial court ruled in favor of
Odrada. The trial court held that Odrada was the proper party to ask for
rescission. 17 The lower court reasoned that the right of rescission is implied
in reciprocal obligations where one party fails to perform what is incumbent
upon him when the other is willing and ready to comply. The trial court ruled
that it was not proper for Lim to exercise the right of rescission since Odrada
had already complied with the contract of sale by delivering the Montero
while Lim remained delinquent in payment. 18 Since Lim was not ready,
willing, and able to comply with the contract of sale, he was not the proper
party entitled to rescind the contract.
The trial court ruled that the defective condition of the Montero was
not a supervening event that would justify the dishonor of the manager's
checks. The trial court reasoned that a manager's check is equivalent to
cash and is really the bank's own check. It may be treated as a promissory
note with the bank as maker. Hence, the check becomes the primary
obligation of the bank which issued it and constitutes a written promise to
pay on demand. 19 Being the party primarily liable, the trial court ruled that
RCBC was liable to Odrada for the value of the manager's checks.
Finally, the trial court found that Odrada suffered sleepless nights,
humiliation, and was constrained to hire the services of a lawyer meriting
the award of damages. 20
The dispositive portion of the Decision reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, judgment is hereby
rendered:
(a) Directing defendant RCBC to pay plaintiff the
amount of Php913,500.00 representing the cash
equivalent of the two (2) manager's checks, plus 12%
interest from the date of filing of the case until fully paid;
(b) Directing defendants to solidarily pay moral
damages in the amount of Php500,000.00 and exemplary
damages in the amount of Php500,000.00;
(c) Directing defendants to solidarily pay
attorney's fees in the amount of Php300,000.00.
Finally, granting the cross-claim of defendant RCBC, Teodoro L.
Lim is hereby directed to indemnify RCBC Savings Bank for the
amount adjudged for it to pay plaintiff.
SO ORDERED. 21

RCBC and Lim appealed from the trial court's decision.

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The Court of Appeals' Ruling
In its assailed 26 March 2014 Decision, the Court of Appeals dismissed
the appeal and affirmed the trial court's 1 October 2009 Decision. ATICcS

The Court of Appeals ruled that the two manager's checks, which were
complete and regular, reached the hands of Lim who deposited the same in
his bank account with Ibank. RCBC knew that the amount reflected on the
manager's checks represented Lim's payment for the remaining balance of
the Montero's purchase price. The appellate court held that when RCBC
issued the manager's checks in favor of Odrada, RCBC admitted the
existence of the payee and his then capacity to endorse, and undertook that
on due presentment the checks which were negotiable instruments would be
accepted or paid, or both according to its tenor. 22 The appellate court held
that the effective delivery of the checks to Odrada made RCBC liable for the
checks. 23
On RCBC's defense of want of consideration, the Court of Appeals
affirmed the finding of the trial court that Odrada was a holder in due
course. The appellate court ruled that the defense of want of consideration is
not available against a holder in due course. 24
Lastly, the Court of Appeals found that the award of moral and
exemplary damages and attorney's fees was excessive. Hence, modification
was proper.
The dispositive portion of the Decision reads:
WHEREFORE, the impugned Decision of the court a quo in Civil
Case No. 02-453 is hereby AFFIRMED with MODIFICATION insofar as
the reduction of awards for moral, exemplary damages and attorney's
fees to P50,000.00, P20,000.00, and P20,000.00 respectively.
SO ORDERED. 25 ETHIDa

RCBC and Lim filed a motion for reconsideration 26 on 28 April 2014. In


its 18 June 2015 Resolution, the Court of Appeals denied the motion for lack
of merit. 27
RCBC alone 28 filed this petition before the Court. Thus, the decision of
the Court of Appeals became final and executory as to Lim.
The Issues
RCBC presented the following issues in this petition:
A. The court a quo gravely erred in finding that as between
Odrada as seller and Lim as buyer of the vehicle, only the former has
the right to rescind the contract of sale finding failure to perform an
obligation under the contract of sale on the part of the latter only
despite the contested roadworthiness of the vehicle, subject matter of
the sale.
1. Whether or not the court a quo erred in holding
that Lim cannot cancel the auto loan despite the failure in
consideration due to the contested roadworthiness of the
vehicle delivered by Odrada to him. 29

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B. The court a quo gravely erred when it found that Odrada is a
holder in due course of the manager's checks in question despite
being informed of the cancellation of the auto loan by the borrower,
Lim.
1. Whether or not Lim can validly countermand the
manager's checks in the hands of a holder who does not
hold the same in due course. 30
Odrada failed to file a comment 31 within the period prescribed by this
Court. 32
The Ruling of this Court
We grant the petition.
Under the law on sales, a contract of sale is perfected the moment
there is a meeting of the minds upon the thing which is the object of the
contract and upon the price which is the consideration. From that moment,
the parties may reciprocally demand performance. 33 Performance may be
done through delivery, actual or constructive. Through delivery, ownership is
transferred to the vendee. 34 However, the obligations between the parties
do not cease upon delivery of the subject matter. The vendor and vendee
remain concurrently bound by specific obligations. The vendor, in particular,
is responsible for an implied warranty against hidden defects.
Article 1547 of the Civil Code states: "In a contract of sale, unless a
contrary intention appears, there is an implied warranty that the thing shall
be free from any hidden faults or defects." 35 Article 1566 of the Civil Code
provides that "the vendor is responsible to the vendee for any hidden faults
or defects in the thing sold, even though he was not aware thereof." 36 As a
consequence, the law fixes the liability of the vendor for hidden defects
whether known or unknown to him at the time of the sale.
The law defines a hidden defect as one which would render the thing
sold unfit for the use for which it is intended, or would diminish its fitness for
such use to such an extent that, had the vendee been aware thereof, he
would not have acquired it or would have given a lower price for it. 37 cSEDTC

In this case, Odrada and Lim entered into a contract of sale of the
Montero. Following the initial downpayment and execution of the deed of
sale, the Montero was delivered by Odrada to Lim and the latter took
possession of the Montero. Notably, under the law, Odrada's warranties
against hidden defects continued even after the Montero's delivery.
Consequently, a misrepresentation as to the Montero's roadworthiness
constitutes a breach of warranty against hidden defects.
In Supercars Management & Development Corporation v. Flores, 38 we
held that a breach of warranty against hidden defects occurred when the
vehicle, after it was delivered to respondent, malfunctioned despite repairs
by petitioner. 39 In the present case, when Lim acquired possession, he
discovered that the Montero was not roadworthy. The engine was
misaligned, the automatic transmission was malfunctioning, and the brake
rotor disks needed refacing. 40 However, during the proceedings in the trial
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court, Lim's testimony was stricken off the record because he failed to
appear during cross-examination. 41 In effect, Lim was not able to present
clear preponderant evidence of the Montero's defective condition.
RCBC May Refuse to Pay Manager's Checks
We address the legal question of whether or not the drawee bank of a
manager's check has the option of refusing payment by interposing a
personal defense of the purchaser of the manager's check who delivered the
check to a third party.
In resolving this legal question, this Court will examine the nature of a
manager's check and its relation to personal defenses under the Negotiable
Instruments Law. 42
Jurisprudence defines a manager's check as a check drawn by the
bank's manager upon the bank itself and accepted in advance by the bank
by the act of its issuance. 43 It is really the bank's own check and may be
treated as a promissory note with the bank as its maker. 44 Consequently,
upon its purchase, the check becomes the primary obligation of the bank
and constitutes its written promise to pay the holder upon demand. 45 It is
similar to a cashier's check 46 both as to effect and use in that the bank
represents that the check is drawn against sufficient funds. 47
As a general rule, the drawee bank is not liable until it accepts. 48 Prior
to a bill's acceptance, no contractual relation exists between the holder 49
and the drawee. Acceptance, therefore, creates a privity of contract between
the holder and the drawee so much so that the latter, once it accepts,
becomes the party primarily liable on the instrument. 50 Accordingly,
acceptance is the act which triggers the operation of the liabilities of the
drawee (acceptor) under Section 62 51 of the Negotiable Instruments Law.
Thus, once he accepts, the drawee admits the following: (a) existence of the
drawer; (b) genuineness of the drawer's signature; (c) capacity and authority
of the drawer to draw the instrument; and (d) existence of the payee and his
then capacity to endorse.
As can be gleaned in a long line of cases decided by this Court, a
manager's check is accepted by the bank upon its issuance. As compared to
an ordinary bill of exchange where acceptance occurs after the bill is
presented to the drawee, the distinct feature of a manager's check is that it
is accepted in advance. Notably, the mere issuance of a manager's check
creates a privity of contract between the holder and the drawee bank, the
latter primarily binding itself to pay according to the tenor of its acceptance.
SDAaTC

The drawee bank, as a result, has the unconditional obligation to pay a


manager's check to a holder in due course irrespective of any available
personal defenses. However, while this Court has consistently held that a
manager's check is automatically accepted, a holder other than a holder
in due course is still subject to defenses. In International Corporate Bank v.
Spouses Gueco, 52 which involves a delivered manager's check, the Court
still considered whether the check had become stale:
It has been held that, if the check had become stale, it becomes
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imperative that the circumstances that caused its non-presentment
be determined. In the case at bar, there is no doubt that the
petitioner bank held on the check and refused to encash the same
because of the controversy surrounding the signing of the joint
motion to dismiss. We see no bad faith or negligence in this position
taken by the bank. 53
I n International Corporate Bank, this Court considered whether the holder
presented the manager's check within a reasonable time after its issuance —
a circumstance required for holding the instrument in due course. 54 AaCTcI

Similarly, in Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation v. Hi-Tri


Development Corporation, 55 the Court observed that the mere issuance of a
manager's check does not ipso facto work as an automatic transfer of funds
to the account of the payee. 56 In order for the holder to acquire title to the
instrument, there still must have been effective delivery. Accordingly, the
Court, taking exception to the manager's check automatic transfer of funds
to the payee, declared that: "the doctrine that the deposit represented by a
manager's check automatically passes to the payee is inapplicable, because
the instrument — although accepted in advance remains undelivered." 57
This Court ruled that the holder did not acquire the instrument in due course
since title had not passed for lack of delivery. 58
We now address the main legal question: if the holder of a manager's
check is not a holder in due course, can the drawee bank interpose a
personal defense of the purchaser?
Our rulings in Mesina v. Intermediate Appellate Court 59 and United
Coconut Planters Bank v. Intermediate Appellate Court 60 shed light on the
matter.
In Mesina, Jose Go purchased a manager's check from Associated Bank.
As he left the bank, Go inadvertently left the check on top of the desk of the
bank manager. The bank manager entrusted the check for safekeeping to
another bank official who at the time was attending to a customer named
Alexander Lim. 61 After the bank official answered the telephone and
returned from the men's room, the manager's check could no longer be
found. After learning that his manager's check was missing, Go immediately
returned to the bank to give a stop payment order on the check. A third
party named Marcelo Mesina deposited the manager's check with Prudential
Bank but the drawee bank sent back the manager's check to the collecting
bank with the words "payment stopped." When asked how he obtained the
manager's check, Mesina claimed it was paid to him by Lim in a "certain
transaction." 62
While this Court acknowledged the general causes and effects of a
manager's check, it noted that other factors were needed to be considered,
namely the manner by which Mesina acquired the instrument. This Court
declared:
Petitioner's allegations hold no water. Theories and examples
advanced by petitioner on causes and effects of a cashier's check
such as (1) it cannot be countermanded in the hands of a holder in
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due course and (2) a cashier's check is a bill of exchange drawn by
the bank against itself — are general principles which cannot be aptly
applied to the case at bar, without considering other things. Petitioner
failed to substantiate his claim that he is a holder in due course and
for consideration or value as shown by the established facts of the
case. Admittedly, petitioner became the holder of the cashier's check
as endorsed by Alexander Lim who stole the check. He refused to say
how and why it was passed to him. He had therefore notice of the
defect of his title over the check from the start. 63
Ultimately, the notice of defect affected Mesina's claim as a holder of
the manager's check. This Court ruled that the issuing bank could
validly refuse payment because Mesina was not a holder in due
course. Unequivocally, the Court declared: "the holder of a cashier's
check who is not a holder in due course cannot enforce such check
against the issuing bank which dishonors the same." 64 EcTCAD

In the same manner, in United Coconut Planters Bank (UCPB), 65 this


Court ruled that the drawee bank was legally, justified in refusing to pay the
holder of a manager's check who did not hold the check in due course. In
UCPB, Altiura Investors, Inc. purchased a manager's check from UCPB, which
then issued a manager's check in the amount of Four Hundred Ninety Four
Thousand Pesos (P494,000) to Makati Bel-Air Developers, Inc. The manager's
check represented the payment of Altiura Investors, Inc. for a condominium
unit it purchased from Makati Bel-Air Developers, Inc. Subsequently, Altiura
Investors, Inc. instructed UCPB to hold payment due to material
misrepresentations by Makati Bel-Air Developers, Inc. regarding the
condominium unit. 66 Pending negotiations and while the stop payment
order was in effect, Makati Bel-Air Developers, Inc. insisted that UCPB pay
the value of the manager's check. UCPB refused to pay and filed an
interpleader to allow Altiura Investors, Inc. and Makati Bel-Air Developers,
Inc. to litigate their respective claims. Makati Bel-Air Developers, Inc. also
filed a counterclaim against UCPB in the amount of Five Million Pesos
(P5,000,000) based on UCPB's violation of its warranty on its manager's
check. 67
In upholding UCPB's refusal to pay the value of the manager's check,
this Court reasoned that Makati Bel-Air Developers, Inc.'s title to the
instrument became defective when there arose a partial failure of
consideration. 68 We held that UCPB could validly invoke a personal defense
of the purchaser against Makati Bel-Air Developers, Inc. because the latter
was not a holder in due course of the manager's check:
There are other considerations supporting the conclusion
reached by this Court that respondent appellate court had committed
reversible error. Makati Bel-Air was a party to the contract of sale of
an office condominium unit to Altiura, for the payment of which the
manager's check was issued. Accordingly, Makati Bel-Air was fully
aware, at the time it had received the manager's check, that there
was, or had arisen, at least partial failure of consideration since it was
unable to comply with its obligation to deliver office space amounting
to 165 square meters to Altiura. Makati Bel-Air was also aware that
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petitioner Bank had been informed by Altiura of the claimed defect in
Makati Bel-Air's title to the manager's check or its right to the
proceeds thereof. Vis-a-vis both Altiura and petitioner Bank, Makati
Bel-Air was not a holder in due course of the manager's check. 69
The foregoing rulings clearly establish that the drawee bank of a
manager's check may interpose personal defenses of the purchaser of the
manager's check if the holder is not a holder in due course. In short, the
purchaser of a manager's check may validly countermand payment to a
holder who is not a holder in due course. Accordingly, the drawee bank may
refuse to pay the manager's check by interposing a personal defense of the
purchaser. Hence, the resolution of the present case requires a
determination of the status of Odrada as holder of the manager's checks.
In this case, the Court of Appeals gravely erred when it considered
Odrada as a holder in due course. Section 52 of the Negotiable Instruments
Law defines a holder in due course as one who has taken the instrument
under the following conditions:
(a) That it is complete and regular upon its face;
(b) That he became the holder of it before it was overdue, and
without notice that it has been previously dishonored, if such was the
fact;
(c) That he took it in good faith and for value;
(d) That at the time it was negotiated to him, he had no notice of
any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person
negotiating it. (Emphasis supplied)
To be a holder in due course, the law requires that a party must have
acquired the instrument in good faith and for value.
Good faith means that the person taking the instrument has acted with
due honesty with regard to the rights of the parties liable on the instrument
and that at the time he took the instrument, the holder has no knowledge of
any defect or infirmity of the instrument. 70 To constitute notice of an
infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating the
same, the person to whom it is negotiated must have had actual knowledge
of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking
the instrument would amount to bad faith. 71
Value, on the other hand, is defined as any consideration sufficient to
support a simple contract. 72
In the present case, Odrada attempted to deposit the manager's
checks on 16 April 2002, a day after Lim had informed him that there was a
serious problem with the Montero. Instead of addressing the issue, Odrada
decided to deposit the manager's checks. Odrada's actions do not amount to
good faith. Clearly, Odrada failed to make an inquiry even when the
circumstances strongly indicated that there arose, at the very least, a partial
failure of consideration due to the hidden defects of the Montero. Odrada's
action in depositing the manager's checks despite knowledge of the
Montero's defects amounted to bad faith. Moreover, when Odrada
redeposited the manager's checks on 19 April 2002, he was already formally
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notified by RCBC the previous day of the cancellation of Lim's auto loan
transaction. Following UCPB, 73 RCBC may refuse payment by interposing a
personal defense of Lim — that the title of Odrada had become defective
when there arose a partial failure or lack of consideration. 74 AScHCD

RCBC acted in good faith in following the instructions of Lim. The


records show that Lim notified RCBC of the defective condition of the
Montero before Odrada presented the manager's checks. 75 Lim informed
RCBC of the hidden defects of the Montero including a misaligned engine,
smashed condenser, crippled bumper support, and defective transmission.
RCBC also received a formal notice of cancellation of the auto loan from Lim
and this prompted RCBC to cancel the manager's checks since the auto loan
was the consideration for issuing the manager's checks. RCBC acted in good
faith in stopping the payment of the manager's checks.
Section 58 of the Negotiable Instruments Law provides: "In the hands
of any holder other than a holder in due course, a negotiable instrument is
subject to the same defenses as if it were non-negotiable. . . . ." Since
Odrada was not a holder in due course, the instrument becomes subject to
personal defenses under the Negotiable Instruments Law. Hence, RCBC may
legally act on a countermand by Lim, the purchaser of the manager's
checks.
Lastly, since Lim's testimony involving the Montero's hidden defects
was stricken off the record by the trial court, Lim failed to prove the
existence of the hidden defects and thus Lim remains liable to Odrada for
the purchase price of the Montero. Lim's failure to file an appeal from the
decision of the Court of Appeals made the decision of the appellate court
final and executory as to Lim. RCBC cannot be made liable because it acted
in good faith in carrying out the stop payment order of Lim who presented to
RCBC the complaint letter to Odrada when Lim issued the stop payment
order.
WHEREFORE, we GRANT the petition. We REVERSE and SET ASIDE
the 26 March 2014 Decision and the 18 June 2015 Resolution of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 94890 only insofar as RCBC Savings Bank is
concerned.
SO ORDERED.
Brion, Del Castillo and Mendoza, JJ., concur.
Leonen, * J., is on official leave.
Footnotes
* On official leave.
1. Rollo , pp. 9-23. Under Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.

2. Id. at 29-36. Penned by Associate Justice Eduardo B. Peralta, Jr., with Associate
Justices Magdangal M. De Leon and Stephen C. Cruz concurring.

3. Id. at 52-53.
4. Id. at 29.
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5. Id. at 30.
6. Id.
7. Records, p. 23.
8. Rollo , p. 30.
9. Civil Case No. 02-453.

10. Branch 66, Makati City.


11. Records, pp. 18-21.
12. Id. at 23.
13. Id. at 19.
14. Id.

15. Rollo , p. 30.


16. Id. at 55-62. Penned by Judge Joselito Villarosa.
17. Id. at 59.
18. Id.
19. Id. at 60.

20. Id. at 61.


21. Id. at 62.

22. Id. at 34.

23. Id.
24. Act No. 2031 (1911), Sec. 24.

25. Rollo , p. 35.

26. Id. at 38-50.


27. Id. at 52-53.

28. The records show that RCBC was the only party in the original case which
filed an appeal to this Court.
29. Rollo , p. 13.

30. Id. at 19.


31. Rule 47, Sec. 7. Effect of failure to file comment. — When no comment is filed
by any of the respondents, the case may be decided on the basis of the
record, without prejudice to any disciplinary action which the court may
take against the disobedient party.

32. Counsel for Odrada failed to file comment on the petition within the period
prescribed in the Resolution dated 30 September 2015, which period
expired on 22 November 2015.

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33. CIVIL CODE, Art. 1475.

34. CIVIL CODE, Art. 1478.


35. CIVIL CODE, Art. 1547 (2).

36. CIVIL CODE, Art. 1485.

37. CIVIL CODE, Art. 1561.


38. 487 Phil. 259 (2004).

39. Id. at 268.


40. Records, pp. 27-29.

41. Id. at 213.

42. Act No. 2031 (1911).


43. Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation v. Hi-Tri Development Corporation ,
687 Phil. 481 (2012); Bank of the Philippine Islands v. Roxas , 562 Phil. 161
(2007); Bank of the Philippine Islands v. Court of Appeals, 383 Phil. 538
(2000); Tan v. Court of Appeals , G.R. No. 108555, 20 December 1994, 239
SCRA 310.
44. Id.

45. Tan v. Court of Appeals , G.R. No. 108555, 20 December 1994, 239 SCRA 310.

46. For purposes of brevity and applying the previous rulings of this Court when
the Court refers to a manager's check, cashier's checks are also included.

47. Bank of the Philippine Islands v. Court of Appeals, 383 Phil. 538 (2000).

48. Act No. 2031 (1911), Sec. 127.


49. Payee or indorsee of a bill or note who is in possession of it, or the bearer
thereof.

50. Act No. 2031 (1911), Sec. 127.


51. Sec. 62. Liability of Acceptor. — The acceptor, by accepting the instrument,
engages that he will pay it according to the tenor of his acceptance and
admits:

(a) The existence of the drawer, the genuineness of his signature and his
capacity and authority to draw the instrument, and

(b) The existence of the payee and his then capacity to indorse.

52. 404 Phil. 353 (2001).


53. Id. at 368.

54. Sec. 53. When person not deemed holder in due course. — Where an
instrument payable on demand is negotiated on an unreasonable length
of time after its issue, the holder is not deemed a holder in due course.
55. 687 Phil. 481 (2012).

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56. Id. at 499.
57. Id. at 500.

58. Notably, under Section 16 of the Negotiable Instruments Law, a complete yet
undelivered negotiable instrument gives rise to a personal defense.
59. 229 Phil. 495 (1986).

60. 262 Phil. 397 (1990).


61. Mesina v. Intermediate Appellate Court, supra at 498.

62. Mesina v. Intermediate Appellate Court, supra at 499.

63. Mesina v. Intermediate Appellate Court, supra at 502.


64. Mesina v. Intermediate Appellate Court, supra at 502.

65. United Coconut Planters Bank v. Intermediate Appellate Court, supra note 60.

66. United Coconut Planters Bank v. Intermediate Appellate Court, supra note 60
at 399.

67. United Coconut Planters Bank v. Intermediate Appellate Court, supra note 60
at 400.
68. United Coconut Planters Bank v. Intermediate Appellate Court, supra note 60
at 403.

69. United Coconut Planters Bank v. Intermediate Appellate Court, supra note 60
at 403.
70. Act No. 2031 (1911), Sec. 52.

71. Act No. 2031 (1911), Sec. 56.

72. Act No. 2031 (1911), Sec. 25.


73. Supra note 60.

74. Sec. 28. Effect of want of consideration. — Absence or failure of consideration


is a matter of defense as against any person not a holder in due course . .
..
75. Records, pp. 51-52.

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