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Xavier Henry Lopez Zamora Torts & Damages

Philippine School of Business Administration et al v. Court of Appeals

Facts: 30 August 1985: Carlitos Bautista was stabbed to death on the second floor balcony of PSBA. Bautista was a student in said school, a junior commerce major. It was established that the assailants were outsiders, not enrolled nor affiliated with the school. The death of one Carlitos Bautista on the premises of the Philippine School of Business Administration (PSBA) prompted his parents to file a suit for damages resulting from negligence, recklessness, and insufficiency of safety precautions against said school, specifically its officials, at the RTC of Manila. As defendants, PSBA sought the dismissal of the case on the ground that PSBA, as an academic institution, is beyond the ambit of Article 2180 of the NCC, under which they are being sued. The RTC denied their motion to dismiss, then the subsequent motion for reconsideration.

death of their 13-year old son, Ferdinand Castillo. Contending that the death of their son was due to the failure of the petitioners to exercise the proper diligence of a good father of the family in preventing their son's drowning. Issue: Whether or not the teachers may be held liable for damages. Held: Yes. Even the picnic in question was not a schoolsponsored activity, nonetheless it cannot be gainsaid that the same was held under the supervision of the teachers employed by the said school, particularly the teacher in charge of first year class to whom the victim belonged, and those whom she invited to help her in supervising the class during the picnic. Considering that the court a quo found negligence on the part of the six defendants-teachers who, as such, were charged with the supervision of the children during the picnic, the St. Francis High School and the school principal, Benjamin Illumin, are liable under Article 2176 taken together with the 1st, 4th and 5th paragraphs of Article 2180 of the Civil Code. They cannot escape liability on the mere excuse that the picnic was not an "extra-curricular activity of the St. Francis High School." The school principal had knowledge of the picnic even from its planning stage and had even been invited to attend the affair; and yet he did not express any prohibition against undertaking the picnic, nor did he prescribe any precautionary measures to be adopted during the picnic. Under Article 2180, supra, the defendant school and defendant school principal must be found jointly and severally liable with the defendants-teachers for the damages incurred by the plaintiffs as a result of the death of their son. It is the rule that in cases where the above-cited provisions find application, the negligence of the employees in causing the injury or damage gives rise to a presumption of negligence on the part of the owner and/or manager of the establishment (in the present case, St. Francis High School and its principal); and while this presumption is not conclusive, it may be overthrown only by clear and convincing proof that the owner and/or manager exercised the care and diligence of a good father of a family in the selection and/or supervision of the employee or employees causing the injury or damage (in this case, the defendants-teachers).

Issue: Whether or not the PSBA may be held liable. Held: Yes. The SC rules that despite the inapplicability
of the rule on quasi-delicts, the school is still liable because all academic institutions enter into a contract with all its enrollees. Part of the obligations of this contract is the providence of an adequate atmosphere of safety for its students (x x x no student can absorb the intricacies of physics or higher mathematics or explore the realm of the arts and other sciences when bullets are flying or grenades exploding in the air or where there looms around the school premises a constant threat to life and limb.). Obligations from quasi-delict or tort* do not govern, since these are extra-contractual and a contract has been made here. However, in Air France vs. Carroscoso, it was established that liability from tort may still exist even if there is a contract, because the act that breaks the contract may also be a tort. This rule obeys Art. 21. The SC here dictates that a trial is necessary in order to determine whether such wilful negligence really lies, in order that liability should be properly determined. St. Francis High School v. CA Facts: Ferdinand Castillo, then a freshman student at St. Francis High School, wanted to join a school picnic undertaken by other freshmen students at Talaan Beach, Sariaya, Quezon. Ferdinand's parents, because of short notice, did not allow their son to join but merely allowed him to bring food to the teachers for the picnic, with the directive that he should go back home after doing so. However, because of persuasion of the teachers, Ferdinand went on with them to the beach. During the picnic and while the students, including Ferdinand, were in the water, one of the female teachers was apparently drowning. Some of the students, including Ferdinand, came to her rescue, but in the process, it was Ferdinand himself who drowned. His body was recovered but efforts to resuscitate him ashore failed. He was brought to a certain Dr. Luna in Sariaya, Quezon and later to the Mt. Cannel General Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival. The parents filed a civil case for damages against St. Francis High School (represented by the principal and the teachers) which they allegedly incurred from the

Memo!!!
GENERAL RULE: The School itself is NOT liable as party defendants EXCEPTIONS: 1. FC 218 schools are expressly made liable 2. St. Francis ruling schools liability as employer (Art 2180) 3. PSBA ruling school has liability based on contract, therefore: *If culprit is a teacher, follow St. Francis ruling (sue school as employer) *If culprit is a stranger, follow PSBA ruling (sue school based on contract *If culprit is a student apply Article 2180

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