Case Digest (G.R. No. 37757)
Facts:
The case G. R. No. 37757, decided on March 28, 1934, concerns a dispute between Teal Motor Company, Inc. (hereafter referred to as the "plaintiff") and multiple insurance companies, including The Continental Insurance Co., Atlas Assurance Company, Ltd., and Employers' Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd. The matter originated from an incident on January 6, 1929, when a fire caused significant damage to a building owned by the plaintiff. The plaintiff had taken out insurance policies covering the premises, under which claims for damages were made. The Manila Building and Loan Association, the defendant and appellant in this case, held a mortgage on the property and was a partial assignee of the insurance policies for its benefit. When the Manila Building and Loan Association refused to join the plaintiff as co-plaintiff in the lawsuit against the insurance companies, the association was subsequently made a party defendant, filing a cross-complaint for the foreclos
Case Digest (G.R. No. 37757)
Facts:
- Parties and Context
- The case involves TEAL MOTOR COMPANY, INC. as plaintiff-appellee suing multiple insurance companies on contracts of insurance covering the building damaged by fire.
- Defendant parties include:
- The Continental Insurance Co., Atlas Assurance Company, Ltd., and The Employers' Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd.
- The Manila Building and Loan Association, originally a non-party plaintiff who was later made a defendant after refusing to join voluntarily.
- The Underlying Incident and Trial Court Proceedings
- The building owned by the plaintiff suffered significant fire damage on the afternoon of January 6, 1929.
- The Court of First Instance of Manila rendered a judgment against the insurance companies for the sum of P125,000 covering the building damage.
- Simultaneously, the cross-complaint filed by the Manila Building and Loan Association, which sought foreclosure of its mortgage on the building, was dismissed by the trial court as premature.
- Mortgage and Payment Issues
- The mortgage held by the Manila Building and Loan Association contained:
- A provision requiring monthly payments on or before the 5th day of each month.
- A clause stating that any failure to pay an amount on time renders the entire sum overdue and demandable.
- Notwithstanding the strict payment terms, prior to the fire, the plaintiff often made late payments, which were accepted without protest by the association.
- In January 1929, the payment due was tendered on the 12th, resulting in:
- The prompt return of the tendered payment by the building and loan association.
- A demand from the association for the payment of the mortgage balance, which the appellee (plaintiff) refused to satisfy.
- Appellate Proceedings and Procedural Issues
- The insurance companies perfected their appeal from the trial court’s judgment against them.
- The building and loan association, due to lack of timely notice of the trial court’s action, delayed in perfecting its appeal from the dismissal of its cross‑complaint.
- The appeal under consideration specifically pertained to the denial of the cross‑complaint filed by the building and loan association.
- Outcome of the Appellate Decision
- The appellate court vacated and reversed the decision of the Court of First Instance dismissing the cross‑complaint.
- The case was remanded for the state of the account to be determined and for further proceedings in line with the appellate opinion.
- Costs were imposed against the plaintiff-appellee.
Issues:
- Whether the building and loan association’s prior forbearance in accepting late payments from the plaintiff-appellee in previous months constituted a waiver or novation of the strict prompt payment clause in the mortgage contract.
- Whether the contractual provision, which rendered the whole mortgage sum overdue upon any late payment, should continue to be enforced despite the historical practice of accepting late payments.
- The proper adjudication of the cross‑complaint for foreclosure in the context of the mortgage terms and the subsequent procedural issues arising from the delayed appeal by the building and loan association.
Ruling:
- (Subscriber-Only)
Ratio:
- (Subscriber-Only)
Doctrine:
- (Subscriber-Only)