Case Summary (G.R. No. 210928)
Antecedents and Claim of Injury
Rico filed a complaint for damages alleging that Union Bank negligently handled his credit card account and that bank actions culminated in the embarrassing dishonor of his credit card at Gourdo’s Restaurant. His specific allegations included unauthorized or wrongful charges (U‑Protect Premium Plan, an Expedia service fee), a declined online airline purchase with Tiger Airways, imposition of late payment charges and interest despite an asserted timely payment, imposition of an annual membership fee contrary to a guarantee, and a large October 15/16, 2005 SOA charge (P30,076.79 / P30,376.79) notwithstanding that he had used the card only for a P347.00 meal at Kitaro Sushi during the billing period. Rico claimed emotional distress, social humiliation, and reputational harm from the Gourdo’s incident, even though Union Bank subsequently reversed the disputed charges.
Union Bank’s Position and Defenses
Union Bank pleaded that it handled the account diligently and in good faith. It explained that the U‑Protect charge was automatically offered and cancellation requests take time to process; Expedia fees were the result of petitioner’s online purchase; the Tiger Airways transaction was included in SOAs because the dispute had not been resolved; petitioner’s May 2005 SOA was paid late (after the due date), and the annual fee was only waived for the first year. The bank asserted that petitioner paid less than the minimum due on the October 2005 SOA (paid P347 when minimum due was P500), that a credit adjustment was later made pending investigation, and that systemically the account was put on “past due” status, which justified the disapproval of his November 20, 2005 transaction. Union Bank also sought attorney’s fees and litigation expenses on the ground that Rico failed to comply with card terms and conditions.
RTC Ruling and Basis for Large Damages
The RTC (June 24, 2010) found for Rico and awarded moral damages (P500,000), exemplary damages (P200,000), and attorney’s fees (P300,000), dismissing the bank’s counterclaims. The RTC concluded that Union Bank’s dishonor on November 20, 2005 was without valid reason, noting that the bank had reversed charges in the November 15, 2005 SOA and that, as of November 20, Rico had no liability that would justify placing his account on “past due” status. The RTC characterized the bank’s conduct as careless, negligent, and unjustified, emphasizing that once a cardholder lodges complaints the bank must exercise utmost care and diligence in billing and handling the account to prevent potentially humiliating situations.
Court of Appeals Modification of Damages
The CA affirmed the RTC’s finding of liability but substantially reduced the awards as excessive, modifying them to moral damages P30,000, exemplary damages P20,000, and attorney’s fees P10,000. The CA applied the principle that there is no fixed rule for moral damages and that awards must be governed by the case’s peculiar facts and be commensurate with the loss or injury suffered.
Issue Before the Supreme Court
The sole issue presented was whether Rico was entitled to moral damages, exemplary damages, and attorney’s fees based on alleged gross negligence by Union Bank when it dishonored his credit card transaction at Gourdo’s Restaurant, causing embarrassment and humiliation.
Governing Legal Doctrines Applied by the Supreme Court
The Court applied controlling principles regarding the nature of credit card transactions: (a) the use of a credit card to pay is an offer to enter into a loan agreement and the creditor‑debtor relationship arises only upon approval of the purchase request (Pantaleon); (b) issuance of a credit card does not create an absolute, demandable right to approval of every purchase; (c) the card membership agreement governs the parties’ relations and, in case of breach, moral damages require fraud or bad faith (Article 2220 and related jurisprudence); (d) gross negligence may amount to bad faith for purposes of moral damages; and (e) the traditional tort requirement that damages must flow from a breach of a legal duty and proximate cause (damnum absque injuria principle) was applied (BPI Express Card and other cited cases).
Factual Application: Disputed Airline Tickets, Payments, and Account Status
The Court examined the sequence of events concerning the Tiger Airways purchases: petitioner purchased airline tickets, later sought cancellation but the airline refused (tickets non‑refundable), and petitioner repeatedly communicated with the airline and bank asserting cancellation. The contested ticket charges remained in successive SOAs (July, August, September, and October 2005) and, while classified as disputed in the October 16, 2005 SOA, they were not resolved at that time. The October SOA reflected a total due of approximately P30,376.79 and a minimum payment of P500; petitioner paid only P347. Union Bank made a credit adjustment on November 7, 2005 to prevent further interest while the dispute was processed, but the bank emphasized that such adjustment was not payment and that the minimum amount remained due. Consequently, when the cardholder attempted to use the card on November 20, 2005, the account was in past‑due status under the bank’s system, which led to disapproval of the transaction. The disputed ticket charges were later resolved in petitioner’s favor and reversals were posted, but the Court gave weight to the state of the account at the time of the Gourdo’s incident.
Supreme Court’s Conclusion on Liability and Damages
The Supreme Court found that Union Bank acted within its rights and in good faith when it disapproved the November 20, 2005 transaction. The Court concluded that issuance of a credit card does not impute an unconditio
...continue readingCase Syllabus (G.R. No. 210928)
Nature of the Case and Procedural Posture
- Petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 assailing the Court of Appeals (CA) Decision dated June 28, 2013 and its Resolution dated January 21, 2014 in CA-G.R. CV No. 96400.
- The CA had affirmed with modification the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Parañaque City, Branch 195 Decision dated June 24, 2010 in Civil Case No. 06-0029.
- RTC originally rendered judgment in favor of petitioner Rex G. Rico (Rico) ordering Union Bank of the Philippines (Union Bank) to pay substantial damages and attorney’s fees; CA affirmed liability but substantially reduced monetary awards.
- Both parties filed motions for reconsideration in the CA; both were denied by the CA in its January 21, 2014 Resolution.
- The sole issue presented to the Supreme Court: whether Rico is entitled to moral damages, exemplary damages and attorney’s fees on account of alleged gross negligence of Union Bank when it dishonored his credit card transaction at a restaurant, causing embarrassment and humiliation.
Antecedent Facts — Card Issuance and Account Details
- Union Bank issued Rico a Union Bank Visa credit card, Account No. 4404-5305-3656, with an original credit limit of P150,000.00 and a cash advance limit of P75,000.00 (later increased credit limit noted in records).
- Multiple disputed entries and transactions appear in Rico’s statements of account (SOAs) for 2005, which form the factual background of the complaint.
- Rico filed a complaint for damages in RTC on January 24, 2006, alleging negligent handling of his credit card account by Union Bank.
Rico’s Allegations (Claims in the Complaint)
- Rico alleged, among other specific grievances:
- He was charged for a “U‑Protect Premium Plan” insurance coverage against unauthorized use, which he disputed.
- He was charged USD $20.00 as an “Expedia Service Fee” reflected in his SOA dated June 10, 2005.
- His transaction with Tiger Airways for airline tickets purchased online on June 18, 2005 was declined by the bank.
- Late payment charges and interest were imposed despite his payment of the May 2005 SOA on June 15, 2005.
- An annual membership fee was imposed despite an alleged bank guarantee that he would not be charged such fee.
- An amount of P30,076.79 was charged in his SOA dated October 15, 2005, when his only actual use during the period was a P347.00 meal at Kitaro Sushi.
- Rico claimed Union Bank dishonored his credit card for alleged non-payment, causing his card to be declined at Gourdo’s Restaurant on November 20, 2005.
- He asserted his SOA dated November 15, 2005 showed a balance of P1,228.84 despite his not using the card during that billing period.
- Rico maintained that even after Union Bank reversed all charges and admitted error, he suffered embarrassment, social humiliation, mental anguish, anxiety, besmirched reputation and wounded feelings due to the Gourdo’s incident.
Union Bank’s Answer and Defenses
- Union Bank asserted it handled Rico’s account diligently and in good faith.
- Specific defenses and explanations included:
- The “U‑Protect Premium Plan” is automatically offered to cardholders meeting certain criteria; cancellation requests sent by mail required processing time and therefore the bank billed the charge in the interim.
- The Expedia service fee resulted from an electronic charge tied to Rico’s online purchase.
- The Tiger Airways transaction was declined later because Rico’s account had entered “past due” status, allegedly because Rico paid his May 2005 SOA only on June 14, 2005 (after the June 8, 2005 due date).
- The annual membership fee was waived only for the first year.
- The October 16, 2005 SOA included the Tiger Airways transaction (P30,376.79 total including P347.00 Kitaro Sushi) because the airline transaction was disputed but unresolved by that SOA issuance; Rico paid only P347.00 instead of the minimum P500.00 due, which resulted in past due status and the subsequent decline at Gourdo’s Restaurant.
- Union Bank prayed for attorney’s fees and litigation expenses, contending Rico failed to comply with the credit card terms and conditions.
RTC Decision (June 24, 2010) — Findings and Awards
- RTC rendered judgment in favor of Rico and against Union Bank. Dispositive awards:
- Moral damages: P500,000.00
- Exemplary damages: P200,000.00
- Attorney’s fees: P300,000.00
- Costs of suit awarded; defendant’s counterclaims dismissed for lack of merit.
- RTC factual determinations and reasoning:
- RTC found the dishonor of Rico’s card on November 20, 2005 was without valid reason because Union Bank reversed all charges in the November 15, 2005 SOA.
- RTC rejected Union Bank’s contention that failure to pay minimum due in October 2005 justified blocking, finding Rico’s outstanding obligation was only P347.00 which he paid on November 3, 2005; thus, he had no liability on November 20, 2005 to justify past-due status.
- RTC concluded Union Bank acted carelessly and negligently in dishonoring the card, placing Rico in an embarrassing situation at Gourdo’s Restaurant.
- RTC emphasized that once a complaint was lodged by the account holder, the bank should act with utmost care and diligence in billing items included or excluded in the SOA.
- RTC characterized Union Bank’s conduct as accompanied by bad faith or wanton and reckless behavior, justifying exemplary damages.
- Attorney’s fees were awarded under Article 2208 of the Civil Code because Rico was compelled to litigate to protect his interest.
Court of Appeals Decision (June 2, 2013) — Affirmation with Modification
- CA affirmed the RTC’s finding of Union Bank’s gross negligence but drastically reduced the monetary awards on the ground that the RTC’s amounts were excessive and must be commensurate with the loss or injury suffered.
- Modified awards ordered by the CA:
- Moral damages: THIRTY THOUSAND PESOS (Php30,000.00)
- Exemplary damages: TWENTY THOUSAND PESOS (Php20,000.00)
- Attorney’s fees: TEN THOUSAND PESOS (Php10,000.00)
- CA reasoning for reduction:
- There is no fixed rule for quantifying moral damages; amounts must reflect the particular facts of each case and be proportionate to the injury suffered.
- Both parties’ motions for reconsideration before the CA were denied (January 21, 2014 Resolution).
Issue Framed Before the Supreme Court
- Whether Rico is ent