FIRST DIVISI ON
[G.R.
No. 126334.
November 23, 2001]
EMILIO EMNACE, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS, ESTATE OF VICENTE TABANAO, SHERWIN TABANAO, VICENTE WILLIAM TABANAO, JANETTE TABANAO DEPOSOY, VICENTA MAY TABANAO VARELA, ROSELA TABANAO and VINCENT TABANAO, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
Petitioner Emilio Emnace, Vicente
Tabanao and Jacinto Divinagracia were partners in a business concern known as
Ma. Nelma Fishing Industry. Sometime in
January of 1986, they decided to dissolve their partnership and executed an
agreement of partition and distribution of the partnership properties among
them, consequent to Jacinto Divinagracia’s withdrawal from the partnership.[1] Among the assets to be
distributed were five (5) fishing boats, six (6) vehicles, two (2) parcels of
land located at Sto. Niño and Talisay, Negros Occidental, and cash deposits in
the local branches of the Bank of the Philippine Islands and Prudential Bank.
Throughout the existence of the
partnership, and even after Vicente Tabanao’s untimely demise in 1994, petitioner
failed to submit to Tabanao’s heirs any statement of assets and liabilities of
the partnership, and to render an accounting of the partnership’s
finances. Petitioner also reneged on
his promise to turn over to Tabanao’s heirs the deceased’s 1/3 share in the
total assets of the partnership, amounting to P30,000,000.00, or the sum of
P10,000,000.00, despite formal demand for payment thereof.[2]
Consequently, Tabanao’s heirs,
respondents herein, filed against petitioner an action for accounting, payment
of shares, division of assets and damages.[3] In their complaint,
respondents prayed as follows:
1. Defendant be ordered to render the proper accounting of all the assets and liabilities of the partnership at bar; and
2. After due notice and hearing defendant be ordered to pay/remit/deliver/surrender/yield to the plaintiffs the following:
A. No less than One Third (1/3) of the assets, properties, dividends, cash, land(s), fishing vessels, trucks, motor vehicles, and other forms and substance of treasures which belong and/or should belong, had accrued and/or must accrue to the partnership;
B. No less than Two Hundred Thousand Pesos (P200,000.00) as moral damages;
C. Attorney’s fees
equivalent to Thirty Percent (30%) of the entire share/amount/award which the Honorable
Court may resolve the plaintiffs as entitled to plus P1,000.00 for every
appearance in court.[4]
Petitioner filed a motion to
dismiss the complaint on the grounds of improper venue, lack of jurisdiction
over the nature of the action or suit, and lack of capacity of the estate of
Tabanao to sue.[5] On August 30, 1994, the
trial court denied the motion to dismiss.
It held that venue was properly laid because, while realties were
involved, the action was directed against a particular person on the basis of
his personal liability; hence, the action is not only a personal action but
also an action in personam. As
regards petitioner’s argument of lack of jurisdiction over the action because
the prescribed docket fee was not paid considering the huge amount involved in
the claim, the trial court noted that a request for accounting was made in
order that the exact value of the partnership may be ascertained and, thus, the
correct docket fee may be paid.
Finally, the trial court held that the heirs of Tabanao had a right to
sue in their own names, in view of the provision of Article 777 of the Civil
Code, which states that the rights to the succession are transmitted from the
moment of the death of the decedent.[6]
The following day, respondents
filed an amended complaint,[7] incorporating the additional prayer that petitioner
be ordered to “sell all (the partnership’s) assets and thereafter
pay/remit/deliver/surrender/yield to the plaintiffs” their corresponding share
in the proceeds thereof. In due time, petitioner
filed a manifestation and motion to dismiss,[8] arguing that the trial court did not acquire
jurisdiction over the case due to the plaintiffs’ failure to pay the proper
docket fees. Further, in a supplement
to his motion to dismiss,[9] petitioner also raised
prescription as an additional ground warranting the outright dismissal of the
complaint.
On June 15, 1995, the trial court
issued an Order,[10] denying the motion to
dismiss inasmuch as the grounds raised therein were basically the same as the
earlier motion to dismiss which has been denied. Anent the issue of prescription, the trial court ruled that
prescription begins to run only upon the dissolution of the partnership when
the final accounting is done. Hence,
prescription has not set in the absence of a final accounting. Moreover, an action based on a written
contract prescribes in ten years from the time the right of action accrues.
Petitioner filed a petition for certiorari
before the Court of Appeals,[11] raising the following
issues:
I. Whether or not respondent Judge acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion in taking cognizance of a case despite the failure to pay the required docket fee;
II. Whether or not respondent Judge acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion in insisting to try the case which involve (sic) a parcel of land situated outside of its territorial jurisdiction;
III. Whether or not respondent Judge acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion in allowing the estate of the deceased to appear as party plaintiff, when there is no intestate case and filed by one who was never appointed by the court as administratrix of the estates; and
IV. Whether or not respondent Judge acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion in not dismissing the case on the ground of prescription.
On August 8, 1996, the Court of
Appeals rendered the assailed decision,[12] dismissing the petition for certiorari, upon
a finding that no grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction was committed by the trial court in issuing the questioned orders
denying petitioner’s motions to dismiss.
Not satisfied, petitioner filed
the instant petition for review, raising the same issues resolved by the Court
of Appeals, namely:
I. Failure to pay the proper docket fee;
II. Parcel of land subject of the case pending before the trial court is outside the said court’s territorial jurisdiction;
III. Lack of capacity to sue on the part of plaintiff heirs of Vicente Tabanao; and
IV. Prescription of the plaintiff heirs’ cause of action.
It can be readily seen that
respondents’ primary and ultimate objective in instituting the action below was
to recover the decedent’s 1/3 share in the partnership’s assets. While they ask for an accounting of the
partnership’s assets and finances, what they are actually asking is for the
trial court to compel petitioner to pay and turn over their share, or the
equivalent value thereof, from the proceeds of the sale of the partnership
assets. They also assert that until and
unless a proper accounting is done, the exact value of the partnership’s
assets, as well as their corresponding share therein, cannot be
ascertained. Consequently, they feel
justified in not having paid the commensurate docket fee as required by the
Rules of Court.
We do not agree. The trial court does not have to employ
guesswork in ascertaining the estimated value of the partnership’s assets, for
respondents themselves voluntarily pegged the worth thereof at Thirty Million Pesos
(P30,000,000.00). Hence, this case is
one which is really not beyond pecuniary estimation, but rather partakes of the
nature of a simple collection case where the value of the subject assets or
amount demanded is pecuniarily determinable.[13] While it is true that the exact value of the
partnership’s total assets cannot be shown with certainty at the time of
filing, respondents can and must ascertain, through informed and practical
estimation, the amount they expect to collect from the partnership,
particularly from petitioner, in order to determine the proper amount of docket
and other fees.[14] It is thus imperative for respondents to pay the
corresponding docket fees in order that the trial court may acquire
jurisdiction over the action.[15]
Nevertheless, unlike in the case
of Manchester Development Corp. v. Court of Appeals,[16] where there was clearly an effort to defraud the
government in avoiding to pay the correct docket fees, we see no attempt to
cheat the courts on the part of respondents.
In fact, the lower courts have noted their expressed desire to remit to
the court “any payable balance or lien on whatever award which the Honorable
Court may grant them in this case should there be any deficiency in the payment
of the docket fees to be computed by the Clerk of Court.”[17] There is evident willingness to pay, and the fact
that the docket fee paid so far is inadequate is not an indication that they
are trying to avoid paying the required amount, but may simply be due to an
inability to pay at the time of filing.
This consideration may have moved the trial court and the Court of
Appeals to declare that the unpaid docket fees shall be considered a lien on
the judgment award.
Petitioner, however, argues that
the trial court and the Court of Appeals erred in condoning the non-payment of
the proper legal fees and in allowing the same to become a lien on the monetary
or property judgment that may be rendered in favor of respondents. There is merit in petitioner’s assertion. The third paragraph of Section 16, Rule 141
of the Rules of Court states that:
The legal fees shall be a lien on the monetary or property judgment in favor of the pauper-litigant.
Respondents cannot invoke the
above provision in their favor because it specifically applies to
pauper-litigants. Nowhere in the
records does it appear that respondents are litigating as paupers, and as such
are exempted from the payment of court fees.[18]
The rule applicable to the case at
bar is Section 5(a) of Rule 141 of the Rules of Court, which defines the two
kinds of claims as: (1) those which are immediately ascertainable; and (2)
those which cannot be immediately ascertained as to the exact amount. This second class of claims, where the exact
amount still has to be finally determined by the courts based on evidence presented,
falls squarely under the third paragraph of said Section 5(a), which provides:
In case the value of the property or estate or the sum claimed is less or more in accordance with the appraisal of the court, the difference of fee shall be refunded or paid as the case may be. (Underscoring ours)
In Pilipinas Shell Petroleum
Corporation v. Court of Appeals,[19] this Court pronounced that the above-quoted
provision “clearly contemplates an initial payment of the filing fees
corresponding to the estimated amount of the claim subject to adjustment as to
what later may be proved.”[20] Moreover, we reiterated therein the principle that
the payment of filing fees cannot be made contingent or dependent on the result
of the case. Thus, an initial payment
of the docket fees based on an estimated amount must be paid simultaneous with
the filing of the complaint. Otherwise,
the court would stand to lose the filing fees should the judgment later turn
out to be adverse to any claim of the respondent heirs.
The matter of payment of docket
fees is not a mere triviality. These
fees are necessary to defray court expenses in the handling of cases. Consequently, in order to avoid tremendous
losses to the judiciary, and to the government as well, the payment of docket
fees cannot be made dependent on the outcome of the case, except when the
claimant is a pauper-litigant.
Applied to the instant case,
respondents have a specific claim – 1/3 of the value of all the partnership
assets – but they did not allege a specific amount. They did, however, estimate the partnership’s total assets to be
worth Thirty Million Pesos (P30,000,000.00), in a letter[21] addressed to petitioner. Respondents cannot now say that they are unable to make an
estimate, for the said letter and the admissions therein form part of the
records of this case. They cannot avoid
paying the initial docket fees by conveniently omitting the said amount in
their amended complaint. This estimate
can be made the basis for the initial docket fees that respondents should pay. Even if it were later established that the
amount proved was less or more than the amount alleged or estimated, Rule 141,
Section 5(a) of the Rules of Court specifically provides that the court may
refund the excess or exact additional fees should the initial payment be
insufficient. It is clear that it is
only the difference between the amount finally awarded and the fees paid upon
filing of this complaint that is subject to adjustment and which may be
subjected to a lien.
In the oft-quoted case of Sun Insurance
Office, Ltd. v. Hon. Maximiano Asuncion,[22] this Court held that when
the specific claim “has been left for the determination by the court, the
additional filing fee therefor shall constitute a lien on the judgment and it
shall be the responsibility of the Clerk of Court or his duly authorized deputy
to enforce said lien and assess and collect the additional fee.” Clearly, the
rules and jurisprudence contemplate the initial payment of filing and docket
fees based on the estimated claims of the plaintiff, and it is only when there
is a deficiency that a lien may be constituted on the judgment award until such
additional fee is collected.
Based on the foregoing, the trial
court erred in not dismissing the complaint outright despite their failure to
pay the proper docket fees.
Nevertheless, as in other procedural rules, it may be liberally
construed in certain cases if only to secure a just and speedy disposition of
an action. While the rule is that the
payment of the docket fee in the proper amount should be adhered to, there are
certain exceptions which must be strictly construed.[23]
In recent rulings, this Court has
relaxed the strict adherence to the Manchester doctrine, allowing the
plaintiff to pay the proper docket fees within a reasonable time before the
expiration of the applicable prescriptive or reglementary period.[24]
In the recent case of National
Steel Corp. v. Court of Appeals,[25] this Court held that:
The court acquires jurisdiction over the action if the filing of the initiatory pleading is accompanied by the payment of the requisite fees, or, if the fees are not paid at the time of the filing of the pleading, as of the time of full payment of the fees within such reasonable time as the court may grant, unless, of course, prescription has set in the meantime.
It does not follow, however, that the trial court should have dismissed the complaint for failure of private respondent to pay the correct amount of docket fees. Although the payment of the proper docket fees is a jurisdictional requirement, the trial court may allow the plaintiff in an action to pay the same within a reasonable time before the expiration of the applicable prescriptive or reglementary period. If the plaintiff fails to comply within this requirement, the defendant should timely raise the issue of jurisdiction or else he would be considered in estoppel. In the latter case, the balance between the appropriate docket fees and the amount actually paid by the plaintiff will be considered a lien or any award he may obtain in his favor. (Underscoring ours)
Accordingly, the trial court in
the case at bar should determine the proper docket fee based on the estimated
amount that respondents seek to collect from petitioner, and direct them to pay
the same within a reasonable time, provided the applicable prescriptive or
reglementary period has not yet expired.
Failure to comply therewith, and upon motion by petitioner, the
immediate dismissal of the complaint shall issue on jurisdictional grounds.
On the matter of improper venue,
we find no error on the part of the trial court and the Court of Appeals in
holding that the case below is a personal action which, under the Rules, may be
commenced and tried where the defendant resides or may be found, or where the
plaintiffs reside, at the election of the latter.[26]
Petitioner, however, insists that
venue was improperly laid since the action is a real action involving a parcel
of land that is located outside the territorial jurisdiction of the court a
quo. This contention is not
well-taken. The records indubitably
show that respondents are asking that the assets of the partnership be
accounted for, sold and distributed according to the agreement of the
partners. The fact that two of the
assets of the partnership are parcels of land does not materially change the
nature of the action. It is an action in
personam because it is an action against a person, namely, petitioner, on
the basis of his personal liability. It
is not an action in rem where the action is against the thing itself
instead of against the person.[27] Furthermore, there is no showing that the parcels of
land involved in this case are being disputed.
In fact, it is only incidental that part of the assets of the
partnership under liquidation happen to be parcels of land.
The time-tested case of Claridades
v. Mercader, et al.,[28] settled this issue thus:
The fact that plaintiff prays for the sale of the assets of the partnership, including the fishpond in question, did not change the nature or character of the action, such sale being merely a necessary incident of the liquidation of the partnership, which should precede and/or is part of its process of dissolution.
The action filed by respondents
not only seeks redress against petitioner.
It also seeks the enforcement of, and petitioner’s compliance with, the
contract that the partners executed to formalize the partnership’s dissolution,
as well as to implement the liquidation and partition of the partnership’s
assets. Clearly, it is a personal
action that, in effect, claims a debt from petitioner and seeks the performance
of a personal duty on his part.[29] In fine, respondents’ complaint seeking the
liquidation and partition of the assets of the partnership with damages is a
personal action which may be filed in the proper court where any of the parties
reside.[30] Besides, venue has nothing to do with jurisdiction
for venue touches more upon the substance or merits of the case.[31] As it is, venue in this case was properly laid and
the trial court correctly ruled so.
On the third issue, petitioner
asserts that the surviving spouse of Vicente Tabanao has no legal capacity to
sue since she was never appointed as administratrix or executrix of his
estate. Petitioner’s objection in this
regard is misplaced. The surviving
spouse does not need to be appointed as executrix or administratrix of the
estate before she can file the action.
She and her children are complainants in their own right as successors
of Vicente Tabanao. From the very
moment of Vicente Tabanao’s death, his rights insofar as the partnership was
concerned were transmitted to his heirs, for rights to the succession are
transmitted from the moment of death of the decedent.[32]
Whatever claims and rights Vicente
Tabanao had against the partnership and petitioner were transmitted to
respondents by operation of law, more particularly by succession, which is a
mode of acquisition by virtue of which the property, rights and obligations to
the extent of the value of the inheritance of a person are transmitted.[33] Moreover, respondents became owners of their
respective hereditary shares from the moment Vicente Tabanao died.[34]
A prior settlement of the estate,
or even the appointment of Salvacion Tabanao as executrix or administratrix, is
not necessary for any of the heirs to acquire legal capacity to sue. As successors who stepped into the shoes of
their decedent upon his death, they can commence any action originally
pertaining to the decedent.[35] From the moment of his death, his rights as a
partner and to demand fulfillment of petitioner’s obligations as outlined in
their dissolution agreement were transmitted to respondents. They, therefore, had the capacity to sue and
seek the court’s intervention to compel petitioner to fulfill his obligations.
Finally, petitioner contends that
the trial court should have dismissed the complaint on the ground of
prescription, arguing that respondents’ action prescribed four (4) years after
it accrued in 1986. The trial court and
the Court of Appeals gave scant consideration to petitioner’s hollow arguments,
and rightly so.
The three (3) final stages of a
partnership are: (1) dissolution; (2) winding-up; and (3) termination.[36] The partnership, although dissolved, continues to
exist and its legal personality is retained, at which time it completes the
winding up of its affairs, including the partitioning and distribution of the
net partnership assets to the partners.[37] For as long as the partnership exists, any of the
partners may demand an accounting of the partnership’s business. Prescription of the said right starts to run
only upon the dissolution of the partnership when the final accounting is done.[38]
Contrary to petitioner’s
protestations that respondents’ right to inquire into the business affairs of
the partnership accrued in 1986, prescribing four (4) years thereafter,
prescription had not even begun to run in the absence of a final
accounting. Article 1842 of the Civil
Code provides:
The right to an account of his interest shall accrue to any partner, or his legal representative as against the winding up partners or the surviving partners or the person or partnership continuing the business, at the date of dissolution, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary.
Applied in relation to Articles
1807 and 1809, which also deal with the duty to account, the above-cited
provision states that the right to demand an accounting accrues at the date of
dissolution in the absence of any agreement to the contrary. When a final accounting is made, it is only
then that prescription begins to run.
In the case at bar, no final accounting has been made, and that is
precisely what respondents are seeking in their action before the trial court,
since petitioner has failed or refused to render an accounting of the
partnership’s business and assets.
Hence, the said action is not barred by prescription.
In fine, the trial court neither
erred nor abused its discretion when it denied petitioner’s motions to
dismiss. Likewise, the Court of Appeals
did not commit reversible error in upholding the trial court’s orders. Precious time has been lost just to settle
this preliminary issue, with petitioner resurrecting the very same arguments
from the trial court all the way up to the Supreme Court. The litigation of the merits and substantial
issues of this controversy is now long overdue and must proceed without further
delay.
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, the instant petition
is DENIED for lack of merit, and the case is REMANDED to the Regional Trial
Court of Cadiz City, Branch 60, which is ORDERED to determine the proper docket
fee based on the estimated amount that plaintiffs therein seek to collect, and
direct said plaintiffs to pay the same within a reasonable time, provided the
applicable prescriptive or reglementary period has not yet expired. Thereafter, the trial court is ORDERED to
conduct the appropriate proceedings in Civil Case No. 416-C.
Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., (Chairman),
Puno, Kapunan, and Pardo, JJ., concur.
[1] Record, pp. 30-31.
[2] Ibid., pp.
32-33.
[3] Civil Case No. 416-C
before the RTC of Cadiz City, Branch 60.
[4] Rollo, p. 41.
[5] Ibid., pp.
44-47.
[6] Id., pp.
108-112.
[7] Appendix “H”, Rollo,
pp. 93-100.
[8] Appendix “I”, Rollo,
pp. 101-104.
[9] Appendix “J”, Rollo,
pp. 105-107.
[10] Appendix “L”, Rollo,
pp. 113-115.
[11] CA-G.R. No. 37878,
Records, pp. 2-18.
[12] Rollo, pp.
119-126.
[13] Colarina v. Court of
Appeals, 303 SCRA 647, 652-653 (1999).
[14] Gregorio v. Angeles,
180 SCRA 490, 494-495 (1989).
[15] Ballatan v. Court of
Appeals, 304 SCRA 34, 42 (1999).
[16] 149 SCRA 562 (1987).
[17] Opposition to Motion
to Dismiss, Records, p. 60.
[18] Pilipinas Shell
Petroleum Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 171 SCRA 674, 681 (1989).
[19] Supra.
[20] Ibid., p.
680.
[21] Record, p. 32.
[22] 170 SCRA 274, 285
(1989).
[23] Colarina, Supra,
p. 654.
[24] Colarina, Supra;
De Zuzuarregui v. Court of Appeals, 174 SCRA 54, 59 (1989); Pantranco
North Express, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 224 SCRA 477, 491 (1993); Talisay-Silay
Milling Co. v. Asociacion de Agricultores de Talisay-Silay, Inc., 247
SCRA 361, 384-385 (1995).
[25] 302 SCRA 522, 531
(1999).
[26] Section 2(b), Rule 4
of the Rules of Court.
[27] Asiavest Limited v.
Court of Appeals, 296 SCRA 539, 552 (1998).
[28] 17 SCRA 1, 4 (1966).
[29] Ruiz v. Court of
Appeals, 303 SCRA 637, 645 (1999).
[30] La Tondeña
Distillers, Inc. v. Ponferrada, 264 SCRA 540, 545 (1996).
[31] Philippine Banking
Corp. v. Tensuan, 228 SCRA 385, 396 (1993).
[32] Coronel v. Court of
Appeals, 263 SCRA 15, 34 (1996); Article 777 of the Civil Code.
[33] Civil Code, Art.
774.
[34] Opulencia v. Court
of Appeals, 293 SCRA 385, 394 (1998).
[35] Heirs of Ignacio
Conti v. Court of Appeals, 300 SCRA 345, 354 (1998).
[36] Idos v. Court of
Appeals, 296 SCRA 194, 205 (1998).
[37] Sy v. Court of
Appeals, 313 SCRA 328, 347 (1999); Ortega v. Court of Appeals, 245 SCRA
529, 536 (1995).
[38] Fue Leung v.
IAC, 169 SCRA 746, 755 (1989).