JOSEPH SALUDAGA, G.R. No. 179337
Petitioner,
Present:
Ynares-Santiago, J. (Chairperson),
- versus - Austria-Martinez,
Chico-Nazario,
Nachura, and
Reyes, JJ.
FAR EASTERN UNIVERSITY and
EDILBERTO C. DE JESUS in his Promulgated:
capacity as
President of FEU,
Respondents.
April 30, 2008
x
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YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
This Petition for Review on Certiorari[1] under Rule 45 of
the Rules of Court assails the June 29, 2007 Decision[2] of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. CV No. 87050, nullifying and setting aside the November 10, 2004 Decision[3] of the Regional Trial
Court of Manila, Branch 2, in Civil Case No. 98-89483 and dismissing the
complaint filed by petitioner; as well as its August 23, 2007 Resolution[4] denying the Motion for
Reconsideration.[5]
The antecedent facts are as follows:
Petitioner
Joseph Saludaga was a sophomore law student of respondent Far Eastern
University (FEU) when he was shot by Alejandro Rosete (Rosete), one of the security
guards on duty at the school premises on August 18, 1996. Petitioner was rushed to FEU-Dr. Nicanor Reyes
Medical Foundation (FEU-NRMF) due to the wound he sustained.[6] Meanwhile, Rosete was brought to the police station
where he explained that the shooting was accidental. He was eventually released considering that
no formal complaint was filed against him.
Petitioner
thereafter filed a complaint for damages against respondents on the ground that
they breached their obligation to provide students with a safe and secure
environment and an atmosphere conducive to learning. Respondents, in turn, filed a Third-Party
Complaint[7] against Galaxy Development
and Management Corporation (Galaxy), the agency contracted by respondent FEU to
provide security services within its premises and Mariano D. Imperial
(Imperial), Galaxy’s President, to indemnify them for whatever would be adjudged
in favor of petitioner, if any; and to pay attorney’s fees and cost of the
suit. On the other hand, Galaxy and Imperial
filed a Fourth-Party Complaint against AFP General Insurance.[8]
On
November 10, 2004, the trial court rendered a decision in favor of petitioner,
the dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, from the foregoing, judgment is hereby rendered ordering:
1. FEU and Edilberto de Jesus,
in his capacity as president of FEU to pay jointly and severally Joseph
Saludaga the amount of P35,298.25 for actual damages with 12% interest per
annum from the filing of the complaint until fully paid; moral damages of
P300,000.00, exemplary damages of P500,000.00, attorney’s fees of P100,000.00
and cost of the suit;
2. Galaxy Management and
Development Corp. and its president, Col. Mariano Imperial to indemnify jointly
and severally 3rd party plaintiffs (FEU and Edilberto de Jesus in his capacity
as President of FEU) for the above-mentioned amounts;
3. And the 4th party
complaint is dismissed for lack of cause of action. No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.[9]
Respondents appealed to the Court of Appeals which rendered the assailed
Decision, the decretal portion of which provides, viz:
WHEREFORE, the appeal is hereby GRANTED. The Decision dated November 10, 2004 is
hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The
complaint filed by Joseph Saludaga against appellant Far Eastern University and
its President in Civil Case No. 98-89483 is DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.[10]
Petitioner filed a Motion for Reconsideration which was denied; hence,
the instant petition based on the following grounds:
THE COURT OF APPEALS SERIOUSLY ERRED IN MANNER
CONTRARY TO LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE IN RULING THAT:
5.1. THE
SHOOTING INCIDENT IS A FORTUITOUS EVENT;
5.2. RESPONDENTS
ARE NOT LIABLE FOR DAMAGES FOR THE INJURY RESULTING FROM A GUNSHOT WOUND
SUFFERED BY THE PETITIONER FROM THE HANDS OF NO LESS THAN THEIR OWN SECURITY
GUARD IN VIOLATION OF THEIR BUILT-IN CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATION TO PETITIONER,
BEING THEIR LAW STUDENT AT THAT TIME, TO PROVIDE HIM WITH A SAFE AND SECURE
EDUCATIONAL ENVIRONMENT;
5.3. SECURITY
GAURD, ALEJANDRO ROSETE, WHO SHOT PETITIONER WHILE HE WAS WALKING ON HIS WAY TO
THE LAW LIBRARY OF RESPONDENT FEU IS NOT THEIR EMPLOYEE BY VIRTUE OF THE
CONTRACT FOR SECURITY SERVICES BETWEEN GALAXY AND FEU NOTWITHSTANDING THE FACT
THAT PETITIONER, NOT BEING A PARTY TO IT, IS NOT BOUND BY THE SAME UNDER THE
PRINCIPLE OF RELATIVITY OF CONTRACTS; and
5.4. RESPONDENT
EXERCISED DUE DILIGENCE IN SELECTING GALAXY AS THE AGENCY WHICH WOULD PROVIDE
SECURITY SERVICES WITHIN THE PREMISES OF RESPONDENT FEU.[11]
Petitioner is suing respondents for
damages based on the alleged breach of student-school contract for a safe
learning environment. The pertinent
portions of petitioner’s Complaint read:
6.0. At the
time of plaintiff’s confinement, the defendants or any of their representative
did not bother to visit and inquire about his condition. This abject indifference on the part of the
defendants continued even after plaintiff was discharged from the hospital when
not even a word of consolation was heard from them. Plaintiff waited for more than one (1) year
for the defendants to perform their moral obligation but the wait was
fruitless. This indifference and total lack of concern of defendants served to exacerbate
plaintiff’s miserable condition.
x x x x
11.0. Defendants
are responsible for ensuring the safety of its students while the latter are
within the University premises. And that
should anything untoward happens to any of its students while they are within
the University’s premises shall be the responsibility of the defendants. In this case, defendants, despite being
legally and morally bound, miserably failed to protect plaintiff from injury
and thereafter, to mitigate and compensate plaintiff for said injury;
12.0. When
plaintiff enrolled with defendant FEU, a contract was entered into between
them. Under this contract, defendants
are supposed to ensure that adequate steps are taken to provide an atmosphere
conducive to study and ensure the safety of the plaintiff while inside
defendant FEU’s premises. In the instant
case, the latter breached this contract when defendant allowed harm to befall
upon the plaintiff when he was shot at by, of all people, their security guard
who was tasked to maintain peace inside the campus.[12]
In Philippine School of Business Administration v. Court of Appeals,[13] we held that:
When an academic institution
accepts students for enrollment, there is established a contract between them,
resulting in bilateral obligations which both parties are bound to comply with.
For its part, the school undertakes to provide the student with an education
that would presumably suffice to equip him with the necessary tools and skills
to pursue higher education or a profession. On the other hand, the student
covenants to abide by the school's academic requirements and observe its rules
and regulations.
Institutions of learning must
also meet the implicit or "built-in" obligation of providing their
students with an atmosphere that promotes or assists in attaining its primary
undertaking of imparting knowledge. Certainly, 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. Necessarily, the school must ensure that adequate steps are taken to
maintain peace and order within the campus premises and to prevent the
breakdown thereof.[14]
It is undisputed that petitioner was enrolled as a sophomore law student
in respondent FEU. As such, there was
created a contractual obligation between the two parties. On petitioner’s part, he was obliged to
comply with the rules and regulations of the school. On the other hand, respondent FEU, as a
learning institution is mandated to impart knowledge and equip its students with
the necessary skills to pursue higher education or a profession. At the same time, it is obliged to ensure and
take adequate steps to maintain peace and order within the campus.
It is settled that in culpa contractual, the mere proof of the existence
of the contract and the failure of its compliance justify, prima facie, a
corresponding right of relief.[15] In the instant case, we find that, when
petitioner was shot inside the campus by no less the security guard who was
hired to maintain peace and secure the premises, there is a prima facie showing
that respondents failed to comply with its obligation to provide a safe and
secure environment to its students.
In order to avoid liability, however, respondents aver that the shooting
incident was a fortuitous event because they could not have reasonably foreseen
nor avoided the accident caused by Rosete as he was not their employee;[16] and that they complied
with their obligation to ensure a safe learning environment for their students
by having exercised due diligence in selecting the security services of Galaxy.
After a thorough review of the records, we find that respondents failed to discharge the burden of proving
that they exercised due diligence in providing a safe learning environment for
their students. They failed to prove
that they ensured that the guards assigned in the campus met the requirements stipulated
in the Security Service Agreement. Indeed,
certain documents about Galaxy were presented during trial; however, no
evidence as to the qualifications of Rosete as a security guard for the
university was offered.
Respondents also failed to show that they undertook
steps to ascertain and confirm that the security guards assigned to them actually
possess the qualifications required in the Security Service Agreement. It was not proven that they examined the
clearances, psychiatric test results, 201 files, and other vital documents enumerated
in its contract with Galaxy. Total
reliance on the security agency about these matters or failure to check the
papers stating the qualifications of the guards is negligence on the part of
respondents. A learning institution should
not be allowed to completely relinquish or abdicate security matters in its
premises to the security agency it hired.
To do so would result to contracting away its inherent obligation to
ensure a safe learning environment for its students.
Consequently, respondents’ defense of force
majeure must fail. In order for force
majeure to be considered, respondents must show that no negligence or
misconduct was committed that may have occasioned the loss. An act of God
cannot be invoked to protect a person who has failed to take steps to forestall
the possible adverse consequences of such a loss. One’s negligence may
have concurred with an act of God in producing damage and injury to another;
nonetheless, showing that the immediate or proximate cause of the damage or
injury was a fortuitous event would not exempt one from liability. When
the effect is found to be partly the result of a person’s participation –
whether by active intervention, neglect or failure to act – the whole
occurrence is humanized and removed from the rules applicable to acts of God.[17]
Article 1170 of the Civil Code provides that those who
are negligent in the performance of their obligations are liable for
damages. Accordingly, for breach of
contract due to negligence in providing a safe learning environment, respondent
FEU is liable to petitioner for damages. It is essential in
the award of damages that the claimant must have satisfactorily proven during
the trial the existence of the factual basis of the damages and its causal
connection to defendant’s acts.[18]
In the instant case, it was
established that petitioner spent P35,298.25 for his hospitalization and other medical
expenses.[19] While the trial court correctly imposed
interest on said amount, however, the case at bar involves an obligation
arising from a contract and not a loan or forbearance of money. As such, the proper rate of legal interest is
six percent (6%) per annum of the amount demanded. Such interest shall continue to run from the
filing of the complaint until the finality of this Decision.[20] After this Decision becomes final and
executory, the applicable rate shall be twelve percent (12%) per annum until
its satisfaction.
The other expenses being
claimed by petitioner, such as transportation expenses and those incurred in
hiring a personal assistant while recuperating were however not duly supported
by receipts.[21]
In the absence thereof, no actual
damages may be awarded. Nonetheless,
temperate damages under Art. 2224 of the Civil Code may be recovered where it
has been shown that the claimant suffered some pecuniary loss but the amount
thereof cannot be proved with certainty.
Hence, the amount of P20,000.00 as temperate damages is awarded to
petitioner.
As regards the award of moral
damages, there is no hard and fast rule in the determination of what would be a
fair amount of moral damages since each case must be governed by its own
peculiar circumstances.[22] The testimony of petitioner about his physical
suffering, mental anguish, fright, serious anxiety, and moral shock resulting
from the shooting incident[23] justify
the award of moral damages. However, moral
damages are in the category of an award designed to compensate the claimant for
actual injury suffered and not to impose a penalty on the wrongdoer. The award is not meant to enrich the
complainant at the expense of the defendant, but to enable the injured party to
obtain means, diversion, or amusements that will serve to obviate the moral
suffering he has undergone. It is aimed
at the restoration, within the limits of the possible, of the spiritual status
quo ante, and should be proportionate to the suffering inflicted. Trial courts must then guard against the award
of exorbitant damages; they should exercise balanced restrained and measured
objectivity to avoid suspicion that it was due to passion, prejudice, or
corruption on the part of the trial court.[24] We deem it just and reasonable under the
circumstances to award petitioner moral damages in the amount of P100,000.00.
Likewise, attorney’s fees and litigation expenses in the amount of
P50,000.00 as part of damages is reasonable in view of Article 2208 of the
Civil Code.[25]
However, the award of exemplary damages is deleted considering the
absence of proof that respondents acted in a wanton, fraudulent, reckless,
oppressive, or malevolent manner.
We note that the trial court held respondent De Jesus solidarily liable
with respondent FEU. In Powton
Conglomerate, Inc. v. Agcolicol,[26] we held that:
[A] corporation is invested by law with a personality
separate and distinct from those of the persons composing it, such that, save
for certain exceptions, corporate officers who entered into contracts in behalf
of the corporation cannot be held personally liable for the liabilities of the
latter. Personal liability of a
corporate director, trustee or officer along (although not necessarily) with
the corporation may so validly attach, as a rule, only when – (1) he assents to a patently unlawful act of the
corporation, or when he is guilty of bad faith or gross negligence in directing
its affairs, or when there is a conflict of interest resulting in damages to
the corporation, its stockholders or other persons; (2) he consents to the issuance of watered down
stocks or who, having knowledge thereof, does not forthwith file with the
corporate secretary his written objection thereto; (3) he agrees to hold
himself personally and solidarily liable with the corporation; or (4) he is
made by a specific provision of law personally answerable for his corporate action.[27]
None of the foregoing exceptions was established in the instant case; hence,
respondent De Jesus should not be held solidarily liable with respondent FEU.
Incidentally, although the main cause of action in the instant case is
the breach of the school-student contract, petitioner, in the alternative, also
holds respondents vicariously liable under Article 2180 of the Civil Code,
which provides:
Art. 2180. The
obligation imposed by Article 2176 is demandable not only for one’s own acts or
omissions, but also for those of persons for whom one is responsible.
x x x x
Employers shall be liable for the damages caused by
their employees and household helpers acting within the scope of their assigned
tasks, even though the former are not engaged in any business or industry.
x x x x
The responsibility treated of
in this article shall cease when the persons herein mentioned prove that they
observed all the diligence of a good father of a family to prevent damage.
We agree with the findings of
the Court of Appeals that respondents cannot be held liable for damages under Art.
2180 of the Civil Code because respondents are not the employers of Rosete. The latter was employed by Galaxy.
The instructions issued by respondents’ Security Consultant to Galaxy
and its security guards are ordinarily no more than requests commonly envisaged
in the contract for services entered into by a principal and a security
agency. They cannot be construed as the
element of control as to treat respondents as the employers of Rosete.[28]
As held in Mercury Drug
Corporation v. Libunao:[29]
In
Soliman, Jr. v. Tuazon,[30] we held
that where the security agency recruits, hires and assigns
the works of its watchmen or security guards to a client, the employer of such guards or watchmen is such agency,
and not the client, since the latter has no hand in selecting
the security guards. Thus, the duty to observe the diligence
of a good father of a family cannot be demanded from the said client:
…
[I]t is settled in our jurisdiction that where the security
agency, as here, recruits, hires and assigns the work of its watchmen or security guards, the agency is the employer of such guards or
watchmen. Liability for illegal or harmful acts committed by the security
guards attaches to the employer agency, and not to the clients or customers of
such agency. As a general rule, a client or customer of a security agency has no hand in selecting who among the pool of security guards or watchmen employed by the agency shall be
assigned to it; the duty to observe the diligence of a good father of a family
in the selection of the guards cannot, in the ordinary course of events, be
demanded from the client whose premises or property are
protected by the security guards.
x
x x x
The
fact that a client company may give instructions or directions to the security
guards assigned to it, does not, by itself, render the client responsible as an
employer of the security guards concerned and liable for their wrongful acts or
omissions.[31]
We now come to respondents’ Third Party Claim against Galaxy. In Firestone Tire and Rubber Company of
the Philippines v. Tempengko,[32] we held that:
The third-party complaint is,
therefore, a procedural device whereby a ‘third party’ who is neither a party
nor privy to the act or deed complained of by the plaintiff, may be brought
into the case with leave of court, by the defendant, who acts as third-party
plaintiff to enforce against such third-party defendant a right for
contribution, indemnity, subrogation or any other relief, in respect of the
plaintiff’s claim. The third-party
complaint is actually independent of and separate and distinct from the
plaintiff’s complaint. Were it not for
this provision of the Rules of Court, it would have to be filed independently
and separately from the original complaint by the defendant against the
third-party. But the Rules permit
defendant to bring in a third-party defendant or so to speak, to litigate his
separate cause of action in respect of plaintiff’s claim against a third-party
in the original and principal case with the object of avoiding circuitry of
action and unnecessary proliferation of law suits and of disposing
expeditiously in one litigation the entire subject matter arising from one
particular set of facts.[33]
Respondents and Galaxy were able to litigate their respective claims and
defenses in the course of the trial of petitioner’s complaint. Evidence duly supports the findings of the
trial court that Galaxy is negligent not only in the selection of its employees
but also in their supervision. Indeed, no
administrative sanction was imposed against Rosete despite the shooting
incident; moreover, he was even allowed to go on leave of absence which led
eventually to his disappearance.[34] Galaxy also failed to monitor petitioner’s
condition or extend the necessary assistance, other than the P5,000.00
initially given to petitioner. Galaxy
and Imperial failed to make good their pledge to reimburse petitioner’s medical
expenses.
For these acts
of negligence and for having supplied respondent FEU with an unqualified
security guard, which resulted to the latter’s breach of obligation to
petitioner, it is proper to hold Galaxy liable to respondent FEU for such
damages equivalent to the above-mentioned amounts awarded to petitioner.
Unlike
respondent De Jesus, we deem Imperial to be solidarily liable with Galaxy for
being grossly negligent in directing the affairs of the security agency. It was Imperial who assured petitioner that
his medical expenses will be shouldered by Galaxy but said representations were
not fulfilled because they presumed that petitioner and his family were no
longer interested in filing a formal complaint against them.[35]
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED.
The June 29, 2007 Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No.
87050 nullifying the Decision of the trial court and dismissing the complaint
as well as the August 23, 2007 Resolution denying the Motion for
Reconsideration are REVERSED and SET
ASIDE. The Decision of the Regional Trial Court of
Manila, Branch 2, in Civil Case No. 98-89483 finding respondent FEU liable for
damages for breach of its obligation to provide students with a safe and secure
learning atmosphere, is AFFIRMED with the following MODIFICATIONS:
a. respondent Far Eastern University (FEU) is ORDERED to
pay petitioner actual damages in the amount of P35,298.25,
plus 6% interest per annum from the filing of the complaint until the finality
of this Decision. After this decision
becomes final and executory, the applicable rate shall be twelve percent (12%)
per annum until its satisfaction;
b. respondent FEU is also ORDERED to
pay petitioner temperate damages in the
amount of P20,000.00; moral damages in the amount of P100,000.00; and attorney’s
fees and litigation expenses in the amount of P50,000.00;
c. the award of exemplary damages is DELETED.
The Complaint against respondent Edilberto C. De Jesus is DISMISSED.
The counterclaims of respondents are
likewise DISMISSED.
Galaxy
Development and Management Corporation (Galaxy) and its president, Mariano D. Imperial
are ORDERED to jointly and
severally pay respondent FEU damages equivalent to the above-mentioned amounts
awarded to petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
CONSUELO
YNARES-SANTIAGO
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
MA. ALICIA AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ
Associate Justice
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIO ANTONIO
EDUARDO B. NACHURA
Associate
Justice Associate Justice
RUBEN T. REYES
Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I attest that the conclusions in the above decision were
reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the
opinion of the Court’s Division.
CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO
Associate Justice
Chairperson, Third Division
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution
and the Division Chairperson’s Attestation, it is hereby certified that the
conclusions in the above Decision were reached in consultation before the case
was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.
REYNATO
S. PUNO
Chief Justice
[1] Rollo, pp. 3-33.
[2] Id. at 38-62; penned by Associate Justice Mariano C. Del Castillo
and concurred in by Associate Justices Arcangelita Romilla Lontok and Romeo F.
Barza.
[3] Id. at 67-75; penned by Judge Alejandro G. Bijasa.
[4] Id. at 64-65.
[5] Id. at 160-177.
[6] Id. at 188.
[7] Records, Vol. I, pp.
136-139.
[8] Id. at 287-290.
[9] Rollo, pp. 74-75.
[10] Id. at 61.
[11] Id. at 13-14.
[12] Records, Vol. I, pp. 1-6.
[13] G.R. No. 84698, February
4, 1992, 205 SCRA 729.
[14] Id. at 733-734.
[15]
FGU Insurance Corporation v. G.P. Sarmiento Trucking Corporation, 435
Phil. 333, 341 (2002).
[16] Records, Vol. 1, pp.
76-86.
[17] Mindex Resources
Development v. Morillo, 428 Phil. 934, 944 (2002).
[18] Roque, Jr. v. Torres,
G.R. No. 157632, December 6, 2006, 510 SCRA 336, 348.
[19] TSN, September 20, 1999,
pp. 20-21; Records, Vol. I, pp. 316-322; Records, Vol. II, p. 597.
[20] Eastern Shipping
Lines, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 97412, July 12, 1994, 234
SCRA 78, 95-97.
[21] TSN, September 27, 1999,
pp. 5, 9.
[22] Roque v. Torres, supra
note 18 at 349.
[23] TSN, September 20, 1999,
pp. 10, 12-13; September 27, 1999, pp. 3, 5-9.
[24] ABS-CBN Broadcasting
Corporation v. Court of Appeals, 361 Phil. 499, 529-530 (1999).
[25] Civil Code, Art. 2208:
In the absence of stipulation, attorney's fees and expenses of
litigation, other than judicial costs, cannot be recovered, except:
(2) when the
defendant's act or omission has compelled the plaintiff to litigate with third
persons or to incur expenses to protect his interest;
[26] 448 Phil. 643 (2003).
[27] Id. at 656.
[28] Records, Vol. I, pp.
43-55 (FEU) and pp. 56-68 (Galaxy).
[29] G.R. No. 144458,
July 14, 2004, 434 SCRA 404.
[30] G.R. No. 66207, May 18,
1992, 209 SCRA 47.
[31] Mercury Drug Corporation v.
Libunao, supra
at 414-418.
[32] 137 Phil. 239 (1969).
[33] Id. at 243-244.
[34] Rollo, p. 74.
[35] Records, Vol. I, p. 330.