Third Division G.R. No. 120553, June 17, 1997: Supreme Court of The Philippines
Third Division G.R. No. 120553, June 17, 1997: Supreme Court of The Philippines
Third Division G.R. No. 120553, June 17, 1997: Supreme Court of The Philippines
htm
THIRD DIVISION
G.R. No. 120553, June 17, 1997
PHILTRANCO SERVICE ENTERPRISES, INC. AND
ROGACIONES MANILHIG, PETITIONER, VS. COURT OF
APPEALS AND HEIRS OF THE LATE RAMON ACUESTA,
RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
DAVIDE, JR., J.:
The petitioners interposed this appeal by way of a petition for review under Rule
45 of the Rules of Court from the 31 January 1995 Decision of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 41140[1] affirming the 22 January 1993[2] Decision of
Branch 31 of the Regional Trial Court, Calbayog City, in Civil Case No. 373, which
ordered the petitioners to pay the private respondents damages as a result of a
vehicular accident.
Civil Case No. 373 was an action against herein petitioners for damages instituted
by the heirs of Ramon A. Acuesta, namely, Gregorio O. Acuesta; Julio O. Acuesta;
Ramon O. Acuesta, Jr.; Baltazar O. Acuesta; Rufino O. Acuesta; Maximo O.
Acuesta; Neri O. Acuesta; Iluminada O. Acuesta; Rosario Acuesta-Sanz; and
Pamfilo O. Acuesta. Atty. Julio O. Acuesta also appeared as counsel for the
plaintiffs (herein private respondents).[3] The private respondents alleged that the
petitioners were guilty of gross negligence, recklessness, violation of traffic rules
and regulations, abandonment of victim, and attempt to escape from a crime.
To support their allegations, the private respondents presented eight witnesses. On
10 February 1992, after the cross-examination of the last witness, the private
respondents’ counsel made a reservation to present a ninth witness. The case was
then set for continuation of the trial on 30 and 31 March 1992. Because of the
non-appearance of the petitioners’ counsel, the 30 March 1992 hearing was
cancelled. The next day, private respondents’ counsel manifested that he would no
longer present the ninth witness. He thereafter made an oral offer of evidence and
rested the case. The trial court summarized private respondents’ evidence in this
wise:
[I]n the early morning of March 24, 1990, about 6:00 o'clock, the victim
Ramon A. Acuesta was riding in his easy rider bicycle (Exhibit ‘O’),
along the Gomez Street of Calbayog City. The Gomez Street is along
the side of Nijaga Park. On the Magsaysay Blvd., also in Calbayog City,
defendant Philtranco Service Enterprises, Inc. (Philtranco for brevity)
Bus No. 4025 with plate No. EVA-725 driven by defendant Rogasiones
Manilhig y Dolira was being pushed by some persons in order to start its
engine. The Magsaysay Blvd. runs perpendicular to Gomez St. and the
said Philtranco bus 4025 was heading in the general direction of the said
Gomez Street. Some of the persons who were pushing the bus were on
its back, while the others were on the sides. As the bus was pushed, its
engine started thereby the bus continued on its running motion and it
occurred at the time when Ramon A. Acuesta who was still riding on his
bicycle was directly in front of the said bus. As the engine of the
Philtranco bus started abruptly and suddenly, its running motion was
also enhanced by the said functioning engine, thereby the subject bus
bumped on the victim Ramon A. Acuesta who, as a result thereof fell
and, thereafter, was run over by the said bus. The bus did not stop
although it had already bumped and ran [sic] over the victim; instead, it
proceeded running towards the direction of the Rosales Bridge which is
located at one side of the Nijaga Park and towards one end of the
Gomez St., to which direction the victim was then heading when he was
riding on his bicycle. P/Sgt. Yabao who was then jogging thru the
Gomez Street and was heading and meeting the victim Ramon A.
Acuesta as the latter was riding on his bicycle, saw when the Philtranco
bus was being pushed by some passengers, when its engine abruptly
started and when the said bus bumped and ran over the victim. He
approached the bus driver defendant Manilhig herein and signalled to
him to stop, but the latter did not listen. So the police officer jumped
into the bus and introducing himself to the driver defendant as
policeman, ordered the latter to stop. The said defendant driver stopped
the Philtranco bus near the Nijaga Park and Sgt. Yabao thereafter, told
the driver to proceed to the Police Headquarter which was only 100
meters away from Nijaga Park because he was apprehensive that the said
driver might be harmed by the relatives of the victim who might come
to the scene of the accident. Then Sgt. Yabao cordoned the scene where
the vehicular accident occurred and had P/Cpl. Bartolome Bagot, the
Traffic Investigator, conduct an investigation and make a sketch of the
crime scene. Sgt. Yambao Yabao was only about 20 meters away when
he saw the bus of defendant Philtranco bumped [sic] and [sic] ran over
the victim. From the place where the victim was actually bumped by the
bus, the said vehicle still had run to a distance of about 15 meters away.
[4]
For their part, the petitioners filed an Answer[5] wherein they alleged that
petitioner Philtranco exercised the diligence of a good father of a family in the
selection and supervision of its employees, including petitioner Manilhig who had
excellent record as a driver and had undergone months of rigid training before he
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was hired. Petitioner Manilhig had always been a prudent professional driver,
religiously observing traffic rules and regulations. In driving Philtranco's buses, he
exercised the diligence of a very cautious person.
As might be expected, the petitioners had a different version of the incident. They
alleged that in the morning of 24 March 1990, Manilhig, in preparation for his trip
back to Pasay City, warmed up the engine of the bus and made a few rounds
within the city proper of Calbayog. While the bus was slowly and moderately
cruising along Gomez Street, the victim, who was biking towards the same
direction as the bus, suddenly overtook two tricycles and swerved left to the center
of the road. The swerving was abrupt and so sudden that even as Manilhig applied
the brakes and blew the bus horn, the victim was bumped from behind and run
over by the bus. It was neither willful nor deliberate on Manilhig's part to proceed
with the trip after his bus bumped the victim, the truth being that when he looked
at his rear-view window, he saw people crowding around the victim, with others
running after his bus. Fearing that he might be mobbed, he moved away from the
scene of the accident and intended to report the incident to the police. After a
man boarded his bus and introduced himself as a policeman, Manilhig gave
himself up to the custody of the police and reported the accident in question.
The petitioners further claimed that it was the negligence of the victim in
overtaking two tricycles, without taking precautions such as seeing first that the
road was clear, which caused the death of the victim. The latter did not even give
any signal of his intention to overtake. The petitioners then counterclaimed for
P50,000 as and for attorney's fees; P1 million as moral damages; and P50,000 for
litigation expenses.
However, the petitioners were not able to present their evidence, as they were
deemed to have waived that right by the failure of their counsel to appear at the
scheduled hearings on 30 and 31 March 1992. The trial court then issued an
Order[6] declaring the case submitted for decision. Motions for the reconsideration
of the said Order were both denied.
On 22 January 1992, the trial court handed down a decision ordering the
petitioners to jointly and severally pay the private respondents the following
amounts:
Unsatisfied with the judgment, the petitioners appealed to the Court of Appeals
imputing upon the trial court the following errors:
(5) in finding that petitioner Philtranco was solidarily liable with Manilhig for
damages.[8]
In its decision of 31 January 1995, the Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of
the trial court. It held that the petitioners were not denied due process, as they
were given an opportunity to present their defense. The records show that they
were notified of the assignment of the case for 30 and 31 March 1992. Yet, their
counsel did not appear on the said dates. Neither did he file a motion for
postponement of the hearings, nor did he appeal from the denial of the motions
for reconsideration of the 31 March 1992 Order of the trial court. The petitioners
have thereby waived their right to present evidence. Their expectation that they
would have to object yet to a formal offer of evidence by the private respondents
was “misplaced,” for it was within the sound discretion of the court to allow oral
offer of evidence.
As to the second and third assigned errors, the respondent court disposed as
follows:
... We cannot help but accord with the lower court's finding on
appellant Manilhig's fault. First, it is not disputed that the bus driven by
appellant Manilhig was being pushed at the time of the unfortunate
happening. It is of common knowledge and experience that when a
vehicle is pushed to a jump-start, its initial movement is far from slow.
Rather, its movement is abrupt and jerky and it takes a while before the
vehicle attains normal speed. The lower court had thus enough basis to
conclude, as it did, that the bumping of the victim was due to appellant
Manilhig's actionable negligence and inattention. Prudence should have
dictated against jump-starting the bus in a busy section of the city.
Militating further against appellants' posture was the fact that the
precarious pushing of subject bus to a jumpstart was done where the
bus had to take a left turn, thereby making the move too risky to take.
The possibility that pedestrians on Gomez Street, where the bus turned
left and the victim was biking, would be unaware of a vehicle being
pushed to a jumpstart, was too obvious to be overlooked. Verily,
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contrary to their bare arguments, there was gross negligence on the part
of appellants.
The doctrine of last clear chance theorized upon by appellants, is
inapplicable under the premises because the victim, who was bumped
from behind, obviously, did not of course anticipate a Philtranco bus
being pushed from a perpendicular street.
The respondent court sustained the awards of moral and exemplary damages and
of attorney’s fees, for they are warranted under Articles 2206, 2231, and 2208(1),
respectively, of the Civil Code. Anent the solidary liability of petitioner Philtranco,
the same finds support in Articles 2180 and 2194 of the said Code. The defense
that Philtranco exercised the diligence of a good father of a family in the selection
and supervision of its employees crumbles in the face of the gross negligence of its
driver, which caused the untimely death of the victim.
Their motion for reconsideration having been denied, the petitioners came to us
claiming that the Court of Appeals gravely erred
I
...IN HOLDING THAT PETITIONERS WAIVED THEIR RIGHT TO
PRESENT THEIR EVIDENCE, AND THAT PETITIONERS WERE NOT
DENIED DUE PROCESS.
II
...IN APPLYING ART. 2194, INSTEAD OF ART. 2180, OF THE CIVIL
CODE, AND IN HOLDING THAT PETITIONER PHILTRANCO CAN
NOT INVOKE THE DEFENSE OF DILIGENCE OF A GOOD FATHER
OF A FAMILY.
III
...IN AWARDING DAMAGES TO RESPONDENTS AND/OR IN NOT
FINDING THE TRIAL COURT'S AWARD OF DAMAGES EXCESSIVE.
We resolved to give due course to the petition and required the parties to submit
their respective memoranda after due consideration of the allegations, issues, and
arguments adduced in the petition, the comment thereon by the private
respondents, and the reply to the comment filed by the petitioners. The petitioners
filed their memorandum in due time; while the private respondents filed theirs
only on 3 January 1997, after their counsel was fined in the amount of P1,000 for
failure to submit the required memorandum.
The first imputed error is without merit. The petitioners and their counsel, Atty.
Jose Buban, were duly notified in open court of the order of the trial court of 10
February 1992 setting the case for hearing on 30 and 31 March 1992.[9] On both
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dates neither the petitioners nor their counsel appeared. In his motion for
reconsideration,[10] Atty. Buban gave the following reasons for his failure to appear
on the said hearings:
1. That when this case was called on March 27, 1992, counsel was very
much indisposed due to the rigors of a very hectic campaign as he is a
candidate for City Councilor of Tacloban; he wanted to leave for
Calbayog City, but he was seized with slight fever on the morning of
said date; but then, during the last hearing, counsel was made to
understand that plaintiffs would formally offer their exhibits in writing,
for which reason, counsel for defendants waited for a copy of said
formal offer, but counsel did not receive any copy as counsel for
plaintiffs opted to formally offer their exhibits orally in open court;
Civil Case No. 373 is an action for damages based on quasi-delict[15] under Article
2176 and 2180 of the Civil Code against petitioner Manilhig and his employer,
petitioner Philtranco, respectively. These articles pertinently provide:
only for one's own acts or omissions, but also for those of persons for
whom one is responsible.
...
The owners and managers of an establishment or enterprise are likewise
responsible for damages caused by their employees in the service of the
branches in which the latter are employed or on the occasion of their
functions.
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.
...
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 have consistently held that the liability of the registered owner of a public
service vehicle, like petitioner Philtranco,[16] for damages arising from the tortious
acts of the driver is primary, direct, and joint and several or solidary with the
driver.[17] As to solidarity, Article 2194 expressly provides:
ART. 2194. The responsibility of two or more persons who are liable for
a quasi-delict is solidary.
Since the employer's liability is primary, direct and solidary, its only recourse if the
judgment for damages is satisfied by it is to recover what it has paid from its
employee who committed the fault or negligence which gave rise to the action
based on quasi-delict. Article 2181 of the Civil Code provides:
ART. 2181. Whoever pays for the damage caused by his dependents or
employees may recover from the latter what he has paid or delivered in
satisfaction of the claim.
The trial court erroneously fixed the "death indemnity" at P200,000. The private
respondents defended the award in their Opposition to the Motion for
Reconsideration by saying that "[i]n the case of Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court
of Appeals, 185 SCRA 110, our Supreme Court held that the award of damages for
death is computed on the basis of the life expectancy of the deceased." In that
case, the "death indemnity" was computed by multiplying the victim's gross annual
income by his life expectancy, less his yearly living expenses. Clearly then, the
"death indemnity" referred to was the additional indemnity for the loss of earning
capacity mentioned in Article 2206(1) of the Civil Code, and not the basic
indemnity for death mentioned in the first paragraph thereof. This article provides
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as follows:
(1) The defendant shall be liable for the loss of the earning capacity of
the deceased, and the indemnity shall be paid to the heirs of the latter;
such indemnity shall in every case be assessed and awarded by the court,
unless the deceased on account of permanent physical disability not
caused by the defendant, had no earning capacity at the time of his
death;
The award of P1 million for moral damages to the heirs of Ramon Acuesta has no
sufficient basis and is excessive and unreasonable. This was based solely on the
testimony of one of the heirs, Atty. Julio Acuesta, contained in his "Direct
Testimony... As Plaintiff, conducted by Himself,"[19] to wit:
Q. What was your feeling or reaction as a result of the death of your
father Ramon A. Acuesta?
A. We, the family members, have suffered much from wounded
feelings, moral shock, mental anguish, sleepless nights, to which we are
entitled to moral damages at the reasonable amount of ONE MILLION
(P1,000,000.00) PESOS or at the sound discretion of this Hon. Court."
Since the other heirs of the deceased did not take the witness stand, the trial court
had no basis for its award of moral damages to those who did not testify thereon.
Moral damages are emphatically not intended to enrich a plaintiff at the expense of
the defendant. They are awarded only to allow the former to obtain means,
diversion, or amusements that will serve to alleviate the moral suffering he has
undergone due to the defendant's culpable action and must, perforce, be
proportional to the suffering inflicted.[20] In light of the circumstances in this case,
an award of P50,000 for moral damages is in order.
Finally, the award of P50,000 for attorney's fees must be reduced. The general rule
is that attorney's fees cannot be recovered as part of damages because of the policy
that no premium should be placed on the right to litigate.[23] Stated otherwise, the
grant of attorney's fees as part of damages is the exception rather than the rule, as
counsel's fees are not awarded every time a party prevails in a suit.[24] Such
attorney's fees can be awarded in the cases enumerated in Article 2208 of the Civil
Code, and in all cases it must be reasonable. In the instant case, the counsel for the
plaintiffs is himself a co-plaintiff; it is then unlikely that he demanded from his
brothers and sisters P100,000 as attorney's fees as alleged in the complaint and
testified to by him.[25] He did not present any written contract for his fees. He is,
however, entitled to a reasonable amount for attorney's fees, considering that
exemplary damages are awarded. Among the instances mentioned in Article 2208
of the Civil Code when attorney's fees may be recovered is "(1) when exemplary
damages are awarded." Under the circumstances in this case, an award of P25,000
for attorney's fees is reasonable.
The petitioners did not contest the award for actual damages fixed by the trial
court. Hence, such award shall stand.
[1] Rollo, 28-36. Per Purisima, F., J., with Rasul, J., and Adefuin-de la Cruz, B.A., JJ.,
concurring.
[2] Original Record (OR), 169-184. Per Judge Clemente C. Rosales.
[13]Id., 148.
[14]Id., 156.
[16] The allegation in the complaint that it is "a privately owned big bus company"
(OR, 1) is admitted without qualification in the Answer (id., 18.)
[17] Gelisan v. Alday, 154 SCRA 388, 394 [1987], Vargas v. Langcay, 116 Phil. 478,
481 (1962). See V TOLENTINO 616; V EDGARDO L. PARAS, et al., CIVIL
CODE OF THE PHILIPPINES 1129, 1154 (13th ed. 1995).
[18] People v. Galas, G.R. No. 114007, 24 September 1996; People v. Tabag, G.R.
No. 116511, 12 February 1997, 11.
[19] Exh. "K," OR, 119.
[20] Grand Union Supermarket, Inc. v. Espino, 94 SCRA 953, 966 [1979]; R and B
Surety & Insurance Co. v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 129 SCRA 736, 745
[1984]; Prudenciado v. Alliance Transport System, Inc. 148 SCRA 440, 449 (1987);
Radio Communications of the Phils., Inc. v. Rodriguez, 182 SCRA 899, 907 (1990);
Visayan Sawmill Company, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 219 SCRA 378, 392 (1993).
[21] Article 2231, New Civil Code.
[23] Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. of the Phil. v. Ines Chaves Co., 18 SCRA 356,
358 (1966); Philippine Air Lines v. Miano, 242 SCRA 235, 240 (1995).
[24] Scott Consultants and Resource Development Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 242
SCRA 393, 406 (1995).
[25] OR, 6; Exh. "K," id, 121.
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