ICTS Vs FGU Insurance
ICTS Vs FGU Insurance
ICTS Vs FGU Insurance
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3.
4.
The rule in our jurisdiction is that only questions of law may be entertained by this Court in a
petition for review on certiorari. This rule, however, is not ironclad and admits certain
exceptions, such as when (1) the conclusion is grounded on speculations, surmises or
conjectures; (2) the inference is manifestly mistaken, absurd or impossible; (3) there is grave
abuse of discretion; (4) the judgment is based on a misapprehension of facts; (5) the findings of
fact are conflicting; (6) there is no citation of specific evidence on which the factual findings are
based; (7) the findings of absence of facts are contradicted by the presence of evidence on
record; (8) the findings of the CA are contrary to those of the trial court; (9) the CA manifestly
overlooked certain relevant and undisputed facts that, if properly considered, would justify a
different conclusion; (10) the findings of the CA are beyond the issues of the case; and (11) such
findings are contrary to the admissions of both parties.[6] In the present case, there is nothing on
record which will show that it falls within the exceptions. Hence, the petition must be denied.
Petitioner posits that its liability for the lost shipment should be limited to P3,500.00 per package
as provided in Philippine Ports Authority Administrative Order No. 10-81 (PPA AO 10-81),
under Article VI, Section 6.01 of which provides:
Section 6.01. Responsibility and Liability for Losses and Damages; Exceptions - The
CONTRACTOR shall at its own expense handle all merchandise in all work undertaken by it
hereunder deligently [sic] and in a skillful, workman-like and efficient manner; that the
CONTRACTOR shall be solely responsible as an independent CONTRACTOR, and hereby
agrees to accept liability and to promptly pay to the shipping company consignees, consignors or
other interested party or parties for the loss, damage, or non-delivery of cargoes to the extent of
the actual invoice value of each package which in no case shall be more than THREE
THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED PESOS (P3,500.00) (for import cargo) x x x for each package
unless the value of the cargo importation is otherwise specified or manifested or
communicated in writing together with the declared bill of lading value and supported by a
certified packing list to the CONTRACTOR by the interested party or parties before the
discharge x x x of the goods, as well as all damage that may be suffered on account of loss,
damage, or destruction of any merchandise while in custody or under the control of the
CONTRACTOR in any pier, shed, warehouse facility or other designated place under the
supervision of the AUTHORITY x x x.[7] (Emphasis supplied)
The CA summarily ruled that PPA AO 10-81 is not applicable to
this case without laying out the reasons therefor.
PPA AO 10-81 is the management contract between by the Philippine Ports Authority and the
cargo handling services providers. In Summa Insurance Corporation v. Court of Appeals,[8] the
Court ruled that:
In the performance of its job, an arrastre operator is bound by the management contract it had
executed with the Bureau of Customs. However, a management contract, which is a sort of a
stipulation pour autrui within the meaning of Article 1311 of the Civil Code, is also binding on a
consignee because it is incorporated in the gate pass and delivery receipt which must be
presented by the consignee before delivery can be effected to it. The insurer, as successor-ininterest of the consignee, is likewise bound by the management contract. Indeed, upon taking
delivery of the cargo, a consignee (and necessarily its successor-in- interest) tacitly accepts the
provisions of the management contract, including those which are intended to limit the liability
of one of the contracting parties, the arrastre operator.
However, a consignee who does not avail of the services of the arrastre operator is not bound by
the management contract. Such an exception to the rule does not obtain here as the consignee did
in fact accept delivery of the cargo from the arrastre operator.[9]
While it appears in the present case that the RAGC availed itself of petitioner's services and
therefore, PPA AO 10-81 should apply, the Court finds that the extent of petitioner's liability
should cover the actual value of the lost shipment and not the P3,500.00 limit per package as
provided in said Order.
It is borne by the records that when Desma Cargo Handlers was negotiating for the discharge of
the shipment, it presented Hapag-Lloyd's Bill of Lading,[10] Degussa's Commercial Invoice,
which indicates that value of the shipment, including seafreight charges, was DM94.960,00
(CFR Manila),[11] and Degussa's Packing List, which likewise notes that the value of the shipment
was DM94.960,00. [12] It is highly unlikely that petitioner was not made aware of the actual value
of the shipment, since it had to examine the pertinent documents for stripping purposes and, later
on, for the discharge of the shipment to the consignee or its representative. In fact, the NBI
Report dated September 26, 1994 on the investigation conducted by it regarding the loss of the
shipment shows that petitioner's Admeasurer Rosco Esquibal was shown the Bill of Lading by
Desma Brokerage's representative, Rey Villanueva.[13] Esquibal also stated that another
representative of Desma Brokerage, Joey Laurente, went to their office and furnished him a copy
of the "processed papers of the fourteen cartons of Asahi Glass cargoes."[14]
By its own act of not charging the corresponding arrastre fees based on the value of the shipment
after it came to know of such declared value from the marine insurance policy, petitioner cannot
escape liability for the actual value of the shipment. The value of the merchandise or shipment
may be declared or stated not only in the bill of lading or shipping manifest, but also in other
documents required by law before the shipment is cleared from the piers.[15]
Petitioner insists that Marine Open Policy No. MOP-12763 under which the shipment was
insured was no longer in force at the time it was loaded on board the Hannover Express on June
10, 1994, as provided in the Endorsement portion of the policy, which states: "IT IS HEREBY
DECLARED AND AGREED that effective June 10, 1994, this policy is deemed
CANCELLED."[16] FGU, on the other hand, insists that it was under Marine Risk Note No. 9798,
which was executed on May 26, 1994, that said shipment was covered.
It must be emphasized that a marine risk note is not an insurance policy. It is only an
acknowledgment or declaration of the insurer confirming the specific shipment covered by its
marine open policy, the evaluation of the cargo and the chargeable premium.[17] It is the marine
open policy which is the main insurance contract. In other words, the marine open policy is the
blanket insurance to be undertaken by FGU on all goods to be shipped by RAGC during the
existence of the contract, while the marine risk note specifies the particular goods/shipment
insured by FGU on that specific transaction, including the sum insured, the shipment particulars
as well as the premium paid for such shipment. In any event, as it stands, it is evident that even
prior to the cancellation by FGU of Marine Open Policy No. MOP-12763 on June 10, 1994, it
had already undertaken to insure the shipment of the 400 kgs. of silver nitrate, specially since
RAGC had already paid the premium on the insurance of said shipment.
Indeed, jurisprudence has it that the marine insurance policy needs to be presented in evidence
before the trial court or even belatedly before the appellate court. In Malayan Insurance Co., Inc.
v. Regis
Brokerage Corp.,[18] the Court stated that the presentation of the marine insurance policy was
necessary, as the issues raised therein arose from the very existence of an insurance contract
between Malayan Insurance and its consignee, ABB Koppel, even prior to the loss of the
shipment. In Wallem Philippines Shipping, Inc. v. Prudential Guarantee and Assurance, Inc.,[19]
the Court ruled that the insurance contract must be presented in evidence in order to determine
the extent of the coverage. This was also the ruling of the Court in Home Insurance Corporation
v. Court of Appeals.[20]
However, as in every general rule, there are admitted exceptions. In Delsan Transport Lines, Inc.
v. Court of Appeals,[21] the Court stated that the presentation of the insurance policy was not fatal
because the loss of the cargo undoubtedly occurred while on board the petitioner's vessel, unlike
in Home Insurance in which the cargo passed through several stages with different parties and it
could not be determined when the damage to the cargo occurred, such that the insurer should be
liable for it.
As in Delsan, there is no doubt that the loss of the cargo in the present case occurred while in
petitioner's custody. Moreover, there is no issue as regards the provisions of Marine Open Policy
No.
MOP-12763, such that the presentation of the contract itself is necessary for perusal, not to
mention that its existence was already admitted by petitioner in open court.[22] And even though it
was not offered in evidence, it still can be considered by the court as long as they have been
properly identified by testimony duly recorded and they have themselves been incorporated in
[1]
Records, p. 480.
[2]
Records, p. 18.
[3]
Penned by Associate Justice Roberto A.Barrios, with the concurrence of associate Justices
Juan Q. Enriquez, Jr. andArsenio J. Magpale, CA rollo, pp. 186-195.
[4]
Id. at 232-233.
[5]
Rollo, p. 35.
[6]
Philippine Charter Insurance Corporation v.Unknown Owner of the Vessel M/V "National
Honor," G.R. No. 161833 ,July 8, 2005, 463 SCRA 202, 215.
[7]
[8]
[9]
Id. at 223-224.
[10]
Records, p. 361.
[11]
Id. at 362-364.
[12]
Id. at 365-367.
[13]
Id. at 343-344.
[14]
Id. at 344.
[15]
[16]
Records, p. 395.
[17]
Aboitiz Shipping Corporation v. PhilippineAmerican General Insurance Co., G.R. No. 77530,
October 5, 1989,178 SCRA 357, 360-361.
[18]
[19]
[20]
[21]
[22]
[23]
People of the Philippines v. Libnao, 443 Phil. 506, 519 (2003); Mato v.Court of Appeals, 320
Phil. 344, 349 (1995).
[24]
[25]
Id. at 448-450.
[26]
Records, p. 18.
[27]
Id. at 5.