Pal Vs CA (GR No. L-49188)
Pal Vs CA (GR No. L-49188)
Pal Vs CA (GR No. L-49188)
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 557
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
*
G.R. No. 49188. January 30, 1990.
———————
* EN BANC.
558
558 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
executed through an alias writ of execution as the case may be. More so, as
in the case at bar. Where the return cannot be expected to be forthcoming, to
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 1/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
require the same would be to compel the enforcement of rights under a
judgment to rest on an impossibility, thereby allowing the total avoidance of
judgment debts. So long as a judgment is not satisfied, a plaintiff is entitled
to other writs of execution (Government of the Philippines v. Echaus and
Gonzales, 71 Phil. 318). It is a well known legal maxim that he who cannot
prosecute his judgment with effect, sues his case vainly.
Civil Law; Payment; The payment to the absconding sheriff by check in
his name did not operate as satisfaction of the judgment debt.—Under the
peculiar circumstances of this case, the payment to the absconding sheriff by
check in his name did not operate as a satisfaction of the judgment debt.
Same; Same; A payment in order to be effective to discharge an
obligation must be made to the proper person.—In general, a payment, in
order to be effective to discharge an obligation, must be made to the proper
person. Thus, payment must be made to the obligee himself or to an agent
having authority, express or implied, to receive the particular payment (Ulen
v. Knecttle, 50 Wyo. 94, 58 [2d] 446, 11 ALR 65). Payment made to one
having apparent authority to receive the money will, as a rule, be treated as
though actual authority had been given for its receipt. Likewise, if payment
is made to one who by law is authorized to act for the creditor, it will work a
discharge (Hendry v. Benlisa, 37 Fla. 609, 20 SO 800, 34 LRA 283). The
receipt of money due on a judgment by an officer authorized by law to accept
it will, therefore, satisfy the debt.
Same; Same; Same; Ordinarily, payment by the judgment debtor in the
case at bar, to the sheriff should be valid payment to extinguish the judgment
debt.—The theory is where payment is made to a person authorized and
recognized by the creditor, the payment to such a person so authorized is
deemed payment to the creditor. Under ordinary circumstances, payment by
the judgment debtor in the case at bar, to the sheriff should be valid payment
to extinguish the judgment debt.
Same; Same; Unless authorized to do so by law or by consent of the
obligee, a public officer has no authority to accept anything other than
money in payment of an obligation under a judgment being executed.—In the
absence of an agreement, either express or implied, payment means the
discharge of a debt or obligation in money (US v. Robertson,
559
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 559
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
5 Pet. [US] 641, 8 L. ed. 257) and unless the parties so agree, a debtor has
no rights, except at his own peril, to substitute something in lieu of cash as
medium of payment of his debt (Anderson v. Gill, 79 Md. 312, 29 A 527, 25
LRA 200, 47 Am. St. Rep. 402). Consequently, unless authorized to do so
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 2/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
by law or by consent of the obligee, a public officer has no authority to
accept anything other than money in payment of an obligation under a
judgment being executed. Strictly speaking, the acceptance by the sheriff of
the petitioner’s checks, in the case at bar, does not, per se, operate as a
discharge of the judgment debt.
Commercial Law; Negotiable Instruments Law; A check whether
manager’s check or ordinary check is not a legal tender and an offer of a
check in payment of a debt is not a valid tender of payment and may be
refused receipt by the obligee or creditor.—Since a negotiable instrument is
only a substitute for money and not money, the delivery of such an
instrument does not, by itself, operate as payment (Sec. 189, Act 2031 on
Negs. Insts.; Art. 1249, Civil Code; Bryan Landon Co. v. American Bank, 7
Phil. 255; Tan Sunco v. Santos, 9 Phil. 44; 21 R.C.L. 60, 61) A check,
whether a manager’s check or ordinary check, is not legal tender, and an
offer of a check in payment of a debt is not a valid tender of payment and
may be refused receipt by the obligee or creditor. Mere delivery of checks
does not discharge the obligation under a judgment. The obligation is not
extinguished and remains suspended until the payment by commercial
document is actually realized.
NARVASA, J., Dissenting:
Execution; Sheriffs; Obligations; Payment by way of a check issued in
the name of the sheriff in his official capacity is a practice of common and
long acceptance. It is valid.—There is no question that the checks came into
the sheriff’s possession in his official capacity. The court may require of the
judgment debtor, in complying with the judgment, no further burden than his
vigilance in ensuring that the person he is paying money or delivering
property to is a person authorized by the court to receive it. Beyond this,
further expectations become unreasonable. To my mind, a proposal that
would make the judgment debtor unqualifiedly the insurer of the judgment
creditor’s entitlement to the judgment amount—which is really what this
case is all about—begs the question.
Same; Same Same; Same.—That the checks were made out in the
sheriff’s name (a practice, by the way, of long and common acceptance) is of
little consequence if juxtaposed with the extent of the authority
560
560 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
explicitly granted him by law as the officer entrusted with the power to
execute and implement court judgments. The sheriff’s requirement that the
checks in payment of the judgment debt be issued in his name was simply an
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 3/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
assertion of that authority; and PAL’s compliance cannot in the premises be
faulted merely because of the sheriff’s subsequent malfeasance in
absconding with the payment instead of turning it over to the judgment
creditor.
FELICIANO, J., Dissenting:
PADILLA, J., Dissenting:
561
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 561
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
Same; Same; Same.—If the PAL checks in question had not been
encashed by Sheriff Reyes, there would be no payment by PAL and,
consequently, no discharge or satisfaction of its judgment obligation. But the
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 4/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
checks had been encashed by Sheriff Reyes—giving rise to a situation as if
PAL had paid Sheriff Reyes in cash, i.e., Philippine currency. This, we
repeat, is payment, in legal contemplation, on the part of PAL and this
payment legally discharged PAL from its judgment obligation to the
judgment creditor. To be sure, the same encashment by Sheriff Reyes of
PAL’s checks delivered to him in his official capacity as Sheriff, imposed an
obligation on Sheriff Reyes to pay and deliver the proceeds of the
encashment to Amelia Tan who is deemed to have acquired a cause of action
against Sheriff Reyes for his failure to deliver to her the proceeds of the
encashment.
PETITION for certiorari to review the judgment of the Court of
Appeals.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
GUTIERREZ, JR., J.:
Behind the simple issue of validity of an alias writ of execution in
this case is a more fundamental question. Should the Court allow a
too literal interpretation of the Rules with an open invitation to
knavery to prevail over a more discerning and just approach? Should
we not apply the ancient rule of statutory construction that laws are
to be interpreted by the spirit which vivifies and not by the letter
which killeth?
This is a petition to review on certiorari the decision of the Court
of Appeals in CAG.R. No. 07695 entitled “Philippine Airlines, Inc.
v. Hon. Judge Ricardo D. Galano, et al.”, dismissing the petition for
certiorari against the order of the Court of First Instance of Manila
which issued an alias writ of execution against the petitioner.
The petition involving the alias writ of execution had its
beginnings on November 8, 1967, when respondent Amelia Tan,
under the name and style of Able Printing Press commenced a
complaint for damages before the Court of First Instance of Manila.
The case was docketed as Civil Case No. 71307, entitled “Amelia
Tan, et al. v. Philippine Airlines, Inc.”
After trial, the Court of First Instance of Manila, Branch 13, then
presided over by the late Judge Jesus P. Morfe rendered
562
562 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
judgment on June 29, 1972, in favor of private respondent Amelia
Tan and against petitioner Philippine Airlines, Inc. (PAL) as follows:
“1. On the first cause of action, to pay to the plaintiff the amount of
P75,000.00 as actual damages, with legal interest thereon from
plaintiff’s extrajudicial demand made by the letter of July 20,
1967;
“2. On the third cause of action, to pay to the plaintiff the amount of
P18,200.00, representing the unrealized profit of 10% included in
the contract price of P200,000.00 plus legal interest thereon from
July 20, 1967;
“3. On the fourth cause of action, to pay to the plaintiff the amount of
P20,000.00 as and for moral damages, with legal interest thereon
from July 20, 1967;
“4. On the sixth cause of action, to pay to the plaintiff the amount of
P5,000.00 damages as and for attorney’s fee.
On July 28, 1972, the petitioner filed its appeal with the Court of
Appeals. The case was docketed as CAG.R. No. 51079R.
On February 3, 1977, the appellate court rendered its decision,
the dispositive portion of which reads:
“IN VIEW WHEREOF, with the modification that PAL is condemned to pay
plaintiff the sum of P25,000.00 as damages and P5,000.00 as attorney’s fee,
judgment is affirmed, with costs.” (CA Rollo, p. 29)
Notice of judgment was sent by the Court of Appeals to the trial
court and on dates subsequent thereto, a motion for reconsideration
was filed by respondent Amelia Tan, duly opposed by petitioner
PAL.
On May 23, 1977, the Court of Appeals rendered its resolution
denying the respondent’s motion for reconsideration for lack of
merit.
No further appeal having been taken by the parties, the judgment
became final and executory and on May 31, 1977, judg
563
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 563
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
ment was correspondingly entered in the case.
The case was remanded to the trial court for execution and on
September 2, 1977, respondent Amelia Tan filed a motion praying
for the issuance of a writ of execution of the judgment rendered by
the Court of Appeals. On October 11, 1977, the trial court, presided
over by Judge Galano, issued its order of execution with the
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 6/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
corresponding writ in favor of the respondent. The writ was duly
referred to Deputy Sheriff Emilio Z. Reyes of Branch 13 of the
Court of First Instance of Manila for enforcement.
Four months later, on February 11, 1978, respondent Amelia Tan
moved for the issuance of an alias writ of execution stating that the
judgment rendered by the lower court, and affirmed with
modification by the Court of Appeals, remained unsatisfied.
On March 1, 1978, the petitioner filed an opposition to the
motion for the issuance of an alias writ of execution stating that it
had already fully paid its obligation to plaintiff through the deputy
sheriff of the respondent court, Emilio Z. Reyes, as evidenced by
cash vouchers properly signed and receipted by said Emilio Z.
Reyes.
On March 3, 1978, the Court of Appeals denied the issuance of
the alias writ for being premature, ordering the executing sheriff
Emilio Z. Reyes to appear with his return and explain the reason for
his failure to surrender the amounts paid to him by petitioner PAL.
However, the order could not be served upon Deputy Sheriff Reyes
who had absconded or disappeared.
On March 28, 1978, motion for the issuance of a partial alias writ
of execution was filed by respondent Amelia Tan.
On April 19, 1978, respondent Amelia Tan filed a motion to
withdraw “Motion for Partial Alias Writ of Execution” with
Substitute Motion for Alias Writ of Execution. On May 1, 1978, the
respondent Judge issued an order which reads:
“As prayed for by counsel for the plaintiff, the Motion to Withdraw ‘Motion
for Partial Alias Writ of Execution’ with Substitute Motion for Alias Writ of
Execution is hereby granted, and the motion for partial alias writ of
execution is considered withdrawn.
“Let an Alias Writ of Execution issue against the defendant for the full
satisfaction of the judgment rendered. Deputy Sheriff Jaime K. del Rosario
is hereby appointed Special Sheriff for the enforcement
564
564 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
thereof.” (CA Rollo, p. 34)
On May 18, 1978, the petitioner received a copy of the first alias
writ of execution issued on the same day directing Special Sheriff
Jaime K. del Rosario to levy on execution in the sum of P25,000.00
with legal interest thereon from July 20, 1967 when respondent
Amelia Tan made an extrajudicial demand through a letter. Levy
was also ordered for the further sum of P5,000.00 awarded as
attorney’s fees.
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 7/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
On May 23, 1978, the petitioner filed an urgent motion to quash
the alias writ of execution stating that no return of the writ had as yet
been made by Deputy Sheriff Emilio Z. Reyes and that the judgment
debt had already been fully satisfied by the petitioner as evidenced
by the cash vouchers signed and receipted by the server of the writ
of execution, Deputy Sheriff Emilio Z. Reyes.
On May 26, 1978, the respondent Jaime K. del Rosario served a
notice of garnishment on the depository bank of petitioner, Far East
Bank and Trust Company, Rosario Branch, Binondo, Manila,
through its manager and garnished the petitioner’s deposit in the said
bank in the total amount of P64,408.00 as of May 16, 1978. Hence,
this petition for certiorari filed by the Philippine Airlines, Inc., on
the grounds that:
II
III
565
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 565
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
IV
Can an alias writ of execution be issued without a prior return of the
original writ by the implementing officer?
We rule in the affirmative and we quote the respondent court’s
decision with approval:
“The issuance of the questioned alias writ of execution under the
circumstances here obtaining is justified because even with the absence of a
Sheriff’s return on the original writ, the unalterable fact remains that such a
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 8/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
return is incapable of being obtained (sic) because the officer who is to make
the said return has absconded and cannot be brought to the Court despite the
earlier order of the court for him to appear for this purpose. (Order of Feb.
21, 1978, Annex C, Petition). Obviously, taking cognizance of this
circumstance, the order of May 11, 1978 directing the issuance of an alias
writ was therefore issued. (Annex D. Petition). The need for such a return as
a condition precedent for the issuance of an alias writ was justifiably
dispensed with by the court below and its action in this regard meets with
our concurrence. A contrary view will produce an abhorent situation whereby
the mischief of an erring officer of the court could be utilized to impede
indefinitely the undisputed and awarded rights which a prevailing party
rightfully deserves to obtain and with dispatch. The final judgment in this
case should not indeed be permitted to become illusory or incapable of
execution for an indefinite and over extended period, as had already
transpired.” (Rollo, pp. 3536)
Judicium non debet esse illusorium; suum effectum habere debet (A
judgment ought not to be illusory; it ought to have its proper effect).
Indeed, technicality cannot be countenanced to defeat the
execution of a judgment for execution is the fruit and end of the suit
and is very aptly called the life of the law (Ipekdjian Merchandising
Co. v. Court of Tax Appeals, 8 SCRA 59 [1963]; Commissioner of
Internal Revenue v. Visayan Electric Co., 19 SCRA 697, 698
[1967]). A judgment cannot be rendered nugatory by the
unreasonable application of a strict rule of procedure. Vested rights
were never intended to rest on the requirement of a
566
566 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
return, the office of which is merely to inform the court and the
parties, of any and all actions taken under the writ of execution.
Where such information can be established in some other manner,
the absence of an executing officer’s return will not preclude a
judgment from being treated as discharged or being executed
through an alias writ of execution as the case may be. More so, as in
the case at bar. Where the return cannot be expected to be
forthcoming, to require the same would be to compel the
enforcement of rights under a judgment to rest on an impossibility,
thereby allowing the total avoidance of judgment debts. So long as a
judgment is not satisfied, a plaintiff is entitled to other writs of
execution (Government of the Philippines v. Echaus and Gonzales,
71 Phil. 318). It is a well known legal maxim that he who cannot
prosecute his judgment with effect, sues his case vainly.
More important in the determination of the propriety of the trial
court’s issuance of an alias writ of execution is the issue of
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 9/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
satisfaction of judgment.
Under the peculiar circumstances surrounding this case, did the
payment made to the absconding sheriff by check in his name
operate to satisfy the judgment debt? The Court rules that the
plaintiff who has won her case should not be adjudged as having
sued in vain. To decide otherwise would not only give her an empty
but a pyrrhic victory.
It should be emphasized that under the initial judgment, Amelia
Tan was found to have been wronged by PAL.
She filed her complaint in 1967.
After ten (10) years of protracted litigation in the Court of First
Instance and the Court of Appeals, Ms. Tan won her case.
It is now 1990.
Almost twentytwo (22) years later, Ms. Tan has not seen a
centavo of what the courts have solemnly declared as rightfully hers.
Through absolutely no fault of her own, Ms. Tan has been deprived
of what, technically, she should have been paid from the start, before
1967, without need of her going to court to enforce her rights. And
all because PAL did not issue the checks intended for her, in her
name.
Under the peculiar circumstances of this case, the payment to the
absconding sheriff by check in his name did not operate as a
satisfaction of the judgment debt.
567
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 567
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
In general, a payment, in order to be effective to discharge an
obligation, must be made to the proper person. Article 1240 of the
Civil Code provides:
“Payment shall be made to the person in whose favor the obligation has been
constituted, or his successor in interest, or any person authorized to receive
it.” (Emphasis supplied)
Thus, payment must be made to the obligee himself or to an agent
having authority, express or implied, to receive the particular
payment (Ulen v. Knecttle, 50 Wyo. 94, 58 [2d] 446, 111 ALR 65).
Payment made to one having apparent authority to receive the
money will, as a rule, be treated as though actual authority had been
given for its receipt. Likewise, if payment is made to one who by
law is authorized to act for the creditor, it will work a discharge
(Hendry v. Benlisa, 37 Fla. 609, 20 SO 800, 34 LRA 283). The
receipt of money due on a judgment by an officer authorized by law
to accept it will, therefore, satisfy the debt (See 40 Am Jm 729, 25;
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 10/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
Hendry v. Benlisa, supra; Seattle v. Stirrat, 55 Wash. 104 p. 834, 24
LRA [NS] 1275).
The theory is where payment is made to a person authorized and
recognized by the creditor, the payment to such a person so
authorized is deemed payment to the creditor. Under ordinary
circumstances, payment by the judgment debtor in the case at bar, to
the sheriff should be valid payment to extinguish the judgment debt.
There are circumstances in this case, however, which compel a
different conclusion.
The payment made by the petitioner to the absconding sheriff
was not in cash or legal tender but in checks. The checks were not
payable to Amelia Tan or Able Printing Press but to the absconding
sheriff.
Did such payments extinguish the judgment debt?
Article 1249 of the Civil Code provides:
“The payment of debts in money shall be made in the currency stipulated,
and if it is not possible to deliver such currency, then in the currency which
is legal tender in the Philippines.
“The delivery of promissory notes payable to order, or bills of exchange
or other mercantile documents shall produce the effect of payment only when
they have been cashed, or when through the fault
568
568 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
of the creditor they have been impaired.
“In the meantime, the action derived from the original obligation shall be
held in abeyance.”
In the absence of an agreement, either express or implied, payment
means the discharge of a debt or obligation in money (US v.
Robertson, 5 Pet. [US] 641, 8 L. ed. 257) and unless the parties so
agree, a debtor has no rights, except at his own peril, to substitute
something in lieu of cash as medium of payment of his debt
(Anderson v. Gill, 79 Md. 312, 29 A 527, 25 LRA 200, 47 Am. St.
Rep. 402). Consequently, unless authorized to do so by law or by
consent of the obligee, a public officer has no authority to accept
anything other than money in payment of an obligation under a
judgment being executed. Strictly speaking, the acceptance by the
sheriff of the petitioner’s checks, in the case at bar, does not, per se,
operate as a discharge of the judgment debt.
Since a negotiable instrument is only a substitute for money and
not money, the delivery of such an instrument does not, by itself,
operate as payment (Sec. 189, Act 2031 on Negs. Insts.; Art. 1249,
Civil Code; Bryan Landon Co. v. American Bank, 7 Phil. 255; Tan
Sunco v. Santos, 9 Phil. 44; 21 R.C.L. 60, 61). A check, whether a
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 11/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
manager’s check or ordinary check, is not legal tender, and an offer
of a check in payment of a debt is not a valid tender of payment and
may be refused receipt by the obligee or creditor. Mere delivery of
checks does not discharge the obligation under a judgment. The
obligation is not extinguished and remains suspended until the
payment by commercial document is actually realized (Art. 1249,
Civil Code, par. 3).
If bouncing checks had been issued in the name of Amelia Tan
and not the Sheriff’s, there would have been no payment. After
dishonor of the checks, Ms. Tan could have run after other properties
of PAL. The theory is that she has received no value for what had
been awarded her. Because the checks were drawn in the name of
Emilio Z. Reyes, neither has she received anything. The same rule
should apply.
It is argued that if PAL had paid in cash to Sheriff Reyes, there
would have been payment in full legal contemplation. The reasoning
is logical but is it valid and proper? Logic has its
569
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 569
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
limits in decision making. We should not follow rulings to their
logical extremes if in doing so we arrive at unjust or absurd results.
In the first place, PAL did not pay in cash. It paid in checks. And
second, payment in cash always carries with it certain cautions.
Nobody hands over big amounts of cash in a careless and inane
manner. Mature thought is given to the possibility of the cash being
lost, of the bearer being waylaid or running off with what he is
carrying for another. Payment in checks is precisely intended to
avoid the possibility of the money going to the wrong party. The
situation is entirely different where a Sheriff seizes a car, a tractor, or
a piece of land. Logic often has to give way to experience and to
reality. Having paid with checks, PAL should have done so properly.
Payment in money or cash to the implementing officer may be
deemed absolute payment of the judgment debt but the Court has
never, in the least bit, suggested that judgment debtors should settle
their obligations by turning over huge amounts of cash or legal
tender to sheriffs and other executing officers. Payment in cash
would result in damage or interminable litigations each time a
sheriff with huge amounts of cash in his hands decides to abscond.
As a protective measure, therefore, the courts encourage the
practice of payments by check provided adequate controls are
instituted to prevent wrongful payment and illegal withdrawal or
disbursement of funds. If particularly big amounts are involved,
escrow arrangements with a bank and carefully supervised by the
court would be the safer procedure. Actual transfer of funds takes
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 12/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
place within the safety of bank premises. These practices are
perfectly legal. The object is always the safe and incorrupt execution
of the judgment.
It is, indeed, out of the ordinary that checks intended for a
particular payee are made out in the name of another. Making the
checks payable to the judgment creditor would have prevented the
encashment or the taking of undue advantage by the sheriff, or any
person into whose hands the checks may have fallen, whether
wrongfully or in behalf of the creditor. The issuance of the checks in
the name of the sheriff clearly made possible the misappropriation of
the funds that were withdrawn.
570
570 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
As explained and held by the respondent court:
“x x x [K]nowing as it does that the intended payment was for the private
party respondent Amelia Tan, the petitioner corporation, utilizing the
services of its personnel who are or should be knowledgeable about the
accepted procedures and resulting consequences of the checks drawn,
nevertheless, in this instance, without prudence, departed from what is
generally observed and done, and placed as payee in the checks the name of
the errant Sheriff and not the name of the rightful payee. Petitioner thereby
created a situation which permitted the said Sheriff to personally encash said
checks and misappropriate the proceeds thereof to his exclusive personal
benefit. For the prejudice that resulted, the petitioner himself must bear the
fault. The judicial guideline which we take note of states as follows:
“ ‘As between two innocent persons, one of whom must suffer the consequence of a
breach of trust, the one who made it possible by his act of confidence must bear the
loss.’ ” (Blondeau, et al. v. Nano, et al., L41377, July 26, 1935, 61 Phil. 625)
Having failed to employ the proper safeguards to protect itself, the
judgment debtor whose act made possible the loss had but itself to
blame.
The attention of this Court has been called to the bad practice of
a number of executing officers, of requiring checks in satisfaction of
judgment debts to be made out in their own names. If a sheriff
directs a judgment debtor to issue the checks in the sheriff’s name,
claiming he must get his commission or fees, the debtor must report
the sheriff immediately to the court which ordered the execution or
to the Supreme Court for appropriate disciplinary action. Fees,
commissions, and salaries are paid through regular channels. This
improper procedure also allows such officers, who have sixty (60)
days within which to make a return, to treat the moneys as their
personal funds and to deposit the same in their private accounts to
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 13/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
earn sixty (60) days interest, before said funds are turned over to the
court or judgment creditor (See Balgos v. Velasco, 108 SCRA 525
[1981]). Quite as easily, such officers could put up the defense that
said checks had been issued to them in their private or personal
capacity. Without a receipt evidencing payment of the judgment
debt, the misappropriation of funds by such officers becomes clean
and complete. The practice is ingenious but evil as
571
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 571
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
it unjustly enriches court personnel at the expense of litigants and
the proper administration of justice. The temptation could be far
greater, as proved to be in this case of the absconding sheriff. The
correct and prudent thing for the petitioner was to have issued the
checks in the intended payee’s name.
The pernicious effects of issuing checks in the name of a person
other than the intended payee, without the latter’s agreement or
consent, are as many as the ways that an artful mind could concoct
to get around the safeguards provided by the law on negotiable
instruments. An angry litigant who loses a case, as a rule, would not
want the winning party to get what he won in the judgment. He
would think of ways to delay the winning party’s getting what has
been adjudged in his favor. We cannot condone that practice
especially in cases where the courts and their officers are involved.
We rule against the petitioner.
Anent the applicability of Section 15, Rule 39, as follows:
the respondent court held:
“We are obliged to rule that the judgment debt cannot be considered satisfied
and therefore the orders of the respondent judge granting the alias writ of
execution may not be pronounced as a nullity.
x x x x x x x x x
“It is clear and manifest that after levy or garnishment, for a judgment to
be executed there is the requisite of payment by the officer to the judgment
creditor, or his attorney, so much of the proceeds as will satisfy the
judgment and none such payment had been concededly made yet by the
absconding Sheriff to the private respondent Amelia Tan. The ultimate and
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 14/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
essential step to complete the execution of the judgment not having been
performed by the City Sheriff, the judgment debt legally and factually
remains unsatisfied.”
572
572 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
Strictly speaking execution cannot be equated with satisfaction of a
judgment. Under unusual circumstances as those obtaining in this
petition, the distinction comes out clearly.
Execution is the process which carries into effect a decree or
judgment (Painter v. Berglund, 31 Cal. App. 2d. 63, 87 P 2d 360,
363; Miller v. London, 294 Mass 300, 1 NE 2d 198, 200; Black’s
Law Dictionary), whereas the satisfaction of a judgment is the
payment of the amount of the writ, or a lawful tender thereof, or the
conversion by sale of the debtor’s property into an amount equal to
that due, and, it may be done otherwise than upon an execution
(Section 47, Rule 39). Levy and delivery by an execution officer are
not prerequisites to the satisfaction of a judgment when the same has
already been realized in fact (Section 47, Rule 39). Execution is for
the sheriff to accomplish while satisfaction of the judgment is for the
creditor to achieve. Section 15, Rule 39 merely provides the sheriff
with his duties as executing officer including delivery of the
proceeds of his levy on the debtor’s property to satisfy the judgment
debt. It is but to stress that the implementing officer’s duty should
not stop at his receipt of payments but must continue until payment
is delivered to the obligor or creditor.
Finally, we find no error in the respondent court’s pronouncement
on the inclusion of interests to be recovered under the alias writ of
execution. This logically follows from our ruling that PAL is liable
for both the lost checks and interest. The respondent court’s decision
in CAG.R. No. 51079R does not totally supersede the trial court’s
judgment in Civil Case No. 71307. It merely modified the same as to
the principal amount awarded as actual damages.
WHEREFORE, IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the petition is
hereby DISMISSED. The judgment of the respondent Court of
Appeals is AFFIRMED and the trial court’s issuance of the alias
writ of execution against the petitioner is upheld without prejudice
to any action it should take against the errant sheriff Emilio Z.
Reyes. The Court Administrator is ordered to follow up the actions
taken against Emilio Z. Reyes.
SO ORDERED.
Fernan (C.J.), Cruz, Paras, Bidin, GriñoAquino, Medialdea
and Regalado, JJ., concur.
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 15/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
573
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 573
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
Narvasa, J., See separate dissent.
MelencioHerrera, J., I join the dissents of Messrs. Justices
Narvasa, Padilla and Feliciano.
Feliciano, J., Please see separate dissenting opinion.
Gancayco, J., I join the dissent of Messrs. Justices Narvasa
and Padilla.
Padilla, J., Dissenting in separate opinion.
Sarmiento, J., I join Mr. Justice Padilla in his dissent.
Cortés, J., I concur in Mr. Justice Padilla’s dissent.
DISSENTING OPINION
NARVASA, J.:
The execution of final judgments and orders is a function of the
sheriff, an officer of the court whose authority is by and large
statutorily determined to meet the particular exigencies arising from
or connected with the performance of the multifarious duties of the
office. It is the acknowledgment of the many dimensions of this
authority, defined by statute and chiselled by practice, which
compels me to disagree with the decision reached by the majority.
A consideration of the wide latitude of discretion allowed the
sheriff as the officer of the court most directly involved with the
implementation and execution of final judgments and orders
persuades me that PAL’s payment to the sheriff of its judgment debt
to Amelia Tan, though made by check issued in said officer’s name,
lawfully satisfied said obligation and foreclosed further recourse
therefor against PAL, notwithstanding the sheriff’s failure to deliver
to Tan the proceeds of the check.
It is a matter of history that the judiciary x x is an inheritor of the Anglo
American tradition. While the common law as such x x ‘is not in force’ in
this jurisdiction, ‘to breathe the breath of life into many of the institutions,
introduced [here] under American sovereignty, recourse must be had to the
rules, principles and doctrines of the common law under whose protecting
aegis the prototypes of these institutions had their birth.’ A sheriff is ‘an
officer of great antiquity,’ and was also called the shire reeve. A shire in
English law is a Saxon word signifying a division later called a county. A
reeve is an ancient English officer of justice inferior in rank to an alderman x
x appointed
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 16/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
574
574 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
to process, keep the King’s peace, and put the laws in execution. From a
very remote period in English constitutional history x x the shire had another
officer, namely the shire reeve or as we say, the sheriff. x x The Sheriff was
the special representative of the regal or central authority, and as such
usually nominated by the King. x x Since the earliest times, both in England
and the United States, a sheriff has continued his status as an adjunct of the
court x x. As it was there, so it has been in the Philippines from the time of
the organization of the judiciary x x.” (J. Fernando’s concurring opinion in
Bagatsing v. Herrera, 65 SCRA 434)
One of a sheriff’s principal functions is to execute final judgments
and orders. The Rules of Court require the writs of execution to
issue to him, directing him to enforce such judgments and orders in
the manner therein provided (Rule 39). The mode of enforcement
varies according to the nature of the judgment to be carried out:
whether it be against property of the judgment debtor in his hands or
in the hands of a third person (i.e. money judgment), or for the sale
of property, real or personal (i.e. foreclosure of mortgage) or the
delivery thereof, etc. (sec. 8, Rule 39).
Under sec. 15 of the same Rule, the sheriff is empowered to levy
on so much of the judgment debtor’s property as may be sufficient to
enforce the money judgment and sell these properties at public
auction after due notice to satisfy the adjudged amount. It is the
sheriff who, after the auction sale, conveys to the purchaser the
property thus sold (secs. 25, 26, 27, Rule 39), and pays the judgment
creditor so much of the proceeds as will satisfy the judgment. When
the property sold by him on execution is an immovable which
consequently gives rise to a right of redemption on the part of the
judgment debtor and others (secs. 29, 30, Rule 39), it is to him (or to
the purchaser or redemptioner) that the payments may be made by
those declared by law as entitled to redeem (sec. 31, Rule 39); and in
this situation, it becomes his duty to accept payment and execute the
certificate of redemption (Enage v. Vda. y Hijos de Escano, 38 Phil.
657, cited in Moran, Comments on the Rules of Court, 1979 ed., vol.
2, pp. 326327). It is also to the sheriff that “written notice of any
redemption must be given and a duplicate filed with the registrar of
deeds of the province, and if any assessments or taxes are paid by
the redemptioner or if he has
575
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 575
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 17/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
or acquires any lien other than that upon which the redemption was
made, notice thereof must in like manner be given to the officer and
filed with the registrar of deeds,” the effect of failure to file such
notice being that redemption may be made without paying such
assessments, taxes, or liens (sec. 30, Rule 39).
The sheriff may likewise be appointed a receiver of the property
of the judgment debtor where the appointment of the receiver is
deemed necessary for the execution of the judgment (sec. 32, Rule
39).
At any time before the sale of property on execution, the
judgment debtor may prevent the sale by paying the sheriff the
amount required by the execution and the costs that have been
incurred therein (sec. 20, Rule 39).
The sheriff is also authorized to receive payments on account of
the judgment debt tendered by “a person indebted to the judgment
debtor,” and his “receipt shall be a sufficient discharge for the
amount so paid or directed to be credited by the judgment creditor
on the execution” (sec. 41, Rule 39).
Now, obviously, the sheriff’s sale extinguishes the liability of the
judgment debtor either in full, if the price paid by the highest bidder
is equal to, or more than the amount of the judgment or pro tanto, if
the price fetched at the sale be less. Such extinction is not in any
way dependent upon the judgment creditor’s receiving the amount
realized, so that the conversion or embezzlement of the proceeds of
the sale by the sheriff does not revive the judgment debt or render
the judgment creditor liable anew therefor.
So, also, the taking by the sheriff of, say, personal property from
the judgment debtor for delivery to the judgment creditor, in
fulfillment of the verdict against him, extinguishes the debtor’s
liability; and the conversion of said property by the sheriff, does not
make said debtor responsible for replacing the property or paying
the value thereof.
In the instances where the Rules allow or direct payments to be
made to the sheriff, the payments may be made by check, but it goes
without saying that if the sheriff so desires, he may require payment
to be made in lawful money. If he accepts the check, he places
himself in a position where he would be liable to the judgment
creditor if any damages are suffered by the latter as a result of the
medium in which payment was made
576
576 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 18/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
(Javellana v. Mirasol, et al., 40 Phil. 761). The validity of the
payment made by the judgment debtor, however, is in no wise
affected and the latter is discharged from his obligation to the
judgment creditor as of the moment the check issued to the sheriff is
encashed and the proceeds are received by said office. The issuance
of the check to a person authorized to receive it (Art. 1240, Civil
Code; Sec. 46 of the Code of Civil Procedure; Enage v. Vda y Hijos
de Escano, 38 Phil. 657, cited in Javellana v. Mirasol, 40 Phil. 761)
operates to release the judgment debtor from any further obligations
on the judgment.
The sheriff is an adjunct of the court; a court functionary whose
competence involves both discretion and personal liability
(concurring opinion of J. Fernando, citing Uy Piaoco v. Osmeña, 9
Phil. 299, in Bagatsing v. Herrera, 65 SCRA 434). Being an officer
of the court and acting within the scope of his authorized functions,
the sheriff’s receipt of the checks in payment of the judgment
execution, may be deemed, in legal contemplation, as received by
the court itself (Lara v. Bayona, 10 May 1955, No. L10919).
That the sheriff functions as a conduit of the court is further
underscored by the fact that one of the requisites for appointment to
the office is the execution of a bond, “conditioned (upon) the faithful
performance of his (the appointee’s) duties x x for the delivery or
payment to Government, or the person entitled thereto, of all
properties or sums of money that shall officially come into his
hands” (sec. 330, Revised Administrative Code).
There is no question that the checks came into the sheriff’s
possession in his official capacity. The court may require of the
judgment debtor, in complying with the judgment, no further burden
than his vigilance in ensuring that the person he is paying money or
delivering property to is a person authorized by the court to receive
it. Beyond this, further expectations become unreasonable. To my
mind, a proposal that would make the judgment debtor unqualifiedly
the insurer of the judgment creditor’s entitlement to the judgment
amount—which is really what this case is all about—begs the
question.
That the checks were made out in the sheriff’s name (a practice,
by the way, of long and common acceptance) is of little consequence
if juxtaposed with the extent of the authority
577
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 577
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
explicitly granted him by law as the officer entrusted with the power
to execute and implement court judgments. The sheriff’s
requirement that the checks in payment of the judgment debt be
issued in his name was simply an assertion of that authority; and
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 19/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
PAL’s compliance cannot in the premises be faulted merely because
of the sheriff’s subsequent malfeasance in absconding with the
payment instead of turning it over to the judgment creditor.
If payment had been in cash, no question about its validity or of
the authority and duty of the sheriff to accept it in settlement of
PAL’s judgment obligation would even have arisen. Simply because
it was made by checks issued in the sheriff’s name does not warrant
reaching any different conclusion.
As payment to the court discharges the judgment debtor from his
responsibility on the judgment, so too must payment to the person
designated by such court and authorized to act in its behalf, operate
to produce the same effect.
It is unfortunate and deserving of commiseration that Amelia Tan
was deprived of what was adjudged to her when the sheriff
misappropriated the payment made to him by PAL in dereliction of
his sworn duties. But I submit that her remedy lies, not here and in
reviving liability under a judgment already lawfully satisfied, but
elsewhere.
ACCORDINGLY, I vote to grant the petition.
FELICIANO, J., Dissenting
I concur in the able dissenting opinions of Narvasa and Padilla, JJ.
and would merely wish to add a few footnotes to their lucid
opinions.
1. Narvasa, J. has demonstrated in detail that a sheriff is
authorized by the Rules of Court and our case law to receive either
legal tender or checks from the judgment debtor in satisfaction of
the judgment debt. In addition, Padilla, J. has underscored the
obligation of the sheriff, imposed upon him by the nature of his
office and the law, to turn over such legal tender, checks and
proceeds of execution sales to the judgment creditor. The failure of a
sheriff to effect such turnover and his conversion of the funds (or
goods) held by him to his own uses, do not have the effect of
frustrating payment by and consequent
578
578 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
discharge of the judgment debtor.
To hold otherwise would be to throw the risk of the sheriff
faithfully performing his duty as a public officer upon those
members of the general public who are compelled to deal with him.
It seems to me that a judgment debtor who turns over funds or
property to the sheriff can not reasonably be made an insurer of the
honesty and integrity of the sheriff and that the risk of the sheriff
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 20/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
carrying out his duties honestly and faithfully is properly lodged in
the State itself. The sheriff, like all other officers of the court, is
appointed and paid and controlled and disciplined by the
Government, more specifically by this Court. The public surely has
a duty to report possible wrongdoing by a sheriff or similar officer to
the proper authorities and, if necessary, to testify in the appropriate
judicial and administrative disciplinary proceedings. But to make the
individual members of the general community insurers of the honest
performance of duty of a sheriff, or other officer of the court, over
whom they have no control, is not only deeply unfair to the former.
It is also a confession of comprehensive failure and comes too close
to an abdication of duty on the part of the Court itself. This Court
should have no part in that.
2. I also feel compelled to comment on the majority opinion
written by Gutierrez, J. with all his customary and special way with
words. My learned and eloquent brother in the Court apparently
accepts the proposition that payment by a judgment debtor of cash to
a sheriff produces the legal effects of payment, the sheriff being
authorized to accept such payment. Thus, in page 10 of his
ponencia, Gutierrez, J. writes:
“The receipt of money due on a judgment by an officer authorized by law to
accept it will satisfy the debt. (Citations omitted)
The theory is where payment is made to a person authorized and
recognized by the creditor, the payment to such a person so authorized is
deemed payment to the creditor. Under ordinary circumstances, payment by
the judgment debtor in the case at bar, to the sheriff would be valid payment
to extinguish the judgment debt.”
Shortly thereafter, however, Gutierrez, J. backs off from the above
position and strongly implies that payment in cash to the sheriff is
sheer imprudence on the part of the judgment debtor
579
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 579
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
and that therefore, should the sheriff abscond with the cash, the
judgment debtor has not validly discharged the judgment debt:
“It is argued that if PAL had paid in cash to Sheriff Reyes, there would have
been payment in full legal contemplation. The reasoning is logical but is it
valid and proper?
In the first place, PAL did not pay in cash. It paid in checks.
And second, payment in cash always carries with it certain cautions.
Nobody hands over big amounts of cash in a careless and inane manner.
Mature thought is given to the possibility of the cash being lost, of the
bearer being waylaid or running off with what he is carrying for another.
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 21/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
Payment in checks is precisely intended to avoid the possibility of the money
going to the wrong party. x x x
Payment in money or cash to the implementing officer may be deemed
absolute payment of the judgment debt but the court has never, in the least
bit, suggested that judgment debtors should settle their obligations by
turning over huge amounts of cash or legal tender to sheriffs and other
executing officers. x x x” (Italics in the original) (Majority opinion, pp. 12
13)
There is no dispute with the suggestion apparently made that
maximum safety is secured where the judgment debtor delivers to
the sheriff not cash but a check made out, not in the name of the
sheriff, but in the judgment creditor’s name. The fundamental point
that must be made, however, is that under our law only cash is legal
tender and that the sheriff can be compelled to accept only cash and1
not checks, even if made out to the name of the judgment creditor.
The sheriff could have quite lawfully required PAL to deliver to him
only cash, i.e., Philippine currency. If the sheriff had done so, and if
PAL had complied with such a requirement, as it would have had to,
one would have to agree that legal payment must be deemed to have
been effected. It requires no particularly acute mind to note that a
dishonest sheriff could easily convert the money and abscond. The
fact that the sheriff in the instant case required, not cash to be
delivered to him, but rather a check made out in his name, does not
change the legal situation. PAL did not thereby become negligent; it
did not make the loss anymore possible or probable
_______________
1 Art. 1249, Civil Code; e.g., Belisario v. Natividad, 60 Phil. 156 (1934); Villanueva
v. Santos, 67 Phil 648 (1938).
580
580 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
than if it had instead delivered plain cash to the sheriff.
It seems to me that the majority opinion’s real premise is the
unspoken one that the judgment debtor should bear the risk of the
fragility of the sheriff’s virtue until the money or property parted
with by the judgment debtor actually reaches the hands of the
judgment creditor. This brings me back to my earlier point that that
risk is most appropriately borne not by the judgment debtor, nor
indeed by the judgment creditor, but by the State itself. The Court
requires all sheriffs to post good and adequate fidelity bonds before
entering upon the performance of their duties and, presumably, to
maintain such bonds in force and effect throughout their stay in
2
office. The judgment creditor, in circumstances like those of the
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 22/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
2
office. The judgment creditor, in circumstances like those of the
instant case, could
3
be allowed to execute upon the absconding
sheriff’s bond.
I believe the Petition should be granted and I vote accordingly.
PADILLA, J., Dissenting Opinion
From the facts that appear to be undisputed, I reach a conclusion
different from that of the majority. Sheriff Emilio Z. Reyes, the trial
court’s authorized sheriff, armed with a writ of execution to enforce
a final money judgment against the petitioner Philippine Airlines
(PAL) in favor of private respondent Amelia Tan, proceeded to
petitioner PAL’s office to implement the writ.
There is no question that Sheriff Reyes, in enforcing the writ of
execution, was acting with full authority as an officer of the law and
not in his personal capacity. Stated differently, PAL had every right
to assume that, as an officer of the law, Sheriff Reyes would perform
his duties as enjoined by law. It would be grossly unfair to now
charge PAL with advanced or constructive notice that Mr. Reyes
would abscond and not deliver to the judgment creditor the proceeds
of the writ of execution. If a judgment debtor cannot rely on and
trust an officer of the law, as the Sheriff, whom else can he trust?
_______________
2 See e.g., Sec. 46, Republic Act No. 296, as amended by Republic Act No. 4814.
3 See e.g., Sec. 9, Act No. 3598.
581
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 581
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
Pursued to its logical extreme, if PAL had delivered to Sheriff Reyes
the amount of the judgment in CASH, i.e. Philippine currency, with
the corresponding receipt signed by Sheriff Reyes, this would have
been payment by PAL in full legal contemplation, because under
Article 1240 of the Civil Code, “payment shall be made to the
person in whose favor the obligation has been constituted or his
successor in interest or any person authorized to receive it.” And
said payment if made by PAL in cash, i.e., Philippine currency, to
Sheriff Reyes would have satisfied PAL’s judgment obligation, as
payment is a legally recognized mode for extinguishing one’s
obligation. (Article 1231, Civil Code).
Under Sec. 15, Rule 39, Rules of Court which provides that—
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 23/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
personal of every name and nature whatsoever, and which may be disposed
of for value, of the judgment debtor not exempt from execution, or on a
sufficient amount of such property, if there be sufficient, and selling the
same, and paying to the judgment creditor, or his attorney, so much of the
proceeds as will satisfy the judgment. x x x.” (emphasis supplied)
it would be the duty of Sheriff Reyes to pay to the judgment creditor
the proceeds of the execution i.e., the cash received from PAL
(under the above assumption). But, the duty of the sheriff to pay the
cash to the judgment creditor would be a matter separate the distinct
from the fact that PAL would have satisfied its judgment obligation
to Amelia Tan, the judgment creditor, by delivering the cash amount
due under the judgment to Sheriff Reyes.
Did the situation change by PAL’s delivery of its two (2) checks
totalling P30,000.00 drawn against its bank account, payable to
Sheriff Reyes, for account of the judgment rendered against PAL? I
do not think so, because when Sheriff Reyes encashed the checks,
the encashment was in fact a payment by PAL to Amelia Tan
through Sheriff Reyes, an officer of the law authorized to receive
payment, and such payment discharged PAL’s obligation under the
executed judgment.
If the PAL checks in question had not been encashed by Sheriff
Reyes, there would be no payment by PAL and, conse
582
582 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Philippine Airlines, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
quently, no discharge or satisfaction of its judgment obligation. But
the checks had been encashed by Sheriff Reyes___giving rise to a
situation as if PAL had paid Sheriff Reyes in cash, i.e., Philippine
currency. This, we repeat, is payment, in legal contemplation, on the
part of PAL and this payment legally discharged PAL from its
judgment obligation to the judgment creditor. To be sure, the same
encashment by Sheriff Reyes of PAL’s checks delivered to him in his
official capacity as Sheriff, imposed an obligation on Sheriff Reyes
to pay and deliver the proceeds of the encashment to Amelia Tan
who is deemed to have acquired a cause of action against Sheriff
Reyes for his failure to deliver to her the proceeds of the
encashment. As held:
“Payment of a judgment, to operate as a release or satisfaction, even pro
tanto, must be made to the plaintiff or to some person authorized by him, or
by law, to receive it. The payment of money to the sheriff having an
execution satisfies it, and, if the plaintiff fails to receive it, his only remedy
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 24/25
3/16/2017 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 181
is against the officer (Henderson v. Planters’ and Merchants Bank, 59 SO
493, 178 Ala. 420).
“Payment of an execution satisfies it without regard to whether the officer
pays it over to the creditor or misapplies it (340, 33 C.J.S. 644, citing Elliot
v. Higgins, 83 N.C. 459). If defendant consents to the Sheriff’s
misapplication of the money, however, defendant is estopped to claim that
the debt is satisfied (340, 33 C.J.S. 644, citing Heptinstall v. Medlin, 83
N.C. 16).”
The above rulings find even more cogent application in the case at
bar because, as contended by petitioner PAL (not denied by private
respondent), when Sheriff Reyes served the writ of execution on
PAL, he (Reyes) was accompanied by private respondent’s counsel.
Prudence dictated that when PAL delivered to Sheriff Reyes the two
(2) questioned checks (payable to Sheriff Reyes), private
respondent’s counsel should have insisted on their immediate
encashment by the Sheriff with the drawee bank in order to promptly
get hold of the amount belonging to his client, the judgment creditor.
ACCORDINGLY, I vote to grant the petition and to quash the
court a quo’s alias writ of execution.
Petition dismissed. Judgment affirmed.
583
VOL. 181, JANUARY 30, 1990 583
Philippine National Bank vs. De Leon
——o0o——
© Copyright 2017 Central Book Supply, Inc. All rights reserved.
http://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/0000015ad338bf217c2e6049003600fb002c009e/t/?o=False 25/25