G.R. No. 116940 June 11, 1997
The Phil. American Gen.
Insurance Co., Inc.
vs Court of Appeals and Felman
Shipping Lines
Ponente: Bellosillo
Facts:
July 6, 1983 Coca-cola loaded
on board MV Asilda, owned and operated by Felman, 7,500 cases of 1-liter Coca-Cola
soft drink bottles to be transported to Zamboanga City to Cebu. The shipment
was insured with Philamgen.
July 7, the vessel sank in
Zamboanga del Norte. July 15, cocacola filed a claim with respondent Felman for
recovery of damages. Felman denied thus prompted cocacola to file an insurance
claim with Philamgen. Philamgen later on claimed its right of subrogation
against Felman which disclaimed any liability for the loss.
Philamgen alleged that the
sinking and loss were due to the vessel's unseaworthiness, that the vessel was
improperly manned and its officers were grossly negligent. Felman filed a
motion to dismiss saying that there is no right of subrogation in favor of
Philamgen was transmitted by the shipper.
RTC dismissed the complaint of
Philamgen. CA set aside the dismissal and remanded the case to the lower court
for trial on the merits. Felman filed a petition for certiorari but was denied.
RTC rendered judgment in favor
of Felman. it ruled that the vessel was seaworthy when it left the port of
Zamboanga as evidenced by the certificate issued by the Phil. Coast Guard and
the ship owner’s surveyor. Thus, the loss is due to a fortuitous event, in
which, no liability should attach unless there is stipulation or negligence.
On appeal, CA rendered
judgment finding the vessel unseaworthy for the cargo for being top-heavy and
the cocacola bottles were also improperly stored on deck. Nonetheless, the CA
denied the claim of Philamgen, saying that Philamgen was not properly
subrogated to the rights and interests of the shipper plus the filing of notice
of abandonment had absolved the ship owner from liability under the limited
liability rule.
Issues: (a) Whether the vessel
was seaworthy, (b) whether limited liability rule should apply and (c) whether
Philamgen was properly subrogated to the rights against Felman.
Ruling:
(a) The vessel was
unseaworthy. The proximate cause thru the findings of the Elite Adjusters,
Inc., is the vessel's being top-heavy. Evidence shows that days after the
sinking coca-cola bottles were found near the vicinity of the sinking which
would mean that the bottles were in fact stowed on deck which the vessel was
not designed to carry substantial amount of cargo on deck. The inordinate
loading of cargo deck resulted in the decrease of the vessel's metacentric
height thus making it unstable.
(b) Art. 587 of the Code of
Commerce is not applicable, the agent is liable for the negligent acts of the
captain in the care of the goods. This liability however can be limited through
abandonment of the vessel, its equipment and freightage. Nonetheless, there are
exceptions wherein the ship agent could still be held answerable despite the
abandonment, as where the loss or injury was due to the fault of the ship owner
and the captain. The international rule is that the right of abandonment of
vessels, as legal limitation of liability, does not apply to cases where the
injury was occasioned by the fault of the ship owner. Felman was negligent, it
cannot therefore escape liability.
(c) Generally, in marine
insurance policy, the assured impliedly warrants to the assurer that the vessel
is seaworthy and such warranty is as much a term of the contract as if
expressly written on the face of the policy. However, the implied warranty of
seaworthiness can be excluded by terms in writing in the policy of the clearest
language. The marine policy issued by Philamgen to cocacola has dispensed that
the "seaworthiness of the vessel as between the assured and the
underwriters in hereby admitted."
The result of the admission of
seaworthiness by Philamgen may mean two things: (1) the warranty of
seaworthiness is fulfilled and (2) the risk of unseaworthiness is assumed by
the insurance company. This waiver clause would mean that Philamgen has
accepted the risk of unseaworthiness, therefore Philamgen is liable.
On the matter of subrogation,
it is provided that;
Art. 2207. If
the plaintiff's property has been insured, and he has received indemnity from
the insurance company for the injury or loss arising out of the wrong or breach
of contract complained of, the insurance company shall be subrogated to the
rights of the insured against the wrongdoer or the person who has violated the
contract. If the amount paid by the insurance company does not fully cover the
injury or loss, the aggrieved party shall be entitled to recover the deficiency
from the person causing the loss or injury.
Pan Malayan Insurance Corp. vs
CA: The right of subrogation is not dependent upon, nor does it grow out of any
privity of contract or upon payment by the insurance company of the insurance
claim. It accrues simply upon payment by the insurance company of the insurance
claim.
Therefore, the payment made by
PHILAMGEN to Coca-Cola Bottlers Philippines, Inc., gave the former the right to
bring an action as subrogee against FELMAN. Having failed to rebut the
presumption of fault, the liability of FELMAN for the loss of the 7,500 cases
of 1-liter Coca-Cola soft drink bottles is inevitable.
WHEREFORE, the petition is
GRANTED. Respondent FELMAN SHIPPING LINES is ordered to pay petitioner
PHILIPPINE AMERICAN GENERAL INSURANCE CO., INC.
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