G.R. No. L-11776, August 30, 1958
Ramon Gonzales
vs Go Tiong and Luzon Surety Co., Inc.
Facts:
Go Tiong owned a rice mill and warehouse located in
Pangasinan. To secure the performance as warehouseman, Luzon Surety executed a
guaranty bond in the sum of 18, 334 conditioned particularly on the fulfillment
by Go Tiong of his duty to deliver the palay stored in his warehouse upon
demand or to pay the market value thereof, in case he cannot return the same.
Before his issuance of license as warehouse, Go
Tiong had several palay deposit from Gonzales, totaling 368 sacks for which he
issued receipts. After he was licensed, Gonzales deposited 492 sacks more, all
the grand total of 860 sacks valued at 8,600.
March 1953, Gonzales demanded from Go Tiong the
value of the deposits but he was told to come back 2 days after. A few days
later, the warehouse of Go Tiong was burned to the ground.
After the burning, Gonzales, along with other palay
depositors filed their claims with the BOC. While the case was pending in
court, parties entered into a contract of amicable settlement agrreing that
Gonzales will withdraw all actions against Go Tiong once the accounts due were
settled.
In this present petition, both parties contend that
the governing law shall be the civil code and not the bonded warehouse act for
the reson that Go Tiong issued ordinary receipts to Gonzales, and because the
deposits were gratuitous.
Ruling:
Act No. 3893 as amended is a special law regulating
the business of receiving commodities for storage and defining the rights and
obligations of a bonded warehouseman and those transacting business with him.
Consequently, any deposit made with him as a bonded warehouseman must
necessarily be governed by the provisions of Act No. 3893. The kind or nature
of the receipts issued by him for the deposits is not very material much less
decisive. Though it is desirable that receipts issued by a bonded warehouseman
should conform to the provisions of the Warehouse Receipts Law, said provisions
in our opinion are not mandatory and indispensable in the sense that if they
fell short of the requirements of the Warehouse Receipts Act, then the
commodities delivered for storage become ordinary deposits and will not be
governed by the provisions of the Bonded Warehouse Act. Under Section 1 of the
Warehouse Receipts Act, one would gather the impression that the issuance of a
warehouse receipt in the form provided by it is merely permissive and directory
and not obligatory:
SECTION 1. Persons who may issue receipts. —
Warehouse receipts may be issued by any warehouseman.,
and the Bonded Warebouse Act as amended permits the
warehouseman to issue any receipt, thus:
. . . . "receipt" as any receipt issued by
a warehouseman for commodity delivered to him.
As the trial court well observed, as far as Go Tiong
was concerned, the fact that the receipts issued by him were not
"quedans" is no valid ground for defense because he was the principal
obligor. Furthermore, as found by the trial court, Go Tiong had repeatedly
promised plaintiff to issue to him "quedans" and had assured him that
he should not worry; and that Go Tiong was in the habit of issuing ordinary
receipts (not "quedans") to his depositors.
Considering the fact, as already stated, that prior
to the burning of the warehouse, plaintiff demanded the payment of the value of
his palay from Go Tiong on two occasions but was put off without any valid
reason, under the circumstances, the better rule which we accept is the
following:
. . . . This rule proceeds upon the theory that the
facts surrounding the care of the property by a bailee are peculiarly within
his knowledge and power to prove, and that the enforcement of any other rule
would impose great difficulties upon the bailors. ... It is illogical and
unreasonable to hold that the presumption of negligence in case of this kind is
rebutted by the bailee by simply proving that the property bailed was destroyed
by an ordinary fire which broke out on the bailee's own premises, without
regard to the care exercised by the latter to prevent the fire, or to save the
property after the commencement of the fire. All the authorities seem to agree
that the rule that there shall be a presumption of negligence in bailment cases
like the present one, where there is default in delivery or accounting, for the
goods is just a necessary one. . . . (9 A.L.R. 566; see also Hanes vs. Shapiro,
84 S.E. 33; J. Russel Mfg. Co. vs. New Haven, S.B. Co., 50 N.Y. 211; Beck vs.
Wilkins-Ricks Co., 102 S.E. 313, Fleishman vs. Southern R. Co., 56 S.E. 974).
Besides, as observed by the trial court, the
defendant violated the terms of his license by accepting for deposit palay in
excess of the limit authorized by his license, which fact must have increased
the risk.
The Luzon Surety claims that the amicable settlement
by and between Gonzales and Go Tiong constituted a material alteration of its
bond, thereby extinguishing and discharging its liability. It is evident,
however, that while there was an attempt to settle the case amicably, the
settlement was never consummated because Go Tiong failed to settle the accounts
of Gonzales to the latter's satisfaction.
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