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Commercial Law o Second objection: I dont know the maker, I just know the one

negotiating it to me. How will I know hes solvent?


Bar 2011 Notes Laws solution will make the indorser liable
regardless (Accumulation of secondary contracts)
Roland Glenn T. Tuazon The more indorsers, the more you can sue
Two general parts in the law:
Ateneo de Manila University
o 1 what makes an instrument negotiable
o 2 rights and obligations of parties
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Two basic forms:
1. NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS LAW o Promise to pay (PN)
2. MERCANTILE INSTRUMENTS: o Order to pay (bill of exchange)
a. LETTERS OF CREDIT What If it does not comply with requisites of negotiability?
b. TRUST RECEIPTS LAW o If it does not comply with the requisites of negotiability, it is still
c. WAREHOUSE RECEIPTS LAW a contract, but not covered by the NIL.
d. CHATTEL MORTGAGE LAW Either:
e. REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE/FORECLOSURE o Payable to order negotiated by indorsement, and delivery
f. SECURITIES REGULATION CODE o Payable to bearer delivery is sufficient
g. FOREIGN INVESTMENTS ACT o N.B. If payable to a specific person, it is not negotiable
3. INSURANCE What are the four basic contracts involved?
4. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW o 1. Making
5. BANKING LAWS o 2. Drawing
a. TRUTH IN LENDING ACT o 3. Negotiating
b. ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING ACT o 4. Accepting
c. PHIL. DEPOSIT INSURANCE LAW To show consent
d. CONFIDENTIALITY OF DEPOSITS o N.B. But for all, there must be delivery
e. GENERAL BANKING LAW What are the basic principles of the NIL?
f. CENTRAL BANK ACT o 1. Bad faith
6. CORPORATION LAW If a person is in BF, he cannot invoke defenses.
7. TRANSPORTATION LAW Ex. Issued a negotiable instrument to pay for a car
that is defective. The indorsee knows that the car is
ANNEX 1: IN-DEPTH DISCUSSION ON LATTER PART OF NIL defective, he is in bad faith.
o 2. Estoppel
Ex. A father allowing a son to steal a check and forge
Negotiable Instruments Law his signature is estopped from denying it
HISTORY: contrast a negotiable instrument with a non-negotiable PN: o 3. Comparative fault
o First objection: a person stepping into the shoes of the seller is If a bank honors a check with a forged signature, the
exposed otherwise to the defenses that the buyer may launch bank is considered negligent too
against the seller
Laws solution exempt from personal defenses

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But if the negligence of the drawer outweighs the Do not look into evidence aliunde. You must confine
negligence of the bank, the law shifts the fault to the yourself within the four corners of the instrument to
drawer deem whether it is absolute.
o 4. The law will only protect you from personal defenses if you Distinguish between uncertain events and certain
are a holder in due course (Sec. 52) events, although indeterminate (ex. Moment of death)
Good faith o 2c. Sum certain, and payable in money
With value Because it is meant to be a substitute for money
Before overdue (see below) Specify the denomination; cannot just be a number.
With no notice of defenses o 3. Payable on demand or on a determinable future time
o 5. General rule: there must be demand , before an instrument o 4. Payable to order or bearer
becomes overdue. Exception: If time is of the essence. Need not use exact words, but there must be
Ex. Reserve requirements of banks must be kept reasonable certainty so people know from whom they
afloat, so overnight, banks sometimes transact with could demand payment
each other Ex. instead of order pay to X or his indorsees;
An overdue instrument is shouting to the high pay to X or his assigns
heavens I have been dishonored! Ex. instead of bearer pay to X or holder; pay to X
or possessor
Requisites and kinds of negotiable instruments o 5. Where the instrument is addressed to a drawee, he must be
named or otherwise indicated with reasonable certainty
What are the requirements for a negotiable instrument? If name of the drawee is left blank, it is an incomplete
o 1a. It must be in writing instrument which can be filled up as a remedy
o 1b. It must be signed symbol of consent When is a sum certain:
If one signed another name or a symbol, it will bind o Does a stipulation of interest still make it a sum certain?
him if he intended for it to bind him Yes. It must be in writing.
Location is immaterial N.B. Remember the rules on unconscionable interest
o 2a. Must contain a promise or order to pay rates
Need not use exact words, even equivalent words are o When does the interest become 12% by default?
fine 1. Unconscionable interest
Creates a NEW obligation to pay, not a mere 2. Stipulated an interest but no rate
acknowledgement of an old debt o What is required for the instrument to be valid?
Exception 1: date of payment is mentioned, 1. Amount of installments must be indicated
or at least, a date of maturity 2. Date of maturity of each installment specified
Exception 2: insertion of or order (words of Ex. Promise to pay Jose Cruz or order P100,000 in
negotiability) in the old terms 10 installments. not negotiable
Authorization to pay or a mere request does not N.B. You have to specify both AMOUNT and WHEN
create a binding obligation to pay. EACH is due. You cannot just give the starting point
o 2b. The promise to pay or order must be unconditional (ex. Nov 2005)
o Does the stipulation of an acceleration clause make it a
sum certain?

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Yes. An acceleration clause: failure to pay an Negotiable, because the promise to pay is still
installment will make the entire balance due and conditional, as long as it is not dependent to the CM.
demandable. When is it payable at a determinable future time:
o Is it valid to stipulate payment in foreign currency? o Distinguish between various insecurity clauses:
Yes. If you talk about an exchange rate, you have to 1st situation: Pay Jose Cruz or order; if the holder
talk about at least two currencies. It cannot be just feels insecure, he may demand that I post reasonable
one. securities, and if I fail to do so, he can declare the
o Is I will pay reasonable attorneys fees in case there is entire balance due and demandable.
failure to pay a sum certain? One view: non-negotiable date of maturity
Yes. Because you know how much is due at the becomes uncertain because holder can
date of maturity. This is the reckoning point at the accelerate payment, and there is an
date of maturity, the sum is still certain. additional undertaking other than payment of
N.B. Stipulations on attorneys fees are always money.
subject to court control anyway. Other view: negotiable the undertaking to
When is a promise is unconditional: put up a security is merely an accessory
o Do instructions on how payment will be entered in the obligation. The date of maturity is not
books of account affect unconditionality? uncertain because acceleration is within
No. control of the maker; he can prevent it by
o Does reimburse yourself from X fund affect giving the additional security. (better view)
unconditionality? 2nd situation: same if the holder feels unsecure, he
No. can declare the entire balance due and demandable.
o What is the test? It is not negotiable, because here, the holder
It must indicate the source of reimbursement, not has the absolute option to make the
source of payment. The latter is not negotiable. obligation due and demandable.
What about treasury warrants? o Differentiate:
It is not negotiable because it is payable out When the maker may choose to pay before a certain
of a particular fund. date, it is still negotiable (ex. on or before June 15)
When does reference to a particular fund not Why?
destroy negotiability? o It benefits everyone because all
Payment must not be limited to come from other secondary contracts are
such fund. discharged.
o What is the rule on how the original obligation came When the holder may absolutely choose to have the
about? obligation due, it is not negotiable.
In general, it does not affect unconditionality Why?
But not if mention of the original contract makes the o Everybody becomes secondarily
instrument subject to the formers terms and liable by ripening their obligation.
conditions o What if its hinged upon a contingency?
o Does mention of a CM securing the original obligation Non-negotiable even if the condition occurs.
make it non-negotiable?

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o Philippine Education v. Soriano: A money order is not o 5. Designates currency in which payment will be made
negotiable, because although it says pay to the order of, When it is payable on demand?
under Postal Regulations, obligation to pay is conditional, o 1. Upon sight or presentation
depending on different grounds where the post office can o 2. Instrument is silent on when payment is made
refuse to pay. Also, it can only be indorsed once. o 3. When it is overdue
o Does an extension clause affect negotiability? As to the maker, he is discharged
No, if the extension is for a definite time too. BUT as to the indorser, it is upon demand
Ex. Payable within 2 years from date, subject Upon whose order may an order instrument be paid?
to one year extension o 1. Payee (who is not maker, drawer, or drawee)
Option to extend belongs to holder or maker/acceptor. o 2. Drawer
What additional provisions do not affect negotiability: Ex. Jose Cruz writing a check saying Pay to the
o What is the general rule? order of Jose Cruz (better than making a check paid
Other obligation or undertaking aside from payment of to cash)
money makes it non-negotiable (secured by CM over In this example, it is not complete until Jose indorses
my car, which I will keep in good condition) it, because there has to be delivery (at least two
o What are the exceptions? parties to a contract)
1. Authority for holder to foreclose pledge, CM, or o 3. Drawee
collateral securities o 4. Two or more payees jointly
2. Authorizes confession of judgment if instrument not Ex. Pay to the order of Jose Cruz AND Manuel
paid upon maturity Santos
N.B. the SC said, however, this is a void o 5. One or some of several payees
stipulation Ex. Pay to the order of Jose Cruz OR Manuel Santos
3. Waiver of benefit of law Contra: For drawees, it CANNOT be alternative or
4. Waiver of notice of dishonor successive, but it can be jointly.
5. Waiver of venue Ex. drawee can be drawn against A and B
6. Waiver of exemption from execution but not A or B
o What if the holder has the option to require something o 6. Holder of an office for the time being
other than payment of money? Ex. Treasurer of the city of Makati
It is valid, as long as the other option is money. o What if the drawee is not indicated with reasonable
Ex. If option is upon holder to demand either certainty?
cash or rice, it is still negotiable because the It is not negotiable.
holder can ALWAYS demand money When it is payable to bearer?
If the maker has the option, not valid. o 1. To bearer
What omissions do not affect negotiability? Caltex: The Certificates of Time Deposit [in this
o 1. Not dated case] are negotiable instruments. The documents
o 2. Failure to mention consideration provide that the amounts deposited shall be
It is presumed in this contract repayable to the depositor. And who, according to the
o 3. Does not specify place where it is drawn or payable document, is the depositor? It is the bearer.
o 4. Bears a seal o 2. To person or bearer

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o 3. Order of fictitious person Whenever the SLA lends to members, it issues post-
What is the general rule? dated checks. But most of the time, the SLA does not
There must be intent by the maker or drawer have enough money. The borrowers thus endorse
of the NI that the instrument be issued to a the checks to Rodriguez; in turn, Rodriguez
fictitious person (knowledge is paramount) rediscounts the checks (issuing checks lower than
Weller and Martin: Either partner can sign or issue face value). The SLA has a policy: when a member
checks. X wanted to steal money from the has an outstanding loan, they cannot get another
partnership. He drew a check payable to a loan. So the officers who wanted to borrow more, to
corporation where he was just the corporate circumvent this, they made it appear that it is the
secretary. He was just the corp. sec., and was not other members who are borrowing. The SLA, in
authorized to indorse; but he indorsed the check to accordance with the usual procedure, issued post-
himself nonetheless. Y, his partner, sued the bank for dated checks to the supposed borrowers (but really
restoration of the amount. HELD: it is payable to for the officers). The officers indorsed the checks to
bearer. The Drawer did not intend the payee (the Rodriguez. Rodriguez issued discounted checks.
Corporation) to get the proceeds of the check, EVEN PNB found out about this and closed the SLA
IF the payee actually existed or not. It fell under this account. Meanwhile, the checks issued to Rodriguez,
provision. which bounced because the SLA account was shut
If, however, the company required two down since the checks they issued were cleared,
signatories to all checks, and X signed it with and the checks issued to them were from a closed
intent to steal, and Y signed it not knowing account. Contention of spouses: How can PNB
Xs intent, then it does not become payable accept the indorsement of those checks, when the
to bearer. For the payee to be fictitious, both ones who indorsed were the officers and not the
must have same intent. supposed borrowers. Contention of PNB: it is
American Sash: Had a payroll clerk, who prepares intended for fictitious persons, since there was no
checks payable to employees. He then makes the intent that they actually get the money (even if the
officers sign the checks. Clerk padded payroll with supposed borrowers really exist). HELD: Rodriguez
ghost employees, had the officers sign the checks spouses won. For the checks to be considered as
(the officers did not know that the employees didnt payable to fictitious persons, the fact must be known
exist), and the clerk collected money. Issue: is this to the person issuing the negotiable instrument.
payable to fictitious persons. These ghost employees Here, the Rodriguez spouses did not know that the
did not actually exist. HELD: It was not a bearer supposed payees were not the real borrowers (when
instrument. The DRAWERS were the officers who it fact it was the officers). PNB must reinstate the
signed the checks. Their intent controls. So the amounts to the Rodriguez spouses.
checks DID NOT become payable to bearer because o 4. Payee is not name of existing person
they DID NOT KNOW that the ghost employees were Classic example: payable to cash
not part of the payroll. o 5. Last indorsement is in blank
Rodriguez v. PNB: Employees of PNB formed a
savings and loan association (SLA). Rodriguez Completion and delivery
spouses meanwhile, had current accounts with PNB.

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What is the effect of ante-dating or post-dating? 1. It must be filled up in accordance with the authority
o Does not affect negotiability given to him
When can the holder insert a date in the instrument? 2. It must be filled up within reasonable time
o When the date of acceptance is not inserted by the drawee, o X gave a check with a blank amount to Y, telling Y that he
the holder may insert date of issue or date of acceptance should fill it up according to what X ultimately owes Y, but not
o What if he places the wrong date? over P50000. X owes Y P30000, but Y put P60000.
If negotiated to a holder in due course, that is the Can Y collect P60000 from X?
correct date as far as the holder in due course is No. It was beyond the authority given him.
concerned even if it is not Y indorsed the check to Z, a HIDC. Can Z collect
Purpose: the law protects a holder in due course, who P60000 from X?
is relying on that date in good faith Yes. The defense does not apply to him.
o But what if the one who put the wrong date presented it for o X asked Y to sign a piece of paper claiming that it was a
payment to the acceptor/drawee? witness signature that the Z will pay X what Z owes. But X
Not valid. Cannot claim because he was not in GF. actually made it appear that it was a PN where Y promised to
o A check drawn by X says Pay to the order of Y P10000 thirty pay money to her. HELD: The court believed the contention
days after sight. It was accepted by E on Sept. 15, but did not that Y never intended for the signature to be for a PN. There
date the instrument. Y negotiated it to Z, telling the latter that must be intent to leave a signature to make a PN.
the instrument was accepted November 1. Z placed in the What about incomplete and undelivered instruments?
instrument this date. o Will not be a valid contract in the hands of any holder, as
Can he collect from E? against the person whose signature was placed on the
Yes, even if it is more than 30 days from instrument prior to delivery (real defense)
acceptance. Z is a HIDC and the Nov 1 date BUT indorsers are liable
is true as to him. o Ex. X left signed checks, and an employee took them and
If Y inserted the wrong date instead and did not filled up amounts. This is an incomplete and undelivered
indorse it to Z, can he collect from E? instrument.
No. He is not a HIDC. o Ex. X went abroad and left signed checks for payment of
What is the rule for incomplete but delivered instruments? debts. Abusive employees put their own names and signed
o When it is wanting of a material particular the person their own names. HELD: By pre-signing checks and leaving
possessing it has prima facie authority to fill up the blanks them with employees, it became possible for them to do this.
CONTROLLING FACTOR: The blank or incomplete The officers were negligent and shared in the loss (60-40).
instrument must have been delivered with intent that What about complete but undelivered instruments?
the holder turn it into a negotiable instrument o The NI is incomplete until delivered, but this does not prejudice
o In a case, a person signed an instrument in blank and left a HIDC
it with the bank. The bank filled it up with an amount. o Ex. You cannot sue if you hold checks that were not delivered
What happens? to you. You never acquired a right over them.
The amount inserted by the bank controls. BUT a HIDC will not be subject to this defense it is
o What are the two requirements for this instrument to be a personal defense
enforceable? o BPI Family Savings: BPI issued a check payable to City
Treasurer of Iloilo to pay for local taxes. They did not deliver it

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to the treasurer, and just gave it to the employee. The o Because the indorser has the least liability among all
employee used it to pay for somebody elses local taxes. characters in a NI
HELD: There was no payment because BPI never delivered it 7. If I promise to pay note is signed by two or more persons
to the city treasurer, so BPI cannot claim to have paid. deemed solidarily liable
o Associated Bank: Somebody was selling RTW clothes, and
shopping malls (buyers) issued crossed checks. Somehow, Signature
the checks fell into the hands of someone else, who indorsed it
to someone else, and were deposited to Associated Bank. What is the general rule as to signatures?
The seller was wondering why she wasnt being paid. [If you o A person whose signature does not appear on the instrument
are legalistic, the RTW seller must sue the shopping malls, is not liable
etc., because the checks were not delivered to her. In turn, the What are the exceptions?
shopping malls, etc. must sue the drawee banks, and then the o 1. Duly authorized agent signing for principal
drawee banks sue Associated Bank why it cleared the checks. o 2. Forger liable for signature he forges
HELD: The SC allowed the RTW seller to sue Associated o 3. Signature in separate paper (allonge) because the
Bank directly because it cleared the checks. instrument has no more space
o It may be shown that delivery between immediate parties is o 4. Estoppel
conditional, or for a special purpose. o 5. Signing under trade/assumed name
o Ex. A godson is taking the CPA test, but X is not in the o 6. Instrument can be negotiated by mere delivery
Philippines. He gave P10,000 check on the condition that he What must an agent write to avoid personal liability?
pass the test. The godson cannot enforce payment on the o 1. Agent must disclose he is an agent
check. BUT if the godson negotiates the check to a holder in o 2. Disclose his principal
due course, the law will protect the HDC. 3. He has authority
What if the party is a minor or a corporation without capacity?
Rules of interpretation o Maker of a PN cannot refuse to pay to a holder on the ground
that the indorser is a minor. Neither can he raise the defense
1. Words prevail over figures that the prior indorsee is a minor.
o Romero: Amount indicated in words is One Million Two o ONLY the minor can raise the defense of minority, no one else.
Hundred Pesos. Amount in figures: 1,200,000. Balance in the o Can apply this principle by analogy to other incapacitated
account is 1,100,000. The check bounced. The words persons (Ex. corporation action ultra vires)
prevailed. o Exceptions:
2. Payment of interest 1. The minor actively misrepresented his age and it
o Runs from date from instrument appears that he is physically of such age
o Or if none, date of issue 2. Minor kept fruits/benefits
3. If not dated, assumed to be dated from time of issue 3. Minor spent the money in good faith
4. Written > printed provisions
5. If ambiguous whether a bill or note, the holder has the option to treat Forgery
it as either
6. Ambiguous role of signature deemed an indorser What if a persons signature is forged?
o Did not give consent to the contract

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o Except when he is estopped E can collect from D as indorser/forger
What are the kinds of forgery? o D. Bearer instrument: A -B or bearer-C (signature forged by D)-
o 1. Signature is copied D-E
o 2. Fraud in esse contractus (fraud in factum) N.B. This is an instrument payable to bearer; delivery
Misled to signing instrument, not knowing it was a is sufficient, no need for indorsement.
negotiable instrument Can E collect from A?
o 3. Duress amounting to forgery Depends. If E is not a holder in due course,
It must be duress in the execution (ex. Grab the hand A will claim that there was no delivery of
of the intimidated), NOT duress in inducement complete instrument by B since C stole it
o 4. Fraudulent impersonation from him
In general, it is NOT a forgery If E is a holder in due course, he may collect
The person to whom the note was given is presumed from A since it is payable to bearer
to be intended to receive the note (because he knew Can E run after C?
the intended payee) No, Cs indorsement was forged
Four general rules for forgeries: Neither can he run after B, because he
o 1. A party whose signature is forged is not liable unless hes cannot trace his right to him [cut off by the
estopped forgery].
o 2. An acceptor who pays on a BOE cannot recover the money He can run after D, because by indorsing the
because he admits the genuineness of the signature of the instrument (even if bearer), he warranted it.
drawer o N.B. if a bearer instrument is indorsed even
o 3. A Holder in Due Course acquires good title if forged if it is not needed, the indorser warrants the
indorsement is not necessary for his title instrument as what it purports to be.
Ex. in a bearer instrument Forgery of Bill of Exchange:
o 4. A person negotiating an instrument after forgery is liable o A. Order instrument: A (signature forged by B) and then
(due to warranties) indorsed to C-D-E. X accepted as drawee.
Forgery of promissory note: Can E collect from A?
o A. Order instrument: A (signature forged by B)-B-C-D-E No. No consent.
E cannot collect from A (not bound) Can E run after X?
E can collect from B (forger) Yes. By accepting, X admits the instrument
E can collect from C, D as indorsers (warranted the is genuine.
instrument) What is Xs remedy?
o B. Bearer instrument: A (signature forged by B)-B-C-D-E o Sue B, the forger.
Indorsing an instrument that need not be indorsed Can E run after B?
leads to a warrant of such o Yes (forger)
o C. Order instrument: A-B-C (signature forged by D)-D-E Can E run after C and D?
E cannot collect from A or B (since it is an order Yes. Warranted by indorsement
instrument, there is a cut-off to A and B, since Cs o B. Same, but X did not accept.
signature is forged) How does the answer change?
E cannot collect from C (no consent)

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Same for everyone, except E cannot run Can E run after X?
after X because he did not accept. No, X did not accept.
o C. Same as A, but bearer instrument. Can E run after C?
How does the answer change? No, did not consent.
Same rules on indorsement of a bearer Can E run after D?
instrument if there was indorsement even Yes (warranted and forged)
if there is no need to do so, there is warrant Can E run after B?
of the genuineness of the instrument by the No, cut off by the forgery.
indorsers. Can E run after A?
o D. Bearer instrument, but an indorsers signature was forged Yes, can go after A if E is a HDC. BUT
Even if Cs indorsement to D is forged, the cannot go after A if E is not HDC. N.B.
payee can still collect from A (because he (reason: complete but undelivered
just promised to pay the bearer). Remedy of instrument is a personal defense)
the acceptor is to just run after the thief. What are the exceptions to these general rules?
o E. BOE issued by A payable to B or order C (signature o 1. When there is estoppel (ex. father saying that his sons
forged by D)-D-E. X accepted and paid. forgery of his signature was genuine)
Can X debit As account? o 2. When there is unreasonable delay by the drawer in
No, because it went against As order to pay informing the drawee about the forgery
B or order, which was cut off by the forgery Drawer can check the statements sent by the bank to
of Cs signature. him
Can X get money back from E? Test: If the drawer had acted quickly, would the
Yes, because X only admits As signature as drawee have been able to stop or freeze payment?
genuine (it was) and not the indorsers X left a check book with his friend, who was in the car. The friend
signatures. forged his signature in a check book left lying there.
Can E run after A, B, or C? o HELD: Not negligent; no reason to suspect friend of bad faith.
No. They were all cut off by the forgery. An external auditor was hired to reconcile records. He managed to
Can E run after D? forge the signatures of the officers of Casa Montessori over a long time.
Yes, he forged. Sued bank, which refused to reinstate the amounts. Bank argued Casa
o F. BOE issued by A payable to B or bearer C (signature was negligent.
forged by D)-D-E. X accepted and paid. o HELD: An external auditor is not an employee. It is an
Can X debit As account? independent contractor, so you cannot blame Casa for
Yes, because A promised to pay the bearer. negligence in hiring an employee.
Can X get money back from E? o Estoppel does not apply, because Casa had no way to know
No. E is the bearer. the auditor was stealing money, because he was precisely the
What is the remedy? one tasked with safeguarding the school records and
C can run after D, the forger. comparing with bank records.
o G. BOE issued by A payable to B or bearer C (signature Effect of comparative fault?
forged by D)-D-E. X did not accept.

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o Split accountability for the loss (usually 50-50 but can adjust o The collecting bank must return the money to the drawee bank,
depending on level of negligence) because the payee did not indorse the check.
Illustrate comparative fault principle: o N.B. This is NOT a case of negotiation, but presentment for
o Robbers broke into Triumph Lumber. Check book was stolen, payment. So the collecting bank cannot claim there was
but Triumph did not report it to the bank. Robbers were able to warranty.
cash checks. X, employee of Ford, was tasked to pay sales tax (P18M), made a
HELD: Triumph was negligent for not reporting the check payable to Insular Bank (for payees account only), the authorized
theft. The bank should also be held negligent for collecting agent of BIR. X showed a fake BIR receipt to Ford. Instead,
authenticating the checks. X deposited a worthless check with Insular Bank, which X substituted
o MWSS did not have their checks printed by the central bank. for the check issued by Ford. In their internal records, X made it appear
They had a private printing press print their checks. The the worthless check was deposited. X stole the real check, and Citibank
signatures of the officers of MWSS were forged. PNB paid. honored it. X collected from Bank of America. Ford had to pay BIR
HELD: MWSS must bear the loss for failing to again. They sued.
exercise caution did not ask printing press to o HELD: Citibank must return the money to Ford, because Ford
surrender plates, account for spoilage, and MWSS did ordered it to pay the BIR, which Citibank disobeyed. It says
not examine the signatures in the bank returns. for payees account only and there was no indorsement from
o Ilusorio was leaving for abroad and he left his checkbook with BIR. Citibank was guilty only of negligence.
his secretary, who he asked to reconcile bank statements. o Citibank manager (who was complicit) was criminally liable.
Secretary forged his signature. o JJ doesnt agree with the court as regards Insular Banks
HELD: Ilusorio should bear the loss for his liability.
negligence. He trusted his secretary. o Check: G.R. 121413 29 Jan. 2001
o Gempesaw owes several groceries. She trusted a bookkeeper Rules on clearing
blindly. When she ordered supplies, the bookkeeper prepared o Checks are brought to a clearing house and are run through a
the checks, and Gempesaw signed the checks without clearing house. They check the magnetic strips on the checks.
verifying the statements. The bookkeeper was able to steal The amount will then be transferred to the collecting bank.
more than P1M. o Then the checks will be physically given to the drawee bank.
HELD: Negligent; did not confirm or examine the The drawee bank has 24 hours to honor/dishonor the check.
invoices, receipts, etc. before signing the checks used o If it dishonors it, the drawee bank returns the check to the
to pay the suppliers. clearing house. The computer will return the amounts paid.
o Province of Tarlac had account with PNB. Province issues o Any return beyond 24 hours: time-barred.
checks to the physician/head of the clinic. The cashier already Here, the doctrine applies to the forged signature of
retired, but he was still hanging around. Cashier was able to the drawer.
forge when he picked up the checks. This 24 hour rule SHOULD NOT apply when it is the
HELD: Province was negligent, for allowing the payees or indorsees signature that is forged,
cashier to pick up the checks even when he was because the drawee bank has no way to find out, until
retired, so he was able to indorse the checks through the drawer informs them.
forgeries. Split accountability 50-50. (But the SC has at times wrongly applied the 24 hour
What is the general duty of the collecting bank when the rule to the payees forged signature.)
indorsement is forged? o New rules (to prevent ping-pong of checks):

10
If a check is dishonored, you can only present it one o Rule: Where value is given for the NI, the holder is a holder for
more time. [Usual reason why one failure is allowed value in respect to all parties who became such prior to [the
drawn against insufficient funds] time consideration was given]
What is the effect when the drawee bank does not o A issued a PN to B, but there is no consideration. B
return the check within 24 hours? indorsed it to C for consideration. C, then to D. What is
The drawee cannot ask the computer to Ds status as holder for value?
reverse the entries. D is a holder for value with respect to A, B, and C
BUT you are not precluded from suing to because C gave value. A and b are parties who
collect after. But since the computer cannot became bound prior to the value given.
reverse, while you are litigating, you do not What is the rule on holder who has a lien on the instrument?
have the amount. o He is a holder for value only to the extent of the lien.
o Ex. Company appealing a lost case posts supersedeas bond
Consideration and Holders for Value (ex. P500000). Surety Company asks for collateral. The
surety company is a holder for value to the extent of P500K,
IMPT THINGS TO REMEMBER: even if the company issued a certificate of time deposit
o 1. Failure of consideration is a personal defense. This usually negotiable for P1M.
applies when X and Y have a transaction and Xs instrument What is the nature of absence of consideration?
bounces, but Ys prestation is only partially fulfilled. o 1. Defense against a person not a HIDC (personal defense)
o 2. But if you bring in a third party (HIDC), then failure of o 2. Partial failure of consideration is a proportionate defense.
consideration is not a defense anymore. Ex. Somebody issued a check for P20000 for 10
o 3. As discussed in the next section, an accommodation party is sacks of rice. The check bounced. The seller
liable to a Holder for Value. however only delivered 5 sacks of rice. HELD: He
Under the law, consideration is presumed can only sue for P10000
o Travel Inc.: Travel agency sued on the basis of a bouncing Want of consideration between drawer and payee cannot be invoked as
check issued by a guy bringing in passengers. The CA was defense of drawee who accepted a BOE
wrong for asking the agency to prove the value of the ticket o A drew a BOE for the amount of P10M in favor of B, the
purchased. There is a presumption of valuable consideration, payee, in exchange for 10 cars. B only delivered 5 cars.
and that the check was for such amount. X, the drawee, did not accept. Can A launch the defense
o Ex. in BP 22, there is no need to prove the check was issued of partial failure of consideration against B?
for valuable consideration Yes. Want of consideration is a defense against the
In civil law, generosity, love, affection, etc. are valid consideration. payee.
o [N.B. Sundiang says love and affection, etc. cannot be o [Same facts] X accepted. Can X refuse to pay on account
considered valuable consideration. But Jack says that a of partial failure of consideration?
donation is a simple contract and the law simply requires No. The acceptor cannot use want of consideration
consideration sufficient to support a simple contract. So love as defense. By accepting, he admits authority of the
and affection is valuable consideration.] drawer to draw the instrument, and that he will pay.
Rule on holder for value vis--vis prior parties:
Accommodation party

11
Who is an accommodation party? then the Prudencio Spouses should pay PNB because PNB is
o Signs as party but does not received consideration or value a holder for value!
therefore, from the underlying contract. Only lends his credit. X was exchanging a post-dated check for cash to the disbursing officer
What is the accommodation partys liability? of AFP. AFP asked Y, Xs sister, to sign as accommodation indorser.
o Liable to a holder for value, even if the holder for value knew The check bounced. Y was acquitted for conspiracy charges, but was
him as merely an accommodation party at the time that holder held civilly liable. Correct?
took the instrument. o HELD: Yes. Thats what an accommodation party is tasked to
Ex. Some banks try to get borrowers to get surety do when the check bounces, she pays.
companies to sign borrowing agreements. Surety
companies charge premiums for signing as co- Negotiation
makers. The surety company, not receiving any part
of the proceeds, is deemed an accommodation party. Can bearer instruments be negotiated?
Must there be independent consideration for the accommodation? o Yes. When a bearer instrument is indorsed although
o No, it is not an absolute prerequisite. The consideration that unnecessary, it is still ultimately negotiated.
o See Caltex case. When pledging a NI, there are no specific
supports the surety is the same consideration for the original
obligation. provisions. Fall back on the NCC. Must comply with
requirements of putting it in a public instrument and
May a corporation be an accommodation party?
indorsement.
o As a general rule: a corporation cannot be an accommodation
Where must the indorsement appear?
party to an instrument, because there is no business purpose
to such [unless that is the business of the corporation]. o On the instrument itself or to a paper attached to it
What must be indorsed?
Prudencio: Construction project. The constructor borrowed from PNB
working capital. The bank required two other signors. The firm got the o The entire instrument. Indorsing only part of the amount will
Prudencio spouses who issued checks. The project was failing. PNB make it cumbersome.
agreed to release part of the security money to help the project. But the o 1. Prohibited to indorse to 2 or more indorsees severally.
project died anyway. PNB sued Prudencio spouses. HELD: Prudencio Ex: A check for P100K is negotiated to Jose Cruz for
spouses are accommodation parties. The court held that PNB is not a 50K and Manuel Santos for P50K.
Ratio: This in effect is two indorsements of 50K each
holder in due course, because it knew that the spouses did not receive
consideration. When PNB released a portion of the money, it was in (two partial indorsements)
BF. o 2. PARTIAL indorsement is treated under law as an
o JJs comment: the law says Holder for value not HIDC. You assignment. It is subject to personal defenses.
cannot claim PNB was in bad faith when it released the money EXCEPTION: When it has been paid in part (ex. on
because the project was already failing. PNB took a risk, installments)
rather than ensure the certain failure of the project, the Types of indorsements:
released funds could have improved the project. o Special specified person to whom it is being indorsed
o Sec. 52: definition of HIDC point in which a person must be is o Blank does not name any person
in GF is when he took the instrument. The release of the funds Indorsement of an order instrument in blank can
happened long after. convert the indorsement into a special indorsement by
o SO IF YOU FOLLOW THE IMPORT OF SEC 29, which writing his name
makes accommodation parties liable to holders for value,

12
This ensures that the order instrument does not o B) bring action indorser could bring
become a bearer instrument o C) transfer rights, if allowed to do so
Ex. A issued a PN to B or order for P10K. B What is a qualified indorsement?
indorses it to C, but in blank. What can C do? o Done by writing without recourse although the instrument is
C can insert To C over the signature to still negotiable
keep it an order instrument. o This can be done if the instrument will fall due for a long time
C CANNOT put To C, waiving notice of (ex. 5 years), and the indorser does not want to be insecure for
dishonor. The contract must be consistent such a long time.
with the tenor of the indorsement o But qualified indorser still has some warranties under Sec. 65;
Types of restrictive indorsements: 1. Genuine as to what it purports to be
(ex. not forged or materially altered)
Negotiability Passing of Consideration Defense 2. Warrants his valid title
title presumed available 3. All prior parties have capacity to contract
Pay to Jose X Yes Yes X, because 4. That he is not aware of any fact that makes the
Cruz only indorsee is
instrument valueless
a HIDC,
defenses (ex. that the maker is insolvent)
against o Ex. A issues a PN to B or order for P50K. B indorses to C,
indorser then C to D. D indorses to E without recourse.
cannot Can E collect from D?
apply to him No. The indorsement is qualified.
To Jose Yes, but X, because X, because Yes, If As signature turned out to be forged, can E
Cruz, for subject to the there is no defenses
collection same indorsee is transfer of title against collect from D?
only (as restriction a mere indorser can Yes. Because he warranted that the
agent only) that he only agent of the be raised instrument is genuine as to what it purports
holds it for indorser against to be.
collection indorsee If D turned out to have forged Cs indorsement to
because he him, can E collect from D?
is just an
agent Yes, more so. He warranted his valid title to
To Jose Yes, but Yes Yes, because X, because E.
Cruz, as subject to there is title What is the effect of a conditional indorsement?
trustee for same trust transfer of title transfers o 1. The maker (or acceptor) may disregard the condition
Glenn because the maker made an unconditional promise to pay.
Tuazon The indorser cannot change the original obligation
(indorsee
o 2. The maker can also say lets wait and see if the condition is
named as
trustee) fulfilled
o 3. If the maker pays, but the conditioned turned out to be
unfulfilled after, the remedy of the conditional indorser is to run
Rights of indorsee in restrictive indorsement: after the indorsee to get back the money. The conditional
o A) collect payment indorser cannot run after the maker/acceptor because the M/A

13
has every right to dispose of his obligation while he feels o ABCDE. E cancels the indorsement of C to D. He
solvent. loses the right to run after C. D is also discharged, because D
What is the effect of an indorser signing of an instrument payable lost his chance to run after C.
to bearer? o RULE: The indorser who is struck out and ALL indorsers after
o It can still be indorsed through mere delivery him are eliminated
o But the special indorser is only liable to those who can make Ex. If there is indorsement from A to Z, and you
title through his indorsement cancel C, persons C to Y are discharged.
o Rule: a bearer instrument is always a bearer instrument What about Instruments transferred without indorsement?
o Contra: a WHR can be converted from a bearer to an order o Transferee will only step into the shoes of the transferor
instrument by a special indorsement o So defenses against transferor apply to the transferee too
What if the instrument is payable to two or more payees? o But the transferee can compel the transferor to indorse it
o All must endorse o What is the time period to determine if he is a HIDC?
o But if they are partners, there is mutual agency The reckoning point is that time of indorsement, not
What if the instrument payable to a cashier or fiscal officer? the initial transfer
o Assumed that the instrument is payable to the corporation he Ex. Did not know necklace was fake at time of
represents transfer; knew it was fake at time of indorsement = not
What is the effect if the name is misspelled? HIDC
o Must indorse the instrument according to the misspelled name, Indorsement to a prior indorser:
because other parties will not know that there was a mistake o Ex. A-B-C-D-E-B
made o Can B run after C, D, and E?
o If he wants, after signing as the misspelled name, he can sign No. Because they in turn can run after B too!
his real name, so it will appear wrong name indorsed to real There is compensation under law. The law will not
name allow them to run around in circles.
What if there is date attached to the negotiation?
o The date is presumed to be correct, but rebuttable. Rights of the Holder
o If there is no date, the negotiation is presumed to have been
What are the rights of a holder?
done before it was overdue
o 1. Can sue in own name
Useful to establish HIDC
o 2. Payment in due course discharges the instrument
What if it indicates a place?
Payment at or after maturity is in due course, and
o Law of that country will govern as to questions of indorsement
without notice his title is defective
N.B. Not every restrictive indorsement will destroy negotiability
Holder in due course (Sec 52)
o Only that in subsection A (Pay to X only) will destroy
o Requisites:
o Crossed check is still negotiable
1. Instrument is complete and regular on its face
Can strike out an indorsement not needed for his title:
2. Must have become a holder before it was overdue
o Ex. bearer instrument: can strike out indorsements B to E
and without notice of prior dishonor, if so
o If its an order instrument, can E strike out B?
3. Took it in GF and for value
No. Because it is payable to the order of B. You
4. When he took, no notice of infirmity in instrument or
cannot take him out, or else, E cannot draw title to the
defect in title of the indorser
instrument.

14
This elaborates #3 o No. Since the check was crossed, it can only be deposited.
When is there defect in the title of the indorser? ABC should have inquired as to the title of Y, but it did not.
If he took it through unlawful means (ex. o If the checks are crossed, the taker must inquire as to the
stole it), illegal consideration (ex. issued for nature of the indorsers title
marijuana), or negotiated it in breach of faith, X paid Y a check, drawn against ABC bank. Y altered the amounts. Y
fraud (ex. issued for fake ring), or duress (ex. deposited it in DEF (her bank). Y told DEF not to present the check for
issued as ransom money) payment right away, even if it was already due, and to let Y to draw the
o Rule on instruments payable on installments and HIDC: amount anyway. The alteration was discovered. ABC refused to pay.
DEF sued to recover. Is DEF a HDC?
Status on payment Knowledge Effect o No. The circumstances show that the check was already due
An installment has not Holder is aware HDC as to installments but Y asked DEF not to present it for payment yet. And DEF
been paid and there is not due on the face of allowed Y to withdraw even if the check has not been cleared
no acceleration clause the instrument
yet.
An installment is not Holder is aware Not a HDC
paid and there is an The claimant received a check that was not indorsed to it by the payee,
acceleration clause and the check had a notice of prior dishonor due to DAIF (drawn against
(automatic) insufficient funds).
An installment is not Holder is not aware HDC as to installments o HELD: Claimant is not a HIDC.
paid and there is an not due on the face of In two cases, there was lack or failure of consideration between the
acceleration clause the instrument maker/drawer and payee of the NI. In one case, it was merely issued
(automatic)
as security, and in the other, the car delivered had the wrong chassis
An installment is not Holder not aware of the HDC as to installments
paid and there is an exercise of this option not due on the face of number. But in both cases, the payee already indorsed the check to
optional acceleration the instrument another person.
clause o HELD: Those persons are HIDCs and the defense of
An installment is not Holder is aware of its Not a HDC failure/lack of consideration does not vest.
paid and there is an exercise May a payee be a HIDC?
optional acceleration o Yes, because the law simply provides holder. A payee is a
clause
holder, too.
What about negotiation of an instrument payable on demand after
What is the test to know whether or not he is a HIDC? an unreasonable length of time?
o A holder must be aware that something is wrong, but chose not o Holder is not a HIDC.
to investigate further as to not be a HDC. o Consider the nature of the instrument, customs, and particular
o Check: was it honest for him to take the instrument under facts
these circumstances? What about a transferee who receives notice of infirmity before he
X issued a crossed check to Y, in order to buy a car from Z. However, has paid the full amount agreed upon as consideration for the
Y took the check and paid it to ABC hospital, and the value of the check instrument?
was greater than his bill to ABC hospital (which gave change). X o He is a HIDC only to the extent of the amount paid by him.
stopped payment. ABC sued X. X launched defense of failure of o Ex. X issued a post-dated check to Y with value of P100K,
consideration. Issue: is ABC a HIDC? and X told Y to just pay him P80K right away because X could
not wait for the maturity of the check. Y has only paid P40K so

15
far. Then Y found out that the check was issued for a fake Personal defenses are available against a non-HDC. This does not
ring. The check was presented but it was dishonored. Y sued mean the non-HDC cannot collect. It just means that personal defenses
Z, the drawer. Can he collect? may be raised against him.
HELD: Yes, but only to P50K, since that is half the (58b) IMPT. Shelter Principle (GT)
value of the check, and Y only paid half of the agreed o What it simply says is that a holder who (1) derives title from a
consideration. He is a HIDC only to the extent of half HDC (2 ) and is not a party to the illegality or fraud has
the check. the same rights as the HDC as to the prior parties to the
What are the rights of a HIDC? indorser, even if he is not.
o 1. Sue in own name and receive payment o Ex. A was induced by B through fraud to issue a PN to B or
o 2. Free from personal defenses order. B C, who was NOT aware of the fraud (HDC). C
o 3. May enforce payment against all parties liable thereon D who was aware of the fraud but not a party to it. What is the
o Exception: when he cannot recover full payment effect?
37 restrictive indorsement [GT: I dont know why.] D is a holder in due course as to the parties prior to
Maybe JJ meant qualified indorsement under the indorser (A and B)
38? What if D indorses it to E, who is not an HDC?
54 notice before full amount is paid Since E derives title from D, who is not an
124 when materially altered, a HDC may still HDC, E does not have the rights of an HDC.
enforce against the maker/drawee according to the o There can be no curing. So D cant indorse the instrument to
original tenor of the instrument F, an HDC, and have it re-indorsed back to him to cure his
General rule: the instrument is avoided as to title. He resumes his position as not a HDC.
those not party to the alteration or did not PRESUMPTION:
indorse it o General rule every holder is a HDC
o But not everyone can invoke real defenses against a HDC. o Exception if it is shown that the title of the negotiator is
For instance, an indorser warrants an instrument is genuine in defective, then the holder has to prove that either the holder or
all respects it purports to be. Also, an acceptor warrants the the negotiator is a HDC
authority of the drawer to pay. o Exception to the exception the exception does not apply to a
party that has become bound to the instrument prior to the
Personal defenses Real defenses acquisition of defective title
Theres a contract with some No contract because an element is Ex. A B C D E. D swindled C, then indorsed
inequitable or iniquitous fact behind missing; or void against public policy
to E.
it
Voidable contract Void contract When E runs after A, he is not required to
Ex: no consideration, undelivered Ex; material alteration (so the prove that he is a HDC because A was
complete instrument, acquired by consent is not anymore to this bound to the instrument before the defective
force/illegal means, illegal instrument); undelivered incomplete title occurred.
consideration, negotiation in breach instrument (no consent); forgery (no Fossum:
of faith, mistake, ultra vires act of consent); minority (lack of capacity) o X issued a check to Y, but there was failure of consideration.
corporation
Y negotiated to Z, who was not a HIDC (he was aware of the
Not applicable to HDC Applicable to HDC
failure of consideration between X and Y). Z sued X to collect.

16
X refused and raised personal defense of lack of consideration. <IF BY DELIVERY
What is the implication? warranties only extend
The burden of proof shifts upon Z to prove that either to immediate
Z or Y is a HIDC. In this case, it failed to do so. transferee>
General indorser Either: 1. Instrument is
In this case, Z loses the presumption of being HDC
1. Upon due genuine and is what it
because Ys title, as negotiating party, is defective. Y presentment he will purports to be
has no benefit of the presumption because it is not a accept/pay according 2. He has good title
holder anymore. to tenor 3. All prior parties had
2. Or if dishonored, he capacity to contract
Liabilities of parties will pay the amount to 4. The instrument is
the holder, or to a valid and subsisting at
Obligations Warranties subsequent indorser the time of his
Maker Pay according to tenor 1. Existence of payee compelled to pay it indorsement
2. Capacity of payee to
indorse
Drawer If dishonored, and 1. Existence of payee Liability of Maker:
process of dishonor 2. Capacity of payee to o X issued a PN to Y. Y collected, by X failed to pay. He lodged
completed: indorse the defense that he used the money to pay for his sick
3. On due presentment, daughters expenses, and his daughter is a beneficiary of a
1. He will pay the it will be accepted/paid
trust administered by Y.
amount to holder, according to its tenor
2. Or to a subsequent HELD: X must pay. He made an unconditional
indorser who pays for it promise to pay. What he did with the money is none
of the courts business.
<But drawer may Liability of drawer:
express stipulation o What is the nature of the drawers liability?
limiting his liability>
Merely secondary liable only if the instrument is
Acceptor Pay according to tenor 1. Existence of drawer,
dishonored.
of acceptance 2. Genuineness of
drawers signature He can put without recourse to limit his liability.
3. Drawers capacity o D issued a check to P, drawn against BPI. P presented for
and authority to draw payment, and BPI debited Ds account. However, P was
4. Existence of payee unable to receive the money because BPI withheld payment,
and capacity to indorse pending investigation of some anomalies. P ran after D.
Qualified indorser or 1. Instrument is HELD: D must pay, even if his account has already
indorser by delivery genuine and is what it
been debited. He warranted that P will be paid, and if
purports to be
2. He has good title not, he will make good the check.
3. All prior parties had Liability of acceptor:
capacity to contract o X issued a check for P4000 to Y. Y indorsed it to Z. Z altered
4. Has no knowledge of the amount to P40000, and negotiated to H. H presented it for
any fact that would acceptance to E. E accepted it. For how much can the
impair the instrument
check be enforced against the acceptor?

17
View 1: P40000 because that is the tenor of the o N.B. In general, a qualified indorser or one negotiating by
acceptance. delivery DOES NOT ANSWER FOR SOLVENCY. It only
View 2 (better view): Acceptance is assent to the warrants the four listed warranties and is liable for breach of
order of the drawer (132), which is just P4000. He did such. Examples:
not consent to P40000, since there must be Breach of W1 (genuine): the instrument is forged
knowledge. (124) In fact, for a HDC, even if there is Breach of W2 (good title): He stole the NI
alteration, he can enforce payment according to the Breach of W3 (prior parties had capacity to contract):
original tenor Prior party is a minor
o Acceptor admits existence of drawer because without the Breach of W4 (no knowledge of fact that would impair
drawer, the BOE cannot exist. He admits authority of the the instrument): Knew that M/D was insolvent; or that
drawer to draw. there was failure of consideration
o Acceptor admits existence and capacity of payee to indorse, o What is the underlying principle behind this?
because the instrument is meant to circulate. Same as Statute of Frauds. An undertaking to
o N.B. Acceptor does not admit signature of indorser. answer for the debt of another must be in writing to be
What is an irregular indorser? enforceable. He must be only liable to the person he
o He signs in blank before delivery. He is called such because dealt with
you would normally expect the payee as the first signature What is the liability of a general indorser?
there. But here, the irregular indorsers signature is found o 1. Same as first 3 warranties of qualified indorser
there first. o 2. Last warranty he warrants that the instrument is valid and
o What is his liability? subsisting
He is actually an accommodation party o If maker is insolvent, even if the indorser was not aware, he is
Must be an additional party (not a regular party liable.
signing again will not increase the credit value of the o X deposited (through indorsement) a check with ABC bank,
check) drawn against DEF bank. X was able to withdraw money
o A (X irregular indorser) B C D E: although not cleared. Eventually, the check bounced. ABC
X is liable to B, C, D and E. asked for return of money.
RULE: liable to all subsequent parties. (If payable to HELD: X must pay. When he indorsed, he warranted.
the maker or drawer or bearer, he is liable to all If for any reason (whatever reason) the drawee does
parties subsequent to the maker or drawer) not pay, he is liable.
What are the warranties where negotiation is by delivery? o There is a 45-day holding period if the check deposited is
o See the list of warranties in the law [see table] drawn abroad. But RCBC accommodates employees, allowing
o Person negotiating by delivery: only liable to the person to them to withdraw right away. An employee X, received a
whom he delivered the instrument. Not liable to subsequent check, and deposited. Bank required X to indorse the check
parties as an irregular indorser. She was then allowed to withdraw.
o Unlike a general indorser, a qualified indorser does not warrant Some employee (Y) placed below the indorsement: valid up
that the instrument will be paid. He is liable only if the maker 75,000 pesos only. The drawee bank dishonored the check,
or acceptor is insolvent and he is aware of that fact (since since the indorsement was irregular. RCBC asked X to return
here, there is a breach of warranty). the immediately withdrawn money.

18
HELD: RCBC cannot collect. The check was 2. Notice of dishonor is given to the secondarily liable
dishonored because of the partial indorsement made party
by Y. This is why the American bank dishonored. o In a BOE:
o Signature of indorser was forged. Payee presented the check 1. Presentment for acceptance to the drawee OR
for payment to the drawee. It was paid. Payee signed at the negotiation within reasonable time after it was
back. Then the forgery was discovered. Must the payee acquired in the following instances:
reimburse drawee? A. Bill payable after sight or acceptance
No. It did not indorse the check. The signature is to needed to fix maturity of instrument
acknowledge payment, not to indorse. B. Bill expressly requires acceptance
o The law mentions that warranties of general indorser C. Bill is payable elsewhere than residence
apply only to HDC. Should we follow this? or place of business of drawee
JJ doesnt think so. 2. If dishonored by non-acceptance:
What if it is indorsed when not required? A. Give notice of dishonor to the indorsers
o He incurs liabilities of an indorser, whether general or qualified and drawer
What is the presumption? B. (If foreign bill, protest for dishonor by non-
o Indorsers are presumed to be liable in the manner in which acceptance)
they indorsed. But parole evidence however may be accepted 3. If the bill is accepted:
to prove otherwise. A. Presentment for payment to the acceptor
o Ex. A B C, C can prove that while Bs signature appears o If dishonored by non-payment, give
first, C indorsed it to him notice of dishonor to those
What if the rule for indorsement by agent? secondarily liable
o If he fails to disclose that he is just an agent, or fails to disclose B. (If foreign bill, protest for dishonor by non-
his principal, he will be liable as an indorser payment)
When is presentment for payment necessary?
Click here for longer discussion on presentment, acceptance, and dishonor
o For primary persons never necessary
and some parts not included in the syllabus
o For secondary persons, generally needed to make
presentment except:
How to enforce liability (presentment, dishonor)
1. To drawer who has no right to expect that the
How do you enforce liability to those primarily liable? drawee or acceptor will pay
o 1. No need to do anything to hold a maker liable because he 2. Indorser where the instrument was made or
already promised to pay. accepted for his accommodation and he has no
o 2. A drawee is liable once he accepts the instrument. reason to expect instrument will be paid if presented
How do you charge those secondarily liable? 3. Dispensed with under Sec. 82:
o In a PN: A) after exercise of reasonable diligence,
1. Presentment for payment made within required presentment cannot be made
period to the maker (and then dishonored by non- B) drawee is fictitious person
payment) C) waiver or presentment
4. Instrument dishonored by non-acceptance

19
What are the requisites for presentment for payment? o 4. Although presentment has been irregular, acceptance
o 1. Presented by the holder or some person authorized by him refused on some other ground
o 2. Made at reasonable hour on business day on proper date Requisites for valid acceptance?
o 3. At proper place o 1. In writing
o 4. To person primarily liable, or if absent, to any person found o 2. Signed by the drawee
at the place where presentment is made o 3. Drawee must assent to the promise to pay a sum certain in
o 5. Person must exhibit the instrument and surrender it money and not any other means
X drew a check in 1990. The holder, Y, presented the check to the o What is proof of acceptance?
drawee bank only in 1994. It was dishonored by the bank. Y gave It must be written on the instrument itself
notice of dishonor to X. What is the ruling? If there is acceptance and the holder requests that it
o The dishonor was proper because it was presented beyond be written on the bill, but the drawee refuses treat it
reasonable time. Reasonable time is relative, depending on as dishonored by non-acceptance
circumstances. But for checks, they become stale in 6 months. o What if it is written on another paper?
o X is no longer liable based on the check. But if there is an It only binds the acceptor to persons to whom it is
underlying contract between X and Y, X is still liable shown to and on faith thereof, accepted the bill for
contractually just not through that particular check. value
What is the implication of failure to make proper presentment for o What is the rule on future bills?
payment? Does it discharge the person primarily liable? If there is an unconditional promise in writing to
o It discharges those secondarily liable on the instrument. accept a bill before it is drawn, and a person on faith
o It does not discharge the person primarily liable (maker or thereof took a bill for value
drawee/acceptor) because its their obligation. But the payee When is a bill deemed accepted?
or holder cannot demand interest subsequent to maturity and o 1. Bill delivered to the drawee and he destroys the same
costs of collection. o 2. Bill delivered to the drawee but he refuses within 24 hours or
When is a bill required to be presented for acceptance? within other period allowed by the holder to return the bill
o [See enumeration above payable after sight etc., expressly What are the kinds of acceptance?
required, payable elsewhere] o 1. Conditional payment dependent on a condition
o Note that a check does not fall under this enumeration o 2. Partial only for part of the amount
When is presentment for acceptance excused or dispensed with? o 3. Local only on a particular place
o 1. DELAY EXCUSED for bill payable elsewhere than place of o 4. Qualified as to time
business or residence of drawee and the holder failed to o 5. Acceptance of some of the drawees but not all
present for acceptance even after reasonable diligence What is the rule on qualified acceptances?
The delay thats excused is the delay in presenting it o The holder has a right to refuse a qualified acceptance and
for payment due to the delay in presentment for deem it as dishonor by non-acceptance.
acceptance o If he accepts qualified acceptance, the drawer and indorsers
o 2. Drawee is dead, has absconded, is fictitious, or has no are discharged from liability on the bill.
capacity to contract Unless they assent to the qualified acceptance
o 3. Presentment cannot be made even after exercise of They must express dissent to the holder within
reasonable diligence reasonable time from receipt of notice of the qualified
acceptance

20
Who should give notice of dishonor? 2. If given through other means, within time that it
o 1. The holder would be received in due course of mail in the same
o 2. His agent or representative time frame as above
o 3. Any party who may be compelled to pay (e.g. indorsers) When is notice of dishonor not required in general?
o 4. Agent of #3 o In general: when after exercise of reasonable diligence, it
Who benefits from the notice? cannot be given or it does not reach the parties
o If given by the holder, benefits all subsequent holders and all When is notice of DH not needed to be given to drawer?
prior parties who have a right of recourse against the party to o 1. Drawer and drawee are the same person
whom it was given o 2. Drawee is fictitious person or has no capacity to contract
Ex. M P or order A B C D (holder). M o 3. Drawer is the person to whom instrument was presented for
dishonors: payment
D may notify C since C may be compelled to Ex. C went to the office of X, the drawee, but he was
pay D. C may then notify any person who not there. But R, the drawer, who was the office
may be liable to him (P, A, or B). And so on. manager, was there. And the drawer dishonored.
If D notified B straight up, C benefits o 4. Drawer has no right to expect that drawee or acceptor will
because he need not notify B. honor
o If given by indorser who may be compelled to pay, it benefits Ex. X withdrew her money from her bank account and
the holder and all parties subsequent to the party to whom issued a check to cover for expected proceeds of
notice was given jewelry she had to sell. She failed to sell the jewelry.
Same example: The check was in the hands of Y who had ABC
If D notified C, and C notified P, then D investment house rediscount it. The check bounced.
benefits through the notice of C, an indorser. HELD: X had no right to expect the bank will pay
It also benefits A and B. because she withdrew all her funds.
What is the effect of valid notice of dishonor? o 5. Drawer countermanded payment
o Immediate right of recourse against the secondarily liable party Meaning, drawer stopped payment.
arises. He becomes primarily liable. o N.B. In all these cases, the drawer KNEW that there was or
How must notice be given? would be dishonor.
o Parties reside in same place: When is notice of DH not needed to be given to indorser?
1. If at place of business, given before close of o 1. Drawee is fictitious person or has no capacity to contract
business hours the next day and the indorser is aware of this fact upon indorsement
2. If at residence, given before usual hours of rest the o 2. Indorser is the person to whom presentment for payment
next day was made
3. If sent by mail, deposited in post office in time to o 3. Instrument was made or accepted for his accommodation
reach him in usual course the next day
Drawer Indorser
o Parties reside in different places
Drawer and drawee same person
1. If sent by mail, deposited in post office in time to go
Drawee fictitious or no capacity Drawee is fictitious or no capacity,
by mail the day follow day of dishonor. If there is no and indorser knows
mail then, on the next mail thereafter Drawer is to whom instrument was Indorser is to whom instrument was

21
presented for payment presented for payment o 5. Release of principal debtor, unless holders right of recourse
Drawer has no right to expect it will Made or accepted for indorsers against secondarily liable party is expressly reserved
be paid by drawee accommodation (same principle: no o 6. By extension of time of payment or right to enforce
right to expect it will be paid) instrument
Drawer countermanded
Except if secondarily liable party assents
Or right to recourse is expressly reserved
When can there be waiver of notice of dishonor? What is the effect of an absolute and unconditional renunciation?
o 1. Before actual time for giving it comes o A holder renouncing against prior parties terminates
o 2. Or after failure to give it recourse to that party
o Can waiver be implied? o If against primarily liable person discharges the instrument
Yes. o But it does not affect subsequent HIDC. So if C renounces all
o Who is affected by a waiver in an instrument? claims against A and B, then negotiates it to D, who is a HIDC,
If written on the instrument all the parties D is not prejudiced by the prior renunciation.
If written over a signature just that person What is the form of renunciation?
o Waiver of protest o It must be absolute and unconditional
Includes presentment and notice of dishonor (steps to o If it is merely oral and the instrument is not surrendered, the
hold a person secondarily liable) renunciation is not effective.
Failure to give notice of dishonor by non-acceptance does not prejudice o It is not effective if unintentional or by mistake
rights of a HIDC subsequent to the omission. OTHER methods of discharge:
o Ex. A drew a BOE payable to B. B indorsed to C. C presented o 48 striking out indorsements (relieves that person and all
the BOE for acceptance to X. X dishonored the instrument. C those subsequent to him)
did not give notice of dishonor to A or B. C indorsed the o 89 those secondarily liable to whom notice was not given
instrument to D, a HIDC. D will not be precluded by Cs failure o 122 renunciation by holder
to give notice of DH to A and B. o 142 qualified acceptance by drawee discharges those
secondarily liable
Discharge Unless they assent to it. Failure to dissent within
reasonable time is an assent
How is a negotiable instrument discharged? o 186 stale check
o 1. Payment in due course by holder o 188 holder of a check procures it to be accepted or certified
o 2. Payment in due course by accommodated party
o 3. Intentional cancellation by holder Material Alteration
o 4. Any other act that discharges simple contract for money
o 5. Principal debtor becomes holder of instrument in his own What is the effect of a material alteration?
right o Discharges all parties not party to the alteration
How those secondarily liable are discharged: o Binds the one who made the alteration, those who assented,
o 1. Discharge of instrument and subsequent indorsers
o 2. Intentional cancellation of his signature by the holder What is the right of a HIDC?
o 3. Discharge of a prior party o If he is not party to the alteration, he may enforce it according
o 4. Valid tender of payment by prior party to the instruments original tenor

22
What is a material alteration? o You sign it twice (first as a specimen signature, and second
o 1. Date goes into the obligation when paying. You present your passport too)
o 2. Sum payable, principal or interest into amount Crossing a check has three consequences:
o 3. Time or place of payment into enforcement o 1. Can be negotiated only once
o 4. Number or relations of parties into obligation o 2. Cannot be encashed; must be deposited
o 5. Medium or currency of payment into amount General can be deposited in any bank
A issued a PN to B for 4K. B indorsed to C. C changed the amount Special must be deposited only in that bank
to 40K and indorsed to D. D indorsed to E. E is a HIDC. What is o 3. To be a HIDC, the holder must inquire as to what purpose
Es right? the check was issued for
o Enforce the instrument for 4K against A or B o But is it still negotiable?
o Enforce the instrument for 40K against C (made the alteration) Yes, it is still negotiable.
or D (indorsed and warranted) o What if you try to encash a crossed check?
It will be denied. You cannot run after the drawer
BOE because there is no proper presentment for payment
Payee of a check presented a check in the morning; the bank said the
Can a BOE be addressed to more than one drawee? drawer had insufficient funds. Presented again in the afternoon, but the
o Depends. If joint drawees, yes. computers are offline, so the bank accepted it. Bank found out after and
o If alternative or successive, no. chased after the payee to recover.
When can a BOE be considered a PN? o HELD: By accepting, the bank admitted authority of drawer to
o 1. Drawer and drawee are the same person draw.
o 2. Drawee is fictitious person or has no capacity to contract Customer bought a managers check and asked that his account be
o But can the holder treat it as a BOE still? debited to purchase it. The bank realized that it made a mistake
Yes. because the account was actually closed. The customer already used
the check to buy goods.
Promissory notes and checks
o HELD: It was a managers check so the store owner was a
HIDC.
What is the nature of a check?
Certified checks:
o Special kind of BOE.
o Banks usually do not do this anymore
o No need to present for acceptance you can present them for
payment immediately Check must be presented for payment within reasonable amount of time
o Rules on BOE apply to checks too, such as the 24 hour o Banking practice: 6 months, or else stale
acceptance rule. If you dont return it in 24 hours, it is deemed o What happens when the check goes stale?
accepted View one (2 cases): the obligation is discharged.
Payment of an obligation with an NI the obligation
What are cashiers and managers checks?
is discharged when there is encashment or the value
o Drawer and drawee is the same
is impaired due to the fault of the holder.
What are memorandum checks?
View two: the obligation remains because the
o Its just usually used as evidence of credit, by a drawer who
drawers bank account was not prejudiced. And there
received goods. He usually redeems it for cash
was no loss caused by the delay. This will only
What is a travelers check?
happen if the bank becomes insolvent, that if the

23
payee didnt dilly-dally, he would have received the bill of lading, delivery receipt, etc. to PBC as proof of
money. delivery so that Dupont will be paid.
Sito: When the payee delays in presenting a check for payment, the What is the nature of a LOC?
indorsers are discharged, because they have an interest to discharge o A contract between the customer who applied for it and the
their potential secondary liability. Unreasonable delay will discharge bank, with a stipulation in favor of a third person
them. o An LOC is a primary, absolute, and unconditional obligation. It
o So contrast the rules: the drawer will not be discharged; the cannot be affected by defects in the underlying obligation
indorsers will be discharged Philamlife: X took a loan from ABC. ABC required X
to open a standby LOC from Z bank. Z bank issued
the LOC, payable when ABC shows documents
proving that X defaulted on the loan. ABC gave this
MERCANTILE INSTRUMENTS document. Z bank, however, refused to pay the
whole amount stating that X informed it that X had
already made some payments, so these have to be
Letters of credit deducted. HELD: Cannot do this! The LOC is a
primary, absolute, and unconditional obligation. It is
What is a Letter of Credit (LOC)? not an accessory obligation, so the defect in the
o An instrument issued by banks on behalf of a customer underlying contract cannot affect it. If there really was
authorizing a beneficiary to draw a draft/drafts which will be overpayment, X just has to run after ABC.
honored upon presentation to the bank o Purposes:
o Must be drawn in accordance with the terms and conditions 1. Safe mode of importing goods
specified in the letter of credit 2. Reduce risk of nonpayment
o Purpose: to ensure certainty of payment 3. Substitute for and support the agreement of
Illustrate the nature of a LOC: purchase (although not necessary to perfect it)
o ABC Company wants to buy chemicals from Dupont. But Types of LOC?
Dupont has no assurance that when it ships chemicals, it will o 1. Commercial LOC
be paid. So ABC gets a letter of credit (LOC) with PBC. PBC issued as payment pursuant to contract of sale
then corresponds with a bank in the US (ex. Citibank) PBC The seller will be paid if the seller gives proof that he
will transmit to Citibank the text of the LOC, through SWIFT. complied with obligation to deliver
Dupont then finds out that when it delivers the chemicals, the o 2. Stand-by LOC
bank will pay him. Since the bank is more trustworthy, Dupont Secondary payment mechanism, where a seller is
is now willing to sell the materials. paid upon certification of a partys non-performance of
o Dupont ships the chemicals to PBC. So when the bill of lading an agreement
arrives, PBC will tell ABC Company that the goods arrived. Show proof that the applicant has not performed his
PBC tells ABC Company that it will release the goods if there is contract
a trust receipt arrangement between them. So the proceeds of o 3. Confirmed LOC
the goods can be used to pay PBC if ABC does not pay. Beneficiary stipulates that the obligation of the issuing
o Dupont will not collect directly from PBC. Dupont will issue a bank should also be the obligation of another bank to
BOE addressed to PBC, to pay Dupont. Dupont then submits himself (usually the notifying bank)

24
o 4. Back-to-back LOC Obligation is solidary with the buyer. It is a primary
Credit with identical documentary requirements and obligation (unlike a guaranty, which requires default
covering the same merchandise as another LOC by the obligor)
except for a difference in the price of the merchandise o 3. Seller (beneficiary)
as shown by the invoice and the draft ships goods to the buyer
The second LOC can be negotiated only after the first delivers documents of title and draft to the issuing
is negotiated bank to recover payment
When is it considered a consummated contract? o Who are the optional parties?
o When the bank pays the creditor (seller-exporter), and not 1. Advising (notifying) bank
when the debtor-buyer pays the bank because the bank can May be utilized to convey to the seller the
give an extension of payment to the debtor. existence of the credit
What is the governing law? BUT does not assure that the issuing bank
o 1. Governed now by UCP 600 (Uniform Customs and Practice will pay and may refuse to accept the drafts
for Documentary Credits). This is revised every 10 years or without being liable
so. 2. Confirming bank
The observance of UCP is justified by Art. 2 of the Lends credence to the LOC issued by a
Code of Commerce, which provides that in the lesser known issuing bank
absence of a particular provision in the COC, Is directly liable to pay the seller-beneficiary
commercial transactions are governed by usages and 3. Paying bank
customs. Undertakes to encash drafts drawn by the
o 2. Code of Commerce, Art. 568: seller-exporter
LOC must be issued in favor of a definite person and 4. Negotiating bank
not to order Instead of going to the place of the issuing
Limited to fixed or specific amount or to an bank to claim payment, the buyer may
undetermined amount but with maximum limit stated approach another bank to have the draft
exactly discounted
Who are the parties to a letter of credit (essential) and their There are 3 underlying contracts in a LOC:
obligations? o 1. Application of customer for LOC
o 1. Buyer (applicant) where customer-buyer undertakes that he will
procures LOC reimburse the bank when it pays the draft, and also
obliges to reimburse the bank upon receipt of pays for bank charges
documents title o 2. LOC
o 2. Issuing bank bank tells beneficiary-seller that if it draws the draft, it
undertakes to pay seller upon receipt of draft and will pay him after submitting documents
proper documents needed o 3. Underlying contract of sale between buyer and seller
and to surrender the documents to the buyer upon Independence principle (always asked in Bar)
reimbursement o Basic principle: cannot invoke defect in one of the other 3
contracts to avoid compliance with obligation

25
o A bank which issued a LOC is obliged to pay the draft so long discrepancy, then the bank pays. If the buyer does not waive,
as the beneficiary submits the documents required by the LOC, the bank does not pay.
without verifying if he actually complied with the obligation in o Cojack: Buyer is a con artist, so it ordered 3M worth of bags
the underlying contract from Cojac company. It opened a letter of credit, and the
o Banks deal with documents only! They do not deal with condition is that an invoice from Cojack be submitted. Cojac
goods nor are they required to examine them. submitted an invoice, of course, without the misspelled K. The
Ex. Seller-beneficiary submitted the documents bank asked the buyer if he waives the discrepancy; the buyer
required, so the bank must pay, even if the goods refused. The bank did not pay. Later, the buyer just paid 1M
delivered turned out to be fake. to Cojac.
o PBC v. Chua Tiep Seng: The bank does not guarantee the Red clause
genuineness of the documents submitted to it. All that is o A clause, usually written in red ink, where the beneficiary/seller
required is the bank act in good faith. may get payment in advance, meaning, even if the
o There was a case (Feati Bank) where somebody shipped beneficiary/seller has not yet delivered the goods to the buyer.
timber to someone abroad. There was an agreement that This is usually because the beneficiary will purchase goods
payment is by LOC. Among the documents is a certification of from a third party producer that does not accept anything but
the buyer that the goods delivered were the proper goods. The cash (hunters, lumberjacks, etc.). If the beneficiary does not
buyer collected the goods but refused to send the certification! deliver the goods, too bad. The buyer still bears the risk.
HELD: The LOC requires buyers certification, so the bank Evergreen clause
need not pay. (This is a stupid move by the seller, because he o A provision that allows an expiring LOC to be automatically
is at the mercy of the buyer.) extended for indefinite number of periods until the issuing bank
o A seller can commit fraud by submitting forged or false informs the beneficiary of its termination.
documents. To combat this, the buyer may require a o Ex. A foreign company not doing business here sues and asks
surveyors certificate to examine the goods. But the seller may for a provisional remedy. The court requires a bond, so the
always give a fake one if he really wanted to defraud the buyer. company obtains one from a surety firm. The surety firm
Interpretation of Letters of Credit MUST BE STRICT (Rule of Strict requires that the company open a stand-by LOC with a bank,
Compliance) which will pay the surety firm if the company is held liable.
o 1. Particular genus If the LOC requires that the seller This LOC will most likely contain an evergreen clause, to keep
submit an invoice for pine lumber, but the invoice states pine renewing it until the case is over.
timber, the bank may refuse to pay May the seller in the Feati bank case (where the buyer refused to
o 2. Quality specifications If the LOC requires Italian marble issue a certification so the seller was not paid) sue the
and the document just says marble, the bank may refuse to correspondent bank when it failed or advance funds?
pay o No. The correspondent bank cannot be sued unless it
o 3. Misspellings If the LOC requires noodles but the confirmed the letter of credit. It becomes solidarily liable.
document says woodles the Bank may refuse to pay who Revocable, irrevocable
knows what a woodle is or could be. o Revocable: no need to notify the beneficiary, can be done
When the bank discovers a discrepancy, what does it do? anytime
o It forwards the documents to the buyer and notifies the latter of o Usually its irrevocable, for certainty of payment
discrepancies it discovered. If the buyer agrees to waive the Revolving letter of credit

26
o Automatically replenishes, whether per month, when the Note: if the entrustee returns the goods, he does not incur any further
amount is finished, or it can be cumulative, etc. liability. The entruster/bank then sells the goods
Bank lien over applicants property What is the nature of the entrusters title?
o Usual stipulation in a LOC if the applicant has a deposit there, o The entruster has a security interest. By fiction of law,
too. ownership is with the entruster-bank, until it has been paid or
o CASE: The depositor/applicant owed the bank for a LOC, but the proceeds of sale turned over to him.
he also assigned the certificate of time deposit to a third party, o But since it is a mere security interest, the entruster is not
who has the better right? responsible as principal in the contracts entered into by the
o HELD: The bank. It had a lien on the deposit. entrustee. The entrustee bears the losses (ex. if the imported
FRAUD EXCEPTION: when can there be enjoinment of payment in goods burn or are stolen).
a stand-by LOC? o Since the entrustee is not the owner of the goods he cannot
o 1) Proof of fraud is strong, 2) fraud must involve abuse of mortgage them yet. Or, at least, he has no free disposal of
independence principle, 3) irreparable injury (Transfield) them yet.
o Distinguish between out and out fraud vis--vis failure to Allied Banking: X imported goods, and opened a LOC with ABC bank.
meet specifications: When the equipment arrived, X took the goods from ABC and issued a
In a landmark case by the CA of New York, instead of trust receipt in ABCs favor. X installed the goods in his factory. X
the seller delivering goods, he delivered rubbish. The failed to pay. ABC sued X for violation of PD 115. X claimed the goods
court allowed the buyer to have a preliminary were not covered because he did not sell nor manufacture/process
injunction to stop payment be issued because this them. HELD: The goods were covered. It says sell or otherwise
involves out-and-out fraud. dispose. Otherwise dispose covers the installed goods.
However, if there is mere failure to meet o Otherwise dispose can cover giving goods to a sister
specifications, you cannot enjoin payment company
Metro v. Daway: Case for corporate rehabilitation does not suspend For estafa, there has to be misappropriation
payment from a stand-by LOC. It is a solidary obligation, there is no o Meralco/steel towers case: X fabricated steel towers (hired
need to exhaust the resources of the applicant corporation that applied by Meralco). X imported materials, which X received and gave
for the stand-by LOC. a trust receipt to ABC bank for. X used the materials to build
the steel towers. But Meralco hasnt paid X yet, so X couldnt
pay ABC bank. ABC sued X for estafa. HELD: No estafa, no
Trust receipts misappropriation.
What is a Trust receipt transaction (TRT)? o Another case: X could not sell the goods covered by the TR.
o The entruster (bank), who has absolute title over the goods, X tried returning the goods to ABC, but it refused. HELD: X
releases these to the entrustee did not commit estafa.
o The entrustee (buyer) executes and delivers a trust receipt, Can the trustee execute a Chattel Mortgage over the goods
where: covered by the TR?
1. He holds the goods in trust for the entruster o No. He does not have free disposition of the property.
2. Sell or otherwise dispose of the goods Can a TR cover a purchase independent from the credit?
3. Turn over to the bank/entruster the proceeds of the o No.
sale to the extent he is indebted o Illustrate: X purchased goods. Independent of this purchase,
4. Or turn over the goods to the bank, in case unsold X applied for a credit facility with ABC bank. ABC bank

27
required X to sign a trust receipt for the goods he just o 3. Represents the goods and operates as a transferable
purchased. HELD: This is invalid. The bank did not have any document that carries with it control over the goods
lien or title to the goods; they were purchased separately from When is a WHR negotiable?
the credit application. o If payable to order or bearer
Can TR apply even to domestic transactions? o If payable to order or bearer, can one insert a stipulation
o Yes, TR can apply even in domestic transactions that it is non-negotiable?
What is the nature of ownership/security interest? No. The stipulation is void.
o X imported puka shells, covered by a trust receipt with ABC o This is a key difference between WHR and negotiable
bank. X failed to sell the puka shells. X decided to return the instruments:
shells and claim he is not liable anymore because X claimed For NIs, a negotiable instrument can be made non-
ABC was the real owner of the shells and X just held it in trust. negotiable.
HELD: X is wrong. ABC can still recover the money. For negotiable WHR, it cannot be converted into a
A TRT is a security transaction, and the buyer is still non-negotiable WHR. The stipulation is void.
really the owner of the goods; it just relies on a legal o What if an order instrument is only delivered but not
fiction to create a lien. ABC still has the right to indorsed?
recover the money; or it can sell the goods. 1. Transferee acquires right against the transferor
o PNB Case: The bank getting back the goods does not 2. There is no direct obligation by the WHM against
terminate the obligation. It just has a lien, and to realize it, the the transferee
bank must foreclose otherwise, it is pactum comissorium. 3. The transferee can compel the transferor to
The bank then returns the excess or runs after the deficiency. complete the negotiation by indorsing the instrument
Rights and liabilities of parties: o What is the effect of negotiation?
o 1. Entruster not liable in any sale or contract entered into by 1. The holder receives title to the goods as the
the entrustee. He merely has a security interest. indorser had [NOTE: the holder never obtains better
o 2. Entrustee bears risk of loss thus, loss of the goods does rights than the indorser, unlike under the NIL] and title
not extinguish the obligation that the depositor had over the goods
o 3. A purchaser for value and in GF of goods covered by TR is X stole goods from Y and deposited with
free from entrusters security interest WHM. X negotiated the WHR to Z. WHM
o 4. Failure of entrustee to turn over proceeds of the sale found out that the goods were stolen and
constitutes estafa or may be basis of suit for damages delivered them to Y. Can Z hold WHM
o 5. If the parties agree to reschedule debts and impose liable?
conditions incompatible with the TR, then there is a novation o No. The depositor, X, never had
and no liability under TRL avails. title over the goods, so the
transferee Z never acquired title
over them either.
Warehouse Receipts Law 2. Direct obligation of the WHM to hold the goods for
him
What are the three functions of a WHR? o Who can negotiate a WHR?
o 1. Contract for deposit 1. Owner thereof
o 2. Evidence of receipt of goods

28
2. Person to whom possession of the WHR has been Ex. X deposited 10 crates of goods with WHM.
entrusted to by the owner, if by the terms of the WHM delivered a non-negotiable receipt to X. X
receipt: transferred the WHR to Y, for value. Meanwhile,
1. The WHM must deliver the goods to the C, a creditor of X, obtained a judgment against X
order of the person to whom possession has for unpaid debt and was levying against the 10
been entrusted, or crates of goods. Who has a better right?
2. If at the time of the entrusting, the receipt C, because Y did not obtain title over the
is in such form that it may be negotiated by goods due to lack of notification to the WHM.
mere delivery If Y had informed WHM of the transfer prior
Can a thief negotiate a WHR? to the levy, then Y would have had a better
YES, but the WHR must be in such form that right.
he need not forge any signature. What are the obligations of the WHM?
When is it non-negotiable? o 1. Safeguard the goods
o Not payable to order or bearer AND there is a large print, o 2. Deliver the goods
usually in red, that it is non-negotiable
N.B. so if its order or bearer the WHM cannot insist To deliver
on putting the red print that its non-negotiable
o What is the consequence of not marking it so? What are the conditions before the WHM delivers the goods?
If someone relied in GF that it is negotiable and acted o 1. Holder pays the WHMs liens
upon it, it will be treated as negotiable. o 2. If the WHR is negotiable, to surrender the receipt
What is the rule on duplicate WHR? o 3. Readiness and willingness to sign an acknowledgment of
o Same as non-negotiable if the holder thought in GF that it receipt of the goods
was the original, he could sue the WHM for damages To whom must the WHM deliver the goods to discharge his
What is the effect of absence of any of the required provisions to liability?
be found on a WHR? o 1. Person lawfully entitled to the goods or his agent
o It does not invalidate the WHR. WHRs are liberally construed o 2. Person entitled to delivery under non-negotiable WHR or
to better serve their purpose. who has authority from the person entitled to delivery (SPA)
o 3. For negotiable WHR, the person in possession
What is the right of a transferee of a non-negotiable WHR?
o When is there misdelivery or conversion?
o 1. Title of the goods subject to the terms of any agreement with
1. Delivery to one not in fact lawfully entitled to the
the transferor
goods
o 2. Right to notify the WHM of the transfer and acquire the
2. The holder of a WHR informs the WHM prior to
direct obligation of the WHM to hold the goods for him
delivery not to make such delivery, but he still did
o What is implication of failure to notify the WHM of the
3. The bailee had information that the delivery he was
transfer?
about to make was to one not lawfully entitled to the
Prior to notification, the title of the transferee can be
possession of the goods, but he still did
defeated by: a) an attaching or executing creditor of
Rules on refusal to deliver:
the transferor, or by b) notification by the transferor or
another transferee of a second transfer o 1. WHM cannot refuse to deliver the goods just because of a
third party claim

29
But he may submit the situation for interpleader How does a creditor go about attaching/levying the goods covered
o 2. WHM is excused for failure to deliver if he sold the goods to by a negotiable WHR?
satisfy an unpaid lien o Ask for enjoinment of indorsement or renegotiation of the
o 3. WHM is excused for selling perishable or hazardous goods receipt have the WHR frozen or surrendered, so it doesnt
What are valid defenses for non-delivery or misdelivery? end up in the hands of someone who takes it for value and in
o 1. Loss or destruction of goods fortuitously GF. Until this is done, the WHM cannot be compelled to
o 2. WHM has a right over the goods deliver.
A. Failure to satisfy the WHMs lien The WHM in general, as a bailee, cannot claim ownership over the
B. legal title over the goods through transfer goods. What are the exceptions?
o 3. Holder of receipt does not comply with requirements o 1. WHR negotiated to him, so takes the goods in his own right
Failure to surrender the WHR o 2. Has unpaid lien, so he foreclosed it and bought the goods
Failure to satisfy the WHMs lien during auction
Failure to show willingness to sign an What if the WHM delivers the goods without asking for surrender
acknowledgment when the goods are delivered, upon of the WHR?
request by the WHM o He is liable for damages to any person who takes the WHR in
o 4. Right or title of third persons GF and for value.
A. Request by person lawfully entitled to goods to o What if the WHM makes partial delivery of the goods?
WHM not to deliver the goods He must cancel the WHR and issue a new one
Can lead to interpleader reflecting the balance of the goods, or indicate partial
B. WHM has information that the delivery about to be delivery on the receipt.
made was to one not lawfully entitled to possession of Again, failure to do so makes him liable to one who
the goods takes the WHR in GF and for value.
WHM ascertains the facts first Can an unpaid seller claim right over the goods over the holder of
C. Disposed to third person to satisfy WHMs lien or the receipt who purchased it for value?
because the goods are perishable o No. The vendors lien does not affect the transfer of title to the
D. Delivery to claimant with better right purchaser for value.
E. Attachment or levy by creditor where the document o X sold Y 10 sacks of rice on credit. Y deposited the sacks
is surrendered or its negotiation is enjoined, or with WHM, who issued a receipt. Y delivered the receipt to
document is impounded Z who purchased it for value and for good faith. Who has
F. Document of title is attached by creditor a better right over the rice, Z or X who is still unpaid?
What is the effect of alteration? Z. While X has a vendors lien, it cannot defeat the
o Unlike in NIL, it does not discharge the WHM. The WHM is rights of a purchaser for value of the receipt.
liable under the original tenor of the WHR. The only way for the unpaid seller to get the goods is
What is the effect of loss of the receipt? to validly reacquire to the receipt from Z and
o The claimant has to file a case in court and get a court order surrender the receipt for cancellation.
telling the WHM to deliver the goods, after proof of loss. He What is the effect of pledge of a receipt?
also has to post a bond, in case the WHR falls in the hands of o The pledgee is in the same footing as a vendee for purposes of
a person who took it in GF and for value. The latter goes the WHR law. He is thus also preferred.
against the bond.

30
o Except of course, once the underlying obligation is paid, the o He must segregate the goods belonging to different depositors
pledgee has to return the WHR to the pledgor. o But he is allowed to commingle if:
o X sold Y 10 sacks of rice by quedan, on credit. Y loaned It is stipulated
money from ABC bank and to secure his indebtedness, Y It is customary to do so
delivered the quedan to ABC bank. Y died. Who has the What are the rules on commingled goods?
better right, ABC bank (pledgee) or X (unpaid seller)? o Each depositor gets a pro rata portion of the common mass
Same principle as above ABC bank wins. Even as upon claim
a pledgee, it has the same preference as a purchaser. o What happens if there is partial loss?
Xs recourse is run after Ys estate. The depositors also share in the loss proportionately
What are the warranties of the transferor?
o NOTE: MOST IMPORTANTLY the indorser or one who Key distinctions between NI and Negotiable WHR:
negotiates for value is not a guarantor. He is not liable to the
bona fide purchaser if the WHM fails to deliver the goods. He Negotiable Instrument Negotiable WHR
does not guarantee to performance of the WHM of his duty. When deliberately altered, becomes When altered, still valid, but it may
void be enforced only according to the
o 1. The receipt is genuine original tenor
o 2. He has a legal right to negotiate or transfer it If payable to bearer, always remain If payable to bearer and it is
o 3. He has no knowledge of any fact which would impair the so payable regardless of the way it endorsed specially, it will be
validity or worth of the receipt was endorsed, whether specially or converted in a receipt deliverable to
o 4. He has a right to transfer title to the goods and that the in blank order
goods are merchantable or fit for a particular purpose HDC may obtain a title better than Endorsee, even if he is a HDC,
What is the rule on attachment or levy of the goods covered by a the negotiating party obtains only such title as the person
negotiating had over the goods
negotiable receipt?
o There can be no attachment or levy of the goods unless the
receipt is first surrendered to the WHM or its negotiation is WHMs lien
enjoined
o What can the creditor do? What are included in the WHMs lien?
1. Have the courts attach the receipt o 1. All lawful charges for storage and preservation
2. Compel the holder to deliver the receipt to him by o 2. All lawful claims for money advanced, interest, insurance,
injunction or otherwise transportation, labor, weighing, coopering, and other charges
o What if the receipt is non-negotiable? in relation to the goods
Remember the discussion above about whether the o 3. Reasonable charges and expenses for notice,
transferee was able to notify the WHM first before the advertisements, and for sale of goods (to satisfy WHM lien)
creditor could attach or levy. What is the rule on notice?
o The charges present at the time of issue of the WHR must be
To safeguard stated or else there is no lien. He will only have a lien on
charges occurring after the WHR was issued.
If the goods are lost, he is presumed to be at fault
What are the properties subject to the lien?
But not for fortuitous events
o 1. All goods deposited belonging to the person liable for the
What is the duty in keeping goods?
claims

31
o 2. All goods belonging to others which have been deposited by contract because physicians pay for the first six sessions of
the person who is liable for the claims if the person has been therapy after injury or loss, but the main purpose is to give
entrusted with possession of the goods, such that a pledge by medical services. But here, even if you did not get injured or
him of the goods at the time of deposit would have been valid sick, you can avail of medical checkup.
When is the lien lost? What are the characteristics of an insurance contract?
o 1. Surrendering possession of the goods o 1. Aleatory
But can he claim a lien over other goods If you dont lose what was insured, there is no
deposited to him but under different bailments? indemnity.
No. His lien only pertains to that one and the o 2. Personal
same bailment, which was lost upon It does not adhere to the property insured because
surrender. the personality of both parties is crucial and is the
o 2. Refusing to deliver the goods when he should have primary consideration for the contract.
complied Ex. teenagers will be charged higher insurance over
How is the lien enforced? cars.
o 1. Valid refusal to deliver the goods until the lien is satisfied The buyer of a car, for instance, will only be insured if
o 2. Causing EJ sale of the property and applying the proceeds the insurance company allows for an endorsement of
to the value of the lien the sellers insurance contract.
o 3. Filing civil action for collection of claims o 3. Unilateral
It is only the insurer that has an obligation to perform
(the insured already paid).
INSURANCE o 4. Conditional
Can you insure against losing the lottery?
o No, this is wagering.
In general
Parties
Elements:
Who can be the insurer?
o 1. Insured possesses interest susceptible of pecuniary
estimation o One authorized by the Insurance Commission
o 2. Insured is subject to risk of loss Who can be insured?
o 3. As consideration, the insured pays premium o Anyone except a public enemy (citizen of a country with which
Someone organized a jeepney association. They give membership fees the Philippines is at war with)
and if a driver gets into an accident, the association pays indemnity. o Wenfeld: German company filed claim with Insurance
Sued by Insurance Commission for not having license to do Insurance Company, and the Philippines was under US at that time. The
Business. Germany and USA were at war (WWII) so the company cannot
o Held: Was conducting insurance business without license. All collect.
requisites concurred. What is the standing of mortgagors to sue on an insurance
o Contra Maxicare: Even if all elements are present, but if contract and what is the effect of his acts?
primary purpose of contract is to provide services, then it is not o 1. The mortgagor can sue the insurance company if it does not
an insurance contract. In Maxicare there is no insurance pay.

32
o 2. If the mortgagor performs an act that prejudices, the EXCEPT: if there is a way to place pecuniary value in
mortgagee cannot collect. the life of the person.
Ex. The Mortgagor brought fireworks to the building Who can be the beneficiary in life insurance?
and it exploded. The mortgagee cannot collect. o 1. If over own life, he can designate anybody, even if the latter
o 3. The mortgagor can have the mortgagee perform acts that has no insurable interest.
benefit the contract But: you cannot name one to whom you are
prohibited to make donations to
Insurable interest Ex. co-guilty party of adultery/concubinage
o 2. If you are the beneficiary, you need to have insurable
When is there insurable interest over life? interest over the life of the insured
o 1. Own life, spouse and children X took an insurance policy over his own life for 1M and named his
Children even if emancipated friend Y as beneficiary. X died, and his debt to Y is worth 50k. The
Spouse need valid and existing marriage executor of Xs estate claims only 50k must go to Y and the 950k
o 2. Based on support or pecuniary interest must go to Xs estate. Correct?
Ex. a key basketball player you signed for your team; o No. Since the insured took a policy out of his own life, he is
a concert impresario in an opera you organized free to name anyone as beneficiary.
o 3. Based on legal obligation, whose death might delay or o The rule would be different if Y took an insurance out of Xs life
prevent performance the insurable interest is only P50k.
o 4. Any person upon whose life any estate or interest vested in
Can the insured change the beneficiary?
him depends
o Yes, unless it was made irrevocable in the policy.
Ex. X is allowed to stay in the family home of his
o If the beneficiary is irrevocable, can it still be changed?
parents as usufruct. They have interest to continue
Yes. But if irrevocable, can only change beneficiary
the life of their parents
with the latters consent.
o Note: for the first, mere relationship is enough. For 2-4, there
Ex. A father made his child an irrevocable beneficiary
must be pecuniary interest. So the interest of the creditor over
of an insurance contract. If the father wanted to
the debtors life ceases upon full payment.
revoke, the child must consent.
So mere friendship does not fall under any of the
What is the rule for beneficiaries in life insurance?
categories.
o 1. The beneficiary/assignee must have insurable interest
When is there insurable interest over property?
o 2. If the policy is going to be assigned, the insurer must
o 1. Existing interest
consent
o 2. Inchoate interest on an existing interest
o Contra: Assignment of a life insurance policy
Ex. stocks, which is based on subscription contract
The assignee need not have insurable interest
o 3. Expectancy coupled with existing interest
When does the beneficiary forfeit?
o N.B. MAIN DIFFERENCE: there must be a valid pecuniary
o If he causes the insureds death.
interest
Except: When the killing is lawful (ex. self-defense,
What is the value of insurable interest over property?
the beneficiary is the executioner in death penalty)
o The insurance cannot go beyond the value of the property
o What is the effect of unlawful killing?
o Whereas in life, you cannot put value over life of a person
Benefits go to the estate of the insured
Various situations re: insurable interest over property:

33
o 1. Importer has insurable interest in goods he is buying even if o Change in interest after the loss does not change indemnity. It
undelivered, because he can compel delivery. The seller also is already an accrued liability at this time. It is a chose in
has insurable interest because he has legal title. action.
o 2. Contractor has insurable interest over the building he is o Change in interest in one or more listed things:
erecting because under the law, he bears the risk of loss prior A taxi company insured 20 units. Sold 4 of them.
to completion. The insurance over 16 is still valid.
o 3. Mortgagor and Mortgagee both have insurable interest o Change of interest in will or succession does not avoid
o 4. Lessor and lessee both have insurable interest insurance.
o 5. Mere possessor. X insured Family Home against fire. X died and
Ex. X Colleges was allowed to use a building by the children inherited. The house burned. The children
owner, as a school. It insured the building. It caught can collect.
fire. HELD: There was insurable interest. What if the children bought the house from the
o 6. Partners, over the property of a partnership father when he was still alive?
o 7. Carrier, over goods it is transporting since he will be liable Insurance does not transfer.
o 8. WH man, over goods for safekeeping since he will be liable o For co-owners, partners, etc:
What is the nature of a mere contingent interest over something? X Y and Z co-owned a house. X bought Y and Zs
o Not insurable. shares and became sole owner. The house burned.
o Ex. Creditor with no collateral over properties of buyer Insurance company must pay because X was part of
o Ex. Expectant heir the original insured.
o Ex. Fictitious contract of sale (completely simulated) But if there is a new person brought into the group,
Can smuggled property be insured? the insurance is avoided.
o No against public policy Can one stipulate against insurable interest?
When must insurable interest exist in life insurance? o No. Stipulation that there need not be an insurance interest for
o In life, need only exist when the policy takes effect an insurance contract NULL AND VOID.
o Ex. X insured his wifes life. They annulled their marriage. But What is the interest of a mortgagor over property he mortgaged?
the wife failed to revoke the insurance. X can collect. o The extent of the value of the property
When must interest exist in property insurance? o How can the mortgagee be made the beneficial payee in
o When the policy takes effect and when loss occurs the mortgagors policy?
o Need not exist in the meantime 1. Assign (with insurers consent) or pledge (no need
Ex. Owned a car, insured, then sold it. Then for insurers consent) the insurance K
repurchased, and then loss in fire. 2. The original policy may have a mortgage clause or
o A person mortgaged his building. The property had been sold there is a rider making the policy payable to the
in foreclosure. Then it was lost by fire. He had no more right mortgagee as long as he has interest (loss payable
to redemption. HELD: Lost insurable interest. clause)
o What if he still possessed the right of redemption? 3. Independent contract between mortgagor and
He still has insurable interest mortgagee
What happens when there is change of interest? 4. Acquired by the mortgagor under a contract duty to
o If you sold your car, if the buyer wants insurance, you have to insure the mortgagees benefit (in which case the
endorse the policy.

34
mortgagee acquires an equitable lien on proceeds Requisites:
collected by the mortgagor) o 1. Party must have known the fact concealed
What is the extent of the mortgagees interest on the property Ex. he did not know he had cancer
mortgaged to him? o 2. Must be material to the policy
o To the extent of the debt secured Test:
o The interest exists until the debt is extinguished Insurer would not have entered into the
o N.B. the mortgagee may procure the policy and have the contract had he known of the fact concealed
mortgagor pay for the premiums or the conditions in the K would have been
Distinguish: different
o Standard/union mortgage clause subsequent acts of Concealment in life insurance:
mortgagor cannot affect the rights of the mortgagee Failure to disclose serious ailments
o Open/loss payable mortgage clause acts of the mortgagor Need not disclose very minor sickness/injury
can affect the mortgagees rights, because the former is a A Couple got an insurance policy for their mongoloid
party to the contract baby, but they did not say he was a mongoloid.
D had a loan of 3M from C. To secure it, D mortgaged his house HELD: concealment
worth 5M in favor of C. There is a law prohibiting insurance companies from
o Who has insurable interest over the house? refusing to issue insurance to someone with AIDS, as
D 5M (value of house) long as he discloses that he has AIDS
C 3M (extent of loan) Is good faith a defense in concealment?
o Will insurance procured by D in his own name and for his No. Whether it is intentional or unintentional,
own benefit inure to benefit of C? the injured party can rescind.
No. Insurance is a personal contract and just like any So if X, a laundrywoman, did not disclose
other contract, it just involves the parties unless there that she had stomach cancer because she
is a stipulation pour autrui (see examples above) did not know, there is still concealment.
But under Art. 2127 of the NCC, the mortagee has an o 3. Party must make no warranty of the fact concealed
equitable lien on the proceeds of the policy. In this case, if there was a warranty, the violation is
o C procured insurance. D fully paid C. The house burned not a concealment but a breach of contract
down. Can C recover? Can D recover? o 4. Other party has no means to ascertain the fact concealed
No and no. C has no more insurable interest. D is If a party discloses that he has been hospitalized and
not a party to the insurance contract. gave the contact # of the hospital, the insurers failure
to look into his records there were means to
Concealment ascertain the fact
If the agent commits a concealment, the applicant will be bound by that,
What is the nature of concealment?
the insured made the agent his own agent for the purpose of filling up
o Failure to communicate what a party knows and ought to
the application form
communicate
There are matters the party need not indicate:
o Need not be intentional
o 1. Insurer could have known
What is the consequence?
o Insurer can rescind

35
The inspectors went to the place and found that it was o But waived for acceptance of premium payments despite
near a squatters area. But the company issued a fire knowledge of ground for rescission
insurance policy anyway. A fire broke out. The What are the kinds of representations?
insurance company cannot use the defense that it o PROMISSORY: Representation as to the future
was near a squatters area, because it sent o AFFIRMATIVE: Representation as to a present fact
inspectors. What is the nature of a representation?
o 2. Matters of public knowledge/insurer should have known o Can be written or oral
Insured an oil tanker. Cannot use the defense, why o Representation is not part of the contract. It is a collateral
did you not disclose that there was a war in inducement.
Afghanistan. They should have known. o But it may qualify as an implied warranty
o 3. Information of ones own judgment. As a rule, parole evidence is not allowed to vary the terms and
o 4. Matters which pertain to excluded or exempted risks. conditions of the contract. It may qualify an implied warranty. It is
Ex. need not disclose that members of NPA are imposed by law.
burning houses in their neighborhood if the fire When is a representation presumed to refer to?
insurance policy exempts rebellion/coup/etc.-related o A representation is presumed to refer to the date on which the
destruction policy goes into effect.
What if the insured dies from another reason apart from the fact o If somebody applied to insure his vessel. Ex. voyage from
concealed? Manila to Cebu. Where is the vessel? It is anchored in
o Insurer still not liable because it wouldnt have issued a policy. Manila Yacht Club. But it is actually in Curimao. However,
Can there be waiver? when the policy takes effect and the vessel is in Manila
o Yes. Either express (in the terms of insurance) or implied (as already, there is no misrepresentation.
when there is failure to make follow up inquiries as to facts What if the insured has no personal knowledge of a fact?
already communicated). o He may repeat the information he has on the subject which he
Is there need to disclose nature or amount of ones interest? believes to be true
o No. EXCEPT if one is not the absolute owner of the insured o Ex. There is a question in life insurance about medical history
property. of the family. If one thinks his father died as a soldier, in
action, when he actually died of AIDS, and he says the former.
Representations o But if the info came from the insureds agent, and exercise of
due diligence was possible, he is liable for the truth of the
What is a representation in general?
statement
o Statements made to induce the other party to enter into the o Ex. There is no misrepresentation because he relied on what
contract the physician told him.
What is a misrepresentation?
Representation is false if facts do not coincide with what was asserted
o 1. Untrue statement o Test for defense: substantially true in every particular
o 2. With knowledge and intent to deceive; or stated as true material to the risk
without knowing it to be true and which tends to mislead o EXCEPT: Marine insurance where what is required is the
o 3. Fact is material exact and whole truth
What is the consequence?
o Voidable at option of insurer

36
o Ex. Have you ever applied for a life insurance policy and the o 1. Loss occurs prior to the warranty taking effect
application was rejected? He said no. But before, he had an o 2. Performance becomes unlawful
application denied, but then accepted on reconsideration. o 3. Performance becomes impossible
HELD: No misrepresentation. Give an example:
o Do you take alcoholic beverages? Applicant said no. But he o Somebody tried to insure his house for fire. Inspectors said his
has been drinking since he was 16. He died of liver failure. neighborhood is not nice. Insurer said that it will insure, but
HELD: Misrepresentation. But if he only drank small insured must put up a firewall within 30 days. A fire razed his
amounts on cocktail parties, it is not material. There house in 10 days.
is no misrepresentation. o HELD: the insurer is liable. Same if there is no cement
o Insured filled up the application form. The insurance company available (impossible) or if it becomes unlawful.
said that they will only accept if the applicant is not more than What is the effect of violation of warranty?
60 years old. He was more than 60 years old. o Allows the other party to rescind.
HELD: he wrote on the application form his date of o Even if not rescinded, it can be launched as defense by the
birth, but the company still issued a policy. There was insurer.
no misrepresentation. o Can the insured argue that it is not material?
Test of materiality? No. The fact that it is in the policy entitles the insurer
o SAME AS CONCEALMENT. to rescind. The basis is not materiality but breach of
o If the other party would not have entered into the contract, or contract.
under different conditions When there is breach of warranty, it is presumed to
be material.
Warranties If there is a breach of warranty, and loss occurs EVEN IF not related to
the breach of warranty, the insurer is not liable.
Express or implied:
o Ex. cannot bring explosive materials into his house. He
o Express found in terms and conditions brought fireworks inside. His kitchen caught fire without
o Implied imposed by law relation to the fireworks. Insurer not liable.
Only exists in Marine insurance o Because the risk increased regardless.
Usually embodied in a rider o What is the exception?
o These riders, issued with the policy, need not be signed When it is merely incidental to the business. For
What is the difference of warranties from representations? instance, placing alcohol to retouch the varnish of
o Warranties are express and placed in the contract ones insured furniture store does not breach the
o Representations are not written and are but collateral warranty against placing inflammable materials.
inducements Ex. where there was gasoline in the warehouse for
May relate to: consumption of the owners car within 2 days. Or
o Past ex. warranty that insured was never confined mothballs in a drug store.
o Present ex. warranty that insured is in good health Double insurance not just to those he acquired before but also the
o Future ex. warranty in fire insurance that owner of property future. Failure to give information is a breach of warranty.
will not store flammable materials o X obtained fire insurance over his house with Insurer A.
When does non-compliance with a future warranty not avoid the He warranted against past and future double insurance.
policy? Then he obtained fire insurance over his house with

37
Insurer B. The same clause is included. The house burns X obtained fire insurance over his house. Warranted
down. Is Insurer A liable? Is insurer B liable? against storage of inflammable materials. On Sept
Both are not liable. There was breach of future 31, a fire broke out. On December 31 he stored
double insurance warranty for contract A and breach inflammable materials (fireworks) then a fire broke
of past double insurance for contract B. out. The insurer is not liable for the Dec 31 fire, but is
o X insured his stocks in trade. Mortgaged them, and insured liable for the Sept fire.
them again, where there is loss proceeds go to mortgagee. o What if there was fraud, i.e. there were inflammable
Fire destroyed the things. Insurer said X did not disclose materials inside the house?
second insurance. The policy doesnt attach in the first place.
HELD: No need to disclose. Different interests Compare a warranty from a representation:
involved. First goes to the mortgagor. Second goes
to the mortgagee. It is not double insurance. Warranty Representation
When is there a waiver by the insurer? Part of the contract Collateral inducement
o Despite knowledge of the breach, it accepts the renewal Written in policy/rider Need not be written
Conclusively presumed to be Must be established to be material
premium
material
X was issued an ordinary drivers license. Can only drive 4 wheeled Fact must be strictly complied with Fact can be merely substantially true
vehicles. He drove a 10 wheeler. Vehicle involved in accident.
o HELD: Insurer not liable because X is not authorized to drive
the 10-wheeled vehicle. Rescission of insurance contracts
How is the authorized driver clause interpreted?
o Usually it means that its just the owner of the policy and an Sec48(a) action to rescind
authorized third party with a license that must drive the vehicle.
o Is the expiration of ones license a violation of the If insurer has right to rescind, insurer must rescind prior to
authorized driver clause? commencement of action on the contract
No. While it may be a violation of the law, it does not Tender of premiums and notice that the policy is cancelled before suit is
violate the authorized driver clause that would breach deemed a rescission
the warranties in an insurance policy.
The requirement for a license applies for a third party Sec 48(b) incontestability clause
not the insured himself.
If a life insurance policy has been in force for at least 2 years since first
o When the car is stolen or misused by a repairman, is it a
effect or last reinstatement insurer is BARRED from questioning it or
violation of the ADC?
alleging misrepresentation or concealment, or deceit/fraud
No. It is considered theft under the policy.
o N.B. Really, what you are barring are defenses against
What does under influence of liquor clause mean?
fraudulent misrepresentation or concealment, but not anything
o No need to actually be drunk, as long as he is under the
else
influence
Requisites for incontestability clause:
When there is breach of warranty without fraud, what is the rule?
o 1. Life insurance
o It only exempts the insurer from the time the breach occurred.
o 2. Payable proceeds upon death
o Give an example.
o 3. In force for 2 years since issuance or reinstatement

38
Can the 2 year period be shortened by Because there is still some delay or information to be
agreement? determined (ex. looking for third-party liability in car
Yes, but it cannot be lengthened by insurance first [give to LTO the cover note] or looking
stipulation. for adequate carrier for goods for marine goods
o What if the policy lapsed but was reinstated? since the policy depends on the state of the boat
The 2 year period will run again. What must be the form of policies?
BUT there are still defenses that can be invoked even after this o Must be in printed form. It cant be handwritten anymore.
period: Before you issue a new policy, the terms and conditions have
o 1. Claimant has no insurable interest to be approved by insurance commission.
o 2. Uncovered risks (ex. insured engaged in car racing) What is the rule on riders and additional attached clauses?
o 3. Policy lapsed and insured did not pay o Does not bind insured UNLESS the descriptive name/title of
o 4. Policy was entered into pursuant to scheme to kill insured the rider or clause is mentioned and written on the blank
(vicious fraud) spaces in the policy
o 5. Someone substituted for the insured during medical test What is the rule on additional riders or clauses issued after the
This fraud is not barred by the clause there is NO original?
perfected contract with the insured because it was o Must be countersigned by the insured or owner
another person o N.B. No need for signature of insured for earlier riders and
o 6. If insured is riding in a plane and it is not a commercial flight additional clauses
(ex. 8-seater plane) When must a policy be issued upon issue of cover note?
o 7. Entered into military without consent o Within 60 days, the policy must be issued.
o 8. Failure to furnish proof of death If the cover note extends beyond 60 days, written
o 9. Action not filed on time agreement of insured must be obtained.
What defenses are barred? But now: there is a circular that allows cover notes to
o 1. Misrepresentation extend beyond 60 days.
o 2. Concealment Who receives insurance proceeds?
o 3. Fraud o Applied exclusively to person in whose name or for whose
When must the two year period lapse? benefit the policy is made
o It must have lapsed while the insured was alive. If the insured o If description is so general that it may comprehend any class or
dies within two years, the heirs cannot wait for the 2 years to persons, only he who can show it was intended to include him
lapse and claim incontestability. can claim the benefit.
When does insurance taken by one partner or part-owner apply to
The Policy the interest of his co-partners or co-owners?
o The terms of the policy must be applicable to the joint or
What is a preliminary policy/cover note?
common interest
o Has terms and conditions of policy that will be issued.
Rules on interpretation:
Insurance company cannot collect separate premium on
o If the provision is clear, there is no room to interpret
preliminary policy and actual policy.
o Tantoco Terminal: had two mills. Old mill was insured. When
o Common in car insurance and marine insurance
the new mill was finished it was insured. The policy however
mentioned the old mill. Burned. Insurer refused.

39
HELD: Clearly they intended the new mill to be From rejection of the claim by the insurer, because
insured, not the old one even if the policy says prior to this, there is no necessity to bring suit yet
otherwise. o What if the clause says that action must be brought one
o Fortune: Security guard and driver of armored van had year from loss?
possession of the money. They stole money. Insurance Its void, because you have to submit your claim to
company refused to pay because it claimed they were not the insurer first, and this takes time. The insurer
employees of the company, but the agency. might decide beyond one year sometimes. In this
HELD: The insurance company pays. The very case, the action given to the insured will be less than
purpose of the insurance is to insure against acts of 1 year from the time cause of action accrues.
those holding the money, which in this case are the o N.B. One year period to file a case is not like period for appeal.
two. Asking for reconsideration from the company does not
What is an Open policy? suspend running of the period.
o There must be a maximum amount mentioned. It is a When can non-life policies be cancelled?
maximum liability of the insurer. o 1. Only with prior notice AND
o So there can be an amount mentioned, but you still have to o 2. On the following grounds:
quantify the value within this amount. 1. Non-payment of premium
What is a Valued policy? 2. Conviction of crime from acts increasing hazard
o One expressing a policy that the thing be valued at a specified insured against
sum 3. Discovery of fraud/material misrepresentation
Ex. Marine policies are usually this 4. Discovery of willful or reckless acts increasing
What is a Running policy? hazard insured against
o Successive insurances Ex. a bus company that always gets into
Ex. Goodyear, instead of getting insurance whenever accidents every week
it ships tires to distributors, it gets a running policy 5. Physical changes in property that makes it
that covers all of these uninsurable
o In any case, it would have to notify the insurance company 6. Determination by Commissioner that continuation
which would issue an indorsement, for it to be covered of policy will place the insurer in violation of the code
What is the rule on validity of agreements limiting times for Ex. Maximum risk it can insure is 20% of its
commencing action? net worth (Ex. 100M net worth, so they can
o In general, a clause in an insurance policy that action upon the issue up to 20M). It can issue policies
policy must be brought upon by the insured within a certain beyond that but it must be reinsured.
period is valid Notice of cancellation:
o But if the period fixed is less than one year from the time cause o 1. Must be in writing
of action accrues, the stipulation is void (the period becomes o 2. State ground for cancellation
the default 10 years, from a written contract) o 3. State that if the insured asks for the facts as basis, the
In industrial life insurance period cannot be less insurer will disclose
than 6 months from accrual of cause of action When can there be automatic renewal in a non-life policy?
o When does cause of action accrue? o Insured can automatically renew the policy as long as he is
willing to pay the premium

40
o Except: 45 days before expiration of policy, the insurer informs the premiums a day after. The insurer was held
him that it will not renew liable.
If insurer does not do this, insured can renew as a o 5. Estoppel
matter of right As in Masagana where UCPB always granted
Policy written for term longer than 1 year, it will be treated as written for Masagana a credit period.
successive terms of 1 year What is Cash Surrender Value?
o Ex. construction contract requires policy covering the building o Amount of cash the insurer receives upon surrender of the life
as it is completed. There were 2 fires, and 3 years. It will be insurance policy prior to maturity
treated as if it is expiring at every anniversary of the policy. What is Paid-up Insurance?
o When the insured defaults, he gets the cash surrender value.
Premiums The insurer then applies the cash surrender value to check
how much insurance it can buy until the end of the policy.
When is the insurer entitled to the payment of the premium? o Can the insured apply for reinstatement at the end of the
o As soon as the thing insured is exposed to the peril insured policy?
against Yes, but he has to undergo medical examination
What is the effect of payment of premium to the liability of the again to show he is insurable, and pay the premium in
insurer? arrears
o Notwithstanding any agreement to the contrary, no policy is What are the rules on refund of premium?
binding until the premium has been paid. o Insured entitled to a refund of the premium if no part of the
What are the exceptions? interest was exposed to the peril
o 1. An acknowledgement under the policy that the premium has Ex. Insured shipment of rice was never shipped
been paid is conclusive evidence, even if there is no actual o What if the insurance is for a particular period and there
payment yet was surrender prior to the end of the period?
But this does not estop the insurer from recovering Entitled to refund corresponding to unexpired time
the payments afterwards Deducting any previous payment of the insurer due to
o 2. Payment in installments losses
Makati Tuscany: In fact, if only a few installments o What the exception to partial refund rule?
were paid, the insurer can sue to collect the rest In life insurance, because the insurance on human life
Tibay: The policy provided that it will not be binding is not divisible. So no matter how short, the insured is
until all installments have been paid. Thus, here, not entitled to a return of the premium.
Makati Tuscany does not apply. o X insured a shipment of goods from Manila to Cebu. Can
o 3. Grace period in life and industrial life policies by default, he can cancel it halfway, i.e. when it is in Romblon, and
there is a 30 day grace period. But it can be increased ask for refund of premium?
o 4. Grant of credit by the insurer to the insured No. The insurer was already exposed to the risk; he
Masagana added this. There was a market insuring cannot ask or the return of the premium. It is not
its premises with UCPB since 1988, and every year divisible.
there is usually a 60-90 credit period to pay renewal. o What if the contract is avoided due to fault of the insurer?
The market burned within the period and UCPB paid Insured gets the premium returned.
o Avoided due to fault of the insured, but not actual fraud?

41
Insured gets return of premium, if the insurer did not o 1. The insurer is not liable for loss caused by connivance of
incur any liability. insured
Ex. Pre-condition for fire insurance over house is to Ex. told someone to steal his car, sell parts, and claim
build a firewall. Insured didnt get to build it, so the insurance
policy never attached. o 2. Loss from unlawful act not liable
o Avoided due to fault of insured, with actual fraud? Ex. committed arson
No return. o 3. Loss in which peril insured against is only a remote cause
Ex. Insured claimed he had a firewall, but he really did Ex. fire insurance policy covers store and stocks in
not. trade. The house across the street caught fire.
Can there be return of the premium due to over insurance? Everyone congregated. While distracted, robbers
o Yes. The insured gets a ratable return of the premium. broke into the store and stole the stocks in trade. Fire
o Ex. a house worth 10M is insured for 10M with X, 5M with Y, is just a remote cause.
5M with Z. Paid premiums: 10K to X, 5K to Y, 5K to Z. He is o 4. Loss, the proximate cause of which is an excepted risk
entitled to return of premium: 5K from X, 2.5K from Y, 2.5K Fire insurance policies say that they do not cover loss
from Z. due to coup detat, rebellion, riots, etc.
Agreement not to transfer the policy after loss has occurred is void, o 5. Loss where the insured is guilty of gross negligence
because at that time, the liability has accrued. It is a chose in action. SMC hired a shipping company to transport thousand
cases of beer. The SMC rep met the captain and told
Loss, claims settlement, subrogation the latter that the boat should be moved to a safer
place since there is a typhoon brewing. The captain
When will the occurrence of the peril insured against make the ignored it and tied the barge to the wharf. During the
insurer liable? typhoon the rope broke, the barge was cut loose.
o 1. If it is the immediate cause. Burden is on the insurer to prove that it is an excepted risk
Ex. Insured against fire. Faulty wiring exploded o But for fire insurance, the burden is on the insured to prove
(proximate cause) and led to fire. that it is not under an exempted risk
o 2. If it is the proximate cause of the immediate cause o Ratio: because the thing is in possession of the insured, so he
Ex. Insured against fire. Fire broke out and burned can best give an explanation for the loss
down a tree, which fell and destroyed a house. How must notice to the insurer of loss be given?
o 3. If it is damaged in the process of rescuing the insured o 1. Notice must be given without unnecessary delay
against the peril insured against. If reported an unreasonable time later ex. 6 months
Ex. Saving insured furniture from a house fire. When opportunity is gone
they were brought out, they were stolen. Insurer is Usually policies have a provision that claims must be
liable. filed within a certain time. Beyond that, barred.
Ex. Fire broke out in neighbors house. To prevent Delay in presentation of a claim/proof of loss is
the fire from spreading to the other house contained waived if the insurance company did not invoke that
insured furniture, the firemen pointed their hoses. as a reason to deny the claim
The furniture was soaked and damaged insurer is o 2. When proof is required, insured is not required to give proof
liable. that stands in court
When is the insurer not liable even if there is loss? Noda: police report should be sufficient

42
Defects in the notice or substantiation thereof which Ex. factory and stocks in trade not the same
the insurer didnt specify are waived, because the o 4. Same interest
insured is usually a layman Ex. Insured property with proceeds payable to him,
o 3. If the policy requires a certificate, and the insured cannot then mortgaged same property with proceeds payable
produce it, it is enough to say that he cannot produce it not to the mortgagee for his interest no double
because the document is prejudicial but because he could not insurance
procure it o 5. Risk is the same
I cannot submit the report not because the contents Ex. against fire, and then against earthquake not
of the report are prejudicial, but because the the same
investigator is abroad and cannot be found What is the consequence of double insurance?
What is the rule on subrogation and release of liability? o Usually there is a clause in insurance policies that will release
o General rule: when the insurer pays the insured, the insurer insurers from liability if there is double insurance
becomes subrogated to the rights of the insured and can run What is the consequence of over-insurance?
after the wrongdoer o The insurers can ask for reimbursement based on
o But the insurer will be discharged from its liability to the insured proportionate liability
if the insured committed any act that would prevent the insurer o Ex. A house worth 10M is insured for 10M with X, 5 M with Y,
from recovering from the wrongdoer 5M with Z:
In motor vehicle insurance, the insured settled with Owner cannot recover more than 10M, the value of
the wrongdoer for P2500. The insured still claimed the house
from the insurer, which paid. The insurer ran after the If owner recovered 10M from X, X can ask for 2.5M
wrongdoer, which raised the defense that there was a from Y and 2.5M from Z.
settlement. The insurer thus can recover from the In the same way, depending on who the owner
insured because it paid by mistake. collects from, they have to reimburse each other in
o What are the grounds when there is no subrogation? the said proportions.
1. Insured by his own act releases the wrongdoer o In car insurance policies, there is a usual clause that for over-
from liability insurance you can just collect proportionately. So two insurers
2. Insurer mistakenly paid for an excepted risk covering a car worth P500K can only be liable for P250K each,
3. Life insurance and nothing more.
4. Recovery of loss in excess of insurance coverage
Reinsurance
Double insurance
What is reinsurance?
Requisites: o Insurer obtains another insurance to cover for loss for liability
o 1. Insured must be the same due to the original insurance
Ex. mortgagor mortgagee not the same o The reinsurer is a liability insurer
o 2. Several insurers o What is retrocession?
If someone takes an insurance from Insurer X, then Subsequent layers after the first reinsurance
takes another after 6 months, no double insurance Two types:
o 3. Same subject matter o Treaty

43
o Facultative case by case o Ex. if it springs a leak.
Can a reinsurer intervene in the original action? What is barratry?
o A reinsurer cannot intervene in the case of insurer and insured o Insuring against the willful misconduct of the master or crew,
because the reinsurer has his own interest anyway. So he has not mere wrong judgment.
to wait until the original insurer sues the reinsurer to recover, if o A ship captain cuts loose a barge. Was this barratry?
it wants to raise defenses. Just an error of judgment. There has to be willful
Insurance is covered by the rule of uberrimae fides misconduct by the master or crew of the ship. So the
What is the nature of a contract of reinsurance? insured cannot claim from the barratry clause.
o It is presumed to be against liability, not damages. So even if When is arrest of the ship recoverable from?
the original insurer fails to pay, the reinsurer will be liable to o Covers arrest of the ship by administrative or executive order
pay. as settled in English jurisprudence. But in Malayan our SC
Most of the time, there is a clause that says that the original reinsurance included arrest by court order.
need not litigate with every reinsurer. If the original insurer paid, the What is the insurable interest of the owner of a vessel that has
reinsurers will pay too. They will rise and fall with the fortunes of the been chartered?
original insurer. o Only the amount which the charterer did not agree to cover, in
Can the insured sue the reinsurer directly? case of loss.
o No. There is no privity of contract between them. o Ex. the ship is worth 10M. The charterer agreed to pay 5M in
What is the exception? case of loss. The insurable interest is 5M.
o The cut-through clause What is freight?
Insured can go straight to the reinsurer o It is the expected profits of the owner of a ship which has been
o Ok in California, invalid in England chartered to ship goods. These expected profits (freight) can
be insured.
Marine insurance o What is the insurable interest of the charterer?
To the extent that can be indemnified for his loss.
What is an all-risk policy? o O is the owner of a boat. C chartered it, agreeing to pay
o All the insured has to prove is that the property was lost; no P500K if the vessel arrives safely and C was able to solicit
need to prove that it was due to fortuitous events. goods paying freight of P600K. The vessel sinks. What
o The only defense the insurer can raise is that the loss was due happens?
to misconduct of the insured. C need not pay O, because the ship did not arrive
What is its not an all-risk policy? safely.
o It only covers perils of the sea. C can only collect 100K because that is the profit
Perils of the sea: which was lost.
o 1. Connected with navigation Insurer answers for general average
o 2. Unusual movement of the sea/winds o Those who were saved will contribute to the general average
There must be a fortuitous event. A normal typhoon o Insurance policy will cover share in general average
is not a fortuitous event. o DOES NOT cover particular average
It does not cover perils of the ship. What are these? Ex. fruits became rotten due to nature of the fruits
o If the ship is not sea worthy, or that the cause is due to the Rule on concealment is stricter, because the ship is usually in the high
poor condition of the ship. seas so the insurer is at a disadvantage harder to inspect.

44
What is the different rule as to concealment in marine insurance? What is the presumption on knowledge of loss?
o Usually, the cause of the loss need not be due to the fact o There is a presumption if the knowledge of the loss could have
concealed. But for the following matters, concealment does been received by the owner in usual rate of communication.
not avoid the policy EXCEPT if these were also the cause of What are the implied warranties?
the loss: o 1. Sea worthy
1. National character of the insured May there be a waiver of warranty of
2. Liability of the thing to capture/detention seaworthiness?
3. Liability to seizure due to breach of foreign laws Yes. If there is a waiver, even if the ship is
4. Want of necessary documents not seaworthy, the insurer is still liable.
5. Use of false/simulated papers o 2. will not deviate
o Ex. Insured conceal that certain important documents are o 3. Will not engage in illegal ventures
missing. The vessel encountered a perfect storm and sank. o 4. It will carry necessary papers if nationality was expressly
The insurer is still liable even if there was concealment, warranted
because the fact concealed was not the cause of the loss. When is a ship seaworthy?
What is the different rule as to belief of a third person as to marine o If it can perform the services and encounter the peril of the
insurance? voyage contemplated.
o Marine insurance belief of a third person as regards what is o Warranty of seaworthiness extends from the hull also that it
material is properly laden, and the complement of the vessel (master,
o Ex. surveyor saying that the ship is not seaworthy MUST BE etc.) is fit
DISCLOSED it is material When must a ship be seaworthy?
What is the rule on misrepresentation as to expectation? o At the start of the voyage
o If there is no fraud, misrepresentation as to expectation does o If there are different portions of the voyage, it must be
not avoid the policy. seaworthy in all such portions
o Ex. The insurer asks the owner when the vessel will go out to o If it is an insurance of cargo taken by different ships, all the
sea, and the latter said April. The vessel only went to sea on ships must be seaworthy
June. The misrepresentation was not tainted with fraud and o What if the ship becomes unseaworthy during the
does not avoid the policy. voyage?
There must be no delay in the repairs; else, the
Subject Ordinary insurance Marine insurance insurer is discharged.
Concealment Can rescind even if Five exceptional What must the voyage route follow?
concealed fact was not grounds apply
cause of loss o Usual maritime usage
Belief of a third person Need not be disclosed; Must be disclosed; o If none, then the most natural, direct, and advantageous
immaterial material
Misrepresentation as to Can rescind If there is no fraud, Deviation
expectation cannot rescind
Implied warranties N/A Four implied warranties Three types of deviation?
automatically apply o 1. Departure from course of the voyage
o 2. Unreasonable delay in pursuing the voyage
o 3. Commencement of an entirely different voyage

45
When it is proper to make deviations? No, the insurer become liable upon actual
o 1. Caused by circumstances which neither the master or owner total loss
has control o B. Constructive total loss
Ex. when there is a typhoon Unique in marine insurance
o 2. Necessary to comply with a warranty or avoid a peril Abandonment is act of insured after constructive total
(whether insured against or not) loss. He relinquishes his share to the insurer
Ex. when the engine gets busted If damage is more than of value of property
o 3. Made in GF, upon reasonable belief to avoid a peril insured, insured can declare constructive total loss
Ex. received of reports waiting in ambush, thus What if the ship cannot continue but the cargo is transferred, what
deviated is the effect?
o 4. Made in GF, to save human life or another ship o The marine policy on the cargo remains
Once the vessel deviates, even if it returns to the original route, the o The insurer is liable for expenses for transfer, discharge,
insurer is exonerated. storage, reshipment, and all other expenses to save the cargo
o What if loss occurs?
Loss The insurer is liable for the general average\
What are the requisites of abandonment?
Loss is either total or partial o 1. Actual relinquishment by the person insured of his interest
Total loss is either: over the thing insured
o A. Actual total loss o 2. Constructive total loss
Actual loss of the thing, renders it valueless o 3. Unconditional and not partial abandonment
Examples of total loss: o 4. Made within reasonable time from receipt of information of
1. Total destruction loss
o Ex. the ship burned o 5. Must be factual
2. Loss by sinking or being broken up Ex. So in a case where the shipment of oranges was
o The ship sank or was broken up, reportedly lost, but they actually just ripened during
making it irretrievable the trip and were sold by the captain, there is no
3. Damage to thing rendering it valueless for factual basis for abandonment
the purpose it was shipped o 6. Give notice to insurer whether orally or in writing
o Ex. palay got wet and became o 7. Notice of abandonment must specify the particular cause
seedlings What is the effect of abandonment?
o Ex. a race horse broke its legs, so it o The insurer gets all the interest of the insured over the vessel
cannot race anymore (ex. salvage, proceeds of the salvage, etc.)
4. Any other event depriving the owner of This same effect will result if the insurer paid as if
possession of the thing at the port of there was actual total loss as if there had been
destination abandonment
o Ex. Ship was ordered seized o Acts done in good faith by the agents of the insured after
Is there need for abandonment for actual total abandonment is for the risk/benefit of the insurer (ex. effort to
loss? repair the ship is for the risk/benefit of the insurer. So the
insurer pays for it, and if the ship gets repaired, benefits.)

46
Insurer is liable for those acts of insured in good faith o Profits separately insured: Sugar being shipped is worth 100M
o Ex. salvors fee, repairs in GF and has expected profit of 120M. 50M worth of sugar was
Acceptance: destroyed. Insured can recover 60M as insurance for
o If abandonment is proper but insurer refuses unjustly, it does expected profit.
not prejudice the insured (Because for every 5 M of sugar it earns 6M sugar
o Acceptance of the abandonment can be express or implied [100:120], so loss of 50M worth of sugar is loss of
Mere silence of insurer after notice is not an 60M in profits)
acceptance o Not separately insured: Sugar being shipped is worth 100M
o Acceptance is conclusive and cannot be revoked [except if the and has expected profit of 120M. 50M worth of sugar was
ground is not factual, like the oranges case] destroyed. Insured can recover of 20M, which is 10M for
o What if the insurer unjustly refuses to accept the expected profit.
abandonment? Is a marine insurer liable for expenses attendant upon damage and
The insured can sell the vessel and earn scrap value. subsequent repairs?
The insurer is liable for the balance. o Yes, the insurance is liable pursuant to sue and labor
Upon accepted abandonment, who is entitled to the earned expenses, because the insurer is presumed to be willing to
freightage? incur these expenses to avoid loss.
o Freightage earned before the loss to the insurer of the Is a marine insurer liable for contribution expenses made by the
freightage insured for general average loss?
o Freightage earned after the loss to the insurer of the ship o Yes.

Measure of indemnity Fire insurance

What is the Co-insurance clause? What are the requisites of alteration?


o It applies by default only to marine insurance. It has to be o 1. Change in the use or condition of a thing insured
stipulated in fire or other insurance. o 2. Which is limited by the policy
o The prerequisites are: o 3. Without consent of insurer
1. Loss is partial o 4. Through means within control of insured
2. The property is insured for less than its total value o 5. Increasing the risk
o What is the effect? What is the consequence of alteration?
The insurer is liable only for the difference between o The insurer can rescind the contract
the amount of insurance and the value of the Give an example of alteration that increases the risk.
property. o Conversion of a bookstore to a restaurant
o Huh? Give an example na lang. Give an example which does not.
Vessel X was worth 1M but was insured for only o Conversion of a residential condominium into an office
800K. It was damaged to the extent of 200K. The condominium.
insured can recover 160,000 which is 1/5 of 800k What is a hostile fire and friendly fire?
(since 200K is 1/5 of 1M) o Hostile fire fire that escapes and burns in a place where it is
What is the difference in what the insured can recover if the profits not supposed to
are separately insured and if not?

47
o Friendly fire fire that burns in a place where it is supposed to o Is this the same as no fault?
burn No. It just distinguishes itself from intentional.
Friendly fire can convert into hostile fire What is the rule on third party liability?
o X is seeking to recover from the insurer for soot marks o There can be a provision allowing a third party to directly sue
caused on the wall by a gas stove burner. Can X recover? the insurer.
No. The marks were caused by friendly fire. But the insurer is not solidarily liable; just directly
Does co-insurance apply to fire insurance? liable. The liability of the insurer is contractual, not
o Not by law. But it is a standard clause placed by companies. quasi-delictual. The liability of the insurer is limited by
What is the rule on valuation for fire insurance (if there is none the policy.
provided in the policy)? o If there is no such provision, the contracts are separate, so the
o The valuation must reflect depreciation suffered by the third person cannot sue the insurer.
property before it was burned. o What if the indemnity is against actual loss or payment?
o SMC had a building worth 100M, which burned. But The third party cannot sue the insurer, because it has
instead of depreciating, the value of construction to wait for the insured to pay him. The insured
materials that year skyrocketed. So SMC is trying to recovers from the insurer.
recover insurance based on those new prices. But the o What if the indemnity is against liability?
insurer claimed SMC thus was underinsured in this case. The insured need not pay first before proceeding
SMC said that it was not, based on the old prices. What against the insurer.
happens? Is the insurer liable even if the insured commits criminal
SMC cannot use new valuation for the amount to be negligence?
recovered, and old prices to disclaim underinsurance. o Yes. This is still accidental. What is not covered is intentional
What is the effect if the insurance gives the insurer the option to or deliberate criminal acts.
rebuild the property instead of paying? A guy was showing off his gun. A friend asked if it was loaded,
o This is valid. The contract is novated and it becomes a and he said no. To prove it, he pointed the gun at himself and
contract for a piece of work. pulled the trigger. There was a bullet. He died. Can the heirs
o The insurer becomes liable for quality of the work done. collect?
o HELD: Yes, because it was accidental.
Casualty insurance o JJs viewpoint: No, because he was stupid.
Sometimes, there is a clause where the insurer will defend the case on
If intentional injuries caused by the insured or a third person are behalf of the insured in court. In a case, the insured sued the insurer
excepted, what does intentional mean? not because of the liability clause (because the insured was not yet
o Exercise of reasoning faculties, consciousness, and volition of made liable) but because the insurer was negligent in defending the
the person. case.
o It is the intention of the person inflicting the injury that controls.
o Usual accident policy doesnt cover death or injury caused by Suretyship
assault or murder. You have to pay extra to cover this.
What does accident or accidental mean? What is suretyship?
o No technical meaning. Something that happens by chance or o Agreement where surety guarantees the performance by
fortuitously, without design or intention. another of an undertaking or obligation in favor of a third party.

48
Examples? o 4. Term insurance
o Fidelity bond contract of insurance against loss from Insured pays premium only once, and is insured for a
misconduct specified period. If he outlives the period, no person
o Fidelity guaranty insurance for consideration, one agrees to benefits from the insurance.
indemnify the assured against loss arising from want of No cash surrender value.
integrity, fidelity, or honesty of persons holding positions of N.B. kind of like life insurance policies you take before
trust flying commercial
What is the nature of a suretyship agreement? o 5. Industrial life
o Solidary agreement, but only to the extent of the contractual Insured pays premiums weekly, or monthly, or oftener
amount in the bond What is the effect of death of insured through suicide?
o The court/obligee is not concerned w/n the premium has been o The insurer is only liable if the insured committed suicide after
paid. It will go against the surety when the obligation is not the policy has been in force for a period of two years from date
paid or the insured absconds. of issue or last reinstatement, unless shorter period is provided
What if the bond is not accepted? o If the suicide was committed in a state of insanity, the insurer is
o The principal-applicant is entitled to return of the premiums liable too, regardless of date of suicide
paid.
o But not entitled to return of taxes paid (ex. DST) and other The business of insurance
service fees, like what was spent to review the application.
o What is the exception? Certificate of authority from the Commissioner lasts one year
If there was fault of the insurance company, leading to What is the margin of solvency for insurance companies?
denial of the application. Even the taxes paid shall be o For a domestic firm, the excess of its admitted assets
returned. excluding paid-up capital, over the amount of liabilities,
What is a continuing bond? unearned premiums, and reinsurance reserves
o One that will last until the end of the case. The company is o For a foreign firm, the excess of its admitted assets in the
entitled to charge premiums every year. Philippines excluding security deposits, over the amount of
liabilities, unearned premiums, and reinsurance reserves
Life insurance Agents and brokers:
o Must be licensed
Kinds: Soliciting for compensation without license
o 1. Ordinary life, general life, or old line policy criminally liable
Insured pays a premium every year until he dies. o Rebate of premiums is also prohibited.
Surrender value after 3 years. o Can agreements regarding kickbacks be enforced?
o 2. Limited payment policy No, they are illegal.
Insured pays premium for limited period. If he
outlives the period, he does not get anything. Compulsory motor vehicle liability insurance
o 3. Endowment policy
Insured pays premium for specified period. If he Third party excludes
outlives the period, the face value of the policy is paid o Driver, etc.
to him. If not, the beneficiaries receive the benefit. o Relative by affinity/consanguinity within 2nd degree

49
o Employee [see qualification] o What if the car is unlawfully taken and driven by a person
What if a provision says that final judgment is needed before who is not authorized?
liability attaches? The theft clause applies, and not the authorized driver
o Its a void provision. If you have to wait until final judgment, it clause
will take a really long time. Ex. a repairman took the car out for a joyride
What is the no fault clause?
o The injured third party or passenger can claim for death or
injury without necessity of proving fault or negligence, under Intellectual Property Law
the ff conditions:
o 1. Indemnity shall not exceed P15,000
N.B. this value can adjust please check In general
o 2. Ff proof of loss is sufficient to substantiate the claim:
If theres death, death certificate What do intellectual property rights cover?
If theres injury, medical certificate o 1. Copyright
In all cases, police report o 2. Trademarks
o 3. Claim is against one motor vehicle only o 3. Geographic indications
Indication identifying a good as originating in a certain
From whom must the insured claim against?
place where a given quality, characteristic, or
o If a passenger, mounting, or dismounting the vehicle, against
reputation is attributable to the place
the insurer of the vehicle he is riding in
o 4. Industrial designs
o Else, against the insurer of the directly offending vehicle
o 5. Patents
What is the right of the insurer paying under the no-fault clause?
o 6. Layout designs of integrated circuits
o It can directly claim against the owner of the offending vehicle
o 7. Protection of undisclosed information
What if the claim exceeds the amount awarded under the no fault
Natural and legal persons can prevent information
clause?
lawfully within their control from being disclosed to,
o If the claim exceeds 15,000, then the insured can still claim it
acquired by, or used by others without their consent in
from the insurer, but he has to prove there was negligence or
a manner contrary to honest commercial practices.
fault.
As long as:
o The insurer cannot ask the insured to waive the rest of the
A. It is a secret
claim as a precondition to pay under the no fault clause.
B. It has commercial value because it is a
What are the important periods?
secret
o Claim from the insurer within 6 months from accident
C. It has been subject or reasonable steps to
o Go to court within 1 year from denial of claim
keep it a secret
Importance of a license:
Differentiate between copyrights, trademarks, and patents:
o If the one recovering is the driver himself, he can recover
o Copyright: literary and artistic works which are original
damages even if his license is expired. The authorized driver
intellectual creations, protection upon creation
clause does not apply to the owner.
o Trademark: visible sign of distinguishing goods (servicemark
o If it is someone else, who is authorized, he must have a valid
if services) of an enterprise, including stamped or marked
license
container of goods

50
o Patent: technical solution of a problem in any field of human What are covered:
activity which is new, involves an inventive step, and o Even choreography, musical compositions, drawings,
industrially applicable paintings, architecture, sculptures, computer etc.
What are technology transfer agreements? o Are email and letters also covered?
o Contracts involving transfer of systematic knowledge for the Yes. Any form of text is covered.
manufacture of a product, application of process, rendering of o Can a dictionary be copyrighted?
service (including management contracts), and transfer, A dictionary can be copyrighted. While no one has a
assignment, or licensing of all forms of IP rights (including non- monopoly on words, the court held that the original
mass market computer software) writer used his judgment in selecting which words will
o N.B. this cannot cover mass market software such as Windows be used.
o For DVDs?
Copyright The producer, music composer, director of
photography, screenwriter, author of the work on
Rights of intellectual creator exists from moment of creation which the movie is based, etc.
o Even if you havent registered yet with the National Library But for collecting, the producer has the right
o Architect exclusive rights over the plans he makes.
Who owns the copyright?
Also covered by special law
You cannot use these same plans to make another
One creator Creator, heirs, assigns
Joint creators, where individual parts Co-owned by authors building
are not identifiable Are derivative works also covered by copyright?
Joint creators, if the joint authorship Copyright over the parts they o Yes, but you have to get the consent of the original creator.
consists of separate and identifiable prepared Examples of these are dramatizations of novels,
parts translations, or adaptations (ex. Miss Saigon, from
Commissioned work Creator (although the commissioning Madame Butterfly)
person owns the work) o What about compilations?
Audio-visual work For exhibition, producer
Yes, they are covered by the rule on derivative works.
For other purposes: producer, author This involves judgment of, for instance, the best
of scenario, composer, director, Filipino short stories. So he has to get the consent of
photo director, author of work those whose stories he included in the compilation.
Anonymous Publisher And if someone else wants to make another
compilation, he cannot use the same set of stories
But if the writer can be identified (ex. since these were chosen by the first compiler; unless,
Quijano de Manila is Nick Joaquin,
of course, he gets permission.
he still gives consent)
Employees work in regular course of Employer What is the main principle?
employment o To be protected it must be original.
Employees work, if not part of his Employee What are not copyrightable?
duties o 1. Mere data, idea, procedure, system, etc. even if embodied in
a work

51
o 2. News of the day or miscellaneous facts amounting to press Technically, this is economic exploitation of
information the work.
o 3. Official text of legislative, administrative, or legal nature, and Ex. The character Charlie Brown is copyrighted. So
their translations sporting goods cannot use Charlie Brown on their
o 4. Works of the government goods. Or a bakery cannot use Cookie Monster.
But if the work will be economically exploited, need Some artist connoisseurs bought Xs paintings for a cheap price.
permission of the government agency Then they sold the paintings for a fortune when he became
Transfer or assignment of copyright: famous. What is Xs right?
o If you sell, mortgage, convey your copyright, you must register o He must get 5% of the selling price. (Sec 200 Droit de suede)
it with the National Library to bind third parties. o This ensures that the artist benefits from the higher price
o The transfer or assignment must be in writing o This right exists as long as the copyright exists.
What if an authors work is distorted? What is infringement?
o Owner can object to the distortion of his work. o Piracy or substantial reproduction, and so much is taken that
o Will transfer to new media distort a work? the value of the original work is substantially diminished
No. Is infringement the same as plagiarism?
How long is the copyright? o No. Every act of infringement is plagiarism. Not every act of
o Lifetime of author + 50 years plagiarism is infringement.
o What if there are several authors? o Plagiarism is passing off the work of another as ones own. It
From death of last author may consist of copying verbatim the work of another w/o
o What if the author is anonymous? acknowledgement, or rewriting in ones own words the idea
Count 50 years from first publication (commence from expressed by another
Jan 1 following the date of publication) BUT you cannot have a copyright over an idea. So
What if the authors identity is found out? copying an idea is plagiarism, but not infringement.
You change the period to his lifetime + 50 Must copying be substantial for plagiarism?
years o No. Because infringement requires substantial copying,
o What if its work of applied art (artistic creation with plagiarism does not.
utilitarian functions or incorporated in a useful article)? o Case: There was a book on grammar and styles of writing,
25 years from making and it quoted actual literary works exhibiting those figures of
o What about broadcast? speech. There was infringement when another book copied
20 years from date of broadcast even the same examples.
o They are not extended by assignment Is intent needed for plagiarism?
The economic rights of author need his permission for: o Law requires bad faith or intentionality
o 1. Reproduction or substantial reproduction (ex. photocopying o But academic institutions as a matter of discipline remove this
an entire book) requirement
o 2. Derivative works There must be copying for there to be infringement. How do you
o 3. Public distribution or exhibition establish this?
Businesses started playing certain songs to drum o Through circumstantial evidence
up business. Is this exploitation of the work? o Ex. a book has a missing page 23. Another book that is similar
is also missing page 23.

52
Action for infringement. Remedies? If one is citing portions of a work because one is
o 1. Injunction to restrain infringement writing a brief or a thesis, is this fair use?
o 2. Payment of damages Yes.
Within 4 years If one is citing portions to use for an anthology, is
But usually its hard to prove the amount lost since this fair use?
infringers do not have accounts or receipts. So No. This is economic exploitation
usually temperate damages are awarded. o 2. Nature of work
o 3. Order delivery under oath of the infringing works and What is example of nature preventing copyright?
tools/instruments that produced the work Trying to copyright the phone book invalid
Moral and exemplary damages awarded because of nature of the work
o 4. Criminal case Example of a statement that can be reproduced?
When is there no infringement of copyright? Ex. simple fact that Rizal died on
o [Limited use] December 30. Cannot claim that one stole
o 1. Used for the benefit of a charitable institution, or if privately that fact from another book.
and for free o 3. Extent
o 2. Ephemeral recordings by broadcasting organization using Amount of work used
own facilities for broadcast use Infringement requires substantial copying. But this
Production of works as part of current events does not just involve quantitative, but also qualitative
Ex. newscast covering ribbon cutting in an event, and Ex. Quoth the raven nevermore is just five
the camera caught a mural in the footage this is words but is qualitatively the heart of the
valid use, the artist cannot demand money E.A. Poes The Raven
o [Valid purpose] Ex. In a satirical work, you are poking fun at
o 3. Used as teaching aid another work. For it to work, the
Ex. using Filipino folk dance songs to teach native viewer/listener must identify the work being
dances satirized. So copying must really be
o 4. Used for judicial proceedings or giving advice substantial.
Ex. citing law book in legal opinion or memorandum to Libraries can make photocopies (ex. the book is
court fragile already ex. Maximo Kalaws The Malolos
o 5. Fair use Congress or Apolinario Mabinis books). If you only
For criticism. need isolated portions of the work for a thesis or
Ex. quoting portions of a book for comment research; instead of photocopying the whole book,
For research and private study you can just copyright the 10 or so pages.
o [Back-up] To complete a set, where it is missing one book or so,
o 6. Reproduction by libraries of fragile works, isolated articles in and it cannot be procured the library can borrow a
composite works, brief portions of published work, or to book and photocopy it
preserve or replace a copy o 4. Effect on the market
o 7. One back-up copy of computer programs
Four factors to determine fair use: Patents
o 1. Purpose

53
What can be patented? When is prior disclosure of the information in the
o 1. Any technical solution to a human problem which is new, patent in the 12 months preceding application for
involves an inventive step, and industrially applicable patent non-prejudicial?
Ex. Machine, computer, cellphone, product, 1. Disclosed by the inventor
medicines, process, etc. 2. Disclosed by the patent office and the
Example of process: information was in an application filed by the
Developing a synthetic replacement for wood inventor or a third party who got the
alcohol to prevent jamming the barrel of a information from the inventor but did not get
gun his consent in filing the application
o 2. An improvement on current machines 3. Disclosed by third party who obtained the
Ex. colored television, 3G phones information directly/indirectly from the
o 3. Microorganisms created artificially in a laboratory inventor
Ex. those to combat oil slicks o 2. Involves an inventive step
Budapest treaty: governs the patentability of If it is useful, but it is not an invention and anyone with
microorganisms mechanical skill can do it it cannot be patented
What cannot be patented? Ex. putting a block of wood over two rollers to rewind
o 1. Discoveries printer ribbon is not patentable. It does not show
Newton cannot patent the law on gravity flash of genius
But he can patent inventions based on it o 3. Industrially applicable
Ex. parachutes Something that spins perpetually. Has no industrial
o 2. Mathematical methods, scientific formulae, schemes, forms, use, so it cannot be patented.
or methods to do mental acts The rule on invention patents: who wins?
o 3. Methods for treatment of animal or human bodies o First to file gets the right.
If patented, patients have to pay royalties to get o The same rule applies for industrial design
treatment, which is not humanitarian o Must be registered with intellectual property office.
Contra: machines used for treatment can be patented What is the first-to-file rule?
o 4. Plant varieties, animals, etc. o First to file first to apply wins.
o 5. Aesthetic creations o If they file the same day, they will be joint owners of the patent.
Covered by industrial design o What is the right to priority for a foreign registered patent?
o 6. Against public policy If there was an earlier application for patent filed in a
Ex. invention to help commit suicide foreign country that allows same rights for Filipino
To patent an invention: citizens, then one can use that date of filing in the
o 1. New foreign country as the same date of filing in the
When is it not new? subsequent Filipino application
1. Already available to the public anywhere Provided, that it is filed within 12 months of earliest
in the world foreign registration and the local application expressly
o Ex. a plow claims this priority rule
2. Prior filed or effective patent, utility model, What is the remedy of the actual inventor after proving in court
or industrial design that the one who filed attained it through fraud?

54
o 1. Order patent to be cancelled OR Compare patents and industrial design:
o 2. Substitute the actual inventor in the patent (alternative) o Limitations of the right of owners of industrial design are the
If two or more persons invented it? same as patents, but industrial design cannot be the subject of
o The patent is owned jointly compulsory licensing
Ex. Wright brothers over flying machine What is the term of a patent?
o What if it is commissioned? o 20 years from date of filing of application
Follow their agreement. What is infringement?
If there is none, the one who commissioned the work o Infringement is the making, using, or importing of the patent of
owns the patent. the product without authorization by the owner
o What about employees? o But importation of medicines has been excluded parallel
If it is part of his duties, it belongs to the employer. If importation is allowed (see notes below)
it is not, he owns the patents. What are the grounds to cancel registration of a patent?
Ex. an employee in the NFA invented a o 1. What is patented is not new or patentable
machine to salvage rotten rice. It belongs to o 2. Patent does not disclose the invention in a manner
him because its not his job to do it. sufficiently clear and complete for it to be carried out by a
What is the value of registration? person skilled in the art
o Assignments in order to bind third parties must be o 3. Patent is contrary to public order or morality
registered with the Intellectual Property Office. Otherwise, Two tests to determine infringement:
subsequent buyers or mortgagees in good faith will be o 1. Literal infringement
protected. When you file an application for a patent, you submit
What is an industrial design? a claim explaining how the product works. If you
o Any composition, lines, colors, etc. which form a pattern for compare the patented product with the claim, and it is
making a product. Ornamental design may be copyrighted exactly the same, then it is literal infringement.
Ex. design for jewelry, clothes, shoes, cars, tiles, etc. o 2. Doctrine of equivalence
o Compare to: Integrated circuits electronic components of If you appropriate an invention and make some
digital equipment (ex. cars with electronic keys, elevators, etc.) changes, but it performs substantially the same
What is required for it to be registrable? functions, and it achieves the same results, its the
o The design must be new. same thing.
Someone copied a design for a suitcase from a N.B. Having the same effect, but not proving that it
foreign catalogue. This is cannot be registered under achieves it through the same means does not prove
industrial design. equivalence
Someone registered as industrial design the Y design What is contributory infringement?
on jockey briefs. o Aside from the infringer, anyone who induces the infringer or
How long is the term of protection for ID? provides the infringer with the component knowing that it is
o Term of protection for industrial design is 5 years, renewable specially adapted for infringing and not for any other use is an
for two consecutive terms of 5 years. infringer too.
EXCEPT: period of 10 years for layout design o Betamax case: the VCR was alleged as being used to pirate,
o Period starts from first commercial exploitation anywhere in the but it was proved to be usable for lawful purposes
world Is an improver an infringer?

55
o Yes, if there is no consent from the owner of the patent. Ex. Viagra was originally used for heart ailments, but
What if there is a pending petition to cancel a patent? serendipitously they discovered it can cure erectile
o A petition for infringement may prosper, because it is still dysfunction. It cannot be patented again because
effective. there was no chemical reagent added.
Can a foreign corporation not doing business here sue for Voluntary licensing:
infringement? o IPL regulates technology transfers.
o Yes, as long as its country gives Filipinos reciprocal right to do o There was a decree providing for regulation of technology
this. transfer arrangements. We cannot abolish it, for being
Defenses against infringement? constitutionally mandated, so it was restored, when initially
o 1. Prescription omitted.
Action prescribes after 4 years from infringement Prohibited provisions in licensing agreements:
o 2. Patent is not new or patentable o [Anti-competitive measures]
o 3. Patent does not disclose an invention in a manner that will o 1. That the licensee must get goods, products, raw materials
make a skilled person to make that invention from specific sources. Then the license becomes a captive
o 4. Against public policy market of the supplier.
Remedies? o 2. Prohibits the use of competitive technology, and the
o 1. Damages technology transfer agreement was not exclusive
If the damages cannot be readily ascertained, the o 3. Require that the technology recipient should not contest the
court can award reasonable royalty validity of any of the patents of the tech supplier
Court may treble the actual damages (equivalent to o [Too much control]
exemplary damages) so trebling and exemplary o 4. The licensor can fix the sale or resale price of the products
damages are mutually exclusive produced under the license
o 2. Injunction o 5. Restricting volume and structure of production
o 3. Destruction of infringing product and implements used to o 6. Prohibit the licensee to export the product, except if it is
make that product because some other country has exclusive contract with the
o 4. Cancellation of patent if the invention is not new, patentable, owner of the patent
or does not disclose the invention sufficiently to make a person o [Exploitative benefit to licensor]
skilled in the art to produce it o 7. Gives licensor option to buy the product used by the
o 5. Criminal action against the infringer for repeated licensee (purchase option)
infringement even after finality of judgment against him o 8. Obligates licensee to transfer for free to the licensor the
Cheaper Medicines Law amendments: improvements or licensed obtained through the licensed
o The CML provides for what medicines cannot be patented. technology
o If you just discovered a new form for the medicine it is not o 9. Exempting the licensor from obligations under the
patentable as a separate invention. agreement or to third parties brought about by suits re: use of
Ex. Medicine sold in liquid form, and then converted the licensed product
to capsule form. It cannot be patented. o [Beyond actual use]
o Neither if you just discover a new property, but did not add a o 10. Require payments of royalties for patents which are not
new chemical reagent. used

56
o 11. Restricting use of the technology even after expiration of o 2. For patented processes: restrain, prohibit, and prevent
the patent unauthorized persons from using the process or
o 12. Require payment of patents after expiration of agreement manufacturing, dealing with, using, selling, or importing any
o [Anti-adaptation] product obtained directly/indirectly from the process
o 13. Restricting R&D of the licensee which gear towards What are the limits on these patent rights i.e. when can the owner
adaptation/application of the technology to local context, or for of the patent not claim the rights above?
new products, processes, or equipment o 1. When product has been put on the market by the patent
o 14. Preventing licensee from adapting imported technology to owner or with his consent
local conditions or introducing innovations to it, as long as it If you bought the patented product, you should be
does not impair the quality standards imposed by the licensor able to use the product. So the old rule that you can
o [Catch-basin] buy an IBM product but you cannot use it unless you
o 15. Analogous cases pay a royalty is not allowed.
Law provides compulsory provisions : The moment a patented medicine is allowed to be
o 1. Philippine Law must govern used anywhere in the world. Ex. it was registered in
o 2. In case of litigation, proper court in the Philippines governs the US and the inventor allows it to be used
o 3. If there is arbitration, venue is Philippines or a neutral elsewhere, automatically you can use it here. (Of
country only course you must buy the patented medicine)
Governed by UNCITRAL rules or ICC ONLY o 2. Charitable purpose
o 4. Licensor bears all taxes o 3. Valid parallel importation
When may the IPO grant exceptions from prohibited or mandatory o 4. Where the act is done privately, for non-commercial
provisions? purposes
o If there is substantial benefit for the country: o 5. Used for educational/scientific purposes
High technology content Once a patent expires, the owner loses his exclusive
Increase in for-ex earnings rights and anybody can make that invention. But in
Generate jobs the case of medicines, use of that for experiment
What if the agreement does not comply with the prohibited or should be allowed even if the patent has not yet
mandatory provisions? expired. You need lead time to study that medicine
o It is unenforceable (ex. 3 years), so the moment the patent expires, they
What is the right of the licensor and licensee? will be ready to produce that medicine.
o The licensor is not prohibited from entering into licensing o 6. Act is to prepare a medicine in accordance with prescription
agreement with a third person or exploiting the subject matter or acts concerning the medicine so prepared, by a pharmacy
himself or medical professional, for individual cases
UNLESS there is provision to the contrary o 7. Government or a 3rd person authorized by government may
o The licensee can exploit the subject matter of the agreement exploit an invention when public interest, national security,
during the whole term safety, etc. requires it
What are rules on the rights of the owner of the patent? Ex. if there is public health need for a medicine and
o 1. For patented products: restrain, prohibit, and prevent the demand is not fulfilled by the supply, the
unauthorized persons from making, using, selling, or importing government can import it
the product

57
If a person is allowed to use it for these needs, the o Usually parties are given time to negotiate terms and
use is non-exclusive (so others can use it too) conditions of compulsory license, but then the Director will step
This use can only be enjoined by the in after
Supreme Court
o 8. Invention is used in a ship, vessel, craft, or land vehicle of Trademarks
another country entering Philippine territory temporarily or
accidentally What is a trademark?
It must be exclusively used for the vessel o Visible sign capable of distinguishing goods/services/enterprise
What is the prior user rule? Ex. including Coca-Cola bottle, which was specially
o When there is a prior user in GF of the invention or has designed
undertaken serious preparations to do so, before the filing or What can be a trademark?
priority date of the application by another, the prior user can o 1. Anything fanciful can be used as a trademark. If a word is
keep on using the invention even when the patent is granted to arbitrary and fanciful, it is entitled to immediate protection.
another. Ex. selecta (Spanish word for selected), maiden
o The right of the prior user may only be transferred along with form bra, Big Mac, Citi
the enterprise or business, and not separately. o 2. Secondary meaning is only required if it is originally not
When can the government use the invention even without prior trademarkable, but after long use, it has acquired another
agreement by the patent owner (compulsory licensing)? meaning
o 1. National emergency What cannot be registered?
o 2. Public interest/national security, health, development of vital o [public policy]
national economy o 1. Immoral
o 3. Judicial or administrative determination that the exploitation o 2. Public order or morality
of the patent has been used for anti-competitive purposes o [same or misleading]
o 4. Has not satisfied the demands of the market (for medicine) o 1. Identical with a registered mark
o 5. Public non-commercial use of the patent with no satisfactory A. Referring to same goods/services or closely related
reason goods/services
o 6. Where the demand for patented medicine is not being met, Ex. Ang Tibay is registered for shoes and
and on reasonable terms determined by the Sec. of Health slippers. Ang Tibay cannot be registered for
What is the effect/role of compulsory licensing? pants and shirts, because theyre both
o N.B. Most cases involve medicine. haberdashery products and its reasonable
o Compulsory license in medicine usually is done to decrease to assume they expanded.
prices through competition B. Not exactly identical but one is a colorable imitation
Petition to compulsory license: that could cause confusion (see tests below)
o Can only be filed after four years from filing of the application C. Too similar to a trademark known around the world
of the patent, or three years from the date the patent, D. Identical to a translation of a foreign trademark
whichever ends later must fall within both periods Ex. Promesa soaps becomes promise
o Medicines anytime o 2. Deceptive
What are the terms of the licensing agreement? o 3. Likely to mislead public publicly known symbol
Ex. red/white/blue barbershop pole

58
o [relating to persons] Ex. Both Paddocks and Dockers jeans had the words
o 4. May disparage or falsely create belief that it is related to a as the dominant design, and not the eagle, so its not
person living or dead confusingly similar to Levis
o 5. With signature of living individual unless with his consent o 2. Holistic test
o 6. Name of deceased president during lifetime of the widow, Consider the TMs in their entirety
except with the latters consent What must be considered?
o [generic symbols] 1. Relevant market (is it targeted to
o 7. National symbol physicians? Illiterate household helpers?)
o 8. Flag of Philippines or other foreign country Ex. Physicians are less likely to be confused
o 9. Uses geographical indicator known for that product 2. Kind of product, since more expensive
Ex. Isabella tobacco products will have more prudent buyers
o 10. Signs that are customary or usual in everyday language o Ordinary household items are not
o 11. Signs that are used to designate the kind or quality of the purchased with great care.
product Examples:
Ex. Shoes or Funeral Parlor Ex. Fruit of Eve was challenged by Fruit of
o 12. Over a color or shape the Loom. Fruit of Eve was rectangular with
o 13. Emblem of the United Nations (under special law) concave sides, and just had a green apple.
What if the applicant is registering a similar trademark for closely Fruit of Loom was circular, and had a red
related goods? apple, with bananas, and grapes.
o The prior trademark will be protected. Ex. Lorenzana Patis had a carp. Lorenz
o Examples of closely related goods (INVALID): patis had a bangus and had the same font.
Ex. X-7 Soap X-7 Pomade (both bathroom Ex. Lard was sold with a big Roman V.
products) Another used III
Ex. Wonder Beauty Soap Wonder Laundry Soap Ex. Black Cat Tea and Black Dog Tea
o Examples of not closely related goods (VALID): Ex. Master Roast and Famous Master, since
Ex. Esso Oil =/= Esso Cigarettes the dominant word is master
Ex. Bruth briefs =/= Bruth soaps
What if the TM is internationally well-known?
Ex. cigarettes =/= liquor
o It can be protected even if not sold here, whether or not
Ex. Jollibee sandals =/= Jollibee restaurant
registered
What are the tests to determine if two products are confusingly
o Passage of time will not bar action to protect that international
similar? trademark
o 1. Dominance test
What is the rule on secondary meanings?
This looks past trivial differences
o Trademarks which originally may not be registrable may be
This applies if a questioned TM contained the main
registered if it already obtained a second meaning.
pictures of the older TM, such that confusion would
Ex. California manufacturing
likely result
Not just the State but the manufacturer of
Deception need not be actually proved
Ladys Choice mayonnaise
Ex. Some colors or shapes

59
o What are the requirements? o 1. Mark became generic (aspirin
1. The use of such as a trademark must be exclusive became generic, cellophane,
2. The name has been used for at least 5 years (long Thermos bottle)
period of time, according to law) o 2. Abandonment failure to use for
Is prior use necessary to register a trademark? uninterrupted period of 3 years
o No. Prior use is no longer a requirement to register a o 3. Misrepresentation of source of
trademark goods
When must a registered trademark be used? o N.B. compare this with periods for actions under copyright and
o Within 3 years from registration patent which are generally both 4 years
o What if you did not use it? When is there infringement of trademark?
If you did not use it, you must file an affidavit of non- o Use, copying, etc.
use and explain why. Otherwise, it will be cancelled. o Includes preparatory steps to carry out the sale of goods
o What is the ONLY acceptable reason? This applies to those who make fake shirts. They
Force majeure make the shirts first, without attaching the label. They
N.B. other reasons like poor economy are invalid will only sell the label when they are about the sell the
How long is the duration of registration? shirts. So this way, even if they havent attached the
o 10 years, with indefinite renewal for similar periods labels, the manufacturer can be held liable for
What if someone just imports or distributes a foreign product? infringement.
o He cannot register the TM. He does not own it. o Copying, counterfeiting, making colorable imitations of TMs
Can a TM be assigned or transferred? and using it for labels, packages, etc.
o Yes. A trademark may be assigned or transferred without Three elements to prove infringement?
transferring the business. o 1. The TM is valid
What is the principle in registration? o 2. The plaintiff owns it
o The law adopts the Torrens principle. If the assignment is to o 3. There is likelihood of confusion due to use of defendant
bind third parties, it must be registered in the IPO. When is registration not needed for an action?
o Otherwise a third party may buy it in GF. o 1. For unfair competition
What are the inter partes cases (contested cases before the IPO)? A. Passing off a product format of another
o 1. Opposition against registration of mark B. Giving goods the appearance of another
Within 30 days after publication o 2. False designation of origin
Ground: registration will damage the The law says the right is acquired from time of registration. When
oppositor is this counted?
o 2. Petition to cancel the registration of mark o From filing of the date of application
A. Within 5 years of registration o Or from the priority date. This is when there is actual
Ground: confusingly similar registration in other countries covered by the reciprocity rule.
B. Any time Types of confusion?
Grounds: o 1. Confusion of goods
o 2. Confusion of business

60
Goods are different but the product can be reasonably Property which may be real property under
assumed to originate form the plaintiff, deceiving the the NCC may be personal property under
public special law.
The parties considered the house as personal
property, and subjected it to CM. Does it bind
Chattel Mortgage them and third parties?
By estoppel this classification binds the
parties. But this does not bind third parties,
What are the requisites of Chattel Mortgage? because it will not occur to third parties to
o 1. Constituted to provide security for a principal obligation check with the CM registry if real property is
If the principal obligation fails, there can be no CM treated as personal.
o 2. The mortgagor must be the absolute owner of the property o 5. Mortgage must be registered
mortgaged If the residence of the mortgagor and the property are
X bought a car and placed it up for CM. But when he in different places, they must be registered in both
signed the CM mortgage, the car hasnt been places
delivered to him yet. Ex. Shares of stock have situs in the
HELD: Cannot CM the car because delivery principal office of the corporation (ex. Makati)
is needed to transfer ownership. and the mortgagor lives in Pasig. It must be
Seller sold an oil tanker, and seller has not been fully registered in both.
paid. They agreed the buyer will not register the Register with appropriate specialized agency:
property until there has been full payment. The buyer If Motor Vehicle, with LTO, aircraft, Civil
breached the agreement and registered it. Aeronatics, ships, Maritime office, copyright,
HELD: The registration was valid, because National Library, trademark, IPO.
the mortgagee was in GF and the buyer was What if it is not registered?
the absolute owner by that time anyway. Valid between the parties, but not against
o 3. Must have free disposal of the property third persons.
Trustee cannot CM property because he has no free o 6. Affidavit of GF
disposal What if there is no affidavit of GF?
o 4. Must be personal property Binds the parties, but not third parties.
Ex. moving vehicles, shares of stock, machinery But if a third party actually knows of the execution of a
placed by persons on property of another, etc. CM and the CM was done in good faith, it will bind the
Can personal property considered real property third party.
under the NCC by subject to CM? Can the CM extend to improvements and future property?
Yes. o No.
What is the status of standing crops? o Contra: In REM, the mortgage extends to improvements
They are real property under the NCC but introduced on the real property by the mortgagor.
personal property under CM Law, so it can Ex. REM over land with one property, and another
be chattel mortgaged. building is built, the REM extends on it.

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o There was a CM over machines in a factory. But then To foreclose, what is needed?
more machines were introduced later on. Does the CM o 1. Publication in the newspaper is not needed,
extend over the new improvements? o 2. Notice must be posted in two or more public places, where
No. Because the machines were treated as personal the mortgagee resides or where the property is located at least
property so the parties are estopped and cannot apply 10 days before the sale.
the REM principle. o 3. Notice to mortgagor
Can a CM secure future loans or indebtedness? o What if there is a stipulation as to where the property must
o No. Cannot constitute CM to provide security for future be sold?
indebtedness, whereas REM can be used to do this. The It must be followed
provision that it will cover future loans is void. What if the proceeds of the foreclosure exceed the amount owed?
You can amend the CM over the first loan to cover the o Return to the mortgagor.
new one if the first loan still exists. o If there is deficiency, the E can run after mortgagor for it.
If the first loan has been extinguished, you constitute o Exception?
a new CM. Art 1484. Sale of property payable in installment
o Because here, the parties have to swear that they constituted it basis. If sale was done to cover for the balance of the
to secure a valid obligation and not to defraud creditors. price, if the foreclosure sale results in deficiency, the
o You cannot swear by an obligation that does not exist yet. E can no longer sue for payment of the deficiency.
Someone mortgaged his car and it was completely wrecked,
collected money from Insurance, and bought a new car, does the
CM cover the new car?
o No. Must constitute a new CM. Extrajudicial foreclosure of REM
Who owns the property under CM? Can he sell it?
o Still the mortgagor. He can sell the property since he retains
ownership. What is required before property can be foreclosed extra-
o The sale is valid, but he can be liable under the RPC for selling judicially?
something that has been mortgaged under CM Law. o There must be stipulation giving the mortgagee a SPA to
If a personal property was mortgaged and the mortgagor has a foreclose it extra-judicially.
judgment creditor who levied on the property mortgaged, who If a loan is overdue, what will not preclude foreclosure of the REM?
wins? o 1. Allegations that the mortgagee did not furnish the mortgagor
o The creditor must respect the CM. He can only garnish on the an updated statement of account
equity of redemption and not the property itself. o 2. Negotiation for restructuring of the loan
If the mortgagor defaults, can the mortgagee appropriate the What is the rule on interest rates?
property? o While the ceiling rates on interests have been lifted by the
o No. This is pactum commissorium which is invalid. monetary board, it doesnt mean the parties can stipulate on
o Can the mortgagee take the property? any rate of interest. If it is unconscionable, it will be void.
Not forcibly. He can file for replevin to get it, and then Ex. 5% a month or 6% a month are contra bonus
sell it. mores for being unconscionable.
Is a private sale of the property to foreclose valid? o What is the effect of this on the foreclosure?
o Yes.

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The foreclosure is thus void, because you have to first This made the foreclosure invalid because there was
determine the amount that is properly due to the no mortgage constituted on that date
mortgagee. What if the mortgagor talks to the bank before foreclosure
o What if the provision says the bank can unilaterally promising to pay the loan, and the bank makes him sign a waiver
increase the interest? of republication, is it valid?
The provision is void, violating mutuality of contracts o Yes.
in the NCC. The parties have to agree in advance a o While commentators have said that third parties who want to
formula on how to increase the interest rate. This will buy the property will be prejudiced since they did not know, this
make the formula valid. waiver is valid because it is for the benefit of the owner of the
What if the foreclosure was done in another place as opposed to property.
what was stipulated in the agreement? Can the foreclosure be done by a Notary Public and not a sheriff?
o Valid. If there were no words of exclusivity, there is waiver of o Yes, although the courts now require the payment of filing fees
venue (Rule 4 of ROC). for foreclosure even if it is a notary public who does it. The
What is the notice requirement? judge also has to confirm it after.
o 1. Notice must be published once a week for 3 consecutive To what extent does Rule 39 apply to EJ foreclosure of mortgage?
weeks in a newspaper of general circulation o Only to the extent of redemption.
N.B. If you publish it on Monday the first week, it must o But not for other provisions, such as the requirement in Rule
ALWAYS be Monday the next two weeks. Not 39 that the sheriff must sell the properties one by one and stop
Wednesday or Friday. as soon as the loan is covered. So if a subdivision developer
o 2. It must be posted in 3 public places where the property is mortgaged all the lots, they can be sold in EJ foreclosure lump
located sum.
o Is personal notice to the mortgagor needed? What if there What happens to the excess or deficiency after foreclosure?
is failure to do so? o Excess goes to mortgagor
No need. No effect. o Mortgagee can sue for payment of deficiency
o What if there was no posting but there was publishing? Is there a right to redemption?
It is sufficient. o Yes.
o What if the sale is postponed? How do you redeem?
You must give notices again through posting and o 1. Tender the correct redemption price, or
publishing. o 2. File a case to compel delivery of property for redemption
o What are the exceptions? (tantamount to tender of payment)
1. Sale not finished that day and will continue the next BUT this doctrine is based on the premise that the
day redemption price is not settled. If the redemption
2. Waiver (see below What if mortgagor talks to the price is not disputed, this doctrine does not apply. If
bank) after filing the case, the redemption price was
o What if there are clerical errors in spelling the name of the determined when before it was unknown, he must
mortgagor? then tender the redemption price.
If the property is properly described, then it is valid. Can the parties agree to extend the redemption period?
o But what if the notice puts the wrong date when the o Yes, this is valid.
mortgage was executed?

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o Ex. In a case, the sheriff placed that there are 2 years to is not in privity with the parties in the mortgage. The
redeem and the bank-mortgagee did not object. case has to be ejectment.
Under the Banking Law, i.e. the mortgagee is a bank, what is o What if the owner-mortgagor of the property has a lessee
provided? on the property?
o If the mortgagor is a natural person, he has one year to A lessee stands in privity with the owner of the
redeem. If the property is covered by Torrens title, count from property so the lessee has to respect the writ of
registration of the sale. possession.
o If the mortgagor is an artificial person like a corporation, the But the writ of possession cannot be enforced
redemption period is three months from date of sale or the date against the lessee when:
when the deed of sale was registered whichever comes first. 1. The lease hasnt expired and it is
In the ROC, if real property is sold on execution you have to pay annotated on the title
1% per month for interest. What if the lender-mortgagee is a bank? 2. The lease is not annotated but the buyer
o The rate stipulated on the loan document governs. has actual knowledge
What if there are two loans falling due on two dates, where one 3. House Rental Law: if the property of the
was due, and the second fell due during redemption? apartment is covered by the House Rental
o The R must pay for BOTH loans; otherwise the first redemption Law, the buyer must honor the lease even if
is not valid. it is not registered. He cannot evict the
What can the buyer of the foreclosed property do? tenant until the expiration of the contract
o He can ask for a writ of possession. Granting this is ministerial o What if a third partys rights are adverse against the
and non-litigious. This is ex parte and there is no need to owner-mortgagor?
require presentation of evidence. If the rights of the third party are adverse against the
o He must just allege that there was a valid mortgage, default, mortgagor, it cannot be enforced against him because
foreclosure sale, and the sale was according to Act 3135. it violates due process. It violates their rights without
When can you ask for a writ of possession? prior hearing.
o Either during redemption period or after lapse of redemption Ex. A third party claims that he bought the
period. property prior to it being mortgaged.
o Does the rule in Rule 39 where enforcement of decision is How can the mortgagor question the validity of foreclosure?
through motion for 5 years and independent action til 10 o Within 30 days from when buyer takes possession, the
years apply here? mortgagor can file a petition to annul the foreclosure sale.
No. This right is imprescriptible. N.B. if he fails to file the petition within the 30 day
o What if you enter into a new contract ex. a K of lease? period, it will be barred.
That new contract will govern the relationship of the o But what if possession hasnt been delivered yet (since
parties. You cannot file for writ of possession you you count the period from there)?
file for ejectment. When no writ of possession has yet been issued, the
o To whom can the writ of possession not be enforced mortgagor can file a case to litigate to question the
against? validity of foreclosure (ordinary civil case)
The writ of possession cannot be enforced against a What if the owners duplicate remained with the mortgagor (since
third party who is in possession of the land in GF and he failed to surrender it), and there was failure to register?

64
o The court should order the register of deeds to annotate the o How much downpayment will go to the principal, and the
deed of sale even if the owners duplicate was not given. interest
o Otherwise, the owner can prevent mortgage from being o Total amount to be financed + finance charges
effective just by withholding the owners duplicate. Percentage of finance charges vis--vis total amount
Central bank prescribed a form to be used by banks to give this
N.B. for other aspects of CM Law and REM Law, see Civil Law and information. But this law is not limited to financial institutions. This law
Remedial Law notes. even covers private persons (5-6 lending, for instance).
o What if the form is not given to the debtor?
Need not follow the exact form, as long as the
Truth in Lending Act instrument reveals the pertinent information
Effects of failure to comply?
o 1. The credit agreement is still binding
What is the purpose of the law? o 2. The borrower is entitled to be paid double the finance
o To protect citizens from lack of awareness as to true cost of charges (not less than 100 pesos, not more than 2,000 pesos)
credit by assuring full disclosure of the cost o 3. When the debtor sues the creditor for payment of finance
o To prevent uninformed use of credit to the detriment of national charges, he can get attys fees.
economy o 4. The creditor who did not comply with the law may be
What is the basic obligation of the lender? prosecuted criminally
o The debtor must be informed how much it is costing him to Manual of regulation for banks
borrow money the charges he has to pay o If a bank lends more than P500,000, it can charge a handling
Which creditors are covered? fee.
o 1. Any person engaged in the business of extending credit, o If that was not disclosed in the statement to comply with the
who requires a finance charge Truth in Lending Act, the bank cannot charge the handling fee
o 2. Any person engaged in the business of loaning or selling The statement given did not mention that the bank can increase
property/services on a time, credit, or installment basis (either the penalty in case of default. Can the bank charge this increase in
as principal or agent), who requires a finance charge a penalty?
What does the Act cover? o No.
o 1. Any loan, mortgage, deed of trust, advance, or discount
o 2. Any contract to sell, contract of sale property or services, on
installment basis; Anti Money Laundering Act
o 3. Lease purchase contract with financing company
o 4. Hire, bailment, lease of property
o 5. Option, demand, lien, pledge, or claim against property or What is money laundering?
money o Crime where proceeds of illegal activity are transacted, to
o 6. Purchase, acquisition of, or any credit upon the security of make them appear to have originated from legitimate sources
any obligation arising from any of the foregoing Who are guilty?
What must be indicated? o 1. Person who transacts the money coming from the illegal
o Cash price activity

65
o 2. He who knows that the money came from an illegal source, o [Grave crimes with property implications]
but performs acts to facilitate the transaction o 1. Kidnap for ransom
Ex. Bank officer who helps open bank account, with o 2.Violation of dangerous drugs law
knowledge that the funds came from kidnapping o 3. Piracy
o 3. Person who does not comply with disclosure requirements o 4. Hijacking, destructive arson, murder
of law (N.B. this is the HK-MAD enumeration + piracy)
Who are covered? o [Obtaining property illegally]
o 1. Banks o 1. Robbery and extortion
o 2. Quasi-banks o 2. Jueteng and illegal betting on jai alai
o 3. Financing institutions (ex. financing companies, pawnshops, o 3. Qualified theft
investment houses, trust companies, institutions supervised by o 4. Swindling
Central Bank, insurance companies, securities dealers, o 5. Smuggling
brokers, investment houses, investment managers, mutual o [Commercial violations]
funds, common trust funds, pre-need companies, foreign o 1. Violation of e-commerce law
exchange corporations, money changers) o 2. Securities regulation code violation
o 4. Those engaged in exchange of valuable property like What is the composition of the AMLC?
jewelry, paintings, etc. o 1. Governor of Bangko Sentral, 2. Chairman of SEC, 3.
Does it cover real estate companies? Insurance Commissioner
o NO. So if someone uses illegally obtained money to buy land, How are decisions reached?
the real estate company is not required to comply with AMLA. o Decisions must be unanimous (all 3 of them)
What are the two kinds of transactions? Powers of the AMLC?
o 1. Covered transactions o 1. Implement measures to prevent AML
More than P500,000 or its equivalent on one banking o 2. Coordinate with foreign countries for enforcement of AML
day o 3. Investigate transactions
Automatically, these have to be reported although o 4. Recommend for prosecution
legitimate o 5. Apply for order, ex parte, for freezing accounts (with the CA)
o 2. Suspicious transactions o 6. Could institute forfeiture proceedings
The amount is irrelevant, even if less than P500,000. o 7. Enforce sanctions for violations
If it is suspicious, it mus be reported. What are duties of covered institutions?
Ex. there is no underlying legal or trade obligation or o Establish true identities of their clients
justification. o Are anonymous accounts allowed?
Ex. the transaction is structured to avoid reporting (for No. The Bank must know who actually owns the
instance, instead of remitting an amount more than account, even if its just numbers indicated.
P500,000, everyday he remits P499,999.) What is the effect of compliance with required reporting under this
The underlying crimes whose commission will give rise to law?
violation of AMLA: o Transaction is removed from coverage of law on secrecy of
o [By public officers] bank deposits
o 1. Violation of Graft and corrupt practices o The officers who make the reports in GF are given immunity
o 2. Plunder from prosecution.

66
Petition for ex-parte order to freeze an account: o 2. Deposit accounts that are unfunded
o Filed with the CA Ex. Issued a check that bounced, so he had no
o The freeze order is valid for 20 days. money. Then the bank closed. Cannot recover from
But it may extend the period PDIC.
o Contra: in the case of inquiring into deposits or investments, it o 3. Deposits from unsafe/unsound bank practices
is not ex parte so the court has to conduct a hearing first. o 4. Proceeds from money laundering
General rule: The AMLC must get court order to investigate any o 5. Contents of safety deposit box
deposit in accordance with this law. Then they have to establish What is the maximum coverage?
probable cause. o P500,000
o When is court order not required to inquire? What is the period to claim?
In case of: kidnapping, DDL, hijacking, destructive o Within 2 years from actual takeover by the receiver
arson, and murder (HK-MAD) Somebody has a current account, saving accounts, time deposits,
Contrast with powers of the BSP? and if you add it all up, the value exceeds P500000. If the bank
o The BSP is authorized to inquire into any deposit or investment closes, how much can he collect?
to ensure that the Bank is complying with this law. o P500000 only. You add it up. Its not per account.
o It may be done in accordance with its regular annual What is the rule to determine what is covered?
inspection, or through special examination. o Add up all deposits altogether. But if he has another deposit in
o So the Monetary Board can inspect the accounts even without another capacity (ex. guardian of minor, administrator of
the order. estate), this is a different capacity so its another P500K. (Per
capacity rule)
o X has a separate account and a joint account (X and/or Y).
Phil. Deposit Insurance Corporation Law What is the rule?
Two separate accounts, one for the separate account,
one for the joint account.
What is the mandatory coverage of the PDIC? The rule is that joint accounts are insured separately
o The law requires that checking accounts, savings accounts, from any individually-owned account.
and time deposits must be insured with the PDIC What if there are two or more depositors, such as in a joint
o Does the PDIC law cover trust accounts? account?
No. Remember this. It applies to deposits. o The P500K will be divided among them unless there is a
o What about other obligations of the banks? different agreement.
If considered deposit liabilities upon order of the o What if the account is held jointly by a juridical entity and
PDIC, may be covered also one or more natural persons?
o Deposits of a branch of a domestic bank abroad (ex. BPI It is presumed that the deposit entirely belongs to the
has a branch abroad) what is the rule? corporation. The natural persons are assumed to be
Not required to be insured. just officers.
But the domestic bank may ask the PDIC to insure If you have a person with several joint accounts, then what is the
the deposits of the branches abroad. total he can get?
What banking transactions are not covered by insurance? o Add all joint accounts together, and subject to the ceiling
o 1. Investment products like bonds, securities, trust receipts

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o Ex. three separate joint accounts, with A, B, and with C, then It is an artificial person, created by law.
his share will be added up and the shares on the three o What is the implication?
accounts cannot exceed P500K It cannot recover moral damages since it cannot
What if the depositor owes the bank too? experience wounded feelings, mental anguish, etc.
o There will be set-off with what he collects. It can, however, recover damages for besmirched
Two ways for PDIC to comply: reputation.
o 1. Hand over the money to the depositor It has the right of succession. What is this?
o 2. Open another account in another bank in the name of the o Stockholders may come and go but its personality remains the
depositor same
What is the right of PDIC after payment? Cannot perform an act unless authorized by law.
o There is subrogation, so in liquidation of the bank, the PDIC o As opposed to natural persons who can do anything as long as
can represent the depositor. not prohibited by law
What if there is monetary or financial instability in the banking Does a defective incorporation result into partnership?
system? o No. A partnership requires delectus personarum, which is not
o If established by the Monetary Board, the PDIC directors may always existent in a corporation, so it is not a fall back.
adjust the maximum coverage. But they must be unanimous o But the liability of persons who form a defective corporation
and it will have to be approved by the President. they are liable as partners.
What if somebody owns a negotiable certificate and it is payable to o Those who merely subscribed are not liable as such.
bearer?
o He cannot collect unless his name is recorded in the books of Nationality of corporations
the bank.
Can a person split his deposits or create fictitious accounts? Primary test:
o No. It is illegal to create fictitious deposit accounts or split o Place of incorporation test is the principal doctrine: country
deposits to circumvent the maximum liability in case of closure under whose laws it was organized
of the bank. When does the control test also apply in addition to the place of
o Ex. He has 1M so he transfers P500K to the name of his incorporation test?
relative. o 1. Exploitation of natural resources
What is the period to pay? o 2. Operating public utilities, mass media, advertising
o It must be within 120 days from closure of the bank. If beyond o 3. War-time test
this, there is no payment, it is a criminal act. During war time, the nationality of a private
corporation is determined by control test
Decisions of PDIC are FINAL. What is the remedy?
o 4. Grandfather rule
o Certiorari.
What is the Grandfather rule in corporations and how did the FIA
change it?
Corporation Law o XYZ and ABC both own 50% of the corporation. ABC is 50%
Filipino and 50% foreign. XYZ is 60% Filipino and 40%
foreign. What are the implications?
Corporation, defined

68
XYZ makes it 30% Filipino and 20% foreign. ABC 95% of his wife, for a very cheap price, and the wifes
makes it 25% and 25%. So it becomes 55% Filipino corporation sells to the public. This was tax fraud and
and 45% foreign. there was piercing.
How did the foreign investments act change this rule? o 2. In the internal dealings, if the SHs show that they are not
o XYZ becomes 100% Filipino because it is at least 60% Filipino. treating the corporation as a separate juridical personality
So XYZ contributes full 50% Filipino ownership, added to (alter ego cases)
ABCs 25% = the corporation is 75% Filipino and is thus The corporation is only a conduit or alter ego of the
qualified to own land. controlling SH.
Here, no fraudulent intent but there is systemic
Corporate juridical personality disregard for separate juridical personality, and so
third persons could not be expected to be bound by
It has separate juridical personality. such
Implications? Ex. there was a controlling SH where she gave four
o The corporate property does not belong to SHs. The SHs minor employees 1 share each, and had the four
cannot recover property or intervene in a case of the endorse the certificates in blank to her. The
corporation to recover property. controlling SH also confused her own funds with the
Case: A SH sued to annul foreclosure of a mortgage. corporations. There were no meetings held, etc.
He wanted to annotate a notice lis pendens. This was Is mere control of a corporation sufficient to pierce?
not allowed because he was just a SH. o No. It must be control plus something else.
Case: SH cannot question the search warrant filed by o If a holding company is exercising control over management of
the government against a corporation, or a a subsidiary this is in itself is not enough. The management
sequestration order against the corporation. must be control for the purpose of committing fraud.
o If there is a judgment against corporation, it cannot be Against whom can you invoke this rule against?
enforced against property of the SHs, and vice versa. o You can invoke this only against the majority SHs. You cannot
o A SH cannot be sued if the corporation breaches its contract. invoke it against minority SHs.
The purpose of the law is justice and fairness. Therefore, when the law Can the corporation use piercing for its favor?
creates a device like the corporate vehicle, and it is abused, the law will o No. The underlying basis for piercing is that the separate
not allow that. So there is piercing the veil of corporate fiction. juridical personality is being used to commit fraud. The
When is there piercing? corporation cannot invoke it for its favor.
o 1. If it is used to commit fraud, violate the law, etc. (fraud o Ex. A SH sued on behalf of a corporation, claiming that since
cases) he was the controlling SH, the veil must be pierced. INVALID
Requisites for this to apply? cannot use piercing for the corporations favor.
1. Complete control, not just of stocks but Piercing can apply even for affiliate companies:
also policy and business practice o Ex. Merrill-Lynch Phils. was organized. The AOI said primary
2. Control used to commit fraud or wrong purpose is to transmit orders of customers if you want to play
3. Proximately causes injury or loss the stock market abroad. A client placed an order to sell his
Case: There was a tax imposed on the sale of cars of holdings of silver. Merrill-Lynch NY delayed it, and by the time
a corporation. This companys 95% owner would sell it was sold, the price of silver plummeted. The client sued both
the cars exclusively to the second corporation, owned M-L Philippines and M-L NY. MLP said the contract was with

69
MLNY. MLNY said it was not doing business in the Philippines Minimum required paid up capital?
so it cannot be sued. HELD: MLNY earns business in the o Generally, none
Philippines but circumvents it through MLP. So it was pierced. Except for banks, public utilities, insurance
In piercing cases, how can an officer be held liable while still companies, etc.
respecting the due process clause? o For all, at least 25% of the authorized shares must be
o The general rule is that a judgment cannot bind a person not subscribed
impleaded in a case. Check if the officers were actually given o At least 25% of those must be paid.
the chance to be apprised and be involved in the defense of Minimum paid-up is P5000.
the case. o Must everyone pay for 25% of their subscriptions?
o If the officers were sued in their official capacity, there is no It is not required that everyone must pay 25%.
problem. When the corporation however has ceased to exist Someone can pay less, although one paid 100%.
already it has been held as an exception to the rule that an You just have to pay the 25%, total.
officer must be impleaded under AC Ransom. A corporation may be stock or non-stock (NS).
What is the corporations liability for torts? o Stock:
o Corporation liable for a tortuous act by an officer or agent only 1. Must have shares and
when the corporation has expressly directed the commission of 2. Must be authorized to declare dividends
the act So country clubs are NS because they
o Who is this proved? cannot declare dividends
1. Corporation issued a resolution o A government corporation is governed by its own special Law.
2. Corporation took advantage of the act But the Corporation Code is suppletory to its charters.
What is the corporations liability for criminal acts? So there can be no amendment of the Special Law
o An officer may be held personally liable for the crime per se if authorizing that there be less than 5 directors
there is a law expressly making the person liable for the because the Corporation Code is still suppletorily
corporations criminal offense applicable.
Distinguish:
Capital Structure o Corporators: those who compose the corporation
o Incorporators: sign the AOI
What is needed to form a corporation? o SHs: for stock corporation
o 5-15 incorporators o Members: for NS
Majority are residents What is the 25-25 rule?
Only natural persons o At least 25% of the authorized capital stock must be
At least one share each subscribed, and 25% of the subscription must be paid
o Can a corporation be a subscriber? o What if 5 natural persons held 1 share each and the rest of
Yes. A corporation can be a subscriber but not an the shares are held by a holding company? Is this valid?
incorporator. Yes. While a corporation cannot be an incorporator, it
What is the maximum corporate life? can be a subscriber. You count the subscription of
o 50 years, extendible for additional periods of 50 years the corporation to see whether the 25-25 rule is met.
o You can only extend in the last five years of its corporate Classification of shares:
existence o Generally, broad discretion.

70
o Shares are presumed to be equal, so unless provided o 6. You can classify shares according to nationalization
otherwise, they get same voting rights, dividends. requirements.
What are exceptions to this general rule? Ex. SMC (class A shares can only be owned by
o 1. Shares must not be denied voting rights unless: Filipinos, class B anyone) to make sure its always
A. Preferred 60% owned by Filipinos
B. Redeemable o 7. Redeemable shares
o 2. Banks, trust companies, insurance companies, etc. are not How can these be issued?
allowed to issue no-par-value shares. May only be issued when expressly provided
Because they need capital. in the AOI. Terms and conditions stated in
o 3. Preferred shares must be par value shares. AOI.
What are preferred shares as to assets? What happens in redemption?
Priority in distribution of assets in case of Corporation pays money in exchange for the
liquidation stock. Option rests entirely upon the
What are preferred shares as to dividends? corporation, and cannot be compelled or
Priority in distribution of dividends in case of refused.
liquidation Shares deemed retired after redemption.
Can preferred shares be given preference over What is required for the corporation to do?
creditors? Corp required to maintain a sinking fund to
No, because this violates Trust Fund cover for redemption price if required to
Doctrine. redeem
Ex. You are liquidating a corporation. You No need for unrestricted retained earnings
cannot benefit shares prior to the creditors. before shares are redeemed but there must
o 4. Cumulative vs. Non-cumulative shares be sufficient assets to pay creditors/answer
Cumulative preferred shares: entitle holders to for operations, or else there can be no
payment of current dividends AND back dividends redemption (The latter qualification is based
before holders of common shares are paid on the Trust Fund Doctrine)
Non-cumulative preferred shares: entitle holders to o 8. Founders shares
payment of current dividends only, before holders of If theres a right to exclusively for or be voted for as
common shares are paid director, it must not be for a period exceeding 5 years
o 5. Participating vs. non-participating What are treasury shares?
Participating: entitle holders to participate with holders o Those issued and fully paid for, and then reacquired by the
of common shares in retained earnings after the corporation
stipulated dividend paid to preferred shares Still considered issued; not considered as outstanding
i.e. paid their dividends, THEN still share in Considered fully paid for and held by the corporation
the common pie o May be distributed as property dividends
Non-participating: entitle holders only to stipulated o What is their status?
preferred dividends and nothing more Not outstanding, not cancelled. In a state of
This is the DEFAULT RULE dormancy, which in the possession of the corporation.

71
They will become outstanding again when the Incorporation and organization
corporation sells the treasury shares
o Can there be stock dividends declared from treasury Who is a promoter?
shares? o Promoter one who, acting alone or with others, takes
No. These are not outstanding. Cannot vote and initiative in founding and organizing business/enterprise and
cannot have dividends declared from them. This is a receives consideration for it.
tax evasion scheme. Distinguish:
Besides, the terminology is wrong. You can only o Promoters contracts: both parties know corporation doesnt
declare stock dividends from authorized but unissued exist yet
shares. From treasury shares, you can declare o Contracts entered into with defective corporations (de facto or
property dividends. by estoppel): at least one party is unaware that the corporation
o Can cash dividends be declared from the shares? is not yet constituted
NOT entitled to dividends because the corporation What is pre-incorporation subscription?
cannot declare dividends for itself o 1. Acquisition of unissued stock in existing or still to be formed
When do non-voting shares vote? corporation is deemed a subscription regardless of appellation
o [Key agreements] o 2. Subscription is irrevocable for 6 months
1. AOI amendment 1. But revocation valid thereafter if the corporation did
2. BLs adoption and amendment not materialize (offer theory)
o [Property-related] 2. Or all other subscribers consented to the
1. Increase/decrease of bonded indebtedness revocation (contract theory)
2. Increase/decrease of capital stock When is revocation disallowed already?
3. Sale/disposition of all/substantially all of corporate When the AOI have been submitted to SEC
property o Is a corporation bound by a promoters contract once it is
o [Changes in the corporation] formed?
1. Merger/consolidation It is not, unless it had received benefits from the
2. Investment of funds in another corporation or contract by the time it was constituted
another business purpose What about other promoters contracts?
3. Corporate dissolution o In general contract law this would have been void because a
What are watered stocks? non-existent corporation cannot give consent until it is formed,
o 1. Issued without consideration but these are exceptions to this general rule.
o 2. Discounted shares o What is needed to validate and enforce promoters
o 3. Issued as stock dividend when there are no sufficient contracts?
retained earnings/surplus The corporation has to ratify the acts when it is
o Who is liable? formed
Solidary liability of director/officer who issued it and all o Who are personally liable for the promoters contracts?
those who didnt oppose it in writing which was filed to The investors who are the moving spirit behind the
the secretary incorporation personally liable for expenses incurred
Liability is the difference in value by the corporation. Those who are not are not.

72
Promoters are also and personally liable for pre- Can have several secondary purposes so if the
incorporation expenses. primary purpose does not become profitable, you can
Subscription: shift without amending the AOI
o Subscription, not payment, grants rights to stockholders, even SEC can only reject if patently illegal
if not fully paid for. Holders of non-delinquent shares have all o 3. Place of principal business
the rights of a stockholder. Must be in the Philippines
o This is a consensual contract The SEC now requires that you put even the street
No need for tradition, unlike sales shares deemed and number
issued already. o 4. Term for which it will exist
Only need to register in the Stock and Transfer Book Period of maximum 50 years, extendable
for dispositions, so no need to register for issuance No extension until last 5 years of term
Not covered by SOF because subscription itself o 5. Names, nationalities, residences of directors
executes the contract. o 6. Names, nationalities, residences of incorporators
o When a condition for issuance of shares is void, then it o 7. If a Stock Corporation, amount of authorized capital stock
becomes a pure, valid subscription agreement. Ignore the If there are par value shares, the amount each
condition. The amount subscribed and paid each by the
What is valid consideration for issuance of shares? incorporators
o 1. Actual cash What is required for amendment?
Cannot be a PN or future services o Must be authorized by 2/3 of the SHs and majority of the
o 2. Property: directors
Actually received, necessary or convenient for o When does it take effect?
corporate purpose, with fair valuation Upon approval by SEC
Appraised by SEC Or lapse of six months from filing
o 3. Labor actually performed Grounds for disapproving application/amendment?
o 4. Previously incurred indebtedness o 1. Articles not sufficient in form
o 5. Amounts transferred from unrestricted retained earnings to o 2. Purpose is illegal, unconstitutional, illegal, immoral, etc.
stated capital o 3. Treasurers affidavit is false
o 6. Outstanding shares exchanged for stocks in event of o 4. Did not comply with nationalization requirement
reclassification/conversion N.B. Applies where required. The SEC will endorse it
What if the consideration is unlawful? with the relevant government agency (education
o It would violate the TFD if the subscription is deemed void. So CHED, etc.)
its better to just consider the subscription valid, but the What is the requirement as to the name?
consideration void. o Required to submit undertaking that you will change the
o The subscriber has outstanding payable consideration in cash, corporate name if it is the same or confusingly similar.
and the directors/officers are liable for watered stocks. o What must be considered?
Articles of incorporation: 1. The same/confusingly similar name
o 1. Name of the corporation 2. Engaged in the same line of business
Registration of business names is with SEC Can you make a corporation that practices a profession?
o 2. Purposes o No.

73
o Acevedo: It is not engaged in the practice of optometry. It claims that the association is not a corporation. So it covers
hires employees engaged in optometry. So its allowed. obligations to the defective corporation.
How does the SEC check for the starting capital? Differences between de facto and estoppel?
o When you incorporate, the SEC will require you to waive o 1. De facto has real existence in law; estoppel has none
secrecy of bank deposits, so they can check starting capital. o 2. De facto may exist even if there are no dealings between
o Can the proceeds of a bank loan be counted as paid-up parties on a corporate basis; estoppel needs these
capital? o 3. A corporation cannot be de facto unless the requisites are
No. This is a liability, not paid-up capital. You cannot present; estoppel, even without any requisite
include it. Two associations of jeep drivers incorporated as NS, non-profit. They
When does a de facto corporation exist? agreed to merge. One president got majority votes. The other guy
o 1. Valid law under which it was organized refused to recognize the others win and continued to collect dues.
o 2. Attempt in good faith to form a corporation o HELD: There was no intra-corporate dispute because there
There must also be a certificate issued by the SEC was no valid merger; there were no articles of merger. There
with a blue ribbon and the seal. Without this, cannot is no corporation by estoppel because both presidents knew
claim to be a corporation. they did not merge.
o 3. User of corporate powers What is the nature of the liabilities of those behind a corporation
What is the scope of the de facto corporation doctrine? by estoppel?
o Situations where the defective enterprise contracts with an o If the incorporators knew there was no corporation (fraud)
outsider. The suit by or against the defective enterprise must liable as general partners (all properties)
be against the de facto corporation and not the individuals o If the incorporators did not know or there was no fraud liable
behind it. as limited partners (only properties they intended to invest)
Can its existence be attacked collaterally? Can the person behind the corporation claim that it is a
o No. Just directly, through quo warranto, and only by the Sol- corporation by estoppel, when the person was being sued for
Gen. execution of properties (because the corporation did not exist)?
What is the nature of its acts? o No. Cannot invoke this. Because the person KNOWS that
o Valid, like that of a de jure corporation. there was no corporation, so there was no genuine belief on
o Even the acts of the officers are valid, although they also have his part.
liabilities of valid officers. What are by-laws?
Can a corporation to practice a profession be a de facto o Intramural document, to govern intra-corporate relationship.
corporation? When are by-laws valid?
o No. There is no law allowing that. o 1. Do not contravene law
What is a corporation by estoppel? o 2. Reasonable and non-discriminatory
o So defective in form that it is neither de jure or de facto, but it is o 3. Do not contradict Articles of Incorporation
a corporation as to those who cannot deny its corporate If there is conflict, AOIs win out
existence. Is it possible that an express by-law provision be violated and still
When it applies: bind the corporation?
o Someone must deal with the association like a corporation and o Yes, as long as there is corporate approval through the BOD,
contracted with this association, and after receiving benefits, express or implied, whether empowered or ratified.
When can a third party be bound by by-laws?

74
o He must be duly informed in time of the pertinent provisions, What is the underlying theory behind corporate powers?
actually or constructively. Otherwise, he cannot be prejudiced o All powers are exercised by the BOD.
by the by-laws because its an intramural document. o No person or officer can bind the corporation; it has to be the
How can BLs be adopted? BOD. Agents must not exceed the power granted by BOD.
o Majority vote of outstanding capital stock. o There are instances, however, where stockholders or members
o What if BLs are not adopted within 1 month from have to give their consent this is where the underlying
incorporation? contractual relationship is being altered or amended.
Not a ground to automatically dissolve the A Corporation can sue or be sued in its own name. It must indicate its
corporation, but it can be a ground for the SEC to corporate name in the pleadings and not use an acronym
revoke the certificate. A. Power to extend or shorten corporate term:
o How can BLs be amended or repealed? o Majority of BOD + 2/3 of OCS
1. Majority of BOD + Majority of outstanding capital o There is right of appraisal for dissenting stockholders (although
stock some commentators say there shouldnt be for mere
2. 2/3 of outstanding capital stock may delegate to the shortening of corporate term)
BOD the power to amend or repeal the by-laws. B. Power to increase or decrease capital stock:
N.B. Majority of outstanding capital stock o Majority of BOD + 2/3 of OCS
may revoke this delegation. o Need SEC approval:
What should be included in the by-laws? For increase to check whether there is subscription
o 1. When regular and special meetings are held to at least 25% of increased stock, and at least 25%
o 2. Quorum paid-up
o 3. Proxies For decrease it must not prejudice corporate
o 4. Qualifications, duties, compensation of directors or officers creditors
Can impose additional qualifications (like minimum o Until approval, the funds are just held by the corporation in
number of shares) trust for the stockholders. Its not part of paid-up capital yet.
o 5. When annual election of officers is done, and manner of o Is there a right of appraisal?
appointment No
o 6. Manner of issuance of stock certificates C. Power to create, incur, or increase bonded indebtedness:
o Citibank: By-laws allowed country managers to sue and o Majority of BOD + 2/3 of OCS
defend lawsuits, and delegate this power. So a delegation of o What is a bonded indebtedness?
this power to the lawyer is valid. Usually a very large amount
Valley Golf: A member pledged his proprietary shares to Chinabank. With first lien on important corporate assets
He forfeited, and Chinabank foreclosed and bought the shares. For a long period of time
Chinabank sought registration of the shares by Valley Golf refused o Need SEC approval
because the shares were delinquent. Valley Golf claimed its bylaws To check if the corporation has at least P25M net
gave it a lien over proprietary shares. worth and 3 years operating experience
o HELD: Valley Golf lost. By-laws do not bind third parties o Is there a right of appraisal?
without actual knowledge. No
D. Power to deny preemptive rights:
Corporate Powers o Where is there a right of preemption by SHs?

75
1. If there is increase of capital stock OR 5. Other similar situations (non-exclusive
2. If the corporation acquired treasury shares enumeration)
o What is the purpose of preemption? o What happens to the shares?
So a SH can prevent dilution of his % ownership. They become treasury shares. These cannot vote.
o When is there no right to preemption? G. Power to invest corporate funds in another corporation or
1. Provided for in the AOI business:
2. Shares issued to comply with order to make a o When do you need SH approval?
public offering to comply with the law If it is in line with the primary purpose of the company,
3. When the shares issued are in exchange for then you dont need SH approval
property for a corporate purpose If it is not, you need Majority of BOD + 2/3 of OCS
4. Conversion of corporate debt to SH equity o Example:
E. Sale/lease/exchange/mortgage all or substantially all of its SMC buying a brewery abroad is in line with primary
property: purpose
o Majority of BOD + 2/3 of OCS Mau Sugar Central buying a company manufacturing
o What is the test of substantially all? sugar bags same doctrine
W/N it can still continue business afterwards. o What is the nature of investing in another corporation,
Qualitative test, whereas it is quantitative for all. deposit accounts, money markets, treasury bills, and the
o Compare to sale in usual and regular course of business, like?
which is covered by business judgment doctrine. This does These do not require SH approval because this fits in
not need SH approval. the power, discretion, and purpose of corporation to
o Is there a right of appraisal? obtain best returns.
Yes THUS, the investment in another corporation that
F. Power to purchase own shares: requires SH approval above implies some
o What is required? management power involved of the other company,
The corporation must have unrestricted retained and not just investment per se.
earnings H. Power to declare dividends:
o Exception? o It must have unrestricted retained earnings. Otherwise, it will
Redeemable shares, which do not require URE for be illegal. In effect you are returning the investment of the
them to be redeemed by the corporation SHs.
o When can the corporation buy shares from SHs? Creditors can sue the SHs for the dividends they
1. To eliminate fractional shares because of stock illegally obtained
dividends o In what forms?
2. To collect indebtedness out of an unpaid Stock, property, or cash dividends
subscription For property or cash dividends, no need for
3. To pay dissenting or withdrawing stockholders SH approval
entitled to payment of their shares For stock dividends, 2/3 SH approval is needed
4. To decrease cost of doing business, by decreasing o Presumed that rights of shares are equal. So they will receive
amount of dividends to be paid in the future the same amount.

76
o Even if a subscription has not been fully paid, the SH will cannot declare dividends without creditors
receive dividends. What is the exception? approval
If it is delinquent. The cash dividends will be applied 3. Special circumstances justify retention
to his outstanding dues. If you invoke any of these provisions, your financial
o A corporation made public offering of shares with par statements must include an explanation
value of P100. But it was able to sell it in the stock market The power to demand dividends is one of the few
for a premium, i.e. P120/share. What happens to the powers of SHs where they can initiate action.
premium surplus? o Once a cash dividend has been declared, it cannot anymore
The surplus cannot be declared as cash or stock be revoked. Because otherwise, a corporation can manipulate
dividends, because dividends can only be declared the price. (Ex. the corporation says we will declare dividends
from corporate earnings. in a month, so prices go up and shares are bought. If they
They must be retained as part of capital. can revoke it, then the prices can go down and the corporation
o Nielsen had a mgt. contract with Lepanto mining (because can re-buy the shares.)
Nielsen had technical expertise). During the war, the o What are the tax implications?
Japanese took over the management of Lepanto. After the There is no tax consequence for stock dividends,
war, Nielsen wanted to continue the unexpired because its still the same pie, cut in smaller pieces
management contract with Lepanto, and the latter refused. You only get taxed when you sell the stocks.
The agreement included that everything Lepanto declared o Dividends will be given to stock holders in the books. If a sale
dividends, part of it should go to Nielsen. HELD: of shares is made and the buyer is not put into the stock and
Lepanto is guilty of breach of contract, and must pay transfer book, it only binds the parties but not the corporation.
Nielsen, including the dividends that were not given. So the remedy is the seller gets the dividends and
o Stock dividends can only be declared out of the authorized, but turns it over to the buyer
unissued shares. Treasury shares cannot be declared as I. Management contracts
stock dividends, but as property dividends. o There is now regulation of management contracts to prevent
Book keeping entry: from retained earnings capital abuse. It is usually done when one company has technical or
o Sometimes property is reappraised to increase value. special expertise.
What are the conditions? o Requirement?
1. There are earnings from operations Approval by BOD
2. The property must have depreciated And majority of the SHs of BOTH corporations
So land cannot be reappraised o Except, when are 2/3 votes needed from the managed
3. The depreciation allowance must have been corporation?
deducted 1. If a SH or SHs who own stocks in both corporations
o Stock corporations are prohibited from retaining surplus profits have more than 1/3 of shares in managing
in excess of 100% of paid-in capital stock. corporation
Exceptions? 2. Majority of BOD in the managing corporation is
1. Justified by definite corporate expansion majority of BOD in the managed corporation
projects approved by the board o Validity?
2. Corporation obtained a loan and there is a 5 years for any one term. You can keep renewing it.
condition in the loan that the corporation

77
o Does the principle that a principal can terminate an agent Enter into Majority of BOD + Majority Yes No
any time apply here? management of OCS of managing
No. This is a contract for lease of services. contracts company + Majority of
o What if the management contract is with an outsider OCS of managed
company
individual and not a corporation?
No need for SH approval because the corporation is Change to 2/3 of OCS of
really just appointing an agent in this instance. managed company if:
1. Common SH/s possess
Power Requirements Non- Appraisal more than 1/3 shares in
voting right? managing company, or
stocks 2. Commonly shared
vote? majority of BOD
Increase or decrease Majority of BOD + 2/3 of Yes Yes
corporate term OCS
Increase or decrease Majority of BOD + 2/3 of Yes Yes Ultra vires acts:
capital stock OCS o What is the scope of a corporations allowable powers?
Create, incur, Majority of BOD + 2/3 of Yes No Powers of corporation include those necessary to
increase bonded OCS
achieve the primary purpose:
indebtedness
Denying pre-emptive 1. Provided in AOI No No Ex. a hotel can hire entertainers
rights 2. Comply with public o What are the type of ultra vires acts?
offering law 1. Acts done beyond powers of the corporation, as
3. For property provided by law or AOI
4. Debt for equity 2. Acts on behalf of a corporation done by those
Substantially all of Majority of BOD + 2/3 of Yes Yes without authority
property OCS
3. Acts which are per se illegal
Purchase own 1. Eliminate fractions No No
o What is the SCs attitude in interpreting whether acts are
shares 2.Pay subscription
indebtedness ultra vires?
3. Pay appraising SH Strict, if the act is per se illegal.
4. Decrease cost of If the act is not per se illegal, as long as fairly
business incidental and reasonably necessary to corporate
5. Other similar purpose, acts are deemed valid.
Invest corporate Majority of BOD + 2/3 of Yes Yes (if But if the AOI or purpose clause has limiting words,
funds in another OCS going into
business another then the court will hold the corporation to such limited
line of business.
business) Ex. Transportation of goods by water
Declare dividends URE exceeding 100% of No No o What is the effect if an act is ultra vires?
paid-in capital stock First type of ultra vires: void and does not bind the
(subject to exceptions) corporation, but can be ratified by the SHs through:
1. Performance
Can be demanded by SHs
2. Ratification

78
3. Estoppel 3. Properties transferred in fraud of creditors.
Second type: no authority so unenforceable contract 4. Properties disposed or undue preference given to
But if the corporation cloaked the person some creditors even if the corporation is insolvent.
with apparent authority, the corporation o The TFD is the backbone as to why there is a strict procedure
cannot deny the contract entered into by that in distribution of corporate assets, and that it can only be done
person with external indicia of authority if: 1) there is amendment of AOI to decrease ACS, 2) purchase
Third type: always void of redeemable shares regardless of URE, 3) dissolution and
o When can ultra vires be invoked? liquidation of the corporation. The Corporation cannot
For purposes of enforceability, if it has been fully distribute assets whimsically.
executed by both sides, one cannot invoke ultra vires
If it has been partially executed (by one side), it Stockholders and members
cannot be invoked because one side is in estoppel
Who can vote?
If it is merely executory on both sides then ultra vires
can be invoked o Any share, except those deprived of right to vote, which is
allowed only for preferred and redeemable shares
Can a corporation guarantee the debt of another?
o There must always be a class with complete voting rights
o No, because it might prejudice the claims of its creditors and it
o For joint owners of shares, consent of all is needed, unless one
violates the trust fund doctrine
is constituted an agent
o When is it valid?
o Pledgor or mortgagor still votes for his shares.
If it has a business purpose, for instance:
Take note of instances when even non-voting shares can vote
1. A mother company guaranteeing the debt
(fundamental changes in the corporation)
of the subsidiary
What are the kinds of meetings of SHs?
2. Will result in increased business
o Meetings may be regular or special.
3. Will enhance the chances of collecting
o Provision on meetings applies only if there is no provision in
from the party whose obligation is
the bylaws or articles to the contrary.
guaranteed
What matters can be taken up?
What is the Trust Fund Doctrine?
o General meeting: anything can be taken up
o Capital stock, property, and other assets of the corporation are
o Special meeting: only matters previously indicated can be
regarded as equity in trust for the payment of corporate
taken up
creditors.
If everybody is present and nobody objected, it is
o Implications:
tantamount to waiver
Corporation may not dissipate the subscribed capital
But if some were absent and those present waived,
stock (which the creditors can check to satisfy their
those absent may question the waiver
credits).
Where must it be held?
Creditors may sue SHs directly for unpaid
o City or municipality where the corporation is located
subscription.
Metro Manila considered a city
o Examples of when the TFD is violated:
o Need not be in the office
1. Corporation releases or condones payment of
What determines quorum?
unpaid subscription.
2. Payment of dividends without URE. o What is provided for in the BLs. Most of the time its a majority

79
o Once a quorum is announced to be present, the SH is Trustee is qualified to sit in the board
competent to take up matters, even if some leave after If the voting trust agreement was given to a lender, as
What is the power of executors, administrators, receivers, and is required in a loan agreement, it is coupled with an
guardians? interest
o Can vote the shares of stocks they administer without need for o Can the voting trust agreement be coterminous with a
proxy loan?
What if there are two or more owners of shares? Yes. It will remain until the loan has been paid; for
o They must go together, but if and/or, either can vote instance, 10 years.
o If both attend and cannot agree on how to vote, the vote is not o Is it revocable for a period of time?
counted No, because it is based on contract, unlike proxies
There are different devices how to get votes. How? which are based on agency.
o 1. Proxy solicitation o Who receives dividends?
o 2. Voting trusts The trustee, with obligation to turn over dividends to
o 3. Pooling agreement, where several SHs agree to vote their the beneficial owner.
shares together Derivative suits requisites?
What are required for a valid proxy agreement? o 1. Cause of action which calls for such remedy
o 1. In writing If its covered by business judgment rule, cannot sue
o 2. Signed by the SH There must be violation of the rights of the corporation
o 3. Filed with corporate secretary before the meeting not just the private parties
o How long is a proxy valid? The cause of action must benefit the corporation, and
Unless it provides that it is a continuing proxy, its only not the particular stockholder bringing suit
valid for the period for which it was issued o 2. Must be filed in the name of the corporation
o What is the ceiling for continuous proxies? Since the cause of action belongs to the corporation,
5 years, maximum validity the corporation gets the damages that are awarded
o Is it revocable? o 3. Must be a SH when the offense was committed, but the acts
Yes, unless it is coupled with an interest continued when he became one
If he shows up to vote, the attendance to vote will o 4. Must have exhausted intra-corporate remedies
result in nullifying the proxy, unless it is coupled with Unless excused
an interest Ex. BOD of corporation granted its own directors
BUT he must show up to vote. If he doesnt vote, it excessive compensation. No need to compel the
doesnt revoke the proxy. BOD to file a suit on behalf of the corporation since
What are required for a valid voting trust agreement? the object of the suit is to nullify the BODs own acts.
o 1. In writing and notarized This is futile.
o 2. Cannot exceed 5 years at a time (except for longer loan) o 5. No right of appraisal for the rights complained of
o 3. Certified true copy of agreement filed with the corporation Contrast with other kinds of suits?
and SEC o Individual suit brought by the SH in his own name against the
o What is the maximum duration? corporation for a wrong directly inflicted on him
5 years
o What are the powers of the trustee?

80
o Representative suit brought by SH in his own behalf and all Can ask anytime to be bought out
other SHs similarly situated when a wrong is inflicted on them o When can a SH be asked to be bought out?
as a group Must have voted against the action, not for the action.
Nature of right to inspection? o When can the SH exercise right?
o 1. SHs: to protect themselves Within 30 days of the action
Must be exercised in his interest as SH for some o What is the value of shares based on?
purpose germane to the corporations interest. But Value the day before the action was done. This is
the corporation has the burden of proof to contest GF. because the action would inevitably change the value
o 2. Directors: broader, because they make decisions of the shares.
o Remedies for refusal to allow inspection? What if they cannot decide on the value of the
Mandamus shares within 60 days from the time the action
Criminal case was taken?
Damages Appraisal will be done
o Grounds to deny inspection? Pay within 30 days after award was made
1. Must improperly use information received before Cost of appraisal borne by corporation. But
2. Asking for trade secrets if the value offered is close to the value
3. No good faith offered by the corporation, then the SH will
4. No valid purpose bear the cost because it was close to the
Ex. bought one share just to inspect amount offered by the corporation.
o What is the rule for SHs of corporations with wholly- o SH cannot be paid unless there are unrestricted retained
owned subsidiaries? earnings, otherwise you violate the Trust Fund doctrine.
Even if not a SH of the subsidiary, if consistent with Exception?
equity, GF, and fairness, the SH can inspect records For close corporations, where even if there
of the subsidiary are no UREs he can ask to be bought out.
Appraisal rights: o What is the effect of appraisal?
o Any dissenting SH can ask to be bought out. The SH will lose all his rights, except to receive
o When is there appraisal right? payment
1. Amendment affects the rights of SHs o When will his right to be paid cease?
2. Creating preferred shares 1. Demand for payment is withdrawn with consent of
3. Shortening or extending corporate life corporation, or
4. Increase authorized capital stock 2. Act he is protesting against is reversed or
5. Going into another line of business disapproved by SEC, or
6. Merger/consolidation 3. SEC says he is not entitled to appraisal rights
7. Corp. sells, leases, mortgages, encumbers, or What is the effect of this?
disposes all or substantially all of its assets His SH rights will be restored
8. Close corporations (anytime) o When will his SH rights be restored?
o N.B. If the amendment does not affect the rights of SHs (ex. 1. Any of the three above
change of corporate name), no appraisal rights. 2. The corp. fails to pay within 30 days
o What is the rule for close corporations? What are the obligations of SHs?

81
o 1. Liability to corporation for unpaid subscription C. Public officials, appointed or elected, cannot serve
o 2. Liability to corporation for interest on unpaid subscription if in BOD of non-rural banks
required by by-laws Directors must be elected every year among the SHs of the
o 3. Liability to creditors of corporation for unpaid subscription corporation. At what point must the director be a SH, at point of
o 4. Liability for watered stock nomination or assumption of office?
Solidary with corporate officers responsible o There are conflicting decisions in US jurisprudence (some say
o 5. Liability for dividends unlawfully paid when nominated, some say upon assumption of office).
o 6. Liability for failure to create corporation Majority view: enough when he assumes office.
o JJ believes that the minority rule must prevail The provision
Directors and officers says that they must be elected from among the holders of
stock. So he must be a SH at time of election.
Powers of the corporation are vested where? There are two devises peculiar to election of directors:
o Board o 1. Proxy voting
Can the president make a decision on behalf of the corporation, A person need not be personally present to vote; can
without board authorization? just give written proxy.
o No. It does not bind the corporation Even if his shares have not been fully paid, as long as
o Islamic directory of the Phils: Acquired parcel of land. not delinquent
When martial law was declared, the members of the Board fled o 2. Cumulative voting
to the Middle East. A corrupt member of the board sold the If someone holds multiple shares, he can cast all
land to Iglesia. HELD: Invalid, because it was not the board those votes for one person (ex. 1,000 shares 1,000
that sold to INC. votes in favor of one person)
o A corporate officer cannot file a case for BP22. There must be o Can the board pass a resolution prohibiting proxy voting
board authorization. and cumulative voting?
Requirements to be a director? No. Its provided by law as mechanisms to allow
o 1.Must own at least 1 share of stock in his name in the STB minority SHs to win positions as directors.
What if he is merely holding that as trustee? What if shares are delinquent?
He is still qualified. o Not allowed to vote
The by-laws can require a bigger number (ex. 50K How may a director be removed?
shares for San Miguel) o 2/3 vote of SHs (or members if non-stock)
The moment a SH ceases to hold even one share, he o In what kind of meeting?
automatically ceases to be a director At regular or special meeting, but the notice must
o 2. Majority of directors must be Philippine residents specifically state removal of the officer will be taken
o 3. Independent directors up
Required for banks (at least 2) and listed companies o What if its not mentioned?
(either 2 or 20% of board, whichever is fewer) Cannot be taken up
o 4. Not disqualified: Who are the directors that cannot be removed without cause?
A. Criminal offense punishable by more than 6 years o 1. Director representing minority of SHs
B. Or violation of Corp. Code 5 years prior to election o 2. Independent directors (as required by law either 2
independent directors or 20% of the board, whichever is less)

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The law mentions conviction as a DQ for becoming a member of o Yes.
the board. Can the By laws add other qualifications? o Exceptions:
o Yes. 1. President cannot be the same as treasurer
o For instance, providing that SHs holding shares in rival 2. President cannot be the same as secretary
companies cannot run for the board. o Because there are some requirements that require assent of
Term of office of directors? President and treasurer/secretary as check and balance.
o Usually one year. There were two separate conflicting lists of officers shown. Which
o But if the annual meeting is delayed, they remain in hold-over wins out?
capacity until successors are elected. o The ones mentioned in the General Information Sheet win out
How are vacancies filled? (CLV DISCUSSION) because its required to be filed with the SEC.
o 1. Special vote by majority of directors What is the business judgment rule?
Assuming they still compose a quorum o Courts will not set aside decisions/resolutions of officers of the
o 2. General or special meeting of SHs corporation unless there is bad faith or illegality or gross
This is required when the remaining directors do not negligence
compose a quorum anymore o Courts will not second guess the wisdom of the officers even if
o 3. If vacancy is due to increase in seats must be through there are losses
election by SHs Differentiate treatment of officers from non-officers?
o What is the term of the replacement? o 1. Officers are hired or fired by the BOD in exercise of
Only the unexpired term of the one replaced business judgment. Non-officers are protected by security of
Do they get compensation? tenure.
o None, except: o 2. Officers are subject to common law duties of loyalty and
1, If the by-laws provide diligence. Non-officers are not bound by these.
2. Reasonable per diems. When can officers be held personally liable?
o Who fixes the compensation? o 1a. Assented to patently unlawful act of corporation
SHs, not directors; otherwise, there would be conflict Ex. approved bribe
of interest o 1b. Bad faith
SHs can give directors performance bonus. Ex. fired a manager who was instituting reforms to
o Is there a limit to director compensation? prevent shenanigans bad faith
The total yearly compensation of the directors cannot Ex. cooked the books of account to pretend losses, to
exceed 10% of the income prior to tax. justify retrenchment
o What about officers? o 1c. Gross negligence
The prohibitions re: compensation do not apply to o 1d. Conflict of interest
them because they perform services beyond the o 2. Issued watered stock or being aware of this, did not object to
ordinary duties of a director the corporate secretary.
Special qualifications of officers: o 3. Bound oneself solidarily to the obligations of the corporation
o President must be director o 4. By provision of law
o Sec must be resident of Philippines and a citizen Examples of bad faith:
o Treasurer need not be a director o Did not remit SSS collections
Can an officer occupy two or more positions? o A director acquired interest adverse to the corporation

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o Director received kickback from contractors What about contracts between corporations with interlocking
o Grabbed corporate opportunity (ex. the director bought a directors?
goods up for sale which is in the line of business of the o They are not per se prohibited.
company which he works in) o But if a director has substantial interest in one and minimal in
What is the duty of loyalty? another, he would be tempted to favor the first.
o The Doctrine of corporate opportunity. Directors or Trustees When is there substantial interest?
who acquire personal or pecuniary interest in conflict with their When his equity exceeds 20%.
duty as director are liable solidarily for damages. o What is the effect if a director has substantial interest in
o Officer X acquires interest adverse to corporation. What one and minimal in the other corporation?
are his responsibilities? 1. Presence of director must not be needed for
1. Liable for all damages to the corporation quorum
2. Compensate for all lost potential profits 2. His vote was not needed to approve the contract
CANNOT be waived/ratified N.B. these are the same first two requirements as in
o Officer Y by virtue of his office acquires a business self-dealing directors
opportunity for himself which should belong to the What is an executive committee?
corporation. What are his responsibilities? o By laws can provide for it, composed of at least 3 members of
1. Account all profits to the corporation the BOD.
2. Refund profits that would have accrued to the N.B. They must be directors.
corporation o What powers are delegated?
o Which can be waived or ratified? The BOD must specify what powers are delegated.
Adverse interest cannot be ratified or waived by the The BOD cannot just make a blanket delegation of its
SHs powers to the Ex Com.
Business opportunity can be ratified by 2/3 of the o What cannot be delegated?
outstanding capital stock 1. Matters requiring SH approval
What is the nature of contracts of the corporation with its own 2. Filling vacancies in the board
directors and officers? 3. Amending/repealing by-laws
o They are voidable. The corporation has the exclusive right to 4. Amending/repealing board resolution which by its
annul the contract. express terms cannot be amended/repealed
o When will it be not voidable? 5. Declaration of stock dividends
1. Presence of the director must not be needed for o What is the power of the board over resolutions of the Ex
quorum Com?
2. His vote was not be needed to approve the contract BOD can approve or revoke it.
3. The contract was fair and reasonable What is the exception?
It must be an arms-length transaction When rights of third parties are involved.
4. If the party is an officer, prior authorization of the Ex. A third party entered into a K with the Ex
BOD Com, relying in good faith on the power of
o What is the effect of the first two defects? the Ex Com to enter into contracts.
Can be ratified by the SHs in a meeting with full Powers are vested on the board. An officer acting alone cannot
disclosure. bind the board. What is the exception?

84
o Ratification by the authority who should have performed that The buyer becomes the debtor for the unpaid
act. balance.
What is the general scope of powers of the officers of a What is the nature of shares of stock?
corporation? o Quasi-negotiable. Just like N.I., endorse at the back and
o Can operate without authorization on the usual course of deliver. All transfer of shares are valid just between the parties
business, or administrative matters until registered in the STB.
o Ex. Insurance company can sell insurance even without board o No need to execute separate deed of sale or assignment,
resolution because they are quasi-negotiable.
o If there is a deed of sale which is a public document, it is akin
Capital affairs to delivery even if the stock certificate is not itself delivered (as
in usual rule in Sales Law).
What are the requisites to issue a certificate of stock (COS)? How does one sell shares?
o 1. Signed by the P/VP and countersigned by the o 1. He must Sign AND deliver the COS; and
secretary/asst. secretary Mere signing without delivery no sale
o 2. Delivery of the COS o 2. Have transaction recorded in the STB
o 3. Pay par value of the shares (or entire value if no par value) What if there is a conflict between the Stock and Transfer Book
o 4. Original certificate surrendered, if the shares are being and the AOI?
transferred o The AOI wins. The AOI is the basic contract between the SHs
What are the remedies of the SH when the corporation refuses to and the corporation, while the STB is merely kept for
issue a COS? convenience.
o 1. Specific performance Who may post in the STB?
o 2. Damages if specific performance not granted o The president cannot post the entries, it must be the Secretary.
o 3. Mandamus to compel issuance of COS o If the secretary refuses, compel performance, but one cannot
o 4. Rescind the subscription contract record the entries himself.
What is the nature of the duty to issue a COS? What are the allowable restrictions in sale of shares?
o It is ministerial , so even if there is a case filed, the buyer must o Procedural: Restriction must appear in the AOI, BL, and COS
be given a certificate o Substantive: Not more onerous than allowing the corporation to
What are the unpaid claims contemplated by the law? purchase the shares of the transferring SH for reasonable
o Payment for subscription, not unpaid claims for monthly dues terms
When is the COS issued? What if the seller of the COS is not the true owner?
o No certificate will be issued until full amount paid o The buyer cannot get valid title.
What is the nature of a subscription contract? o The first buyer, however, was given a fake COS. Effect?
o It is indivisible. None. The real owner cannot be deprived.
o If somebody has not yet paid full subscription, he cannot o What if the first buyer sold to a second buyer, signing and
assign part of the shares; it is all or nothing delivering the fake COS?
o If he sells all the shares, it is a novation of contract, with a The new buyer will be protected. Give her shares too.
substitution of debtor. The corporation runs after the seller for damages.
So you need corporations consent. What is the exception?

85
When there are no more shares to issue. In They will be applied to the unpaid dues.
this case, the new buyer does not obtain any o If the SH wants to question the sale, what are
shares, but can sue for damages. prerequisites?
Directors responsible for issuance of shares who issue watered- File case within 6 months from the date of sale
down stocks and those who know about it and didnt give their He must tender payment of unpaid dues and interest
objections: What is the other option of the corporation, apart from auction of
o Solidarily liable with the non-paying SH the shares?
If someone only paid part of the stocks, when must the rest be o Sue the SH in a collection case.
paid? What is the remedy for a lost COS?
o 1. By provision o 1. Owner submits affidavit of loss
o 2. Upon call by the directors o 2. Corporation verifies the affidavit and publishes notice in
o What is the nature of the call? newspaper of GC for 3 consecutive weeks at owners expense
It must be uniform for all, not just for particular o 3. After 1 year from publication, right to contest is barred and
persons. the corporation can issue a new COS to the SH
o When is there interest payable? o What if the applicant issues a bond to cover for damages?
Only if there is a provision The 1 year period is waived
If there is no rate mentioned, just that interest must be o What if there is a contest of the application?
paid, apply the legal rate The corporation cannot issue COS until resolved
What is the nature of the unpaid portion of the subscription? o What is the free and harmless clause?
o It is an asset of the corporation, and is thus a receivable If there is no bad faith or gross negligence, there can
o What is the implication? be no action against the corporation for issuance of
Creditors can run after these. the new certificate
A. But first they have to sue the corporation, o What if the corporation fails to comply with the procedure
and if unsatisfied, the creditors can sue SHs above and just issues a new COS?
on unpaid subscriptions. It is valid, but the corporation cannot avail of the free
B. If the corporation is insolvent, the SHs can and harmless clause
automatically be included as co-defendants. What is the rule on involuntary dealings with shares?
If after 30 days of call there is no payment, what happens? o A. Mortgage, if not covered by COS
o 1. The shares become delinquent. Mortgage binding on third parties with notice
o 2. The directors can auction the shares o B. Mortgage, if covered by COS
Personal notice sent through registered mail Register in the CM registry of both the domicile of the
Published in newspaper of GC for 2 weeks owner and place of principal office of the corporation
o How can the SH prevent sale of the shares? No need to register if the COS was delivered
Pay unpaid dues, interest, and costs (for publication, to the pledgee/mortgagee
etc.) No need to log in the STB
o How is the bidding for the shares done? o C. Attachment or levy
There is a fixed price, but those willing to accept the Creditor must leave with the president or managing
least amount of shares for the highest price get it. agent a copy of the writ and a notice stating the stock
o What if there are dividends before sale? was attached

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Priority rules: o 3. Quo Warranto
o A. Two judgment creditors What are the specific grounds?
Whoever serves writ first o 1. Does not commence business within 2 years from its
o B. Judgment creditor v. mortgagee/pledgee registration
Whichever is first in service of writ v. registry in CM o 2. Suspended transactions for 5 years
registry o 3. Failure to adopt and file BLs within required time
o C. Mortgagee/pledgee v. buyer/assignee o 4. Offended provision of law for creation (or renewal)
First between registry v. STB entry o 5. Commission or omission of act deemed as surrender of
o D. Judgment creditor v. buyer/assignee corporate rights
First between service of writ v. STB entry o 6. Misuse or right or privilege granted by law
o 7. Receiver recommended against continuation of business
Dissolution and liquidation o 8. Serious misrepresentation to public
o 9. Refusal to comply with SEC order leading to grave abuse of
When and how can a corporation voluntarily dissolve? franchise
o 1. Vote of majority of BOD + 2/3 of OCS o 10. Failure to file reports with SEC within prescribed period
What if dissolution will not prejudice any What if the corporation claims that the economy was depressed
creditor? and there was no demand for its goods; thus, there was no
1. Just need SEC approval business?
2. After 3 consecutive weeks publication in o Even so, it has to file an ITR and the general information sheet,
newspaper of GC, dissolution takes effect even if not operating.
What if creditors are affected? Is dissolution automatic?
1. Petition filed and all the names of the o No, the SEC determines the cause first.
creditors will be mentioned. Can a minority stockholder file a dissolution case?
2. Set for hearing, so if someone has o Yes.
objections, he can oppose. o For what grounds?
3. Order published in newspaper of GC for 3 1. Majority is mismanaging assets
consecutive weeks 2. Dissipating its assets
4. SEC will decide w/n dissolution is proper 3. Fraudulently disposing its properties
o 2. Amending the AOI, shortening corporate life o Can a receiver be appointed in an action for involuntary
Fastest and simplest way dissolution?
Who decides on dissolution? Yes.
o The SEC N.B. You do not dissolve a corporation for every single minor infraction.
o There must be a tax clearance first from the BIR before the This is like the death penalty for corporations.
SEC dissolves a corporation (because this is the last chance to o Ex. do not dissolve a company just because one employee
recover taxes) does not wear an ID
Involuntary dissolution: o Ex. but you can dissolve a corporation that engages in banking
o 1. Based on grounds provided in the Corp. Code (see above) without authorization from the Monetary Board because it
o 2. Violations of PD 902-A (SEC reorganization act see above harms public interest
for some acts) Where is the dissolution case filed?

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o SEC, not RTC What are the characteristics of NSNP corporations?
Three ways of providing for mechanics for dissolution: o 1. No shares of stock
o 1. Directors themselves can take care of winding up o 2. Not be authorized to declare dividends
o 2. Appoint trustee to whom they assign assets of the As indicated in the by-laws or AOI
corporation; will acquire legal title over properties of Only exception: distribution as a consequence of
corporation to pay off creditors and distributing the residue to dissolution
SH o 3. Eleemosynary purpose
N.B. Three year period does not count anymore if this For what purposes may a NSNP corporation be organized?
option is chosen o 1. Charitable
o 3. Receiver appointed o 2. Religious order, to manage its properties
What is the effect of dissolution on existing rights and o 3. Educational
obligations? o 4. Others: professional associations, cultural, fraternal, literary,
o It does not impair its rights and obligations scientific, social, civic service, similar purpose like chambers of
o Ex. Even if a corporation has been dissolved, it must still be commerce
paid What is the rule on the right to vote?
How long must winding up be? o By default, each member may vote
o Three years from the time SEC approved dissolution o Unless limited, broadened, or denied in the AOI or BLs
What can the corporation do and not do during this period? o For stock corporations, even non-voting shares vote for
o It can only wind up its affairs disposing its properties. It cannot certain transactions. Does this rule apply to NSNP?
for example renew a contract of lease. It must not pertain to No. They can even be denied voting rights for these
acts of that of a going concern. fundamental issues, unlike in stock corporations.
Will corporate dissolution abate any ongoing case against or filed o NSNP corporations can make classifications of members.
by the corporation not finished within the three year period? Example:
o Yes, under the old rule. Golf and country clubs for instance have honorary
o This now only applies if: members. But usually associate and honorary
1. The directors are in charge of winding up (option 1) members do not have voting rights, just playing rights.
2. Receivership (option 3) What are the peculiar rules in proxy voting?
But not if under trusteeship (option 2), because suit o Can be allowed to vote by e-mail or similar means.
can be filed against the trustee provided the o Membership is not transferred in proxies.
prescriptive period has not lapse. The trust will last Ex. X is a member of a golf and country club. He
until the affairs have been wound up. died. His son Y inherits his shares. He does not
o What is the common practice now for the cases that are automatically become a member. He has to be
still pending before the three years end? approved first. But he has proprietary rights, so he
Appoint a trustee. The lawyer handling the case is can sell it, pledge it, etc.
often constituted as the trustee himself. Sometimes, What is the policy in elections of the board?
its the directors themselves that are the trustees. o 1. There can be more than 15 directors
Purpose: to broaden representation
Non-stock/non-profit o 2. By default, the voting is staggered, 1/3 of positions are voted
for every year (for policy continuation)

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N.B. But you can also provide that everybody will be In this case, the SHs have powers, duties, obligations
elected every year or any other system of directors
How are assets distributed upon dissolution? Which corporations are not allowed to be close corporations?
o 1. Pay all liabilities and obligations of the corporation o Those vested with public interest.
o 2. Return all assets held by corporation with resolutory o Specifically:
condition of dissolution 1. Mining companies, oil companies
o 3. Transfer assets received by the corporation subject to 2. Stock exchanges, banks, insurance companies
limitations of usage for eleemosynary purposes to 3. Public utilities
organizations with similar purpose 4. Schools
o 4. Other assets distributed according to BLs or AOI, or follow How can the restrictions on transfers bind third parties?
plan of distribution o 1. Must appear in AOI, and
Can a NSNP corporation be converted to a stock corporation o 2. Must also appear in BLs, and
through amendment of AOI? o 3. Must also appear at the back of the COS
o No, because this is tantamount to distribution of profits to the Whats the effect of pre-incorporation agreements?
members. You have dissolve the NSNP corporation first. o They remain binding even after incorporation
o Ex. a pre-agreement that the president comes from Family A,
Close corporations the treasurer from Family B, etc.
When are board meeting not necessary?
Why are close corporations important?
o Board meetings not necessary if everyone signs or SHs know
o Most corporations in the Philippines are family corporations. that the board members were signing minutes without a
What is the definition of a close corporation? What are the meeting and they did not object.
features that make up a close corporation? What is the nature of the preemptive right?
o 1. AOI provides there are at most 20 SHs and none more o Covers ALL issuances of stock.
o 2. There are restrictions on transfers o There is right of pre-emption even if debt is being converted to
Ex. before a SH sells shares, he must ask permission equity.
from the other SHs
What is required for amendment of AOI?
Usually it provides too that if none of the SHs are
o If the amendment seeks to delete any provision required by the
willing to buy the shares, it must be offered to the
title on Close Corporations or reduce quorum/voting
corporation itself
requirement not valid or effective unless there is 2/3 vote of
o 3. Prohibition on listing shares in the stock market
OCS (all, even those with no voting rights), or a higher
o 4. Articles may provide for classification of shares
proportion of votes if required by AOI.
Ex. If there are three brothers, there can be class A,
What are the remedies that may be done by SEC in case of
B, and C shares one for each brother and his family,
deadlock in close corporations?
to ensure that each has equal ownership; can only
o 1. Amend/alter provision in the AOI that causes the deadlock
hold shares of the class pertaining to his family
o 2. Alter, prohibit, or cancel any resolution or action of the
o 5. Can provide for higher quorum or voting requirements
corporation, board, SHs, or officers
o 6. Can agree that the SHs manage the corporation and not the
o 3. Require the purchase of the shares of a SH even if there are
directors
no unrestricted retained earnings
o 4. Appoint a provisional director as tiebreaker

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o 5. For extreme cases, dissolving the corporation o The articles provide that members constitute a religious society
and at least 2/3 of members have agreed to incorporate.
Educational corporations
Foreign corporations
How many trustees must be there?
o Always multiples of five (5, 10, 15, etc.) What is a foreign corporation?
How long must their terms be? o 1. One formed, organized, existing under laws other than those
o Five years of the Philippines
o Every year, only 1/5 is elected to provide for continuity o 2. AND whose laws allow Philippine corporations to do
o But can there be contrary stipulations as to term and business there
elections of trustees? What is the effect of a foreign corporation having no license and
Yes. doing business?
o It cannot sue.
Religious corporations o If its not doing business, and has no license: can sue.
What is required to do business here:
How can a religious organization administer its properties? o Must appoint resident agent to receive summonses for the
o 1. NSNP corporation corporation
o 2. Corporation sole Resident agent required to be in good financial
One person only: ex. the Archbishop standing
o 3. Religious aggregate or society o What else must it do?
How does a corporation sole come about? To say that if it has no resident agent, summonses
o 1. File affidavit with the SEC, stating that: may be served to the SEC
A. the affiant is the head of a religious sect and would Also, any officer in the Philippines may be served with
want to be corporation sole summons
B. His religion allows him to incorporate as a X is a foreign corporation with no license. It entered into a contract
corporation sole with another corporation, which breached the contract. X got a
C. He is charged with administration of properties license, and then it sued. The other corporation said that the
o 2. Submit the following: contract is void. Valid?
A. Inventory o The contract is valid; the only effect is that there is no power to
B. Manner for choosing successor sue for the foreign corp. Here, it can sue.
C. Where he will hold office How can you sue a corporation not doing business here and also
Can the archbishop be a foreigner and hold land? without a license?
o Yes. He is actually just administering it, and the property really o Make the action quasi in rem by attaching its property to obtain
belongs to the faithful. jurisdiction over it.
What if the corporation sole wants to dispose property? What if the corporation is doing business and is not licensed and
o He must get authorization from RTC unless his religion allows the other party was aware of it?
him to dispose or mortgage real property o Then it cannot have the case dismissed because the other
What is the nature of a religious aggregate or society? party benefited from the contract.
o Incorporated to manage its properties. When is it considered doing business?

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o 1. There must be habituality. Transactions must not be o 1. Failure to file annual report or pay fees
isolated. o 2. Failure to appoint or maintain a resident agent
If the corporation is just buying here, its not doing o 3. Failure to submit to SEC notice of change of resident agent
business because there is no profit from buying or address
Except isolated transactions that indicate intent to o 4. Failure to submit to SEC notice of amendment of AOI or by-
habitually do business is doing business. Ex. renting laws or articles of mergers/consideration
out a space for lease and sending officers here. o 5. Misrepresentation of material matter
o 2. Substantial portion of the business of the primary purpose of o 6. Failure to pay taxes or fees due to the Government
the corporation o 7. Transacting business outside of purpose clause
If a shipping company goes here and hires a cook, o 8. Transacting business as agent of foreign corporation not
thats not doing business because its not as licensed to do business here
substantial portion of its business of the primary o 9. Any other ground that would render it unfit to do business
purpose here
o 3. Contract consummated in the Philippines
If the contract is consummated abroad then the Merger and consolidation
foreign corporation is not doing business here
Foreign investments act has a definition of what is doing business. What is a merger, and what is a consolidation?
The definition includes: o Merger one corporation absorbed by another
o 1. Soliciting orders o Consolidation combine to form a new corporation
Even if its isolated transaction, as long as its What is the procedure?
indicative of doing business o 1. Plan for merger or consolidation drafted by each
o 2. Service contracts corporations BOD
o 3. Opening offices Approved by majority of BOD and at least 2/3 of OCS
Whether liaison office or branch Any amendment subject to same voting requirement
o 4. Appointing representatives or distributors who are either o 2. Articles of merger or consolidation executed by each
Domiciled here corporation, signed by P or VP and certified by Sec/Asst. Sec,
Or staying here for at least 180 days setting forth:
o 5. Participating in management, supervision, or control of any A. Plan of merger or consolidation
domestic business, firm, entity, or corporation here B. For stock corporation, the number of outstanding
o 6. Any other acts implying continuity of dealings/operations shares, and for non stock, the number of members
here C. The result of voting
What doing business under FIA does not include: o 3. Four copies of Articles submitted to SEC for approval
o 1. Mere investment of a foreign entity in a local entity or For special corporations, must have approval of the
exercise of rights as investor designated government agency as well (ex. banks)
o 2. Having nominee officer or director to represent its interests Can dissenting SHs exercise appraisal right?
in that local corporation o Yes.
o 3. Having a distributor or representative doing business in its When does merger or consolidation take place?
own name o Upon SEC approval
What are the grounds to revoke a license? What is the effect of merger or consolidation?

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o 1. The separate existence of the absorbed corporation will Exceptions?
cease to exist o 1. Depositor gave written consent
o 2. Acquire rights, portfolio of business, and assume liabilities of o 2. If a bank officer or SH will borrow money from his own bank,
the absorbed corporations hes required to waive secrecy of bank deposits
o Is it bound to absorb the employees? o 3. Examination in an impeachment case
No, as long as it is done in GF. The decision to retain o 4. When there is an order from the court in cases of bribery or
employees is within legitimate sphere of management dereliction of duty
prerogative. o 5. When the money/bank account is the subject matter of the
XYZ corp issued a PN to D. XYZ was then absorbed by ABC. D litigation
then sought to enforce the PN against ABC. Is it liable, even if the Even if it is no longer in the possession of the
PN was in XYZs name? defendant
o Yes. ABC assumed XYZs liabilities. Ex. in a case, the money was transferred from
account to account to make it difficult to trace
Ex. To settle the estate of the deceased (in Special
Laws on confidentiality of bank transactions (RA 1405) Proceedings)
Contra: X sold treasury bills to Y for a sum of money.
X refused to deliver the bills. Y sued for specific
What is the purpose of this law? performance. Y then wanted to examine the bank
o To encourage people to deposit in banks and avoid private account of X.
hoarding HELD: This is NOT covered by this
What is secrecy of bank deposits? exception because the account is not the
o Bank deposits and investment in bonds issued by the subject matter of litigation.
government are confidential o 6. Under the AMLA, the AMLC can inquire into deposits where
o The very existence of the account is confidential there is probable case of money laundering (some requiring
Who are covered by the prohibition under law? court order, some not see discussion of AMLA), or if there
o Prohibition against giving details is only limited to bank officers are covered or suspicious transactions
and employees. So this prohibition does not cover private o 7. Under the HSA, Anti-terror council can apply with CA for
persons. authority to examine deposits upon probable cause of
What deposits are covered? commission of terrorism/conspiracy
o 1. ALL DEPOSITS OF WHATEVER NATURE, with banks or o 8. Under the NIRC, the CIR can examine bank deposits if:
banking institutions 1. The depositor died, to check net estate
o 2. Investments in bonds issued by the Philippine Government, 2. Taxpayer applied for compromise of tax liability on
its subdivisions and instrumentalities ground that he is in no financial position to pay
Does this law cover trust accounts? 3. Upon the request of information from the foreign
o Yes. tax authority pursuant to an international convention
o The law says that deposits of whatever kind or nature are or agreement to which the Philippines is party
covered by this law. So concept of deposit is not limited to o 9. The PDIC may examine deposits in case of findings that
savings, time, or current deposits. banks engage in unsafe or unsound bank practices

92
o 10. Under the Unclaimed Balances Act, disclosure to the o There is secrecy of bank transactions. No officer or employee
Treasurer of the Philippines of dormant deposits of at least 10 may disclose information about funds or property belonging to
years private individuals without court order. This covers all funds
Gangcaico: The OMB Law provides that the OMB can inquire into bank and property, unlike FCDA.
deposits during investigation. This was the old doctrine. But in this o It covers even safety deposit boxes.
case it was reversed. Requisites now before OMB can examine: o It does not cover public officials accounts (ex. Clarissa
o 1. There must be a case in court already Ocampo during impeachment trial) requisites:
o 2. The account must be clearly identified 1. Funds belonged to public officer
o 3. Inspection covers only the account identified 2. It was disclosed to an official body (ex. Senate)
o 4. Bank employees and owner are notified 3. And it was by court processes
Is there a violation of secrecy of bank deposits if the account is
garnished?
o No, there is none. Bank accounts can still be garnished. The General Banking Law
amount is not actually disclosed. Types, definition
Foreign Currency Deposits Act
o Foreign deposits are exempt from examination What is the definition of banks?
o And also exempt from garnishment o An entity engaged in lending funds obtained in the form of
BUT see exception below, in the rape case deposits
Judgment was rendered against a foreign national o Receives money from the public and lends it out to them
who raped a Filipino child. He escaped. The only o What is required?
source of money he had was a foreign currency Banks must be STOCK corporation with funds
deposit with Chinabank. The bank argued it obtained from the public
cannot be garnished. HELD: Public means that there must be at least 20
It can be garnished. The FCDA was for the depositors
purposes of encouraging investment, which How are banks classified?
this situation does not fall under. o 1. Universal banks
o Only one exception under the FCDA itself: o 2. Commercial banks
Depositor gave written consent o 3. Thrift banks (RA 7906 primary)
o Which exceptions under other laws apply to FCDA? A. Savings and mortgage banks
1. AMLA exceptions B. Stock savings and loan associations
2. HSA exceptions C. Private development banks
3. NIRC exceptions o 4. Rural banks (RA 7353 primary)
o Who can inquire? o 5. Cooperative banks (RA 6938)
1. PDIC o 6. Islamic banks (RA 6848)
2. AMLC What are the powers of a universal bank?
N.B. But not the Anti-terrorism council because the o 1. Everything commercial banks can do
law forgot to provide for it o 2. Powers of an investment house
General Banking Law: o 3. Power to invest in non-allied enterprises

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What are the powers of a commercial bank, in addition to ordinary o Trust entities are those authorized by the MB to act as trustee
powers? or administrator of any trust, or hold property in trust or on
o [Instruments] deposit for benefit/use of others.
o 1. Accepting and issuing LOC o These funds and properties in trust must be kept separate from
o 2. Discounting and negotiating PNs, drafts, BOEs, and those held under general banking functions.
evidences of debt Central Bank (CB) supervises bank operations.
o 3. Accepting and creating demand deposits (checks and drafts) o CB can examine companies where banks or quasi-banks have
o [Deposit, credit] controlling interest
o 4. Receiving other types of deposits and deposit substitutes o Nobody can engage in banking or quasi-banking without
o 5. Extending credit Monetary Board authorization.
o [Foreign exchange, securities]
o 6. Buying and selling foreign exchange, gold, and silver bullion Shares, etc
o 7. Acquiring marketable bonds and debt securities
What are thrift banks? What kind of shares can banks issue?
o Those that provide short-term working capital, medium-to-long o Banks can only issue par-value shares so you can ensure it
term financing to businesses engaged in agriculture, services, met the minimum paid-up capital requirement.
industry, and housing, by Can banks acquire their own shares?
o 1. Accumulating savings of depositors and investing them o No, unless given as security as loan.
o 2. Capital loans secured by mortgages, bonds, CM, etc. o The bank has to dispose these shares within six months after it
What are rural banks? got them.
o Those that provide credit facilities to farmers and merchants, to What is the limit on ownership of shares?
their cooperatives, people of rural communities o Unlike the former law, the GBL does not impose a limit on the
o Special rules: number of shares that can be owned by the same family or
1. Can have elective or appointive local officials serve related interest.
as director, officer, or consultant o Rules on family groups and related interests
2. Must have purely 100% Filipino equity What are family groups?
3. Cooperatives or corporations primarily organized to Stockholdings of individuals related to each
hold equities in rural banks may be incorporators other within 4th degree of consanguinity or
What are cooperative banks? affinity, legitimate or common law, are
o Those organized primarily to provide financial and credit considered family groups.
services to cooperatives What are related interests?
What are quasi-banks? Two or more corporations owned or
o Entities engaged in borrowing through deposit substitutes for controlled by the same group of persons or
the purpose of relending or purchasing receivables/other family group are related interests.
obligations What is required?
o (Ex. money market placements) The family group or related interests MUST
What are trust entities? disclose such fact in all their transactions
with the bank.

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o Foreign individuals and foreign non-bank corporations can only o 2. Investing up to 60% of a new banking subsidiary
own up to 40% of total voting shares of a local bank. incorporated under Philippine laws
The restriction here refers to TOTAL equity o 3. Establishing branches with full banking authority
participation of foreigners in the bank o What is common among the three?
What is the test of foreign citizenship under this Need MB approval
rule? o What is the extent of their powers?
Control test of majority stockholders, and not Same functions and privileges as a Philippine bank of
place of incorporation the same category
o Filipino individuals and domestic non-bank corporations can o When is a head office guarantee required?
only own up to 40% of the voting stock of a local bank. Only for establishment of branches (mode 3)
The restriction here refers to individual equity Requirements on directors?
participation of non-bank domestic corporations o 5-15
o Foreign banks o At least 2 must be independent not connected with the bank,
Up to 60% equity of domestic banks (see discussion its subsidiaries, or affiliates
immediately below) o What if there are bank mergers?
Equity investments of universal banks in financial allied Can have up to 21.
enterprises: Appointive or elective official limits?
o Universal bank can own up to 100% equity of a thrift bank, o Cannot work in a bank, whether part or full time.
rural bank, or financial allied enterprise o Exceptions?
o Universal or commercial bank can own up to 100% voting 1.Incidental to financial assistance (ex. PDIC gave
stock of only one other universal or commercial bank. financial assistance; can require that an officer sit as
trustee in that companys law)
Type of shareholder Limitation on shares 2. Provided by existing laws (ex. DBP is required to
Family groups, related interests Unlimited, but must disclose invest in all rural banks, so they can have people sit in
Foreign individuals and non-bank 40% of total voting shares of local the boards)
foreign corporations bank
How can meetings be conducted?
Filipino individuals and domestic 40% individual equity
non-bank corporations o Can conduct meetings by teleconference or video conference.
Foreign banks 60% equity of domestic banks Rule on banks and their branches:
Universal bank 100% equity of thrift bank, rural o Universal and commercial banks may open branches in the
bank, or financial allied enterprise Philippines or abroad with prior approval by the CB.
100% equity of only one other o A bank and its branches shall be treated as one unit.
universal or commercial bank
Commercial bank 100% equity of only one other Powers of banks
universal or commercial bank
Special powers of commercial banks (and universal)?
o Commercial banks automatically have the power to engage in
What are the three modes of entry for foreign banks in the
quasi-banking.
Philippines?
o Can automatically accept opening of current accounts
o 1. Acquiring up to 60% of an existing domestic bank

95
Unlike other banks (e.g. saving and mortgage or thrift Single Borrowers Limit (SBL) the law limits this to 20% of net worth
banks) which can accept current accounts, only with of the bank to a single borrower
special authorization from Monetary Board. o The MB has discretion to raise this
o Commercial banks can invest in allied enterprises, subject to o In computing this, if the loan is secured with treasury bills or
MB approval. CB bills, bills of lading, trust receipts, and other readily-
N.B. For universal, even non-allied enterprises marketable goods the ceiling can be increased by 10%
Universal banks: o Who are included in the calculated of SBL?
o Universal banks may act as an investment house Loan to corporation where the SB has majority
o But universal banks HAVE TO list shares in the stock market interest, subsidiaries of a corporation, members of a
What is the nature of deposits? partnership/association
o They are in the nature of simple loans. Thus, the bank is the o What is not included?
debtor, and the depositor is the creditor. 1. Loans that are secured by obligations of the BSP or
o Thus, the bank can make use as its own the money deposited. the government
The money is not held in trust or for safekeeping. 2. Loans covered by assignment of deposits
o Third persons may not have a right to the money deposited maintained in the lending bank and held in the
unless there is court order for garnishment. The debtor- Philippines
creditor relationship is between the bank and the depositor, 3. Loans under LOC to extent covered by the margin
and not third persons. deposits (security deposit by a customer with a broker
o Officers are not liable for estafa if they used the money for futures or option contracts)
deposited or failed to return the amount. 4. Other non-risk items as specified by the MB
o Does right to compensation exist? DOSRI loans (bank exposure to Directors, Officers, Stockholders and
Yes. The bank can set-off indebtedness of the Related Interests)
depositor with deposits, if the requisites apply. o What are requisites to be covered under the DOSRI rule?
BUT the bank must inform the depositor prior to such 1. Borrower is a director, officer, stockholder, or has
set-off. related interest
What is the degree of diligence required to be exercised by banks? 2. He contracts a loan or any form of financial
o Extraordinary diligence in the handling of deposits accommodation
o What about deposit substitutes (ex. money market 3. The loan or accommodation is from:
placements)? a) his bank,
Just ordinary diligence b) a bank that is a subsidiary of a bank
o What are essential for a bank to be a mortgagee in GF? holding company [and both his bank and
1. Ascertain mortgagors title or ownership of the lending bank are subsidiaries],
property mortgaged c) a bank in which controlling proportion of
2. Check both duplicate original title of the property shares is owned by the same interest that
and the title in the ROD owns a controlling proportion of shares of his
3. Conduct ocular inspection of the property if there is bank
something which would arouse suspicion and require 4. The loan or financial accommodation is in excess
an ocular inspection of 5% of capital and surplus of the lending bank or in

96
the maximum amount allowed by law, whichever is o CM 75%
lower Statement of purpose:
o Generally, DOSRI transactions are allowed, however, what o When a borrower loans money from a bank, he must state his
restrictions must be complied with? purpose for doing so
1. Procedural: Approved by majority of the directors o If he diverts it for some other reason, the bank may demand
excluding the director concerned immediate payment
2. Terms must be arms-length Foreclosure:
3. Limits on amount that would be lent o Check special laws on banks foreclosure [already know this]
Loan must be limited also to amount Note that the purchaser in the auction sale, whether
equivalent to his encumbered deposits and judicial or extra-judicial shall have the right to enter
book value of their paid-in capital upon and take possession of the property immediately
contribution to the bank after the date of the confirmation of the auction sale
o N.B. so, not just his deposits but o If the property will be redeemed, the mortgagor must pay
also his paid-in capital contribution amounts due on the mortgage. Ex. there are two loans
When does an individual ceiling not secured by the REM, and the 2nd loan became due during
apply? redemption period, he must pay both.
o 1. Fringe benefits extended by the Total investment in real estate, including equipment for use by the
bank to officers bank:
o 2. Loans by cooperative banks to o 1. Cannot exceed 50% of capital
members o 2. If it acquires real property it must be disposed within 5 years
o 3. Secured by collateral which MB Is it valid to stipulate that the bank will not be liable for losses of
considers as non-risk items property in the safety deposit box?
4. Aggregate ceiling o This is void. This is a bailment and this is part of the nature of
The MB may regulate amount of loans, the obligation.
credits, accommodations extended to o Stipulation that a bank is not liable for delay in wire-transfer is
DOSRIs, including bank investment in their similarly void.
enterprises. Can a bank engage in insurance?
Current Manual for Regulation of Banks o No.
provision sets ceilings: o But the bank can sell insurance policies if the insurance
o 15% of total loan portfolio of bank company is a subsidiary or affiliate of the bank.
o 100% of combined capital accounts
o Whichever is lower Prohibitions
5. Reportorial requirement: approval of the loan must
be entered in bank records and a copy of the entry Prohibitions against officers or employees:
transmitted to the Supervising and Examination o 1. Making false records of transactions affecting the operations
Sector of the BSP of the bank
Value of collaterals? o 2. Disclosing bank deposits to unauthorized persons without
o If secured by REM up to 75% of value of property prior court authorization
o 60% of the improvements o 3. Overvaluing securities

97
o 4. Accept gifts or fees to approve a loan because the money was eventually credited to him. HELD: Wrong,
o 5. Outsourcing inherent bank functions because money was the medium of exchange. Money is money, and
Ex. lending and accepting deposits no evidence of title is required to transfer.
o 6. Employing employees with lengthy probationary periods o Ex. A robber held up passengers in a jeepney and went to a
Cannot do the usual S.M. practice for bank tellers department store to buy clothes using the money. The victims
(replacing them every 5 months or so) cannot claim the money back from the store. This the analogy
o 7. Engaging in unsafe or unsound banking practice: of the SCs reasoning.
A. material loss/damage or abnormal risk/danger to Senator Villar floated bonds abroad in dollars and started Camella
institution Homes. There were talks that Ayala will start a joint venture with
B. same, to depositors, creditors, investors, SH, Camella. A customer asked to invest her funds in the long term
public in general commercial papers of Camella homes. But Ayala did not push through
C. undue injury or unwarranted benefits through with the JV. The long term papers plunged in value, so the customer
manifest partiality, evident BF, or gross negligence lost money. The customer sued the bank. HELD: The customer bears
D. manifestly and grossly disadvantageous to the the risks because she gave the instructions to the bank. She cannot
bank (w/n the officer or director profits) blame the bank for her bad investment decision.
o 8. Declaring dividends:
A. that are greater than accumulated net profits
B. if its clearing account with BSP is overdrawn Central Bank Act (RA 7653)
C. deficient in required liquidity floor for government
deposits for 5 days or more
D. does not comply with liquidity standards/ratios What are the State policies?
E. committed major violation as prescribed by BSP o 1. State maintains a central monetary authority that functions
An urban bank was closed, and that some favored clientele and operates as an independent and accountable body
received advance warning so they could take out their loans. Is corporate in discharging mandated responsibilities re: money,
there a violation? banking, and credit.
o Yes, this was an act that caused unwarranted benefit to parties o 2. BSP is a GOCC that enjoys fiscal and administrative
due to partiality, bad faith, etc. autonomy.
Head office guarantees prompt payment by its Philippine branches. Creation of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP):
Banco Filipino: SC appointed judge Cosico to receive evidence and he o It is the central monetary authority mentioned above
made a finding that Banco Filipino (BF) must be closed. The sc issued What is the responsibility and primary objective of the BSP?
a resolution that these hearings were not thorough, so they appointed o 1. Provide policy directions in areas of money, banking, and
Judge Ynares. Ynares said BF was solvent and had 1B in assets. The credit.
closure violated due process because the bank was closed before the o 2. Supervise operations of banks
investigation was finished. The law was then changed saying that a o 3. Exercise regulatory powers over finance companies and
bank may be closed before completing examination. quasi-banks and those performing quasi-banking functions
BPI family bank had three depositors. A deposited a check issued by B. What is the Monetary Board (MB)?
The money inside Bs account came from an authorization allegedly o It exercises the powers and functions of the BSP
signed by C to debit his account and transfer the amount to B. o It is composed of 7 members, appointed by the President for 6-
Depositor C claimed it was forged so the bank debited the account of A, year terms:

98
1. Governor of BSP (treated as department head move on to receivership/liquidation (see next
subject to CONA confirmation) part)
2. Cabinet member designated by President o 2. Receivership
3. 5 from private sector (staggered terms) Must there be prior conservatorship?
How does the Monetary Board (MB) act? No.
o It needs 4 votes to approve any decision What is the difference?
o In case of emergency, the governor with 2 concurring The bank must be in insolvent here
members of the board can act on any matter requiring MB When can you declare receivership?
decision 1. Unable to pay liabilities as they become
But have to report to the President and Congress due in the ordinary course of business
within 72 hours o Does not include inability to pay
What steps can the MB take when the bank is under distress? due to extraordinary demands
o 1. Place it under conservatorship o Ex. Equitable bank run after
When the bank is having liquidity problems impeachment trial
What are the powers of the conservator? 2. Insufficient realizable assets to meet
1. Take charge of assets, liabilities, and liabilities
management thereof 3. Cannot continue without probable loss to
2. Reorganize the management of the bank depositors or creditors
3. Collect all monies and debts due the bank 4. Willfully violated cease and desist order
4. Exercise all powers necessary to restore that has become final, or dissipation of
viability assets of the bank
5. Can overrule the decisions of the bank o In this case, forbidding from doing
officers/directors when it will prejudice the business and appointment of PDIC
bank as receiver is summary
o To what power does this apply? Who is the statutory receiver?
Only to defective contracts The PDIC is the statutory receiver
o Can it apply to valid contracts? But if quasi-bank, any person of recognized
No. This will impair competence in banking or finance
freedom of contracts Duties of the receiver?
How long can conservatorship last? 1. Gather and take charge of all assets and
1 year. Afterwards, it will be determined if it liabilities, and administer these for the
can survive creditors
When is conservatorship terminated? 2. General powers of receiver in ROC
1. MB is satisfied the institution can operate o Cannot pay or dissipate any of the
on its own and conservatorship is no longer assets UNLESS it is for
necessary administrative expenditures
2. Continuance of business will involve 3. May deposit or place funds of the
probable loss to depositors or creditors institution in non-speculative interests

99
Case: Manila Banking was placed under receivership. 2. RTC adjudicates disputed claims against
The officers sold real property belonging to Manila the institution, liabilities of officers and
Banking and the receiver approved it. employees, and issues re: liquidation plan
HELD: Invalid. The moment the bank was 3. Convert assets to cash and pay claims
placed under receivership, the officers lost according to concurrence and preference of
their authority to dispose its properties credits
because they now pass under the control of Effect of receivership or liquidation?
the receiver. The receiver cannot approve 1. Assets of institution cannot be garnished,
the sale because his powers are limited to attached, levied, executed
acts of administration. o Because they are deemed in
What must the receiver decide within 90 days custodia legis when in the hands of
from taking over? the receiver
1. Whether the institution may be 2. No preference even if the claimant-
rehabilitated or is in a condition that it may depositor obtained a writ of preliminary
resume business (with safety to general attachment
public and creditors). o Remedy is to join in liquidation
o MB must approve this proceedings.
determination of resumption 3. Appointment of receiver does not dissolve
2. Otherwise, proceed to liquidation corporation. It does not eliminate legal
o 3. Liquidation personality of bank. It can sue and be sued,
What is the close now, hear later scheme? but all actions pass through the
No prior hearing needed to appoint a receiver/liquidator.
receiver and close the bank. It is enough Can the BSP forbid the bank to do business?
that subsequent judicial review is given. To Yes, but when the BSP decides this, the
require prior hearing would defeat purpose of bank can still foreclose mortgages and the
closure. prescriptive period to foreclose is not tolled.
General Bank: It was closed and nobody was willing Is an insolvent bank closed by the BSP liable to
to invest fresh capital. Allied Bank bought and pay interests on deposits of clients?
rehabilitated it. The old orders to close it were No. A bank cannot pay interest when it is
questioned. They claimed there was an unusual bank not operating.
run. But the court found that there was bankruptcy But interests on loans extended by the BSP
because they extended unlimited credit facilities are still demandable.
What happens in liquidation? What is the character of all these remedies?
1. Receiver files ex parte in the RTC petition o No prior hearing required
for assistance in liquidation o Final and executory
o According to liquidation plan by o What is the remedy?
PDIC (or MB, if quasi-bank) Within 10 days, file a petition for certiorari
o From when do you count the 10 days?

100
Count from receipt of order by the BOD o Maintain price stability conducive to a balanced and
Filing must be authorized by majority of SHs interest sustainable growth of the economy. Promote and maintain
MB may impose sanctions including liquidation of a bank when: monetary stability and the convertibility of the peso.
o [violations] There are different tools held by the MB for this purpose:
o 1. There are violations of articles and by-laws o 1. CB maintains international reserves. The CB maintains an
o 2. Willful failure to comply with banking law/regulation of Mb account with the Federal Reserve system in the US. The CB
o 3. Conducting business with irregularities thus can buy and sell foreign currency.
o [re: information and supervision] o 2. With concurrence of MB and with president, the MB can
o 4. Failure to submit reports restrict sales of foreign currency. Back in the 60s the MB
o 5. Refusal of examination ordered all banks to surrender all their foreign currency to the
o 6. Willfully making false statements to MB CB.
What is the provisional remedy against erring officers? o 3. Require exchange obtained by anyone to be sold to the
o 1. MB may place under preventive suspension any officer of bank.
the bank pending investigation up to 120 days There are laws on paper saying that upon earning
o 2. If the officers continue with the violation, can issue a cease money in dollars, you have to sell them to the bank
and desist order within 5 days. But because of our commitment to the
Officers can request for a hearing within 5 days from IMF, this is not implemented anymore.
order to question the cease and desist order, or else it The MB can:
becomes final o 1. Determine exchange policy,
Only the CB can issue currency and all notes issued by the CB are o 2. Require banks to sell excess foreign exchange,
legal currency: o 3. Buy and sell credit instruments from banks (Discount
o Coins, denominations of 25c, 10c, and 5c are legal tender up policy)
to 100 pesos. Extend loans and advances (w/ charges and
o Denominations of 1, 5, and 10 are legal tender up to 1000 interests) to banking institutions to influence volume
pesos. of credit
o N.B. The old rates were 25 and 50 pesos, but they have been o 4. Extend loans to banks for up to 7 days without collateral for
changed to these rates in 2006 by CB Circular 537 the sake of liquidity
o Someone went shopping in the supermarket and paid This can influence the volume of credit, consistent
coins to the cashier, total more than 1000 pesos. The with the objective of price stability
cashier said it is not legal tender. Is she correct? o 5. In national emergency, by vote of at least 5 members, the
Yes. MB can approve of extraordinary loans
o What is its powers regarding money function? Amount must not exceed 50% of the banks total
May prevent circulation of foreign currency or of deposits and deposit substitutes
currency substitutes, or of reproduction of facsimiles Loans released in two tranches (installments)
of BSP notes o 6. Can buy and sell debt instruments (Open Market
Investigate, make arrests, conduct search and seizure Operations)
in accordance with law to maintain integrity of BSP may buy and sell in the open market evidence of
currency indebtedness directly issued by the government or by
What is the responsibility and primary objective of the BSP?

101
a government instrumentality (and guaranteed by the o 2. Compel officers of registered corporations or association to
Government) call meetings of SHs or members
o 7. Reserve requirements can increase this (to decrease the o 3. Issue subpoenas duces tecum or summon witnesses in
amount available for loans by the banks) vis--vis deposit proceedings, or procure books
liabilities o [quasi-legislative]
o 1. Formulate policies and recommendations on issues re:
securities market and make recommendations to Congress
Securities Regulations Code o 2. Issue rules and regulations and opinions
o [compliance and punishment]
o 1. Impose sanctions for violation of rules and regulations
State policy and SEC o 2. Enlist aid and support of government agencies to implement
its powers and functions
What is the purpose and scheme of the Securities Regulations o 3. Issue cease and desist orders to prevent fraud/injury to
Code? public
o 1. Protect public investors from fraudulent schemes o 4. Punish for contempt according to ROC
o 2. Encourage public investments by regulating sale and o 5. Suspend or revoke the franchises or certificates of
disposition of securities registration
o 3. Establish a socially conscious free market that self- o 6. Exercise necessary or incidental powers
regulates, encourages widest participation of ownership in Which cases have been transferred to RTC jurisdiction from the
enterprises, enhance democratization of wealth, and promote SEC?
development of capital market o 1. Investors and corporate affairs
o 4. Protect investors, ensure full and fair disclosure of Particularly fraudulent devices and schemes
securities, minimize/eliminate insider trading and employed by directors detrimental to public
fraudulent/manipulative devices that distort the free market interest/other firms
Composition of SEC: Ex. insider trading, etc.
o 1 chairperson, 4 commissioners o 2. State and corporate affairs
o Collegial body In relation to legal existence of corporations,
o 7 year terms each partnerships, and associations
What are the powers and functions of the SEC? o 3. Intra-corporate and partnership relations
o [Registration and supervisory] e.g. Controversies in election, appointment or
o 1. Jurisdiction and supervision over business organizations directors or trustees
o 2. Approve, reject, suspend, revoke, require amendments to o 4. Petitions for suspension of payment corporate rehabilitation
registration statements, and registration/licensing applications
o 3. Supervise, monitor, suspend, take over exchanges, clearing Registration of securities
agencies, and SROs
o [Regulation] What is an investment contract requisites?
o 1. Regulate, investigate, supervise activities of persons to o 1. Investment of money
ensure compliance with SRC N.B. a no money out transaction is not an
investment

102
o 2. In a common enterprise the checks mature. The SEC found out and issued a
N.B. thus charitable institutions are not covered cease and desist order for selling unregistered securities.
o 3. With expectation of profits Is the SEC right?
o 4. To be derived primarily from efforts of others Yes, it is. It is one thing to issue checks for isolated
N.B. So if the investor contributes actual work, its transactions, but another for an elaborate scheme
not an investment contract that turns postdated checks as instruments for
What are securities? pseudo-investment. Securities also include
o Shares, participation, or interests in a corporation/commercial commercial papers evidencing indebtedness of any
enterprise/profit-making venture, and evidenced by a person or entity.
certificate, contract, instrument (written or electronic) What are specific examples of securities?
o In particular: o A foreign exchange trading transaction is an investment
1. Shares of stock, bonds, debentures, notes, contract
evidence of indebtedness, asset-backed securities o Pyramiding scheme is an investment contract
2. Investment Ks, certificates of interest or Because there is expectation of profit from the efforts
participation in profit-sharing agreement, certificates of other people (you get commissions)
of deposit for future subscription o Someone with exploration contracts for oil or gas can sell
Investment K a person seeks to use the participation rights
money of others on the promise of profits o Derivatives limitless (depends on creativity of the human
3. Fractional undivided interests in oil, gas, or other mind)
mineral rights Different from spot trading. Spot trading is where X
4. Derivatives (options and warrants) bought $1000 (where exchange rate is 43 pesos to a
Options contracts that give the buyer the dollar), but the seller gives credit: 10 days to pay.
right to buy/sell an underlying security at a Here, you are not speculating, you have already
predetermined price on or before an expiry agreed to a price, you are just given credit.
date Whereas in derivatives, you must have a license from
o Call options rights to buy the MB.
o Put options rights to sell Rules on registration?
Warrants right to subscribe/purchase new o 1. No securities can be sold or offered without registration
shares or existing shares in a company on or statement filed with and approved by the SEC
before an expiry date o 2. Prior to sale, information on securities made available to
5. Certificates of assignments, certificates of each prospective purchaser
participation, trust certificates, voting trust certificates, Which securities need not be registered?
and the like o 1. Security issued or guaranteed by the Phil. Government,
6. Proprietary or non-proprietary membership political subdivision or agency, or instrumentality of
certificates in corporations; other instruments government
o XYZ borrows money from persons and in exchange issues o 2. Security issued or guaranteed by government of any country
postdated checks in an amount equivalent to their value + with which Philippines maintains diplomatic relations (or
interest, maturing after 2 months. The lenders can re-lend subdivision) on the basis of reciprocity
these amounts after and even increase contribution when

103
o 3. Certificates issued by receiver/trustee in bankruptcy o [D. sophisticated transactions]
approved by proper adjudicatory body o 1. Judicial sale or any extra-judicial sale/execution sale by
o 4. Security or derivatives which sale or transfer is under admin/guardian/receiver/trustee in insolvency or bankruptcy
supervision of Insurance Comm, HLURB, BIR o 2. Brokers transactions, executed upon customers orders, on
o 5. Security issued by a bank except its own shares of stock any registered exchange or trading market
o N.B. Usually these are issued by the government or o 3. Sale to banks, etc. and other sophisticated investors not
regulated by another agency. For instance, certificates needing protection from the SEC
issued in bankruptcy proceedings, lots, condominiums, Bank
securities issued by banks. Regulated investment house
o Why are they exempt securities? Insurance company
These are non-speculative in nature. The return on Pension fund/retirement plan maintained by the RP
investment is somewhat assured. government or those authorized by government
What transactions are exempt from registration? Investment company
o [A. isolated and minor transactions] Others, as deemed by the SEC
o 1. Isolated transactions Grounds for disapproving application for registration of
Not in repeated and successive transactions securities?
o 2. Sale of securities to less than 20 persons within 12 months o 1. If corporation is insolvent
(deemed isolated) o [violations]
o [B. with existing underlying relationships] o 2. Violation of SRC
o 1. Stock dividends (to existing SHs) o 3. Engaged in fraudulent transactions or about to engage in
o 2. Sale of shares to existing SHs such
o 3. Issue and delivery of security in exchange for any other o 4. Issuing officer/SH convicted of moral turpitude or fraud
security of the same issuer pursuant to right of conversion o [misinformation or lack thereof]
If a corporation floated bonds and there is an option to o 5. False or misleading annotations as to material facts
exchange it for stocks o 6. Failed to comply with conditions for registration
o 4. Pre-incorporation subscription or pursuant to increase in o 7. Registration is inaccurate or incomplete
A.C.S. without compensation or remuneration for the
transaction and where purpose of solitication is to comply Protection of investors
with legal requirements
o 5. Exchange of securities by the issuer with its existing security What is the shift of the Philippine securities registration system?
holders exclusively, where no remuneration is paid o It has shifted from a merit-based system to a disclosure-based
o [C. secured by mortgage and the like] system. So even if securities are potentially valueless (ex.
o 1. Sale by pledgee or mortgagee foreclosing issued by a company on the brink of insolvency), as long as
o 2. Issuance of bonds secured by mortgage, where the entire these facts are properly disclosed, the SEC will not deny
mortgage + all the bonds/notes secured thereby sold to one registration.
buyer (who is the underwriter) What is a tender offer?
Ex. Meralco will float $500M bonds secured by o Publicly announced intention by a person or group of persons
mortgage on its assets. One bank bought all that. to acquire equity securities of a public company (a type of
This is exempt. takeover bid).

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It is a public, open offer to all stockholders of the o 3. Publish and send out requests/invitation to tender shares
corporation. o 4. SHs deposit securities pursuant to the offer or request
It is an offer for them to tender their shares on the Requisites if the depositor wants to withdraw the
terms specified in the offer. securities deposited?
o Purpose: To protect minority SHs from any scheme to dilute 1. Done throughout period the offer remains
their shares. It gives them the chance to exit the company open, and
under reasonable terms and the chance to sell their shares at 2. Not yet been accepted by the offeror, and
the same price as those of majority SHs. 3. After 60 days from the date of the original
When is a tender offer required? tender offer or request
o If a person or group intends to acquire: o except as the SEC may otherwise
1. At least 35% equity of a listed corporation prescribe
2. At least 35% equity of an unlisted corporation, if it o What if the securities offered exceeded what the
has at least 50M+ assets and 200 SHs with at least person/group intend to purchase?
100 shares each The offered securities are purchased pro rata,
3. At least 35% of equity of a listed corporation over a disregarding fractions
period of 12 months This rule also covers: securities deposited within 10
o NOTE: in the codal this was 15% and 30% but the SEC rules days from increased consideration offer
changed these to 35% N.B. if the person/group offers higher consideration to
o N.B. This requirement applies even to indirect means of attract more offers, the initial depositors must also be
acquiring control given the higher consideration
Ex. Shares of mother corp. which owns a subsidiary What is proxy solicitation?
will be sold o A request that a corporate shareholder authorize another
What are not covered by the tender offer rule? person to cast the shareholders vote at a corporate meeting.
o [New stocks] What is the rule on proxy solicitation?
o 1. Purchase from unissued capital o No broker or dealer can give any proxy in respect to any
o 2. Purchase of shares from increase in ACS security carried for the account of the customer to a person
o [In relation to proceedings] other than the customer, if without express written
o 1. Purchases in connection with privatization undertaken by the authorization of the customer
government o A broker or dealer who holds or acquires proxy for at least 10%
o 2. Purchases in connection with corporate rehabilitation under of the shares must identify who the beneficial owner is, within
court supervision 10 days of acquisition, in a report given to:
o 3. Merger or consolidation 1. SEC,
o [Public sales] 2. Issuer of the security, and
o 1. Purchases through open market at prevailing market price 3. The exchange where the security is traded
o 2. Purchase in connection with foreclosure proceedings
involving a pledge/security arrangement Prohibited and Fraudulent Acts
What is the procedure for making a tender offer?
o 1. File a declaration with SEC of intent to make tender offer What are prohibited acts?
o 2. Furnish the issuer of securities the necessary info o [Market manipulations]

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o 1. Manipulation of security prices, false transactions, where to Brought by the issuer, or the owner of the securities
falsely show active trading, there are multiple transactions issued by the issuer if after 60 days from request to
Wash sales (transaction that involves no change in prosecute, the issuer fails to do so
beneficial ownership thereof) What is a short sale?
Matched orders o It is the sale of a security that the seller doesnt own. A short
Market rigging or jiggling seller often borrows shares from a broker and sells them to a
o 2. Effecting alone or with others a series of transactions in third person, hoping the price will drop. He then buys back
securities that: from the public, at a lower price, the same number and type of
Raise price to induce purchase shares he borrowed from the broker and returns them, profiting
Depress price to induce sale from the lower value of shares.
Create active trading to induce purchase/sale through o N.B. This is perfectly legal. Contrast this with the short-swing
manipulative devices profit sale (which the code actually calls short sales)
o 3. Series of transactions for purchase/sale of security to peg, What are fraudulent transactions?
fix, or stabilize its price o Obtain money or property through untrue statements
o 4. Manipulative or deceptive devices or contrivance in o Involves deceit
purchase or sale of security What is insider trading? (Usually asked in the Bar)
o [Deception] o Illegal for an insider to buy or sell security while in possession
o 1. Circulate or disseminate information that the price of a of material information not available to the public
security will rise or fall because of manipulative market Unless that insider proves that the information was
operations not obtained from insider relationship
o 2. Make false/misleading statement with respect to material Or if he had reason to believe the other party knew of
facts, which he knew or had ground to believe was this information or he himself made it known
false/misleading to induce purchase or sale of any security o Who is an insider?
What are covered by the short-swing profit rule? 1. Issuer
o Directors, officers, and principal stockholders (owns more than 2. Officer of issuer
10% of a particular class of securities) (i.e. corporate 3. Person whose relationship gives him access to
insiders) who enter into a purchase-and-sale or sale-and- material information
purchase transaction within a gap of 6 months 4. Government employee, director, etc. (of SEC) with
o What is the effect? access to this information
The corporate insider must return any profits derived 5. Person who learns this info from the foregoing
to the securities-issuer persons
o What transactions are exempted from forfeiture of profits? N.B. not if it wasnt communicated to the
1. If the securities were acquired in good faith in person (ex. just randomly stumbled upon a
connection with a debt contracted prior letter containing such information)
2. If the beneficial owner was not such both at the o When is information material?
time of purchase and sale If it will affect the price
o When is suit filed? Or important in the decision to buy, sell, or hold the
2 years from when profit was realized, in the RTC security
Civil liabilities:

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o Any person acquiring a security may sue if the registration or Extraordinary diligence Diligence of GFF
statement is untrue as to a material fact Cannot stipulate exemption from May validly stipulate such
o Who: liability for negligence (void against
1. Issuer and every person who signed the PP)
registration statement
2. [See enumeration in the Code] prospectus,
What are common carriers?
fraudulent transactions, insider trading, etc.
o Hold themselves out to the public as ready to engage in
Time sharing:
carrying goods or passengers or both for compensation as
o Can offer staying in cottages, clubs, etc. to non-members
public employment.
because sometimes they are empty. These are securities that
Even if thats not his primary business
must be registered.
Does not need to have a regular schedule, and can
What is the effect of contracts made in violation of the SRC?
have limited service (ex. school bus)
o 1. Void as regards the rights of any person who, in violation of o What about transportation of oil through a pipeline?
any such provision, shall have made or engaged in the
Still a common carrier it does not have to be a
performance of the contract
vehicle.
Ex. Company who knowingly issued unregistered o Is a travel agency a common carrier?
securities (the infirmity of which the buyer wasnt
No, it only makes arrangements for the passenger.
aware of) cannot file action for specific performance
What is the level of diligence for a common carrier?
to compel payment
o Extraordinary diligence, as opposed to GFF for a private carrier
N.B. It is unilaterally void only as for the violator. So
o Both in transportation of persons and custody of goods
the buyer can void it because the seller was
o Can a common carrier invoke the last clear chance
fraudulent, but the seller cannot decide to invoke that
defense?
it is void.
No, it is a defense in quasi-delict, but does not apply
o 2. Void as regards a non-party to the contract who was aware
to liability of passengers.
of the violation
o What about diligence in selection and supervision of
employees?
No, its just a defense in quasi-delict but not breach of
Transportation Law
transportation contract.
o What about defects in the parts, even if brand new?
Its still not a defense. Even if its brand new, the
Distinguish common carrier from private carrier:
common carrier cannot be complacent. Defect in
Common carrier Private carrier components or car part is not a good defense.
Holds self out in common to all Agrees to carry persons/goods for What are the defenses available to the carrier?
persons who choose to employ him hire in a special agreement o 1. Fortuitous event
Bound to all who offer such goods as Only by virtue of special agreement When is fortuitous event not allowed to be
it is accustomed to carry and tender invoked?
reasonable compensation If there is negligence or delay
Subject to regulation; as a public Not subject to regulation to same
service regulations

107
When is extraordinary diligence required, even o Carrier was delivering hemp, but it cannot approach the wharf
during a fortuitous event? because the water was shallow. It sent a lighter to send the
Before, during, and even after the event hemp, but it sank.
(fortuitous event does not justify major HELD: The carrier is liable. The transportation
delays after the event) through the lighter was a preparatory act to delivery,
If there is failure to comply with this there is and so was within the K of transportation.
concurrent negligence by the transporter o Carrier was delivering oil, and when it got to the wharf, it was
Is fire a fortuitous event? pumping oil into a tank. The hose was severed, without the
As a rule, no, except if caused by lightning. carrier noticing, and the oil placed in the tanks spilled into the
Its traceable to human negligence. water. Caltex, the shipper, sued.
What about robbery? HELD: No final delivery yet because the oil spilled
Robbers must be acting with irresistible force back. Carrier was liable.
o 2. Acts of public enemy in war o X was waiting for the LRT on the platform, after buying a token
o 3. Acts or omissions of the shipper or owner and entering the turnstile. He got into an altercation with the
o 4. Character of the goods or faulty packaging guard who assaulted him. X fell onto the tracks and got hit by
Character of goods: ex. ripening of fruits the train. Is LRT liable?
Faulty packaging: If obvious from external Yes, because he was there in pursuit of boarding the
appearance that they are not properly packed, and LRT.
still the carrier accepted it, it is liable. o After alighting a bus, but waiting to pick up luggage, the same
An owner under-declared the weight of his bus hit one of the passengers. Is the bus liable?
package to save money. The carrier accepted it. Yes, responsibility only ends after passage of
This caused the goods to spill from the package. reasonable time and opportunity to leave the
Held? destination.
There is shared liability. Extraordinary The contract of carriage does not automatically end
diligence includes the carrier examining the upon alighting. Contract of carriage includes chance
goods and noticing that they are obviously to get the baggage.
under-declared. Upon landing on the dock, and the goods were placed in a
o 5. Order of competent public authority warehouse, but there was no consignee was there delivery?
o 6. Exercise of extraordinary diligence o No.
If the goods are damaged or lost, what is o What are the defenses?
presumed? 1. There was delivery
The carrier is presumed to have been in fault Notice given to consignee re: the arrival of
Burden of proof is on the carrier to prove exercise of the goods
extraordinary diligence Given reasonable opportunity to remove
When does responsibility of the carrier begin? them or dispose of them
o From the time the goods were placed in its possession until the 2. There was exercise of extraordinary diligence
goods are actually delivered When does the K of transportation terminate?
o 1. When the goods are actually received
o 2. When there is unreasonable delay in receiving the goods

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What is the implication? o The law of the country wherein the goods will be shipped
The carrier becomes a depositary, and governs.
diligence is reduced to GFF. o Ex. If there are two carriers (A and B) with a transshipment
o What if the goods were placed in a bonded warehouse agreement and As transportation ends in Davao, its liability is
prior to loading or in transit? governed by Philippine law even if B proceeds to deliver to
The common carrier is still liable, because it has USA.
control and responsibility over the goods What specific laws will govern under Philippine law?
How could the carrier avoid liability? o Primary: New Civil Code provision on common carriers
o Through stoppage in transitu o Secondary: Code of Commerce and other special laws: Public
This is exercised by the seller/owner, before it has Service Act, Customs and Tariff Code, Civil Aeronautics Act
reached the consignee. Its as if the owner never o Tertiary: Carriage of Goods by Sea Act
parted with ownership of the goods. o Can the parties deviate from this hierarchy?
o Legal effect: the contract of carriage is terminated; the shipper Yes. Stipulate in contract of carriage what laws
becomes akin to a warehouseman/bailee should govern (Paramount Clause). It applies by
What is the nature of services of an arrastre operator? reason of contract, as long as it is not against public
o The legal relationship between the arrastre operator and the policy.
consignee is akin to that of warehouseman/depositary and What are the rules governing baggage of passengers?
depositor o If it is checked in, liable as common carrier
o Maritime law does not apply to govern the arrastre operators o If it is hand carried, it is considered necessary deposit only
responsibility required to exercise diligence of GFF
When is a stipulation limiting carrier liability valid? How does gratuitous transportation affect stipulation limiting
o It must be reasonable to be valid. liability?
o What are unreasonable? o It becomes valid
1. No liability at all o But not for willful acts and gross negligence
2. Limited liability up to a certain amount Contributory negligence of passenger will not exculpate carrier but
3. Goods transported at risk of owner minimize liability
4. Exercise of diligence less than GFF o Ex. Passenger left his elbow hanging out the bus window, got
N.B. so this is the minimum hit and severed. His contributory negligence reduced the
5. That the common carrier is not liable for acts of its carriers liability.
employees o A bus was cruising along the highway. One passenger ran
o What is valid: amuck and started hurting the passengers with a knife. The
1. Limiting carrier liability in case of strikes or riots other passengers panicked and ran out, and fell, died.
2. Limiting liability up to a certain amount UNLESS HELD: The bus company was liable because a
the shipper declares the actual damage passenger ran amuck and the employees did not do
o N.B. if the carrier is a private carrier, such stipulations anything, stop the bus, or whatever.
otherwise deemed unreasonable are valid. o A bystander threw a stone at a bus and it struck a passenger.
Which countrys laws govern the transshipment of goods between Carrier liable?
countries?

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HELD: No. It has no control over this occurrence. It Exemplary damages apply same doctrine above
is required to exercise extraordinary diligence but is Lost income
not an absolute insurer. (80 actual age) (annual income) (2/3) =
What is the rule re: explosives, etc? indemnity
o Airline companies liable because they are authorized to What bout injuries caused by acts or omissions of employees of
search bags the common carrier?
o Bus not authorized to search bags, so not liable. o The CC is liable EVEN IF the act was done in violation of
If the carrier ends up in an accident, what are the remedies of the orders, or beyond scope of the employees authority
passenger? (Respondeat superior)
o A passenger can sue under breach of contract or quasi-delict. o Must be in the course of his employment
o N.B. Breach of contract is easier to prove because there is Ex. If the liability is for damages caused to another
presumption and the defense of diligence in automobile, then diligence of GFF is a defense.
selection/supervision is not available. Ex. But if at the same time, there is liability for injuries
o Why would you sue under quasi-delict then? caused to passenger, diligence of GFF is not a
There are more damages recoverable, but the case is defense.
tougher. But you can recover moral damages from What if the passenger was caused by co-passenger or stranger?
physical injuries here. o If the act of the stranger could have been prevented or stopped
What damages can be recovered in breach of contract? by the personnel using GFF, there is liability.
o 1. Passenger was injured: o If not, it is a fortuitous event.
Medical expenses Can this liability be eliminated by stipulation, posted notices,
Loss of income if incapacitated to work statements on tickets, or otherwise?
Attorneys fees, if the carrier unjustifiably resisted the o No.
claim
If the driver was negligent, you cannot impose Warsaw Convention
exemplary damages on the employer unless there is
something that makes the employer liable (ex. When does the Warsaw Convention apply?
awareness of the drivers recklessness) o To transport of persons, baggage, goods in international air
Moral damages? transport
General rule: not demandable o Although domestic flights may apply it in a Paramount clause
Exceptions: When is there international transport?
o Obligor acted in bad faith or fraud o 1. Point of departure and point of destination are in two high
o Gross negligence tantamount to contracting States to the convention
bad faith o 2. Point of departure and point of destination is within one high
o 2. Passenger died contracting State, and there is an intermediate point, which is a
Medical expenses State that may or may not be a high contracting party
Funeral expenses o What is the single operation rule?
Where there is no proof of funeral expenses, The moment a person is covered by the WC, then it
award of 25K as temperate damages also covers even domestic portions of the itinerary
Moral damages Ex. ML Amsterdam Madrid Barcelona

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o KLM issues a ticket from ML to Amsterdam. Then it helps o N.B. Consignee will have right to enforce rights under contract
the passenger secure a ticket from Amsterdam to Paris, of carriage
but flown through Air France. Is KLM liable for problems When must claim notice be given to the carrier?
in the flight to Paris? o Baggage loss: 3 days from receipt of baggage
NO. It is a mere agent of the other airline company. o Goods loss: 7 days from receipt of goods
What documents are involved in international transport by air? o Delay in delivery of baggage or goods: 14 days from delivery
o Passenger ticket o What if the consignee does not give such claim notice to
o Baggage check the carrier?
o Airway bill Further action by the consignee is barred (similar to
Is the issuance of an airway bill necessary in order to establish the rule in the Code of Commerce and unlike
contract of carriage? COGSA)
o Yes, because an airway bill is a document that would establish o See directly below for period to file claims in cour
a contract of carriage between the carrier and the owner of What is the period to file claims for damages in court?
goods. It establishes receipt of goods and the condition of the o 2 years from arrival at the destination, or when arrival should
goods loaded on board. have happened, or stoppage of carriage
Can the carrier accept the goods without issuing an airway bill? o What is the exception for period to file claims?
o Yes, but it would be liable to the shipper, had it delivered the Action based on passenger being humiliated (follow
goods to the consignee without asking for surrender of the tort law) 4 years
airway bill. o Where can you sue the airline company?
o The carrier will be liable to shipper for misdelivery. 1. Where you bought the ticket
o Also liable to real person with lawful right over the goods who 2. Where the airline company was incorporated
holds the airway bill. 3. Where the airline company has its principal office
When does the right of the shipper to dispose the goods cease? 4. Point of destination
o From the time when the right of the consignee begins (when o In a roundtrip flight (ex. SF ML SF), can you sue in
the goods are delivered to the latter) ML?
o He couldnt recall the goods anymore or stop delivery in transit. No, because in a roundtrip flight, your point of
If the consignee refuses to exercise his rights as consignee, what departure is the same as your point of destination.
happens? When can you sue in ML?
o The shipper resumes right over the goods and can exercise If the return date is left open. Meaning, ML
rights and obligations over goods under Warsaw Convention is the point of destination.
Rights of consignee upon arrival of goods at port of destination: Who is the defendant?
o 1. Right to demand from the carrier to deliver the airway bill o 1. As regards passengers:
and the goods to him In case of successive carriers, the carrier in which the
o 2. Pay transportation costs to carrier if stipulated accident or delay occurred
When is the consignee allowed to enforce provisions of contract Unless by express agreement, the first carrier
(airway bill)? assumed liability for the whole journey
o 1. Goods not delivered before expiry of 7 days from the time o 2. As regards baggage or goods:
they were supposed to arrive Passenger or consignor can sue first carrier,
o 2. Goods are missing Passenger or consignee can sue last carrier, or

111
Against carrier I which destruction, damage, or loss o 2. Carriage of registered baggage and cargo 250 francs per
occurred kg (of the baggage concerned, not total baggage)
N.B. all carriers are jointly and severally liable Except if the passenger or consignor has made a
What is the liability of carriers to passengers? special declaration of interest in the delivery and has
o Liable for death or injury if caused on board, during paid a supplementary sum if it is required
embarkation, or disembarkation In this case, what happens to the liability?
What is the period of responsibility for the air carrier? The limit will be the declared amount
o As soon as the carrier has possession and custody over the Unless it is proven the actual value is higher
baggage and goods o 3. Hand-carried baggage 5K francs per passenger
What are the defenses available to the carrier? o What is the effect of the Guatemala Protocol?
o 1. Carrier/agents took all necessary measures to avoid Increased limits to $100K for passenger and $1K for
damage or it was impossible to take these measures baggage, but its not yet effective
o 2. Error in piloting and the carrier/agents had taken all Do you apply Warsaw Convention when suing on a tort? (Ex.
necessary measures to prevent the accident or it was humiliation)
impossible to take these measures o No.
Ex. pilot mistakenly identified one airport as another When a passenger is downgraded, can he recover damages?
o 3. Error in handling of aircraft and the carrier/agents had taken o Yes.
all necessary measures to prevent the accident or it was How much are airlines allowed to overbook?
impossible to take these measures o Up to 10%.
o 4. Error in navigating and the carrier/agents had taken all o If everybody shows up, then the airline company asks for
necessary measures to prevent the accident or it was volunteers to be transferred to the next flight.
impossible to take these measures o If no one wants to be transferred, the last ones to check in will
o 5. Contributory negligence be left behind.
Liability reduced appropriately by the degree of o N.B. But our SC does not accept this reasoning.
negligence contributed by the shipper/consignees X and his wife went to HK with another couple, with their friends. When
What is the concept of limited liability? they were returning, X was informed that he was being transferred to
o Liability to passengers (injury on board, injury during first class, against his wishes. He sued.
embarkation or disembarkation, or delay) or goods (damage or o HELD: He won. There was still a breach of contract, in spite of
delay) is limited to the stated amounts. the upgrade.
When does limited liability NOT apply? X was a soprano who was scheduled to perform in KL. X booked with
o Limited liability does not apply when there is dol or willful Sing Air a flight from Frankfurt to ML, and then ML to KL. Because of
misconduct the bad weather, Sing Air wasnt able to fly her to ML on time to reach
Ex. the PAL situation where bags were unloaded so it KL. So X just flew directly to KL with another flight and wasnt able to
could take in more freight practice, and performed badly.
Ex. Recklessness in handling luggage o HELD: Sing Air was liable; it was not beyond remedy.
What is the limitation of liability? Couldve booked another flight to make it possible.
o 1. Carriage of passengers 250K francs A Northwest flight was aborted so the passengers were all rebooked in
Except if by special contract, the carrier and different NW flights. A family was rebooked in an itinerary that was
passenger agree to a higher limit more roundabout and longer compared to other passengers.

112
o HELD: NW was liable. Immediately, or else barred
PAL in a stopover unloaded pieces of baggage of its passengers to take What if the damage is not apparent?
in additional cargo and freight. Within 24 hours from receipt, or else barred
o HELD: this was bad faith, leading to moral damages. When does this provision not apply?
Unloading baggage to prevent airplane from being overweight, for For international shipping, the COGSA
safety considerations applies
o HELD: not liable If goods are transshipped, who is liable?
JAL was unable to land in MLA for two weeks because Pinatubo o The ultimate carrier
erupted and the runway had lahar. o What if the goods were actually damaged during the first
o HELD: It is a fortuitous event. JAL not liable for leg?
accommodations, food, etc. The ultimate carrier is still liable
Immigration refuses to let a passenger leave due to defects in It can just sue the prior carrier for reimbursement
passport/travel documents. o Against whom does the shipper or consignee have right of
o HELD: This is not the airlines fault. action?
Carrier who executed the transportation contract, or
Maritime law other carriers who received the goods without
reservation
What is the 3-fold character of a BOL? When does a reservation have no effect in
o 1. Contract relieving responsibility?
o 2. Receipt for goods When the carrier who made the reservation
o 3. Symbol of the goods is responsible
What does a clean bill of lading bar? When must the consignee pay for freight and expenses?
o Any argument by the shipper that the goods were damaged o Within 24 hours of receipt
when it received them. The clean BOL shows that they were in o Otherwise, the carrier may ask that the goods be dissolved
good condition when received. until enough to pay arrears
What if the package appears unfit for transportation? The contract between buyer and seller stated that there should be
o The carrier can refuse to accept the goods no transshipment. The shipping company issued a BOL which
What if the carrier suspects the goods as misdeclared? stated on its face that there will be transshipment. When the
o It can open the package. If the carrier is right, the owner goods arrived, the buyer refused to receive the goods. The seller
shoulders costs of inspection. If the carrier is wrong, it bears sued the vessel. HELD?
the costs. o The seller lost. The BOL clearly stated that there will be
When can the consignee of the goods refuse to take delivery of the transshipment but the seller agreed.
goods and just claim damages? The goods which arrived to the buyer did not meet specifications
o 1. When the partial loss makes the entire thing useless so the buyer refused to receive the goods. The carriage piled up.
o 2. When the damage makes the goods useless for the purpose Who is liable?
for which they were intended o The consignee. The contract of sale and the contract of
o 3. Delay through fault of carrier shipment are two different contracts. The consignee should
o 4. Damage apparent from external appearance of package have just received the goods and sued the seller.
When must claim be made?

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The goods were shipped from ML to Davao by one shipper, then 2. The vessel was insured the proceeds of the
Davao to SF by another. The goods were damaged upon arrival in insurance will take the place of the vessel
Davao, but suit was made upon arrival in SF. HELD? 3. Even if the vessel sinks, the ship owner will be
o Period for filing the claim was barred. Should have claimed in liable for repairs and provisioning of the vessel
Davao. undertaken before its loss
Registration of vessels with the Maritime Industry Authority N.B.: workmans compensation is not anymore an
o Where the sale was not registered, the sale does not bind third exception the sinking of the ship is irrelevant for
persons claims for injury, sickness, or death in the course of
Goods arrived at the pier. Then the vessel hired a harbor pilot, employment. File claim with ECC
which crashed and damaged the goods. Claim was against the What are Charter parties?
vessel. Vessel claimed it was not liable because the harbor pilot o In essence, a lease of the vessel
was not part of the crew. HELD? o What are the basic types of CPs?
o Vessel liable. The captain still retained control over the vessel. 1. Bareboat charter
When he saw that the harbor pilot was about to crash the ship, The ship owner turns over the possession of
he should have intervened. the vessel to the charterer
Responsibilities of ship owners and ship agents? The charterer undertakes to provide the
o 1. Acts of the captain officers, supplies, provisions during the
o 2. Contracts signed by the captain to repair, provision, or equip voyage
the vessel What is owner pro hac vice?
o 3. For indemnities due to third persons due to conduct in the o Owner for this occasion
care of the goods o If it is a public carrier, it temporarily
o 4. Quasi-delict in case of negligence in selection/supervision of becomes a private carrier (diligence
employees becomes GFF)
o 5. Collision due to the fault of the captain 2. Time charter
Real and hypothecary nature of maritime commerce: Contract for the use of the vessel for a
o If liability is incurred, it is not the owner that incurs the liability specific duration or voyages
attaches to the thing. So if the vessel sinks, the liability is 3. Voyage charter/contract of affreightment
extinguished. Contract for carriage of goods from one or
The liability of the ship owner is limited to the value of more ports of loading to one or more ports of
the vessel, earned freightage, and proceeds of unloading
insurance. No vessel, no liability. o What is the nature of the time/vessel charter?
What is the effect of abandonment? The owner of the ship retains ownership and control
Abandonment of the vessel and all her If the charterer does not pay, there is a lien by the
equipment and freight leads to exemption ship owner over the goods
from liability. In a bareboat charter, there is no such lien if
o What are the exceptions (usually asked)? the charterer does not pay the ship owner
1. If the ship owner is at fault (i.e. the vessel is not The vessel remains a common carrier
seaworthy) o In a charter party with a private carrier, a stipulation that the
Ex. the ship did not have enough lifeboats ship owner will not be liable for damages is valid, or a

114
stipulation that the owner will not be liable for damages due to o 2. Wages of crew of a vessel chartered by the month during
fault of the captain is valid. the time vessel was detained by force majeure
Averages When are there particular averages?
o Averages may be particular or general o The damage did not benefit persons interested in the cargo
o Items mentioned in Art. 809 and 811 are merely illustrative. It o Ex. fruits became rotten
is not exhaustive. o Ex. pirates intercepted the vessel, so the captain threw money
overboard
General averages Particular averages What are the requisites of general averages?
Common danger to vessel and cargo None o 1. There is common danger
Deliberate sacrifice of part of the Accidental damage There is no common danger when the damage was
vessel or cargo, with authority
due to fault of the captain
Inured to common benefit No such common benefit
All persons with interest in the vessel Owner of the thing damaged bears o 2. For common safety part of the vessel/cargo is sacrificed
and cargo saved must contribute in damage alone foundation of general averages
the indemnity o 3. It was successful
o 4. Legal steps should have been taken before general average
is made
General average samples: i.e. the captain conferred with the officers, the cargo
o [Enemies and bad people!] owner, entered in log book, marine protest made
o 1. Goods or cash invested in redemption of the vessel or cargo Protest must be made within 24 hours (unless the
captured by pirates/enemies, etc. or expenses for repair captain is injured, or is unable to do so for some
o 2. Curing and maintaining members of the crew who were reason)
wounded in defending the vessel or saving it What are the rules on apportionment of liability in collisions?
o 3. Wages of member of the crew detained as hostage (Maritime tort)
o [Too heavy, brother] o The provisions on civil tort do not apply
o 1. Goods jettisoned to lighten the vessel ex. last clear chance, rule of comparative fault, due
o 2. Removing or transferring portion of cargo to lighten the diligence in selection/supervision of employee
vessel o If two vessels collided and it is the fault of one:
o 3. Loss suffered in value of goods sold at arrivals under stress Latter bears it own costs
to lighten load Bears the other vessels costs
o [Emo solutions] Bears cost of goods damaged
o 1. Cables or masts cut or anchors and chains abandoned o If both are at fault:
o 2. Damages suffered by goods through opening made in Each one will bear its loss
vessel for draining (to avoid sinking) Do not consider LCC, comparative fault, etc.
o 3. Floating a vessel intentionally stranded to save it Solidarily liable for the damaged goods onboard both
o 4. Damage to the vessel which had to be opened, scuttled, or vessels
broken to save cargo o If you cannot tell which one is at fault:
o [Expenses pursuant to average] Same rules as if both are at fault
o 1. Expenses to liquidate average Rule of inscrutable fault
o If a third vessel is at fault:

115
The third vessel is liable for losses and damages o When does the one year prescription not apply?
o If collision was due to fortuitous event: 1. Agreement by parties to extend the period
Each shall bear their own damage 2. In case of misdelivery delivered to wrong party
What is the doctrine of error in extremis in collisions? Apply NCC: 10 years under a written K, 5
o There are three zones in collision: years if suing under tort
First time up to the moment when risk of collision 3. Delay in the delivery of the goods
begins o IMPT: COGSA doesnt apply to misdelivery and delayed
Second when risk of collision begins until the delivery. COGSA only applies to non-delivery and damaged
moment it becomes a practical certainty goods.
Third when collision is certain up to the time of $500/carton limit
impact o BUT if the nature and value of the goods are stated in the bill
o Thus, even when a ship with right of way suddenly changes its of lading and the BOL indicates this greater amount, the ship
course during third zone, in an effort to avoid collision due to owner is liable for that greater amount
the other vessels fault, the act is in extremis and cannot It must apply on the BOL itself, not a mere reference
create responsibility on the part of the former (meaning, since to another document
its a useless effort, the ship with right of way must not be Compare the prescriptive periods:
penalized for it). o Code of commerce:
Period to file a claim:
Carriage of goods by sea act/COC Immediately if damage is apparent
Within 24 hours if damage is not apparent
When does the COGSA apply?
What is the caveat?
o Shipment from foreign country to the Philippines
o For both cases, the claim must be
o It is valid for parties in inter-island shipping to stipulate that the
made before the payment of the
COGSA applies
transportation charge
Even if the cargo owner did not file a claim, it can still sue. Filing a
Prescription for court claim
claim is not a condition precedent.
Claim is a condition precedent
1 year period to file a case
For non-delivery or misdelivery:
o Count the one year from the last day delivery was made (if
o Within 6 years if there is no BOL
unloaded Mon-Wed, count from Wed)
o Within 10 years if there is a BOL
o If the goods were not delivered, count it from the last day the
o COGSA:
vessel was here and could have delivered the goods
Claim is not a condition precedent. But periods are
o Does the provision in the civil code that the filing of the
here anyway:
claim interrupts the prescriptive period apply?
Immediately if damage is apparent
No, it does not. Public policy dictates expeditious
Within 3 days from delivery if damages is not
disposition of the cases under COGSA.
o Can the consignee-insured sue the insurer instead? apparent
No. This is a circumvention of the rule. The insurer Prescription for court claim
will step into his shoes and will find himself barred Within 1 year form delivery or when the
from recovery. goods should have been delivered

116
Public service law o 1. Applicant must be Filipino or corp/association organized in
the Philippines and 60% Filipino
What are not public utilities: o 2. Applicant must prove public service and interest is promoted
o In the old law, ice plants were regulated as public utility, but o 3. Applicant is financially capable
when the PSC was abolished, there is no more body regulating What is the prior operator rule?
them. o Before allowing a new applicant to come in, a prior operator
o In case of tricycles, it is now the municipalities/cities who issue must first be given the chance to expand his service
certificates of public convenience o Provided that his service is efficient, to prevent ruinous
o A shipyard is not a public utility, because you have to render competition
services to the public. A shipyard does not. Not all competition is ruinous competition, but the
The law mentions entities that are not public utilities: returns in income should drastically lower the income
o Warehouses of the prior operator that he loses a lot of money
o Vehicles drawn by animals o Exceptions?
o Bancas, tugboats, lighters 1. Prior operator is operating less units than
o Tricycles authorized
o Pedal-driven pedicabs 2. Operator denies there is a need to expand his
o Public utilities operated by national or local government service
Ex. PNR, Olongapo City power plant 3. The old operator did not apply until a new applicant
But these are regulated by appropriate regulatory emerged
agency 4. Service of the prior operator must be deficient
Can foreigners own public utility properties? 5. Prior operator given a chance to expand but failed
o Mere ownership of the properties used by public utilities does to do so
not make one a public utility. So a foreign entity can own the 6. Abandoned his service
LRT facilities and lease it out. 7. Routes are different, although partially overlapping
In case of radio and telecommunication companies, what is Who has the burden of proof to establish need for public
required? transportation service?
o A legislative franchise. What is granted is a certificate of o Always the applicant
necessity and public convenience. Unlawful acts:
o If legislative franchise is not required, its just a certificate of o 1. Provide unsafe or inadequate service
public convenience. o 2. Charge rates not authorized
o So: if the legislative grants a franchise, its a CNPC. If no Up to how long is suspension allowed?
legislative franchise is needed and what is just needed is o Director can suspend up to 30 days the certificate of authority.
authorization given by the regulatory body, its a CPC. Acts requiring commission approval:
When can a CPC be revoked? o 1. Fixing rates
o 1. Violation or refusal to comply with order, rule or regulation of BUT Usually regulatory agencies are allowed to issue
the authority provisional rate increases
o 2. Holder is just a dummy This needs no hearing. Reason: they are temporary
o 3. Holder ceases operations or abandons services by nature and subject to adjustment after final
Requirements to get a Certificate of Public convenience? hearing.

117
o 2. Construct, maintain, operate new units to extend facilities o Same file with the court if you want to question how Meralco
Somebody had a certificate of public convenience for arrived at its calculations and to ask for an explanation on the
inter-island shipping and had one vessel which was particulars.
indicated. It became unseaworthy, and he sold the If a customer claims that his service of electricity was improperly
CPC. The sale is void because there was no valid disconnected, where does he file?
subject matter of the sale. o With the ERC, which has the power to direct the power
NOTE: the CPC indicates what units will be used. If companies to reconnect the service
you replace the unit you have to get approval. Generally: need 72 hour notice prior to disconnection of service
o 3. Increase capitalization o EPIRA provision
o 4. Sell, mortgage, lease, encumber its CPC and properties If a customer was caught in flagrante delicto using a
o Sale of units covered by a CPC without commission jumper, the service can be disconnected immediately.
approval valid? o Requisites?
Yes, but only between the parties and not to third 1. Caught in flagrante delicto
persons. When the owner was not present and just his
What is the standard that should be used when an admin body househelper was, there, not in flagrante
fixes rates of public utilities? 2. A representative of the ERC or officer of the law
o The only standard is that it must be reasonable and just. must be present when the inspection was conducted
o Factors considered: When is notice and hearing required?
1. Rate of return (usually 12%) o 1. Issuance of CPC/CNPC
2. Rate base o 2. Fixing standards and qualifications
3. Return itself or computed revenue to be earned by o 3. Fixing standards of measuring quantity
the public utility o 4. Establishment of rules to secure accuracy of meters and
There is a circular saying that provincial buses can charge more or less measuring appliances
with allowed variance of up to 15% in costs. Is this valid? o 5. Order to compel operators to furnish proper service
o No, because this is undue delegation. o 6. Allowing extension of facilities
What is the fair rate of return for investment? When is notice and hearing not required?
o 12% - citing US jurisprudence o 1. Investigation of public utilities
o But the SC also approved using present value of properties o 2. Valuation of properties of public utilities
used to render public service as basis o 3. Examination and test of measuring appliances
o Meralco case: Court adopted the present value of the assets o 4. Grant of special permits to make extra or special trips in
used to render services as basis to determine rate of return. territories specified in the certificate
Now and then, this is why power plants can submit adjusted o 5. Investigation of accidents
rates because they just had their assets reappraised, and o 6. Compel compliance with law and regulations
these increased in value. Kabit system is this legal?
If a customer claims he was overcharged, where does he file? o No, because someone not financially capable to render public
o With the courts service will be able to do so. So to protect the public, the
o NOT with regulatory agency, because this does not involve actual operator and ostensible operator (grantee of franchise)
rate-fixing. are SOLIDARILY liable to victims.

118
o But the ostensible operator (with the franchise) can sue the o 6. Any other act that implies continuity of business dealings for
actual operator for indemnity. commercial gain or pursuant to objective of the organization
o Can the ostensible operator sue the actual operator to o Does not include:
recover units which were the subject of Kabit system? 1. Mere investment as SH in domestic firm
No. They are in pari delicto. You cant come to court 2. Exercising rights as SH or having nominee
with unclean hands. director/officer in that corporation
o Kabit system jurisprudence talks about liabilities to third 3. Appointing representative/distributor that acts in its
parties. So if a kabit jeepney is hit by a truck from behind, the own name
truck is still liable. Define export enterprise:
If a taxi was used as a get-away vehicle by robbers, can the CPC o Enterprise where the manufacturer, processor, or service
be cancelled? (including tourism) enterprise exports at least 60% of its output
o No, not unless there is proof of collusion. o Or purchase-and-export of at least 60% of the products
Define domestic market enterprise:
o Enterprise which produces goods for sale or renders service to
Foreign investments act the domestic market entirely, or export fails to consistently
reach at least 60% of its output
Is there need for prior approval before a non-Philippine enterprise
What is the policy of the FIA? may invest or do business in the Philippines?
o To attract and promote foreign investments in activities that o None. The enterprise just has to register with the SEC or the
contribute to national development and socio-economic BTRCP (for sole proprietorships, the Bureau of Trade
development of the country, to the extent allowed by the Regulation and Consumer Protection).
Constitution o The SEC or BTRCP cannot limit the amount of investment
o In general, no restrictions on foreign investments, except for made by the firm.
industries in the negative list, but foreign firms are encouraged Of course, subject to constitutional limitations and the
to undertake measures to gradually improve Philippine negative lists.
participation in the enterprise o If they seek incentives, register with the BOI.
Define foreign investment: What is the rule on foreign investments in export-oriented
o Equity investment by non-Philippine nationals in the form of enterprises?
foreign exchange or assets actually transferred to the o Can be up to 100%, if not on the negative lists
Philippines, and duly registered with the BSP which shall o If the export-oriented enterprise is not a Philippine national,
assess/appraise the other assets other than foreign exchange register with BOI, which will check compliance with the 60%
Define doing business: export requirement, and require reduction of domestic sales if
o 1. Soliciting orders they fail to comply, under threat of cancellation of registration
o 2. Service contracts by the SEC/BTRCP.
o 3. Opening offices whether liaison offices or branches What is the rule on foreign investments in domestic market
o 4. Appointing representatives staying in the Philippines 180 enterprises?
days or more o Can be up to 100%, if not prohibited or limited in the
o 5. Participating in management of domestic business Constitution or negative lists
Negative lists:

119
o Board of Investments draws up negative list A and B. o Presentment for payment not necessary to charge the primarily
o List A: covers business enterprises reserved for Filipinos by liable person
the Constitution and specific laws. Maker and acceptor
o List B: commercial activities which are nationalized and: If the instrument is payable in special place and he is
1. Defense-related activities due to national security able and willing to pay there at maturity = such
reasons willingness is equivalent to tender of payment
Unless approved by the Sec. of National What does this imply?
Defense o If the person primarily liable is there
2. Activities which impact public health and morals on the place where it is payable on
Ex. manufacture and sale of dangerous the stated time, holder loses right to
drugs (since there are drugs that are recover interest due subsequent to
regulated, not totally prohibited) maturity + costs of collection
3. Small and medium sized domestic enterprises o BUT he does not lose the right to
where the paid in capital is less than $200,000 get paid
But if it involves highly-advanced o But for those secondarily liable (indorsers and drawer) there
technologies (approved by DOST) or they is need for presentment for payment
employ at least 50 employees the paid up What if the holder does not make presentment to
capital can be at least $100,000 the person primarily liable?
o Outside of these two lists, its open to all foreigners. Those secondarily liable are discharged
What is the right of Natural Born Filipinos and naturalized citizens? But he can still go after the person primarily
o They have the same rights as Filipinos although they have lost liable
their citizenship as to investments. So, the bottomline: the instrument must be
o Ex. in rural banks presented for payment on date it is due to
o Natural born Filipinos who lost their citizenships can acquire up charge the secondarily liable persons see
to 3 hectares of rural land or 500 sq. m. of urban land Sec. 71 for special rules on when an
o Cannot acquire more than 2 lots, which must be in different instrument must be presented
municipalities or cities o What is presentment?
Production of BOE to drawee for acceptance or
payment, or acceptor for payment, or of a PN to the
maker for payment
Annex 1: in-depth discussion of presentment, dishonor, o What constitutes presentment?
acceptance in NIL 1. Personal demand for payment
2. Readiness to present the note and surrender it if
paid
Presentment for payment Sec 71
o Instrument not payable on demand
When is presentment for payment necessary? When is it not Make presentment on date due
necessary? o instrument payable on demand
Must be presented within reasonable time from issue

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If its a BOE, you make it after a reasonable time after 2) payment refused on some other ground
last negotiation Ex. no funds, and not because it was not
What does negotiation here cover? shown
o Negotiation for value, not Sec 75
negotiation for collection between o Presentment where instrument payable at bank must be
banks made during banking hours. Law assumes that the bank will
Sec 72 when presentment is sufficient be the source of the funds.
o REQUISITES: o But if presentment is made beyond banking hours, it is valid if
1. Made by holder or agent the funds will not come from the bank, as long as it falls on the
2. Reasonable hour on business day date of maturity.
3. At proper place defined Sec 76-78
4. To person primarily liable o Applies when principal debtors is:
Is absent/inaccessible to any person found Dead
in place where presentment is made Liable as partners
o There is a wife who presented a negotiable certificate of time Liable as Joint debtors
deposit. Bank refused to pay her because they paid the o If there is an address stipulated, pay there.
husband. HELD: it was not presented by the husband, but the o If dead, give to executor/admin
wife. Bank should pay the wife. If there is one, and he can be found with reasonable
Sec 73 proper place for presentment diligence
o If there is a stipulation where presentment must be made, it o If partners, to any of the partners
must be made there. Even if dissolved already
o If none provided, but address of maker is stated, go there o If joint debtors, to all of them
o If none provided, to usual place of business/residence When presentment is not required to charge those secondarily liable:
o Wherever he may be found/last known place of o DRAWER presentment not required to charge the drawer
business/residence when there is no reasonable expectation that the drawee or
Sec 74 acceptor will pay the instrument
o NI must be exhibited to the person from whom payment is Ex. knows there are no funds or there is stoppage of
demanded payment
o So he can check genuineness o INDORSER when instrument was made/accepted for
o This is why telephone as demand is not allowed indorsers accommodation, and indorser has no reason to
o First Pacific (?) Check negotiated by car dealer to financing expect it will be paid if presented
company. When the instrument not paid, company sued Fortuitous event excuses delay in presentment
maker and indorser. Indorser said he was discharged because Presentment for PAYMENT excused if:
there was no proper presentment for payment. HELD: Letter o 1. Cannot be done even after reasonable diligence
of demand is not sufficient. Law requires that the instrument o 2. Drawee is fictitious person
be shown to the maker. Therefore, presentment not valid and o 3. Waiver of presentment express or implied
indorsement is discharged. When is an instrument dishonored by non-payment?
o Failure excused on two grounds: o 1. Duly presented for payment and payment is refused or
1) Instrument was lost cannot be obtained

121
o 2. Presentment is excused and it is overdue and unpaid o 3. By the debtor, in GF and w/o notice that the holders title is
What is the effect of dishonor by non-payment? defective
o Under the law, the moment it is dishonored, there is
immediately a right of recourse against those secondarily Notice of dishonor
liable. NO NEED to go to the primarily liable.
Sec 85 Sec 89 dishonor
o If payable in a fixed period, it must be paid on that day o Give notice of dishonor
o If on a Sunday or holiday, then go to next business day o Any party may be compelled to pay it to the holder with right of
o If on a Saturday reimbursement
On next business day. Because even if some offices o ABCDE
hold business on Saturday, they are usually half day. D giving notice to B will benefit E
The law wants a whole business day o Notice given by a holder benefits all subsequent holders and
Except instruments payable on demand can prior parties that have right of recourse against the one given
present before 12 noon, Saturday, if it is not a holiday notice against
o Contrast: o Notice may be given by holder himself or agent of the holder.
Ex. Payable on Friday. But it was declared a public Sec 90 Who can give notice of dishonor
holiday. So it becomes Saturday. But the law says o 1. Holder
present it on next business day. So Monday. o 2. Agent of holder
Ex. BUT if it is payable on demand then the o 3. Party to the instrument who may be compelled to pay the
maker/acceptor MUST pay provided it is presented on holder, but only to those other parties he may seek
working hours of Saturday. reimbursement from
Sec 86 o 4. Agent of such party
o What about strangers?
o Time exclude first day, include last day
Cannot give notice, except as agents
Sec 87 when instrument is payable at a bank
o Who is considered a stranger?
o Implied: that it is an order to the bank to pay for account of the
Party discharged from the instrument
principal debtor
Person primarily liable who dishonored the instrument
o First National bank: PN payable at FNB. Maker had sufficient
funds. But holder did not show up at day of maturity. Dilly- Sec 91
dallied then the maker became insolvent. Had he shown up o Notice may be given by a party or an agent
by then, he would have been paid. HELD: No. The fact o Agent need not be authorized by the party
remains that he is the maker, so he is primarily liable, and Because this is beneficial
should pay. o If the agent wants to give notice, on a instrument dishonored
o N.B. Remember, failure to make proper presentment only on Monday, two options:
discharges those secondarily liable. The primarily liable A) notify principal
person is still liable, although the holder may not claim interest On Tuesday
subsequent to maturity and costs of collection. Principal has until Wednesday to notify
Sec 88 Payment in due course secondarily liable parties
o 1. At or after maturity B) notify parties who are secondarily liable
o 2. To the holder o If agent receives notice of dishonor, he must be authorized

122
Because this is prejudicial o Sec 105 if notice was duly addressed and deposited in the
Form of notice: post-office, due notice is deemed given
o In writing or oral o What is deposit in the post office?
As long as it sufficiently describes the instrument and Deposited in any branch of the P.O.
indicates that it has been dishonored Deposited in any P.O. box
Misdescription does not vitiate notice unless the party Sec 108: WHERE notice must be sent
to whom it is given is in fact misled o 1. Post office nearest to residence or where he is accustomed
o Personal or through mail to receiving letters
o If written, need not be signed o 2. To place of business or residence
In sufficient written notice may be supplemented by o 3. Place where he is sojourning
verbal/oral communication o If notice is actually received, although not according to
Rule as to jointly liable parties: these provisions, what happens?
o If partners? It is still valid
Notice to one is notice to all When can there be waiver of notice of dishonor?
o If joint payees or joint indorsees who indorse? o 1. Before actual time for giving it comes
Sec 68 treats them as solidarily liable o 2. Or after failure to give it
o If joint drawers or joint accommodation indorsers, and o Can waiver be implied?
others not covered by 68? Yes.
Give notice to all Who is affected by a waiver in an instrument?
Sec 103 and 104 time within which notice must given o If written on the instrument all the parties
o Know the difference in rules where parties reside in the same o If written over a signature just that person
place (103) or different places (104) Waiver of protest
o SAME PLACE: o Includes presentment and notice of dishonor (steps to hold a
1. If given at place of business before close of person secondarily liable)
business hours the next day When is notice of DH not needed to be given to drawer?
2. If given at residence before usual hours of rest o 1. Drawer and drawee are the same person
the next day o 2. Drawee is fictitious person or has no capacity to contract
3. If by mail sufficient to reach him the next day o 3. Drawer is the person to whom instrument was presented for
o DIFF PLACES: payment
1. If by post office in time to go by mail the next day; Ex. C went to the office of X, the drawee, but he was
if no mail at a convenient hour that day, the next mail not there. But R, the drawer, who was the office
2. If not by post office within the time it would have manager, was there. And the drawer dishonored.
been received in due course had it been sent by post o 4. Drawer has no right to expect that drawee or acceptor will
office honor
o N.B. This same time is counted again, after a party receives Ex. X withdrew her money from her bank account and
notice of dishonor, to give that party a chance to give notice to issued a check to cover for expected proceeds of
antecedent parties jewelry she had to sell. She failed to sell the jewelry.
What is the effect of miscarriage in mails? The check was in the hands of Y who had ABC
investment house rediscount it. The check bounced.

123
HELD: X had no right to expect the bank will pay Acceptance assent to order of drawer
because she withdrew all her funds. o Must be in writing and signed by drawee
o 5. Drawer countermanded payment What if the drawee refuses to sign?
Meaning, drawer stopped payment. If drawee refused to write and sign, holder
o N.B. In all these cases, the drawer KNEW that there was or may treat it as dishonored
would be dishonor. What if the acceptance is written on a different
When is notice of DH not needed to be given to indorser? sheet of paper?
o 1. Drawee is fictitious person or has no capacity to contract It does not bind the drawee, except to
and the indorser is aware of this fact upon indorsement someone to whom it is shown and receives
o 2. Indorser is the person to whom presentment for payment the bill for value upon faith thereof
was made NB: this applies when the bill exists as of
o 3. Instrument was made or accepted for his accommodation time of acceptance
What if there is a promise to accept in writing?
Drawer Indorser Deemed an actual acceptance in favor of
Drawer and drawee same person
those who receive the bill for value upon
Drawee fictitious or no capacity Drawee is fictitious or no capacity,
and indorser knows faith thereof
Drawer is to whom instrument was Indorser is to whom instrument was NB: this applies for bills that do not exist yet
presented for payment presented for payment when the promise is made (Ex. BOE
Drawer has no right to expect it will Made or accepted for indorsers pursuant to a LOC)
be paid by drawee accommodation (same principle: no o Cannot be other than payment of money
right to expect it will be paid) Must accept within 24 hours from presentment
Drawer countermanded
o Acceptance deemed done on date of presentment
o When is a bill deemed accepted?
If an instrument was not accepted, and notice of dishonor by non-
Failed to act on it within 24 hours
acceptance is given, is there need to give notice of dishonor by
Does the drawee have a right to retain the
non-payment?
bill for the whole 24 hours?
o No.
o No. The holder can ask for it back.
o What is the exception?
But the drawee will still have the
If it was accepted in the meantime.
rest of the 24 hours to decide.
Failure to give notice of dishonor by non-acceptance does not prejudice
Destroys the bill
rights of a HIDC subsequent to the omission.
NB: destruction must be on purpose
o Ex. A drew a BOE payable to B. B indorsed to C. C presented
o What are the special situations when can the drawee
the BOE for acceptance to X. X dishonored the instrument. C
accept pa rin?
did not give notice of dishonor to A or B. C indorsed the
1. Even before it is signed by the drawer
instrument to D, a HIDC. D will not be precluded by Cs failure
2. Even when it is incomplete
to give notice of DH to A and B.
3. When it is overdue
Acceptance 4. Dishonored by prior non-acceptance or non-
payment

124
What is the special rule if the bill was dishonored Special rule when there is little time to present for acceptance
by prior non-acceptance, but it was accepted before presenting for payment, where presentment for acceptance
thereafter? is needed?
The holder can consider the date of first o Delay caused by prior presentment for acceptance is excused
presentment as date of acceptance and does not discharge those secondarily liable
Kinds of acceptance: When is presentment for acceptance excused?
o 1. General o 1. Drawee is dead, has absconded, fictitious, lacks capacity
Includes local but not confined only at a particular o 2. Cannot make presentment even after reasonable diligence
place o 3. Although presentment is irregular, acceptance refused on
o 2. Qualified some other ground
Conditional What if a bill is DH by non-acceptance?
Partial o Immediate recourse to secondarily liable parties avail; no need
Local (ONLY at a particular place) for presentment for payment
As to time
Only some of drawees, but not all [Step-by-step guide on presentment for acceptance, dishonor,
What is the right of parties as to qualified acceptance? payment]
o Holder can deem it DH by non-acceptance
o If holder allows qualified acceptance, indorser and drawer Step 1: Presentment for acceptance required if
discharged o 1. BOE is payable after sight, or acceptance is needed to fix
Unless they assent the maturity of the instrument
Failure to dissent is assent o 2. BOE expressly requires presentment for acceptance
o 3. BOE payable elsewhere apart from residence or place of
Presentment for acceptance business of drawee
OTHER OPTION May choose to negotiate it within a reasonable time
When is presentment for acceptance needed? Consequence: will discharge drawer and all other indorsers
o 1. Bill payable after sight or acceptance needed to fix maturity EXCEPTIONS no need to present if/or treated as dishonored if:
of instrument o 1. Drawee is dead, has absconded, fictitious, or lacks capacity
o 2. Bill expressly requires acceptance to contract
o 3. Bill is payable elsewhere than residence or place of o 2. Presentment cannot be made even after reasonable
business of drawee diligence
o What about other cases? o 3. Although presentment is irregular, acceptance was refused
No need for presentment for acceptance to render on some other ground
any party to the bill liable Step 2: Give notice of dishonor by non-acceptance to secondarily liable
What is the option of the holder? persons
o Must present the bill for acceptance within reasonable time o EXCEPT, no need to give notice: if instrument was
o Or negotiate the bill within reasonable time made/accepted for his accommodation and he has no reason
What is the consequence of failure to present for acceptance? to expect the instrument will be paid if presented
o Discharges those secondarily liable o AND will not prejudice rights of HIDC after omission to give
Time for presentment same as presentment for payment notice of dishonor

125
o IF foreign bill, o Is this mandatory?
Protest for non-acceptance or protest for non- Nope
payment needed o What is the purpose?
Except To inform the drawer/indorsers that the drawee is
1. If instrument was made/accepted for his insolvent and therefore they should prepare to pay
accommodation and he has no reason to When is protest excused or dispensed with?
expect the instrument will be paid if o Dispensed with for same grounds notice of DH is dispensed
presented with
2. Delay is excused for fortuitous o Excused for fortuitous event
circumstances When is protest also done?
Except: will not prejudice rights of HIDC after o When bill is lost, destroyed, wrongly detained protest made
omission to protest on copy/written particulars of the bill
Step 3: Give notice of dishonor by non-payment to secondarily liable
persons (if dishonored by non-payment) Bills in set
o See notes above
o EXCEPT: When presentment for payment is excused Main Principle: each part of the bill, numbered and referring to the other
1. Drawee is fictitious person parts, the whole of the parts constitute one bill
2. Presentment cannot be made even after o [usually, it is done to ensure that bills can be collected from
reasonable diligence even if one part is lost in the mail or so]
3. Waiver of presentment, express or implied o [So usually bills in a set are several copies of the same thing,
sent separately]
Protest What if different parts are negotiated to different HIDCs?
o The one whose title accrues first is the true owner
Protest necessary for DH of a bill that on its face appears to be a foreign o But the one who gets acceptance or payment first is the one
bill who will be able to collect
Made by Notary Public or respectable resident + two or more credible Indorser of two different parts is liable on every such part
witnesses How should the drawee accept?
When must it be done? o Accept on any part, and on one part ONLY. If he accepts on
o Day of DH multiple parts and these are severed, he is liable on all parts.
o If bill is noted in the notarial register, protest may be made o If he pays and did not get back the part with the acceptance,
anytime and it once again falls in the hands of an HIDC, he can still be
Where? liable
o Place of DH Discharge of one part is discharge of all
o Except when expressly payable at the residence/business of
another person apart from the drawee
What is protest for better security?
o If the drawee was adjudged bankrupt or insolvent, or made
assignment for benefit of creditors even before the bill
matures

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