Jul 8, 2013

Filinvest v. Phil. Acetylene Digest, G.R. No. L-50449

Special Form of Payment - Dacion

Filinvest v. Phil. Acetylene
G.R. No. L-50449 January 30, 1982

Facts:
Phil. Acetylene (Defendant) purchased a vehicle through a Deed of Sale from Alexander Lim payable on installment. The balance is to be paid under a promissory note with the said vehicle as the subject of a chattel mortgage to secure the obligation. Subsequently, Lim assigned his rights to the vehicle to appellee corporation (Filinvest). Phil. Acetylene defaulted after it failed to pay nine (9) successive installments. The petitioner through a demand letter informed the defendant to make the full payment plus interests and charges or return the mortgaged property. As a result, the defendant returned the vehicle together with the document "Voluntary Surrender with Special Power of Attorney To Sell" by appellant on March 12, 1973 and confirmed to by Filinvest’s vice-president.

Filinvest then informed appellant thru a letter that it cannot sell the vehicle due to its unpaid taxes in the amount of P70,122. On the last portion of the said letter, appellee requested the appellant to update its account by paying the instalments in arrears and accruing interest in the amount of P4,232.21 on or before April 9, 1973. On May 8, 1973, appellee, in a letter, offered to deliver back the motor vehicle to the appellant but the latter refused to accept it, so the appellee instituted an action for collection of a sum of money with damages in the CFI of Manila.

Phil. Acetylene argued that appellee has no cause of action against it since its obligation towards the appellee was extinguished when it returned the mortgaged property, and that assuming that the return of the property did not extinguish its obligation, it was nonetheless justified in refusing payment since the appellee is not entitled to recover the same due to the breach of warranty committed by the original vendor-assignor Alexander Lim.

Issue: whether or not the return of the mortgaged motor vehicle to the appellee by virtue of a voluntary surrender by the appellant totally extinguished and/or cancelled the obligation

RULING: No. No dacion en pago here since there’s nothing in the evidence to show that Filinvest consented or intended that the mere delivery to and acceptance by him of the vehicle be construed as actual payment or more specifically, dacion en pago. The mere return of the mortgaged motor vehicle by the mortgagor (herein appellant) to the mortgagee, (appellee), does not constitute dation in payment or dacion en pago in the absence, express or implied of the true intention of the parties. Dacion en pago, (according to Manresa) is the transmission of the ownership of a thing by the debtor to the creditor as an accepted equivalent of the performance of obligation.  In dacion en pago, as a special mode of payment, the debtor offers another thing to the creditor who accepts it as equivalent of payment of an outstanding debt. The undertaking really partakes in one sense of the nature of sale, that is, the creditor is really buying the thing or property of the debtor, payment for which is to be charged against the debtor's debt. As such, the essential elements of a contract of sale, namely, consent, object certain, and cause or consideration must be present. In its modern concept, what actually takes place in dacion en pago is an objective novation of the obligation where the thing offered as an accepted equivalent of the performance of an obligation is considered as the object of the contract of sale, while the debt is considered as the purchase price.  In any case, common consent is an essential prerequisite, be it sale or innovation to have the effect of totally extinguishing the debt or obligation.

The evidence fails to show that Filinvest consented, or at least intended, that the mere delivery to, and acceptance by him, of the mortgaged motor vehicle be construed as actual payment, more specifically dation in payment or dacion en pago. The fact that the mortgaged motor vehicle was delivered to him does not necessarily mean that ownership thereof, as juridically contemplated by dacion en pago, was transferred from appellant to appellee. In the absence of clear consent of appellee to the proferred special mode of payment, there can be no transfer of ownership of the mortgaged motor vehicle from appellant to appellee. If at all, only transfer of possession of the mortgaged motor vehicle took place, for it is quite possible that appellee, as mortgagee, merely wanted to secure possession to forestall the loss, destruction, fraudulent transfer of the vehicle to third persons, or its being rendered valueless if left in the hands of the appellant.


Finally the Voluntary Surrender with SPA to Sell executed reveals that the possession of the mortgaged motor vehicle was voluntarily surrendered by the appellant to the appellee authorizing the latter to look for a buyer and sell the vehicle in behalf of the former who retains ownership thereof, and to apply the proceeds of the sale to the mortgage indebtedness, with the undertaking of the appellant to pay the difference, if any, between the selling price and the mortgage obligation. With the stipulated conditions as stated, the appellee, in essence was constituted as a mere agent to sell the motor vehicle which was delivered to the appellee, not as its property. There is no estoppel on part of Filinvest to demand payment from the unpaid obligation since it never accepted the mortgaged motor vehicle in cull satisfaction of the mortgaged debt.

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