Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence


Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence > Year 1907 > July 1907 Decisions > G.R. No. L-3704 December 12, 1907 - LA COMPAÑIA MARITIMA v. FRANCISCO MUÑOZ

009 Phil 326:




PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. L-3704. December 12, 1907. ]

LA COMPAÑIA MARITIMA, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. FRANCISCO MUÑOZ, ET AL., Defendants-Appellees.

Rosado, Sanz and Opisso, for Appellant.

Haussermann, Cohn and Williams, for Appellees.

SYLLABUS


1. PARTNERSHIP; INDUSTRIAL PARTNERS. — In an ordinary general merchantile partnership the industrial partners liable to third parties for the debts and obligations of the partnership.

2. ID; ID; SALARY TO PARTNER. — The mere payment of a salary to one of the partners of a concern and the subsequent discontinuance of such salary does not destroy the interest of the partner nor relieve him from partnership liability.

3. ID; ACTION; JOINDER. — Both the partnership and the separate partners thereof may be joined in one action, but the private property of the latter can not be taken in payment of the firm debts until the common property of the concern is exhausted. (Art. 237, Code of Commerce.)


D E C I S I O N


WILLARD, J. :


The plaintiff brought this action in the Court of First Instance of Manila against the partnership of Francisco Muñoz & Sons, and against Francisco Muñoz de Bustillo, Emilio Muñoz de Bustillo, and Rafael Naval to recover the sum of P26,828.30, with interest and costs. Judgment was rendered in the court below acquitting Emilio Muñoz de Bustillo and Rafael Naval of the complaint, and in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant partnership, Francisco Muñoz & Sons, and Francisco Muñoz de Bustillo form the sum of P26,828.30 with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 31st day of March, 1905, and costs. From this judgment the plaintiff appealed.

On the 31st day of March, 1905, the defendants Francisco Muñoz, Emilio Muñoz, and Rafael Naval formed on ordinary general mercantile partnership under the name of Francisco Muñoz & Sons for the purpose of carrying on the mercantile business in the Province of Albay which had formerly been carried on by Francisco Muñoz. Francisco Muñoz was a capitalist partner and Emilio Muñoz and Rafael Naval were industrial partners.

It is said in the decision of the court below that in the articles of partnership it was called an ordinary, general mercantile partnership, but that from the article it does not appear to be such a partnership. In the brief of the appellees it is also claimed that it is not an ordinary, general commercial partnership. We see nothing in the case to support either the statement of the court below in its decision or the claim of the appellees in their brief. In the articles of partnership signed by the partners it is expressly stated that they have agreed to form, and do form, an ordinary, general mercantile partnership. The object of the partnership, as stated in the fourth paragraph of the articles, is a purely mercantile one and all the requirements of the Code of Commerce in reference to such partnership were complied with. The articles of partnership were recorded in the mercantile registry in the Province of Albay. If it should be held that the contract made in this case did not create an ordinary, general mercantile partnership we do not see how one could be created.

The claim of the appellees that Emilio Muñoz contributed nothing to the partnership, either in property, money, or industry, can not be sustained. He contributed as much as did the other industrial partner, Rafael Naval, the difference between the two being that Rafael Naval was entitled by the articles of agreement to a fixed salary of P2,500 as long as he was in charge of the branch office established at Ligao. If he had left that branch office soon after the partnership was organized, he would have been in the same condition then that Emilio Muñoz was from the beginning. Such a change would have deprived him of the salary P2,500, but would not have affected in any way the partnership nor have produced the effect of relieving him from liability as a partner. The argument of the appellees seems to be that, because no yearly or monthly salary was assigned to Emilio Muñoz, he contributed nothing to the partnership and received nothing from it. By the articles themselves he was to receive at the end of five years one-eighth of the profits. It can not be said, therefore, that he received nothing from the partnership. The fact that the receipt of this money was postponed for five years is not important. If the contention of the appellees were sound, it would result that, where the articles of partnership provided for a distribution of profits at the end of each year, but did not assign any specific salary to an industrial partner during that time, he would not be a member of the partnership. Industrial partners, by signing the articles, agree to contribute their work to the partnership and article 138 of the Code of Commerce prohibits them from engaging in other work except by the express consent of the partnership. With reference to civil partnerships, section 1683 of the Civil Code relates to the same matter.

It is also said in the brief of the appellees that Emilio Muñoz was entirely excluded from the management of the business. It rather should be said that he excluded himself from such management, for he signed the articles of partnership by the terms of which the management was expressly conferred by him and the others upon the persons therein named. That partners in their articles can do this, admits of no doubt. Article 125 of the Code of Commerce requires them to state the partners to whom the management is intrusted. This right is recognized also in article 132. In the case of Reyes v. The Compania Maritima (3 Phil. Rep., 519) the articles of association provided that the directors for the first eight years should be certain persons named therein. This court not only held that such provision was valid but also held that those directors could not be removed from office during the eight years, even by a majority vote of all the stockholders of the company.

Emilio Muñoz was, therefore, a general partner, and the important question in the case is whether, as such general partner, he is liable to third persons for the obligations contracted by the partnership, or whether he relieved from such liability, either because he is an industrial partner or because he was so relieved by the express terms of the articles of partnership.

Paragraph 12 of the articles of partnership is as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"Twelfth. All profits arising from mercantile transactions carried on, as well as such as may be obtained from the sale of property and other assets which constitute the corporate capital, shall be distributed, on completion of the term of five years agreed to for the continuation of the partnership, in the following manner: Three-fourths thereof for the capitalist partner Francisco Muñoz de Bustillo and one-eighth thereof for the industrial partner Emilio Muñoz de Bustillo y Carpiso, and the remaining one-eighth thereof for the partner Rafael Naval y Garcia. If, in lieu of profits, losses should result in the winding up of the partnership, the same shall be for the sole and exclusive account of the capitalist partner Francisco Muñoz de Bustillo, without either of the two industrial partners participating in such losses."cralaw virtua1aw library

Articles 140 and 141 of the Code of Commerce are as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"ART. 140. Should there not have been stated in the articles of copartnership the portion of the profits to be received by each partner, said profits shall be divided pro rata, in accordance with the interest each one has on the copartnership, partners who have not contributed any capital, but giving their services, receiving in the distribution the same amount as the partner who contributed the smallest capital."cralaw virtua1aw library

"ART. 141. Losses shall be charged in the same proportion among the partners who have contributed capital, without including those who have not, unless by special agreement the latter have been constituted as participants therein."cralaw virtua1aw library

A comparison of these articles with the twelfth paragraph above quoted will show that the latter is simply a statement of the rule laid down in the former. The article do not, therefore, change the rights of the industrial partners as they are declared by the code, and the question may be reduced to the very simple one namely, Is an industrial partner in an ordinary, general mercantile partnership liable to third persons for the debts and obligations contracted by the partnership?

In limited partnership the Code of Commerce recognizes a difference between general and special partners, but in a general partnership there is no such distinction — all the members are general partners. The fact that some may be industrial and some capitalist partners does not make the members of either of these classes alone such general partners. There is nothing in the code which says that the industrial partners shall be the only general partners, nor is there anything which says that the capitalist partners shall be the only general partners.

Article 127 of the Code of Commerce is as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"All the members of the general copartnership, be they or be they not managing partners of the same, are liable personally and in solidum with all their property for the results of the transactions made in the name and for the account of the partnership, under the signature of the latter, and by a person authorized to make use thereof."cralaw virtua1aw library

Do the words "all the partners" found in this article include industrial partners? The same expression is found in other articles of the code. In article 129 it is said that, if the management of the partnership has not been limited by special act to one of the partners, all shall have the right to participate in the management. Does this mean that the capitalist partners are the only ones who have that right, or does it include also industrial partners? Article 132 provides that, when in the articles of partnership the management has been intrusted to a particular person, he can not be deprived of such management, but that in certain cases the remaining partners may appoint a comanager. Does the phrase "remaining partners" include industrial partners, or is it limited to capitalist partners, and do industrial partners have no right to participate in the selection of the comanager? Article 133 provides that all the partners shall have the right to examine the books of the partnership. Under this article are the capitalist partners the only ones who have such right? Article 135 provides that the partners can not use the firm name in their private business. Does this limitation apply only to capitalist partners or does it extend also to industrial partners? Article 222 provides that a general partnership shall be dissolve by the death of one of the general partners unless it is otherwise provided in the articles. Would such a partnership continue if all the industrial partners should die? Article 229 provides that upon a dissolution of a general partnership it shall be liquidated by the former managers, but, if all the partners do not agree to this, a general meeting shall be called, which shall determine to whom the settlement of the affairs shall be intrusted. Does this phrase "all the partners" include industrial partners, or are the capitalist partners the only ones who have a voice in the selection of a manager during a period of liquidation? Article 237 provides that the private property of the general partners shall not be taken in payment of the obligations of the partnership until its property has been exhausted. Does the phrase "the general partners" include industrial partners?

In all of these articles the industrial partners must be included. It can not have been intended that, in such a partnership as the one in question, where there were two industrial and only one capitalist partner, the industrial partners should have no voice in the management of the business when the articles of partnership were silent on that subject; that when the manager appointed mismanages the business the industrial partners should have no right to appoint a comanager; that they should have no right to examine the books; that they might use the firm name in their private business; or that they have no voice in the liquidation of the business after dissolution. To give a person who contributed no more than, say, P500, these rights and to take them away from a person who contributed his services, worth, perhaps, infinitely more than P500, would be discriminate unfairly against industrial partners.

If the phrase "all the partners" as found in the articles other than article 127 includes industrial partners, then article 127 must include them and they are liable by the terms thereof for the debts of the firm.

But it is said that article 141 expressly declares to the contrary. It is to be noticed in the first place that this article does not say that they shall not be liable for losses. Article 140 declares how the profits shall be divided among the partners. This article simply declares how the losses shall be divided among the partners. The use of the words se imputaran is significant. The verb means abonar una partida a alguno en su cuenta o deducirla de su debito. Article 141 says nothing about third persons and nothing about the obligations of the partnership.

While in this section the word "losses" stand’s alone, yet in other articles of the code, where it is clearly intended to impose the liability to third persons, it is not considered sufficient, but the word "obligations" is added. Thus article 148, in speaking of the liability of limited partners, uses the phrase las obligaciones y perdidas. There is the same use of the two same words in article 153, relating to anonymous partnership. In article 237 the word "obligations" is used and not the word "losses."cralaw virtua1aw library

The claim of the appellees is that this article 141 fixes the liability of the industrial partners to third persons for the obligations of the company. If it does, then it also fixes the liability of the capitalist partners to the same persons for the same obligations. If this article says that industrial partners are not liable for the debts of the concern, it also says that the capitalist partners shall be only liable for such debts in proportion to the amount of the money which they have contributed to the partnership; that is to say, that if there are only two capitalist partners, one of whom has contributed two-thirds of the capital and the other one-third, the latter is liable to a creditor of the company for only one-third of the debt and the former for only two-thirds. It is apparent that, when given this construction, article 141 is directly in conflict with article 127. It is not disputed by the appellees that by the terms of article 127 each one of the capitalist partners is liable for all of the debts, regardless of the amount of his contribution, but the construction which they put upon article 141 makes such capitalist partners liable for only a proportionate part of the debts.

There is no injustice in imposing this liability upon the industrial partners. They have a voice in the management of the business, if no manager has been named in the articles; they share in the profits and as to third persons it is no more than right that they should share in the obligations. It is admitted that if in this case there had been a capitalist partner who had contributed only P100 he would be liable for this entire debt of P26,000.

Our construction of the article is that it relates exclusively to the settlement of the partnership affairs among the partners themselves and has nothing to do with the liability of the partners to third persons; that each one of the industrial partners is liable to third persons for the debts of the firm; that if he has paid such debts out of his private property during the life of the partnership, when its affairs are settled he is entitled to credit for the amount so paid, and if it results that there is not enough property in the partnership to pay him, then the capitalist partners must pay him. In this particular case that view is strengthened by the provisions of article 12, above quoted. There it is stated that if, when the affairs of the partnership are liquidated — that is, at the end of five years — it turns out that there had been losses instead of gains, then the capitalist partner, Francisco Muñoz, shall pay such losses — that is, pay them to the industrial partners if they have been compelled to disburse their own money in payment of the debts of the partnership.

While this is a commercial partnership and must be governed therefore by the rules of the Code of Commerce, yet an examination of the provisions of the Civil Code in reference to partnerships may throw some light upon the question here to be resolved. Articles 1689 and 1691 contain, in substance, the provisions of articles 140 and 141 of the Code of Commerce. It is to be noticed that these articles are found in section 1 of Chapter II [Title VIII] of Book IV. That section treats of the obligations of the partners between themselves. The liability of the partners as to third persons is treated in a distinct section, namely, section 2, comprising articles from 1697 to 1699.

If industrial partners in commercial partnerships are not responsible to third persons for the debts of the firm, then industrial partners in civil partnerships are not. Waiving the question as to whether there can be a commercial partnership composed entirely of industrial partners, it seems clear that there can be such civil partnership, for article 1678 of the Civil Code provides as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"A particular partnership has for its object specified things only, their use of profits, or a specified undertaking, or the exercise of a profession or art."cralaw virtua1aw library

It might very easily happen, therefor, that a civil partnership could be composed entirely of industrial partners. If it were, according to the claim of the appellees, there would be no personal responsibility whatever for the debts of the partnership. Creditors could rely only upon the property which the partnership had, which in the case of a partnership organized for the practice of any art or profession would be practically nothing. In the case of Agustin v. Inocencio, 1 just decided by this court, it was alleged in the complaint, and admitted by the answer —

"That is partnership has been formed without articles of association or capital other than the personal work of each one of the partners, whose profits are to be equally divided among themselves."cralaw virtua1aw library

Article 1675 of the Civil Code is as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"General partnership of profits include all that the partners may acquire by their by their industry or work during the continuation of the partnership.

"Personal or real property which each of the partners may possess at the time of the celebration of the agreement shall continue to be their private property, the usufruct only passing to the partnership."cralaw virtua1aw library

It might very well happen in partnership of this kind that no one of the partners would have any private property and that if they did the usufruct thereof would be inconsiderable.

Having in mind these different cases which may arise in the practice, that construction of the law should be avoided which would enable two persons, each with a large amount of private property, to form and carry on a partnership and, upon the bankruptcy of the latter, to say to its creditors that they contributed no capital to the company but only their services, and that their private property is not, therefore, liable for its debts.

But little light is thrown upon this question by the authorities. No judgment of the supreme court of Spain has been called to our attention, and we have been able to find none which refers in any way to this question. There is, therefore, no authority from the tribunal for saying that an industrial partner is not liable to third persons for the debts of the partnership.

In a work published by Lorenzo Benito in 1889 (Lecciones de derecho mercantil) it is said that industrial partners are not liable for debts. The author, at page 127, divides general partnership into ordinary and irregular. The irregular partnership are those which include one or more industrial partners. It may be said in passing that his views can not apply to this case because the articles of partnership directly state that it is an ordinary partnership and do not state that it is an irregular one. But his view of the law seems to be derived from something other than the Code of Commerce now in force. He says:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

". . . but it has not been very fortunate in sketching the characters of a regular collective partnership (since it says nothing conclusive in reference to the irregular partnership) . . ." (p. 127.)

And again:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"This article would not need to be commented upon were it not because the writer entirely overlooked the fact that there might exist industrial partners who did not contribute with capital in money, credits, or goods, which partners generally participate in the profits but not in the losses, and whose position must also be determined in the articles of copartnership." (p. 128.)

And again:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"The only defect that can be pointed out in this article is the fact that it has been forgotten that in collective partnerships there are industrial partners who, not being jointly liable for the obligations of the copartnership, should not include their names in that of the firm." (p. 129.)

As a logical result of his theory he says that an industrial partner has no right to participate in the administration of the partnership and that his name can not appear in the firm name. In this last respect his view is opposed to that of Manresa, who says (Commentaries on the Spanish Civil Code, vol. 11, p. 330):jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"It only remains to us to state that a partner who contributes his industry to the concern can also confer upon it the name or the corporate name under which such industry should be carried on. In this case, so long as the copartnership lasts, it can enjoy the credit, reputation, and name or corporate name under which such industry is carried on; but upon dissolution thereof the aforesaid name or corporate name pertains to the partner who contributed the same, and he alone is entitled to use it, because such a name or style is an accessory to the work of industrial partner, and upon recovering his work or his industry he also recovers his name or the style under which he exercised his activity. It has thus been decided by the French court of cassation in a decision dated June 6, 1859."cralaw virtua1aw library

In speaking of limited partnerships Benito says (p. 144) that here are found two kinds of partners, one with unlimited responsibility and the other with limited responsibility, but adopting his view as to industrial partners, it should be said that there are three kinds of partners, one with unlimited responsibility, another with limited responsibility, and the third, the industrial partner, with no responsibility at all. In Estasen’s recent publication on mercantile partnerships (Tratado de las Sociedades Mercantiles) he quotes from the work of Benito, but we do not understand that he commits himself to the doctrines therein laid down. In fact, in his former treatise, Instituciones de Derecho Mercantil (vol. 3, pp. 1-99), we find nothing which recognizes the existence of these irregular general partnerships, or the exemption from the liability to third persons of the industrial partners. He says in his latter work (p. 186) that according to Dr. Benito the irregular general partner originated from the desire of the partnership to associate with itself some old clerk or employee as a reward for his services and the interest which he had shown in the affairs of the partnership, giving him in place of a fixed salary a proportionate part of the profits of the business. Article 269 of the Code of Commerce of 1829 relates to this subject and apparently provides that such partners shall not be liable for debts. If this article was the basis for Dr. Benito’s view, it can be so no longer, for it does not appear in the present code. We held in the case of Fortis v. Gutirrez Hermanos (6 Phil. Rep., 100) that a mere agreement of that kind does not make the employee a partner.

An examination of the works of Manresa and Sanchez Roman on the Civil Code, and of Blanco’s Mercantile Law, will shows that no one of these mentions in any way the irregular general partnership spoken of by Dr. Benito, nor is there anything found in any one of these commentaries which in any way indicates that an industrial partner is not liable to third persons for the debts of the partnership. An examination of the French law will also show that no distinction of that kind is therein anywhere made and nothing can be found therein which indicates that the industrial partners are not liable for the debts of the partnership. (Fuzier-Herman, Repertoire de Droit Francais, vol. 34, pp. 256, 361, 510, and 512.)

Our conclusion is upon this branch of the case that neither on principle nor on authority can the industrial partner be relieved from liability to third persons for the debts of the partnership.

It is apparently claimed by the appellee in his brief that one action can not be maintained against the partnership and the individual partners, this claim being based upon the provisions of article 237 of the Code of Commerce which provides that the private property of the partners shall not be taken until the partnership property has been exhausted. But this article furnishes to argument in support of the appellee’s claim. An action can be maintained against the partnership and partners, but the judgment should recognize the rights of the individual partners which are secured by said article 237.

The judgment of the court below is reversed and judgment is ordered against all of the defendants for the sum of P26,828.30, with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent per annum since the 31st day of March, 1905, and for the cost of this action. Execution of such judgment shall not issue against the private property of the defendants Francisco Muñoz, Emilio Muñoz, or Rafael Naval until the property of the defendant Francisco Muñoz & Sons is exhausted. No costs will be allowed to their party in this court. So ordered.

Torres, Johnson, and Tracey, JJ., concur.

Separate Opinions


ARELLANO, C.J., dissenting:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

I consider that the judgment appealed from is entirely in accordance with the law.

The question set up in the majority decision, "In a regular collective commercial company, is an industrial partner liable as to third persons by reason of the debts and obligations contracted by the copartnership?" I decide in a negative sense; he is not; by express provision of the law he can not be held to be liable, save, of course, and agreement to the contrary, which in such case would be a special law, and would set aside the general law.

The basis for the contrary opinion and decision is article 127 of the Code of Commerce:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"All the members of the general copartnership, be they or be they not managing partners of the same, are personally and in solidum liable with all their property for the results of the transactions made in the name and for the account of the partnership, under the signature of the latter, and by a person authorized to take use thereof."cralaw virtua1aw library

Now, do the words "all the members" found in this article include the industrial partners?

At first it would appear that they do. In order to complete such reasoning the following premise will be sufficient: That the industrial partners from the collective partnership; therefore the industrial partners are personally and jointly liable with all their property for the results of the transactions made in the name and for account of the partnership.

But they form the collective partnership in the manner in which our laws allows the same to be formed — that is, by contributing with their industry, not with property.

And the word all, in reference to property, which is common with the three classes of partnership defined by the code, to wit, collective, limited copartnership (comanditaria), and corporation (anonima), gives the rule for such personal and joint liability, which is the purpose of the provision in the above-quoted article.

The above three classes of partnership agree in that property must in each of them be contributed. "The articles of general copartnership must state . . . the capital which each partner contributes in cash, credits, or property, stating the value given the latter or the basis on which their appraisal is to be made." (Art. 125.) "The same statements shall be included in articles of limited copartnerships (compañias en comandita) which are required for those of general copartnerships" — that is, among other things, the capital which each partner contributes. (Art. 145.) "The articles of incorporation (of corporations) must include . . . the corporate capital, stating the value at which property, not cash, contributed has been appraised, or the basis on which the appraisal is to be made; and the number of shares into which the corporate capital is divided and represented." (Art. 151.)

Now, then, "The liability of the members of a corporation for the obligations and losses of the same shall be limited to the funds they contributed or bound themselves to contribute to the corporate capital." (Art. 153.) "The liability of special partners for the obligations and losses of the copartnership shall be limited to the funds which they contributed or bound themselves to contribute to the limited copartnership, with the exception of the sense mentioned in article 147" — that is, if any of them include his name or permit its conclusion in the firm name. (Art. 148, par. 3.) However, in a collective partnership the liability is not limited to the funds or property contributed, but extends to all the property which partners may own within or without the copartnership.

In every mercantile copartnership it is the corporate capital that responds for the obligations of the same; this is elemental. The members of a joint stock, a limited, or a collective company respond with their capital for the obligations of the association; in the joint stock concerns, with their shares; in the limited class, with the amount contributed; in the collective, with their constituted capital. An industrial partner, with what principal sum, share, or quota in the corporate capital does he or can he respond for the obligations of the collective partnership? Evidently with none whatever.

If the capital of the association is exhausted, the extreme case of losses incurred by the company arises, and third persons can not recover the amount of the obligations of the company from the corporate capital, because the latter is sufficient to recover them. Shareholders in the case of a joint stock company, beyond the value of their stock, have no longer to think of any ulterior subsidiary responsibility. Neither do the partners of a limited company. In either case the partners are only liable to the extent of their corporate capital. Collective partners have to respond not only with their corporate capital but also with the whole of their property outside of the association. And it is desired that the industrial partner who, in a collective copartnership, did not primarily respond with his corporate capital, because he had none, shall subsidiary respond with such property as he may have outside of the company, and with which nobody, either within or without the copartnership, had counted upon, since both inside and outside of the company his industry or work only had been reckoned with. Therefore, the word all, of article 127 cited above, simply denoted the extent of the ulterior or subsidiary responsibility, and that which does not appear, which does not materially exist, can hardly be made to apply.

An industrial partner can not engage in transactions of any class whatever, otherwise he would be subject to serious consequences (art. 138), while a capitalist partner, as a rule, may so engage without extending profits or liabilities to the company (arts. 134 and 136); an industrial partner, as regards profits, can only receive in the distribution the same amount as the partner who contributed the smallest amount of capital (art. 140); in the case at bar, one-eighth goes to each of the two industrial partners, three-fourths being for the capitalist, and even at the expiration of the copartnership they run the risk of having the one-eighth of the profits earned in former years absorbed by a total loss incurred during the last year of the contract of copartnership; and it is claimed that such industrial partner, so much delayed with regard to profits, who has not the same rights, shall be under the same obligations as regards obligations because he is a collective partner? This seems neither just nor logical.

And it is not so. Article 141 reads: "Losses shall be charged in the same proportion among the partners who have contributed capital, without including" the industrial partners (since they have not the same rights), and they should not be included therein nor in the corporation of the partner who contributed the smallest capital, simply for the reason that the industrial partner has nothing to lose, he not having contributed anything which the company may lose when the losses of the copartnership are considered, either among the partners thereof or with regard to third persons.

There need be no distinction made between obligations and losses. During the existence of a company the gains or the losses are set off the one against the other, and the difference is either in favor of or against the concern. As to the industrial partner, in connection with the question submitted, it is not a matter of striking a balance from time to time, but one of the final adjustment of assets and liabilities, because the matter under discussion refers only to his private property, which has nothing to do with the company nor with losses in liquidating the same. Article 127 is affected by article 237: "The private property of the general partners which is not included in the assets of the copartnership when it is established can not be seized for the payment of the obligations contracted by the copartnership until after the common assets have been attached." And such condition is stated in the majority decision. As long as there is property belonging to the company, obligations in favor of third persons are covered by the primary and direct responsibility of the company; the question arises when the assets of the company are exhausted and it becomes necessary to appeal to the ulterior or subsidiary liability of the private property of the partners; in this case such obligations constitute the extreme losses in the liquidation of the company.

The case at bar could only thus be set forth: Should an industrial partner be responsible for such losses, for such obligations in favor of third persons? Article 141 expressly states that he shall not. In order to state the contrary it would be necessary to appeal to discriminations in the wording of said article; and this is neither permitted where the law does not make them nor would they lead to anything after all. In the aforesaid article 237 the corroboration of the word all of article 127 may be found: "The private property of the general partners which is not included in the assets of the copartnership," differing from such as were included, can not seized for the payment of obligations contracted by the copartnership, until after the common assets have been attached; after such attachment all the assets, according to article 127, such as were included, and those that were not included, in this order, shall be subject to the results of the transactions of the copartnership. An industrial partner has not contributed any property whatever; he therefore offers no subject for the principal and direct seizure when the assets of the copartnership are attached. How is it possible to conceive any ulterior, subsidiary, indirect responsibility over the property which it was not even thought to be included, since he only contributed to the company his industry and work, not property of any class whatever? It seems very anomalous that one who has not obligated himself in the least should be responsible or the greater part, that he who is not comprehended within the explicit terms should be included by implication, and that he who pledge nothing should be held to respond with his property.

As to the nature of the defendant company in this action, I take it to be:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

1. That the defendant company is really a collective one such as is described in the Code of Commerce; the firm of "F. Muñoz & Sons" and the terms of the articles of association prove it so beyond all doubt.

2. That it is a regular collective company; the word regular means, as employed in the Code of Commerce, that the collective company is the rule, the standard in all commercial associations, the one combining all the effects which are consequent upon this form of convention; and the limited and the joint-stock companies are the exception.

3. That it is not irrelevant in view of the manner in which the present Code of Commerce, like the former one of 1829, has defined the collective company, that such a distinguished professor of law as Doctor Lorenzo de Benito should have established in his "Lessons on Mercantile Law" a difference between the regular collective associations and irregular collective companies; "regular are those wherein, as article 122 reads, all the members in a collective name and under a firm name bind themselves to participate in the proportion which they may establish with the same rights and obligations." "And irregular, those wherein one or more members who, though not contributing toward the company with anything but their industry, participate in the profits in the manner agreed to in the articles of association or as determined by law, and ordinarily do not share in the losses which the copartnership may sustain. Such members are called industrial partners, and the collective copartnership having a member of said class is also sometimes called an association of capital and industry.

"This is what the law says (he continues), but it has not been very fortunate in sketching the characters of a regular collective partnership (since in conclusion it says nothing in reference to the irregular partnership), because precisely the collective name and the corporate name are applicable to both the collective and the limited companies; and as to the covenant entered into by the partners to participate in the proportion which they may establish with the same rights and obligations, this is inherent to all partnerships without distinction as to class. What characterizes this partnership is that all the members, "with the exception of the industrial partners," are jointly responsible and with all their property for the corporate obligations."cralaw virtua1aw library

4. That the code in force, by means of three articles, 138, 140, and 141, among those which regulate collective partnerships, has involved this association of capital and industry; whence irregularity necessarily arises; the irregularity of such an irregular system is that in a collective partnership wherein, besides the element property, common or generic to the three aforesaid classes, there appears this one, to wit, industry, a special features only in collective partnerships, according to the system of the code.

Had the system adopted by the codes of Portugal, Brazil, and the Argentine Republic been followed, a different classification would have been made of the association of capital and industry which, according to the last of the codes cited, is properly characterized by means of the following articles:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"435. Habilitacion or association of capital and industry is the name given to the partnership formed on the one part by one or more persons who furnish funds for a general business, or for some particular commercial transaction, and on the other part by one or more individuals who join the copartnership with their industry alone.

"438. The obligation of the partners who furnished capital is in solidum, and extends beyond the capital contributed by them to the concern.

"439. The articles of association, besides the requirements contained in article 395, must specify the obligations of the industrial partner or partners and the share in the profits to which they are entitled in the apportionment.

"In the absence of such declaration, the industrial partner shall draw from the profits a share equal to those of the partner who furnished the smallest capital.

"440. An industrial partner can not contract on behalf of the partnership nor is he obligated with his own property toward the creditors of the company.

"Nevertheless, if besides his industry he should contribute some capital toward the company either in money or thing of value, the association shall then be considered as a collective one, and the industrial partner, whatever might have been stipulated, shall respond in solidum."cralaw virtua1aw library

In my opinion it can not be denied that there is no substantial difference between the three articles of our code and those transcribed from that of the Argentine Republic as regards the rights and obligations of industrial partners in conjunction with partners who furnish capital; there is no difference except in the system, the code of the Argentine Republic dealing with this class of association of capital and industry separately from the only three defined in our code, all of them of capital only or essentially of partners who furnish capital. Therefore, as said code has an article almost literally identical with article 127 of our code, this question can not possibly arise in that country. That code contains article 454, which reads: "All those who form a collective commercial company, whether managing the corporate funds or not, are obligated in solidum (with all their property, as our code would state) for the results of the transactions made in the name and for account of the partnership," etc. To the question, Do the words "all the partners" found in said article include the industrial partners? undoubtedly the answer would be no.

And it would not suffice to say that the above article of the code of the Argentine Republic, namely, "on collective copartnership," involves no section which may refer to industrial partners, and that, therefore, there can be no question as to the words "all the members;" it is because, by reason of the nature thereof, whether under one system or another, the provisions and the principles being identical, the conclusions can not otherwise than identical. In a copartnership, and as the result of the obligations thereunder, an industrial partner can not lose except what he has actually contributed thereto for a limited or an unlimited purpose, subject ultimately to company or personal obligations; this is all that law and logic may demand of him; anything else would not come under the law, but may be demanded of him by reason of his express covenant, because he has consented to something beyond the character and the effects of the contract of partnership of capital and industry entered into by him, called collective; nothing else has been the subject of his consent and obligation.

Manuel Duran y Bas, a former professor of the University of Barcelona, in his addition to the work of Marti de Eixala, which is so generally and specially consulted in that eminently commercial and industrial city, has offered no remarks to the original text of said work which establish as an elemental doctrine that "When the copartnership is purely a collective one, each of its members is jointly obligated for the result of the transactions which should be charged to the copartnership . . . From the general rule which we have just set up the industrial partners who contract no obligation to secure the liabilities of the company should be excepted, unless there be an express covenant to the contrary." (Art. 319 of the code of 1829, identical with art. 141 of the code now in force.)

During almost half a century no obligation has been raised by the professors of law, the press, or the bar, to this doctrine regarding the exemption, not merely with respect to losses but to company obligations of the industrial partner, on the suppositions, which I do not admit, as already shown, that it may be possible to discriminate between losses and obligations in connection with an industrial partner, for whom there are none but the final losses, such as absorb the assets of the company, which can not be otherwise than outstanding obligations in favor of third parties inasmuch as, so long as there are company assets, no recourse can be held to the private property of any partner.




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July-1907 Jurisprudence                 

  • [G. R. No. L-3273. July 13, 1907.] THE UNITED STATES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. QUIRINO PERALTA and VICENTE PERALTA, Defendants-Appellants.

  • [G. R. No. L-3556. July 13, 1907.] H. J. BLACK, Plaintiff, vs. CARL T. NYGREN, acting provincial treasurer of the Province of Pampanga, Defendant.

  • [G. R. No. L-3332. July 18, 1907.] THE UNITED STATES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. HARRY B. MULFORD, Defendant-Appellant.

  • [G. R. No. L-2646. July 25, 1907.] MARIA ROURA AND JUAN ROURA, Petitioners-Appellants, vs. THE INSULAR GOVERNMENT, Respondent-Appellee.

  • [G. R. No. L-3476. July 25, 1907.] DOROTEA MENDOZA, Plaintiff-Appellant, vs. CASIMIRO FULGENCIO and JOSE DE ASIS, Defendants-Appellees.

  • [G. R. No. L-3348. July 26, 1907.] JULIAN NAVAL, Plaintiff-Appellant, vs. HERMOGENES BENAVIDES, Defendant-Appellee.

  • [G. R. No. L-3563. July 26, 1907.] THE UNITED STATES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. MAXIMO AUSTRIA, ET AL., Defendants-Appellants.

  • [G. R. No. 3621. July 26, 1907.] THE UNITED STATES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. MACARIO SAKAY, JULIAN MONTALBAN, LEON VILLAFUERTE, and LUCIO DE VEGA, Defendants-Appellants.

  • [G. R. No. L-2997. July 27, 1907.] ANDRES BARTOLOME, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. SIMEON MANDAC, ET AL., Defendants-Appellants.

  • [G. R. No. L-3397. July 27, 1907.] THE UNITED STATES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. BERNARDO ALAMEDA, Defendant-Appellant.

  • [G. R. No. L-3431. July 27, 1907.] THE UNITED STATES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. CHU CHIO, Defendant-Appellant.

  • [G. R. No. L-3479. July 29, 1907.] THE UNITED STATES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. WILLIAM BOSTON, Defendant-Appellant.

  • [G. R. No. L-3496. July 31, 1907.] THE UNITED STATES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. URBANA NACION, Defendant-Appellant.

  • G.R. No. L-3273 July 13, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. QUIRINO PERALTA, ET AL.

    008 Phil 200

  • G.R. No. L-3556 July 13, 1907 - H.J. BLACK v. CARL T. NYGREN

    008 Phil 205

  • G.R. No. L-3332 July 18, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. HARRY B. MULFORD

    008 Phil 208

  • G.R. No. L-3541 July 20, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ESTEBAN SEVILLA

    009 Phil 700

  • G.R. No. L-2646 July 25, 1907 - MARIA ROURA, ET AL. v. INSULAR GOVERNMENT

    008 Phil 214

  • G.R. No. L-3476 July 25, 1907 - DOROTEA MENDOZA v. CASIMIRO FULGENCIO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 243

  • G.R. No. L-3348 July 26, 1907 - JULIAN NAVAL v. HERMOGENES BENAVIDES

    008 Phil 250

  • G.R. No. L-3563 July 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MAXIMO AUSTRIA

    008 Phil 254

  • G.R. No. 3621 July 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MACARIO SAKAY, ET AL.

    008 Phil 255

  • G.R. No. L-2997 July 27, 1907 - ANDRES BARTOLOME v. SIMEON MANDAC, ET AL.

    008 Phil 263

  • G.R. No. L-3397 July 27, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. BERNARDO ALAMEDA

    008 Phil 266

  • G.R. No. L-3431 July 27, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. CHU CHIO

    008 Phil 269

  • G.R. No. L-3479 July 29, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. WILLIAM BOSTON

    008 Phil 271

  • G.R. No. L-3496 July 31, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. URBANA NACION

    008 Phil 274

  • G.R. No. L-3640 August 1, 1907 - CHARLES S. ROBINSON v. CHARLES F. GARRY

    008 Phil 275

  • G.R. No. L-4011 August 1, 1907 - MAMERTA BANAL v. JOSE SAFONT, ET AL.

    008 Phil 276

  • G.R. No. L-3574 August 2, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. NICOMEDES DE DIOS

    008 Phil 279

  • G.R. No. L-3965 August 2, 1907 - ENRIQUE F. SOMES, ET AL. v. A.S. CROSSFIELD, ET AL.

    008 Phil 283

  • G.R. No. L-3422 August 3, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MANUEL SAMONTE

    008 Phil 286

  • G.R. No. L-3576 August 3, 1907 - FLORENCIO TERNATE v. MARIA ANIVERSARIO

    008 Phil 292

  • G.R. No. L-3841 August 3, 1907 - CHUNG KIAT v. LIM KIO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 297

  • G.R. No. L-2730 August 7, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. BASILIO MORALES, ET AL.

    008 Phil 300

  • G.R. No. L-2837 August 7, 1907 - CALDER & CO. v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 303

  • G.R. No. L-2838 August 7, 1907 - MACONDRAY & CO. v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 305

  • G.R. No. L-3419 August 7, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. DOMINGO POLINTAN

    008 Phil 309

  • G.R. No. L-3517 August 7, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JOSE MAGNO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 314

  • G.R. No. L-3586 August 7, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. HIGINO VELASQUEZ

    008 Phil 321

  • G.R. No. L-3608 August 7, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ESTANISLAO FLOIRENDO

    008 Phil 325

  • G.R. No. L-3842 August 7, 1907 - VICTORINO RON, ET AL. v. FELIX MOJICA

    008 Phil 328

  • G.R. No. L-4008 August 7, 1907 - AGUSTIN GARCIA GAVIERES v. WILLIAM ROBINSON, ET AL.

    008 Phil 332

  • G.R. No. L-2836 August 8, 1907 - CALDER & CO. v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 334

  • G.R. No. L-2840 August 8, 1907 - KUENZLE & STREIFF v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 339

  • G.R. No. L-4002 August 8, 1907 - LO PO v. H.B. McCOY

    008 Phil 343

  • G.R. No. L-3507 August 9, 1907 - ISABELO AGUIRRE v. OCCIDENTAL NEGROS, ET AL.

    008 Phil 350

  • G.R. No. L-2841 August 10, 1907 - RUBERT & GUAMIS v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 352

  • G.R. No. L-3488 August 10, 1907 - C.S. ROBINSON, ET AL. v. THE SHIP "ALTA", ET AL.

    008 Phil 355

  • G.R. No. L-3456 August 14, 1907 - JOSEPH N. WOLFSON v. ELIAS REYES, ET AL.

    008 Phil 364

  • G.R. No. L-3529 August 14, 1907 - ESTEBAN GUILLERMO v. RAMON MATIENZO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 368

  • G.R. No. L-2839 August 15, 1907 - CALDER & CO. v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 373

  • G.R. No. L-3562 August 15, 1907 - GUTIERREZ HERMANOS v. ANTONIO VALLEJO

    008 Phil 377

  • G.R. No. L-3363 August 17, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JOAQUIN CELIS

    008 Phil 378

  • G.R. No. L-3554 August 17, 1907 - JULIANA BENEMERITO v. FERNANDO VELASCO

    008 Phil 381

  • G.R. No. L-3572 August 17, 1907 - S.G. LARSON v. H. BRODEK

    008 Phil 383

  • G.R. No. L-3627 August 17, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JOAQUIN CELIS

    008 Phil 385

  • G.R. No. L-3664 August 17, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. LEONA CINCO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 388

  • G.R. No. L-3200 August 19, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. TOMAS COLOMBRO

    008 Phil 391

  • G.R. No. L-3625 August 19, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JOAQUIN CELIS

    008 Phil 394

  • G.R. No. L-3432 August 20, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ESTANISLAO GASINGAN

    008 Phil 397

  • G.R. No. L-3567 August 20, 1907 - KAY B. CHANG, ET AL. v. ROYAL EXCHANGE ASSURANCE CORPORATION OF LONDON

    008 Phil 399

  • G.R. No. L-3626 August 21, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JOAQUIN CELIS

    008 Phil 408

  • G.R. No. L-3460 August 22, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. LEON NARVASA, ET AL.

    008 Phil 410

  • G.R. No. L-3557 August 22, 1907 - VICTORIANO GARCIA, ET AL. v. REMIGIO DIAMSON

    008 Phil 414

  • G.R. No. L-3173 August 23, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MODESTO GARCIA

    008 Phil 416

  • G.R. No. L-3568 August 23, 1907 - ROMAN ESPAÑA v. LEONARDO LUCIDO

    008 Phil 419

  • G.R. No. L-3510 August 24, 1907 - HENRY O’CONNELL v. NARCISO MAYUGA

    008 Phil 422

  • G.R. No. L-3573 August 24, 1907 - HENRY BRODEK v. S.G. LARSON

    008 Phil 425

  • G.R. No. L-3604 August 24, 1907 - INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORP. v. FRANCISCO MARTINEZ

    008 Phil 427

  • G.R. No. L-3622 August 26, 1907 - H.W. PEABODY & CO., ET AL. v. PACIFIC EXPORT & LUMBER CO.

    008 Phil 429

  • G.R. No. L-3734 August 26, 1907 - JAMES J. PETERSON v. RAFAEL AZADA

    008 Phil 432

  • G.R. No. L-2871 August 29, 1907 - LA COMPAÑIA GENERAL DE TABACOS DE FILIPINAS v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 438

  • G.R. No. L-3192 August 29, 1907 - LUISA ALVAREZ v. SHERIFF OF ILOILO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 441

  • G.R. No. L-3458 August 29, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. FIDEL GONZALEZ

    008 Phil 442

  • G.R. No. L-3526 August 29, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. SEVERINO MACAVINTA

    008 Phil 447

  • G.R. No. L-3636 August 29, 1907 - FREDERICK GARFIELD WAITE v. JAMES J. PETERSON, ET AL.

    008 Phil 449

  • G.R. No. L-3547 August 30, 1907 - LORENZA PAEZ v. JOSE BERENGUER

    008 Phil 454

  • G.R. No. L-3628 August 30, 1907 - MANUEL COUTO SORIANO v. BLAS CORTES

    008 Phil 459

  • G.R. No. L-3416 August 31, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. PILAR JAVIER, ET AL.

    008 Phil 462

  • G.R. No. L-3561 August 31, 1907 - RITA GARCIA, ET AL. v. SIMEON BALANAO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 465

  • G.R. No. L-3630 August 31, 1907 - JOS. N. WOLFSON v. CAYETANO CHINCHILLA

    008 Phil 467

  • G.R. No. L-3637 August 31, 1907 - PEDRO P. ROXAS, ET AL. v. ANASTASIO CUEVAS, ET AL.

    008 Phil 469

  • G.R. No. L-3220 September 2, 1907 - MURPHY MORRIS & CO. v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 479

  • G.R. No. L-3396 September 2, 1907 - STRUCKMANN & CO. v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 483

  • G.R. No. L-2538 September 4, 1907 - MARIANO PAMINTUAN, ET AL. v. INSULAR GOVERNMENT

    008 Phil 485

  • G.R. No. L-3648 September 5, 1907 - LUTZ & CO. v. COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS

    008 Phil 492

  • G.R. No. L-3667 September 5, 1907 - NATALIA FABIAN, ET AL. v. SMITH, BELL & CO.

    008 Phil 496

  • G.R. No. L-3326 September 7, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. LAURENTE REY

    008 Phil 500

  • G.R. No. L-3482 September 7, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. BARTOLOME GRAY

    008 Phil 506

  • G.R. No. L-3489 September 7, 1907 - VICENTE NAVALES v. EULOGIA RIAS, ET AL.

    008 Phil 508

  • G.R. No. L-2526 September 10, 1907 - PEDRO PAMINTUAN, ET AL. v. INSULAR GOVERNMENT, ET AL.

    008 Phil 512

  • G.R. No. L-3301 September 10, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. EMIGDIO NOBLEZA

    008 Phil 515

  • G.R. No. L-3616 September 10, 1907 - CIRILO PURUGANAN v. TEODORO MARTIN, ET AL.

    008 Phil 519

  • G.R. No. L-3221 September 11, 1907 - ATLANTIC, GULF & CO. v. UNITED STATES

    008 Phil 524

  • G.R. No. L-3708 September 12, 1907 - ELVIRA FRESSELL v. MARCIANA AGUSTIN

    008 Phil 529

  • G.R. No. L-3383 September 13, 1907 - TAN LEONCO v. GO INQUI

    008 Phil 531

  • G.R. No. L-3546 September 13, 1907 - PIA DEL ROSARIO v. JUAN LUCENA, ET AL.

    008 Phil 535

  • G.R. No. L-3132 September 14, 1907 - MANUEL SOLER, ET AL. v. EMILIA ALZOUA, ET AL.

    008 Phil 539

  • G.R. No. L-3146 September 14, 1907 - NICOLAS CO-PITCO v. PEDRO YULO

    008 Phil 544

  • G.R. No. L-3534 September 14, 1907 - TO GUIOC-CO v. LORENZO DEL ROSARIO

    008 Phil 546

  • G.R. No. L-3395 September 16, 1907 - PEDRO ARENAL, ET AL. v. CHARLES F. BARNES, ET AL.

    008 Phil 551

  • G.R. No. L-3067 September 17, 1907 - RUBERT & GUAMIS v. LUENGO & MARTINEZ, ET AL.

    008 Phil 554

  • G.R. No. L-3434 September 18, 1907 - SAGASAG v. VICTORIA TORRIJOS

    008 Phil 561

  • G.R. No. L-3474 September 20, 1907 - RAFAEL ENRIQUEZ, ET AL. v. FRANCISCO ENRIQUEZ, ET AL.

    008 Phil 565

  • G.R. No. L-4244 September 20, 1907 - RAFAEL MOLINA v. ANTONIO DE LA RIVA, ET AL.

    008 Phil 569

  • G.R. No. L-3575 September 23, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. TRANQUILINO ALMADEN, ET AL.

    008 Phil 573

  • G.R. No. L-3672 September 23, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ESTANISLAO EUSEBIO

    008 Phil 574

  • G.R. No. L-3675 September 23, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. GREGORIO AMANTE, ET AL.

    008 Phil 577

  • G.R. No. 3527 September 23, 1907 - TAN TIOCO v. MARCELINA LOPEZ

    011 Phil 591

  • G.R. No. L-3726 September 23, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. FERNANDO MONZONES, ET AL.

    008 Phil 579

  • G.R. No. L-3369 September 24, 1907 - JONAS BROOK BROS. v. FROELICH & KUTTNER

    008 Phil 580

  • G.R. No. L-3597 September 24, 1907 - MANUEL MESIA v. PLACIDO MAZO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 587

  • G.R. No. L-3615 September 24, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. BRIGIDO CASIN

    008 Phil 589

  • G.R. No. L-3669 September 24, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. DOMINGO BALTAZAR

    008 Phil 592

  • G.R. No. L-4138 September 24, 1907 - SY HONG ENG v. SY LIOC SUY

    008 Phil 594

  • G.R. No. L-3728 September 25, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ANASTASIO MAISA

    008 Phil 597

  • G.R. No. L-3207 September 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. CATALINO GARCIA

    008 Phil 598

  • G.R. No. L-3373 September 26, 1907 - VICENTA JALBUENA v. GABRIEL LEDESMA, ET AL.

    008 Phil 601

  • G.R. No. L-3535 September 26, 1907 - RAFAEL ENRIQUEZ, ET AL. v. FRANCISCO ENRIQUEZ, ET AL.

    008 Phil 607

  • G.R. No. L-3645 September 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. EMETERIO DACANAY

    008 Phil 617

  • G.R. No. L-3439 September 27, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JUAN MONTANER

    008 Phil 620

  • G.R. No. L-1516 September 28, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. DOMINADOR GOMEZ

    008 Phil 630

  • G.R. No. L-2264 September 28, 1907 - P. JOSE EVANGELISTA v. P. ROMAN VER

    008 Phil 653

  • G.R. No. L-3629 September 28, 1907 - MATEA E. RODRIGUEZ v. SUSANA DE LA CRUZ, ET AL.

    008 Phil 665

  • G.R. No. L-3684 September 28, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. EMILIO NERI

    008 Phil 669

  • G.R. No. L-3767 September 28, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. FLORENTINO LEYBA, ET AL.

    008 Phil 671

  • G.R. No. L-3497 September 30, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. L. V. SMITH, ET AL.

    008 Phil 674

  • G.R. No. L-3584 September 30, 1907 - ARTADI & CO. v. CHU BACO

    008 Phil 677

  • G.R. No. L-3727 September 30, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. FLORENDO GADILA, ET AL.

    008 Phil 679

  • G.R. No. L-3543 October 1, 1907 - LA CAPELLANIA DEL CONVENTO DE TAMBOBONG v. GUILLERMO ANTONIO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 683

  • G.R. No. L-3587 October 2, 1907 - FRANCISCO ALDAMIS v. FAUSTINO LEUTERIO

    008 Phil 688

  • G.R. No. L-2827 October 3, 1907 - MARIA LOPEZ Y VILLANUEVA v. TAN TIOCO

    008 Phil 693

  • G.R. No. L-3409 October 3, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. REMIGIO BUSTAMANTE, ET AL.

    008 Phil 698

  • G.R. No. L-3515 October 3, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ANDERSON MACK

    008 Phil 701

  • G.R. No. L-3520 October 3, 1907 - HIJOS DE I. DE LA RAMA v. JOSE ROBLES, ET AL.

    008 Phil 712

  • G.R. No. L-3571 October 3, 1907 - VALENTIN LACUESTA, ET AL. v. PATERNO GUERRERO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 719

  • G.R. No. L-3957 October 3, 1907 - DOMINGO REYES, ET AL. v. SOR EFIGENIA ALVAREZ

    008 Phil 723

  • G.R. No. L-3716 October 4, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. BIBIANO BORJA

    008 Phil 726

  • G.R. No. L-3729 October 4, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ZACARIAS VALENCIA

    008 Phil 729

  • G.R. No. L-3744 October 5, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. CARLOS CASTAÑARES

    008 Phil 730

  • G.R. No. 3067 October 7, 1907 - RUBERT & GUAMIS v. LUENGO & MARTINEZ, ET AL.

    008 Phil 732

  • G.R. No. L-3642 October 7, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ANTONIO XAVIER

    008 Phil 733

  • G.R. No. L-2558 October 8, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JULIAN MACALALAD

    009 Phil 1

  • G.R. No. L-4052 October 8, 1907 - ENRIQUE F. SOMES v. HON. A. S. CROSSFIELD, ET AL.

    008 Phil 284

  • G.R. No. L-3715 October 8, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. BIBIANO BORJA

    009 Phil 8

  • G.R. No. L-3749 October 8, 1907 - ARTADY & CO. v. CLARO SANCHEZ

    009 Phil 10

  • G.R. No. L-3807 October 8, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. SANTIAGO CABIGAO

    009 Phil 12

  • G.R. No. L-4052 October 8, 1907 - ENRIQUE F. SOMES v. HON. A. S. CROSSFIELD

    009 Phil 13

  • G.R. No. L-3752 October 9, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. FAUSTO BASILIO

    009 Phil 16

  • G.R. No. L-4057 October 9, 1907 - MARIANO MACATANGAY v. MUN. OF SAN JUAN DE BOCBOC

    009 Phil 19

  • G.R. No. L-3181 October 10, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. GUMERSINDO DE LA SANTA

    009 Phil 22

  • G.R. No. L-3438 October 12, 1907 - MANUEL LOPEZ Y VILLANUEVA v. EVARISTO ALVAREZ Y PEREZ

    009 Phil 28

  • G.R. No. L-3594 October 12, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ALLEN A. GARNER

    009 Phil 38

  • G.R. No. L-3609 October 12, 1907 - EULALIA ESPINO v. DANIEL ESPINO

    009 Phil 41

  • G.R. No. L-3660 October 12, 1907 - JOSE TAN SUNCO v. ALEJANDRO SANTOS

    009 Phil 44

  • G.R. No. L-3887 October 12, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. PEDRO FLORES

    009 Phil 47

  • G.R. No. L-3961 October 12, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ISIDORO BASE

    009 Phil 48

  • G.R. No. L-3224 October 17, 1907 - MUÑOZ & CO. v. STRUCKMANN & CO., ET AL.

    009 Phil 52

  • G.R. No. L-3796 October 17, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MACARIA RAMIREZ

    009 Phil 67

  • G.R. No. L-3905 October 17, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. REMIGIO DONATO

    009 Phil 701

  • G.R. No. 3810 October 18, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. DAMIAN ORERA

    011 Phil 596

  • G.R. No. L-2870 October 18, 1907 - CITY OF MANILA v. INSULAR GOVERNMENT

    009 Phil 71

  • G.R. No. L-3766 October 18, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. PONCIANO LIMCANGCO

    009 Phil 77

  • G.R. No. L-3808 October 18, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JACINTO VICTORIA

    009 Phil 81

  • G.R. No. L-3873 October 18, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JUSTO DACUYCUY

    009 Phil 84

  • G.R. No. L-3760 October 19, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. WALTER B. BROWN

    009 Phil 89

  • G.R. No. L-3819 October 19, 1907 - JESUS SANCHEZ MELLADO v. MUNICIPALITY OF TACLOBAN

    009 Phil 92

  • G.R. No. L-3853 October 19, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JUAN VILLANUEVA

    009 Phil 94

  • G.R. No. L-3949 October 19, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. GABINO SORIANO

    009 Phil 98

  • G.R. No. L-3532 October 21, 1907 - TY LACO CIOCO v. ARISTON MURO

    009 Phil 100

  • G.R. No. L-3644 October 21, 1907 - VICENTE QUESADA v. ISABELO ARTACHO

    009 Phil 104

  • G.R. No. L-3694 October 21, 1907 - JULIANA BONCAN v. SMITH

    009 Phil 109

  • G.R. No. L-3649 October 24, 1907 - JOSE GUZMAN v. WILLIAM X

    009 Phil 112

  • G.R. No. L-3761 October 24, 1907 - SALUSTIANO LERMA Y MARTINEZ v. FELISA MAMARIL

    009 Phil 118

  • G.R. No. L-3560 October 26, 1907 - MAGDALENA LEDESMA v. ILDEFONSO DORONILA

    009 Phil 119

  • G.R. No. L-3619 October 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. APOLONIO CANAMAN

    009 Phil 121

  • G.R. No. L-3676 October 26, 1907 - PONS Y COMPANIA v. LA COMPANIA MARITIMA

    009 Phil 125

  • G.R. No. L-3695 October 16, 1907 - ALEJANDRA PALANCA v. SMITH

    009 Phil 131

  • G.R. No. L-3745 October 26, 1907 - JUAN AGUSTIN v. BARTOLOME INOCENCIO

    009 Phil 134

  • G.R. No. L-3756 October 28, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ILDEFONSO RODRIGUEZ

    009 Phil 136

  • G.R. No. L-3633 October 30, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. TEODORA BORJAL

    009 Phil 140

  • G.R. No. L-3908 November 1, 1907 - ENRIQUE SERRANO v. LEANDRO SERRANO

    009 Phil 142

  • G.R. No. L-3732 November 2, 1907 - CLEMENCIA FELIX v. MATEO A FELIX

    009 Phil 144

  • G.R. No. L-3427 November 6, 1907 - CAPELLANIA DEL CONVENTO DE TAMBOBONG v. HIPOLITO CRUZ

    009 Phil 145

  • G.R. No. L-3623 November 6, 1907 - RUPERTO RELOVA v. ELENA LAVAREZ

    009 Phil 149

  • G.R. No. L-3661 November 6, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. LAUREANO RODRIGUEZ

    009 Phil 153

  • G.R. No. L-3985 November 6, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ANANIAS CERVO, ET AL.

    009 Phil 158

  • G.R. No. L-3986 November 6, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. AMBROSIO GESMUNDO

    009 Phil 160

  • G.R. No. L-3996 November 6, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JUAN BAILON

    009 Phil 161

  • G.R. No. L-3852 November 11, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. EDUARDO MONTIEL

    009 Phil 162

  • G.R. No. L-3779 November 13, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. OTIS G. FREEMAN

    009 Phil 168

  • G.R. No. L-3787 November 14, 1907 - TEODORICA ENDENCIA v. EDUARDO LOALHATI

    009 Phil 177

  • G.R. No. L-3754 November 15, 1907 - ANGELA OJINAGA v. ESTATE OF TOMAS R. PEREZ

    009 Phil 185

  • G.R. No. L-3516 November 16, 1907 - FELISA NEPOMUCENO v. CIRILO A. CARLOS

    009 Phil 194

  • G.R. No. L-3838 November 16, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. AGUSTIN FERNANDEZ

    009 Phil 199

  • G.R. No. L-3840 November 16, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. IGNACIO BORSED

    009 Phil 203

  • G.R. No. L-3878 November 16, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ATANACIO MACASPAC

    009 Phil 207

  • G.R. No. L-4123 November 16, 1907 - LA YEBANA COMPANY v. TIMOTEO SEVILLA

    009 Phil 210

  • G.R. No. L-4018 November 18, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. DEMETRIO SALUDO

    009 Phil 213

  • G.R. No. L-3144 November 19, 1907 - CARMEN AYALA DE ROXAS, ET AL. v. CITY OF MANILA, ET AL.

    009 Phil 215

  • G.R. No. L-3638 November 19, 1907 - FAUSTINO GUERRA v. BLANCO SENDAGORTA, ET AL.

    009 Phil 222

  • G.R. No. L-3662 November 19, 1907 - VICENTA ACUÑA v. THE CITY OF MANILA

    009 Phil 225

  • G.R. No. L-3610 November 20, 1907 - JOSE CAMPS v. PEDRO A. PATERNO

    009 Phil 229

  • G.R. No. L-3774 November 20, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. VICENTE SOTTO

    009 Phil 231

  • G.R. No. L-4069 November 20, 1907 - JUAN JAUCIAN v. ROBERTO FLORANZA

    009 Phil 236

  • G.R. No. L-2786 November 21, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. VICTORIANO ASEBUQUE

    009 Phil 241

  • G.R. No. L-3900 November 21, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. CANUTO BUTARDO

    009 Phil 246

  • G.R. No. L-4357 November 21, 1907 - MIGUEL PAVON v. PHIL. ISLANDS TELEPHONE, ET AL.

    009 Phil 247

  • G.R. No. 3747 November 22, 1907 - YU CHENGCO v. ALFONSO TIAOQUI, ET AL.

    011 Phil 598

  • G.R. No. L-3755 November 23, 1907 - C. C. PYLE v. ROY W. JOHNSON

    009 Phil 249

  • G.R. No. L-3823 November 23, 1907 - PEDRO P. ROXAS v. MARIA DE LA PAZ MIJARES

    009 Phil 252

  • G.R. No. L-3750 November 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JUSTO GAMIS

    009 Phil 259

  • G.R. No. L-3964 November 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ESTEBAN MALABANAN

    009 Phil 262

  • G.R. No. L-3973 November 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MARTIN SOL

    009 Phil 265

  • G.R. No. L-3741 November 27, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. AFRONIANO FERNANDEZ

    009 Phil 269

  • G.R. No. L-3702 November 29, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ESCOLASTICO DE LA CRUZ

    009 Phil 276

  • G.R. No. L-4338 December 2, 1907 - ALFRED B. JONES v. J. E. HARDING

    009 Phil 279

  • G.R. No. L-3738 December 3, 1907 - JOSE ACOSTA v. ANDRES DOMINGO

    009 Phil 290

  • G.R. No. L-3190 December 4, 1907 - ASUNCION ALBERT Y MAYORALGO, ET AL v. MARTINIANO PUNSALAN

    009 Phil 294

  • G.R. No. L-3935 December 4, 1907 - UY PIAOCO v. SERGIO OSMENA

    009 Phil 299

  • G.R. No. L-3378 December 5, 1907 - JOSE CASTAÑO v. CHARLES S. LOBINGIER

    009 Phil 310

  • G.R. No. L-3713 December 5, 1907 - UNION FARMACEUTICA FILIPINA v. FRANCISCO ICASIANO

    009 Phil 319

  • G.R. No. L-3826 December 7, 1907 - CARMEN AYALA DE ROXAS v. JUANA VALENCIA

    009 Phil 322

  • G.R. No. L-3847 December 7, 1907 - LEOPOLDO FERRER v. RAMON NERI ABEJUELA

    009 Phil 324

  • G.R. No. L-3704 December 12, 1907 - LA COMPAÑIA MARITIMA v. FRANCISCO MUÑOZ

    009 Phil 326

  • G.R. No. L-3895 December 14, 1907 - In the matter of A. K. JONES

    009 Phil 347

  • G.R. No. L-3899 December 16, 1907 - ALFREDO CHANCO v. ANACLETA MADRILEJOS

    009 Phil 356

  • G.R. No. L-3933 December 16, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. PAULINO SAN ANDRES

    009 Phil 362

  • G.R. No. L-3959 December 16, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. FLORENCIO PARAS

    009 Phil 367

  • G.R. No. L-3972 December 16, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MATEO GUANZON

    009 Phil 371

  • G.R. No. L-3596 December 17, 1907 - LUCHSINGER & CO. v. CORNELIO MELLIZA

    009 Phil 376

  • G.R. No. L-3128 December 19, 1907 - UN PAK LEUNG v. JUAN NIGORRA

    009 Phil 381

  • G.R. No. L-3128 December 19, 1907 - UN PAK LEUNG v. JUAN NIGORRA

    009 Phil 381

  • G.R. No. L-3688 December 19, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. JOHN HAZLEY

    009 Phil 384

  • G.R. No. L-3891 December 19, 1907 - ELENA MORENTE v. GUMERSINDO DE LA SANTA

    009 Phil 387

  • G.R. No. L-3505 December 20, 1907 - ARCADIO MAXILOM v. GAUDENCIO TABOTABO

    009 Phil 390

  • G.R. No. L-3980 December 20, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. RUPERTO GOROSPE, ET AL.

    009 Phil 394

  • G.R. No. L-4061 December 20, 1907 - MANUEL TAGUINOT v. MUNICIPALITY OF TANAY

    009 Phil 396

  • G.R. No. L-3483 December 21, 1907 - BENITO MOJICA v. JUANA FERNANDEZ

    009 Phil 403

  • G.R. No. L-3788 December 21, 1907 - PEDRO P. ROXAS v. JULIA TUASON

    009 Phil 408

  • G.R. No. L-3936 December 21, 1907 - JOSE VILLEGAS v. NICOLAS CAPISTRANO

    009 Phil 416

  • G.R. No. L-3991 December 21, 1907 - SIMEON ROQUE v. RUFINO NAVARRO

    009 Phil 420

  • G.R. No. L-3992 December 21, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MAGDALENO MENDEZ

    009 Phil 422

  • G.R. No. L-4086 December 21, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MAXIMO BRELLO

    009 Phil 424

  • G.R. No. L-4201 December 21, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ESPIRIDION ROTA

    009 Phil 426

  • G.R. No. L-3570 December 23, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ELIGIO C. GARCIA

    009 Phil 434

  • G.R. No. L-3948 December 27, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. GABINO SORIANO

    009 Phil 441

  • G.R. No. L-3969 December 27, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. GABINO SORIANO SANTILLAN

    009 Phil 445

  • G.R. No. L-3212 December 28, 1907 - ROMAN CATHOLIC APOSTOLIC CHURCH v. MUNICIPALITIES OF TARLAC, ET AL.

    009 Phil 450

  • G.R. No. L-3273 July 13, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. QUIRINO PERALTA, ET AL.

    008 Phil 200

  • G.R. No. L-3556 July 13, 1907 - H.J. BLACK v. CARL T. NYGREN

    008 Phil 205

  • G.R. No. L-3332 July 18, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. HARRY B. MULFORD

    008 Phil 208

  • G.R. No. L-3541 July 20, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. ESTEBAN SEVILLA

    009 Phil 700

  • G.R. No. L-2646 July 25, 1907 - MARIA ROURA, ET AL. v. INSULAR GOVERNMENT

    008 Phil 214

  • G.R. No. L-3476 July 25, 1907 - DOROTEA MENDOZA v. CASIMIRO FULGENCIO, ET AL.

    008 Phil 243

  • G.R. No. L-3348 July 26, 1907 - JULIAN NAVAL v. HERMOGENES BENAVIDES

    008 Phil 250

  • G.R. No. L-3563 July 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MAXIMO AUSTRIA

    008 Phil 254

  • G.R. No. 3621 July 26, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. MACARIO SAKAY, ET AL.

    008 Phil 255

  • G.R. No. L-2997 July 27, 1907 - ANDRES BARTOLOME v. SIMEON MANDAC, ET AL.

    008 Phil 263

  • G.R. No. L-3397 July 27, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. BERNARDO ALAMEDA

    008 Phil 266

  • G.R. No. L-3431 July 27, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. CHU CHIO

    008 Phil 269

  • G.R. No. L-3479 July 29, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. WILLIAM BOSTON

    008 Phil 271

  • G.R. No. L-3496 July 31, 1907 - UNITED STATES v. URBANA NACION

    008 Phil 274