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FIRST DIVISION
[G.R. No. 92462. June 2, 1997]
SANTIAGO GOKING, Petitioner, v. HON. ROLANDO R. VILLARAZA, as Presiding Judge of the RTC of Misamis Oriental, 10th Judicial Region, Br. 23, Cagayan de Oro City, PEOPLES TRANS-EAST ASIA INSURANCE CORP. AND FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER CO. OF THE PHILIPPINES, Respondents.
D E C I S I O N
HERMOSISIMA, JR., J.:
To assail as tainted with grave abuse of discretion the Order1 of
Hon. Judge Rolando R. Villaraza which denied the Motion for Execution2
filed by petitioner Santiago Goking on the ground that the prayer therein to
collect from private respondent Peoples Trans-East Asia Insurance Corporation
(hereafter, Peoples), the sum of P76,222.93
representing refund for premium payments, had neither factual nor legal basis,
petitioner inevitably filed the herein petition for certiorari.
The
Decision3
of the Regional Trial Court,4 as modified by the Decision5
of the Court of Appeals,6 was then due for execution.
The following facts are not disputed:
xxx [S]ometime on March 18, 1982, [petitioner] mortgaged his
property covered by TCT No. T-21615 to the [private respondent] Firestone to
secure an obligation of Three G Distributors, Inc. with the latter company in
the amount of P500,000.00 pursuant to an agreement previously entered
into between Firestone on one hand and Three G and its directors (Santiago
Goking, Rufino Inocian, Sulpicio Tancinco, and Pedro Guerzon) on the other. It
was likewise agreed that plaintiffs property would be released by Firestone
upon the assumption by said directors in their personal capacity of the
aforestated obligation of Three G and the submission of the required surety
bonds.
Pursuant thereto, [petitioner] entered into an indemnity agreement with Aggregated Underwriters Corporation, General Agent of [private respondent] Peoples Trans-East Asia Insurance Corporation, through Roque Villadores, Rodolfo Esculto and Federico Garcia Jr. for the insurance of surety bonds to the individual members of the Board of Directors of Three G in connection with their obligation to Firestone.
The premiums for the surety bonds issued were paid by [petitioner]
to [private respondent] Peoples General Agent on January 21, 1983 in the total
amount of P76,222.93 per receipt issued by Aggregated Underwriters
Corporation.
Thereafter, in spite of several demands, [private respondent] Peoples failed and refused to honor the commitment and obligation entered into by it through its General Agent [and] to return the premiums paid. As a result, plaintiffs mortgaged property was foreclosed by Firestone on August 7, 1984. x x x
The case against Firestone was, however, dropped in view of an amicable settlement entered into with [petitioner] on August 17, 1987, leaving Peoples Trans-East Asia Insurance Corporation as sole defendant. Said defendant, in its, Answer, denies the authority of its General Agent, Aggregate Underwriter[s] Corporation, to enter into the indemnity agreement with [petitioner] x x x in spite of its admission and due execution of the Special Power of Attorney x x x authorizing Aggregated to conduct and transact insurance business as General Agent of Peoples. x x x
x x x
x x x [A]s a result of the refusal of defendant Peoples to honor
the indemnity agreement entered into by Aggregated Underwriters Corporation
through Roque Villadores, Rodolfo Esculto and Federico Garcia,
Jr. with [petitioner] and to issue the
necessary surety bonds, [petitioner] together with the other directors of Three
G x x x filed a personal complaint against Roque Villadores and his companions
with the Regional Trial Court of Misamis Oriental, Branch 22, Cagayan de Oro
City, in Civil Case No. 9114, for a refund of the premiums paid in the amount
of P76,222.93 plus damages.
On October 19, 1984, a decision x x x was rendered in said [Civil Case No. 9114] in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants, in this wise:
'WHEREFORE, considering all the foregoing, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants, ordering the latter to pay the following:
1) P76,222.93 as
refund for the premium;
2) P5,000.00 as
attorneys fees;
3) P3,000.00 as
litigation expenses;
4) P50,000.00 as
moral and exemplary damages;
5) The total amount of P134,222.93
shall earn interest at the rate of 12% per annum from the date of finality of
this decision until fully paid.
There being no appeal in said [Civil Case No. 9114], the same became final and executory.
On December 5, 1985, a decision was also rendered in the case at bar [i.e., Civil Case No. 9800], the dispositive portion of which reads:
'WHEREFORE, considering all the foregoing, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiff [Santiago Goking] and against the defendant [Peoples Trans-East Asia Insurance Corporation], ordering the latter to do the following:
1)
To issue approved surety bonds in compliance
with the commitment of its authorized agent in case the premium in the amount
of P76,222.93 is not yet refunded to the plaintiff;
2) To pay the amount of P5,000.00 as litigation expenses and
P5,000.00 as attorneys fees;
3) To pay solidarily with defendants in Civil Case No. 9114 the amounts in the decision for the attorneys fees and litigation expenses, moral and exemplary damages.
SO ORDERED.7chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
While the decision of the trial court in Civil Case No. 9114
became final and executory, private respondent Peoples appealed from the
decision of the trial court in Civil Case No. 9800, to the Court of
Appeals.
Said appelate court, however,
found no merit in the appeal, except that it deleted the portion of the trial
courts decision ordering defendant to pay solidarily with defendants in Civil
Case No. 9114 the amounts in the decision for attorneys fees and litigation
expenses plus moral and exemplary damages.8chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
On December 12, 1988, petitioner filed with the Court of Appeals
a Motion for Delineation, Definition and/or Enforcement of Decision and/or
Motion for Reconsideration9
praying for, among others, a modification of the Decision of the Court of
Appeals to the effect that private respondent Peoples be ordered to pay the
amount of P76,222.93 as
refund for the premiums payments plus interest of 12% until full reimbursement
is made.
On January 10, 1989, the Court of Appeals denied the aforedescribed Motion on the ground that the records having been remanded to the trial court for execution, said appellate court had already lost jurisdiction over the case and could not, thus, act on said Motion.
On August 29, 1989, petitioner filed in the trial court a Motion
for Execution in Civil Case No. 9800.
In said Motion, petitioner reiterated its prayer for a modification of
the order of the trial court to issue approved surety bonds in compliance with
the commitment of its authorized agent in case the premium in the amount of P76,222.93
is not yet refunded to the plaintiff10
and accordingly asked the trial court to instead order private respondent
Peoples to directly pay the said amount to petitioner as reimbursement for the
premiums paid by petitioner, including legal interest of 12%.
On August 29, 1989, petitioner filed in the trial court his Bill
of Costs.11chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
On September 12, 1989, private respondent Peoples filed an
Opposition to Motion for Execution and to Plaintiffs Bill of Costs.12chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
In a pleading denominated as Rejoinder to Opposition for Execution and to Plaintiffs Bill of Costs13 (which pleading should have been captioned as a Reply), petitioner reinterated its demand for the reimbursement of the premiums paid to private respondent Peoples, plus legal interests. A Rejoinder thereto was filed subsequently by private respondent Peoples.
On December 4, 1989, respondent Judge Rolando R. Villaraza
rendered the herein assailed Order in effect denying petitioners prayer for
the trial court to order private respondent Peoples to pay the amount of P76,222.93
to petitioner as reimbursement for the premiums paid by the latter to Roque
Villadores, Rodolfo Esculto and Federico Garcia, Jr., all of whom represented
Aggregated Underwriters Corporation, which was the General Agent of private
respondent Peoples.
The pertinent
portion of the herein assailed Order reads:
Admittedly, the decision was rendered by this Court on December 5, 1985, in favor of [petitioner], as follows-
'WHEREFORE, considering all the foregoing, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiff [Santiago Goking] and against the defendant [Peoples Trans-East Asia Insurance Corporation], ordering the latter to do the following:
1) To issue approved surety
bonds in compliance with the commitment of its authorized agent in case the
premium in the amount of
P76,222.93
is not yet refunded to the plaintiff;
2) To pay the amount of P5,000.00
as litigation expenses and P5,000.00 as attorneys fees;
3) To pay solidarily with defendants in Civil Case No. 9114 the amounts in the decision for attorneys fees and litigation expenses, moral and exemplary damages.
SO ORDERED.
On appeal by defendants, the Court of Appeals modified the foregoing judgement in a decision promulgated on September 17, 1987, as follows -
WHEREFORE, with the exception of the order of the trial court to the defendant to pay solidarily with defendants in Civil Case No. 9114 the amounts in the decision for attorneys fees and litigation expenses plus moral and exemplary damages, the decision appealed from is hereby affirmed in all other respects. Appellee in Civil Case No. 9114 is not precluded from executing the decision in said case which is final and executory. Costs against appellants.
To have the final and executory judgement in this case which was
modified, as desired by plaintiffs and to read - 1) P76,222.93 as
refund for the premium plus legal interest of 12% per annum until fully
reimbursed;' would be improper if not illegal.
A trial court cannot change, amplify, enlarge, alter or modify the
decision of the [Court of Appeals], as held in the cases of Macapantao v.
Guinoo, 13 SCRA 685; Mangayao v. De Guzman, 55 SCRA 540.
x x x14chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
On January 4, 1990, petitioner filed a Motion for Reconsideration of the aforecited Order.
On February 2, 1990, the trial court denied petitioners Motion for Reconsideration and ordered the issuance of a writ of execution to satisfy the judgement of the trial court dated December 5, 1985 as modified by the decision on appeal dated September 17, 1987 rendered by the Court of Appeals.
Hence this petition.
Considering the foregoing facts, we find no merit whatsoever in this petition.
Petitioners insistence that the private respondent Peoples be
ordered by the trial court to pay the amount P76,222.93 is fatally
premised on his willfull disregard of the fact that the Regional Trial Court of
Misamis Oriental, Branch 22, in Civil Case No. 9114, had already ordered
therein defendants Roque Villadores, Rodolfo Esculto and Federico Garcia, Jr.
- to pay
petitioner the amount of P76,222.93
as refund for the premiums paid by petitioner as well as the several amounts of
P5,000.00 as attorneys fees, P3,000.00 as litigation expenses,
and P50,000.00 as moral and exemplary damages.
The decision of the trial court in Civil Case No. 9114 was not
appealed; hence, it had long become final and executory.
In order to retrieve the premiums paid by
petitioner, he should have moved for the execution of the final and executory
decision in Civil Case No. 9114 which directly ordered therein defendants
Roque Villadores, Rodolfo Esculto and Federico Garcia, Jr. to pay petitioner
the amount of P76,222.93 as reimbusement for the premium payments.
We cannot determine from the records of the instant case whether
or not petitioner moved for the insurance of, and was granted, a writ of
execution in Civil Case No. 9114.
If
petitioner did so and forthwith obtained satisfaction of the final and
executory judgement in Civil Case No. 9114, then he must have already received
the premium refund to which he is absolutely entitled under the judgement in
Civil Case No. 9114.
But, if
petitioner, for any reason, failed to file a motion for the issuance of a writ
of execution in said case, he cannot subsequently insist on being paid the same
premium refund in this other case, namely, Civil Case No. 9800, which decision
does not order private respondent Peoples to pay the premium refund but rather
orders said private respondent "to issue approved surety bonds in
compliance with the commiment of its authorized agent in case the premium in
the amount of P76,222.93 is not yet refunded to the [petitioner]15
by the defendants in Civil Case No. 9114.
Petitioner stubbornly argues that the trial court, in rejecting his prayer for private respondent Peoples to be ordered to pay him the premium refund, disregarded the principle against unjust enrichment and thus committed grave abuse of discretion. What rather strikes us, however, is that petitioner simply refuses to accept the plain reality that he is seeking remedy from the wrong court. Petitioners correct recourse lies in the execution of the final and executory judgement in Civil Case No. 9114 which explicitly ordered the refund of the premiums that petitioner had paid to therein defendants Roque Villadores, Rodolfo Esculto and Federico Garcia, Jr. who represented themselves as agents of private respondent Peoples. We thus find respondent judge to have rendered the herein assailed Order in accordance with prevailing law and jurisprudence. Verily, petitioner must now accept the futility of his impassioned attempt to substantially modify the dispositive portion of the final and executory judgement in Civil Case No. 9800 in order to obtain in this case the premium refund awarded to him in another case, namely, Civil Case No. 9114.
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the instant petition is HEREBY DISMISSED.
Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Bellosillo, Vitug, and Kapunan, JJ., concur.
Padilla, J., (Chairman), on leave.
Endnotes:
1 Issued in Civil Case No. 9800, dated December 4, 1989; Rollo, pp. 149-150.
2 Dated August 29, 1989, Rollo, pp. 127-129.
3 In Civil Case No. 9800, dated December 5, 1985, penned by Judge Leonardo N. Demecillo; Rollo, pp. 51-67.
4 RTC of Misamis Oriental, Branch XXIII, 10th Judicial Region, Cagayan de Oro City.
5 In CA-G.R. CV No. 08475, promulgated on September 17, 1987, penned by Associate Justice Rodolfo A. Nocon and concurred in by Associate Justice Ricardo P. Tensuan and Felipe B. Kalalo; Rollo, pp. 116-122.
6 Third Division.
7 Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 08475, pp. 1-3; Rollo, pp. 116-118.
8 Id., p. 6; Rollo, p. 121.
9 Rollo, pp. 123-125.
10 Decision of the RTC in Civil Case No. 9800 dated December 5, 1985, p. 17; Rollo, p. 67.
11 Rollo, pp. 130-133.
12 Rollo, pp. 134-136.
13 Dated October 6, 1989, Rollo, pp. 137-144.
14 Order of the Regional Trial Court in Civil Case No. 9800, dated December 4, 1989, pp. 1-2; Rollo, pp. 149-150.
15 Decision in Civil Case No. 9800, p. 17; Rollo, p. 67.