060-Vicente vs. Geraldez 52 Scra 210
060-Vicente vs. Geraldez 52 Scra 210
060-Vicente vs. Geraldez 52 Scra 210
Geraldez
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Vicente v. Geraldez
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contractual commitments, for all of which reasons the plaintiff prayed the court to issue preliminary writs of
mandatory injunction perpetually restraining the defendants and those cooperating with them from the commission
or continuance of the acts complained of, ordering defendants to allow plaintiff, or its agents and workers, to enter,
develop and extract minerals from the areas claimed by defendants, to declare the injunction permanent after
hearing, and to order the defendants to pay damages to the plaintiff in the amount of P200,000.00, attorney's fees,
expenses of litigation and costs.
On September 12, 1967 the trial court issued a restraining order and required the defendants to file their answers.
The defendants filed their respective answers, which contained the usual admissions and denials and interposed
special and affirmative defenses, namely, among others, that they are rightful owners of certain portions of the land
covered by the supposed mining claims of the plaintiff; that it was the plaintiff and its workers who had committed
acts of force and violence when they entered into and intruded upon the defendants' lands; and that the complaint
failed to state a cause of action. The defendants set up counter-claims against the plaintiff for actual and moral
damages, as well as for attorney's fees.
In another pleading filed on the same date, defendant Juan Bernabe opposed the issuance of a writ of preliminary
mandatory or prohibitory injunction. In its Order dated September 30, 1967, the trial court, however, directed the
issuance of a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction upon the plaintiff's posting of a bond in the amount of
P100,000.00. In its order, the court suggested the relocation of the boundaries of the plaintiff's claims in relation to
the properties of the defendants, and to this end named as Commissioner, a Surveyor from the Office of the District
Engineer of Bulacan to relocate the boundaries of the plaintiff's mining claims, to show in a survey plan the
location of the areas thereof in conflict with the portions whose ownership is claimed by the defendants and to
submit his report thereof to the court on or before October 31, 1967. The court also directed the parties to send their
representatives to the place of the survey on the date thereof and to furnish the surveyor with copies of their titles.
The Commissioner submitted his report to the Court on November 24, 1967 containing the following findings:
1. In the attached survey plan, the area covered and embraced full and heavy lines is the Placer
Mining Claims of the Plaintiff containing an area of 107 hectares while the area bounded by finebroken lines are the properties of the Defendants.
2. The property of the Defendant MOISES ANGELES, consisting of two (2) parcels known as Lot
1-B and Lot 2 of Psu-103374, both described in O.C.T. No. O-1769 with a total area of 34,984
square meters were totally covered by the Claims of the Plaintiff.
3. The property of the Defendant IGNACIO VICENTE, containing an area of 32,619 square meters,
is also inside the Claims of the Plaintiff.
4. The property of the defendant JUAN BERNABE known as Psu-178969, described in O.C.T. No.
0-2050 is partially covered by the Claims of the Plaintiff and the area affected is 57,539 square
meters.
In an Order issued on December 14, 1967, the court approved the report "with the conformity of all the parties in
this case."
Thereafter, on April 2, 1968 plaintiff HI Cement Corporation filed a motion to amend the complaint "so as to
conform to the facts brought out and/or impliedly admitted in the pre-trial. This motion was granted by the court on
April 6, 1968. Accordingly, on October 21, 1968, the plaintiff filed its amended complaint. The amendments
consisted in the statement of the correct areas of the land belonging to defendants Bernabe (57,539 square meters),
Vicente (32,619 square meters) and Angles (34,984 square meters), as well as the addition of allegations to the
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effect, among others, that at the pre-trial the defendants Angeles and Vicente declared their willingness to sell to the
plaintiff their properties covered by the plaintiff's mining claims for P10.00 per square meter, and that when the
plaintiff offered to pay only P0.90 per square meter, the said defendants stated that they were willing to go to trial
on the issue of what would be the reasonable price for the properties of defendants sought to be taken by plaintiff.
With particular reference to defendant Bernabe, the amended complaint alleged that the said defendant neither
protested against nor prohibited the predecessor-in-interest of the plaintiff from prospecting, discovering, locating
and contracting minerals from the aforementioned claims, or from conducting the survey thereon, or filed any
opposition against the application for lease by the Red Star Mining Association, and that as a result of the failure of
said defendant to object to the acts of possession or occupation over the said property by plaintiff, defendant is now
estopped from claiming that plaintiff committed acts of usurpation on said property. The plaintiff prayed the court,
among other things, to fix the reasonable value of the defendants' properties as reasonable compensation for any
resulting damage.
Defendant Bernabe filed an amended answer substantially reproducing his original answer and denying the
averments concerning him in the amended complaint.
The respective counsels of the parties then conferred among themselves on the possibility of terminating the case
by compromise, the defendants having previously signified their willingness to sell to the plaintiff their respective
properties at reasonable prices.
On January 30, 1969 the counsels of the parties executed and submitted to the court for its approval the following
Compromise Agreement:
COMPROMISE AGREEMENT
COME NOW the plaintiff and the defendants, represented by their respective counsel, and
respectfully submit the following agreement:
1. That the plaintiff is willing to buy the properties subject of litigation, and the defendants are
willing to sell their respective properties;
2. That this Honorable Court authorizes the plaintiff and the defendants to appoint their respective
commissioners, that is, one for the plaintiff and one for each defendant;
3. That the parties hereby agree to abide by the decision of the Court based on the findings of the
Commissioners;
4. That the fees of the Commissioners shall be paid as follows:
For those appointed by the parties shall be paid by them respectively; and for the one
appointed by the Court, his fees shall be paid pro-rata by the parties;
5. That the names of the Commissioners to be appointed by the parties shall be submitted to the
Court on or before February 8, 1969.
WHEREFORE, the undersigned respectfully pray that the foregoing agreement be approved.
Sta. Maria, Bulacan, January 30, 1969.
For the Plaintiff:
(Sgd. ) FRANCISCO VENTURA
t/ FRANCISCO VENTURA.
Vicente v. Geraldez
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(Sgd.) FLORENTINO V. CARDENAS
t/ FLORENTINO V. CARDENAS
(Sgd.) ENRIQUETO I. MAGPANTAY
t/ ENRIQUETO I. MAGPANTAY
For Juan Bernabe:
(Sgd.) ANDRECIANO F. CABALLERO
t/ ANDRECIANO F. CABALLERO
For
Ignacio
Moises Angeles:
Vicente
and
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B IGNACIO VICENTE:
a) 60% or 19,571.4 sq. m. (mineral land) at P12.00 per sq. m.
b) 40% or 13,047.6 sq. m. (riceland) at P8.00 per sq. m.
C MOISES ANGELES (riceland) at P8.00 per sq. m.
It is worthy of note that in the individual report of the Commissioner nominated by plaintiff HI Cement
Corporation, the price recommended for defendant Juan Bernabe's property was P0.60 per square meter, while in
the individual report of the Commissioner nominated by the said defendant, the price recommended was P50.00
per square meter. The Commissioners named by defendants Vicente and Angeles recommended was P15.00 per
square meter for the lands owned by the said two defendants, while the Commissioners named by the said two
defendants, while the Commissioner named by the plaintiff recommended P0.65 per square meter for Vicente's
land, and P0.55 per square meter for Angeles' land.
On October 21, 1969, Atty. Francisco Ventura, one of the three lawyers for plaintiff HI Cement Corporation, filed
with the trial court a manifestation stating that on September 1, 1969 he sent a copy of the Compromise Agreement
to Mr. Antonio Diokno, President of the corporation, requesting the latter to intercede with the Board of Directors
for the confirmation or approval of the commitment made by the plaintiff's lawyers to abide by the decision of the
Court based on the reports of the Commissioners; and that on October 15, 1969 he received a letter from Mr.
Diokno, a copy of which was attached to the manifestation. In that letter Mr. Diokno said:
While I realize your interest in cooperating with the Court in its desire to expedite the disposition of
the case, this commitment would deprive us of the right to appeal if we do not agree with the
valuation set by the Court. Our Board, therefore, cannot waive its rights; only when it knows the
value set by the Court on the properties can it decide whether to abide by it or appeal therefrom. I
would like to stress that, under the law, the compromise agreement requires the express approval of
our Board of Directors to be binding on our corporation. Such an approval, I regret to say, cannot be
obtained at this time.
On November 5, 1969, defendant Bernabe filed an answer to Atty. Ventura's manifestation, praying the court to
ignore, disregard and, if possible, order striken from the record, the plaintiff's manifestation on the following
grounds: that its filing after the Consolidated Report of the Commissioners had been submitted and approved, and
long after the signing of the Compromise Agreement on January 30, 1969, cast suspicion on the sincerity of the
plaintiff's motive; that when the Compromise Agreement was being considered, the court inquired from the parties
and their respective lawyers if all the attorneys appearing in the case had been duly authorized and/or empowered
to enter into a compromise agreement, and the three lawyers for the plaintiff answered in the affirmative; that in
fact it was Atty. Ventura himself who prepared the draft of the Compromise Agreement in his own handwriting and
was the first to sign the agreement; that one of the three lawyers for the plaintiff, Atty. Florentino V. Cardenas, who
also signed the Compromise Agreement, was the official representative, indeed was an executive official, of
plaintiff corporation; that the Compromise Agreement, having been executed pursuant to a pre-trial conference,
partakes the nature of a stipulation of facts mutually agreed upon by the parties and approved by the court, hence,
was binding and conclusive upon the parties; and that the nomination by the plaintiff of Mr. Larry G. Marquez as
its Commissioner pursuant to the Compromise Agreement, was a clear indication of the plaintiff's tacit approval of
the terms and conditions of the Compromise Agreement, if not an implied ratification of Atty. Ventura's acts.
On March 13, 1970 the court rendered a decision in which the terms and conditions of the Compromise Agreement
are reproduced, and the Consolidated Report of the Commissioners is extensively quoted. The rationale and
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Vicente v. Geraldez
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On April 17, 1970 the plaintiff filed a motion for reconsideration of the April 14, 1970 Order, alleging that it had an
opposition to the defendants' motions for execution, and that the Compromise Agreement had been repudiated by
the plaintiff corporation through its Vice President, as earlier manifested by the plaintiff. The plaintiff prayed for
ten days from the date of the hearing of the motion within which to file its written opposition to the motions for
execution. Defendant Juan Bernabe filed an opposition to the plaintiff's motion on April 21, 1970.
On April 22, 1970 the plaintiff filed with the court a motion for new trial on the ground that the decision of the
court dated March 13, 1970 is null and void because it was based on the Compromise Agreement of January 30,
1969 which was itself null and void for want of a special authority by the plaintiff's lawyers to enter into the said
agreement. The plaintiff also prayed that the decision dated March 13, 1970 and the Order dated April 14, 1970
granting the defendants' motions for execution, be set aside. Defendant Juan Bernabe filed on April 27, 1970 an
opposition to the plaintiff's motion on the grounds that the decision of the court is in accordance with law, for three
lawyers for the plaintiff signed the Compromise Agreement, and one of them, Atty. Cardenas, was an official
representative of plaintiff corporation, hence, when he signed the Compromise Agreement, he did so in the dual
capacity of lawyer and representative of the management of the corporation; that the plaintiff itself pursued,
enforced and implemented the agreement by appointing Mr. Larry Marquez as its duly accredited Commissioner;
and that the plaintiff is conclusively bound by the acts of its lawyers in entering into the Compromise Agreement.
In the meantime, or on April 24, 1970, the court issued an Order setting aside its Order of April 14, 1970 under
which the defendants' motions for execution of judgment had been granted, and gave the plaintiff ten days within
which to file an opposition to the defendants' motions for execution.
On May 9, 1970 the plaintiff filed an opposition to the motions for execution of judgment, on the grounds that the
decision dated March 13, 1970 is contrary to law for it is based on a compromise agreement executed by the
plaintiff's lawyers who had no special power of attorney as required by Article 1878 of the Civil Code, or any
special authority as required by Section 23, Rule 138 of the Rules of Court; and that the judgment is void for lack
of jurisdiction of the court because the same is based on a void compromise agreement.
On May 18, 1970 the court issued an Order setting aside its decision dated March 13, 1970, denying the
defendants' motions for execution of judgment, and setting for June 23, 1970 a pre-trial conference in the case. The
three defendants moved for reconsideration, but their motions were denied in an Order dated July 18, 1970.
It is in these factual premises that the defendants in Civil Case No. SM-201 came to this Court by means of the
present petitions. In G.R. No. L-32473, petitioners Vicente and Angeles pray this Court to issue a writ of
preliminary injunction, and, after hearing, to annul and set aside the Order dated May 18,1970 issued by
respondent Judge setting aside the decision dated March 13, 1970; to declare the said decision legal, effective and
immediately executory; to dissolve the writ of preliminary mandatory injunction issued by respondent Judge on
September 30, 1967 commanding petitioners to allow private respondent to enter their respective properties and
excavate thereon; to make the preliminary injunction permanent; and to award treble costs in favor of petitioners
and against private respondent. In G.R. No. L-32483, petitioner Juan Bernabe prays this Court to issue a writ of
preliminary injunction or, at least a temporary restraining order, and, after hearing, to annul and set aside the Order
dated April 24, 1970 issued by respondent Judge setting aside his Order of April 14, 1970 and allowing private
respondent to file an opposition to petitioners' motion for execution, the Order dated May 18, 1970, and the Order
dated July 18, 1970. Petitioner Bernabe also seeks the reinstatement of the trial court's decision dated May 13,
1970 and its Order dated April 14, 1970 granting his motion for execution of judgment, and an award in his favor
of attorney's fees and of actual, moral and exemplary damages.
At issue is whether the respondent court, in setting aside its decision of March 13, 1970 and denying the motions
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for execution of said decision, had acted without or in excess of its jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion.
We hold that said court did not, in view of the following considerations:
1. Special powers of attorney are necessary, among other cases, in the following: to compromise and to renounce
the right to appeal from a judgment. Attorneys have authority to bind their clients in any case by any agreement in
relation thereto made in writing, and in taking appeals, and in all matters of ordinary judicial procedure, but they
cannot, without special authority, compromise their clients' litigation, or receive anything in discharge of their
clients' claims but the full amount in cash.
The Compromise Agreement dated January 30, 1969 was signed only by the lawyers for petitioners and by the
lawyers for private respondent corporation. It is not disputed that the lawyers of respondent corporation had not
submitted to the Court any written authority from their client to enter into a compromise.
This Court has said that the Rules "require, for attorneys to compromise the litigation of their clients, a special
authority. And while the same does not state that the special authority be in writing the court has every reason to
expect that, if not in writing, the same be duly established by evidence other than the self-serving assertion of
counsel himself that such authority was verbally given him."
2. The law specifically requires that "juridical persons may compromise only in the form and with the requisites
which may be necessary to alienate their property." Under the corporation law the power to compromise or settle
claims in favor of or against the corporation is ordinarily and primarily committed to the Board of Directors. The
right of the Directors "to compromise a disputed claim against the corporation rests upon their right to manage the
affairs of the corporation according to their honest and informed judgment and discretion as to what is for the best
interests of the corporation." This power may however be delegated either expressly or impliedly to other corporate
officials or agents. Thus it has been stated, that as a general rule an officer or agent of the corporation has no power
to compromise or settle a claim by or against the corporation, except to the extent that such power is given to him
either expressly or by reasonable implication from the circumstances. It is therefore necessary to ascertain whether
from the relevant facts it could be reasonably concluded that the Board of Directors of the HI Cement Corporation
had authorized its lawyers to enter into the said compromise agreement.
Petitioners claim that private respondent's attorneys admitted twice in open court on January 30, 1969, that they
were authorized to compromise their client's case, which according to them, was never denied by the said lawyers
in any of the pleadings filed by them in the case. The claim is unsupported by evidence. On the contrary, in private
respondent's "Reply to Defendant Bernabe's Answer Dated November 8, 1969," said counsels categorically denied
that they ever represented to the court that they were authorized to enter into a compromise. Indeed, the complete
transcript of stenographic notes taken at the proceedings on January 30, 1969 are before Us, and nowhere does it
appear therein that respondent corporation's lawyers ever made such a representation. In any event, assuming
arguendo that they did, such a self-serving assertion cannot properly be the basis for the conclusion that the
respondent corporation had in fact authorized its lawyers to compromise the litigation.
3. Petitioners however insist that there was tacit ratification on the part of the corporation, because it nominated
Mr. Larry Marquez as its commissioner pursuant to the agreement, paid his services therefor, and Atty. Florentino
V. Cardenas, respondent corporation's administrative manager, not only did not object but even affixed his
signature to the agreement. It is also argued that respondent corporation having represented, through its lawyers, to
the court and to petitioners that said lawyers had authority to bind the corporation and having induced by such
representations the petitioners to sign the compromise agreement, said respondent is now estopped from
questioning the same.
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The infirmity of these arguments is in their assumption that Atty. Cerdenas as administrative manager had authority
to bind the corporation or to compromise the case. Whatever authority the officers or agents of a corporation may
have is derived from the board of directors, or other governing body, unless conferred by the charter of the
corporation. A corporation officer's power as an agent of the corporation must therefore be sought from the statute,
the charter, the by-laws, or in a delegation of authority to such officer, from the acts of board of directors, formally
expressed or implied from a habit or custom of doing business. In the case at bar no provision of the charter and
by-laws of the corporation or any resolution or any other act of the board of directors of HI Cement Corporation
has been cited, from which We could reasonably infer that the administrative manager had been granted expressly
or impliedly the power to bind the corporation or the authority to compromise the case. Absent such authority to
enter into the compromise, the signature of Atty. Cardenas on the agreement would be legally ineffectual.
4. As regards the nomination of Mr. Marquez as commissioner, counsel for respondent corporation has explained
and this has not been disproven that Atty. Cardenas, apparently on his own, submitted the same to the court.
There is no iota of proof that at the time of the submission to the Court, on February 26, 1969, of the name of Mr.
Marquez, respondent corporation knew of the contents of the compromise agreement. As matter of fact, according
to the manifestation of Atty. Ventura to the court, it was only on September 1, 1969 that he sent to Mr. Antonio
Diokno, Vice-President of the corporation, a copy of the compromise agreement for the approval by the board of
directors and on October 22, 1969, Mr. Diokno informed him that the approval of the Board cannot be obtained, as
under the agreement the corporation is deprived of its right to appeal from the judgement.
In the absence of any proof that the governing body of respondent corporation had knowledge, either actual or
constructive, or the contents of the compromise agreement before September 1, 1969, why should the nomination
of Mr. Marquez as commissioner, by Attys. Ventura, Cardenas and Magpantay, on February 26, 1969, be
considered as a form of tacit ratification of the compromise agreement by the corporation? In order to ratify the
unauthorized act of an agent and make it binding on the corporation, it must be shown that the governing body or
officer authorized to ratify had full and complete knowledge of all the material facts connected with the transaction
to which it relates. It cannot be assumed also that Atty. Cardenas, as administrative manager of the corporation, had
authority to ratify. For ratification can never be made "on the part of the corporation by the same persons who
wrongfully assume the power to make the contract, but the ratification must be by the officer or governing body
having authority to make such contract and, as we have seen, must be with full knowledge."
5. Equally inapposite is petitioners' invocation of the principle of estoppel. In the case at bar, except those made by
Attys. Ventura, Cardenas and Magpantay, petitioners have not demonstrated any act or declaration of the
corporation amounting to false representation or concealment of material facts calculated to mislead said
petitioners. The acts or conduct for which the corporation may be liable under the doctrine of estoppel must be
those of the corporation, its governing body or authorized officers, and not those of the purported agent who is
himself responsible for the misrepresentation.
It having been found by the trial court that "the counsel for the plaintiff entered into the compromise agreement
without the written authority of his client and the latter did not ratify, on the contrary it repudiated and disowned
the same ...", We therefore declare that the orders of the court a quo subject of these two petitions, have not been
issued in excess of its jurisdictional authority or in grave abuse of its discretion.
WHEREFORE, the petitions in these two cases are hereby dismissed. Costs against the petitioners.
Makalintal, Actg. C.J., Castro, Teehankee, Barredo, Makasiar, and Esguerra, JJ., concur.
Zaldivar, J., is on leave.
Fernando, J., took no part.