Talampas Vs Moldex Realty
Talampas Vs Moldex Realty
Talampas Vs Moldex Realty
We resolve the petition for review on certiorari 1 assailing the June 27, 2005
decision 2 and October 21, 2005 resolution 3 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV
No. 64715. The CA dismissed, for lack of cause of action, the complaint 4 for breach of
contract and damages led by Angel V. Talampas, Jr. (petitioner) against Moldex
Realty, Inc. (respondent).
The Facts
The petitioner is the owner and general manager of Angel V. Talampas, Jr.
Construction (AVTJ Construction) , a business engaged in general engineering and
building. 5
On December 16, 1992, the petitioner entered into a contract 6 with the
respondent to develop a residential subdivision on a land owned by the latter, located
at Km. 41, Aguinaldo Highway, Cavite, and known as the Metrogate Silang Estates.
The petitioner undertook to perform roadworks, earthworks and site-grading, 7
and to procure materials, labor, equipment, tools and facilities, 8 for the contract price
of P10,500,000.00, 9 to be paid by the respondent through progress billings. The
respondent made an initial down payment of P500,000.00 at the start of the contract.
10
Construction works on the Metrogate project started on January 14, 1993 11 and
was projected to be completed by the petitioner within three hundred (300) calendar
days from this starting date. 12
On May 14, 1993, Metrogate's Project Manager, Engr. Honorio 'Boidi' Almeida,
asked the petitioner to suspend construction work on the site for one week due to a
change in the project's subdivision plan. 13 The suspension lasted for more than one
week, leaving the petitioner's personnel and equipment idle at the site for three weeks.
In a letter 14 dated June 1, 1993, the petitioner inquired from Engr. Almeida whether the
respondent would still push through with the project.
On June 16, 1993, the petitioner received from the respondent's Vice President,
Engr. Jose Po, an antedated April 23, 1993 letter 15 that contained the respondent's
decision to terminate the parties' contract. The April 23, 1993 letter stated:
Gentlemen:
AaCTcI
This has reference to our site development contract for METROGATE SILANG
ESTATES dated 16 December 1992.
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The letter bore the signature of Engr. Almeida and gave the petitioner the 'go signal' to
demobilize his equipment from the site. 16
In a letter 17 dated August 18, 1993, the petitioner demanded from the
respondent the payment of the following amounts: (a) P1,485,000.00 as equipment
rentals incurred from May 14, 1993 to June 16, 1993 the period of suspension of
construction works on the Metrogate project, and (b) P2,100,000.00 or twenty
percent (20%) of the P10,500,000.00 contract price as cost of opportunity lost due to
the respondent's early termination of their contract. The respondent received the letter
on August 18, 1993, 18 but refused to heed the petitioner's demands.
On November 5, 1993, the petitioner led a complaint for breach of contract
and damages against the respondent before the RTC. He alleged that the respondent
committed the following acts: (1) breach of contract for unilaterally terminating their
agreement, and (2) fraud for failing to disclose the Metrogate project's lack of a
conversion clearance certi cate from the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR), which
he claimed to be the real reason why the respondent terminated their contract.
In a decision 19 dated September 9, 1999, the RTC found the respondent liable
for breach of contract because the respondent's reason for termination, i.e., "project
redesign," was not a stipulated ground for the unilateral termination under the parties'
contract. 20 The RTC further found the respondent liable for fraud for failing to disclose
to the petitioner the lack of a conversion clearance certi cate for the Metrogate
subdivision. The RTC considered the conversion clearance to be a material
consideration for the petitioner in entering the contract with the respondent. 21
Consequently, the RTC ordered the respondent to pay: (a) P1,485,000.00 as
unpaid construction equipment rentals from May 14, 1993 to June 16, 1993; (b)
P2,100,000.00 as unrealized pro ts; (c) P300,000.00 as moral damages; (d)
P150,000.00 as exemplary damages; (e) attorney's fees equivalent to ten percent
(10%) of the sum total of items (a) and (b); and (f) double costs of suit. 22
On appeal, the CA reversed and set aside the RTC's ruling and dismissed the
petitioner's complaint for breach of contract for lack of cause of action. 23 The CA held:
The pieces of evidence presented and offered by the plaintiff-appellee do
not clearly prove that the subject contract was unilaterally terminated by the
defendant-appellant. While the trial court cited the letter of defendant-appellant
dated April 23, 1993 as an evidence of unilateral rescission, said court however,
failed to consider the letter of the plaintiff-appellee dated June 15, 1993,
showing that he agreed to terminate the contract. Thus:
June 15, 1993.
ENGR. JOSE PO
Vice-President
Moldex Realty, Inc.
West Avenue, Q.C.
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Subject:
This letter of June 15, 1993 of Angel Talampas, Jr. to Engr. Jose Po, Sr.,
Vice-President of Moldex Realty, Inc., con rms that previous to said date or
speci cally on May 21, 1993, Engr. Jose Po, Sr. met with Jose Angel Talampas,
the Project Manager of the plaintiff-appellee, to discuss the possibility of either
suspending or terminating the contract due to a redesign of the project
necessitated by the acquisition of a larger tract of land adjacent to the original
project. Engr. Talampas opted for the termination of the contract instead of its
suspension.
This letter was never considered by the court a quo.
supplied)
24
(emphasis
The CA, likewise, dismissed the petitioner's allegation of fraud, under the
following reasoning:
The alleged lack of conversion clearance does not in itself amount to
fraud. While the duty to seek conversion clearance from DAR is an obligation of
the defendant-appellant, failure to obtain the same at the time of the execution
of the contract would not convincingly show that the plaintiff-appellee was
defrauded. The omission to obtain conversion clearance could be in good faith
since the records show that it was eventually obtained. Fraud must be
established by clear and convincing evidence. Mere preponderance of evidence
is not enough. Besides, it cannot be said by the plaintiff-appellee that the
alleged lack of conversion clearance was concealed by defendant-appellant
from plaintiff-appellee. Plaintiff-appellee had every opportunity to verify this
before submitting his bid. Plaintiff-appellee must suf ciently connect that such
lack of conversion clearance was the real reason for the termination of the
contract. Sadly, the records fail to show that he adequately established that the
failure of the defendant-appellant to seek conversion clearance of the subject
property was the real reason for the termination of the contract. On the contrary,
the June 15, 1993 letter of Angel V. Talampas admits that the reason for the
termination was "due to business decision." 25
The petitioner moved to reconsider the CA's decision, but the CA denied his
motion in a resolution 26 dated October 21, 2005. The denial opened the way for the
filing of the present petition for review on certiorari with this Court.
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The Petition
The petitioner raised the following issues:
1.
Whether, as found by the trial court, the subject development
contract was unilaterally abrogated by respondent without justi able cause, or
whether, as opined by the Court of Appeals, the contract termination was upon
the mutual agreement of the parties.
2.
Whether, as found by the trial court, the lack of DAR
conversion clearance which was not disclosed to the petitioner prior to the
bidding and execution of the subject contract, was the true reason of the
respondent in ordering stoppage of work and in eventually terminating the
subject contract, or whether, as opined by the Court of Appeals, the reason for
the contract termination was "due to business decision" of the respondent.
3.
Whether or not it was respondent's responsibility prior to the
bidding or execution of the contract, to disclose to the petitioner, the lack of
conversion clearance certi cate from DAR and/or its agrarian problem; and if in
the af rmative, whether such non-disclosure constitutes bad faith or fraud on
the part of respondent.
4.
Whether, as concluded by the trial court, the subject
development contract was an integrated whole, not divisible contract, or
whether, as opined by the Court of Appeals, subject contract is a divisible
contract.
5.
Whether or not petitioner is entitled to the damages awarded
to him by the trial court for breach of contract by respondent. 27
In a resolution 28 dated June 28, 2006, this Court gave due course to the petition
and required the parties to submit their respective memoranda.
The Case for the Respondent
The respondent argues that the petitioner is no longer entitled to the payment of
the amounts he demanded because he had already agreed/consented to terminate
their contract; 29 that, in a meeting held on May 21, 1993, the petitioner's son, Engr.
Jose Angel Talampas, the Project Manager and Vice-President of AVTJ Construction,
agreed, even opted, to terminate their contract. 30 The respondent posits that the
petitioner's consent is con rmed by his request for an of cial letter of termination from
the respondent, as the petitioner would not have requested for such letter had he not
earlier agreed/consented to the termination. 31
Moreover, the respondent argues that the petitioner is estopped to claim further
damages, as he had already been paid the amounts of: (a) P297,090.43 representing
the contractor's unpaid actual work accomplishment at the time of termination (paid on
August 13, 1993); (b) P109,551.00 representing unrecouped costs of equipment
mobilization and demobilization, and unrecouped payment of insurance bond (paid on
September 14, 1993); and (c) P209,606.56 representing the release of all retention
fees. 32 The respondent contends that the petitioner, by accepting these payments,
ratified, if not consented to, the termination of their contract. 33
The respondent strongly denies the petitioner's allegation of fraud and maintains
that the real reason for the termination of their contract was the redesign of the
Metrogate Silang Estates project, not the project's lack of conversion clearance from
the DAR. 34
The Court's Ruling
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The petitioner's issues are largely factual in nature and are therefore not the
proper subjects of a Rule 45 petition. 35 Speci cally, the determination of the existence
of a breach of contract is a factual matter that we do not review in a Rule 45 petition. 36
But due to the conflicts in the factual findings of the RTC and the CA, we see the need to
re-examine the facts and the parties' evidence to fully resolve their present dispute. 37
In an April 23, 1993 letter 38 addressed to the petitioner, the respondent declared
that it was "constrained to cause the termination of the parties' contract effective
immediately" due to a "business decision," but the termination was not immediately
implemented.
On May 14, 1993, the respondent, through Engr. Almeida, ordered the suspension
of construction work on the site, instead of terminating the project in accordance with
the respondent's instructions in its (belatedly received) April 23, 1993 letter to the
petitioner.
The respondent alleged that, on May 21, 1993, its Vice-President Engr. Po and
Engr. Talampas of AVTJ Construction met to discuss the possible termination of their
contract or the suspension of construction works on the Metrogate project. In this
meeting, Engr. Talampas chose to terminate their contract.
On June 1, 1993, the petitioner wrote Engr. Almeida to ask for the con rmation
of the Metrogate project's status.
On June 10, 1993, the petitioner received from the respondent the amount of
P474,679.28 as payment for Progress Billing No. 3 39 (which billing the petitioner
requested in a letter 40 to the respondent dated May 31, 1993).
On June 15, 1993, the petitioner wrote Engr. Po, informing the latter that he had
not yet received from the respondent the letter officially terminating their contract.
On June 16, 1993, the petitioner received from the respondent a letter dated April
23, 1993, expressing the respondent's decision to terminate the parties' contract. The
petitioner alleged that it was only then (June 16, 1993) that he was formally informed of
the respondent's decision to terminate their contract.
On August 13, 1993, the petitioner received from the respondent the amount of
P297,090.43 as payment for earthworks and road base preparations done on the
Metrogate subdivision as of July 12, 1993 (Progress Billing No. 4). 41
On August 18, 1993, the petitioner sent a demand letter to the respondent for the
payment of P1,485,000.00 for unpaid construction equipment rentals from May 14,
1993 to June 16, 1993, and P2,100,000.00 as unrealized profits, among others.
Meanwhile, the petitioner received from the respondent the amount of
P209,606.56 for the release of all "retention fees" 42 withheld by the respondent from
the petitioner's billings. 43
On November 5, 1993, the petitioner led a complaint for breach of contract
against the respondent. This is the root-complaint of the present case.
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In the present case, we nd that the respondent failed to comply with its
contractual stipulations on the unilateral termination when it terminated their
contract due to the redesign of the Metrogate Silang Estates' subdivision
plan .
Paragraph 8 of the parties' contract limits the instances when the respondent
(referred to as owner in the contract) or the petitioner (referred to as contractor in the
contract) may unilaterally terminate their agreement. On the part of the owner,
paragraph 8.1 of the contract specifically provides:
8.1.
The OWNER may terminate this CONTRACT upon ten (10) days
written notice to the CONTRACTOR in the event of any default by the
CONTRACTOR. It shall be considered a default by the CONTRACTOR
whenever he shall:
a)
b)
c)
The respondent could not have validly and unilaterally terminated its contract
with the petitioner, as the latter has not committed any of the stipulated acts of default.
In fact, the petitioner at that time was willing and able to perform his obligations under
their contract; he expressed this in his June 1, 1993 letter to the respondent, which
stated:
Dear Sir:
Please be advised that as per last meeting, you made mention that works
at Silang Estates, Cavite will be temporarily stopped for reason/reasons of
redesigning of the subdivision plan. Stoppage will only be for one week and that
we will be informed in writing of your decision. It has been three weeks now,
going a month that we have not received your decision on the matter. Meantime,
our timetable for the completion of the work is hampered, considering also the
good weather condition prevailing in the area which is also a big factor for our
early completion of our contract with you.
Kindly inform us in writing regarding this matter, so that we can act
accordingly. 46
Thus, the respondent's termination of the subject contract violated the parties'
agreement as the reason for the termination, i.e., the redesign of the project's
subdivision plan, was not a stipulated cause for the unilateral termination under
Paragraph 8.1 of their contract.
HESIcT
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Talampas of AVTJ Construction on May 21, 1993. However, this claim is not supported
by evidence.
In the rst place, the respondent failed to fully establish that a meeting took
place as alleged. Except for the self-serving testimony of Engr. Po that the May 21,
1993 meeting took place, the respondent presented no other evidence to prove that
Engr. Po and Engr. Talampas, met on that date to discuss the fate of their contract. No
document or record the minutes of their May 21, 1993 meeting appeared to have been
made despite the importance of their alleged discussion. The questions that this
evidentiary gap raised cannot but be resolved against the respondent.
Even assuming that the May 21, 1993 meeting between Engr. Po and Engr.
Talampas did indeed take place, we cannot discern from the developments the
petitioner's claimed agreement or consent to the termination of the construction
contract.
The respondent contended that the petitioner's request for an of cial letter of
termination was proof that the latter consented to the termination of their contract. We
disagree with this view. The request for an of cial letter of termination does not
necessarily mean consent to the termination; by itself, the request for an of cial letter
of termination does not really signify an agreement; it was nothing more than a request
for a final decision from the respondent.
A close reading of petitioner's June 15, 1993 letter shows that the petitioner's
intent was solely to con rm whether the respondent would still push through with its
decision to terminate the contract. The petitioner's June 15, 1993 letter to the
respondent stated:
Sir:
Please be informed that as of this writing, we have not received your
of cial letter regarding the untimely termination of our contract with you, due to
reason that stoppage of work is due to business decision.
In order for us to demobilize our personnel, construction equipments, we
need your official letter of termination soonest possible time.
Thank you.
To our mind, the petitioner fully disclosed the intent behind his letter and it was not
consent. Thus, we nd it erroneous to conclude, based on this letter, that the petitioner
had consented to the termination of the construction contract.
The respondent also contended that the petitioner rati ed the termination of
their contract by accepting payments for progress billings, costs of equipment
mobilization/demobilization, refund of insurance bond payments, and the release of
retention fees. However, we do not see the petitioner's receipt of these payments to be
acts of ratification or consent to the contract's termination.
Consent is manifested by the meeting of the offer and the acceptance upon the
thing and the cause which are to constitute the contract. 47 The offer must be certain,
and the acceptance, whether express or implied, must be absolute. 48 An acceptance is
considered absolute and unquali ed when it is identical in all respects with that of the
offer so as to produce consent or a meeting of the minds. 49
We nd no such meeting of the minds between the parties on the
matter of termination because the petitioner's acceptance of the
respondent's offer to terminate was not absolute.
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To terminate their contract, the respondent offered to pay the petitioner billings
for accomplished works, unrecouped costs of equipment mobilization and
demobilization, unrecouped payment of insurance bond, and the release of all retention
fees payments that the petitioner accepted or received.
But despite receipt of payments, no absolute acceptance of the respondent's
offer took place because the petitioner still demanded the payment of equipment
rentals, cost of opportunity lost, among others. In fact, the payments received were for
nished or delivered works and for expenses incurred for the respondent's account. By
making the additional demands, the petitioner effectively made a quali ed acceptance
or a counter-offer, 50 which the respondent did not accept. Under these circumstances,
we see no full consent.
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failed to obtain . On this basis, we nd the petitioner entitled to the payment for the
opportunity lost because of the respondent's unilateral termination of the parties'
contract.
Signi cantly, the respondent itself impliedly accepted this legal consequence by
contending that the cost of opportunity lost should not be based on the total contract
price of P10,500,000.00 as the petitioner had already been compensated for a part of
the construction work done.
We nd merit in the respondent's contention that the basis of the cost of
opportunity lost should not be the total contract price, as the 'cost of opportunity lost'
must represent only the pro ts that the petitioner failed to obtain due to the contract's
early termination. Thus, from the total contract price, the amounts paid to the petitioner
for work accomplished must be subtracted, including the P500,000.00 down payment
that the respondent gave at the start of the contract; the difference would be the basis
for determining the cost of opportunity lost.
On record, the petitioner received the following amounts for work accomplished:
(a) P292,682.90, paid by the respondent on March 10, 1993; (b) P319,922.32, paid on
May 14, 1993; (c) P474,679.28, paid on June 10, 1993; and (d) P297,090.43, paid on
August 13, 1993. By subtracting these amounts and the P500,000.00 down payment
from the total contract price of P10,500,000.00, we arrive at the amount of
P8,615,625.07, which represents the petitioner's unrealized gross earnings from the
contract.
The twenty percent (20%) rate of cost of opportunity lost is, to our mind,
reasonable under the circumstances, considering that one hundred fty (150) days had
lapsed (out of the three hundred (300) days-completion period under the contract) at
the time the petitioner received the respondent's letter con rming the termination of
their contract on June 16, 1993.
TAIaHE
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We cannot award moral and exemplary damages to the petitioner in the absence
of fraud on the respondent's part. To recover moral damages in an action for breach of
contract, the breach must be palpably wanton, reckless, malicious, in bad faith,
oppressive or abusive. 52 In the same manner, to warrant the award of exemplary
damages, the wrongful act must be accompanied by bad faith, such as when the guilty
party acted in a wanton, fraudulent, reckless or malevolent manner. 53
We cannot also award attorney's fees to the petitioner. Attorney's fees are not
awarded every time a party wins a suit. 54 Attorney's fees cannot be awarded even if a
claimant is compelled to litigate or to incur expenses to protect his rights due to the
defendant's act or omission, 55 where no suf cient showing of bad faith exists; a
party's persistence based solely on its erroneous conviction of the righteousness of his
cause, does not necessarily amount to bad faith. 56 In the present case, the respondent
was not shown to have acted in bad faith in appealing and zealously pursuing its case.
Under the circumstances, it was merely protecting its interests.
WHEREFORE , premises considered, we GRANT the appeal and REVERSE and
SET ASIDE the decision dated June 27, 2005, and resolution dated October 21, 2005,
of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 64715.
Accordingly, we ORDER the respondent to pay the petitioner the following
amounts of: (a) P1,485,000.00 , for the rent of petitioner's equipment from May 14,
1993 to June 16, 1993, and (b) P1,723,125.01 , as cost of opportunity lost. The sum
of these amounts shall earn legal interest of six percent (6%) per annum from the
finality of this Decision until full payment.
No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED .
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