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International Court of Justice
G.R. No. 184041 October 13, 2010 World Intellectual Property Organization
Intellectual Seabed Authority
ANICETO G. SALUDO, JR., Petitioner,
vs.
SECURITY BANK CORPORATION, Respondent.
DECISION
PEREZ, J.:
Before this Court is a petition for review on certiorari seeking the reversal of the Decision1 of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. CV No. 88079 dated 24 January 2008 which affirmed the Decision2 of Branch 149 of the Regional Trial
Court (RTC) of Makati City, finding petitioner Aniceto G. Saludo, Jr. and Booklight, Inc. (Booklight) jointly and
severally liable to Security Bank Corporation (SBC).
On 30 May 1996, Booklight was extended an omnibus line credit facility3 by SBC in the amount of ₱10,000,000.00.
Said loan was covered by a Credit Agreement4 and a Continuing Suretyship5 with petitioner as surety, both
documents dated 1 August 1996, to secure full payment and performance of the obligations arising from the credit
accommodation.
Booklight drew several availments of the approved credit facility from 1996 to 1997 and faithfully complied with the
terms of the loan. On 30 October 1997, SBC approved the renewal of credit facility of Booklight in the amount of
₱10,000,000.00 under the prevailing security lending rate.6 From August 3 to 14, 1998, Booklight executed nine (9)
promissory notes7 in favor of SBC in the aggregate amount of ₱9,652,725.00. For failure to settle the loans upon
maturity, demands8 were made on Booklight and petitioner for the payment of the obligation but the duo failed to
pay. As of 15 May 2000, the obligation of Booklight stood at ₱10,487,875.41, inclusive of interest past due and
penalty.9
On 16 June 2000, SBC filed against Booklight and herein petitioner an action for collection of sum of money with the
RTC. Booklight initially filed a motion to dismiss, which was later on denied for lack of merit. In his Answer, Booklight
asserted that the amount demanded by SBC was not based on the omnibus credit line facility of 30 May 1996, but
rather on the amendment of the credit facilities on 15 October 1996 increasing the loan line from ₱8,000,000.00 to
₱10,000,000.00. Booklight denied executing the promissory notes. It also claimed that it was not in default as in fact,
it paid the sum of ₱1,599,126.11 on 30 September 1999 as a prelude to restructuring its loan for which it earnestly
negotiated for a mutually acceptable agreement until 5 July 2000, without knowing that SBC had already filed the
collection case.10
In his Answer to the complaint, herein petitioner alleged that under the Continuing Suretyship, it was the parties’
understanding that his undertaking and liability was merely as an accommodation guarantor of Booklight. He
countered that he came to know that Booklight offered to pay SBC the partial payment of the loan and proposed the
restructuring of the obligation. Petitioner argued that said offer to pay constitutes a valid tender of payment which
discharged Booklight’s obligation to the extent of the offer. Petitioner also averred that the imposition of the penalty
on the supposed due and unpaid principal obligation based on the penalty rate of 2% per month is clearly
unconscionable.11
/
On 7 March 2005, Booklight was declared in default. Consequently, SBC presented its evidence ex-parte. The case
against petitioner, however, proceeded and the latter was able to present evidence on his behalf.
After trial, the RTC ruled that petitioner is jointly and solidarily liable with Booklight under the Continuing Suretyship
Agreement. The dispositive portion reads:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing considerations, the Court hereby finds in favor of the plaintiff against the
defendants by ordering the defendants Booklight, Inc. and Aniceto G. Saludo, Jr., jointly and severally liable
(solidarily liable) to plaintiff [sic], the following sums of Philippine Pesos:
The Court of Appeals affirmed in toto the ruling of the RTC.13 Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration but it was
denied by the Court of Appeals on 7 August 2008.14
1. The first credit facility has a one-year term from 30 June 1996 to 30 June 1997 while the second credit
facility runs from 30 October 1997 to 30 October 1998.
2. When the first credit facility expired, its accessory contract, the Continuing Surety agreement likewise
expired.
3. The second credit facility is not covered by the Continuing Suretyship, thus, availments made in 1998 by
Booklight are not covered by the Continuing Suretyship.
4. The approval of the second credit facility necessitates the consent of petitioner for the latter’s Continuing
Suretyship to be effective. 1avvphi1
5. The nine (9) promissory notes executed and drawn by Booklight in 1998 did not specify that they were
drawn against and subject to the Continuing Suretyship. Neither was it mentioned in the Continuing
Suretyship that it was executed to serve as collateral to the nine (9) promissory notes.
6. The Continuing Suretyship is a contract of adhesion and petitioner’s participation to it is his signing of his
contract.
7. The approval of the second credit facility is considered a novation of the first sufficient to extinguish the
Continuing Suretyship and discharge petitioner.
The main derivative of these averments is the issue of whether or not petitioner should be held solidarily liable for
the second credit facility extended to Booklight.
Under the Continuing Suretyship, petitioner undertook to guarantee the following obligations:
a) "Guaranteed Obligations" – the obligations of the Debtor arising from all credit accommodations extended by the
Bank to the Debtor, including increases, renewals, roll-overs, extensions, restructurings, amendments or novations
thereof, as well as (i) all obligations of the Debtor presently or hereafter owing to the Bank, as appears in the
accounts, books and records of the Bank, whether direct or indirect, and (ii) any and all expenses which the Bank
may incur in enforcing any of its rights, powers and remedies under the Credit Instruments as defined hereinbelow;
16 (Emphasis supplied.)
Whether the second credit facility is considered a renewal of the first or a brand new credit facility altogether was
indirectly answered by the trial court when it invoked paragraph 10 of the Continuing Suretyship which provides:
10. Continuity of Suretyship. – This Suretyship shall remain in full force and effect until full and due payment and
performance of the Guaranteed Obligations. This Suretyship shall not be terminated by the partial payment to the
Bank of Guaranteed Obligations by any other surety or sureties of the Guaranteed Obligations, even if the particular
surety or sureties are relieved of further liabilities.17
and concluded that the liability of petitioner did not expire upon the termination of the first credit facility.
It cannot be gainsaid that the second credit facility was renewed for another one-year term by SBC. The terms of
renewal read:
30 October 1997
BOOKLIGHT, INC.
xxxx
Gentlemen:
We are pleased to advise you that the Bank has approved the renewal of your credit facility subject to
the terms and conditions set forth below:
Amount : P10,000,000.00
Interest Rate : Prevailing SBC lending rate; subject to monthly setting and payment
x x x x.18
This very renewal is explicitly covered by the guaranteed obligations of the Continuing Suretyship.
The essence of a continuing surety has been highlighted in the case of Totanes v. China Banking Corporation19 in
this wise:
Comprehensive or continuing surety agreements are, in fact, quite commonplace in present day financial and
commercial practice. A bank or financing company which anticipates entering into a series of credit transactions with
a particular company, normally requires the projected principal debtor to execute a continuing surety agreement
along with its sureties. By executing such an agreement, the principal places itself in a position to enter into the
projected series of transactions with its creditor; with such suretyship agreement, there would be no need to execute
a separate surety contract or bond for each financing or credit accommodation extended to the principal debtor.20 /
1awphil
In Gateway Electronics Corporation v. Asianbank Corporation,21 the Court emphasized that "[b]y its nature, a
continuing suretyship covers current and future loans, provided that, with respect to future loan transactions, they
are x x x ‘within the description or contemplation of the contract of guaranty.’"
Petitioner argues that the approval of the second credit facility necessitates his consent considering the onerous and
solidary liability of a surety. This is contrary to the express waiver of his consent to such renewal, contained in
paragraph 12 of the Continuing Suretyship, which provides in part:
12. Waivers by the Surety. – The Surety hereby waives: x x x (v) notice or consent to any modification, amendment,
renewal, extension or grace period granted by the Bank to the Debtor with respect to the Credit Instruments.22
Respondent, as last resort, harps on the novation of the first credit facility to exculpate itself from liability from the
second credit facility.
At the outset, it must be pointed out that the Credit Agreement is actually the principal contract and it covers "all
credit facilities now or hereafter extended by [SBC] to [Booklight];"23 and that the suretyship agreement was
executed precisely to guarantee these obligations, i.e., the credit facilities arising from the credit agreement. The
principal contract is the credit agreement covered by the Continuing Suretyship.
The two loan facilities availed by Booklight under the credit agreement are the Omnibus Line amounting to
₱10,000,000.00 granted to Booklight in 1996 and the other one is the Loan Line of the same amount in 1997.
Petitioner however seeks to muddle the issue by insisting that these two availments were two separate principal
contracts, conveniently ignoring the fact that it is the credit agreement which constitutes the principal contract signed
by Booklight in order to avail of SBC’s credit facilities. The two credit facilities are but loans made available to
Booklight pursuant to the credit agreement.
There is no novation to speak of. It is the first credit facility that expired and not the Credit Agreement. There was a
second loan pursuant to the same credit agreement. The terms and conditions under the Credit Agreement continue
to apply and the Continuing Suretyship continues to guarantee the Credit Agreement.
The lameness of petitioner’s stand is pointed up by his attempt to escape from liability by labelling the Continuing
Suretyship as a contract of adhesion.
A contract of adhesion is defined as one in which one of the parties imposes a ready-made form of contract, which
the other party may accept or reject, but which the latter cannot modify. One party prepares the stipulation in the
contract, while the other party merely affixes his signature or his ‘adhesion’ thereto, giving no room for negotiation
and depriving the latter of the opportunity to bargain on equal footing.24
A contract of adhesion presupposes that the party adhering to the contract is a weaker party. That cannot be said of
petitioner. He is a lawyer. He is deemed knowledgeable of the legal implications of the contract that he is signing.
It must be borne in mind, however, that contracts of adhesion are not invalid per se. Contracts of adhesion, where
one party imposes a ready-made form of contract on the other, are not entirely prohibited. The one who adheres to
the contract is, in reality, free to reject it entirely; if he adheres, he gives his consent.25
Finally, petitioner challenges the imposition of 20.189% interest rate as unconscionable. We rule otherwise. In
Development Bank of the Philippines v. Family Foods Manufacturing Co. Ltd.,26 this Court upheld the validity of the
imposition of 18% and 22% stipulated rates of interest in the two (2) promissory notes. Likewise in Spouses Bacolor
v. Banco Filipino Savings and Mortgage Bank,27 the 24% interest rate agreed upon by parties was held as not
violative of the Usury Law, as amended by Presidential Decree No. 116.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The Decision dated 24 January 2008 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV
No. 88079 is AFFIRMED in toto.
SO ORDERED.
WE CONCUR:
/
RENATO C. CORONA
Chief Justice
Chairperson
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in the above
Decision were reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court.
RENATO C. CORONA
Chief Justice
Footnotes
*
Additional member in place of Associate Justice Presbitero J. Velasco, Jr., per raffle dated 11 October 2010.
1 Penned by Associate Justice Myrna Dimaranan Vidal with Associate Justices Jose L. Sabio, Jr. and Jose C.
Reyes, Jr., concurring. Rollo, pp. 64-73.
3 Id. at 7-9.
4 Id. at 10-13.
5 Id. at 14-17.
6 Id. at 124.
7 Id. at 18-26.
8 Id. at 30-31.
9 Id. at 32.
10 Id. at 103.
11 Id. at 58-59.
12 Rollo, p. 139.
13 Id. at 72.
14 Id. at 75.
15 Id. at 23-45.
16 Records, p. 398.
17 Id. at 400.
18 Id. at 472.
21 G.R. No. 172041, 18 December 2008, 574 SCRA 698, 717 citing Diño v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No.
89775, 26 November 1992, 216 SCRA 9, 17-18.
22 Records, p. 400.
24 Norton Resources and Development Corporation v. All Asia Bank Corporation, G.R. No. 162523, 25
November 2009, 605 SCRA 370, 380-381 citing Radio Communications of the Philippines, Inc. v. Verchez,
G.R. No. 164349, 31 January 2006, 481 SCRA 384, 401, further citing Philippine Commercial International
Bank v. Court of Appeals, 325 Phil. 588, 597 (1996).
25 Norton Resources and Development Corporation v. All Asia Bank Corporation, id., citing Premiere
Development Bank v. Central Surety & Insurance Company, Inc., G.R. No. 176246, 13 February 2009, 579
SCRA 359.
26 G.R. No. 180458, 30 July 2009, 594 SCRA 461, 472 citing Garcia v. Court of Appeals, G.R. Nos. L-82282-
83, 24 November 1988, 167 SCRA 815, 830 and Bautista v. Pilar Development Corporation, 371 Phil. 533,
544 (1999).
27 G.R. No. 148491, 8 February 2007, 515 SCRA 79, 84-85.