The Supreme Court ruled that there was no perfected contract of sale between Luna Sosa and Toyota Shaw. The agreement signed between Sosa and Toyota's sales representative Popong Bernardo was not a contract of sale as it did not establish Toyota's obligation to sell a vehicle to Sosa or Sosa's obligation to pay a certain price. At most, it was part of initial negotiations. The subsequent Vehicle Sales Proposal was also just a proposal and did not create any right for Sosa to demand delivery of the vehicle when the financing fell through. Therefore, Toyota was not liable for damages.
The Supreme Court ruled that there was no perfected contract of sale between Luna Sosa and Toyota Shaw. The agreement signed between Sosa and Toyota's sales representative Popong Bernardo was not a contract of sale as it did not establish Toyota's obligation to sell a vehicle to Sosa or Sosa's obligation to pay a certain price. At most, it was part of initial negotiations. The subsequent Vehicle Sales Proposal was also just a proposal and did not create any right for Sosa to demand delivery of the vehicle when the financing fell through. Therefore, Toyota was not liable for damages.
The Supreme Court ruled that there was no perfected contract of sale between Luna Sosa and Toyota Shaw. The agreement signed between Sosa and Toyota's sales representative Popong Bernardo was not a contract of sale as it did not establish Toyota's obligation to sell a vehicle to Sosa or Sosa's obligation to pay a certain price. At most, it was part of initial negotiations. The subsequent Vehicle Sales Proposal was also just a proposal and did not create any right for Sosa to demand delivery of the vehicle when the financing fell through. Therefore, Toyota was not liable for damages.
The Supreme Court ruled that there was no perfected contract of sale between Luna Sosa and Toyota Shaw. The agreement signed between Sosa and Toyota's sales representative Popong Bernardo was not a contract of sale as it did not establish Toyota's obligation to sell a vehicle to Sosa or Sosa's obligation to pay a certain price. At most, it was part of initial negotiations. The subsequent Vehicle Sales Proposal was also just a proposal and did not create any right for Sosa to demand delivery of the vehicle when the financing fell through. Therefore, Toyota was not liable for damages.
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G.R. No.
L-116650 May 23, 1995
TOYOTA SHAW, INC., petitioner, Vs. COURT OF APPEALS and LUNA L. SOSA, respondents. FACTS: Luna L. Sosa wanted to purchase a Toyota Lite Ace. So Sosa and his son, Gilbert, went to the Toyota office at Shaw Boulevard, Pasig, Metro Manila. There they met Popong Bernardo, a sales representative of Toyota. Sosa emphasized to Bernardo that he needed the Lite Ace not later than 17 June 1989 because he, his family, and a balikbayan guest would use it on his birthday. Bernardo assured Sosa that a unit would be ready for pick up at 10:00 a.m. on 17 June 1989. Bernardo then signed the aforequoted “Agreements Between Mr. Sosa & Popong Bernardo of Toyota Shaw, Inc.” It was also agreed upon by the parties that the balance of the purchase price would be paid by credit financing through B.A. Finance, and for this Gilbert, on behalf of his father, signed the documents of Toyota and B.A. Finance pertaining to the application for financing. Sosa and Gilbert went to Toyota to deliver the down payment of P100,000.00. They met Bernardo who then accomplished a printed Vehicle Sales Proposal (VSP) No. 928. Bernardo called Gilbert to inform him that the vehicle would not be ready for pick up at 10:00 a.m. as previously agreed upon but at 2:00 p.m. that same day. At 2:00 p.m., Sosa and Gilbert met Bernardo at the latter’s office. According to Sosa, Bernardo informed them that the Lite Ace was being readied for delivery. After waiting for about an hour, Bernardo told them that the car could not be delivered because "nasulot ang unit ng ibang malakas." After it became clear that the Lite Ace would not be delivered to him, Sosa asked that his down payment be refunded. Toyota did so on the very same day by issuing a Far East Bank check for the full amount of P100,000.00, the receipt of which was shown by a check voucher of Toyota, which Sosa signed with the reservation, “without prejudice to our future claims for damages.” Thereafter, Sosa sent two letters to Toyota. In the first letter, he demanded the refund, within five days from receipt, of the down payment of P100,000.00 plus interest from the time he paid it and the payment of damages with a warning that in case of Toyota's failure to do so he would be constrained to take legal action. In its answer to the complaint, Toyota alleged that no sale was entered into between it and Sosa, that Bernardo had no authority to sign or and in its behalf, and that Bernardo signed in his personal capacity. As special and affirmative defenses, it alleged that the VSP did not state a date of delivery; Sosa had not completed the documents required by the financing company, and as a matter of policy, the vehicle could not and would not be released prior to full compliance with financing requirements, submission of all documents, and execution of the sales agreement/invoice; the P100,000.00 was returned to and received by Sosa the trial court rendered on 18 February 1992 a decision in favor of Sosa. Sosa sued Toyota for damages. The trial court rendered a decision in favour of Sosa holding that the “AGREEMENTS BETWEEN MR. SOSA AND POPONG BERNARDO OF TOYOTA SHAW INC,” was a valid perfected contract of sale which bound Toyota to deliver the vehicle to Sosa, and further agreed with Sosa that Toyota acted in bad faith in selling to another the unit already reserved for him. The Court of Appeals affirmed in toto the appealed decision. ISSUE: Whether or not there was a perfected contract of sale RULING: What is clear from the agreement signed by Sosa and Gilbert is not a contract of sale. Exhibit “A” is not what the trial court and the Court of Appeals appear to see. It is not a contract of sale. No obligation on the part of Toyota to transfer ownership of a determinate thing to Sosa and no correlative obligation on the part of the latter to pay therefor a price certain appears therein. The provision on the down payment of P100,000.00 made no specific reference to a sale of a vehicle. If it was intended for a contract of sale, it could only refer to a sale on installment basis, as the VSP executed the following day confirmed. But nothing was mentioned about the full purchase price and the manner the installments were to be paid. Neither logic nor recourse to one’s imagination can lead to the conclusion that Exhibit “A” is a perfected contract of sale. Moreover, Exhibit “A” shows the absence of a meeting of minds between Toyota and Sosa. For one thing, Sosa did not even sign it. For another, Sosa was well aware from its title, written in bold letter. AGREEMENTS BETWEEN MR. SOSA & POPONG BERNARDO OF TOYOTA SHAW, INC that he was not dealing with Toyota but with Popong Bernardo and that the latter did not misrepresent that he had the authority to sell any Toyota vehicle. He knew that Bernardo was only a sales representative of Toyota and hence a mere agent of the latter. It was incumbent upon Sosa to act with ordinary prudence and reasonable diligence to know the extent of Bernardo’s authority as an Agent in respect of contracts to sell Toyota’s vehicles. A person dealing with an agent is put upon inquiry and must discover upon his peril the authority of the agent. At the most, Exhibit “A” may be considered as part of the initial phase of the generation or negotiation stage of a contract of sale. The second phase of the generation or negotiation stage in this case was the execution of the VSP. It must be emphasized that thereunder, the down payment of the purchase price was P53,148.00 while the balance to be paid on installment should be financed by B.A. Finance Corporation. It is, of course, to be assumed that B.A. Finance Corp. was acceptable to Toyota, otherwise it should not have mentioned B.A. Finance in the VSP. We are inclined to believe Toyota’s version that B.A. Finance disapproved Sosa’s application for which reason it suggested to Sosa that he pay the full purchase price. When the latter refused, Toyota cancelled the VSP and returned to him his P100,000.00. Sosa’s version that the VSP was cancelled because, according to Bernardo, the vehicle was delivered to another who was “mas malakas” does not inspire belief and was obviously a delayed afterthought. The VSP was a mere proposal which was aborted in lieu of subsequent events. It follows that the VSP created no demandable right in favor of Sosa for the delivery of the vehicle to him, and its non-delivery did not cause any legally indemnifiable injury. Since Sosa is not entitled to moral damages and there being no award for temperate, liquidated, or compensatory damages, he is likewise not entitled to exemplary damages. Under Article 2229 of the Civil Code, exemplary or corrective damages are imposed by way of example or correction for the public good, in addition to moral, temperate, liquidated, or compensatory damages. Also, it is settled that for attorney’s fees to be granted, the court must explicitly state in the body of the decision, and not only in the dispositive portion thereof, the legal reason for the award of attorney’s fees. No such explicit determination thereon was made in the body of the decision of the trial court. No reason thus exists for such an award. WHEREFORE, the instant petition is GRANTED
A Short View of the Laws Now Subsisting with Respect to the Powers of the East India Company
To Borrow Money under their Seal, and to Incur Debts in
the Course of their Trade, by the Purchase of Goods on
Credit, and by Freighting Ships or other Mercantile
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