G.R. No. 47823

JOSE ORNUM AND EMERENCIANA ORNUM, PETITIONERS, VS. MARIANO LASALA ET AL RESPONDENTS. DECISION

[ G.R. No. 47823. July 16, 1943 ] 74 Phil. 242

[ G.R. No. 47823. July 16, 1943 ]

JOSE ORNUM AND EMERENCIANA ORNUM, PETITIONERS, VS. MARIANO LASALA ET AL RESPONDENTS. DECISION

PARAS, J.:

The following  tacts are  practically admitted in the pleadings and briefs of the parties: The respondents (plaintiffs below) are natives  of Taal, Batangas, and resided  therein or in  Manila.  The petitioners  (defendants below) are also natives of Taal,  but resided  in the  barrio of Tan-agan,  municipality of Tablas, province of Romblon.  In 1908 Pedro Lasala, father of the respondents, and Emerenciano Ornum formed a partnership, whereby the former, as capitalist, delivered the  sum of Pl,000 to the latter who, as industrial partner, was to conduct a business at his place  of residence in Romblon.  In 1912, when the assets of the partnership consisted of outstanding accounts and old stock of merchandise, Emerenciano Ornum, following the wishes of his wife, asked for the dissolution of the partnership.  At the instance of Pedro Lasala, Emerenciano Ornum looked for some one who could take his place and he Suggested the names of the petitioners who accordingly became the new partners.  Upon joining the business, the petitioners contributed P505.54 as their capital, with the result that in the new partnership Pedro Lasala had a capital of P1.000, appraised value of the assets of the former partnership plus the said P505.54 invested by the petitioners who, as industrial partners, were to run the business in Romblon.  After the death of Pedro Lasala, his children (the respondents) succeded to all his rights  and  interest in the partnership.  The partners never knew each other personally. No formal partnership agreement was ever executed.  The petitioners, as managing partners, were to receive one-half of the net gains, and the other half was to be divided between them and the Lasala group  in proportion to the capital put in by each group.  During the course of the business, profits were declared and divided, but the partners were given the election, as evidenced  by the statements of accounts referred to in the decision of the Court of Appeals, to invest their respective shares in such profits as additional capital.  The petitioners accordingly let a greater part of their profits as additional investment in the partnership.  After twenty years the business had grown to such an “extent  that  its total Value, including profits, amounted to P44,618.67.  Statements of accounts were periodically prepared by the petitioners and sent to the respondents who invariably did not make any objection thereto.  Before the last statement of accounts was made, the respondents had received P5,387.29 by way of profits.  The last and final statement of accounts, dated May 27, 1932, and prepared by the petitioners after the respondents had announced their desire to dissolve the partnership, reads as follows:

Ganancia total dede el ultimo balance hasta le fecha

P575.45

“Participacion del capital de los her    manos Lasala en la ganancia

P55.39

“Participacion del capital de Jose Ornum en la ganacia

125.79

“Participacion de Jose Ornum como socio industrial

143.86

“Participacion del capital de Emerenciana Ornum en la ganacia

106.54

“Participacion de Emerenciana Ornum como socia industrial

143.86

“Siendo este el balance final lo siguiente es la cantidad que debe corresponder a cada socio: “Capital de los hermanos Lasala segun el ultimo balance

P4,393.08

“Ganancia de este capital

55.39

P4,448.47

“Pero se debe deducir la cantidad tomada por los hermanos Lasala

1,730.00

“Cantidad neta que debe corresponder a los hermanos Lasala

P2,718.47

“Capital de Jose Ornum sequn el ultimo balance

P9,975.13

“Ganancia de este capital

125.79

“Participacion de Jose Ornum como socio industrial

143.86

P10,244.65

“Pero se debe deducir la cantidad tomada por Jose Ornum

1,650.00

“Cantidad neta que debe corresponder a Jose Ornum

P8,594.65

“Capital de Emerenciana Ornum segun el ultimo balance

P8,448.00

“Ganacia de este capital

106.54

“Participacion de Emerenciana Ornum como socia industrial

143.86

P8,698.40

“Pero se debe deducir la cantidad tomada por Emerenciana Ornum

1,850.00

‘Cantidad neta que debe corresponder a Emerenciana Ornum

P6,848.40”

After the receipt of the foregoing statement of accounts, Father Mariano Lasala, spokesman for the respondents, wrote the following letter to the Petitioners on July 19, 1932:

“Ya te manifestamos francamente aqui, como consocio, y te autorizamos tanrfaien para que lo repitas a tu hermana Mering, viuda,  que el motivo porque recogemos el capital y utilida des  de  nuestra sociedad en todo nuestro negocio que esta al cuidado vosotros dos, es que tenemos un grande compromiso que casi no podemos evitarlo.  Por esto volvemos a rogarles que por cualquier medio antes de terminar este mes de julio,  1932, nosotros esperamos vuestra consideracion.  Gracias. “En cuanto hayamos recibido esto,  entonces firmaremos  el balance que  habeis hecho alli, cuya copia has dejado aqui. “Recuerdos a todos alli y mandar.”

Pursuant to the  request  contained in this letter, the petitioners remitted and paid to the respondents the  total  amount corresponding  to them under the above-quoted statement of accounts which, however, was not signed by the latter.  Thereafter the complaint in this case was filed by the respondents, praying for an accounting and final liquidation of the assets of the partnership.   The Court of First Instance of Manila held that the last and final statement of accounts prepared by the petitioners was tacitly approved and accepted by the respondents who, by virtue of the above-quoted letter of Father Mariano Lasala, lost their right to a further accounting from the moment they received and accepted their shares as itemized in said statement. This judgment was reversed  by the Court of Appeals principally on the ground that, as the final statement of accounts remains unsigned by the respondents, the same stands disapproved.  The decision appealed by the petitioners thus said:

“To support a plea of  a stated account so as to conclude the  parties in relation to all dealings between  them, the accounting  must be shown to have been final. (1 Cyc. 366.)  All the first nine statements which  the defendants sent the  plaintiffs were partial settlements,  while the last, although intended to be final, has not been signed.”

We hold that  the last and final statement of accounts hereinabove quoted, had been approved by the respondents.  This approval resulted, by virtue of the letter of Father Mariano Lasala of July 19, 1932, quoted in part in the appealed decision, from the failure of the respondents to object to the statement and from  their promise to sign the same as soon as they received  their shares as shown in  said statement.  After such shares had been paid by  the petitioners and accepted by the respondents without any reservation, the approval of the statement of accounts was virtually confirmed and its signing thereby became a mere formality to be complied with by the respondents exclusively.  Their refusal to sign, after receiving their shares, amounted to a waiver of that formality in favor of the petitioners who had already performed their obligation. This approval precludes any right on the part of the respondents to a further liquidation,  unless the latter can show that there was fraud, deceit, error or mistake in said approval.  (Pastor vs.  Nicasio, 6 Phil., 152; Aldecoa & Co., vs. Warner, Barnes & Co., 16 Phil., 423; Gonzalez vs. Harty, 32 Phil., 328.)  The Court of Appeals did not make any finding  that there was fraud, and on the matter of error or mistake it merely said:

“The question then is, have mistakes been committed in the statements sent appellants?  Not only do plaintiffs so allege, and not only does the evidence so tend to prove, but the charge is seconded by the defendants themselves when in their counterclaims they said: “’(a) Que recientemente se ha hecho una acabada revision de las cuentas y libros del negocio, y, se ha deseubierto que los demandados cometieron un error al hacer las entregas de las varias cantidades en efectivo a los demandantes, entregando en total mayor cantidades a  la que teman derecho estos por su participacipn y ganancias en dicho negocio; “’(b) Que el exceso entregado a los demandantes, asciende a la suma de quinientos setenta y cinco pesos con doce centimos (P575.12), y que los demandados reclaman ahora de aquellos su devolucion o pago en lapresente contrademanda’”

I our opinion, the pronouncement that the evidence tends to prove that there were mistakes in the petitioners’ statements of accounts, without specifying the mistakes, merely  intimates a suspicion and is not such a positive and unmistakable finding of fact (Cf. Concepcion vs. People, G. R. No. 48169, promulgated December 28, 1942) as to justify a revision, especially because the Court of Appeals has relied on the bare allegations of the parties.  Even admitting that, as alleged by the petitioners in their counterclaim, they overpaid the respondents  in the sum of P575.12, this error is essentially fatal to the latter’s theory that they are entitled to more than what the statement of accounts shows, and is therefore not the kind of error that calls for another accounting which will serve the purpose of the respondent’s suit.   Moreover, as the petitioners did not appeal from the decision of the Court of First Instance of Manila, they have abandoned such  allegation in the Court of Appeals. If the liquidation is ordered in the absence of any particular error, found as a fact, simply  because no damage will be suffered by  the petitioners in  case the latter’s final statement of accounts proves to be correct, we shall be assuming a fundamentally  inconsistent position.   If there is no mistake, the only reason for a new accounting disappears.  The petitioners may not be prejudiced in the sense that they will be required to pay anything to the respondents, but  they will have to go to the trouble of itemizing accounts covering a period of twenty years mostly from memory, it appearing that no regular books of accounts were kept.  Stated more emphatically, they will be told to do what seems to be hardly possible.  When it is borne in mind that this case has been pending for nearly nine years and that, if another accounting is ordered, a costly action or proceeding may arise which may not be disposed of within a similar period, it is not improbable that the intended relief  may  in fact  be the respondents’ funeral. We are reversing the appealed decision on the legal ground that the petitioners’ final statement  of  accounts had been approved by the respondents and no justifiable  reason  (fraud, deceit, error or mistake)  has been positively and unmistakably found by the Court of Appeals so as to warrant the liquidation sought by the respondents.  In justice to the petitioners, however, we may add that, considering that they ran the business of the partnership for about twenty years at a place far from the residence of the respondents and  without the  latter’s intervention; that the partners did not even know each other personally; that no formal partnership agreement was entered into which bound the petitioners under specific conditions; that the petitioners could have easily and freely alleged that the business became a partial, or even a total, loss for any plausible reason which they could have concocted, it appearing that the partnership engaged in such uncertain ventures  as agriculture, cattle raising, and operation of rice mill, and the petitioners did not keep any regular books of accounts; that the petitioners were still frank enough to disclose that the original capital of P1,505.54 amounted, as of the date of the dissolution of the partnership, to  P44,618.67; and that the respondents had received a total of P8,105.76 out of their capital of P1,000, without any effort on their part, we are reluctant even to make the  conjecture that the petitioners had ever intended to, or actually did, take undue advantage of the absence and confidence  of the respondents. Indeed, we feel justified in stating that the petitioners have here given a remarkable demonstration of the legendary honesty, good faith and industry with which the natives of Taal pursue business arrangements similar to the partnership in question, and we  would hate, in the absence of any sufficient reason, to let such a beautiful legend have a distasteful ending. The appealed decision is hereby reversed and the petitioners (defendants below) absolved  from the complaint of the respondents  (plaintiffs  below),  with costs against the latter. Yulo, C. J., and Hontiveros, J., concur.