Cited Laws
TL;DR — Ruling
WHEREFORE , the judgment appealed from is hereby MODIFIED, to read as follows: ` WHEREFORE, JUDGMENT IS HEREBY RENDERED, ORDERING: `1. The plaintiffs to pay Far East Bank & Trust Company the principal sum of P1,067,000.00 plus interests thereon computed at 12% per annum from July 9, 1988 until fully paid; `2. The parties to negotiate for a new lease over the subject premises; and `3.
WHEREFORE , the judgment appealed from is hereby MODIFIED, to read as follows: ` WHEREFORE, JUDGMENT IS HEREBY RENDERED, ORDERING: `1. The plaintiffs to pay Far East Bank & Trust Company the principal sum of P1,067,000.00 plus interests thereon computed at 12% per annum from July 9, 1988 until fully paid; `2. The parties to negotiate for a new lease over the subject premises; and `3. The defendant to pay the plaintiff the sum of fifteen thousand (P15,000.00) pesos as and for attorney's fees plus the costs of litigation. "All other claims of the parties against each other are DENIED ." [4] Likewise assailed is the May 4, 1999 CA Resolution, [5] which denied petitioner's Motion for Reconsideration. The Facts The court a quo summarized the antecedents of the case as follows: "Sometime in August 1973, Diaz and Company got a loan from the former PaBC [Pacific Banking Corporation] in the amount of P720,000.00, with interest at 12% per annum, later increased to 14%, 16%, 18% and 20%. The loan was secured by a real estate mortgage over two parcels of land owned by the plaintiff Diaz Realty, both located in Davao City. In 1981, Allied Banking Corporation rented an office space in the building constructed on the properties covered by the mortgage contract, with the conformity of mortgagee PaBC, whereby the parties agreed that the monthly rentals shall be paid directly to the mortgagee for the lessor's account, either to partly or fully pay off the aforesaid mortgage indebtedness. Pursuant to such contract, Allied Bank paid the monthly rentals to PaBC instead of to the plaintiffs. On July 5, 1985, the Central Bank closed PaBC, placed it under receivership, and appointed Renan Santos as its liquidator. Sometime in December 1986, appellant FEBTC purchased the credit of Diaz & Company in favor of PaBC, but it was not until March 23, 1988 that Diaz was informed about it. "According to the plaintiff as alleged in the complaint and testified to by Antonio Diaz (President of Diaz & Company and Vice-President of Diaz Realty), on March 23, 1988, he went to office of PaBC which by then housed FEBTC and was told that the latter had acquired PaBC; that Cashier Ramon Lim told him that as of such date, his loan was P1,447,142.03; that he (Diaz) asked the defendant to make an accounting of the monthly rental payments made by Allied Bank; that on December 14, 1988, [6] Diaz tendered to FEBTC the amount of P1,450,000.00 through an Interbank check, in order to prevent the imposition of additional interests, penalties and surcharges on its loan; that FEBTC did not accept it as payment; that instead, Diaz was asked to deposit the amount with the defendant's Davao City Branch Office, allegedly pending the approval of Central Bank Liquidator Renan Santos; that in the meantime, Diaz wrote the defendant, asking that the interest rate be reduced from 20% to 12% per annum, but no reply was ever made; that subsequently, the defendant told him to change the P1,450,000.00 deposit into
G.R. NO. 153134 - BANCO FILIPINO SAVINGS AND MORTGAGE BANK, VS. ANTONIO G. DIAZ AND ELSIE B. DIAZ. D E C I S I O N - Supreme Court E-Library
G.R. NO. 153134 -
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G.R. NO. 142672 -
CaseG.R. NO. 160324 - INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CORPORATION, VS. IMPERIAL TEXTILE MILLS, INC.,**. DECISION - Supreme Court E-Library
G.R. NO. 160324 -