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[CIRIACO CHUNACO v. TRIA](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1c42?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 43101, Sep 29, 1936 ]

CIRIACO CHUNACO v. TRIA +

DECISION

63 Phil. 500

[ G. R. No. 43101, September 29, 1936 ]

CIRIACO CHUNACO, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. TRIA, ALBINO RICO, MARGARITA DE LOS SANTOS, FRANCISCO R. MALABANAN, PAZ NADRES VILLA AND ANDRES M. ILAGAN, DEFENDANTS AND APPELLEES.

D E C I S I O N

AVANCEƃ'A, C.J.:

This case was originally instituted on August 21,1933, by Ciriaco Chunaco against  Delfina Tria for  the recovery  of the amount of P2,179.10  with  legal interest thereon from the filing of the complaint; of another  sum of P500 for damages, and of P400 for  attorney's fees.   On said date the plaintiff  asked for the attachment of the defendant's property.

It is inferred from the allegations of  the complaint and from the document attached to it as  a  part thereof that one Angel Pintor was an  agent of the  plaintiff to purchase palay and sell rice, coconut wine and other products in the municipality of Naga, Province of Camarines Sur.   The defendant Delfina Tria signed a contract of suretyship in favor of the plaintiff, whereby she bound herself jointly and severally  with Angel Pintor to secure  to the plaintiff the payment of any amount resulting, after liquidation, in favor of said plaintiff and against the principal obligor Angel Pintor.  To secure this obligation, the defendant mortgaged certain parcels of land described in the document of suretyship.  After a liquidation of  accounts made on December 20, 1929, between the plaintiff and Angel Pintor, it appeared that the latter was indebted to the former in the specific sum of P2,179.10.  Notwithstanding the demands made by the plaintiff to Angel Pintor for the  payment of this amount,  the  latter  has failed to make payment, for which reason this  case was instituted against the defendant as joint and several  surety, for the recovery thereof.  Angel Pintor has not been joined as a defendant.

On September 6,1933, the plaintiff filed another amended complaint which  was admitted by the court. The said second complaint is for the foreclosure of a mortgage.  In  as much as the defendant, as alleged in  the amended complaint, has sold the  mortgaged parcels  of land to Albino Rico, Margarita de los Santos, Francisco Malabanan, Paz Nadres and  Andres  Ilagan, in different contracts, they were joined as defendants.  Francisco Malabanan and Paz Nadres filed  a demurrer to the amended complaint but it was  overruled.  All the defendants answered the amended complaint.

After the filing of the amended  complaint, without the plaintiff's reproducing his petition for an attachment, the court granted the petition filed  with the original complaint

At this stage of the proceedings, the court, without calling the case for trial for the  presentation of evidence, rendered a resolution on November 14, 1934, declaring that the facts alleged in the complaint do not constitute a cause of action against each and every one  of the defendants, and ordered the plaintiff to amend his complaint by joining Angel Pintor as defendant,  and to refrain from prosecuting the attachment.  The plaintiff refused to amend his  complaint and asked that judgment be rendered in accordance therewith.  The court, in a decision  rendered  on December 4, 1934, dismissed the complaint, with the costs to the plaintiff.  The plaintiff appealed from said resolution.

The court, in dismissing the complaint and in holding that the facts alleged therein do not constitute a cause of action, based its opinion on the premise that, as the obligor Angel Pintor was not joined as  a defendant, it  cannot be declared that the account between him and the plaintiff is liquidated and, it  not being liquidated, the liability of the defendant as a surety, under the terms of the contract of suretyship, has  not yet  arisen.   However, it is  alleged in the complaint  that the account between the plaintiff and the obligor Angel Pintor has already been liquidated and this is sufficient to prevent the court from dismissing the complaint on  the  grounds alleged in  its decision,  the  question of whether or not there really was such a liquidation being, at all events, a question of evidence.  Furthermore,  as the defendant had bound herself jointly and severally with the obligor  Angel Pintor, the action of the plaintiff may be directed only against her, without the necessity of joining Angel Pintor (art. 1144, Civil Code).

With respect to the other defendants, inasmuch as  they had purchased the mortgaged parcels and are in possession thereof, as alleged in the amended complaint, and inasmuch as the action brought is a foreclosure suit,  they are  duly joined in this case as defendants.

As to the attachment levied,  notwithstanding the  fact that, according to the amended complaint, the action brought is a foreclosure suit, it should  be  remembered  that  the plaintiff asked for it when the action brought by him was simply for the recovery of a certain sum of money.  Furthermore, an attachment is not absolutely incompatible with a foreclosure suit, as it may lie if the mortgage, by reason of deterioration or any other cause, becomes insufficient to secure the debt.  At  all events, the dissolution of the attachment may, in the course of the proceedings, be decreed by the court if a petition to that effect is presented to it.

For the foregoing considerations, the appealed judgment  is reversed, and  the case is ordered  remanded to the court of origin for final determination, with the costs to the appellee.  So ordered.

Villa-Real, Abad Santos, Imperial, Diaz, and Laurel, JJ., concur.

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