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https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1d06?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09
[HEREDEROS DEL FINADO BENITO LOPEZ ET AL. v. ISABELA SUGAR CO.](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1d06?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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55 Phil. 606

[ G. R. No. 32624, February 07, 1931 ]

HEREDEROS DEL FINADO BENITO LOPEZ ET AL., PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLANTS, VS. ISABELA SUGAR CO., INC., DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

OSTRAND, J.:

The defendant  corporation operates a  sugar central in the  municipality  of  Isabela, Occidental Negros,  and the plaintiffs  are the owners  of the  Hacienda Antolanga, situated in the same locality.   In the year 1920 the parties entered into a thirty-year  milling contract  in which the defendant bound  itself to provide the  necessary railroad facilities and among other things also guaranteed to extract not  less than 42 per  cent of high grade centrifugal sugar, generally known as sugar A and B, with an  average polarization of 96 per cent in sugar A and 93 per cent in sugar B.   The contract further provides for a committee of planters who,  in  connection with the manager of the central, look after the production of the various plantations and  determine the number  of cars required for the transportation of the cane.

The relations between the parties were satisfactory until the agricultural year 1927-1928 when conflicts arose.  It appears from the record that at the beginning of that year the management of the  central, in  order to expedite the milling of the cane, induced nearly all of the planters affiliated with the central to agree to an extraction of 91 per cent of the sugar, which arrangement seems to have been of benefit both to the central and to the planters, but Vicente Lopez, then in charge of the Hacienda Antolanga, did not accept the proposition made by the management and insisted that the 92 per cent extraction of the sugar should be maintained.

The central appears to have had a sufficient number of cars for the transportation of the cane and also maintained extra or  reserve cars for emergencies.  The plaintiffs contend that they were discriminated against by the management of the central and that the extra cars were distributed among the  planters who  had accepted the  91  per cent extraction; that as a result the plaintiffs did not  receive sufficient cars and that as a consequence the harvest on their plantation was greatly delayed.  They therefore demand damages for losses of sugar and for inability to cultivate rattoons  in the total sum of P22,394.

In its  answer to the plaintiffs' complaint the defendant in  substance denied that  it, in any  manner, obstructed the plaintiffs'  cultivation and harvest of their cane; that the distribution of the cars was in the hands of the committee of planters in accordance with the practice provided for in the contract between  the plaintiffs  and the  central and that the distribution of said cars was made fairly; that the committee valuated the harvest accurately and that  it asked for and obtained from the central 300 cars for the Hacienda Antolanga, a  sufficient allotment for that hacienda; that probably due to lack of laborers  the harvest of the hacienda was delayed; that on March 20,  1928, the planters  whose harvests  were  delayed  were  offered additional cars, but that Vicente Lopez, then in charge of the Hacienda Antoianga, did not avail himself of the offer.

The defendant  also presented a  counterclaim alleging that by reason of unnecessary delays on the  part of the plaintiffs, during the period from April 23 to May 6, 1928, when practically all  of the milling was terminated,  the defendant was obliged to mill the plaintiffs' cane,  the daily amount of which was less than one-fourth of the normal capacity of the mill and that, considering the overhead and other expenses, the defendant estimated its loss thereby to amount to P39,948.94, for which it  demanded judgment against the plaintiffs.

Upon trial of the case the court below absolved the defendant from the plaintiffs' complaint and ordered said plaintiffs to pay the defendant the sum of P6,000 upon its counterclaim.   From this judgment the plaintiffs appealed.

With the exception of the third assignment of error the case involves only questions of fact, none of which are of sufficient importance  to reverse the findings of the court below.  The distribution of the cars was under control of the committee of planters and though the manager of the central may to some extent have favored the planters who had accepted the proposition for a 91 per cent extraction offered by the management of the central, we cannot hold that the losses alleged to have been suffered by the  plaintiffs were due to obstructions brought about by the officials of the central.  On the contrary the  record indicates that the number of cars furnished the plaintiffs was  adequate and with prompt loading would have fully met the plaintiffs' requirements.

The third assignment of error relates to the defendant's counterclaim and in our opinion is well  taken.  Towards the end of the milling season the harvest of the cane produced  on the plantations  "Antolanga,"  "Pucatud" and "Maria Cecilia" was seriously delayed, but notwithstanding the fact that in the last weeks the plantations mentioned could not deliver even the minimum tonnage of cane provided for in the milling contract,  the central continued to mill the cane brought in from said plantations.  No  notice was given the planters to the effect that the central  would demand damages or increase the cost of the milling and we can find nothing in the contract upon which damages, such as those granted by the court below, can be based.  On the contrary the extension of the milling period must be regarded as a mutual agreement by which the central became entitled to 45 per cent of the sugar as provided for in the contract and no more.  Articles 10 and 14 of the Obligations of the Planters, as stated in the contract, are not in point.

The appealed judgment is therefore modified by absolving the plaintiffs from the counterclaim of the defendant.  In all  other respects the judgment  is affirmed without costs. So ordered.

Johnson, Street, Malcolm, Villamor,  Johns, and  Villa- Real, JJ., concur.

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