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[RIO Y COMPANIA v. DATU JOLKIPLI](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c2e31?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-12301, Apr 13, 1959 ]

RIO Y COMPANIA v. DATU JOLKIPLI +

DECISION

105 Phil. 447

[ G.R. No. L-12301, April 13, 1959 ]

RIO Y COMPANIA (SUCCESSOR TO RIO Y OLABARRIETA), PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. DATU JOLKIPLI, DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

REYES, J.B.L., J.:

This appeal originated from  the decision  of the Court of  First  Instance  of Palawan,  dismissing the  above-entitled case on the ground that the cause of action alleged in the complaint had prescribed, and the plaintiff had no longer any cause of  action against the defendant.

The  undisputed facts  of this case are  as follows: In December  1936, Rio y Olabarrieta (now Rio y Compania), entered  into  a contract  with defendant-appellee,  Datu Jolkipli, wherein the  latter agreed to  undertake  the exploitation  of a  timber concession of the former in the municipality of Brooke's  Point, Palawan.   To  give  Jolkipli  the  opportunity  to carry on  the venture,  Rio y Olabarrieta extended credit to him.  As of January 1939, Jolkipli had incurred an outstanding obligation of P620.82 in favor of plaintiff-appellant Rio y Compania (successor to Rio y Olabarrieta) and as of the filing of the complaint, on April 19, 1954, the accumulated  interests from January 1939 amount  to P948.11.   Upon motion of  Jolkipli,  the complaint was dismissed by the Justice of the Peace on the  ground of prescription; and plaintiff appealed to  the Court of First Instance of Palawan.  However, the decision of the Justice of the Peace Court was there sustained and, upon  the denial of the  plaintiff-appellant's motion for  reconsideration, it interposed  the present  appeal.

Plaintiff  predicates  its case  mainly on two points:  (1) that the court below improperly denied it an opportunity to prove that  the Justice of the Peace Court at Brooke's Point was  not open during the Japanese occupation and the  period of  military  operations  for the  liberation of the Philippines; and (2) that the court below erroneously declared that the moratorium period to be deducted from the  term of  extinctive  prescription  extended  only from March  10,  1945  (as  declared by  President  Osmena's Executive Order No. 32) to July 26, 1948 when the Moratorium  Law, Republic Act No. 342  was enacted.

We rule  for plaintiff-appellant on  both points.   As to the  first, while it  is  true  that the  suspensive effect of Executive Orders Nos. 26 and  32, together  with Republic Act  342, do  not cover  the period of  invasion and the liberation of  the Philippines,  this  Court has  in  several cases already held that:
"The statute of limitations is only suspended by war, rebellion, insurrection when the regular course of justice is interrupted to such  an  extent  that the courts cannot  be kept open."  (España vs. Lucido, 8 Phil., 419, 420; Palma & Los Baños vs. Celda, 81 Phil., 416, 46 Off. Gaz.  Suppl. No. 1, p. 198.)  (Italics supplied.) "The  interruption in the  functions of the courts by the war interrupted the  running  of the prescriptive period  of actions." (Talens,  et al.  vs. M.  Chuakay & Co.,  G. R. No. L-10127, June 30, 1958.)
In the light of these  decisions,  it is clear that  the statute  of  limitation  is  suspended,  if  during the war time  courts  are not or can  not be kept  open.  But in order that the plaintiff-appellant may  invoke  our ruling, it must first show that the Justice of the Peace Court of Brooke's  Point was closed or could not  be  opened for business as a  consequence of  chaos  and confusion.   The determination of this matter  is a question of  fact, which should be ventilated in the hearing of  the case on the merits; and the court below should not have  refused the plaintiff an opportunity to substantiate its contention.

As to the second issue tendered by appellant, it must be pointed out that the obligation of the defendant was contracted before  December 31, 1941; hence, the moratorium order applicable to it was the  second, i.e., Executive Order No. 32, issued on March 10,  1945.[1]  Regardless whether or not the local court was open during the occupation, the period for the enforcement of appellant's cause of action stopped running on that date.  If the  defendant was not  a war sufferer, the suspension ran only  from March 10, 1945  to July 26, 1948, when  Republic  Act No. 342 went into effect.  But if the defendant was a war sufferer,  and had filed  a war damage claim, then the period of suspension extended from March 10, 1945 until  May 18, 1953, when our  decision  in the Rutter case,[2] holding unconstitutional the further operation of Republic Act 342, became operative.  Admittedly,  in this last  case, the  appellant's complaint was filed on time.

Under the circumstances, it was Incumbent upon  the defendant to plead and prove  that he was not  covered by the Moratorium Law, Act  342, in order to establish that plaintiff's action was barred by  prescription in  all cases that may be established under the complaint.   The rule, on the authority of Lyon  vs.  Bertram, 20 How. (U.S.) 149, 15 Law.  Ed. 847, is stated by American Jurisprudence to be  as follows:
"A plea of the  statute  (of limitations)  can not be sustained which rests upon a supposed state of  facts  which may not exist. It must be an answer to any case which may be legally established under the  declaration.  So where the  statute  imposed  a  bar  on certain contracts after  three years and  on  others  after two  years the plea of the statute was held  to be bad where it  did not show that  the contract in question was of the latter class."  (34 Am. Jur. 341,  Sec. 431, note 8.)  
The defendant has  not shown nor  pleaded that he was not a war sufferer and had not filed a war damage claim. While constituting  negative  averments, they  are of the essence of his contention that plaintiff's claim was barred, and  hence the burden of proving  them lay on defendant- appellee  (Rule  123, sec.  70).  Moreover, it appears that in his  motion for  reconsideration,  plaintiff  offered  to  prove that defendant was  such a war damage  claimant,  but  the  court below rejected the  offer.  Plainly,  the rejection  is reversible error.

If  defendant is  a war  damage  claimant,  appellant's action was initiated only 7 years, 1 month and  10 days after the cause of action accrued, well before the expiration of the ten year limitation period; because from the total of 15 years,  3 months and  18 days that elapsed from the accrual of the cause of action on  January 1,  1939,  to the filing of the  complaint on April 15, 1954, we  must  deduct the moratorium period of 8  years, 2 months and 8 days (from March 10, 1945 to May 18,  1953).

Wherefore, the order of dismissal of the complaint  is revoked and  set aside, and the records ordered remanded to the  court of origin  for  further proceedings.  Costs against appellee Datu Jolkipli.  So ordered.

Paras,  C.  J., Bengzon, Padilla, Montemayor, Bautista Angelo, Labrador, Concepcion and Endencia, JJ., concur.

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