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[UY HOO v. JUDGE BIENVENIDO A. TAN](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c2f2e?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-9873, May 20, 1959 ]

UY HOO v. JUDGE BIENVENIDO A. TAN +

DECISION

105 Phil. 716

[ G.R. No. L-9873, May 20, 1959 ]

UY HOO & CO., INC., PETITIONER, VS. JUDGE BIENVENIDO A. TAN, ETC., ET AL., RESPONDENTS.

D E C I S I O N

BENGZON, J.:

The case Joaquin C. Yuseco sued  Uy Hoo & Co. Inc., to annul a mortgaged he had signed.  He alleged a previous valid tender  of payment which the creditor-defendant had wrongfully refused.  The defendant denied validity of the tender.   Later, it asked for leave to file an amended answer with counterclaim to collect the mortgaged debt.  The court admitted  the  amended answer; but subsequently rejected it, and refused to reconsider such rejection.

Hence this  petition for  certiorari based on grave abuse of discretion.

The  facts 1. On December 23,  1943,  Yuseco obtained from Uy Hoo & Co., a loan of P70,000.00 Japanese currency, and executed on that date the  corresponding deed of mortgage on his real property in Manila.   The loan,  such deed stipulated, "shall not be paid * *  * within two years from the  date hereof, but must be paid after the said period of two years but not  later  than December  24,  1946", this condition being unwaivable by either party.

2. Prior to September 25,1944,  Yuseco offered to pay the creditor P70,000.00 plus interest for the entire period; but Uy Hoo & Co., refused  to accept payment, invoking the above two-year stipulation.

3. Wherefore, on  September 25, 1944, Yuseco instituted Civil  Case No. 2904  of Manila, wherein reciting the tender of payment, he demanded discharge of the mortgage, plus damages.

4. On November 29, 1944, Uy Hoo answered asserting that the proffered payment had not been accepted because it violated the above stipulation in the mortgage deed.

5. And when the two-year period fixed in the mortgage had lapsed, Uy Hoo filed on January 18, 1946 in Manila, a complaint to collect the debt and foreclose the mortgage (Civil Case No. 71980).

6. On June 28, 1949, citing the Moratorium Law, Yuseco moved  for  dismissal  of this foreclosure complaint.  The motion was granted, and on appeal, this Court affirmed.

7. After such dismissal, Civil Case No. 2904 was several times  set for  hearing.  (It had been suspended  pending decision on the foreclosure proceeding.)

8. Then on July 29, 1955, before the presentation of any evidence, Uy Hoo & Co., asked in Civil Case No. 2904, for permission to file an amended  answer including for the first time, a counter-claim to  collect and/or foreclose the mortgage; add the respondent Judge admitted such amend- ed answer in his order of August 6, 1955.

9. However, on September 23, 1955, Yuseco moved for reconsideration of  the last order  arguing  that  through laches  (ten years having elapsed from its first  answer) defendant  was  estopped from  making any  substantial amendment to its  defenses.  He  also  argued  that the amended answer eliminated from the  original answer  a certain paragraph allegedly supporting his line of action, which  paragraph read as follows:
"2. That after the above mentioned Exhibit "A" was duly delivered, the defendant had made an effort to consult the plaintiff by asking him, if at any time before the due date of the mortgage and the defendant was in need of money to buy other real property and were willing to pay back all the expenses and interest to tile plaintiff, whether the  said defendant would be able to get  the full amount back.  The plaintiff answered that no parties, neither he nor the defendant would  be able to violate the  condition  of the mortgage deed before the  time provided in the said  deed.  If the plaintiff were of the  above opinion, he should not be allowed to  violate it first."
10. Declaring Yuseco's motion  to be  meritorious,  the respondent Judge set aside his order admitting the amended answer, which he  consequently ordered stricken  off  the record.

11. After failing to secure reversal of the set-aside order (of September 28,  1955), Uy  Hoo  filed  this petition  for certiorari  alleging grave abuse of discretion, inasmuch as the Rules of Court  allow the amendment of pleadings "at any stage of the action".

Discussion Nobody  doubts  that  in Yuseco's action to annul the mortgage deed (Civil Case No. 2904), Uy Hoo's demand for payment of the mortgage would be a  proper counterclaim, which sec. 1 of Rule 10 defines as "any claim, whether for money  or  otherwise, which a party may have against the Opposing party".  Indeed, it appears to be what is  called compulsory counterclaim, one that will be barred if  not set up (sec.  6, Rule 10) since it arises out of the transaction  or occurrence which is  the  subject-matter of Yuseco's complaint. "In an action for declaratory judgment for  cancellation of fire insurance for breach of policies,  defendant's right, if any, to recover under the policies is a compulsory counterclaim, and unless pleaded in the answer, is  waived".[1]

Uy Hoo & Co.'s failure to  state his  counter-claim in his original answer filed  November 29,  1944,  becomes understandable bearing in  mind that the  mortgage debt was not yet then payable. And having presented thereafter a complaint to recover  the amount (Civil Case No. 71980) the corporation evidently found it unnecessary to reiterate the same claim in Civil Case  No.  2904.  However, after dismissal of its complaint (71980) due to the Moratorium Law,  and after invalidation of such Law in May 1953,[2] Uy Hoo & Co. Inc., had no other recourse than to file the counter-claim; otherwise,  it will  forever lose its right to collect the debt.

The Court refused to admit  such counter-claim because it  was presented  ten years after defendant had filed its original answer.   The preceding paragraph, however, will explain the reason for part of the delay: it was the subject of  an  action  which the Moratorium Law suspended.

Therefore, the only delay  attributable to Uy  Hoo is the time  elapsing from May  1953  (when  the Moratorium ceased to  operate)  to July  1955 when the counter-claim was asserted over two years.  Yet on August 26, 1954, Yuseco filed a motion to dismiss Civil Case No. 2904, which motion Uy Hoo  opposed.  And such motion was denied only on December 3, 1954.  Deducting the time when this motion of dismissal was pending August to December the result is that Uy Hoo's procrastination did not last two years.   Counsel for Yuseco has brought to our attention no case wherein delay of less than  two years was regarded as laches.  Therefore,  considering that the Rules of Court allow  amendment  "at any stage of  an action"  *  * * "to the end that  the real matter in  dispute and all matters in the  action in dispute between the parties may, so far as possible,  be completely determined in a single proceeding",[3] we think the Court a quo had no valid  reason to reject the  amendment, and consequently,  abused  its discretion, which  should have been liberally exercised amendments to  pleadings  being favored.  (Torres vs.  Toniacruz,  49 Phil., 913.)  Of course,  this liberality should not be extended so as to allow a substantial change of the cause of action or defense or an alteration of the theory  of the case.   (Torres vs. Tomacruz, supra.)

This leads to the other ground of rejection: elimination of a certain paragraph which plaintiff claims to favor his theory of the case.  Reading the paragraph herein-above quoted, we fail to see how it may confirm the allegation that after  the  execution of the  deed  of mortgage, the parties verbally agreed that payment could be made even before the expiration of the two-year period stipulated in the written mortgage.  The whole paragraph emphasize whole (4) contradicts  such verbal-agreement theory.   Besides,  the original answer remains in the record, and plaintiff may always refer to it, and for good measure, introduce it as evidence.  And  if every allegation in the  pleading that favors the  adverse  party could  never be  withdrawn, amended pleadings may  as  well be abolished.

Conclusion Wherefore, we must conclude that in rejecting the amendment the  trial judge abused his discretion.

Furthermore, realizing that if the  counter-claim  is  not allowed, the creditor may forever be barred from collecting its  credit  (sec. 6,  Rule 10), we  must hold such  abuse to be so serious as to call for certiorari.

Judgment Accordingly, granting the petition,  we hereby annul respondent judge's order  of September 28, 1955. No costs.

Paras, C. J., Padilla,  Montemayor, Reyes, A.,  Bautista Angelo, Concepcion,  and Endencia, JJ., concur.



[1] Moran, Rules of Court (1957 Ed.) Vol. I, p. 175 citing several cases.

[2] Ruther vs. Esteban, 93 Phil., 68; 49  Off. Gaz., 1807.

 [3] Rule 17, sec. 2.

 [4] The admission, if any , may not be cut into parts.
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