You're currently signed in as:
User
Add TAGS to your cases to easily locate them or to build your SYLLABUS.
Please SIGN IN to use this feature.
https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ce4f?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09
[US v. TAN TOK](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ce4f?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
{case:ce4f}
Highlight text as FACTS, ISSUES, RULING, PRINCIPLES to generate case DIGESTS and REVIEWERS.
Please LOGIN use this feature.
Show printable version with highlights

[ GR No. 5183, Mar 21, 1910 ]

US v. TAN TOK +

DECISION

15 Phil. 538

[ G. R. No. 5183, March 21, 1910 ]

THE UNITED STATES, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. TAN TOK, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.

D E C I S I O N

On the 27th of May, 1908, the complaint was filed against Tan Tok.  The crime charged was estafa, consisting in that on  the 1st of April, 1908, he had been sold upon credit a bale of gray cloth for P260, and this bale afterwards appeared  included in  an attachment,  made on  petition of Findlay & Co., of the store at No. 144 Calle Rosario, as of the property of another Chinaman named Uy Chieng Can and sold as a result of Findlay & Co.'s claim against this other Chinaman - Behn, Meyer & Co., who had sold the bale to Tan  Tok, losing  the price thereof.  Had Tan Tok not assured Behn, Meyer & Co. that the store at No. 144 was exclusively his and that he had already severed connections with the business  carried on by Uy Chieng Can, who conducted the store at  No. 156 on the same street, he  would not have been trusted with that bale of gray cloth valued at P260.

The order for the merchandise was given by Tan Tok to Behn, Meyer & Co. on March 26, 1908.  On April 1 or 2 the bale was taken to the store at No. 144, which was supposed to belong to Tan  Tok.  On  April  4,  1908, the document evidencing the debt  for the price of the bale, that is, for P260, was signed.  First it was signed with a square stamp, which meant nothing.  The document was again taken to the store at No. 144  and was returned  signed with another stamp which reads:  "Benito Uy Chieng Can, Rosario, 156."

Tan Tok says that on March 29,  1908, the said store at No. 144 was sold by him to Uy Chieng Can.

So that when, on April 1 or 2, 1908, the bale of gray cloth ordered by  Tan Tok on the  26th of March previous was received in the said store,  it was in  fact received in a store belonging to Uy Chieng Can, and  this is how that document of debt  for  the price of  the  bale appears as signed by Uy Chieng Can; and Deogracias Zamora, a clerk in the employ of Behn, Meyer & Co., says that he called the matter to the attention of a principal employee of the firm, who had Tan Tok come to the office; but  what the said employee did afterwards does not appear in the record.

Up to May,  when the bale in question was in the possession of the sheriff for sale,  the only thing done was to prosecute the criminal action  for estafa.

In this class of operations where, with more or less caution, one relies upon a person's credit, there is no estafa. If a person already  enjoyed  credit  and it was afterwards withdrawn, but subsequently, because of his apparently conducting his operations in a manner which appears to warrant it he again secures credit and does  not pay for what he gets by reason of  the credit thus continued, he does not thereby commit the crime of  estafa, which it is evident he would not have committed by availing himself of the credit in the beginning.

To the creditor, the firm of Behn, Meyer & Co,, is reserved the right to bring such civil  action as may be proper for the recovery of the  value of the  merchandise sold upon credit, against the debtor, Tan Tok,  or whoever may be found to be indebted  for its price.

The judgment of the Court of First Instance of the city of Manila is reversed, with costs in both instances de oficio. So ordered.

Torres, Mapa, Johnson, Carson, and Moreland, JJ., concur.

tags