Escueta Vs Fandalian
Escueta Vs Fandalian
Escueta Vs Fandalian
ESCUETA, plainttiff-appellant,
vs.
EUTIQUIANO FANDIALAN, defendant-appellee.
Manuel A. Alvero for plaintiff-appellant.
Manuel V. San Jose for defendant-appellee.
TEEHANKEE, J.:p
In this appeal certified by the Court of Appeals as involving a pure question of law on
prescription, the Court finds that the lower court correctly dismissed the plaintiff-appellant's
civil action for damages arising from physical injuries filed after the lapse of 16 years on the
ground that the action was already barred by the four-year statutory limitation under Article
1146 (1) of the Civil Code which provides that actions "upon an injury to the rights of plaintiff"
must be instituted within four years.
The appellate court's resolution of October 23, 1974 certifying plaintiff-appellant's appeal (from
the lower court's order of dismissal on the ground of prescription) to this Court as involving a
pure question of law recites the following factual background:
Plaintiff filed [on July 5, 1968] a complaint in the Court of First Instance of
Laguna (Civil Case No. SP-756) against defendant for damages, praying that the
latter be ordered to pay him the sums of (1) P7,000 as actual or compensatory
damages, (2) P20,000 as moral damages, (3) P5,000 as exemplary damages and
(4) P4,000 as attorney's fees, plus costs of suit.
The complaint alleged that on July 2, 1952, defendant inflicted several physical
injuries on the person of plaintiff for which he was charged with the crime of
frustrated homicide but was convicted of slight physical injuries by the CFI of
Laguna, which judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals on August 31,
1955 (Annex A); that on June 20, 1956, plaintiff, having reserved his right to
institute a separate civil action, filed with the CFI a complaint to enforce
defendant's civil liability under Article 100 of the Revised Penal Code but the
same was dismissed without prejudice and costs on October 31, 1962, for lack
of interest; and that despite the lapse of several years and the attempt on
plaintiff's part to enforce the said civil liability, defendant failed to settle the
same, thus compelling plaintiff to refile the case on July 5, 1968.
Plaintiff's cause of action was entirely independent of the result and outcome of the criminal
action. Indeed, plaintiff derived no enforceable right from the judgment of conviction which
became final on August 31, 1955, since no adjudication was therein made as to defendant's
civil liability by virtue of plaintiff's express reservation of the filing of a separate civil suit.
On the second question of the applicable period of prescription, the Court holds that the lower
court correctly ruled that the applicable prescriptive period is four years under Article 1146 (1)
of the Civil Code as against plaintiff's contention that it should be ten years under Article 1144
(3) which provides for such ten-year prescriptive for actions based "upon a judgment."
Plaintiffs civil suit for damages arising from physical injuries is clearly one based upon an
injury to his rights, for which Article 1146 (1) provides a prescriptive period of four years.
Plaintiff's contention that his prescriptive period should be ten years based upon the judgment
of defendant's conviction for physical injuries in the criminal case is untenable. No civil liability
was adjudged in the criminal case since plaintiff expressly reserved the right of filing a
separate civil action. Hence, he had no standing in the criminal action as an offended party
and the verdict of conviction excluded any civil liability.
Plaintiffs invocation of Article 1144 (3) would be tenable only if he had not reserved the filing of
a separate civil action and if defendant's civil liability had been determined and adjudged in the
criminal case. In such case, as in other-civil actions where judgment has obtained, the action
to enforce the judgment would prescribe only after ten years, with the judgment being
enforceable by mere motion within the first five years.
Plaintiffs final contention that the running of the prescriptive period was interrupted by the
first civil case that he filed on June 20, 1956 which was dismissed on October 31, 1962 for lack
of interest serves no purpose. On the premise that such judicial action suspended the four-year
prescriptive period under Article 1155 of the Civil Code as against the old rule that non-suit or
abandonment of an action takes no time out of the period of prescription, 4it is readily seen
that from July 2, 1952 (commission of physical injuries) until the filing on June 20, 1956 of
the first case, plaintiff had only twelve (12) days left of the four-year prescriptive period. The
period commenced to run again from the dismissal of the case for lack of interest on October
31, 1962. There were only twelve (12) days left thereafter for plaintiff to file the case which
expired on November 12, 1962. Plaintiffs filing of the second case below only on July 5, 1968 or
more than five years later was much too late.
ACCORDINGLY, the appealed order of dismissal is hereby affirmed, with costs against plaintiffappellant.