CASE NO. 6 First Metro Investment Corporation v. Este Del Sol Mountain Reserve, Inc.
CASE NO. 6 First Metro Investment Corporation v. Este Del Sol Mountain Reserve, Inc.
CASE NO. 6 First Metro Investment Corporation v. Este Del Sol Mountain Reserve, Inc.
DOCTRINE:
An apparently lawful loan is usurious when it is intended that additional
compensation for the loan be disguised by an ostensibly unrelated contract
providing for payment by the borrower for the lender's services which are of
little value or which are not in fact to be rendered.
In usurious loans, the entire obligation does not become void because of
an agreement for usurious interest; the unpaid principal debt still stands and
remains valid but the stipulation as to the usurious interest is void,
consequently, the debt is to be considered without stipulation as to the
interest.
FACTS:
This is a petition for review on certiorari of the Decision of the Court of
Appeals (CA) which reversed the Decision of the Regional Trial Court (RTC). The
CA found and declared that the fees provided for in the Underwriting and
Consultancy Agreements executed by and between petitioner First Metro
Investment Corp. (FMIC) and respondent Este del Sol Mountain Reserve, Inc.
(Este del Sol) simultaneously with the Loan Agreement were mere subterfuges
to camouflage the usurious interest charged by petitioner FMIC.
On January 31, 1978, petitioner FMIC granted respondent Este del Sol a
loan of Seven Million Three Hundred Eighty-Five Thousand Five Hundred Pesos
(P7,385,500.00) to finance the construction and development of the Este del
Sol Mountain Reserve, a sports/resort complex project.
Under the terms of the Loan Agreement, proceeds of the loan were to be
released on a staggered basis, subject to 16% interest per annum. The loan
was payable in thirty-six (36) equal and consecutive monthly amortizations to
commence at the beginning of the thirteenth month from the date of the first
release in accordance with the Schedule of Amortization. In addition the loan
was subject to: (a) a one-time penalty of 20% of the amount due which shall bear
an interest at the highest rate permitted by law from the date of default until full
payment; (b) 2 % per month liquidated damages, compounded quarterly on the
unpaid balance and accrued interests together with all the penalties, fees,
expenses or charges thereon until the unpaid balance is fully paid; and (c)
attorney's fees equivalent to twenty-five (25%) percent of the sum sought to be
recovered, which in no case shall be less than Twenty Thousand Pesos
(P20,000.00) if the services of a lawyer were hired. Pursuant to the Loan
Agreement, Este del Sol executed several documents as security payment: (a)
Real Estate Mortgage (2 parcels of land) and (b) individual Continuing
Suretyship agreements by co-respondents.
On the same day, in compliance with the Loan Agreement, both parties
executed an Underwriting Agreement whereby: (a) petitioner FMIC shall
underwrite on a best-efforts basis the public offering of 120,000 common
shares of respondent Este del Sol's capital stock for a one-time underwriting fee
of P200,000.00; (b) an annual supervision fee of P200,000.00 per annum for a
period of 4 consecutive years; and (c) a consultancy fee of P332,500.00 per
annum for a period of 4 consecutive years.
FMIC billed respondent Este del Sol for the amounts of (a) P200,000.00
as the underwriting fee of petitioner FMIC in connection with the public offering
of the common shares of stock of respondent Este del Sol; (b) P1,330,000.00 as
consultancy fee for a period of four (4) years; and (c) P200,000.00 as
supervision fee for the year beginning February, 1978, in accordance to the
Underwriting Agreement. The said amounts of fees were deemed paid by
respondent Este del Sol to petitioner FMIC which deducted the same from the
first release of the loan.
CA: Reversed RTC’s Decision. CA held that the fees provided for in the
Underwriting and Consultancy Agreements were mere subterfuges to
camouflage the excessively usurious interest charged by the petitioner FMIC on
the loan of respondent Este del Sol.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the Underwriting and Consultancy Agreements were
mere subterfuges to camouflage the usurious interest charged by the
petitioner.
HELD:
YES. The Underwriting and Consultancy Agreements were mere
subterfuges to camouflage the usurious interest charged by the petitioner. The
Underwriting and Consultancy Agreements which were executed and delivered
contemporaneously with the Loan Agreement were exacted by petitioner FMIC
as essential conditions for the grant of the loan.
In usurious loans, the entire obligation does not become void because of
an agreement for usurious interest; the unpaid principal debt still stands and
remains valid but the stipulation as to the usurious interest is void,
consequently, the debt is to be considered without stipulation as to the
interest.
There are several facts and circumstances taken altogether show that the
Underwriting and Consultancy Agreements were simply cloaks or devices to
cover an illegal scheme employed by petitioner FMIC to conceal and collect
excessively usurious interest, and these are:
a. The Underwriting and Consultancy Agreements were executed
simultaneously with the Loan Agreement and set to mature or shall remain
effective during the same period of time.
b. The Underwriting Agreement is "part and parcel of the Loan Agreement since
it was stipulated in the Loan Agreement that such underwriting agreement is a
condition precedent for petitioner FMIC to extend the loan to respondent Este
del Sol.
c. The P1,330,000.00 consultancy fee was billed at once (February 28, 1978)
despite that it should be P332,500.00 per annum for 4 years.
d. The Underwriting, Supervision and Consultancy fees were like wise billed
on February 22, 1978 and were deducted from the first release of the loan.
f. FMIC failed to comply with its obligation under the Consultancy Agreement,
aside from the fact that there was no need for a Consultancy Agreement, since
respondent Este del Sol's officers appeared to be more competent to be
consultants in the development of the projected sports/resort complex.
Thus, the nullity of the stipulation on the usurious interest does not
affect the lender's right to receive back the principal amount of the loan. With
respect to the debtor, the amount paid as interest under a usurious agreement
is recoverable by him, since the payment is deemed to have been made under
restraint, rather than voluntarily.
The Court agreed with the CA’s findings that the stipulated penalties,
liquidated damages and attorney's fees, excessive, iniquitous and
unconscionable and revolting to the conscience as they hardly allow the
borrower any chance of survival in case of default. In the case at bar, ESTE
folded up when the appellee extrajudicially foreclosed on its (ESTE's)
development project and literally closed its offices as both the appellee and
ESTE were at the time holding office in the same building. Accordingly, the
20% penalty on the amount due and 10% of the proceeds of the foreclosure
sale as attorney's fees would suffice to compensate the appellee, especially so
because there is no clear showing that the appellee hired the services of
counsel to effect the foreclosure, it engaged counsel only when it was seeking
the recovery of the alleged deficiency.