129796-1992-Philippine School of Business Administration PDF
129796-1992-Philippine School of Business Administration PDF
SYLLABUS
DECISION
PADILLA , J : p
A stabbing incident on 30 August 1985 which caused the death of Carlitos Bautista while
on the second-floor premises of the Philippine School of Business Administration (PSBA)
prompted the parents of the deceased to file suit in the Regional Trial Court of Manila
(Branch 47) presided over by Judge (now Court of Appeals justice) Regina Ordoñez-
Benitez, for damages against the said PSBA and its corporate officers. At the time of his
death, Carlitos was enrolled in the third year commerce course at the PSBA. It was
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established that his assailants were not members of the schools academic community but
were elements from outside the school.
Specifically, the suit impleaded the PSBA and the following school authorities: Juan D. Lim
(President), Benjamin P. Paulino (Vice-President), Antonio M. Magtalas
(Treasurer/Cashier), Col. Pedro Sacro (Chief of Security) and a Lt. M. Soriano (Assistant
Chief of Security). Substantially, the plaintiffs (now private respondents) sought to adjudge
them liable for the victim's untimely demise due to their alleged negligence, recklessness
and lack of security precautions, means and methods before, during and after the attack
on the victim. During the proceedings a quo, Lt. M. Soriano terminated his relationship with
the other petitioners by resigning from his position in the school.
Defendants a quo (now petitioners) sought to have the suit dismissed, alleging that since
they are presumably sued under Article 2180 of the Civil Code, the complaint states no
cause of action against them, as jurisprudence on the subject is to the effect that
academic institutions, such as the PSBA, are beyond the ambit of the rule in the afore-
stated article.
The respondent trial court, however, overruled petitioners' contention and thru an order
dated 8 December 1987, denied their motion to dismiss. A subsequent motion for
reconsideration was similarly dealt with by an order dated 25 January 1988. Petitioners
then assailed the trial court's dispositions before the respondent appellate court which, in
a decision * promulgated on 10 June 1988, affirmed the trial court's orders. On 22 August
1988, the respondent appellate court resolved to deny the petitioners' motion for
reconsideration. Hence, this petition.
At the outset, it is to be observed that the respondent appellate court primarily anchored
its decision on the law of quasi-delicts, as enunciated in Articles 2176 and 2180 of the Civil
Code. 1 Pertinent portions of the appellate court's now assailed ruling state:
"Article 2180 (formerly Article 1903) of the Civil Code is an adoptation from the
old Spanish Civil Code. The comments of Manresa and learned authorities on its
meaning should give way to present day changes. The law is not fixed and
flexible (sic); it must be dynamic. In fact, the greatest value and significance of
law as a rule of conduct in (sic) its flexibility to adopt to changing social
conditions and its capacity to meet the new challenges of progress.
Construed in the light of modern day educational systems, Article 2180 cannot be
construed in its narrow concept as held in the old case of Exconde vs. Capuno 2
and Mercado vs. Court of Appeals 3 ; hence, the ruling in the Palisoc 4 case that it
should apply to all kinds of educational institutions, academic or vocational.
At any rate, the law holds the teachers and heads of the school staff liable unless
they relieve themselves of such liability pursuant to the last paragraph of Article
2180 by 'proving that they observed all the diligence to prevent damage.' This can
only be done at a trial on the merits of the case." 5
While we agree with the respondent appellate court that the motion to dismiss the
complaint was correctly denied and the complaint should be tried on the merits, we do
not however agree with the premises of the appellate court's ruling.
Article 2180, in conjunction with Article 2176 of the Civil Code, establishes the rule of in
loco parentis. This Court discussed this doctrine in the afore-cited cases of Exconde,
Mendoza, Palisoc and, more recently, in Amadora vs. Court of Appeals. 6 In all such cases,
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it had been stressed that the law (Article 2180) plainly provides that the damage should
have been caused or inflicted by pupils or students of the educational institution sought to
be held liable for the acts of its pupils or students while in its custody. However, this
material situation does not exist in the present case for, as earlier indicated, the assailants
of Carlitos were not students of the PSBA, for whose acts the school could be made liable.
However, does the appellate court's failure to consider such material facts mean the
exculpation of the petitioners from liability? It does not necessarily follow.
When an academic institution accepts students for enrollment, there is established a
contract between them, resulting in bilateral obligations which both parties are bound to
comply with. 7 For its part, the school undertakes to provide the student with an education
that would presumably suffice to equip him with the necessary tools and skills to pursue
higher education or a profession. On the other hand, the student covenants to abide by the
school's academic requirements and observe its rules and regulations.
Institutions of learning must also meet the implicit or "built-in" obligation of providing their
students with an atmosphere that promotes or assists in attaining its primary undertaking
of imparting knowledge. Certainly, no student can absorb the intricacies of physics or
higher mathematics or explore the realm of the arts and other sciences when bullets are
flying or grenades exploding in the air or where there looms around the school premises a
constant threat to life and limb. Necessarily, the school must ensure that adequate steps
are taken to maintain peace and order within the campus premises and to prevent the
breakdown thereof.
Because the circumstances of the present case evince a contractual relation between the
PSBA and Carlitos Bautista, the rules on quasi-delict do not really govern. 8 A perusal of
Article 2176 shows that obligations arising from quasi-delicts or tort, also known as extra-
contractual obligations, arise only between parties not otherwise bound by contract,
whether express or implied. However, this impression has not prevented this Court from
determining the existence of a tort even when there obtains a contract. In Air France vs.
Carroscoso (124 Phil. 722), the private respondent was awarded damages for his
unwarranted expulsion from a first-class seat aboard the petitioner airline. It is noted,
however, that the Court referred to the petitioner-airline's liability as one arising from tort,
not one arising from a contract of carriage. In effect, Air France is authority for the view
that liability from tort may exist even if there is a contract, for the act that breaks the
contract may be also a tort. (Austro-America S.S. Co. vs. Thomas, 248 Fed. 231).
This view was not all that revolutionary, for even as early as 1918, this Court was already of
a similar mind. In Cangco vs. Manila Railroad (38 Phil. 780), Mr. Justice Fisher elucidated
thus:
"The field of non-contractual obligation is much more broader than that of
contractual obligation, comprising, as it does, the whole extent of juridical human
relations. These two fields, figuratively speaking, concentric; that is to say, the
mere fact that a person is bound to another by contract does not relieve him from
extra-contractual liability to such person. When such a contractual relation exists
the obligor may break the contract under such conditions that the same act which
constitutes a breach of the contract would have constituted the source of an
extra-contractual obligation had no contract existed between the parties."
Immediately what comes to mind is the chapter of the Civil Code on Human Relations,
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particularly Article 21, which provides:
"Any person who wilfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner that is
contrary to morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the latter for
the damage." (emphasis supplied)
Air France penalized the racist policy of the airline which emboldened the petitioner's
employee to forcibly oust the private respondent to cater to the comfort of a white man
who allegedly "had a better right to the seat." In Austro-American, supra, the public
embarrassment caused to the passenger was the justification for the Circuit Court of
Appeals, (Second Circuit), to award damages to the latter. From the foregoing, it can be
concluded that should the act which breaches a contract be done in bad faith and be
violative of Article 21, then there is a cause to view the act as constituting a quasi-delict.
In the circumstances obtaining in the case at bar, however, there is, as yet, no finding that
the contract between the school and Bautista had been breached thru the former's
negligence in providing proper security measures. This would be for the trial court to
determine. And, even if there be a finding of negligence, the same could give rise generally
to a breach of contractual obligation only. Using the test of Cangco, supra, the negligence
of the school would not be relevant absent a contract. In fact, that negligence becomes
material only because of the contractual relation between PSBA and Bautista. In other
words, a contractual relation is a condition sine qua non to the school's liability. The
negligence of the school cannot exist independently on the contract, unless the negligence
occurs under the circumstances set out in Article 21 of the Civil Code.
This Court is not unmindful of the attendant difficulties posed by the obligation of schools,
above-mentioned, for conceptually a school, like a common carrier, cannot be an insurer of
its students against all risks. This is specially true in the populous student communities of
the so-called "university belt" in Manila where there have been reported several incidents
ranging from gang wars to other forms of hooliganism. It would not be equitable to expect
of schools to anticipate all types of violent trespass upon their premises, for
notwithstanding the security measures installed, the same may still fail against an
individual or group determined to carry out a nefarious deed inside school premises and
environs. Should this be the case, the school may still avoid liability by proving that the
breach of its contractual obligation to the students was not due to its negligence, here
statutorily defined to be the omission of that degree of diligence which is required by the
nature of the obligation and corresponding to the circumstances of persons, time and
place. 9
As the proceedings a quo have yet to commence on the substance of the private
respondents' complaint, the record is bereft of all the material facts. Obviously, at this
stage, only the trial court can make such a determination from the evidence still to unfold.
WHEREFORE, the foregoing premises considered, the petition is DENIED. The Court of
origin (RTC, Manila, Br. 47) is hereby ordered to continue proceedings consistent with this
ruling of the Court. Costs against the petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Melencio-Herrera, Paras, Regalado and Nocon, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
* Penned by Justice Jose C. Campos, Jr. and concurred in by Justices Ricardo J. Francisco
and Alfredo L. Benipayo.
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1. Article 2176 provides:
"The obligation imposed by article 2176 is demandable not only for one's own
acts or omissions, but also for those of persons for whom one is responsible.
"Lastly, teachers or heads of establishments of arts and trades shall be liable for
damages caused by their pupils and students or apprentices, so long as they remain in
their custody.
"The responsibility treated of in this article shall cease when the persons herein
mentioned prove that they observed all the diligence of a good father of a family to
prevent damage."
2. 101 Phil. 843.
3. 108 Phil. 414.
4. G.R. No. L-29025, 4 October 1971, 41 SCRA 548.
5. Rollo, p. 75.