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Magat Vs Medialdea

This document summarizes a court case regarding a contract dispute between a defendant and the U.S. Navy Exchange in the Philippines in 1972. The defendant entered into a contract to operate a fleet of taxicabs with radios to communicate with base stations. The issue is whether the terms of the contract were contravened. The court found the complaint satisfied the test of legal sufficiency as it outlined the circumstances leading to the contract and alleged the defendant fulfilled their obligations but the plaintiff failed to comply by not opening a letter of credit. The court ruled that contract breach results in loss of expected profits and those losses are recoverable damages along with any loss or lack of profits under Article 1170 of the Civil Code.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
708 views1 page

Magat Vs Medialdea

This document summarizes a court case regarding a contract dispute between a defendant and the U.S. Navy Exchange in the Philippines in 1972. The defendant entered into a contract to operate a fleet of taxicabs with radios to communicate with base stations. The issue is whether the terms of the contract were contravened. The court found the complaint satisfied the test of legal sufficiency as it outlined the circumstances leading to the contract and alleged the defendant fulfilled their obligations but the plaintiff failed to comply by not opening a letter of credit. The court ruled that contract breach results in loss of expected profits and those losses are recoverable damages along with any loss or lack of profits under Article 1170 of the Civil Code.

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mcris101
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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MAGAT VS.

MEDIALDEA
L-37120 April 20, 1983
FACTS:
That sometime in September 1972, the defendant entered into a contract with the
U.S. Navy Exchange, Subic Bay, Philippines, for the operation of a fleet of taxicabs,
each taxicab to be provided with the necessary taximeter and a radio transceiver for
receiving and sending of messages from mobile taxicab to fixed base stations within
the Naval Base at Subic Bay, Philippines.
ISSUE:
Whether or not there is contravention of the terms.
RULING:
After a thorough examination of the complaint at bar, We find the test of legal
sufficiency of the cause of action adequately satisfied. In a methodical and logical
sequence, the complaint recites the circumstances that led to the perfection of the
contract entered into by the parties. It further avers that while petitioner had fulfilled
his part of the bargain, private respondent failed to comply with his correlative
obligation by refusing to open a letter of credit to cover payment of the goods
ordered by him and that consequently, petitioner suffered not only loss of his
expected profits, but moral and exemplary damages as well. From these allegations,
the essential elements of a cause of action are present, to wit: the existence of a
legal right to the plaintiff; a correlative duty of the defendant and an act or omission
of the defendant in violation of the plaintiff's right, with consequent injury or damage
to the latter for which he may maintain an action for recovery of damages or other
appropriate relief.
Indisputably, the parties, both businessmen, entered into the aforesaid contract with
the evident intention of deriving some profits therefrom. Upon breach of the contract
by either of them, the other would necessarily suffer loss of his expected profits.
Since the loss comes into being at the very moment of breach, such loss is real,
"fixed and vested" and, therefore, recoverable under the law.
Article 1170 of the Civil Code provides:
"Those who in the performance of their obligation are guilty of fraud, negligence, or
delay, and those who in any manner contravene the tenor thereof are liable for
damages."
The phrase "in any manner contravene the tenor" of the obligation includes any illicit
act or omission which impairs the strict and faithful fulfillment of the obligation and
every kind of defective performance.
The damages which the obligor is liable for includes not only the value of the loss
suffered by the obligee [dao emergente] but also the profits which the latter failed to
obtain [lucro cesante]. If the obligor acted in good faith, he shall be liable for those
damages that are the natural and probable consequences of the breach of the
obligation and which the parties have foreseen or could have reasonably foreseen at
the time the obligation was constituted; and in case of fraud, bad faith, malice or
wanton attitude, he shall be liable for all damages which may be reasonably
attributed to the nonperformance of the obligation

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