Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila

THIRD DIVISION

G.R. No. 180157               February 8, 2012

EQUITABLE CARDNETWORK, INC., Petitioner,
vs.
JOSEFA BORROMEO CAPISTRANO, Respondent.

D E C I S I O N

ABAD, J.:

This case is about the sufficiency of the defendant’s allegations in the answer denying the due execution and genuineness of the plaintiff’s actionable documents and the kind of evidence needed to prove forgery of signature.

The Facts and the Case

Petitioner Equitable Cardnetwork, Inc. (ECI) alleged in its complaint that in September 1997 respondent Josefa B. Capistrano (Mrs. Capistrano) applied for membership at the Manila Yacht Club (MYC) under the latter’s widow-membership program. Since the MYC and ECI had a credit card sponsorship agreement in which the Club would solicit for ECI credit card enrollment among its members and dependents, Mrs. Capistrano allegedly applied for and was granted a Visa Credit Card by ECI.

ECI further alleged that Mrs. Capistrano authorized her daughter, Valentina C. Redulla (Mrs. Redulla), to claim from ECI her credit card and ATM application form.1 Mrs. Redulla signed the acknowledgment receipt2 on behalf of her mother, Mrs. Capistrano. After Mrs. Capistrano got hold of the card, she supposedly started using it. On November 24, 1997 Mrs. Redulla personally issued a ₱45,000.00 check as partial payment of Mrs. Capistrano’s account with ECI. But Mrs. Redulla’s check bounced upon deposit.

Because Mrs. Capistrano was unable to settle her ₱217,235.36 bill, ECI demanded payment from her. But she refused to pay, prompting ECI to file on February 30, 1998 a collection suit against her before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Cebu City.

Answering the complaint, Mrs. Capistrano denied ever applying for MYC membership and ECI credit card; that Mrs. Redulla was not her daughter; and that she never authorized her or anyone to claim a credit card for her. Assuming she applied for such a card, she never used it. Mrs. Redulla posed as Mrs. Capistrano and fooled ECI into issuing the card to her. Consequently, the action should have been brought against Mrs. Redulla. Mrs. Capistrano asked the court to hold ECI liable to her for moral and exemplary damages, attorney’s fees, and litigation expenses.

After trial, the RTC3 ruled that, having failed to deny under oath the genuineness and due execution of ECI’s actionable documents that were attached to the complaint, Mrs. Capistrano impliedly admitted the genuineness and due execution of those documents. In effect she admitted: 1) applying for membership at the MYC;4 2) accomplishing the MYC membership information sheet5 which contained a request for an ECI Visa card; 3) holding herself liable for all obligations incurred in the use of such card; 4) authorizing Mrs. Redulla to receive the Visa card issued in her name;6 5) applying for an ATM Card with ECI; 7 and 6) using the credit card in buying merchandise worth ₱217,235.36 as indicated in the sales slips.

The RTC said that when an action is founded upon written documents, their genuineness and due execution shall be deemed admitted unless the defendant specifically denies them under oath and states what he claims to be the facts.8 A mere statement that the documents were procured by fraudulent representation does not raise any issue as to their genuineness and due execution.9 The RTC rejected Mrs. Capistrano’s argument that, having verified her answer, she should be deemed to have denied those documents under oath. The RTC reasoned that she did not, in her verification, deny signing those documents or state that they were false or fabricated.

The RTC added that respondent Mrs. Capistrano could no longer raise the defense of forgery since this had been cut-off by her failure to make a specific denial. Besides, said the RTC, Mrs. Capistrano failed to present strong and convincing evidence that her signatures on the document had been forged. She did not present a handwriting expert who could attest to the forgery. The trial court ordered Mrs. Capistrano to pay ECI’s claim of ₱217,235.36 plus interests, attorney’s fees and litigation expenses. Mrs. Capistrano appealed the decision to the Court of Appeals (CA).

On May 10, 2007 the CA reversed the trial court’s decision and dismissed ECI’s complaint.10 The CA ruled that, although Mrs. Capistrano’s answer was somewhat infirm, still she raised the issue of the genuineness and due execution of ECI’s documents during trial by presenting evidence that she never signed any of them. Since ECI failed to make a timely objection to its admission, such evidence cured the vagueness in her answer. Further, the CA ruled that Mrs. Capistrano sufficiently proved by evidence that her signatures had been forged.

The Issues Presented

The issues presented are:

1. Whether or not the CA correctly ruled that, although Mrs. Capistrano failed to make an effective specific denial of the actionable documents attached to the complaint, she overcame this omission by presenting parol evidence to which ECI failed to object; and

2. Whether or not the CA correctly ruled that Mrs. Capistrano presented clear and convincing evidence that her signatures on the actionable documents had been forged.

Ruling of the Court

One. An answer to the complaint may raise a negative defense which consists in defendant’s specific denial of the material fact that plaintiff alleges in his complaint, which fact is essential to the latter’s cause of action.11 Specific denial has three modes. Thus:

1) The defendant must specify each material allegation of fact the truth of which he does not admit and whenever practicable set forth the substance of the matters on which he will rely to support his denial;

2) When the defendant wants to deny only a part or a qualification of an averment in the complaint, he must specify so much of the averment as is true and material and deny the remainder; and

3) When the defendant is without knowledge and information sufficient to form a belief as to the truth of a material averment made in the complaint, he shall so state and this shall have the effect of a denial.

But the rule that applies when the defendant wants to contest the documents attached to the claimant’s complaint which are essential to his cause of action is found in Section 8, Rule 8 of the Rules of Court, which provides:

SECTION 8. How to contest such documents. —When an action or defense is founded upon a written instrument, copied in or attached to the corresponding pleading as provided in the preceding Section, the genuineness and due execution of the instrument shall be deemed admitted unless the adverse party, under oath, specifically denies them, and sets forth what he claims to be the facts; but the requirement of an oath does not apply when the adverse party does not appear to be a party to the instrument or when compliance with an order for an inspection of the original instrument is refused.

To determine whether or not respondent Mrs. Capistrano effectively denied the genuineness and due execution of ECI’s actionable documents as provided above, the pertinent averments of the complaint and defendant Capistrano’s answer are here reproduced.

ECI’s complaint:

3. That sometime in 1997, defendant applied for membership, as widow of a deceased member of the Manila Yacht Club;

4. That in connection with her application for membership in the Manila Yacht Club, defendant applied for and was granted a Manila Yacht Club Visa Card in accordance with Credit Card Sponsorship Agreement entered into between the plaintiff and the Manila Yacht Club wherein Manila Yacht Club shall solicit applications for the Manila Yacht Club Visa Cards from Manila Yacht Club members and dependents. Copy of the Manila Yacht Club Information Sheet is hereto attached as Annex "A";

Mrs. Capistrano’s answer:

3. She specifically denies paragraph[s] 3 and 4 of the complaint for want of sufficient knowledge to form a belief as to the veracity of the allegations contained therein and for the reasons stated in her special and affirmative defenses.

x x x x

ECI’s complaint:

5. That defendant authorized her daughter, Mrs. Valentina Redulla to get the said credit card including her ATM application form from the plaintiff which enabled the defendant to avail of the cash advance facility with the use of said card; Copy of the authorization letter, application form and acknowledgment receipt showing that Valentina C. Redulla received the said credit card are hereto attached as Annexes "B", "C", and "D", respectively;

Mrs. Capistrano’s answer:

4. She specifically denies paragraph 5 of the complaint for want of sufficient knowledge to form a belief as to the allegations contained therein. She never authorized any person to get her card. Valentina Redulla is not her daughter.

x x x x

ECI’s complaint:

6. That with the use of the said Manila Yacht Club Visa Card, defendant could purchase goods and services from local and accredited stores and establishments on credit and could make cash advances from ATM machines since it is the plaintiff who pays first the said obligations and later at a stated period every month, the plaintiff will send a statement of account to defendant showing how much she owes the plaintiff for the payments it previously made on her behalf. Copy of the monthly statement of accounts for the months of November and December 1997 are hereto attached as Annexes "E" and "F", respectively;

Mrs. Capistrano’s answer:

5. She specifically denies paragraph 6 of the complaint for want of sufficient knowledge to form a belief as to the veracity of the allegations contained therein and for the reasons as stated in her special and affirmative defenses.

x x x x

ECI’s complaint:

7. That it is the agreement of the parties that in the event that an account is overdue, interest at 1.75% per month and service charge at 1.25% will be charged to the defendant;

Mrs. Capistrano’s answer:

6. She specifically denies paragraph 7 of the complaint for want of sufficient knowledge to form a belief as to the veracity of the allegations contained therein.

x x x x

ECI’s complaint:

8. That on November 24, 1997, defendant’s daughter, Mrs. Valentina C. Redulla issued Solidbank Check No. 0127617 dated November 24, 1997 in the amount of ₱45,000.00 in partial payment of defendant’s account with the plaintiff;

9. That when the said check was deposited in the bank, the same was dishonored for the reason "Account Closed." Copy of said said check is hereto attached as Annex "G";

Mrs. Capistrano’s answer:

7. She denies paragraph[s] 8 and 9 for want of sufficient knowledge to form a belief as to the veracity of the allegations contained therein and for the reasons aforestated. It is quite peculiar that herein defendant’s alleged account would be paid with a personal check of somebody not related to her.

x x x x

ECI’s complaint:

10. That defendant has an unpaid principal obligation to the plaintiff in the amount of ₱217,235.326;

Mrs. Capistrano’s answer:

8. She denies paragraph 10 for want of sufficient knowledge as to the veracity of the allegations contained therein and for the reasons stated in her special and affirmative defenses. Granting ex gratia argumenti that defendant did indeed apply for a card, still, she vehemently denies using the same to purchase goods from any establishment on credit.

x x x x

ECI’s complaint

11. That plaintiff made demands on the defendant to pay her obligation but despite said demands, defendant has failed and refused to pay her obligation and still fails and refuses to pay her obligation to the plaintiff and settle her obligation, thus, compelling the plaintiff to file the present action and hire the services of counsel for the amount of ₱53,998.84 and incur litigation expenses in the amount of ₱30,000.00;

12. That it is further provided as one of the terms and conditions in the issuance of the Manila Yacht Club Card that in the event that collection is enforced through court action, 25% of the amount due of ₱53,998.84 will be charged as attorney’s fees and ₱53,998.84 will be charged as liquidated damages;

Mrs. Capistrano’s answer

9. She denies paragraph[s] 11 and 12 for want of sufficient knowledge to form a belief as to the veracity of the allegations therein. If ever there was any demand sent to herein defendant the same would have been rejected on valid and lawful grounds. Therefore, any damage or expense, real or imaginary, incurred or sustained by the plaintiff should be for its sole and exclusive account.

x x x x

Further, Mrs. Capistrano’s special and affirmative defenses read as follows:

10. Defendant repleads by reference all the foregoing allegations which are relevant and material hereto.

11. Defendant denies having applied for membership with the Equitable Cardnetwork, Inc. as a widow of a deceased member of the Manila Yacht Club.

12. She has never authorized anyone to get her alleged card for the preceding reason. Therefore, being not a member, she has no obligation, monetary or otherwise to herein plaintiff.

13. Plaintiff has no cause of action against herein answering defendant.

14. This Valentina C. Redulla is not her daughter. In all modesty, defendant being a member of one of the prominent families of Cebu and being a board member of the Borromeo Brothers Estate whose holdings include Honda Cars Cebu as well as other prestigious establishments, it would be totally uncalled for if she would not honor a valid obligation towards any person or entity.

15. She surmises that this Valentina Redulla has been posing as Josefa Capistrano. Therefore, plaintiff’s cause of action should have been directed towards this Redulla.

16. Even granting for the sake of argument that herein answering defendant did indeed authorized somebody to pick up her card, still, she never made any purchases with the use thereof. She, therefore, vehemently denies having used the card to purchase any merchandise on credit.

In substance, ECI’s allegations, supported by the attached documents, are that Mrs. Capistrano applied through Mrs. Redulla for a credit card and that the former used it to purchase goods on credit yet Mrs. Capistrano refused to pay ECI for them. On the other hand, Mrs. Capistrano denied these allegations "for lack of knowledge" as to their truth.12 This mode of denial is by itself obviously ineffectual since a person must surely know if he applied for a credit card or not, like a person must know if he is married or not. He must also know if he used the card and if he did not pay the card company for his purchases. A person’s denial for lack of knowledge of things that by their nature he ought to know is not an acceptable denial.

In any event, the CA ruled that, since ECI did not object on time to Mrs. Capistrano’s evidence that her signatures on the subject documents were forged, such omission cured her defective denial of their genuineness and due execution. The CA’s ruling on this point is quite incorrect.

True, issues not raised by the pleadings may be tried with the implied consent of the parties as when one of them fails to object to the evidence adduced by the other concerning such unimpleaded issues.13 But the CA fails to reckon with the rule that a party’s admissions in the course of the proceedings, like an admission in the answer of the genuineness and true execution of the plaintiff’s actionable documents, can only be contradicted by showing that defendant made such admission through palpable mistake.14 Here, Mrs. Capistrano never claimed palpable mistake in the answer she filed.

It is of no moment that plaintiff ECI failed to object to Mrs. Capistrano’s evidence at the trial that the subject documents were forgeries. As the Court ruled in Elayda v. Court of Appeals,15 the trial court may reject evidence that a party adduces to contradict a judicial admission he made in his pleading since such admission is conclusive as to him. It does not matter that the other party failed to object to the contradictory evidence so adduced.

Notwithstanding the above, the Court holds that the CA correctly ordered the dismissal of ECI’s action since, contrary to the RTC’s finding, Mrs. Capistrano effectively denied the genuineness and due execution of ECI’s actionable documents. True, Mrs. Capistrano denied ECI’s actionable documents merely "for lack of knowledge" which denial, as pointed out above, is inadequate since by their nature she ought to know the truth of the allegations regarding those documents. But this inadequacy was cured by her quick assertion that she was also denying the allegations regarding those actionable documents "for the reasons as stated in her special and affirmative defenses."

In the "Special and Affirmative Defenses" section of her answer, Mrs. Capistrano in fact denied ECI’s documented allegations that she applied for a credit card, was given one, and used it. She said:

11. Defendant denies having applied for membership with the Equitable Cardnetwork, Inc. as a widow of a deceased member of the Manila Yacht Club.

12. She has never authorized anyone to get her alleged card for the preceding reason.1âwphi1 Therefore, being not a member, she has no obligation, monetary or otherwise to herein plaintiff.

Neither the RTC nor the CA can ignore Mrs. Capistrano’s above additional reasons denying ECI’s allegations regarding its actionable documents. Such reasons form part of her answer. Parenthetically, it seems that, when Mrs. Capistrano denied the transactions with ECI "for lack of knowledge," it was her way of saying that such transactions took place without her knowing. And, since Mrs. Capistrano in fact verified her claim that she had no part in those transactions, she in effect denied under oath the genuineness and due execution of the documents supporting them. For this reason, she is not barred from introducing evidence that those documents were forged.

Two. Here, apart from presenting an officer who identified its documents, ECI presented no other evidence to support its claim that Mrs. Capistrano did business with it. On the other hand, the evidence for the defense shows that it was not likely for Mrs. Capistrano to have applied for a credit card since she was already 81 years old, weak, bedridden, and suffering from senility at the time in question.16 What is more, she had been staying in Cagayan de Oro under the care of his son Mario; whereas she made the alleged cash advances and purchases using the credit card in different malls in Cebu City, Bohol, and Muntinlupa City.17

Further, as the CA found, Mrs. Capistrano’s specimen signatures on a Deed of Sale,18 an Extra-judicial Settlement of Estate of Deceased Person,19 a Waiver of Rights,20 and a handwritten note,21 executed at about the time in question, clearly varied from the signatures found on ECI’s documents.22 The testimony of a handwriting expert, while useful, is not indispensable in examining or comparing handwritings or signatures.23 The matter here is not too technical as to preclude the CA from examining the signatures and ruling on whether or not they are forgeries. The Court finds no reason to take exception from the CA’s finding.

WHEREFORE, the Court DISMISSES the petition and AFFIRMS the order of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV 79424 dated May 10, 2007 that directed the dismissal of the complaint against respondent Josefa B. Capistrano.

SO ORDERED.

ROBERTO A. ABAD
Associate Justice

WE CONCUR:

PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR.
Associate Justice
Chairperson

DIOSDADO M. PERALTA
Associate Justice
JOSE CATRAL MENDOZA
Associate Justice

ESTELA M. PERLAS-BERNABE
Associate Justice

A T T E S T A T I O N

I attest that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.

PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR.
Associate Justice
Chairperson, Third Division

C E R T I F I C A T I O N

Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution and the Division Chairperson’s Attestation, I certify that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.

RENATO C. CORONA
Chief Justice


Footnotes

1 Exhibit "F."

2 Exhibit "E."

3 Rollo, pp. 77-82.

4 Exhibit "A."

5 Exhibit "C."

6 Exhibit "E."

7 Exhibit "F."

8 Rules of Court, Rule 8, Sec. 8.

9 Songco v. Sellner, 37 Phil. 254, 256 (1917).

10 Rollo, pp. 34-43.

11 Rules of Court, Rule 6, Sec. 5.

12 Rollo, pp. 71-72, paragraphs 3 to 9.

13 Rules of Court, Rule 10, Sec. 5. Amendment to conform to or authorize presentation of evidence. — When issues not raised by the pleadings are tried with the express or implied consent of the parties, they shall be treated in all respects, as if they had been raised in the pleadings. Such amendment of the pleadings as may be necessary to cause them to conform to the evidence and to raise these issues may be made upon motion of any party at any time, even after judgment; but failure to amend does not affect the result of the trial of these issues. xxx

14 Rule 129, Sec. 4. Judicial admissions. - An admission, verbal or written, made by a party in the course of the proceedings in the same case, does not require proof. The admission may be contradicted only by showing that it was made through palpable mistake or that no such admission was made. (2a)

15 G.R. No. 49327, July 18, 1991, 199 SCRA 349, 353.

16 TSN, March 16, 2001, pp. 7-8.

17 Annex "E."

18 Exhibits "8" and "9."

19 Exhibit "10."

20 Exhibit "11."

21 Exhibit "7."

22 Exhibit "F."

23 Progressive Trade & Service Enterprises v. Antonio, G.R. No. 179502, September 18, 2009, 600 SCRA 683, 689.


The Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation