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1276
SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
DaudenHernaez vs. De los Angeles
No. L27010. April 30, 1969.
MARLENE DAUDENHERNAEZ, petitioner, vs. HON.
WALFRIDO DE LOS ANGELES, Judge of the Court of
First Instance of Quezon City, HOLLYWOOD FAR EAST
PRODUCTIONS, INC., and RAMON VALENZUELA,
respondents,
Pleading and practice; Amendment of complaint; Motion to
dismiss; When court sustains motion it is error for it to dismiss
complaint without giving plaintiff opportunity to amend his
complaint.—It is a well established rule in our jurisprudence that
when a court sustains a demurrer or motion to dismiss it is error
for it to dismiss the complaint without giving the party plaintiff
an opportunity to amend his complaint if he so chooses. Insofar as
the first order of dismissal did not provide that the same was
without prejudice to amendment of the complaint, or reserve to
the plaintiff the right to amend his complaint, the said order was
erroneous; and this error was compounded when the motion to
accept the amended complaint was denied in the subsequent
order of Oct. 3, 1966. Hence, the petitionerplaintiff was within
her rights in filing her socalled second motion for
reconsideration, which was actually a first motion against the
refusal to admit the amended complaint.
Same; Same; Motion for reconsideration; Second motion not
pro forma when based on a different ground.—It is contended that
the second motion for reconsideration was merely pro forma and
did not suspend the period to appeal from the first order of
dismissal because (1) it merely reiterated the first motion for
reconsideration and (2) it was filed without giving the counsel for
defendantappellee the three days’ notice provided by the rules.
This argument is not tenable, for the reason that the second
motion for reconsideration was addressed to the court’s refusal to
allow an amendment to the original complaint, and this was a
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‘ground not invoked in the f irst motion for reconsideration. Thus,
the second motion to reconsider was really not pro forma, as it
was based on a different ground, even if in its first part it set forth
in greater detail the arguments against the correctness of the first
order to dismiss. And as to the lack of three days notice, the
record shows that appellees had filed their opposition to the
second motion to reconsider; so that even if it were true that
respondents were not given the full three days’ notice, they were
not deprived of any substantial right. Therefore, the claim that
the first order of dismissal had become final and unappealable
must be overruled.
Same; Same; Same; Motion to dismiss not a responsive
pleading; Plaintiff entitles to amend original dismissed com
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DaudenHernaez vs. De los Angeles
plaint.—It is well to observe that since a motion to dismiss is not
a responsive pleading, the plaintiffpetitioner was entitled as of
right to amend the original dismissed complaint. In Paeste vs.
Jaurigue (94 Phil. 179) the Supreme Court ruled as follows:
“Amendments to pleadings are favored and should be liberally
allowed in the furtherance of justice. Moreover, under section 1 of
Rule 17, Rules of Court, a party may amend his pleading once as
a matter of course, that is, without leave of court, at any time
before a responsive pleading is served. A motion to dismiss is not
a ‘responsive pleading’. As plaintiffs amended their complaint
before it was answered, the motion to admit the amendment
should not have been denied. It is true that the amendment was
presented after the original complaint had been ordered
dismissed. But that order was not yet final for it was still under
consideration.”
Obligations and contracts; Civil Code’s contractual system
follows that ‘of the Spanish Civil Code of 1889 and of the
“Ordenamiento de Alcala".—The court below abuse its discretion
in ruling that a contract for personal services involving more than
P500.00 was either invalid or unenforceable under the last
paragraph of Article 1358 of the Civil Code of the Philippines. In
the matter of formalities, the contractual system of the Civil Code
still follows that of the Spanish Civil Code of 1889 and of the
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“Ordenamiento de Alcala” (Law 1, Title I, Book X, of the Novisima
Recopilacion) of upholding the spirit and intent of the parties over
formalities: since, in general, contracts are valid and binding from
their perfection regardless of form, whether they be oral or
written. This is plain from Articles 1315 and 1356 of the present
Civil Code.
Same; Where the contract in the case at bar does not come
under the exceptions in Article 1356 of the Civil Code.—The
contract sued upon by petitioner herein does not come under the
exceptions in Article 1356 of the Civil Code. It is true that it
appears included in Article 1358, last clause, providing that “all
other contracts where the amount involved exceeds five hundred
pesos must appear in writing, even a private one.” But Article
1358 nowhere provides that the absence of written form in this
case will make the agreement invalid or unenforceable. On the
contrary, Article 1357 clearly indicates that contracts covered by
Article 1358 are binding and enforceable by action or suit despite
the absence of writing.
ORIGINAL PETITION in the Supreme Court. Certiorari.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
R.M. Coronado & Associates for petitioner.
Francisco Lavides for respondent.
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DaudenHernaez vs. De los Angeles
REYES, J.B.L., Acting C.J.:
Petition f or a writ of certiorari to set aside certain orders
of the Court of First Instance of Quezon City (Branch IV),
in its Civil Case No. Q10288, dismissing a complaint for
breach of contract and damages, denying reconsideration,
refusing to admit an amended complaint, and declaring the
dismissal final and unappealable.
The essential facts are the following:
Petitioner Marlene DaudenHernaez, a motion picture
actress, had filed a complaint against herein private
respondents, Hollywood Far East Productions, Inc., and its
President and General Manager, Ramon Valenzuela, to
recover P14,700.00 representing a balance allegedly due
said petitioner for her services as leading actress in two
motion pictures produced by the company, and to recover
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damages. Upon motion of defendants, the respondent court
(Judge Walfrido de los Angeles presiding) ordered the
complaint dismissed, mainly because the “claim of plaintiff
was not evidenced by any written document, either public
or private”, and the complaint “was defective on its face” for
violating Articles 1356 and 1358 of the Civil Code of the
Philippines, as well as for containing defective allegations.
Plaintiff sought reconsideration of the dismissal and for
admission of an amended complaint, attached to the
motion. The court denied reconsideration and the leave to
amend; whereupon, a second motion for reconsideration
was filed. Nevertheless, the court also denied it f or being
pro forma, as its allegations “are, more or less, the same as
the first motion”, and for not being accompanied by an
affidavit of merits, and further declared the dismissal final
and unappealable. In view of the attitude of the Court of
First Instance, plaintiff resorted to this Court.
The answer sets up the defense that “the proposed
amended complaint did not vary in any material respect
from the original complaint except in minor details, and
suffers from the same vital defect of the original
complaint”, which is the violation of Article 1356 of the
Civil Code, in that the contract sued upon was not alleged
to be in writing; that by Article 1358 the writing was ab
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DaudenHernaez vs. De los Angeles
solute and indispensable, because the amount involved
exceeds five hundred pesos; and that the second motion for
reconsideration did not interrupt the period for appeal,
because it was not served on three days’ notice.
We shall take up first the procedural question. It is a
well established rule in our jurisprudence that when a
court sustains a demurrer or motion to dismiss it is error
for the court to dismiss the complaint without giving the
party plaintiff
an opportunity to amend his complaint if he
1
so chooses. Insofar as the first order of dismissal (Annex D,
Petition) did not provide that the same was without
prejudice to amendment of the complaint, or reserve to the
plaintiff the right to amend his complaint, the said order
was erroneous; and this error was compounded when the
motion to accept the amended complaint was denied in the
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subsequent order of 3 October 1966 (Annex F, Petition).
Hence, the petitionerplaintiff was within her rights in
filing her socalled second motion for reconsideration,
which was actually a first motion against the refusal to
admit the amended complaint.
It is contended that the second motion for
reconsideration was merely pro forma and did not suspend
the period to appeal from the first order of dismissal
(Annex D) because (1) it merely reiterated the first motion
for reconsideration and (2) it was filed without giving the
counsel for defendantappellee the 3 days’ notice provided
by the rules. This argument is not tenable, for the reason
that the second motion for reconsideration was addressed
to the court’ refusal to allow an amendment to the original
complaint, and this was a ground not invoked in the first
motion for reconsideration. Thus, the second motion to
reconsider was really not pro forma, as it was based on a
different ground, even if in its first part it set forth in
greater detail the arguments against the correctness of the
first order to dismiss. And as to the lack of 3 days’ notice,
_______________
1
Macapinlac vs. Gutierrez Repide, 43 Phil. 774; Ibañez vs. Fortis, 17
Phil. 82; Balderrama vs. Compañia General de Tabacos, 13 Phil. 609;
Molina vs. La Electricista, 6 Phil. 519; Mapua vs. Suburban Theaters,
Inc., 87 Phil. 364. Unless, of course, the defect is incurable, as in lack of
jurisdiction.
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DaudenHernaez vs. De los Angeles
the record shows that appellees had filed their opposition
(in detail) to the second motion to reconsider (Answer,
Annex 4); so that even if it were true that respondents were
not given the full 3 days’ notice they were not deprived of
any substantial right. Therefore, the claim that the first
order of dismissal had become final and unappealable must
be overruled.
It is well to observe in this regard that since a motion to
dismiss is not a responsive pleading, the plaintiffpetitioner
was entitled as of right to amend the original dismissed
complaint. In Paeste vs. Jaurigue, 94 Phil. 179, 181, this
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Court ruled as follows:
“Appellants contend that the lower court erred in not admitting
their amended complaint and in holding that their action had
already prescribed. Appellants are right on both counts.
“Amendments to pleadings are favored and should be liberally
allowed in the furtherance of justice. (Torres vs. Tomacruz, 49
Phil. 913). Moreover, under section 1 of Rule 17, Rules of Court, a
party may amend his pleading once as a matter of course, that is,
without leave of court, at any time before a responsive pleading is
served. A motion to dismiss is not a responsive Pleading’. (Moran
on the Rules of Court, vol. 1, 1952 ed., p. 376). As Plaintiffs
amended their complaint before it was answered, the motion to
admit the amendment should not have been denied. It is true that
the amendment was presented after the original complaint had
been ordered dismissed. But that order was not yet final for it was
still under reconsideration.”
The foregoing observations leave this Court free to discuss
the main issue in this petition. Did the court below abuse
its discretion in ruling that a contract for personal services
involving more than P500.00 was either invalid of
unenforceable under the last paragraph of Article 1358 of
the Civil Code of the Philippines?
We hold that there was abuse, since the ruling herein
contested
betrays
a
basic
and
lamentable
misunderstanding of the role of the written form in
contracts, as ordained in the present Civil Code.
In the matter of formalities, the contractual system of
our Civil Code still follows that of the Spanish Civil Code
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DaudenHernaez vs. De los Angeles
2
of 1889 and of the “Ordenamiento de Alcalá" of upholding
the spirit and intent of the parties over formalities: hence,
in general, contracts are valid and binding from their
perfection regardless of form, whether they be oral or
written. This is plain from Articles 1315 and 1356 of the
present Civil Code. Thus, the first cited provision
prescribes:
“ART. 1315. Contracts are perfected by mere consent, and from
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that moment the parties are bound not only to the fulfillment of
what has been expressly stipulated but also to all the
consequences which, according to their nature, may be in keeping
with good faith, usage and law.” (Italics supplied)
Concordantly, the first part of Article 1356 of the Code
provides:
“ART. 1356. Contracts shall be obligatory in whatever form they
may have been entered into, provided all the essential requisites
for their validity are present. x x x.” (Italics supplied)
These essential requisites last mentioned are normally (1)
consent, (2) proper subject matter, and (3) consideration
ion
3
or causa for the obligation assumed (Article 1318). So that
once the three elements exist, the contract is generally
valid and obligatory, regardless of the form, oral or written,
in which they are couched.
To this general rule, the Code admits exceptions, set
forth in the second portion of Article 1356:
“However, when the law requires that a contract be in some form
in order that it may be valid or enforceable, or that a contract be
proved in a certain way, that requirement is absolute and
indispensable. x x x.”
It is thus seen that’ to the general rule that the form (oral
or written) is irrelevant to the binding effect inter partes of
a contract that possesses the three validating elements of
consent, subject matter, and causa, Article 1356 of the
Code establishes only two exceptions, to wit:
_______________
2
Law 1, Title I, Book X, of the Novisima Recopilacion.
3
Plus a fourth requisite of delivery in socalled real contracts, such as
deposit, pledge and commodatum (Article 1316). But the contract here
involved is not of this class.
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(a) Contracts for which the law itself requires that they
be in some particular form (writing) in order to
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make them valid and enforceable (the socalled
solemn contracts). Of these the typical example is
the donation of immovable property that the law
(Article 749) requires to be embodied in a public
instrument in order “that the donation may be
valid”, i.e., existing or binding. Other instances are
the donation of movables worth more than
P5,000.00 which must be in writing, “otherwise the
donation shall be void” (Article 748); contracts to
pay interest on loans (mutuum) that must be
“expressly stipulated in writing” (Article 1956); and
the agreements contemplated by Articles 1744,
1773, 1874 and 2134 of the present Civil Code.
(b) Contracts that the law requires to be proved by
some writing (memorandum) of its terms, as in
those covered by the old Statute of Frauds, now
Article 1403 (2) of the Civil Code. Their existence
not being provable by mere oral testimony (unless
wholly or partly executed), these contracts are
exceptional in requiring a writing embodying the
terms thereof for their enforceability by action in
court.
The contract sued upon by petitioner herein (compensation
for services) does not come under either exception. It is true
that it appears included in Article 1358, last clause,
providing that “all other contracts where the amount
involved exceeds five hundred pesos must appear in
writing, even a private one”. But Article 1358 nowhere
provides that the absence of written form in this case will
make the agreement invalid or unenforceable. On the
contrary, Article 1357 clearly indicates that contracts
covered by Article 1358 are binding and enforceable by
action or suit despite the absence of writing.
“ART. 1357. If the law requires a document or other special form,
as in the acts and contracts enumerated in the following article,
the contracting parties may compel each other to observe that
form, once the contract has been perfected. This right may be
exercised simultaneously with the action upon the contract.”
(Italics supplied)
It thus becomes inevitable to conclude that both the court a
quo as well as the private respondents herein were
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VOL. 27, APRIL 30, 1969
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Dauden Hernaez vs. De los Angeles
grossly mistaken in holding that because petitioner
Dauden’s contract for services was not in writing the same
could not be sued upon, or that her complaint should be
dismissed for failure to state a cause of action because it
did not plead any written agreement.
The basic error in the court’s decision lies in overlooking
that in our contractual system it is not enough that the law
should require that the contract be in writing, as it does in
Article 1358. The law must further prescribe that without
the writing the contract is not valid or not enforceable by
action.
WHEREFORE, the order dismissing the complaint is set
aside, and the case is ordered remanded to the court of
origin for further proceedings not at variance with this
decision. Costs to be solidarily paid by private respondents
Hollywood Far East Productions, Inc., and Ramon
Valenzuela.
Dizon, Makalintal, Zaldivar, Sanchez, Fernando,
Teehankee and Barredo, JJ., concur.
Concepcion, C.J. and Castro, J., are on official
leave.
Capistrano, J., did not take part.
Order set aside and case remanded to court of origin for
further proceedings.
——o0o——
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