ONG LIM
SING, JR. vs. FEB LEASING AND FINANCE CORPORATION
G.R. No. 168115 - June 8, 2007
FACTS:
On
March 9, 1995, FEB Leasing and Finance Corporation entered into a lease of
equipment and motor vehicles with JVL Food Products. On the same date, Vicente
Ong Lim Sing, Jr. executed an Individual Guaranty Agreement with FEB to
guarantee the prompt and faithful performance of the terms and conditions of
the aforesaid lease agreement. Corresponding Lease Schedules with Delivery and
Acceptance Certificates over the equipment and motor vehicles formed part of
the agreement. Under the contract, JVL was obliged to pay FEB an aggregate
gross monthly rental of One Hundred Seventy Thousand Four Hundred Ninety-Four
Pesos (P170,494.00).
JVL defaulted in the payment of the monthly rentals. As of July 31, 2000, the
amount in arrears, including the penalty charges and insurance premiums, amounted
to Three Million Four Hundred Fourteen Thousand Four Hundred Sixty-Eight and
75/100 Pesos (P3,414,468.75). On August 23, 2000, FEB sent a letter to JVL
demanding payment of the said amount. However, JVL failed to pay.
On
December 6, 2000, FEB filed a Complaint with the Regional Trial Court of Manila
for sum of money, damages, and replevin against JVL, Lim, and John Doe.
In
an Amended Answer, JVL and Lim admitted the existence of the lease agreement
but asserted that it is in reality a sale of equipment on instalment basis, with
FEB acting as the financier. On November 22, 2002, the trial court ruled in
favor of JVL and Lim and stressed the contradictory terms found in the lease
agreement. The trial court stated, among others, that if JVL and Lim (then
defendants) were to be regarded as only a lessee, logically the lessor who
asserts ownership will be the one directly benefited or injured and therefore
the lessee is not supposed to be the assured as he has no insurable interest.
On December 27, 2002, FEB filed its Notice of Appeal.
Accordingly, on January 17, 2003, the court issued an Order elevating the
entire records of the case to the Court of Appeals. On March 15, 2005, the
Court of Appeals issued its Decision declaring the transaction between the
parties as a financial lease agreement. The said decision reversed and set
aside the trial court’s decision dated November 22, 2002. Hence, Lim filed the
present Petition for Review on Certiorari.
ISSUE:
Whether or not petitioner
has an insurable interest in the equipment and motor vehicles leased.
RULING:
Yes.
The stipulation in Section 14 of the leased contract,
that the equipment shall be insured at the cost and expense of the lessee
against loss, damage, or destruction from fire, theft, accident, or other
insurable risk for the full term of the lease, is a binding and valid
stipulation. Petitioner, as a lessee, has an insurable interest in the
equipment and motor vehicles leased. Section 17 of the Insurance Code provides
that the measure of an insurable interest in property is the extent to which
the insured might be damnified by loss or injury thereof. It cannot be denied
that JVL will be directly damnified in case of loss, damage, or destruction of
any of the properties leased.
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