G.R. No. 82248 January 30, 1992
ERNESTO MARTIN, petitioner,
vs.
HON. COURT OF APPEALS and MANILA ELECTRIC COMPANY, respondents.
Roberto M. Cabangis for petitioner.
Benjamin R. Reonal for private respondent.
CRUZ, J.:
This case turns on the proper application of the familiar rule that he who alleges must prove his allegation.
Ernesto Martin was the owner of a private car bearing
license plate No. NPA-930. At around 2 o'clock in the morning of May
11, 1982, while being driven by Nestor Martin, it crashed into a Meralco
electric post on Valley Golf Road, in Antipolo, Rizal. The car was
wrecked and the pole severely damaged. Meralco subsequently demanded
reparation from Ernesto Martin, but the demand was rejected. It
thereupon sued him for damages in the Regional Trial Court of Pasig,
alleging inter alia that he was liable to it in the
sum of P17,352.00 plus attorney's fees and litigation costs as the
employer of Nestor Martin. The petitioner's main defense was that Nestor
Martin was not his employee.
After the plaintiff had rested, the defendant moved
to dismiss the complaint on the ground that no evidence had been adduced
to show that Nestor Martin was his employee. The motion was denied. The
case was considered submitted for decision with the express waiver by
the defendant of his right to present his own evidence. The defendant
thus did not rebut the plaintiff's allegation that he was Nestor
Martin's employer.
In the decision dated August 27, 1985, Judge Eutropio Migriño held in favor of the plaintiff, awarding him the amount claimed, with 12% interest, and P4,000.00 attorney's fees, plus costs. 1 The decision was seasonably elevated to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed it in toto on February 22, 1988, 2 prompting this petition for review.
The petition has merit.
It is important to stress that the complaint for
damages was filed by the private respondent against only Ernesto Martin
as alleged employer of Nestor Martin, the driver of the car at the time
of the accident. Nestor Martin was not impleaded. The action was based
on tort under Article 2180 of the Civil Code, providing in part that:
Employers
shall be liable for the damages caused by their employees and household
helpers acting within the scope of their assigned tasks, even though
the former are not engaged in any business or industry.
The above
rule is applicable only if there is an employer-employee relationship
although it is not necessary that the employer be engaged in any
business or industry. It differs in this sense from Article 103 of the
Revised Penal Code, which requires that the employer be engaged in an
industry to be subsidiarily liable for the felony committed by his
employee in the course of his employment.
Whether or
not engaged in any business or industry, the employer under Article 2180
is liable for the torts committed by his employees within the scope of
their assigned task. But it is necessary first to establish the
employment relationship. Once this is done, the plaintiff must show, to
hold the employer liable, that the employee was acting within the scope
of his assigned task when the tort complained of was committed. It is
only then that the defendant, as employer, may find it necessary to
interpose the defense of due diligence in the selection and supervision
of the employee as allowed in that article. 3
In the
case at bar, no evidence whatsoever was adduced by the plaintiff to show
that the defendant was the employer of Nestor Martin at the time of the
accident. The trial court merely presumed the existence of the
employer-employee relationship and held that the petitioner had not
refuted that presumption. It noted that although the defendant alleged
that he was not Nestor Martin's employer, "he did not present any proof
to substantiate his allegation."
As the trial court put it:
There
is no need to stretch one's imagination to realize that a car owner
entrusts his vehicle only to his driver or to anyone whom he allows to
drive it. Since neither plaintiff nor defendant has presented any
evidence on the status of Nestor Martin, the Court presumes that he was
at the time of the incident, an employee of the defendant. It is
elementary that he who makes an allegation is required to prove the
same. Defendant alleges that Nestor Martin was not his employee but he
did not present any proof to substantiate his allegation. While it is
true plaintiff did not present evidence on its allegation that Nestor
Martin was defendant's employee, the Court believes and so holds, that
there was no need for such evidence. As above adverted to, the Court can
proceed on the presumption that one who drives the motor vehicle is an
employee of the owner thereof.
A
presumption is defined as an inference as to the existence of a fact
not actually known, arising from its usual connection with another which
is known, 4 or a conjecture based on past experience as to what course human affairs ordinarily take. 5 It is either a presumption juris, or of law, or a presumption hominis, or of fact. 6
There
is no law directing the deduction made by the courts below from the
particular facts presented to them by the parties. Such deduction is not
among the conclusive presumptions under Section 2 or the disputable
presumptions under Section 3 of Rule 131 of the Rules of Court. In other
words, it is not a presumption juris.
Neither is it a presumption hominis, which is a reasonable deduction from the facts proved without an express direction of law to that effect. 7 The facts proved, or not denied, viz.,
the ownership of the car and the circumstances of the accident, are not
enough bases for the inference that the petitioner is the employer of
Nestor Martin.
In the modern urban society, most male persons know
how to drive and do not have to employ others to drive for them unless
this is needed for business reasons. Many cannot afford this luxury, and
even if they could, may consider it an unnecessary expense and
inconvenience. In the present case, the more plausible assumption is
that Nestor Martin is a close relative of Ernesto Martin and on the date
in question borrowed the car for some private purpose. Nestor would
probably not have been accommodated if he were a mere employee for
employees do not usually enjoy the use of their employer's car at two
o'clock in the morning.
As the employment relationship between Ernesto Martin
and Nestor Martin could not be presumed, it was necessary for the
plaintiff to establish it by evidence. Meralco had the burden of proof,
or the duty "to present evidence on the fact in issue necessary to
establish his claim" as required by Rule 131, Section 1 of the Revised
Rules of Court. Failure to do this was fatal to its action.
It was
enough for the defendant to deny the alleged employment relationship,
without more, for he was not under obligation to prove this negative
averment. Ei incumbit probatio qui dicit, non qui negat. 8
This Court has consistently applied the ancient rule that "if the
plaintiff, upon whom rests the burden of proving his cause of action,
fails to show in a satisfactory manner the facts upon which he bases his
claim, the defendant is under no obligation to prove his exception or
defense." 9
The case of Amor v. Soberano, 10
a Court of Appeals decision not elevated to this Court, was misapplied
by the respondent court in support of the petitioner's position. The
vehicle involved in that case was a six-by-six truck, which reasonably
raised the factual presumption that it was engaged in business and that
its driver was employed by the owner of the vehicle. The case at bar
involves a private vehicle as its license plate indicates. No evidence
was ever offered that it was being used for business purposes or that,
in any case, its driver at the time of the accident was an employee of
the petitioner.
It is worth mentioning in this connection that in Filamer Christian Institute v. Court of Appeals, 11
the owner of the jeep involved in the accident was absolved from
liability when it was shown that the driver of the vehicle was not
employed as such by the latter but was a "working scholar" as that term
is defined by the Omnibus Rules Implementing the Labor Code. 12
He was assigned to janitorial duties. Evidence was introduced to
establish the employment relationship but it failed nonetheless to hold
the owner responsible. Significantly, no similar evidence was even
presented in the case at bar, the private respondent merely relying on
its mere allegation that Nestor Martin was the petitioner's employee.
Allegation is not synonymous with proof.
The above observations make it unnecessary to examine
the question of the driver's alleged negligence or the lack of
diligence on the part of the petitioner in the selection and supervision
of his employee. These questions have not arisen because the employment
relationship contemplated in Article 1860 of the Civil Code has not
been established.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The decision of
the respondent court is REVERSED, and Civil Case No. 48045 in the
Regional Trial Court of Pasig, Branch 151, is DISMISSED, with costs
against the respondent. It is so ordered.
Narvasa, C.J., Griño-Aquino and Medidialdea, JJ., concur.
Footnotes2 Penned by Herrera, O., J., with Ejercito and Torres, JJ., concurring.
3 Cerf v. Medel, 33 Phil. 37.
4 Moran, Comments on the Rules of Court, Vol. 6, 1980 ed., p. 12.
5 Perez v. Ysip, 81 Phil. 218.
6 Moran, supra.
7 Ibid.
8 "He who asserts, not he who denies, must prove."
9 Belen v. Belen, 13 Phil. 202.
10 63 O.G. No. 32. 6850.
11 190 SCRA 485.
12 Sec. 14, Rule X of Book III of the Omnibus Rules Implementing the Labor Code.
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