Government of the Philippine Islands v. Monte de Piedad
G.R. No. L-9959 December 13, 1916
Trent, J.
Facts:
About
$400,000, were subscribed and paid into the treasury of the Philippine Islands by
the inhabitants of the Spanish Dominions of the relief of those damaged by the earthquake
which took place in the Philippine Islands on June 3, 1863. Subsequent thereto and
on October 6 of that year, a central relief board was appointed, by authority of
the King of Spain, to distribute the moneys thus voluntarily contributed. After
a thorough investigation and consideration, the relief board allotted $365,703.50
to the various sufferers named in its resolution, and, by order of the Governor-General
of the Philippine Islands, a list of these allotments, together with the names of
those entitled thereto, was published in the Official Gazette of Manila. There was
later distributed, in accordance with the above-mentioned allotments, the sum of
$30,299.65, leaving a balance of S365,403.85 for distribution. Upon the petition
of the governing body of the Monte de Piedad, the Philippine Government, by order
dated the 1st of that month, directed its treasurer to turn over to the Monte de
Piedad the sum of $80,000 of the relief fund in installments of $20,000 each. These
amounts were received on the following dates: February 15, March 12, April 14, and
June 2, 1883, and are still in the possession of the Monte de Piedad. On account
of various petitions of the persons, and heirs of others to whom the above-mentioned
allotments were made by the central relief board for the payment of those amounts,
the Philippine Islands to bring suit against the Monte de Piedad a recover, “through
the Attorney-General and in representation of the Government of the Philippine Islands,”
the $80.000, together with interest, for the benefit of those persons or their heirs
appearing in the list of names published in the Official Gazette instituted on May
3, 1912, by the Government of the Philippine Islands, represented by the Insular
Treasurer, and after due trial, judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff for
the sum of $80,000 gold or its equivalent in Philippine currency, together with
legal interest from February 28, 1912, and the costs of the cause.
By
the royal order of December 3, 1892, the Governor-General of the Philippine Islands
was ordered to “inform this ministerio what is the total sum available at the present
time, taking into consideration the sums delivered to the Monte de Piedad pursuant
to the decree issued by your general Government on February 1, 1883,” and after
the rights of the claimants, whose names were published in the Official Gazette
of Manila on April 7, 1870, and their heirs had been established, as therein provided,
as such persons “have an unquestionable right to be paid the donations assigned
to them therein, your general Government shall convoke them all within a reasonable
period and shall pay their shares to such as shall identify themselves, without
regard to their financial status,” and finally “that when all the proceedings and
operations herein mentioned have been concluded and the Government can consider
itself free from all kinds of claims on the part of those interested in the distribution
of the funds deposited in the vaults of the Treasury, such action may be taken as
the circumstances shall require, after first consulting the relief board and your
general Government and taking account of what sums have been delivered to the Monte
de Piedad and those that were expended in 1888 to relieve public calamities,” and
“in order that all the points in connection with the proceedings had as a result
of the earthquake be clearly understood, it is indispensable that the offices hereinbefore
mentioned comply with the provisions contained in paragraphs 2 and 3 of the royal
order of June 25, 1879.” On receipt of this Finance order by the Governor-General,
the Department of Finance was called upon for a report in reference to the $80,000
turned over to the defendant, and that Department’s report to the Governor-General.
Issue:
whether
the obligation on the part of the Monte de Piedad to return the $80,000 to the Government,
even considering it a loan, was wiped out on the change of sovereignty
Held:
While the obligation to return the $80,000 to the Spanish
Government was still pending, war between the United States and Spain ensued. Under
the Treaty of Paris of December 10, 1898, the Archipelago, known as the Philippine
Islands, was ceded to the United States, the latter agreeing to pay Spain the sum
of $20,000,000. Under the first paragraph of the eighth article, Spain relinquished
to the United States “all buildings, wharves, barracks, forts, structures, public
highways, and other immovable property which, in conformity with law, belonged to
the public domain, and as such belonged to the crown of Spain.” As the $80,000 were
not included therein, it is said that the right to recover this amount did not,
therefore, pass to the present sovereign. This, does not follow as a necessary consequence,
as the right to recover does not rest upon the proposition that the $80,000 must
be “other immovable property” mentioned in article 8 of the treaty, but upon contractual
obligations incurred before the Philippine Islands were ceded to the United States.
All laws theretofore in force which are in conflict with the political character,
constitution, or institutions of the substituted sovereign, lose their force, is
also plain. But it is equally settled in the same public law that the great body
of municipal law which regulates private and domestic rights continues in force
until abrogated or changed by the new ruler.
If the above-mentioned legal provisions are in conflict with the political
character, constitution or institutions of the new sovereign, they became inoperative
or lost their force upon the cession of the Philippine Islands to the United States,
but if they are among “that great body of municipal law which regulates private
and domestic rights,” they continued in force and are still in force unless they
have been repealed by the present Government. That they fall within the latter class
is clear from their very nature and character. They are laws which are not political
in any sense of the word. They conferred upon the Spanish Government the right and
duty to supervise, regulate, and to some extent control charities and charitable
institutions. The present sovereign, in exempting “provident institutions, savings
banks, etc.,” all of which are in the nature of charitable institutions, from taxation,
placed such institutions, in so far as the investment in securities are concerned,
under the general supervision of the Insular Treasurer
Furthermore, upon the cession of the Philippine Islands the prerogatives
of the crown of Spain devolved upon the United States.
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