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ISSUE/S: Whether the private respondent Salazar owns the checks notwithstanding the lack of
endorsement thereon by the payee?
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RULING: No,
Section 49 of the Negotiable Instruments Law contemplates a situation whereby the payee or indorsee
delivers a negotiable instrument for value without indorsing it, thus:
Transfer without indorsement; effect of- Where the holder of an instrument payable to his order
transfers it for value without indorsing it, the transfer vests in the transferee such title as the
transferor had therein, and the transferee acquires in addition, the right to have the indorsement
of the transferor. But for the purpose of determining whether the transferee is a holder in due
course,the negotiation takes effect as of the time when the indorsement is actually made.
DLSU COLLEGE OF LAW | COMMERCIAL L AW REVIEW | G01 | SY 2016-2017
It bears stressing that the above transaction is an equitable assignment and the transferee acquires the
instrument subject to defenses and equities available among prior parties. Thus, if the transferor had legal
title, the transferee acquires such title and, in addition, the right to have the indorsement of the transferor
and also the right, as holder of the legal title, to maintain legal action against the maker or acceptor or
other party liable to the transferor. The underlying premise of this provision, however, is that a valid
transfer of ownership of the negotiable instrument in question has taken place.
Transferees in this situation do not enjoy the presumption of ownership in favor of holders since
they are neither payees nor indorsees of such instruments. The weight of authority is that the
mere possession of a negotiable instrument does not in itself conclusively establish either the
right of the possessor to receive payment, or of the right of one who has made payment to be
discharged from liability. Thus, something more than mere possession by persons who are not payees
or indorsers of the instrument is necessary to authorize payment to them in the absence of any other facts
from which the authority to receive payment may be inferred.
In the present case, the records do not support the finding made by the CA and the trial court that a prior
arrangement existed between Salazar and Templonuevo regarding the transfer of ownership of the
checks. This fact is crucial as Salazars entitlement to the value of the instruments is based on the
assumption that she is a transferee within the contemplation of Section 49 of the Negotiable Instruments
Law.
The CA and the trial court surmised that the subject checks belonged to private respondent Salazar
based on the pre-trial stipulation that Templonuevo incurred a one-year delay in demanding
reimbursement for the proceeds of the same. To the Courts mind, however, such period of delay is not of
such unreasonable length as to estop Templonuevo from asserting ownership over the checks especially
considering that it was readily apparent on the face of the
instruments that these were crossed checks.
Negotiable instruments are negotiated by transfer to one person or another in such a manner as to
constitute the transferee the holder thereof. If payable to bearer it is negotiated by delivery. If payable to
order it is negotiated by the indorsement completed by delivery.
The present case involves checks payable to order. Not being a payee or indorsee of the checks, private
respondent Salazar could not be a holder thereof. It is an exception to the general rule for a payee of an
order instrument to transfer the instrument without indorsement. Precisely because the situation is
abnormal, it is but fair to the maker and to prior holders to require possessors to prove without the aid of
an initial presumption in their favor, that they came into possession by virtue of a legitimate transaction
with the last holder. Salazar failed to discharge this burden, and the return of the check proceeds to
Templonuevo was therefore warranted under the circumstances despite the fact that Templonuevo may
not have clearly demonstrated that he never authorized Salazar to deposit the checks or to encash the
same. Noteworthy also is the fact that petitioner stamped on the back of the checks the words: "All prior
endorsements and/or lack of endorsements guaranteed," thereby making the assurance that it had
ascertained the genuineness of all prior endorsements. Having assumed the liability of a general indorser,
petitioners liability to the designated payee cannot be denied.
Consequently, petitioner, as the collecting bank, had the right to debit Salazars account for the value of
the checks it previously credited in her favor. It is of no moment that the account debited by petitioner was
different from the original account to which the proceeds of the check were credited because both
admittedly belonged to Salazar, the former being the account of the sole proprietorship which had no
separate and distinct personality from her, and the latter being her personal account.
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DISPOSITIVE PORTION: HEREFORE, the petition is partially GRANTED. The assailed Decision dated
April 3, 1998 and Resolution dated April 3, 1998 rendered by the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No.
42241 are MODIFIED insofar as it ordered petitioner Bank of the Philippine Islands to return the amount
DLSU COLLEGE OF LAW | COMMERCIAL L AW REVIEW | G01 | SY 2016-2017
of Two Hundred Sixty-seven Thousand Seven Hundred and Seven and 70/100 Pesos (P267,707.70) to
respondent Annabelle A. Salazar, which portion is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. In all other respects, the
same are AFFIRMED.