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Carpio V Doroja

The owner-operator Dionisio Carpio is subsidiarily liable for the damages caused by Edwin Ramirez, who was convicted of reckless imprudence resulting in less serious physical injuries. A writ of execution was issued against Edwin but was returned unsatisfied due to his insolvency. Philippine law states that the subsidiary liability established for employers applies to owners engaged in any industry for felonies committed by employees in the discharge of their duties. For an owner to be held subsidiarily liable, it must be shown that the employee committed the offense in the discharge of his duties and is insolvent. All of these requirements are met in this case.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
290 views2 pages

Carpio V Doroja

The owner-operator Dionisio Carpio is subsidiarily liable for the damages caused by Edwin Ramirez, who was convicted of reckless imprudence resulting in less serious physical injuries. A writ of execution was issued against Edwin but was returned unsatisfied due to his insolvency. Philippine law states that the subsidiary liability established for employers applies to owners engaged in any industry for felonies committed by employees in the discharge of their duties. For an owner to be held subsidiarily liable, it must be shown that the employee committed the offense in the discharge of his duties and is insolvent. All of these requirements are met in this case.

Uploaded by

Jian Cerrero
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Carpio v.

Doroja

Issue: WON the owner-operator Dionisio Carpio is subsidiarily liable due to


insolvency of Edwin. YES.

Facts:

The accused-respondent Edwin Ramirez, was convicted for Reckless Imprudence


Resulting to Less Serious Physical Injuries under an amended information
punishable under Article 365 of the RPC.
A writ of execution dated March 10, 1988 was duly served upon the accused but was
returned unsatisfied due to the insolvency of the accused as shown by the sheriff's
return. Thus, complainant moved for a subsidiary writ of execution against the
subsidiary liability of the owner-operator of the vehicle. The same was denied by
the trial court on two grounds, namely, the decision of the appellate court made no
mention of the subsidiary liability of Eduardo Toribio, and the nature of the accident
falls under "culpa-aquiliana" and not "culpa-contractual." A motion for
reconsideration of the said order was disallowed for the reason that complainant
having failed to raise the matter of subsidiary liability with the appellate court, said
court rendered its decision which has become final and executory and the trial court
has no power to alter or modify such decision.

Ruling:

The law involved in the instant case is Article 103 in relation to Article 100, both of
the Revised Penal Code, which reads thus: “Art. 103. Subsidiary civil liability of other
persons. The subsidiary liability established in the next preceding article shall apply
to employers, teachers, persons, and corporations engaged in any kind of industry
for felonies committed by their servants, pupils, workmen, apprentices, or
employees in the discharge of their duties.” Respondent contends that the case of
Pajarito v. Señeris cannot be applied to the present case, the former being an action
involving culpa-contractual, while the latter being one of culpa-aquiliana. Such a
declaration is erroneous. The subsidiary liability in Art. 103 should be distinguished
from the primary liability of employers, which is quasi-delictual in character as
provided in Art. 2180 of the New Civil Code. Under Art. 103, the liability emanated
from a delict. On the other hand, the liability under Art. 2180 is founded on culpa
aquiliana. The present case is neither an action for culpa-contractual nor for culpa-
aquiliana. This is basically an action to enforce the civil liability arising from crime
under Art. 100 of the Revised Penal Code. In no case can this be regarded as a civil
action for the primary liability of the employer under Art. 2180 of the New Civil
Code, i.e., action for culpa aquiliana.

In order that an employer may be held subsidiarily liable for the employee’s civil
liability in the criminal action, it should be shown (1) that the employer, etc. is
engaged in any kind of industry, (2) that the employee committed the offense in the
discharge of his duties and (3) that he is insolvent (Basa Marketing Corp. v. Bolinao,
117 SCRA 156). The subsidiary liability of the employer, however, arises only after
conviction of the employee in the criminal action. All these requisites present, the
employer becomes ipso facto subsidiarily liable upon the employee’s conviction and
upon proof of the latter’s insolvency. Needless to say, the case at bar satisfies all
these requirements.

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