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CMS Logging Inc. v. Court of Appeals

This case involved a dispute between CMS Logging Inc. and DRACOR regarding a contract for an exclusive agency agreement for DRACOR to export and sell logs produced by CMS. The contract was for 5 years. 6 months before the contract expired, CMS discovered that DRACOR had used another company, Shinko, as a liaison to sell CMS's logs in Japan. CMS then began selling logs directly to Japanese firms without DRACOR. The court ruled that as the principal, CMS had an absolute right to revoke the agency agreement at any time, even if the contract period had not yet expired. By selling logs directly to Japanese firms, CMS impliedly revoked the agreement. Therefore, DRACOR was no longer entitled

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

CMS Logging Inc. v. Court of Appeals

This case involved a dispute between CMS Logging Inc. and DRACOR regarding a contract for an exclusive agency agreement for DRACOR to export and sell logs produced by CMS. The contract was for 5 years. 6 months before the contract expired, CMS discovered that DRACOR had used another company, Shinko, as a liaison to sell CMS's logs in Japan. CMS then began selling logs directly to Japanese firms without DRACOR. The court ruled that as the principal, CMS had an absolute right to revoke the agency agreement at any time, even if the contract period had not yet expired. By selling logs directly to Japanese firms, CMS impliedly revoked the agreement. Therefore, DRACOR was no longer entitled

Uploaded by

wuplawschool
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CMS Logging Inc. v.

Court of Appeals
jurist

G.R. No. L-41420, 10 July 1992

FACTS:

Petitioner CMS is a forest concessionaire engaged in the logging business,


while private respondent DRACOR is engaged in the business of exporting
and selling logs and lumber.

On August 28,1957, CMS and DRACOR entered into a contract of agency


1whereby the former appointed the latter as its exclusive export and sales
agent for all logs that the former may produce, for a period of five (5) years.
By virtue of the aforesaid agreement, CMS was able to sell through DRACOR
a total of 77,264,672 board feet of logs in Japan, from September 20, 1957
to April 4, 1962.

About six months prior to the expiration of the agreement, while on a trip to
Tokyo, Japan, CMS’s president, Atty. Carlos Moran Sison, and general
manager and legal counsel, Atty. Teodoro R. Dominguez, discovered that
DRACOR had used Shinko Trading Co.,Ltd. (Shinko for brevity) as agent,
representative or liaison officer in selling CMS’s logs in Japan for which
Shinko earned a commission ofU.S. $1.00 per 1,000 board feet from the
buyer of the logs. Under this arrangement, Shinko was able to collect a total
of U.S.$77,264.67.After this discovery, CMS sold and shipped logs valued at
U.S.$739,321.13 or P2,883,351.90, 4 directly to several firms in Japan
without the aid or intervention of DRACOR. CMS sued DRACOR for the
commission received by Shinko and form oral and exemplary damages, while
DRACOR counterclaimed for its commission, amounting to P144,167.59, from
the sales made by CMS of logs to Japanese firms.

ISSUE:
Whether the principal may revoke a contact of agency at will.

RULING:

No. The principal may revoke a contract of agency at will, and such
revocation may be express, or implied, and may be availed of even if the
period fixed in the contract of agency as not yet expired.

As the principal has this absolute right to revoke the agency, the agent
cannot object thereto; neither may he claim damages arising from such
revocation, unless it is shown that such was done in order to evade the
payment of agent’s commission.

In the case at bar, CMS appointed DRACOR as its agent for the sale of its
logs to Japanese firms. Yet, during the existence of the contract of agency,
DRACOR admitted that CMS sold its logs directly to several Japanese firms.
This act constituted an implied revocation of the contract of agency under
Article 1924 of the Civil Code, which provides: Art. 1924 The agency is
revoked if the principal directly manages the business entrusted to the
agent, dealing directly with third persons.

Since the contract of agency was revoked by CMS when it sold its logs to
Japanese firms without the intervention of DRACOR, the latter is no longer
entitled to its commission from the proceeds of such sale and is not entitled
to retain whatever moneys it may have received as its commission for said
transactions. Neither would DRACOR be entitled to collect damages from
CMS, since damages are generally not awarded to the agent for the
revocation of the agency, and the case at bar is not one falling under the
exception mentioned, which is to evade the payment of the agent’s
commission.

*Case digest by April Rose B. Tuanda, JD – 4, Andres Bonifacio College, SY


2019 – 2020

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