AGENCY TRUST AND PARTNERSHIP | EMNACE VS. COURT OF APPEALS, G.R. NO. 126334, NOVEMBER 23, 2001
EMNACE
VS. COURT OF APPEALS,
G.R. NO. 126334, NOVEMBER 23, 2001
TOPIC/DOCTRINE
Prescription
of the said right starts to run only upon the dissolution of the partnership
when the final accounting is done.
FACTS
Petitioner Emilio Emnace, Vicente Tabanao and Jacinto
Divina-gracia were partners in a business concern known as Ma. Nelma Fishing
Industry. Sometime in January of 1986, they decided to dissolve their
partnership and executed an agreement of partition and distribution of the
partnership properties among them, consequent to Jacinto Divinagracia’s
withdrawal from the partnership.1 Among the
assets to be distributed were five (5) fishing boats, six (6) vehicles, two (2)
parcels of land located at Sto. NiƱo and Talisay, Negros Occidental, and cash
deposits in the local branches of the Bank of the Philippine Islands and Prudential
Bank.
Throughout the existence of the partnership, and even after
Vicente Tabanao’s untimely demise in 1994, petitioner failed to submit to
Tabanao’s heirs any statement of assets and liabilities of the partnership, and
to render an accounting of the partnership’s finances. Petitioner also reneged
on his promise to turn over to Tabanao’s heirs the deceased’s 1/3 share in the
total assets of the partnership, amounting to P30,000,000.00, or the sum of
P10,000,000.00, despite formal demand for payment thereof.
Consequently, Tabanao’s heirs, respondents herein, filed against
petitioner an action for accounting, payment of shares, division of assets and
damages. Petitioner contends that the trial court should have dismissed the
complaint on the ground of prescription, arguing that respondents’ action
prescribed four (4) years after it accrued in 1986.
ISSUE
Whether the action in
this case is bared by prescription.
RULING
No.
The court
ruled that the three (3) final stages of a partnership are: (1) dissolution;
(2) winding-up; and (3) termination. The partnership, although dissolved,
continues to exist and its legal personality is retained, at which time it
completes the winding up of its affairs, including the partitioning and
distribution of the net partnership assets to the partners. For as long as the
partnership exists, any of the partners may demand an accounting of the
partnership’s business. Prescription of the said right starts to run only upon
the dissolution of the partnership when the final accounting is done.
Here, the
court ruled that contrary to petitioner’s protestations that respondents’ right
to inquire into the business affairs of the partnership accrued in 1986,
prescribing four (4) years thereafter, prescription had not even begun to run
in the absence of a final accounting.