Crescent Petroleum Vs MV Lok

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SECOND DIVISION
 
 
CRESCENT PETROLEUM, LTD., G.R. No. 155014 Petitioner,
Present:
Puno, J.,
- versus - Chairman,
Austria-Martinez,
Callejo, Sr.,
Tinga, and
*
Chico-Nazario, JJ.
M/V LOK MAHESHWARI,
THE SHIPPING CORPORATION
OF INDIA, and PORTSERV LIMITED Promulgated:
and/or TRANSMAR SHIPPING, INC.,
Respondents. November 11, 2005
x--------------------------------------------------x
 
DECISION
 
PUNO, J.:

This petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 seeks the (a) reversal of the
November 28, 2001 Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. No. CV-54920,
[1]
which dismissed for want of jurisdiction the instant case, and the September 3,

2002 Resolution of the same appellate court, [2] which denied petitioners motion for

reconsideration, and (b) reinstatement of the July 25, 1996 Decision [3] of the

Regional Trial Court (RTC) in Civil Case No. CEB-18679, which held that

respondents were solidarily liable to pay petitioner the sum prayed for in the

complaint.

The facts are as follows: Respondent M/V Lok Maheshwari (Vessel) is an

oceangoing vessel of Indian registry that is owned by respondent Shipping

Corporation of India (SCI), a corporation organized and existing under the laws of

India and principally owned by the Government of India. It was time-chartered by

respondent SCI to Halla Merchant Marine Co. Ltd. (Halla), a South Korean
company. Halla, in turn, sub-chartered the Vessel through a time charter to

Transmar Shipping, Inc. (Transmar). Transmar further sub-chartered the Vessel to

Portserv Limited (Portserv). Both Transmar and Portserv are corporations

organized and existing under the laws of Canada.

On or about November 1, 1995, Portserv requested petitioner Crescent

Petroleum, Ltd. (Crescent), a corporation organized and existing under the laws of

Canada that is engaged in the business of selling petroleum and oil products for the

use and operation of oceangoing vessels, to deliver marine fuel oils (bunker fuels)

to the Vessel. Petitioner Crescent granted and confirmed the request through an

advice via facsimile dated November 2, 1995. As security for the payment of the

bunker fuels and related services, petitioner Crescent received two (2) checks in

the amounts of US$100,000.00 and US$200,000.00. Thus, petitioner Crescent

contracted with its supplier, Marine Petrobulk Limited (Marine Petrobulk), another

Canadian corporation, for the physical delivery of the bunker fuels to the Vessel.

On or about November 4, 1995, Marine Petrobulk delivered the bunker fuels

amounting to US$103,544 inclusive of barging and demurrage charges to the

Vessel at the port of Pioneer Grain, Vancouver, Canada. The Chief Engineer

Officer of the Vessel duly acknowledged and received the delivery receipt. Marine

Petrobulk issued an invoice to petitioner Crescent for the US$101,400.00 worth of

the bunker fuels. Petitioner Crescent issued a check for the same amount in favor

of Marine Petrobulk, which check was duly encashed.

Having paid Marine Petrobulk, petitioner Crescent issued a revised invoice

dated November 21, 1995 to Portserv Limited, and/or the Master, and/or Owners,

and/or Operators, and/or Charterers of M/V Lok Maheshwari in the amount of

US$103,544.00 with instruction to remit the amount on or before December 1,

1995. The period lapsed and several demands were made but no payment was

received. Also, the checks issued to petitioner Crescent as security for the payment
of the bunker fuels were dishonored for insufficiency of funds. As a consequence,

petitioner Crescent incurred additional expenses of US$8,572.61 for interest,

tracking fees, and legal fees.

On May 2, 1996, while the Vessel was docked at the port of Cebu City,

petitioner Crescent instituted before the RTC of Cebu City an action for a sum of

money with prayer for temporary restraining order and writ of preliminary

attachment against respondents Vessel and SCI, Portserv and/or Transmar. The

case was raffled to Branch 10 and docketed as Civil Case No. CEB-18679.

On May 3, 1996, the trial court issued a writ of attachment against the

Vessel with bond at P2,710,000.00. Petitioner Crescent withdrew its prayer for a

temporary restraining order and posted the required bond.

On May 18, 1996, summonses were served to respondents Vessel and SCI, and

Portserv and/or Transmar through the Master of the Vessel. On May 28, 1996,

respondents Vessel and SCI, through Pioneer Insurance and Surety Corporation

(Pioneer), filed an urgent ex-parte motion to approve Pioneers letter of

undertaking, to consider it as counter-bond and to discharge the attachment. On

May 29, 1996, the trial court granted the motion; thus, the letter of undertaking was

approved as counter-bond to discharge the attachment.

For failing to file their respective answers and upon motion of petitioner Crescent,

the trial court declared respondents Vessel and SCI, Portserv and/or Transmar in

default. Petitioner Crescent was allowed to present its evidence ex-parte.

On July 25, 1996, the trial court rendered its decision in favor of petitioner

Crescent, thus:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, judgment is hereby
rendered in favor of plaintiff [Crescent] and against the defendants
[Vessel, SCI, Portserv and/or Transmar].
 
Consequently, the latter are hereby ordered to pay plaintiff jointly
and solidarily, the following:
 
(a) the sum of US$103,544.00, representing the
outstanding obligation;

(b) interest of US$10,978.50 as of July 3, 1996, plus


additional interest at 18% per annum for the period
thereafter, until the principal account is fully paid;

(c) attorneys fees of P300,000.00; and

(d) P200,000.00 as litigation expenses.


 
SO ORDERED.

On August 19, 1996, respondents Vessel and SCI appealed to the Court of

Appeals. They attached copies of the charter parties between respondent SCI and

Halla, between Halla and Transmar, and between Transmar and Portserv. They

pointed out that Portserv was a time charterer and that there is a clause in the time

charters between respondent SCI and Halla, and between Halla and Transmar,

which states that the Charterers shall provide and pay for all the fuel except as

otherwise agreed. They submitted a copy of Part II of the Bunker Fuel Agreement

between petitioner Crescent and Portserv containing a stipulation that New York

law governs the construction, validity and performance of the contract. They

likewise submitted certified copies of the Commercial Instruments and Maritime

Lien Act of the United States (U.S.), some U.S. cases, and some Canadian cases to

support their defense.

On November 28, 2001, the Court of Appeals issued its assailed Decision,

which reversed that of the trial court, viz:


WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Decision dated July
25, 1996, issued by the Regional Trial Court of Cebu City, Branch
10, is hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE, and a new one is entered
DISMISSING the instant case for want of jurisdiction.
 

The appellate court denied petitioner Crescents motion for reconsideration

explaining that it dismissed the instant action primarily on the ground of forum
non conveniens considering that the parties are foreign corporations which are not

doing business in the Philippines.

Hence, this petition submitting the following issues for resolution, viz:


1.                  Philippine courts have jurisdiction over a foreign vessel found
inside Philippine waters for the enforcement of a maritime lien
against said vessel and/or its owners and operators;
 
2.                  The principle of forum non conveniens is inapplicable to the
instant case;
 
3.                  The trial court acquired jurisdiction over the subject matter of
the instant case, as well as over the res and over the persons of
the parties;
 
4.                  The enforcement of a maritime lien on the subject vessel is
expressly granted by law. The Ship Mortgage Acts as well as
the Code of Commerce provides for relief to petitioner for its
unpaid claim;
 
5.                  The arbitration clause in the contract was not rigid or
inflexible but expressly allowed petitioner to enforce its
maritime lien in Philippine courts provided the vessel was in
the Philippines;
 
6.                  The law of the state of New York is inapplicable to the
present controversy as the same has not been properly pleaded
and proved;
 
7.                  Petitioner has legal capacity to sue before Philippine courts as
it is suing upon an isolated business transaction;
 
8.                  Respondents were duly served summons although service of
summons upon respondents is not a jurisdictional requirement,
the action being a suit quasi in rem;
 
9.                  The trial courts decision has factual and legal bases; and,
 
10.              The respondents should be held jointly and solidarily liable.
 

In a nutshell, this case is for the satisfaction of unpaid supplies furnished by

a foreign supplier in a foreign port to a vessel of foreign registry that is owned,

chartered and sub-chartered by foreign entities.


Under Batas Pambansa Bilang 129, as amended by Republic Act No. 7691,

RTCs exercise exclusive original jurisdiction (i)n all actions in admiralty and

maritime where the demand or claim exceeds two hundred thousand pesos

(P200,000) or in Metro Manila, where such demand or claim exceeds four hundred

thousand pesos (P400,000). Two (2) tests have been used to determine whether a

case involving a contract comes within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of a

court - the locational test and the subject matter test. The English rule follows

the locational test wherein maritime and admiralty jurisdiction, with a few

exceptions, is exercised only on contracts made upon the sea and to be executed

thereon. This is totally rejected under the American rule where the criterion in

determining whether a contract is maritime depends on the nature and subject

matter of the contract, having reference to maritime service and transactions.


[4]
 In International Harvester Company of the Philippines v. Aragon,[5] we

adopted the American rule and held that (w)hether or not a contract is maritime

depends not on the place where the contract is made and is to be executed, making

the locality the test, but on the subject matter of the contract, making the true

criterion a maritime service or a maritime transaction.

A contract for furnishing supplies like the one involved in this case is

maritime and within the jurisdiction of admiralty.[6] It may be invoked before our

courts through an action in rem or quasi in rem or an action in personam. Thus: [7]


xxx

Articles 579 and 584 [of the Code of Commerce] provide a


method of collecting or enforcing not only the liens created under
Section 580 but also for the collection of any kind of lien whatsoever.
[8]
 In the Philippines, we have a complete legislation, both substantive
and adjective, under which to bring an action in rem against a vessel
for the purpose of enforcing liens. The substantive law is found in
Article 580 of the Code of Commerce. The procedural law is to be
found in Article 584 of the same Code. The result is, therefore, that in
the Philippines any vessel even though it be a foreign vessel found in
any port of this Archipelago may be attached and sold under the
substantive law which defines the right, and the procedural law
contained in the Code of Commerce by which this right is to be
enforced.[9] x x x. But where neither the law nor the contract between
the parties creates any lien or charge upon the vessel, the only way in
which it can be seized before judgment is by pursuing the remedy
relating to attachment under Rule 59 [now Rule 57] of the Rules of
Court.[10]
 

But, is petitioner Crescent entitled to a maritime lien under our laws?

Petitioner Crescent bases its claim of a maritime lien on Sections

21, 22 and 23 of Presidential Decree No. 1521 (P.D. No. 1521), also known as

the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978, viz:


Sec. 21. Maritime Lien for Necessaries; persons entitled to
such lien. - Any person furnishing repairs, supplies, towage, use of
dry dock or maritime railway, or other necessaries, to any vessel,
whether foreign or domestic, upon the order of the owner of such
vessel, or of a person authorized by the owner, shall have a maritime
lien on the vessel, which may be enforced by suit in rem, and it shall
be necessary to allege or prove that credit was given to the vessel.
 
Sec. 22. Persons Authorized to Procure Repairs, Supplies and
Necessaries. - The following persons shall be presumed to have
authority from the owner to procure repairs, supplies, towage, use of
dry dock or marine railway, and other necessaries for the vessel: The
managing owner, ships husband, master or any person to whom the
management of the vessel at the port of supply is entrusted. No
person tortuously or unlawfully in possession or charge of a vessel
shall have authority to bind the vessel.
 
Sec. 23. Notice to Person Furnishing Repairs, Supplies and
Necessaries. - The officers and agents of a vessel specified in Section
22 of this Decree shall be taken to include such officers and agents
when appointed by a charterer, by an owner pro hac vice, or by an
agreed purchaser in possession of the vessel; but nothing in this
Decree shall be construed to confer a lien when the furnisher knew,
or by exercise of reasonable diligence could have ascertained, that
because of the terms of a charter party, agreement for sale of the
vessel, or for any other reason, the person ordering the repairs,
supplies, or other necessaries was without authority to bind the vessel
therefor.
 

Petitioner Crescent submits that these provisions apply to both domestic and

foreign vessels, as well as domestic and foreign suppliers of necessaries. It


contends that the use of the term any person in Section 21 implies that the law is

not restricted to domestic suppliers but also includes all persons who supply

provisions and necessaries to a vessel, whether foreign or domestic. It points out

further that the law does not indicate that the supplies or necessaries must be

furnished in the Philippines in order to give petitioner the right to seek enforcement

of the lien with a Philippine court.[11]

Respondents Vessel and SCI, on the other hand, maintain that Section 21 of

the P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 does not apply to a foreign

supplier like petitioner Crescent as the provision refers only to a situation where

the person furnishing the supplies is situated inside the territory of the Philippines

and not where the necessaries were furnished in a foreign jurisdiction like Canada.
[12]

We find against petitioner Crescent.

I.

P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 was enacted to

accelerate the growth and development of the shipping industry and to extend the

benefits accorded to overseas shipping under Presidential Decree No. 214 to

domestic shipping.[13] It is patterned closely from the U.S. Ship Mortgage Act of

1920 and the Liberian Maritime Law relating to preferred mortgages. [14] Notably,

Sections 21, 22 and 23 of P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 are

identical to Subsections P, Q, and R, respectively, of the U.S. Ship Mortgage Act

of 1920, which is part of the Federal Maritime Lien Act. Hence, U.S. jurisprudence

finds relevance to determining whether P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage

Decree of 1978 applies in the present case.

The various tests used in the U.S. to determine whether a maritime lien

exists are the following:


One. In a suit to establish and enforce a maritime lien for supplies furnished

to a vessel in a foreign port, whether such lien exists, or whether the court has or

will exercise jurisdiction, depends on the law of the country where the supplies

were furnished, which must be pleaded and proved. [15] This principle was laid

down in the 1888 case of The Scotia,[16] reiterated in The Kaiser Wilhelm

II[17] (1916), in The Woudrichem[18] (1921) and in The City of Atlanta[19] (1924).

Two. The Lauritzen-Romero-Rhoditis trilogy of cases, which replaced

such single-factor methodologies as the law of the place of supply.[20]

In Lauritzen v. Larsen,[21] a Danish seaman, while temporarily in New

York, joined the crew of a ship of Danish flag and registry that is owned by a

Danish citizen. He signed the ships articles providing that the rights of the crew

members would be governed by Danish law and by the employers contract with the

Danish Seamens Union, of which he was a member. While in Havana and in the

course of his employment, he was negligently injured. He sued the shipowner in a

federal district court in New York for damages under the Jones Act. In holding that

Danish law and not the Jones Act was applicable, the Supreme Court adopted

a multiple-contact test to determine, in the absence of a specific Congressional

directive as to the statutes reach, which jurisdictions law should be applied. The

following factors were considered: (1) place of the wrongful act; (2) law of the

flag; (3) allegiance or domicile of the injured; (4) allegiance of the defendant

shipowner; (5) place of contract; (6) inaccessibility of foreign forum; and (7)

law of the forum.

Several years after Lauritzen, the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of Romero

v. International Terminal Operating Co.[22] again considered a foreign seamans

personal injury claim under both the Jones Act and the general maritime law. The

Court held that the factors first announced in the case of Lauritzen were applicable
not only to personal injury claims arising under the Jones Act but to all

matters arising under maritime law in general.[23]

Hellenic Lines, Ltd. v. Rhoditis[24] was also a suit under the Jones Act by a

Greek seaman injured aboard a ship of Greek registry while in American waters.

The ship was operated by a Greek corporation which has its largest office in New

York and another office in New Orleans and whose stock is more than 95% owned

by a U.S. domiciliary who is also a Greek citizen. The ship was engaged in

regularly scheduled runs between various ports of the U.S. and the Middle East,

Pakistan, and India, with its entire income coming from either originating or

terminating in the U.S. The contract of employment provided that Greek law and a

Greek collective bargaining agreement would apply between the employer and the

seaman and that all claims arising out of the employment contract were to be

adjudicated by a Greek court. The U.S. Supreme Court observed that of the seven

factors listed in the Lauritzen test, four were in favor of the shipowner and

against jurisdiction. In arriving at the conclusion that the Jones Act applies, it

ruled that the application of the Lauritzen test is not a mechanical one. It stated

thus: [t]he significance of one or more factors must be considered in light of the

national interest served by the assertion of Jones Act jurisdiction. (footnote

omitted) Moreover, the list of seven factors in Lauritzen was not intended to be

exhaustive. x x x [T]he shipowners base of operations is another factor of

importance in determining whether the Jones Act is applicable; and there well may

be others.

The principles enunciated in these maritime tort cases have been extended to

cases involving unpaid supplies and necessaries such as the 

cases of Forsythe International U.K., Ltd. v. M/V Ruth Venture,


[25]
 and Comoco Marine Services v. M/V El Centroamericano.[26]
Three. The factors provided in Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of

Law have also been applied, especially in resolving cases brought under the

Federal Maritime Lien Act. Their application suggests that in the absence of an

effective choice of law by the parties, the forum contacts to be considered include:

(a) the place of contracting; (b) the place of negotiation of the contract; (c) the

place of performance; (d) the location of the subject matter of the contract; and (e)

the domicile, residence, nationality, place of incorporation and place of business of

the parties.[27]

In Gulf Trading and Transportation Co. v. The Vessel Hoegh Shield,


[28]
 an admiralty action in rem was brought by an American supplier against a

vessel of Norwegian flag owned by a Norwegian Company and chartered by a

London time charterer for unpaid fuel oil and marine diesel oil delivered while the

vessel was in U.S. territory. The contract was executed in London. It was held that

because the bunker fuel was delivered to a foreign flag vessel within the

jurisdiction of the U.S., and because the invoice specified payment in the U.S., the

admiralty and maritime law of the U.S. applied. The U.S. Court of Appeals

recognized the modern approach to maritime conflict of law problems introduced

in the Lauritzen case. However, it observed that Lauritzen involved a torts claim

under the Jones Act while the present claim involves an alleged maritime lien

arising from unpaid supplies. It made a disclaimer that its conclusion is limited to

the unique circumstances surrounding a maritime lien as well as the statutory

directives found in the Maritime Lien Statute and that the initial choice of law

determination is significantly affected by the statutory policies surrounding a

maritime lien. It ruled that the facts in the case call for the application of the

Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Law. The U.S. Court gave much significance

to the congressional intent in enacting the Maritime Lien Statute to protect the

interests of American supplier of goods, services or necessaries by making


maritime liens available where traditional services are routinely rendered. It

concluded that the Maritime Lien Statute represents a relevant policy of the forum

that serves the needs of the international legal system as well as the basic policies

underlying maritime law. The court also gave equal importance to the

predictability of result and protection of justified expectations in a particular field

of law. In the maritime realm, it is expected that when necessaries are furnished to

a vessel in an American port by an American supplier, the American Lien Statute

will apply to protect that supplier regardless of the place where the contract was

formed or the nationality of the vessel.

The same principle was applied in the case of Swedish Telecom Radio v.

M/V Discovery I[29] where the American court refused to apply the Federal

Maritime Lien Act to create a maritime lien for goods and services supplied by

foreign companies in foreign ports. In this case, a Swedish company supplied radio

equipment in a Spanish port to refurbish a Panamanian vessel damaged by fire.

Some of the contract negotiations occurred in Spain and the agreement for supplies

between the parties indicated Swedish companys willingness to submit to Swedish

law. The ship was later sold under a contract of purchase providing for the

application of New York law and was arrested in the U.S. The U.S. Court of

Appeals also held that while the contacts-based framework set forth in Lauritzen

was useful in the analysis of all maritime choice of law situations, the factors were

geared towards a seamans injury claim. As in Gulf Trading, the lien arose by

operation of law because the ships owner was not a party to the contract under

which the goods were supplied. As a result, the court found it more appropriate to

consider the factors contained in Section 6 of the Restatement (Second) of

Conflicts of Law. The U.S. Court held that the primary concern of the Federal

Maritime Lien Act is the protection of American suppliers of goods and services.
The same factors were applied in the case of Ocean Ship Supply, Ltd. v.

M/V Leah.[30]

II.

Finding guidance from the foregoing decisions, the Court cannot sustain

petitioner Crescents insistence on the application of P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship

Mortgage Decree of 1978 and hold that a maritime lien exists.

First. Out of the seven basic factors listed in the case of Lauritzen,

Philippine law only falls under one the law of the forum. All other elements are

foreign Canada is the place of the wrongful act, of the allegiance or domicile of the

injured and the place of contract; India is the law of the flag and the allegiance of

the defendant shipowner. Balancing these basic interests, it is inconceivable that

the Philippine court has any interest in the case that outweighs the interests of

Canada or India for that matter.

Second. P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 is inapplicable

following the factors under Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws. Like the

Federal Maritime Lien Act of the U.S., P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage

Decree of 1978 was enacted primarily to protect Filipino suppliers and was not

intended to create a lien from a contract for supplies between foreign entities

delivered in a foreign port.

Third. Applying P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 and

rule that a maritime lien exists would not promote the public policy behind the

enactment of the law to develop the domestic shipping industry. Opening up our

courts to foreign suppliers by granting them a maritime lien under our laws even if

they are not entitled to a maritime lien under their laws will encourage forum

shopping.
Finally. The submission of petitioner is not in keeping with the reasonable

expectation of the parties to the contract. Indeed, when the parties entered into a

contract for supplies in Canada, they could not have intended the laws of a remote

country like the Philippines to determine the creation of a lien by the mere accident

of the Vessels being in Philippine territory.

III.

But under which law should petitioner Crescent prove the existence of its maritime

lien?

In light of the interests of the various foreign elements involved, it is clear that

Canada has the most significant interest in this dispute. The injured party is a

Canadian corporation, the sub-charterer which placed the orders for the supplies is

also Canadian, the entity which physically delivered the bunker fuels is in Canada,

the place of contracting and negotiation is in Canada, and the supplies were

delivered in Canada.

The arbitration clause contained in the Bunker Fuel Agreement which states

that New York law governs the construction, validity and performance of the

contract is only a factor that may be considered in the choice-of-law analysis but is

not conclusive. As in the cases of Gulf Trading and Swedish Telecom, the lien

that is the subject matter of this case arose by operation of law and not by contract

because the shipowner was not a party to the contract under which the goods were

supplied.

It is worthy to note that petitioner Crescent never alleged and proved

Canadian law as basis for the existence of a maritime lien. To the end, it insisted

on its theory that Philippine law applies. Petitioner contends that even if foreign

law applies, since the same was not properly pleaded and proved, such foreign law
must be presumed to be the same as Philippine law pursuant to the doctrine of

processual presumption.

Thus, we are left with two choices: (1) dismiss the case for petitioners

failure to establish a cause of action[31] or (2) presume that Canadian law is the

same as Philippine law. In either case, the case has to be dismissed.

It is well-settled that a party whose cause of action or defense depends upon

a foreign law has the burden of proving the foreign law. Such foreign law is treated

as a question of fact to be properly pleaded and proved. [32] Petitioner Crescents

insistence on enforcing a maritime lien before our courts depended on the

existence of a maritime lien under the proper law. By erroneously claiming a

maritime lien under Philippine law instead of proving that a maritime lien exists

under Canadian law, petitioner Crescent failed to establish a cause of action.[33]

Even if we apply the doctrine of processual presumption, the result will still

be the same. Under P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978, the

following are the requisites for maritime liens on necessaries to exist: (1) the

necessaries must have been furnished to and for the benefit of the vessel; (2) the

necessaries must have been necessary for the continuation of the voyage of the

vessel; (3) the credit must have been extended to the vessel; (4) there must be

necessity for the extension of the credit; and (5) the necessaries must be ordered by

persons authorized to contract on behalf of the vessel. [34] These do not avail in the

instant case.

First. It was not established that benefit was extended to the vessel. While

this is presumed when the master of the ship is the one who placed the order, it is

not disputed that in this case it was the sub-charterer Portserv which placed the

orders to petitioner Crescent.[35] Hence, the presumption does not arise and it is


incumbent upon petitioner Crescent to prove that benefit was extended to the

vessel. Petitioner did not.

Second. Petitioner Crescent did not show any proof that the marine

products were necessary for the continuation of the vessel.

Third. It was not established that credit was extended to the vessel. It is

presumed that in the absence of fraud or collusion, where advances are made to a

captain in a foreign port, upon his request, to pay for necessary repairs or supplies

to enable his vessel to prosecute her voyage, or to pay harbor dues, or for pilotage,

towage and like services rendered to the vessel, that they are made upon the credit

of the vessel as well as upon that of her owners. [36] In this case, it was the sub-

charterer Portserv which requested for the delivery of the bunker fuels. The

issuance of two checks amounting to US$300,000 in favor of petitioner Crescent

prior to the delivery of the bunkers as security for the payment of the obligation

weakens petitioner Crescents contention that credit was extended to the Vessel.

We also note that when copies of the charter parties were submitted by

respondents in the Court of Appeals, the time charters between respondent SCI

and Halla and between Halla and Transmar were shown to contain a clause which

states that the Charterers shall provide and pay for all the fuel except as otherwise

agreed. This militates against petitioner Crescents position that Portserv is

authorized by the shipowner to contract for supplies upon the credit of the vessel.

Fourth. There was no proof of necessity of credit. A necessity of credit will

be presumed where it appears that the repairs and supplies were necessary for the

ship and that they were ordered by the master. This presumption does not arise in

this case since the fuels were not ordered by the master and there was no proof of

necessity for the supplies.


Finally. The necessaries were not ordered by persons authorized to contract

in behalf of the vessel as provided under Section 22 of P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship

Mortgage Decree of 1978 - the managing owner, the ships husband, master or any

person with whom the management of the vessel at the port of supply is entrusted.

Clearly, Portserv, a sub-charterer under a time charter, is not someone to whom the

management of the vessel has been entrusted. A time charter is a contract for the

use of a vessel for a specified period of time or for the duration of one or more

specified voyages wherein the owner of the time-chartered vessel retains

possession and control through the master and crew who remain his employees.
[37]
 Not enjoying the presumption of authority, petitioner Crescent should have

proved that Portserv was authorized by the shipowner to contract for supplies.

Petitioner failed.

A discussion on the principle of forum non conveniens is unnecessary.

IN VIEW WHEREOF, the Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.

No. CV 54920, dated November 28, 2001, and its subsequent Resolution of

September 3, 2002 are AFFIRMED. The instant petition for review on certiorari is

DENIED for lack of merit. Cost against petitioner.

SO ORDERED.
 

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