CARGILL PHILS. v. SAN FERNANDO REGALA TRADING
Facts:
CARGILL and SAN FERNANDO are sellers and buyers of molasses
under the contract. It was agreed that SAN FERNANDO would purchase 12,000
metric tons of Thailand origin cane blackstrap molasses at a certain price.
CARGILL however failed to deliver the ordered molasses to SAN FERNANDO. Thus,
SAN FERNANDO filed a complaint for rescission of contract with damages before
the RTC.
CARGILL field a motion to dismiss or suspend the proceedings
and to refer the controversy to voluntary arbitration pursuant to the
arbitration clause. It alleged that the contract was never consummated because
SAN FERNANDO did not return the proposed agreement bearing its written
acceptance and conformity. The controversy being the existence of the contract,
it argued that the RTC was not the proper forum but by an arbitration
proceeding before the American Arbitration Association.
SAN FERNANDO opposed. It argued that RTC has jurisdiction
over the action for rescission of contract and could not be changed by the
arbitration clause.
RTC denied the motion to dismiss and directed CARGILL to
file answer.
CARGILL filed a Petition for Certiorari with the CA. CA
denied the petition and affirmed RTC’s Orders. It held that the case cannot be
brought under the Arbitration Law for the purpose of suspending the proceedings
before the RTC and it was proper that the issue on the validity of the contract
and the arbitration clause be resolved first. Arbitration is not proper when
one of the parties repudiated the existence or validity of the contract.
ISSUE: IS the CA correct?
HELD:
NO. Petition for Certiorari with the CA is the proper
remedy.
RTC has acted in excess of its jurisdiction. In issuing the
Order which denied CARGILL’s motion to dismiss and to refer to Voluntary
arbitration and directing CARGILL to file an answer, the RTC went beyond its
authority of determining ONLY the issue of whether or not there is an agreement
in writing providing for arbitration. RTC should have instead ordered the parties to
proceed to arbitration.
Since RTC acted in excess of jurisdiction and since there is
no plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law, Petition
for Certiorari is proper.