Cathay Pacific v. Court of Appeals, 219 SCRA 520, G.R. No. 60501, 5 March 1993
Subject: Transportation Law
FACTS
On 19 October
1975, respondent Tomas L. Alcantara was a first-class passenger of petitioner
Cathay Pacific Airways, Ltd. on its Flight No. CX-900 from Manila to Hongkong
and onward from Hongkong to Jakarta on Flight No. CX-711. The purpose of his
trip was to attend the following day, 20 October 1975, a conference with the
Director General of Trade of Indonesia, Alcantara being the Executive
Vice-President and General Manager of Iligan Cement Corporation, Chairman of
the Export Committee of the Philippine Cement Corporation, and representative
of the Cement Industry Authority and the Philippine Cement Corporation. He
checked in his luggage which contained not only his clothing and articles for
personal use but also papers and documents he needed for the conference.
Upon his
arrival in Jakarta, respondent discovered that his luggage was missing. When he
inquired about his luggage from CATHAY's representative in Jakarta, private
respondent was told that his luggage was left behind in Hongkong. For this,
respondent Alcantara was offered $20.00 as "inconvenience money" to
buy his immediate personal needs until the luggage could be delivered to him.
His luggage
finally reached Jakarta more than twenty-four (24) hours after his arrival.
However, it was not delivered to him at his hotel but was required by
petitioner to be picked up by an official of the Philippine Embassy.
On 1 March
1976, respondent filed his complaint against petitioner with the Court of First
Instance (now RTC) of Lanao del Norte. RTC rendered a decision in favor of
Alcantara. On appeal, CA affirms the decision of CFI with modifications. Hence
this petition.
ISSUE
Whether or not the
Warsaw Convention on the liability of a carrier to its passengers is applicable
in this case.
RULING
No, it is not.
The Warsaw
Convention itself provides in Art. 25 that:
“(1) The
carrier shall not be entitled to avail himself of the provisions of this
convention which exclude or limit his liability, if the damage is caused by his
wilfull misconduct or by such default on his part as, in accordance with the
law of the court to which the case is submitted, is considered to be equivalent
to wilfull misconduct;
(2) Similarly
the carrier shall not be entitled to avail himself of the said provisions, if
the damage is caused under the same circumstances by any agent of the carrier
acting within the scope of his employment."
In this case,
SC held that Warsaw Convention declares the carrier liable for damages in the
enumerated cases and under certain limitations. However, it must not be
construed to preclude the operation of the Civil Code and other pertinent laws.
It does not regulate, much less exempt, the carrier from liability for damages
for violating the rights of its passengers under the contract of carriage,
especially if willful misconduct on the part of the carrier's employees is
found or established, which is clearly the case before us. When petitioner
airline misplaced respondent's luggage and failed to deliver it to its
passenger at the appointed place and time, some special species of injury must
have been caused to him.