DAMAGES
Atty. Misheena Joyce C. Tiatco
   14 February 2020
Types of damages under the Civil Code
   1. Actual or compensatory
   2. Moral
   3. Nominal
   4. Temperate or Moderate
   5. Liquidated
   6. Exemplary or corrective
Actual or Compensatory Damages
   Value of the loss suffered
   Profits which the obligee failed to obtain
   Must be proven in court
 In contracts and quasi-contracts, the obligor who
  acted in good faith shall be liable for those that
  are the natural and probable consequences of the
  breach of the obligation and for those which the
  parties have foreseen or could have been
  reasonably foreseen.
 In crimes and quasi-delicts, the defendants shall
  be liable for all damages which are the natural
  and probable consequences of the act or
  omission complained of. It is not necessary
  that such damages have been foreseen or
  could have reasonably been foreseen by the
  defendant.
 Damages may be recovered
1.) for loss or impairment of earning capacity
  in cases of temporary or permanent
  personal injury;
2.) for injury to the plaintiff’s business
  standing or commercial credit.
    Attorney’s Fees and Expenses of Litigation cannot be
     recovered, EXCEPT:
1.    When agreed by the parties in writing
2.    When exemplary damages are awarded
3.    When defendant’s act or omission has compelled the
      plaintiff to litigate with third persons or to incur
      expenses to protect his interest
4.    In criminal cases of malicious prosecution against
      the plaintiff
5.    In case of a clearly unfounded civil action or
      proceeding against the plaintiff
6. Where the defendant acted in gross and evident bad faith
   in refusing to satisfy the plaintiff’s plainly valid, just and
   demandable claim;
7. In actions for legal support;
8. In actions for the recovery of wages of household
   helpers, laborers and skilled workers;
9. In actions for indemnity under workmen’s compensation
   and employer’s liability laws;
10. In a separate civil action to recover civil liability
   arising from crime.
11. When at least double judicial costs are awarded.
12. In any other case where the court deems it just and
   equitable that attorney’s fees and expenses of litigation
   should be recovered.
Moral Damages
 Physical suffering, mental anguish, fright,
  serious anxiety, besmirched reputation,
  wounded feelings, moral shock, social
  humiliation, and similar injury.
 May be recovered, though incapable of
  pecuniary estimation, if they are the
  proximate result of the defendant’s
  wrongful act or omission.
Cases where moral damages can be recovered
1.   A criminal offense resulting in physical injuries;
2.   Quasi-delicts causing physical injuries;
3.   Seduction, abduction, rape, or other lascivious
     acts;
4.   Adultery or concubinage;
5.   Illegal or arbitrary detention or arrest;
6.   Illegal search;
7.   Libel, slander, or any other form of defamation;
8.   Malicious prosecution
Nominal Damages
 are adjudicated in order that a right of the
  plaintiff, which has been violated or invaded
  by the defendant, may be vindicated or
  recognized, and not for the purpose of
  indemnifying the plaintiff for any loss
  suffered by him.
 Cannot co-exist with actual/compensatory
  damages.
Temperate or Moderate Damages
 More than nominal but less than
  compensatory damages.
 May be recovered when the court finds
  that some pecuniary loss has been suffered
  but its amount cannot, from the nature of
  the case, be proved with certainty.
Liquidated Damages
 those that are agreed upon by the
  parties to a contract, to be paid in
  case of breach thereof.
 Whether intended as an indemnity or
  a penalty, liquidated damages shall
  be equitably reduced if they are
  iniquitous or unconscionable.
    Exemplary or Corrective Damages
 are imposed, by way of example or correction for
  the public good, in addition to the moral,
  temperate, liquidated or compensatory damages.
 In quasi-delicts, exemplary damages may be
  granted if the defendant acted with gross
  negligence.
 In contracts and quasi-contracts, the court may
  award exemplary damages if the defendant acted
  in a wanton, fraudulent, reckless, oppressive, or
  malevolent manner.
 Exemplary damages cannot be recovered as a
  matter of right.
 The court will decide whether or not they should
  be adjudicated.
 Need not be proved.
 But the plaintiff must show that he is entitled to
  moral, temperate, or compensatory damages before
  the court may consider the question of whether or
  not exemplary damages should be awarded.
    PSI vs. Agana
   1. As actual damages, the following amounts:
   a. The equivalent in Philippine Currency of the total of
    US$19,900.00 at the rate of P21.60-US$1.00, as
    reimbursement of actual expenses incurred in the
    United States of America;
   b. The sum of P4,800.00 as travel taxes of plaintiffs
    and their physician daughter;
   c. The total sum of P45,802.50, representing the cost of
    hospitalization at Polymedic Hospital, medical fees,
    and cost of the saline solution;
    PSI vs. Agana
 2. As moral damages, the sum of
  P2,000,000.00;
 3. As exemplary damages, the sum of
  P300,000.00;
 4. As attorney’s fees, the sum of P250,000.00;
 5. Legal interest on items 1 (a), (b), and (c);
  2; and 3 hereinabove, from date of filing of
  the complaint until full payment; and
 6. Costs of suit.
Damages awarded by RTC in Ramos vs. CA:
   1) the sum of P8,000.00 as actual monthly expenses for
    the plaintiff Erlinda Ramos reckoned from November
    15, 1985 or in the total sum of P632,000.00 as of April
    15, 1992, subject to its being updated;
   2) the sum of P100,000.00 as reasonable attorney's fees;
   3) the sum of P800,000.00 by way of moral damages
    and the further sum of P200,000,00 by way of
    exemplary damages; and,
   4) the costs of the suit.
    Modifications made by the Supreme Court:
   1) P1,352,000.00 as actual damages computed as of
    the date of promulgation of this decision plus a
    monthly payment of P8,000.00 up to the time that
    petitioner Erlinda Ramos expires or miraculously
    survives;
   2) P2,000,000.00 as moral damages,
   3) P1,500,000.00 as temperate damages;
   4) P100,000.00 each as exemplary damages and
    attorney's fees; and,
   5) the costs of the suit.
Justification on award of temperate damages.
Temperate damages should be awarded on
 top of actual or compensatory damages in
 instances where the injury is chronic and
 continuing.
End.