Yes, you can sue for breach of agreement over an unpaid business investment in the Philippines, but the correct case depends on what the “investment” really was: a loan, a capital contribution, a share subscription, a partnership contribution, a revenue-sharing deal, or an investment scheme where money was solicited with promised returns. The most important first step is to identify the legal nature of the agreement, because that determines the remedy, the court, the documents you need, the prescriptive period, and whether the matter is purely civil or may also involve fraud, securities violations, or estafa.
What counts as a breach of agreement over a business investment?
In ordinary terms, people say “investment” when money is given or promised for a business. Legally, however, Philippine law looks at the actual arrangement.
Common examples include:
| Situation | Possible legal character | Usual remedy |
|---|---|---|
| You gave money to a business and it promised to return your capital plus profit | Loan, investment contract, or revenue-sharing agreement | Collection of sum of money, damages, rescission |
| Someone promised to invest capital in your business but failed to pay | Breach of contract or unpaid capital contribution | Specific performance, damages, rescission |
| A person subscribed to corporate shares but did not pay the balance | Unpaid stock subscription | Collection, delinquency process, possible sale of delinquent shares |
| Two or more people agreed to run a business together and one did not contribute the promised amount | Partnership or joint venture dispute | Accounting, specific performance, damages, dissolution |
| A person solicited money from many investors with guaranteed high returns | Possible securities issue, investment scam, or estafa depending on facts | Civil case, SEC complaint, criminal complaint if fraud exists |
The label used in chats or receipts is not controlling. Courts will look at the substance: Who gave money? What was promised? Was repayment guaranteed? Was the money used for business operations? Was the investor given shares? Was there profit-sharing? Was there authority to solicit investments?
Under Article 1318 of the Civil Code, a valid contract generally requires consent, a certain object, and a cause or consideration. Contracts are binding regardless of form if the essential requisites are present, unless the law requires a special form for validity, enforceability, or proof. (Lawphil)
Legal basis for suing for breach of agreement in the Philippines
Contracts have the force of law between the parties
Article 1159 of the Civil Code states that obligations arising from contracts have the force of law between the parties and should be complied with in good faith. This is the basic legal foundation for suing when one party refuses to pay an agreed investment amount, return capital when due, remit profit shares, issue agreed shares, or comply with a written business agreement. (Lawphil)
Delay usually starts after demand
If the obligation is to pay money or deliver something, Article 1169 of the Civil Code is important. A debtor generally incurs legal delay from the time the creditor makes a judicial or extrajudicial demand, unless demand is unnecessary because the contract or law says so, time was the controlling reason for the obligation, or demand would be useless. (Lawphil)
This is why a proper demand letter matters. It is not just a formality. It helps show:
- the amount being claimed;
- the basis of the claim;
- the due date or breach;
- that the debtor was given a chance to comply;
- when delay began for purposes of damages or interest.
Damages may be recovered for fraud, negligence, delay, or violation of the agreement
Article 1170 of the Civil Code provides that those who, in performing their obligations, are guilty of fraud, negligence, delay, or who contravene the tenor of their obligations are liable for damages. (Lawphil)
In a business investment dispute, damages may include:
- the unpaid investment amount;
- the unpaid return of capital;
- agreed interest or profit share, if legally and clearly proven;
- penalties stated in the contract;
- actual losses supported by documents;
- attorney’s fees, if allowed by law or contract and awarded by the court;
- costs of suit.
Rescission may be available in reciprocal obligations
If the agreement involved mutual promises, such as “I will give you shares if you pay ₱500,000” or “I will fund the business if you transfer agreed ownership,” Article 1191 of the Civil Code may apply. The injured party may choose between fulfillment and rescission, with damages in either case, subject to court determination. (Lawphil)
In simple terms, you may ask the court either to enforce the agreement or to undo it and award damages, depending on what is fair and legally possible.
First clarify: Was it a loan, investment, subscription, or partnership?
Many cases become weak because the claimant cannot clearly explain what the agreement was. Before filing anything, classify the transaction.
If it was a loan disguised as an investment
If the business or person promised to return a fixed amount regardless of business performance, the arrangement may look more like a loan. This is common when the agreement says things like:
- “Capital is guaranteed.”
- “Return of investment in 90 days.”
- “Monthly payout of 5%.”
- “Principal will be returned after six months.”
For loans, Article 1956 of the Civil Code says no interest is due unless it was expressly stipulated in writing. If there is no written interest agreement, the principal may still be recoverable, but claimed interest can become a problem. (Lawphil)
If there is no valid agreed interest rate, courts may apply legal interest in proper cases. BSP Circular No. 799 set the legal interest rate for loans or forbearance of money, goods, or credits, and judgments in the absence of an express contract, at 6% per annum, a rule recognized in Philippine jurisprudence. (Supreme Court E-Library)
If it was a true business investment
If the investor assumed business risk and expected profits only if the business earned money, the claim is not always a simple debt. The investor may need to prove:
- the amount invested;
- the agreed ownership, profit share, or repayment terms;
- the event that triggered payment;
- whether losses were possible;
- whether the business actually earned profits;
- whether accounting was required first.
For example, if the agreement says “Investor gets 20% of net profits,” the investor may need financial records, sales reports, bank statements, or accounting documents to prove that profits existed.
If it was an unpaid stock subscription
If the person subscribed to shares in a Philippine corporation and failed to pay the balance, the Revised Corporation Code, Republic Act No. 11232 of 2019, provides a specific framework. Unpaid subscriptions are payable on the date stated in the subscription contract or on the date stated in a board call; failure to pay may make the balance due and payable, with interest, and after 30 days the shares may become delinquent and subject to sale unless the board orders otherwise. (Supreme Court E-Library)
This is not handled the same way as an ordinary personal loan. The corporation should check its:
- subscription agreement;
- articles of incorporation;
- bylaws;
- board resolutions;
- stock and transfer book;
- notices of call;
- notices of delinquency.
If it was a partnership or joint venture
If two or more persons agreed to contribute money, property, or industry to a common business and divide profits, the dispute may involve partnership or joint venture principles. The remedy may not be only “pay me back.” It may require:
- accounting of income and expenses;
- determination of capital accounts;
- proof of contributions;
- identification of losses;
- liquidation of the business;
- return of remaining assets, if any.
This is common in small family businesses, restaurants, online stores, real estate ventures, importation deals, and informal “kakilala” business arrangements.
When an unpaid business investment may involve securities law
Some “investment” arrangements are not just private contracts. If a person or company solicits money from the public with a promise of profits mainly from the efforts of others, the arrangement may be an investment contract, which can be treated as a security under the Securities Regulation Code, Republic Act No. 8799 of 2000.
The Supreme Court has applied the Howey Test in determining whether a transaction is an investment contract: investment of money, in a common enterprise, with expectation of profits, to be derived from the efforts of others. The Court also stated that an investment contract covered by the test must be registered, regardless of whether the issuer was engaged in fraudulent practices. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Section 8 of the Securities Regulation Code generally prohibits securities from being sold or offered for sale or distribution in the Philippines without a registration statement filed with and approved by the SEC. (Lawphil)
This matters if the unpaid investment came from a scheme involving:
- public solicitation through Facebook, Viber, Telegram, TikTok, YouTube, or agents;
- “guaranteed” high monthly returns;
- pooled funds;
- referral commissions;
- many investors;
- no real participation by investors in business operations;
- no SEC registration for the securities being offered.
In such cases, a civil collection case may still be possible, but the facts may also justify reporting the matter to the Securities and Exchange Commission or law enforcement.
Civil case vs. estafa: not every unpaid investment is a crime
A common question is: “Can I file estafa if they did not pay my investment?”
Sometimes yes, but not always.
A broken promise to pay is usually a civil breach unless there was deceit, fraudulent representation, or abuse of confidence that existed before or at the time the money was obtained. The Supreme Court has repeatedly distinguished mere non-performance of an obligation from criminal fraud; deceit in fraud cases must generally be antecedent to the obligation. (Lawphil)
For estafa by deceit under Article 315(2)(a) of the Revised Penal Code, the Supreme Court has described elements such as false pretenses or fraudulent representations made before or at the time of the fraud, reliance by the offended party, and resulting damage. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Practical examples:
| Scenario | More likely civil breach | Possible estafa concern |
|---|---|---|
| Business failed after genuine operations and transparent losses | Yes | Usually no |
| Investor was promised profit, but agreement clearly involved business risk | Yes | Depends on proof of fraud |
| Person used fake business permits, fake inventory, fake clients, or fake checks to get money | Possible | Yes |
| Person never intended to invest or operate and immediately disappeared | Possible | Yes |
| Money was solicited from many investors using guaranteed returns and paid old investors from new investors | Possible | Yes, depending on facts |
A civil case seeks payment, enforcement, rescission, or damages. A criminal complaint seeks punishment for a crime, with possible civil liability arising from the offense. The evidence and burden of proof are different.
Step-by-step: What to do before suing
1. Gather and preserve all evidence
Do this before sending threats or filing complaints. Investment disputes often depend on documents and digital records.
Collect:
- signed agreement, memorandum of agreement, term sheet, subscription agreement, partnership agreement, or promissory note;
- receipts, acknowledgment receipts, deposit slips, bank transfer confirmations, GCash/Maya screenshots, remittance receipts;
- chat messages, emails, voice notes, text messages, call logs;
- invoices, purchase orders, delivery receipts, ledgers, sales reports;
- SEC registration documents, articles of incorporation, general information sheets, board resolutions;
- proof of identity and address of the other party;
- proof of demand and proof of receipt.
Electronic documents and messages may be used as evidence if properly authenticated. The Rules on Electronic Evidence recognize electronic documents as admissible if they comply with the Rules of Court and related laws, and the Supreme Court has also recognized that private individuals’ photos and Messenger messages may be admissible in court when properly presented. (Lawphil)
Practical tip: Do not rely only on screenshots. Export conversations where possible, keep the device, save metadata, back up files, and avoid editing images.
2. Identify the correct debtor or defendant
Many investment disputes fail because the wrong person is sued.
Ask:
- Was the agreement with an individual, sole proprietorship, partnership, or corporation?
- Did the person sign personally or as president/manager/agent?
- Did the money go to a personal bank account or corporate account?
- Was there board authority for the transaction?
- Was the business registered with DTI or SEC?
- Did the person personally guarantee payment?
A corporation has a separate personality from its shareholders and officers. If the agreement was with the corporation, suing only the president personally may fail unless there is a personal guarantee, fraud, bad faith, or another legal basis to hold the officer personally liable.
3. Send a clear demand letter
A demand letter should be factual and specific. It should usually include:
- the date of the agreement;
- the amount invested or promised;
- the obligation breached;
- the due date;
- the amount now being demanded;
- a deadline to pay or comply;
- attached proof, if appropriate;
- reservation of rights to file civil, criminal, administrative, or SEC remedies if warranted.
Demand may be sent by personal delivery, registered mail, courier, email, or other agreed method. For stronger proof, use a method that shows receipt.
4. Check if barangay conciliation is required
If the dispute is between individuals actually residing in the same city or municipality, barangay conciliation may be required before filing in court. The Supreme Court has stated that prior barangay conciliation is a pre-condition before filing a complaint in court or a government office when the parties are actual residents of the same city or municipality and the dispute falls within the Katarungang Pambarangay system. (Supreme Court E-Library)
However, barangay conciliation generally does not apply to complaints by or against corporations, partnerships, or other juridical entities. The Supreme Court has recognized that such complaints may not be filed with or acted upon by the barangay for conciliation. (Supreme Court E-Library)
If barangay conciliation applies and you skip it, the case may be attacked as premature, even if the court itself has jurisdiction.
5. Choose the correct court and procedure
The amount and nature of the claim matter.
| Claim type | Usual forum/procedure |
|---|---|
| Pure money claim not exceeding ₱1,000,000, exclusive of interest and costs | Small claims in first-level court |
| Money claim above ₱1,000,000 but not exceeding ₱2,000,000, generally within first-level court jurisdiction and possibly expedited/summary procedure depending on the claim | First-level court |
| Money claim exceeding ₱2,000,000, exclusive of interest, damages, attorney’s fees, litigation expenses, and costs | Regional Trial Court |
| Claim involving accounting, injunction, corporate control, complex fraud, or multiple remedies | Often regular civil action; forum depends on relief and amount |
| Securities solicitation issue | SEC complaint may be appropriate in addition to court remedies |
| Criminal fraud or estafa | Prosecutor’s office, after complaint-affidavit and supporting evidence |
The current small claims threshold is ₱1,000,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and the Supreme Court has stated that the new rule no longer distinguishes between Metro Manila and areas outside Metro Manila. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)
Under the Rules on Expedited Procedures in the First Level Courts, small claims are for purely civil claims where the relief is solely payment or reimbursement of money, and the claim does not exceed ₱1,000,000, exclusive of interest and costs. Covered civil actions and damages complaints under the expedited rules may reach ₱2,000,000, depending on the claim. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)
Republic Act No. 11576 expanded the jurisdiction of first-level courts and raised relevant jurisdictional thresholds, including monetary claims not exceeding ₱2,000,000 in certain civil actions. (Supreme Court E-Library)
6. Prepare the complaint and attachments
For a regular civil case, the complaint usually states:
- names and addresses of parties;
- facts showing the agreement;
- facts showing breach;
- demand and failure to comply;
- amount claimed;
- legal basis for damages, interest, attorney’s fees, and costs;
- prayer for relief.
For small claims, the court provides forms. Lawyers cannot appear for or represent a party at the small claims hearing unless the lawyer is the plaintiff or defendant, although a party may consult a lawyer before or after the hearing. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)
7. Attend hearings and prove the agreement
In court, the issue is not simply who sounds more believable. The claimant must prove the agreement and breach by competent evidence.
Helpful evidence includes:
- signed contracts;
- notarized acknowledgments;
- bank records matching the amount claimed;
- admissions in chat or email;
- proof of partial payments;
- board resolutions or corporate documents;
- witness testimony from people who participated in negotiations;
- accounting records showing unpaid profits or capital.
Documents usually needed
| Document | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Written agreement, MOA, subscription agreement, promissory note | Proves terms and obligations |
| Proof of payment or transfer | Proves money was actually given |
| Demand letter and proof of receipt | Shows demand, default, and good-faith attempt to collect |
| Government IDs and addresses | Needed for proper identification and service |
| SEC/DTI documents | Identifies whether the business is a corporation, partnership, or sole proprietorship |
| Board resolution or secretary’s certificate | Important if a corporation is involved |
| Screenshots, emails, chat exports | Proves admissions, promises, negotiations, or deceit |
| Accounting records | Needed for profit-sharing or partnership disputes |
| Special Power of Attorney | Needed if someone else will act for a party, especially if the party is abroad |
For parties outside the Philippines, documents signed abroad may need notarization, consular acknowledgment, or apostille depending on the country and document use. The DFA’s apostille system covers authentication requirements for documents, including notarized private documents such as a Special Power of Attorney. (Apostille Philippines)
Timelines and practical bottlenecks
| Stage | Practical timeline | Common bottleneck |
|---|---|---|
| Evidence gathering | A few days to several weeks | Missing written agreement or incomplete chats |
| Demand letter | 7–15 days deadline is common | Debtor ignores or changes address |
| Barangay conciliation, if required | Often several weeks | Non-appearance of respondent |
| Small claims | Designed to be faster, often resolved much faster than regular cases | Service of summons, incomplete forms, absent parties |
| Regular civil case | Months to years depending on court, defenses, and evidence | Court congestion, motions, mediation, service issues |
| Execution after judgment | Weeks to months or longer | Debtor has no visible assets or assets are hidden |
Winning a case and collecting money are two different things. Before suing, it is practical to check whether the defendant has reachable assets, bank accounts, business receivables, vehicles, real property, inventory, or income streams. A judgment is useful only if it can be enforced.
Common pitfalls in unpaid business investment cases
Relying only on verbal promises
Oral contracts can be enforceable, but they are harder to prove. Under the Civil Code, actions on written contracts generally prescribe in 10 years, while actions on oral contracts must be commenced within six years. (Lawphil)
If the amount is significant, reduce the terms to writing.
Confusing profit with guaranteed interest
A “profit share” depends on actual profit. “Interest” is compensation for use or delay of money. “Guaranteed return” may make the arrangement look like a loan or investment contract. Courts will examine the actual wording and conduct.
Not proving where the money went
A bank transfer alone proves payment, but not necessarily the legal reason for payment. Connect the transfer to the agreement using receipts, messages, invoice references, or acknowledgments.
Suing the wrong party
If money was paid to ABC Trading Corporation, but the complaint is only against its marketing officer, the case may be vulnerable unless there is proof of personal liability. If money was paid to an individual who merely used a business name, suing the sole proprietorship name alone may also cause problems.
Ignoring SEC and foreign ownership issues
Foreigners may invest in Philippine businesses, but some sectors have constitutional or statutory foreign ownership limits. Republic Act No. 11647, enacted in 2022, amended the Foreign Investments Act to promote foreign investments, but restrictions still apply in areas covered by the Foreign Investment Negative List and constitutional limits. (Lawphil)
A foreign investor should be careful with arrangements involving land, public utilities, mass media, advertising, natural resources, or “nominee” structures. If the agreement itself violates foreign ownership restrictions or anti-dummy rules, enforcement may become difficult and risky.
Treating every unpaid investment as estafa
A civil breach is not automatically estafa. Criminal remedies require proof of criminal fraud, not merely failure to pay. Filing an unsupported criminal complaint can delay recovery and weaken settlement discussions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I sue if I invested money in a Philippine business and they refuse to return it?
Yes, if you can prove an enforceable obligation to return the money, pay profits, issue shares, or comply with agreed terms. The case may be for collection of sum of money, breach of contract, rescission, damages, accounting, or another remedy depending on the agreement.
Can I sue someone who promised to invest in my business but never paid?
Yes, if there was a perfected agreement and you can prove the promised investment, the due date or condition for payment, your own compliance, and the damage caused by non-payment. If the promise was only preliminary negotiation, there may be no enforceable contract yet.
Is a written contract required to sue for unpaid investment?
Not always. Philippine law recognizes contracts in different forms if the essential requisites are present. However, written proof is much stronger, especially for interest, profit-sharing, share subscriptions, guarantees, and long-term business arrangements.
Can screenshots of chats be used as evidence?
Yes, electronic messages may be used if properly authenticated and relevant. Preserve the original device, export conversations where possible, and keep full message context instead of isolated screenshots.
Should I file small claims for an unpaid investment?
Small claims may be appropriate if the claim is purely for payment or reimbursement of money and does not exceed ₱1,000,000, exclusive of interest and costs. If you need accounting, injunction, share issuance, rescission of a complex agreement, or corporate relief, small claims may not be the right procedure.
How long do I have to file a case?
For written contracts, the Civil Code generally gives 10 years from the time the right of action accrues. For oral contracts, the period is generally six years. Other claims may have different periods, so the safest approach is to act once default becomes clear.
Can I charge interest on the unpaid investment?
Only if interest was expressly agreed in writing, or if legal interest applies after default or judgment under applicable rules. If the agreement only mentioned “profit,” you must prove actual profit or the agreed formula.
Can a foreigner sue in the Philippines for an unpaid business investment?
Yes, foreigners can sue in Philippine courts if the court has jurisdiction and venue is proper. Practical issues include signing pleadings, executing a Special Power of Attorney if represented by someone in the Philippines, authentication or apostille of foreign documents, and complying with foreign ownership restrictions if the dispute involves equity or restricted industries.
Can I file both a civil case and a criminal complaint?
Possibly, if the facts support both breach of obligation and criminal fraud. If the problem is only non-payment after a legitimate business failure, the remedy is usually civil. If there was deceit from the start, fake documents, false authority, or a scheme to solicit money, a criminal complaint or SEC report may also be appropriate.
What if there was no profit because the business failed?
If the agreement was a true risk investment, business loss may defeat a claim for profit. But you may still have a claim if the other party misused funds, violated agreed restrictions, refused accounting, diverted money, failed to issue shares, or guaranteed return of capital.
Key Takeaways
- You can sue for breach of agreement over an unpaid business investment in the Philippines if there is a valid obligation and sufficient proof.
- The remedy depends on whether the arrangement was a loan, investment contract, share subscription, partnership, joint venture, or profit-sharing deal.
- A demand letter is important because delay often begins only after judicial or extrajudicial demand.
- Small claims may be available for purely monetary claims up to ₱1,000,000, exclusive of interest and costs.
- Claims above ₱1,000,000 or involving accounting, shares, rescission, corporate issues, or fraud may require a different court procedure.
- Not every unpaid investment is estafa; criminal fraud requires deceit or fraudulent acts, not mere inability or refusal to pay.
- Written agreements, receipts, bank records, chat logs, corporate documents, and proof of demand are usually the strongest evidence.
- Foreign investors can enforce rights in Philippine courts, but must consider document authentication, representation, and foreign ownership restrictions.