Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Sales Case Digests 2012
Sales Case Digests 2012
I.
Introduction
1.
obliges himself to do is to fulfill his promise to sell the subject property when the entire amount of the purchase price is
delivered to him. In other words the full payment of the purchase price partakes of a suspensive condition, the non-fulfillment
of which prevents the obligation to sell from arising and thus, ownership is retained by the prospective seller without further
remedies by the prospective buyer.
5. Contract to sell: failure to deliver payment is not a breach but event preventing vendor to convey title; obligation
demandable upon full payment of price; promise binding if supported by payment distinct from the price
When a contract is a contract to sell where the ownership or title is retained by the seller and is not to pass until the full
payment of the price, such payment being a positive suspensive condition and failure of which is not a breach, casual or serious,
but simply an event that prevented the obligation of the vendor to convey title from acquiring binding force (Roque v. Lapuz).
Upon the fulfillment of the suspensive condition which is the full payment of the purchase price, the prospective sellers
obligation to sell the subject property by entering into a contract of sale with the prospective buyer becomes demandable as
provided in Article 1479 of the Civil Code (A promise to buy and sell a determinate thing for a price certain is reciprocally
demandable.) An accepted unilateral promise to buy or to sell a determinate thing for a price certain is binding upon the
promissor if the promise is supported by a consideration distinct from the price.
6. Contract to sell defined
A contract to sell be defined as a bilateral contract whereby the prospective seller, while expressly reserving the ownership of
the subject property despite delivery thereof to the prospective buyer, binds himself to sell the said property exclusively to the
prospective buyer upon fulfillment of the condition agreed upon, that is, full payment of the purchase price.
7. Contract to sell not a conditional contract of sale (existence of first element)
A contract to sell may not even be considered as a conditional contract of sale where the seller may likewise reserve title to the
property subject of the sale until the fulfillment of a suspensive condition, because in a conditional contract of sale, the first
element of consent is present, although it is conditioned upon the happening of a contingent event which may or may not
occur.
8. Conditional contract of sale: if suspensive condition not fulfilled, pefection abated; if fulfilled, contract of sale perfected
and ownership automatically transfers to buyer
If the suspensive condition is not fulfilled, the perfection of the contract of sale is completely abated (cf. Homesite and Housing
Corp. vs. Court of Appeals, 133 SCRA 777 [1984]). However, if the suspensive condition is fulfilled, the contract of sale is thereby
perfected, such that if there had already been previous delivery of the property subject of the sale to the buyer, ownership
thereto automatically transfers to the buyer by operation of law without any further act having to be performed by the seller.
9. Contract to sell: if suspensive condition fulfilled, seller has still to convey title even if property is previously delivered
In a contract to sell, upon the fulfillment of the suspensive condition which is the full payment of the purchase price, ownership
will not automatically transfer to the buyer although the property may have been previously delivered to him. The prospective
seller still has to convey title to the prospective buyer by entering into a contract of absolute sale.
10. Contract to sell: there is no double sale; if property sold to another, the seller may be sued for damages
In a contract to sell, there being no previous sale of the property, a third person buying such property despite the fulfillment of
the suspensive condition such as the full payment of the purchase price, for instance, cannot be deemed a buyer in bad faith
and the prospective buyer cannot seek the relief of reconveyance of the property. There is no double sale in such case. Title to
the property will transfer to the buyer after registration because there is no defect in the owner-sellers title per se, but the
latter, of course, may be sued for damages by the intending buyer.
11. Conditional contract of sale: sale becomes absolute upon fulfillment of condition; if property sold to another, first buyer
may seek reconveyance
In a conditional contract of sale, upon the fulfillment of the suspensive condition, the sale becomes absolute and this will
definitely affect the sellers title thereto. In fact, if there had been previous delivery of the subject property, the sellers
ownership or title to the property is automatically transferred to the buyer such that, the seller will no longer have any title to
transfer to any third person. Applying Article 1544 of the Civil Code, such second buyer of the property who may have had
actual or constructive knowledge of such defect in the sellers title, or at least was charged with the obligation to discover such
defect, cannot be a registrant in good faith. Such second buyer cannot defeat the first buyers title. In case a title is issued to the
second buyer, the first buyer may seek reconveyance of the property subject of the sale.
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12. Interpretation of contracts, natural and meaning of words unless technical meaning was intended
It is a canon in the interpretation of contracts that the words used therein should be given their natural and ordinary meaning
unless a technical meaning was intended (Tan vs. Court of Appeals, 212 SCRA 586 [1992]).
13. Document entitled Receipt of Down Payment indicates Conditional Contract of Sale and not contract to sell
The agreement could not have been a contract to sell because the sellers made no express reservation of ownership or title to
the subject parcel of land. Furthermore, the circumstance which prevented the parties from entering into an absolute contract
of sale pertained to the sellers themselves (the certificate of title was not in their names) and not the full payment of the
purchase price. Under the established facts and circumstances of the case, had the certificate of title been in the names of
petitioners-sellers at that time, there would have been no reason why an absolute contract of sale could not have been
executed and consummated right there and then. Moreover, unlike in a contract to sell, petitioners did not merely promise to
sell the property to private respondent upon the fulfillment of the suspensive condition. On the contrary, having already agreed
to sell the subject property, they undertook to have the certificate of title changed to their names and immediately thereafter,
to execute the written deed of absolute sale. What is clearly established by the plain language of the subject document is that
when the said Receipt of Down Payment was prepared and signed by petitioners, the parties had agreed to a conditional
contract of sale, consummation of which is subject only to the successful transfer of the certificate of title from the name of
petitioners father to their names. The suspensive condition was fulfilled on 6 February 1985 and thus, the conditional contract
of sale between the parties became obligatory, the only act required for the consummation thereof being the delivery of the
property by means of the execution of the deed of absolute sale in a public instrument, which petitioners unequivocally
committed themselves to do as evidenced by the Receipt of Down Payment.
14. Article 1475 and 1181 applies to present case; Perfection of a contract of sale and Conditional obligation based on the
happening of the event
Article 1475 of the New Civil Code provides that the contract of sale is perfected at the moment there is a meeting of minds
upon the thing which is the object of the contract and upon the price. From that moment, the parties may reciprocally demand
performance, subject to the provisions of the law governing the form of contracts. Article 1181 of the same code provides that
in conditional obligations, the acquisition of rights, as well as the extinguishment or loss of those already acquired, shall
depend upon the happening of the event which constitutes the condition. In the present case, since the condition
contemplated by the parties which is the issuance of a certificate of title in petitioners names was fulfilled on 6 February 1985,
the respective obligations of the parties under the contract of sale became mutually demandable, i.e. the sellers were obliged to
present the TCT already in their names to he buyer, and to immediately execute the deed of absolute sale, while the buyer on
her part, was obliged to forthwith pay the balance of the purchase price amounting to P1,190,000.00.
15. Condition deemed fulfilled when obligor voluntary prevents its fulfillment; Condition fulfilled, such fact controlling over
hypothetical arguments
Article 1186 provides that the condition shall be deemed fulfilled when the obligor voluntarily prevents its fulfillment. Thus, in
the present case, the petitioners having recognized that they entered into a contract of sale subject to a suspensive condition,
as evidenced in the first paragraph in page 9 of their petition, cannot now contend that there could have been no perfected
contract of sale had the petitioners not complied with the condition of first transferring the title of the property under their
names. It should be stressed and emphasized that the condition was fulfilled on 6 February 1985, when TCT 327403 was issued
in petitioners name, and such fact is more controlling than mere hypothetical arguments.
16. Retroactivity of conditional obligation to day of constitution of obligation
Article 1187 provides that the effects of conditional obligation to give, once the condition has been fulfilled, shall retroact to
the day of the constitution of the obligation. In obligations to do or not to do, the courts shall determine, in each case, the
retroactive effect of the condition that has been complied with. In the present case, the rights and obligations of the parties
with respect to the perfected contract of sale became mutually due and demandable as of the time of fulfillment or occurrence
of the suspensive condition on 6 February 1985. As of that point in time, reciprocal obligations of both seller and buyer arose.
17. Succession as a mode of transferring ownership
Article 774 of the Civil Code defines Succession as a mode of transferring ownership, providing succession is a mode of
acquisition by virtue of which the property, rights and obligations to the extent and value of the inheritance of a person are
transmitted through his death to another or others by his will or by operation of law. In the present case, petitioners-sellers
being the sons and daughters of the decedent Constancio P. Coronel are compulsory heirs who were called to succession by
operation of law. Thus, at the instance of their fathers death, petitioners stepped into his shoes insofar as the subject property
is concerned, such that any rights or obligations pertaining thereto became binding and enforceable upon them. It is expressly
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provided that rights to the succession are transmitted from the moment of death of the decedent (Article 777, Civil Code;
Cuison vs. Villanueva, 90 Phil. 850 [1952]).
18. Estoppel, as to lack of capacity
Article 1431 provides that through estoppel an admission or representation is rendered conclusive upon the person making it,
and cannot be denied or disproved as against the person relying thereon. In the present case, the petitioners, having
represented themselves as the true owners of the subject property at the time of sale, cannot claim now that they were not yet
the absolute owners thereof at the time they entered into agreement.
19. Mere allegation is not evidence
The supposed grounds for petitioners rescission, are mere allegations found only in their responsive pleadings, which by
express provision of the rules, are deemed controverted even if no reply is filed by the plaintiffs (Sec. 11, Rule 6, Revised Rules
of Court). The records are absolutely bereft of any supporting evidence to substantiate petitioners allegations. We have
stressed time and again that allegations must be proven by sufficient evidence (Ng Cho Cio vs. Ng Diong, 110 Phil. 882 [1961];
Recaro vs. Embisan, 2 SCRA 598 [1961]). Mere allegation is not an evidence (Lagasca vs. De Vera, 79 Phil. 376 [1947]).
20. No stipulation to authorize extrajudicial rescission of contract of sale
Even assuming arguendo that Ramona P. Alcaraz was in the United States of America on 6 February 1985, petitioners-sellers act
of unilaterally and extrajudicially rescinding the contract of sale cannot be justified as there was no express stipulation
authorizing the sellers to extrajudicially rescind the contract of sale. (cf Dignos vs. CA, 158 SCRA 375 [1988]; Taguba vs. Vda. de
Leon, 132 SCRA 722 [1984])
21. Estoppel, acceptance of check from buyers mother; buyers absence not a ground for rescission
Petitioners are estopped from raising the alleged absence of Ramona P. Alcaraz because although the evidence on record shows
that the sale was in the name of Ramona P. Alcaraz as the buyer, the sellers had been dealing with Concepcion D. Alcaraz,
Ramonas mother, who had acted for and in behalf of her daughter, if not also in her own behalf. Indeed, the down payment
was made by Concepcion D. Alcaraz with her own personal check (Exh. B; Exh. 2) for and in behalf of Ramona P. Alcaraz.
There is no evidence showing that petitioners ever questioned Concepcions authority to represent Ramona P. Alcaraz when
they accepted her personal check. Neither did they raise any objection as regards payment being effected by a third person.
Accordingly, as far as petitioners are concerned, the physical absence of Ramona P. Alcaraz is not a ground to rescind the
contract of sale.
22. Buyer not in default as there is no proof that seller presented the TCT and signify their readiness to execute the deed of
absolute sale
Article 1169 of the Civil Code defines when a party in a contract involving reciprocal obligations may be considered in default.
Said article provides that those obliged to deliver or to do something, incur in delay from the time the obligee judicially or
extrajudicially demands from them the fulfillment of their obligation. xxx In reciprocal obligations, neither party incurs in delay if
the other does not comply or is not ready to comply in a proper manner with what is incumbent upon him. From the moment
one of the parties fulfill his obligation, delay by the other begins. In the present case, there is no proof offered whatsoever to
show that the seller actually presented the new transfer certificate of title in their names and signified their willingness and
readiness to execute the deed of absolute sale in accordance with their agreement. Ramonas corresponding obligation to pay
the balance of the purchase price in the amount of P1,190,000.00 (as buyer) never became due and demandable and, therefore,
she cannot be deemed to have been in default.
23. Double sale; Article 1544, paragraph 2 applies in the present case
Article 1544 of the Civil Code provides that If the same thing should have been sold to different vendees, the ownership shall
be transferred to the person who may have first taken possession thereof in good faith, if it should be movable property. Should
if be immovable property, the ownership shall belong to the person acquiring it who in good faith first recorded it in the
Registry of Property. Should there be no inscription, the ownership shall pertain to the person who in good faith was first in the
possession; and, in the absence thereof to the person who presents the oldest title, provided there is good faith. In the present
case, the record of the case shows that the Deed of Absolute Sale dated 25 April 1985 as proof of the second contract of sale
was registered with the Registry of Deeds of Quezon City giving rise to the issuance of a new certificate of title in the name of
Catalina B. Mabanag on 5 June 1985. Thus, the second paragraph of Article 1544 shall apply.
24. Double sale presumes title to pass to first buyer, exceptions
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Article 1544, the provision on double sale, presumes title or ownership to pass to the first buyer, the exceptions being: (a) when
the second buyer, in good faith, registers the sale ahead of the first buyer, and (b) should there be no inscription by either of the
two buyers, when the second buyer, in good faith, acquires possession of the property ahead of the first buyer. Unless, the
second buyer satisfies these requirements, title or ownership will not transfer to him to the prejudice of the first buyer.
25. Prius tempore, potior jure (first in time, stronger in right); First to register in good faith
The governing principle is prius tempore, potior jure (first in time, stronger in right). Knowledge by the first buyer of the second
sale cannot defeat the first buyers rights except when the second buyer first registers in good faith the second sale (Olivares vs.
Gonzales, 159 SCRA 33). Conversely, knowledge gained by the second buyer of the first sale defeats his rights even if he is first
to register, since knowledge taints his registration with bad faith (see also Astorga vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 58530, 26
December 1984). It was further held that it is essential, to merit the protection of Article 1544, second paragraph, that the
second realty buyer must act in good faith in registering his deed of sale (Cruz v. Cabana, 129 SCRA 656, citing Carbonell vs.
Court of Appeals, 69 SCRA 99, Crisostomo vs. CA, G.R. No. 95843, 02 September 1992).
26. Double sale; good faith in recording of second sale, not in buying
In a case of double sale, what finds relevance and materiality is not whether or not the second buyer was a buyer in good faith
but whether or not said second buyer registers such second sale in good faith, that is, without knowledge of any defect in the
title of the property sold. In the present case, Mabanag could not have in good faith registered the sale entered into on 18
February 1985 because as early as 22 February 1985, a notice of lis pendens had been annotated on the TCT in the names of
petitioners, whereas Mabanag registered the said sale sometime in April 1985. At the time of registration, therefore, petitioner
knew that the same property had already been previously sold to Coronel, or, at least, she was charged with knowledge that a
previous buyer is claiming title to the same property. Mabanag thus cannot close her eyes to the defect in petitioners title to
the property at the time of the registration of the property.
27. Double sale; Bad faith in registration does not confer registrant any right
If a vendee in a double sale registers the sale after he has acquired knowledge that there was a previous sale of the same
property to a third party or that another person claims said property in a previous sale, the registration will constitute a
registration in bad faith and will not confer upon him any right. (Salvoro vs. Tanega, 87 SCRA 349 [1981];citing Palarca vs.
Director of Land, 43 Phil. 146; Cagaoan vs. Cagaoan, 43 Phil. 554; Fernandez vs. Mercader, 43 Phil. 581.)
28. Agency; The issue whether Concepcion, mother of Ramona, is an agent or a co-buyer is undisturbed
Although there may be ample indications that there was in fact an agency between Ramona as principal and Concepcion, her
mother, as agent insofar as the subject contract of sale is concerned, the issue of whether or not Concepcion was also acting in
her own behalf as a co-buyer is not squarely raised in the instant petition, nor in such assumption disputed between mother and
daughter. The Court did not touch this issue and did not disturb the lower courts ruling on this point.
2.
defendants to vacate the premises. The decision was handed down beyond the 60-day period (expiring 09 August 1988)
stipulated in the contract. The writ of execution of the judgment was issued, still later, on 30 March 1989.
In a letter, dated 07 April 1989, Ongsiong sought to return the P50,000.00 she received from Romero since, she said, she could
not get rid of the squatters on the lot. Atty. Sergio A.F. Apostol, counsel for Romero, refused the tender, citing the favorable
decision and the writ of execution issued pursuant thereto, and expressed Romeros willingness to underwrite the expenses for
the execution of the judgment and ejectment of the occupants chargeable to the purchase price of the land.
Meanwhile, the Presidential Commission for the Urban Poor (PCUD), through its Regional Director for Luzon (Viloria), asked
the MTC Paraaque for a grace period of 45 days from 21 April 1989 within which to relocate and transfer the squatter families.
Acting favorably on the request, the court suspended the enforcement of the writ of execution accordingly.
On 08 June 1989, Atty. Apostol reminded Ongsiong on the expiry of the 45-day grace period and reiterated his clients
willingness to underwrite the expenses for the execution of the judgment and ejectment of the occupants. On 19 June 1989,
Atty. Joaquin Yuseco, Jr., counsel for Ongsion, advised Atty. Apostol that the Deed of Conditional Sale had been rendered null
and void by virtue of his clients failure to evict the squatters from the premises within the agreed 60-day period. He added that
private respondent had decided to retain the property.
Meanwhile, on 25 August 1989, the MTC issued an alias writ of execution in Civil Case 7579 on motion of Ongsiong but the
squatters apparently still stayed on.
On 27 June 1989, Ongsiong prompted by Romeros continued refusal to accept the return of the P50,000.00 advance payment,
filed with the RTC Makati (Branch 133, Civil Case 89-4394) for a rescission of the deed of conditional sale, plus damages, and
for the consignation of P50,000.00 cash. On 26 June 1990, the RTC rendered decision holding that Ongsiong had no right to
rescind the contract since it was she who violated her obligation to eject the squatters from the subject property and that
Romero, being the injured party, was the party who could, under Article 1191 of the Civil Code, rescind the agreement. The
lower court, thus dismissed the complaint and ordered Ongsiong to eject or cause the ejectment of the squatters from the
property and to execute the absolute deed of conveyance upon payment of the full purchase price by Romero.
Ongsiong appealed to the Court of Appeals. On 29 May 1992, the appellate court rendered its decision, reversed and set aside
the decision appealed from and entered another declaring he contract of conditional sale of 9 June 1988 cancelled and ordering
Romero to accept the return of the downpayment in the amount of P50,000 deposited with the trial court; without
pronouncement as to cost. Failing to obtain a reconsideration, Romero filed his petition for review on certiorari before the
Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court reversed and set aside the questioned decision of the Court of Appeals, and entered another ordering
Romero to pay Ongsiong the balance of the purchase price and the latter to execute the deed of absolute sale in favor of
petitioner; without costs.
1. Perfected contract of sale, absolute or conditional
A perfected contract of sale may either be absolute or conditional depending on whether the agreement is devoid of, or subject
to, any condition imposed on the passing of title of the thing to be conveyed or on the obligation of party thereto. When
ownership is retained until the fulfillment of a positive condition the breach of the condition will simply prevent the duty to
convey title from acquiring an obligatory force. If the condition is imposed on an obligation of a party which is not complied
with, the other party may either refuse to proceed or waive said condition (Art. 1545, Civil Code). Where, of course, the
condition is imposed upon the perfection of the contract itself, the failure of such condition would prevent the juridical relation
itself from coming into existence.
2. Real character of a contract, substance more significant than title given to it by parties
In determining the real character of the contract, the title given to it by the parties is not as much as significant as its substance.
For example, a deed of sale, although denominated as a deed of conditional sale, may be treated as absolute in nature, if title to
the property sold is not reserved in the vendor or if the vendor is not granted the right to unilaterally rescind the contract
predicated on the fulfillment or non-fulfillment, as the case may be, of the prescribed condition.
3. Condition in the context of a perfected contract of sale
The term condition in the context of a perfected contract of sale pertains, in reality, to the compliance by one party of an
undertaking the fulfillment of which would beckon, in turn, the demandability of the reciprocal prestation of the other party.
The reciprocal obligations referred to would normally be, in the case of vendee, the payment of the agreed purchase price and,
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in the case of the vendor, the fulfillment of certain express warranties (which, in the present case is the timely eviction of the
squatters on the property).
4. Perfection of a sale; Parties bound to fulfill what is expressly stipulated and all consequences in keeping with good faith,
usage and law
A sale is at once perfected where a person (the seller) obligates himself, for a price certain, to deliver and to transfer ownership
of a specified thing or right to another (the buyer) over which the latter agrees. From the moment the contract is perfected, the
parties are bound not only to the fulfillment of what has been expressly stipulated but also to all the consequences which,
according to their nature, may be in keeping with good faith, usage and law. In the present cas, under the agreement, Ongsiong
is obligated to evict the squatters on the property. The ejectment of the squatters is a condition the operative act of which sets
into motion the period of compliance by Romero of his own obligation, i.e., to pay the balance of the purchase price.
5. Options available under Article 1545 belongs to injured party
Ongsiongs failure to remove the squatters from the property within the stipulated period gives Romero the right to either
refuse to proceed with the agreement or waive that condition in consonance with Article 1545 of the Civil Code. This option
clearly belongs to petitioner (Romero) and not to private respondent (Ongsiong).
In contracts of sale particularly, Article 1545 of the Civil Code allows the obligee to choose between proceeding with the
agreement or waiving the performance of the condition. Evidently, Romero has waived the performance of the condition
imposed on Ongsiong to free the property from squatters.
6. Potestative condition is mixed, and not dependent on the sole will of the debtor; If condition is imposed on the
fulfillment of the obligation and not the birth thereof, only the condition is avoided and does not affect obligation itself
The undertaking required of private respondent does not constitute a potestative condition dependent solely on his will that
might, otherwise, be void in accordance with Article 1182 of the Civil Code but a mixed condition dependent not on the will
of the vendor alone but also of third persons like the squatters and government agencies and personnel concerned. However,
where the so-called potestative condition is imposed not on the birth of the obligation but on its fulfillment, only the
condition is avoided, leaving unaffected obligation itself.
7. Rescission by non-injured party not warranted; Article 1191
The right of resolution of a party to an obligation under Article 1191 of the Civil Code is predicated on a breach of faith by the
other party violates the reciprocity between them. In the present case, Ongsiongs action for rescission was not warranted as
she was not the injured party. It was Ongsiong who has failed in her obligation under the contract. Romero did not breach the
agreement. He has agreed, in fact, to shoulder the expenses of the execution of the judgment in the ejectment case and to
make arrangement with the sheriff to effect such execution. Parenthetically, this offer to pay, hiring been made prior to the
demand for rescission, assuming for the sake of argument that such a demand is proper under Article 1592 of the Civil Code,
would likewise suffice to defeat Ongsiongs prerogative to rescind thereunder.
8. Petitioner, opting to proceed with sale, may not demand the reimbursement of the advance payment
When petitioner having opted to proceed with the sale, neither may petitioner demand its reimbursement from private
respondent. Further, private respondent may not subject it to forfeiture.
3.
to check the property and found out that no sale or barter was feasible as the 1-year period of redemption has not expired. In
an effort to cut through any legal impediment, Fule executed on 19 October 1984, a deed of redemption on behalf of Fr. Jacobe
purportedly in the amount of P15,987.78, and on even date, Fr. Jacobe sold the property to Fule for P75,000.00. The haste with
which the two deeds were executed is shown by the fact that the deed of sale was notarized ahead of the deed of redemption.
As Dr. Cruz had already agreed to the proposed barter, Fule went to Prudential Bank to take a look at the jewelry.
On 23 October 1984, Fule met Atty. Belarmino at the latters residence to prepare the documents of sale. Atty. Belarmino
accordingly caused the preparation of a deed of absolute sale while Fule and Dr. Cruz attended to the safekeeping of the
jewelry. The following day, Fule, together with Dichoso and Mendoza, arrived at the residence of Atty. Belarmino to finally
execute a deed of absolute sale. Fule signed the deed and gave Atty. Belarmino the amount of P13,700.00 for necessary
expenses in the transfer of title over the Tanay property; and issued a certification to the effect that the actual consideration of
the sale was P200,000.00 and not P80,000.00 as indicated in the deed of absolute sale (the disparity purportedly aimed at
minimizing the amount of the capital gains tax that Fule would have to shoulder). Since the jewelry was appraised only at
P160,000.00, the parties agreed that the balance of P40,000.00 would just be paid later in cash. Thereafter, at the bank, as prearranged, Dr. Cruz and the cashier opened the safety deposit box, and delivered the contents thereof to Fule. Fule inspected the
jewelry, near the electric light at the banks lobby, for 10-15 minutes. Fule expressed his satisfaction by nodding his head when
asked by Dr. Cruz if the jewelry was okay. For services rendered, Fule paid the agents, Dichoso and Mendoza, the amount of
US$300.00 and some pieces of jewelry. He did not, however, give them half of the pair of earrings in question, which he had
earlier promised. Later in the evening, Fule arrived at the residence of Atty. Belarmino complaining that the jewelry given him
was fake. Dichoso, who borrowed the car of Dr. Cruz, called up Atty. Belarmino. Informed that Fule was at the lawyers house,
went there posthaste thinking that Fule had finally agreed to give them half of the pair of earrings, only to find Fule
demonstrating with a tester that the earrings were fake. Fule then accused Dichoso and Mendoza of deceiving him which they,
however, denied. They countered that Fule could not have been fooled because he had vast experience regarding jewelry. Fule
nonetheless took back the US$300.00 and jewelry he had given them. Thereafter, the group decided to go to the house of a
certain Macario Dimayuga, a jeweler, to have the earrings tested. Dimayuga, after taking one look at the earrings, immediately
declared them counterfeit. At around 9:30 p.m., Fule went to one Atty. Reynaldo Alcantara residing at Lakeside Subdivision in
San Pablo City, complaining about the fake jewelry. Upon being advised by the latter, Fule reported the matter to the police
station where Dichoso and Mendoza likewise executed sworn statements.
On 26 October 1984, Fule filed a complaint before the RTC San Pablo City against private respondents praying, among other
things, that the contract of sale over the Tanay property be declared null and void on the ground of fraud and deceit. On 30
October 1984, the lower court issued a temporary restraining order directing the Register of Deeds of Rizal to refrain from
acting on the pertinent documents involved in the transaction. On 20 November 1984, however, the same court lifted its
previous order and denied the prayer for a writ of preliminary injunction. After trial, the lower court rendered its decision on 7
March 1989; holding that the genuine pair of earrings used as consideration for the sale was delivered by Dr. Cruz to Fule, that
the contract was valid even if the agreement between the parties was principally a barter contract, that the agreement has
been consummated at the time the principal parties parted ways at the bank, and that damages are due to the defendants.
From the trial courts adverse decision, petitioner elevated the matter to the Court of Appeals. On 20 October 1992, the Court
of Appeals, however, rendered a decision affirming in toto the lower courts decision. His motion for reconsideration having
been denied on 19 October 1993. Hence, the petition for review on certiorari.
The Supreme Court affirmed in toto the decision of the Court of Appeals, but ordered Dr. Cruz to pay Fule the balance of the
purchase price of P40,000 within 10 days from the finality of the decision; with costs against petitioner.
1. New factual issues cannot be examined as it unduly transcends the limits of the Supreme Courts review power
The Supreme Court cannot entertain a factual issue, and thus examine and weigh anew the facts regarding the genuineness of
the earrings bartered in exchange for the Tanay property, as this would unduly transcend the limits of the Courts review power
in petitions of this nature which are confined merely to pure questions of law. As a general rule, the Supreme Court accords
conclusiveness to a lower courts findings of fact unless it is shown, inter alia, that: (1) the conclusion is a finding grounded on
speculations, surmises or conjectures; (2) the inference is manifestly mistaken, absurd and impossible; (3) when there is a grave
abuse of discretion; (4) when the judgment is based on a misapprehension of facts; (5) when the findings of fact are conflicting;
and (6) when the Court of Appeals, in making its findings, went beyond the issues of the case and the same is contrary to the
admission of both parties. To reiterate, the Supreme Courts jurisdiction is only limited to reviewing errors of law in the absence
of any showing that the findings complained of are totally devoid of support in the record or that they are glaringly erroneous as
to constitute serious abuse of discretion.
2. Immediate rendition of decision not anomalous
No proof has been adduced that Judge Jaramillo was motivated by a malicious or sinister intent in disposing of the case with
dispatch. Neither is there proof that someone else wrote the decision for him. The immediate rendition of the decision was no
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more than Judge Jaramillos compliance with his duty as a judge to dispose of the courts business promptly and decide cases
within the required periods. The two-year period within which Judge Jaramillo handled the case provided him with all the time
to study it and even write down its facts as soon as these were presented to court. In fact, the Supreme Court does not see
anything wrong in the practice of writing a decision days before the scheduled promulgation of judgment and leaving the
dispositive portion for typing at a time close to the date of promulgation, provided that no malice or any wrongful conduct
attends its adoption. The practice serves the dual purposes of safeguarding the confidentiality of draft decisions and rendering
decisions with promptness. Neither can Judge Jaramillo be made administratively answerable for the immediate rendition of the
decision. The acts of a judge which pertain to his judicial functions are not subject to disciplinary power unless they are
committed with fraud, dishonesty, corruption or bad faith. Hence, in the absence of sufficient proof to the contrary, Judge
Jaramillo is presumed to have performed his job in accordance with law and should instead be commended for his close
attention to duty.
3. Contract perfected by mere consent, binds parties to stipulation and all the consequences; Contract of sale perfected
upon meeting of minds upon the thing object of the contract and upon price; Embodiment of contract in public instrument
only for convenience, and registration only to affect third parties; Lack of formal requirements does not invalidate the
contract
The Civil Code provides that contracts are perfected by mere consent. From this moment, the parties are bound not only to the
fulfillment of what has been expressly stipulated but also to all the consequences which, according to their nature, may be in
keeping with good faith, usage and law. A contract of sale is perfected at the moment there is a meeting of the minds upon the
thing which is the object of the contract and upon the price. Being consensual, a contract of sale has the force of law between
the contracting parties and they are expected to abide in good faith by their respective contractual commitments.
Article 1358 of the Civil Code which requires the embodiment of certain contracts in a public instrument, is only for
convenience, and registration of the instrument only adversely affects third parties. Formal requirements are, therefore, for the
benefit of third parties. Non-compliance therewith does not adversely affect the validity of the contract nor the contractual
rights and obligations of the parties thereunder.
4. Voidable or annullable contracts
Contracts that are voidable or annullable, even though there may have been no damage to the contracting parties are: (1) those
where one of the parties is incapable of giving consent to a contract; and (2) those where the consent is vitiated by mistake,
violence, intimidation, undue influence or fraud. The contract can be voided in accordance with law so as to compel the parties
to restore to each other the things that have been the subject of the contract with their fruits, and the price with interest.
5. Fraud; No inducement made by the private respondents
There is fraud when, through the insidious words or machinations of one of the contracting parties, the other is induced to
enter into a contract which, without them, he would not have agreed to. In the present case, the records, are bare of any
evidence manifesting that private respondents employed such insidious words or machinations to entice petitioner into
entering the contract of barter. Neither is there any evidence showing that Dr. Cruz induced petitioner to sell his Tanay property
or that she cajoled him to take the earrings in exchange for said property. On the contrary, Dr. Cruz did not initially accede to
petitioners proposal to buy the said jewelry. Rather, it appears that it was petitioner, through his agents, who led Dr. Cruz to
believe that the Tanay property was worth exchanging for her jewelry as he represented that its value was P400,000.00 or more
than double that of the jewelry which was valued only at P160,000.00. If indeed petitioners property was truly worth that
much, it was certainly contrary to the nature of a businessman-banker like him to have parted with his real estate for half its
price. In short, it was in fact petitioner who resorted to machinations to convince Dr. Cruz to exchange her jewelry for the Tanay
property.
7. Mistake; Mistake caused by manifest negligence cannot invalidate a judicial act
To invalidate a contract, mistake must refer to the substance of the thing that is the object of the contract, or to those
conditions which have principally moved one or both parties to enter into the contract. An example of mistake as to the object
of the contract is the substitution of a specific thing contemplated by the parties with another. In the present case, the
petitioner failed to prove the fact that prior to the delivery of the jewelry to him, private respondents endeavored to make such
substitution of an inferior one or one with Russian diamonds for the jewelry he wanted to exchange with his 10-hectare land.
Further, on account of his work as a banker-jeweler, it can be rightfully assumed that he was an expert on matters regarding
gems. He had the intellectual capacity and the business acumen as a banker to take precautionary measures to avert such a
mistake, considering the value of both the jewelry and his land. A mistake caused by manifest negligence cannot invalidate a
juridical act. As the Civil Code provides, (t)here is no mistake if the party alleging it knew the doubt, contingency or risk
affecting the object of the contract.
8. Contract of sale absolute if no stipulation that title to property is reserved to seller until full payment; Ownership
transferred upon actual or constructive delivery
Page 9 of 87
A contract of sale being absolute in nature, title passed to the vendee upon delivery of the thing sold since there was no
stipulation in the contract that title to the property sold has been reserved in the seller until full payment of the price or that the
vendor has the right to unilaterally resolve the contract the moment the buyer fails to pay within a fixed period. Such
stipulations are not manifest in the contract of sale. In the present case, both the trial and appellate courts, therefore, correctly
ruled that there were no legal bases for the nullification of the contract of sale. Ownership over the parcel of land and the pair
of emerald-cut diamond earrings had been transferred to Dr. Cruz and Fule, respectively, upon the actual and constructive
delivery thereof.
9. Contract silent when balance is due and demandable; non-payment does not invalidate the contract
While it is true that the amount of P40,000.00 forming part of the consideration was still payable to Fule, its nonpayment by Dr.
Cruz is not a sufficient cause to invalidate the contract or bar the transfer of ownership and possession of the things exchanged
considering the fact that their contract is silent as to when it becomes due and demandable.
10 No interest due if it is not stipulated
Failure to pay the balance of the purchase price does not result in the payment of interest thereon. Article 1589 of the Civil
Code prescribes the payment of interest by the vendee for the period between the delivery of the thing and the payment of
the price in cases (1) Should it have been so stipulated; (2) Should the thing sold and delivered produce fruits or income; (3)
Should he be in default, from the time of judicial or extrajudicial demand for the payment of the price.
11. Case distinguished from de la Cruz v Legaspi
The present case should be distinguished from De la Cruz v. Legaspi, where the court held that failure to pay the consideration
after the notarization of the contract as previously promised resulted in the vendees liability for payment of interest. In the
present, there is no stipulation for the payment of interest in the contract of sale nor proof that the Tanay property produced
fruits or income. Neither did petitioner demand payment of the price as in fact he filed an action to nullify the contract of sale.
12 Award of moral and exemplary damages
Moral and exemplary damages may be awarded without proof of pecuniary loss. In awarding such damages, the court shall take
into account the circumstances obtaining in the case and assess damages according to its discretion. To warrant the award of
damages, it must be shown that the person to whom these are awarded has sustained injury. He must likewise establish
sufficient data upon which the court can properly base its estimate of the amount of damages. Statements of facts should
establish such data rather than mere conclusions or opinions of witnesses. Thus, for moral damages to be awarded, it is
essential that the claimant must have satisfactorily proved during the trial the existence of the factual basis of the damages and
its causal connection with the adverse partys acts. If the court has no proof or evidence upon which the claim for moral
damages could be based, such indemnity could not be outrightly awarded. The same holds true with respect to the award of
exemplary damages where it must be shown that the party acted in a wanton, oppressive or malevolent manner.
13. Rule that moral damages cannot be recovered from person who filed a complaint does not apply in present case
While, as a rule, moral damages cannot be recovered from a person who has filed a complaint against another in good faith
because it is not sound policy to place a penalty on the right to litigate, the same, however, cannot apply in the present case.
This is not a situation where petitioners complaint was simply found later to be based on an erroneous ground which, under
settled jurisprudence, would not have been a reason for awarding moral and exemplary damages. Instead, the cause of action
of the instant case appears to have been contrived by petitioner himself. The factual findings of the courts a quo to the effect
that petitioner filed this case because he was the victim of fraud; that he could not have been such a victim because he should
have examined the jewelry in question before accepting delivery thereof, considering his exposure to the banking and jewelry
businesses; and that he filed the action for the nullification of the contract of sale with unclean hands, all deserve full faith and
credit to support the conclusion that petitioner was motivated more by ill will than a sincere attempt to protect his rights in
commencing suit against respondents. It must be noted that before petitioner was able to convince Dr. Cruz to exchange her
jewelry for the Tanay property, petitioner took pains to thoroughly examine said jewelry, even going to the extent of sketching
their appearance. Why at the precise moment when he was about to take physical possession thereof he failed to exert extra
efforts to check their genuineness despite the large consideration involved has never been explained at all by petitioner. His acts
thus failed to accord with what an ordinary prudent man would have done in the same situation.
4.
payment of P600,000 broken into P103,499.91 directly paid to seller on 22 March 1983 and P496,500.09 directly paid to BPI to
answer for part of sellers loan with the bank; and balance of 1.4M to be paid in 4 equal quarterly installments of P350,000 the
first of which due and demandable on 15 June 1983); binding themselves that upon the payment of the total purchase price the
seller delivers a good and sufficient deed of sale and conveyance for the parcels of land free and clear from liens and
encumbrances, that seller delivers, surrenders and transfers the parcels of land including all improvements thereon and to
transfer the operations of the piggery and rice mill to the buyer; and that all payments due and demandable under the contract
effected in the residence of the seller unless otherwise designated by the parties in writing. On 15 May 1983, Ong took
possession of the subject parcels of land together with the piggery, building, ricemill, residential house and other improvements
thereon. Pursuant to the contract, Ong paid the spouses the sum of P103,499.91 2 by depositing it with the UUCPB.
Subsequently, Ong deposited sums of money with the BPI, in accordance with their stipulation that petitioner pay the loan of
the spouses with BPI. To answer for his balance of P 1.4M, Ong issued 4 post-dated Metro Bank checks payable to the spouses
in the amount of P350,000.00 each (Check 137708-157711). When presented for payment, however, the checks were
dishonored due to insufficient funds. Ong promised to replace the checks but failed to do so. To make matters worse, out of the
P496,500.00 loan of the spouses with BPI, which ong, as per agreement, should have paid, Ong only managed to dole out no
more than P393,679.60. When the bank threatened to foreclose the spouses mortgage, they sold 3 transformers of the rice mill
worth P51,411.00 to pay off their outstanding obligation with said bank, with the knowledge and conformity of Ong. Ong, in
return, voluntarily gave the spouses authority to operate the rice mill. He, however, continued to be in possession of the two
parcels of land while the spouses were forced to use the rice mill for residential purposes.
On 2 August 1985, the spouses, through counsel, sent Ong a demand letter asking for the return of the properties. Their
demand was left unheeded, so, on 2 September 1985, they filed with the RTC Lucena City, Branch 60, a complaint for rescission
of contract and recovery of properties with damages. Later, while the case was still pending with the trial court, Ong introduced
major improvements on the subject properties by constructing a complete fence made of hollow blocks and expanding the
piggery. These prompted the spouses to ask for a writ of preliminary injunction; which the trial court granted, and thus enjoined
Ong from introducing improvements on the properties except for repairs. On 1 June 1989, the trial court rendered a decision in
favor of the spouses: ordering the contract entered into by the parties set aside, ordering the delivery of the parcels of land and
the improvements thereon to the spouses, ordering the return of the sum of P497,179.51 to Ong by the spouses, ordering Ong
to pay the spouses P100,000 for exemplary damages and P20,000 as attorneys fees and litigation expenses. From this decision,
petitioner appealed to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the decision of the RTC but deleted the award of exemplary
damages. In affirming the decision of the trial court, the Court of Appeals noted that the failure of petitioner to completely pay
the purchase price is a substantial breach of his obligation which entitles the private respondents to rescind their contract under
Article 1191 of the New Civil Code. Hence, the petition for review on certiorari.
The Supreme Court affirmed the decision rendered by the Court of Appeals with the modification that the spouses are ordered
to return to Ong the sum P48,680.00 in addition to the amounts already awarded; with costs against petitioner Ong.
1. Reevaluation of evidence not the function of the Supreme Court
It is not the function of the Supreme Court to assess and evaluate all over again the evidence, testimonial and documentary,
adduced by the parties to an appeal, particularly where the findings of both the trial court and the appellate court on the matter
coincide. There is no cogent reason shown that would justify the court to discard the factual findings of the two courts below
and to superimpose its own.
2. Rescission as a remedy to secure the reparation of damages caused by a contract; Article 1380
Rescission, as contemplated in Articles 1380, et seq., of the New Civil Code, is a remedy granted by law to the contracting
parties and even to third persons, to secure the reparation of damages caused to them by a contract, even if this should be
valid, by restoration of things to their condition at the moment prior to the celebration of the contract. It implies a contract,
which even if initially valid, produces a lesion or a pecuniary damage to someone.
3. Rescission applicable to reciprocal obligations under Article 1191
Article 1191 of the New Civil Code refers to rescission applicable to reciprocal obligations. Reciprocal obligations are those
which arise from the same cause, and in which each party is a debtor and a creditor of the other, such that the obligation of one
is dependent upon the obligation of the other. They are to be performed simultaneously such that the performance of one is
conditioned upon the simultaneous fulfillment of the other.
4. Rescission of reciprocal obligations under Article 1191 distinguished from rescission of contract under Article 1383
Rescission of reciprocal obligations under Article 1191 of the New Civil Code should be distinguished from rescission of contracts
under Article 1383. Although both presuppose contracts validly entered into and subsisting and both require mutual restitution
when proper, they are not entirely identical. While Article 1191 uses the term rescission, the original term which was used in
the old Civil Code, from which the article was based, was resolution. Resolution is a principal action which is based on breach
Page 11 of 87
of a party, while rescission under Article 1383 is a subsidiary action limited to cases of rescission for lesion under Article 1381 of
the New Civil Code.
5. Rescissible contract under Article 1381
Article 1381 of the New Civil Code enumerates rescissible contracts as (1) those which are entered into by guardians whenever
the wards whom they represent suffer lesion by more than one fourth of the value of the things which are the object thereof;
(2) those agreed upon in representation of absentees, if the latter suffer the lesion stated in the preceding number; (3) those
undertaken in fraud of creditors when the latter cannot in any manner collect the claims due them; (4) those which refer to
things under litigation if they have been entered into by the defendant without the knowledge and approval of the litigants or of
competent judicial authority; (5) all other contracts specially declared by law to be subject to rescission. In the present case,
the contract entered into by the parties obviously does not fall under any of those mentioned by Article 1381. Consequently,
Article 1383 is inapplicable.
6. Contract to sell distinguished from contract of sale
In a contract of sale, the title to the property passes to the vendee upon the delivery of the thing sold; while in a contract to sell,
ownership is, by agreement, reserved in the vendor and is not to pass to the vendee until full payment of the purchase price. In
a contract to sell, the payment of the purchase price is a positive suspensive condition, the failure of which is not a breach,
casual or serious, but a situation that prevents the obligation of the vendor to convey title from acquiring an obligatory force.
7. Agreement of Purchase and Sale is in the nature of contract to sell
A careful reading of the parties Agreement of Purchase and Sale shows that it is in the nature of a contract to sell. The
spouses bound themselves to deliver a deed of absolute sale and clean title covering the two parcels of land upon full payment
by the buyer of the purchase price of P2M. This promise to sell was subject to the fulfillment of the suspensive condition of full
payment of the purchase price by the Ong. The non-fulfillment of the condition of full payment rendered the contract to sell
ineffective and without force and effect. It must be stressed that the breach contemplated in Article 1191 of the New Civil Code
is the obligors failure to comply with an obligation already extant, not a failure of a condition to render binding that obligation.
Failure to pay, in this instance, is not even a breach but merely an event which prevents the vendors obligation to convey title
from acquiring binding force. Hence, the agreement of the parties the present case may be set aside, but not because of a
breach on the part of Ong for failure to complete payment of the purchase price. Rather, his failure to do so brought about a
situation which prevented the obligation of the spouses to convey title from acquiring an obligatory force.
8. Contract was not novated as to the manner and time of payment; Novation not presumed
Article 1292 of the New Civil Code states that, In order that an obligation may be extinguished by another which substitutes the
same, it is imperative that it be so declared in unequivocal terms, or that the old and the new obligations be on every point
incompatible with each other. Novation is never presumed, it must be proven as a fact either by express stipulation of the
parties or by implication derived from an irreconcilable incompatibility between the old and the new obligation. In the present
case, the parties never even intended to novate their previous agreement. It is true that Ong paid the spouses small sums of
money amounting to P48,680.00, in contravention of the manner of payment stipulated in their contract. These installments
were, however, objected to by the spouses, and ong replied that these represented the interest of the principal amount which
he owed them. Records further show that Ong agreed to the sale of MERALCO transformers by the spousess to pay for the
balance of their subsisting loan with BPI. Although the parties agreed to credit the proceeds from the sale of the transformers to
petitioners obligation, he was supposed to reimburse the same later to respondent spouses. This can only mean that there was
never an intention on the part of either of the parties to novate petitioners manner of payment.
9. Requisites of novation
In order for novation to take place, the concurrence of the following requisites is indispensable: (1) there must be a previous
valid obligation; (2) there must be an agreement of the parties concerned to a new contract; (3) there must be the
extinguishment of the old contract; and (4) there must be the validity of the new contract. In the present case, the requisites are
not found. The subsequent acts of the parties hardly demonstrate their intent to dissolve the old obligation as a consideration
for the emergence of the new one. Novation is never presumed, there must be an express intention to novate.
10. Builder in bad faith
As regards the improvements introduced by Ong to the premises and for which he claims reimbursement, the Court found no
reason to depart from the ruling of the trial court and the appellate court that petitioner is a builder in bad faith. He introduced
the improvements on the premises knowing fully well that he has not paid the consideration of the contract in full and over the
vigorous objections of respondent spouses. Moreover, Ong introduced major improvements on the premises even while the
case against him was pending before the trial court.
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5.
covering the first shipment of iron ore . . . etc. There is no uncertainty that the payment will have to be made sooner or later;
what is undetermined is merely the exact date at which it will be made. By the very terms of the contract, therefore, the
existence of the obligation to pay is recognized; only its maturity or demandability is deferred.
3. Contract of sale commutative and onerous; Each party assume correlative obligation and anticipate performance from
the other
A contract of sale is normally commutative and onerous: not only does each one of the parties assume a correlative obligation
(the seller to deliver and transfer ownership of the thing sold and the buyer to pay the price), but each party anticipates
performance by the other from the very start. While in a sale the obligation of one party can be lawfully subordinated to an
uncertain event, so that the other understands that he assumes the risk of receiving nothing for what he gives (as in the case of
a sale of hopes or expectations, emptio spei), it is not in the usual course of business to do so; hence, the contingent character
of the obligation must clearly appear. In the present case, nothing is found in the record to evidence that Gaite desired or
assumed to run the risk of losing his rights over the ore without getting paid for it, or that Fonacier understood that Gaite
assumed any such risk. The fact that appellants did put up such bonds indicates that they admitted the definite existence of
their obligation to pay the balance of P65,000.
4. To consider sale as a condition precedent leaves the payment at the discretion o fthe debtor
To subordinate the obligation to pay the remaining P65,000 to the sale or shipment of the ore as a condition precedent, would
be tantamount to leaving the payment at the discretion of the debtor, for the sale or shipment could not be made unless the
appellants took steps to sell the ore. Appellants would thus be able to postpone payment indefinitely. Such construction of the
contract should be avoided.
5. Interpretation incline in favor of the greatest reciprocity of interests
Assuming that there could be doubt whether by the wording of the contract the parties intended a suspensive condition or a
suspensive period (dies ad quem) for the payment of the P65,000, the rules of interpretation would incline the scales in favor of
the greatest reciprocity of interests, since sale is essentially onerous. The Civil Code of the Philippines, Article 1378, paragraph
1, in fine, provides if the contract is onerous, the doubt shall be settled in favor of the greatest reciprocity of interests and
there can be no question that greater reciprocity obtains if the buyers obligation is deemed to be actually existing, with only its
maturity (due date) postponed or deferred, than if such obligation were viewed as non-existent or not binding until the ore was
sold.
6. Sale of ore to Fonacier was a sale on credit, not an aleatory contract
The sale of the ore to Fonacier was a sale on credit, and not an aleatory contract where the transferor, Gaite, would assume the
risk of not being paid at all; and that the previous sale or shipment of the ore was not a suspensive condition for the payment of
the balance of the agreed price, but was intended merely to fix the future date of the payment.
7. Non-renewal of bond impaired the securities given to the creditor
Appellants have forfeited the right to compel Gaite to wait for the sale of the ore before receiving payment of the balance of
P65,000, because of their failure to renew the bond of the Far Eastern Surety Company or else replace it with an equivalent
guarantee. The expiration of the bonding companys undertaking on 8 December 1955 substantially reduced the security of the
vendors rights as creditor for the unpaid P65,000, a security that Gaite considered essential and upon which he had insisted
when he executed the deed of sale of the ore to Fonacier. The case squarely comes under paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article 1198 of
the Civil Code of the Philippines which provides (2) When he does not furnish to the creditor the guaranties or securities which
he has promised. (3) When by his own acts he has impaired said guaranties or securities after their establishment, and when
through fortuitous event they disappear, unless he immediately gives new ones equally satisfactory. Appellants failure to
renew or extend the surety companys bond upon its expiration plainly impaired the securities given to the creditor (appellee
Gaite), unless immediately renewed or replaced.
8. No waiver intended by creditor
Gaites acceptance of the surety companys bond with full knowledge that on its face it would automatically expire within one
year was not a waiver of its renewal after the expiration date. No such waiver could have been intended, for Gaite stood to lose
and had nothing to gain thereby; and if there was any, it could be rationally explained only if the appellants had agreed to sell
the ore and pay Gaite before the surety companys bond expired on 8 December 1955. But in the latter case the defendantsappellants obligation to pay became absolute after 1 year from the transfer of the ore to Fonacier by virtue of the deed.
Page 14 of 87
6.
In 1983, however, Acap refused to pay any further lease rentals on the land, prompting delos Reyes to seek the assistance of the
then Ministry of Agrarian Reform (MAR) in Hinigaran, Negros Occidental. The MAR invited Acap, who sent his wife, to a
conference scheduled on 13 October 1983. The wife stated that the she and her husband did not recognize delos Reyess claim
of ownership over the land. On 28 April 1988, after the lapse of four (4) years, delos Reys field a complaint for recovery of
possession and damages against Acap, alleging that as his leasehold tenant, Acap refused and failed to pay the agreed annual
rental of 10 cavans of palay despite repeated demands. On 20 August 1991, the lower court rendered a decision in favor of
delos Reyes, ordering the forfeiture of Acaps preferred right of a Certificae of Land Transfer under PD 27 and his farmholdings,
the return of the farmland in Acaps possession to delos Reyes, and Acap to pay P5,000.00 as attorneys fees, the sum of
P1,000.00 as expenses of litigation and the amount of P10,000.00 as actual damages.
Aggrieved, petitioner appealed to the Court of Appeals. Subsequently, the CA affirmed the lower courts decision, holding that
de los Reyes had acquired ownership of Lot No. 1130 of the Cadastral Survey of Hinigaran, Negros Occidental based on a
document entitled Declaration of Heirship and Waiver of Rights, and ordering the dispossession of Acap as leasehold tenant of
the land for failure to pay rentals. Hence, the petition for review on certiorari.
The Supreme Court granted the petition, set aside the decision of the RTC Negros Occidental, dismissed the complaint for
recovery of possession and damages against Acap for failure to properly state a cause of action, without prejudice to private
respondent taking the proper legal steps to establish the legal mode by which he claims to have acquired ownership of the land
in question.
1. Asserted right or claim to ownership not sufficient per se to give rise to ownership over the res
An asserted right or claim to ownership or a real right over a thing arising from a juridical act, however justified, is not per se
sufficient to give rise to ownership over the res. That right or title must be completed by fulfilling certain conditions imposed by
law. Hence, ownership and real rights are acquired only pursuant to a legal mode or process. While title is the juridical
justification, mode is the actual process of acquisition transfer of ownership over a thing in question.
2. Classes of modes of acquiring ownership
Under Article 712 of the Civil Code, the modes of acquiring ownership are generally classified into two (2) classes, namely, the
original mode (i.e, through occupation, acquisitive prescription, law or intellectual creation) and the derivative mode (i.e.,
through succession mortis causa or tradition as a result of certain contracts, such as sale, barter, donation, assignment or
mutuum).
3. Contract of Sale; Declaration of Heirship and Waiver of Rights an extrajudicial settlement between heirs under Rule 74
of the Rules of Court
In a Contract of Sale, one of the contracting parties obligates himself to transfer the ownership of and to deliver a determinate
thing, and the other party to pay a price certain in money or its equivalent. On the other hand, a declaration of heirship and
waiver of rights operates as a public instrument when filed with the Registry of Deeds whereby the intestate heirs adjudicate
and divide the estate left by the decedent among themselves as they see fit. It is in effect an extrajudicial settlement between
the heirs under Rule 74 of the Rules of Court. In the present case, the trial court erred in equating the nature and effect of the
Declaration of Heirship and Waiver of Rights the same with a contract (deed) of sale.
4. Sale of hereditary rights and waiver of hereditary rights distinguished
There is a marked difference between a sale of hereditary rights and a waiver of hereditary rights. The first presumes the
existence of a contract or deed of sale between the parties. The second is, technically speaking, a mode of extinction of
ownership where there is an abdication or intentional relinquishment of a known right with knowledge of its existence and
intention to relinquish it, in favor of other persons who are co-heirs in the succession. In the present case, de los Reyes, being
then a stranger to the succession of Cosme Pido, cannot conclusively claim ownership over the subject lot on the sole basis of
the waiver document which neither recites the elements of either a sale, or a donation, or any other derivative mode of
acquiring ownership.
5. Summon of Ministry of Agrarian Reform does not conclude actuality of sale nor notice of such sale
The conclusion, made by the trial and appellate courts, that a sale transpired between Cosme Pidos heirs and de los Reyes
and that Acap acquired actual knowledge of said sale when he was summoned by the Ministry of Agrarian Reform to discuss de
los Reyes claim over the lot in question, has no basis both in fact and in law.
6. A notice of adverse claim does not prove ownership over the lot; Adverse claim not sufficient to cancel the certificate of
tile and for another to be issued in his name
A notice of adverse claim, by its nature, does not however prove private respondents ownership over the tenanted lot. A
notice of adverse claim is nothing but a notice of a claim adverse to the registered owner, the validity of which is yet to be
established in court at some future date, and is no better than a notice of lis pendens which is a notice of a case already pending
Page 16 of 87
in court. In the present case, while the existence of said adverse claim was duly proven (thus being filed with the Registry of
Deeds which contained the Declaration of Heirship with Waiver of rights an was annotated at the back of the Original Certificate
of Title to the land in question), there is no evidence whatsoever that a deed of sale was executed between Cosme Pidos heirs
and de los Reyes transferring the rights of the heirs to the land in favor of de los Reyes. De los Reyes right or interest therefore
in the tenanted lot remains an adverse claim which cannot by itself be sufficient to cancel the OCT to the land and title to be
issued in de los Reyes name.
7. Transaction between heirs and de los Reyes binding between parties, but cannot affect right of Acap to tenanted land
without corresponding proof thereof
While the transaction between Pidos heirs and de los Reyes may be binding on both parties, the right of Acap as a registered
tenant to the land cannot be perfunctorily forfeited on a mere allegation of de los Reyes ownership without the corresponding
proof thereof. Acap had been a registered tenant in the subject land since 1960 and religiously paid lease rentals thereon. In his
mind, he continued to be the registered tenant of Cosme Pido and his family (after Pidos death), even if in 1982, de los Reyes
allegedly informed Acap that he had become the new owner of the land.
8. No unjustified or deliberate refusal to pay the lease rentals to the landowner / agricultural lessor
De los Reyes never registered the Declaration of Heirship with Waiver of Rights with the Registry of Deeds or with the MAR, but
instead, he filed a notice of adverse claim on the said lot to establish ownership thereof (which cannot be done). It stands to
reason, therefore, to hold that there was no unjustified or deliberate refusal by Acap to pay the lease rentals or amortizations to
the landowner/agricultural lessor which, in this case, de los Reyes failed to established in his favor by clear and convincing
evidence. This notwithstanding the fact that initially, Acap may have, in good faith, assumed such statement of de los Reyes to
be true and may have in fact delivered 10 cavans of palay as annual rental for 1982 to latter. For in 1983, it is clear that Acap
had misgivings over de los Reyes claim of ownership over the said land because in the October 1983 MAR conference, his wife
Laurenciana categorically denied all of de los Reyes allegations. In fact, Acap even secured a certificate from the MAR dated 9
May 1988 to the effect that he continued to be the registered tenant of Cosme Pido and not of delos Reyes.
9. Sanction of forfeiture of tenants preferred right and possession of farmholdings should not be applied
The sanction of forfeiture of his preferred right to be issued a Certificate of Land Transfer under PD 27 and to the possession of
his farmholdings should not be applied against Acap, since de los Reyes has not established a cause of action for recovery of
possession against Acap.
7.
on the lot; ordered the cancellation of the deed of sale executed by Trinidad to Mondejar, as well as the deeds of
sale/relinquishments executed by Mondejar to the other defendants; and ordered the defendants to pay the plaintiffs, in
solidum, the amount of P10,000, P8,000, and P30,000 as attorneys fees, expenses of litigation and moral damages, respectively.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed and set aside the judgment a quo ruling that the sale made by Trinidad Quijada to
respondent Mondejar was valid as the former retained an inchoate interest on the lots by virtue of the automatic reversion
clause in the deed of donation. Thereafter, petitioners filed a motion for reconsideration. When the CA denied their motion,
petitioners instituted a petition for review to the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court affirmed the assailed decision of the Court of Appeals.
1. Condition valid in donation if not contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order or public policy
The donation made on April 5, 1956 by Trinidad Quijada and her brother and sisters was subject to the condition that the
donated property shall be used solely and exclusively as a part of the campus of the proposed Provincial High School in
Talacogon. The donation further provides that should the proposed Provincial High School be discontinued or if the same shall
be opened but for some reason or another, the same may in the future be closed the donated property shall automatically
revert to the donor. Such condition, not being contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order or public policy was validly
imposed in the donation.
2. Donation as mode of acquiring ownership
When the Municipalitys acceptance of the donation was made known to the donor, the former became the new owner of the
donated property, donation being a mode of acquiring and transmitting ownership, notwithstanding the condition imposed by
the donee. The donation is perfected once the acceptance by the donee is made known to the donor. Accordingly, ownership is
immediately transferred to the latter and that ownership will only revert to the donor if the resolutory condition is not fulfilled.
3. Condition to construct school is a resolutory condition
The resolutory condition, in the present case, is the construction of the school. It has been ruled that when a person donates
land to another on the condition that the latter would build upon the land a school, the condition imposed is not a condition
precedent or a suspensive condition but a resolutory one. So long as the resolutory condition subsists and is capable of
fulfillment, the donation remains effective and the donee continues to be the owner subject only to the rights of the donor or
his successors-in-interest under the deed of donation. Since no period was imposed by the donor on when must the donee
comply with the condition, the latter remains the owner so long as he has tried to comply with the condition within a
reasonable period. Such period, however, became irrelevant herein when the donee manifested that it cannot comply with the
condition and the same was made known to the donor. Only then, when the non-fulfillment of the resolutory condition was
brought to the donors knowledge, that ownership of the donated property reverted to the donor as provided in the automatic
reversion clause of the deed of donation.
4. Inchoate interest may be subject of contract including a contract of sale; Interest over property under conditional deed of
donation, not the land itself
The donor may have an inchoate interest in the donated property during the time that ownership of the land has not reverted
to her. Such inchoate interest may be the subject of contracts including a contract of sale. In the present case, however, what
the donor sold was the land itself which she no longer owns. It would have been different if the donor-seller sold her interests
over the property under the deed of donation which is subject to the possibility of reversion of ownership arising from the nonfulfillment of the resolutory condition.
5. Laches, elements
Laches presupposes failure or neglect for an unreasonable and unexplained length of time, to do that which, by exercising due
diligence, could or should have been done earlier; it is negligence or omission to assert a right within a reasonable time, thus,
giving rise to a presumption that the party entitled to assert it either has abandoned or declined to assert it. Its essential
elements of (a) Conduct on the part of the defendant, or of one under whom he claims, giving rise to the situation complained
of; (b) Delay in asserting complainants right after he had knowledge of the defendants conduct and after he has an opportunity
to sue; (c) Lack of knowledge or notice on the part of the defendant that the complainant would assert the right on which he
bases his suit; and, (d) Injury or prejudice to the defendant in the event relief is accorded to the complainant are absent in this
case. In the present case, petitioners cause of action to quiet title commenced only when the property reverted to the donor
and/or his successors-in-interest in 1987, not in the 1960s when they had no interest over the property at that time except
under the deed of donation to which private respondents were not privy. Moreover, petitioners had previously filed an
ejectment suit against private respondents only that it did not prosper on a technicality.
6. Sale, being a consensual contract, is perfected by mere consent; Seller need not own property when sold but when
delivered
Page 18 of 87
Sale, being a consensual contract, is perfected by mere consent, which is manifested the moment there is a meeting of the
minds as to the offer and acceptance thereof on three (3) elements: subject matter, price and terms of payment of the price.
Ownership by the seller on the thing sold at the time of the perfection of the contract of sale is not an element for its
perfection. What the law requires is that the seller has the right to transfer ownership at the time the thing sold is delivered.
Perfection per se does not transfer ownership which occurs upon the actual or constructive delivery of the thing sold. A
perfected contract of sale cannot be challenged on the ground of non-ownership on the part of the seller at the time of its
perfection; hence, the sale is still valid.
7. Sellers title passes by operation of law to the buyer
The consummation of the perfected contract is another matter. It occurs upon the constructive or actual delivery of the subject
matter to the buyer when the seller or her successors-in-interest subsequently acquires ownership thereof. In the present case,
such circumstance happened in this case when petitioners (Trinidads heirs) became the owners of the subject property upon
the reversion of the ownership of the land to them. Consequently, ownership is transferred to Mondejar and those who claim
their right from him. Article 1434 of the New Civil Code supports the ruling that the sellers title passes by operation of law to
the buyer. This rule applies not only when the subject matter of the contract of sale is goods, but also to other kinds of
property, including real property.
8. Article 1409 (4) does not provide that the properties of a municipality are outside the commerce of man; Objects outside
of the commerce of man are those which cannot be appropriated
Nowhere in Article 1409 (4) is it provided that the properties of a municipality, whether it be those for public use or its
patrimonial property, are outside the commerce of men; so as to render the contract involving the same inexistent and void
from the beginning when sold. In the present case, the lots were conditionally owned by the municipality. To rule that the
donated properties are outside the commerce of men would render nugatory the unchallenged reasonableness and justness of
the condition which the donor has the right to impose as owner thereof. Moreover, the objects referred to as outside the
commerce of man are those which cannot be appropriated, such as the open seas and the heavenly bodies.
9. No factual or legal basis for the award of fees and damages
There is neither factual nor legal basis for the trial courts award of attorneys fees, litigation expenses and moral damages.
Attorneys fees and expenses of litigation cannot, following the general rule in Article 2208 of the New Civil Code, be recovered
in the present case, there being no stipulation to that effect and the case does not fall under any of the exceptions. It cannot be
said that private respondents had compelled petitioners to litigate with third persons. Neither can it be ruled that the former
acted in gross and evident bad faith in refusing to satisfy the latters claims considering that private respondents were under
an honest belief that they have a legal right over the property by virtue of the deed of sale. Moral damages cannot likewise be
justified as none of the circumstances enumerated under Articles 2219 27 and 2220 28 of the New Civil Code concur in this case.
8.
Celestino Co v. Collector of Internal Revenue [G.R. No. L-8506. August 31, 1956.]
First Division, Bengzon (J): 7 concur
Facts: Celestino Co & Company is a duly registered general copartnership doing business under the trade name of Oriental Sash
Factory. From 1946 to 1951 it paid percentage taxes of 7% on the gross receipts of its sash, door and window factory, in
accordance with section 186 of the National Revenue Code imposing taxes on sales of manufactured articles. However in 1952 it
began to claim liability only to the contractors 3% tax (instead of 7%) under section 191 of the same Code; and having failed to
convince the Bureau of Internal Revenue, it brought the matter to the Court of Tax Appeals, where it also failed. Hence, the
appeal.
The Supreme Court affirmed the appealed decision.
1. Business name and income militates against claim as ordinary contractor
The company has taken all the trouble and expense of registering a special trade name for its sash business and has ordered
company stationery carrying the bold print Oriental Sash Factory (Celestino Co & Company, Prop.) 926 Raon St. Quiapo,
Manila, Tel. No. 33076, Manufacturers of all kinds of doors, windows, sashes, furnitures, etc. used season-dried and kiln-dried
lumber, of the best quality workmanship. It is unlikely that these act were made solely for the purpose of supplying the needs
for doors, windows and sash of its special and limited customers. Further, the Company has chosen for its tradename and has
offered itself to the public as a Factory, which means it is out to do business, in its chosen lines on a big scale. Moreover, as
shown from the investigation of the Companys books of accounts (for transactions covering the period of 1 January 1952 to 30
September 1952), it sold sash, doors and windows worth P188,754.69. It will be difficult to believe that such amount that ran to
six figures was derived entirely from its few customers who made special orders. Thus, Celestino Co & Company habitually
Page 19 of 87
makes sash, windows and doors, as it has represented in its stationery and advertisements to the public, and it has admitted by
the appellant itself that the company manufactures.
2. Construction work contractors defined
Construction work contractors are those who alter or repair buildings, structures, streets, highways, sewers, street railways,
railroads, logging roads, electric, steam or water plants telegraph and telephone plants and lines, electric lines or power lines,
and includes any other work for the construction, altering or repairing for which machinery driven by mechanical power is used.
(Payton vs. City of Anadardo 64 P. 2d 878, 880, 179 Okl. 68).
3. Nature of business does not fall in any of the occupation that may be classified as contractor within the purview of
Section 191 of the National Internal Revenue Code
Even if it were to believe that the company does not manufacture ready-made sash, doors and windows for the public and that
it makes these articles only upon special order of its customers, that does not make it a contractor within the purview of section
191 of the National Internal Revenue Code. There are no less than fifty occupations enumerated in the said section of the
National Internal Revenue Code subject to percentage tax, not one under which the business enterprise of petitioner could
appropriately fall. It would require a stretch of the law to make the business of manufacturing sash, doors and windows upon
special order of customers fall under the category of road, building, navigation, artesian well, water works and other
construction work contractors.
4. Percentage tax imposed under Section 191 of the Tax Code a tax on sales of service, while tax imposed by Section 186 a
tax on original sales of articles
The percentage tax imposed in section 191 of the Tax Code is generally a tax on the sales of services, in contradiction with the
tax imposed in section 186 of the same Code which is a tax on the original sales of articles by the manufacturer, producer or
importer. (Formillezas Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the National Internal Revenue Code, Vol II, p. 744). The fact that the
articles sold are manufactured by the seller does not exchange the contract from the purview of section 186 of the National
Internal Revenue Code as a sale of articles.
5. Custom specifications required by customer does not alter character of business, the company does not become an
employee or servant of the customer
Nobody will say that when a sawmill cuts lumber in accordance with the peculiar specifications of a customer, sizes not
previously held in stock for sale to the public, it thereby becomes an employee or servant of the customer, not the seller of
lumber. The same consideration applies to this sash manufacturer. The Sash Factory does nothing more than sell the goods that
it mass-produces or habitually makes; sash, panels, mouldings, frames, cutting them to such sizes and combining them in such
forms as its customers may desire.
6. Installation of window panels not construction work in common parlance
Petitioners idea of being a contractor doing construction jobs is untenable. Nobody would regard the doing of two window
panels as construction work in common parlance.
7. Contract of sale distinguished from a contract for a piece of work
Article 1467 of the New Civil Code provides that a contract for the delivery at a certain price of an article which the vendor in
the ordinary course of his business manufactures or procures for the general market, whether the same is on hand at the time
or not, is a contract of sale, but if the goods are to be manufactured specially for the customer and upon his special order, and
not for the general market, it is contract for a piece of work. In the present case, it is apparent that the Factory did not merely
sell its services to Teodoro & Co. because it also sold the materials. When it sold materials ordinarily manufactured by it (sash,
panels, mouldings), although in such form or combination as suited the fancy of the purchaser, such new form does not divest
the Factory of its character as manufacturer. Neither does it take the transaction out of the category of sales under Article 1467
because although the Factory does not, in the ordinary course of its business, manufacture and keep on stock doors of the kind
sold to Teodoro, it could stock and/or probably had in stock the sash, mouldings and panels it used therefor.
8. Contract for a piece of work in Factory happens if the use of extraordinary or additional equipment is required or if it
involves services not generally performed by it
When the Factory accepts a job that requires the use of extraordinary or additional equipment, or involves services not
generally performed by it, it thereby contracts for a piece of work, i.e. filling special orders within the meaning of Article 1467.
In the present case, however, the orders exhibited were not shown to be special. They were merely orders for work, regular
work.
9. Transfers under Section 186 of the Tax Code
If all the work of appellant is only to fill orders previously made, such orders should not be called special work, but regular work;
and supposing for the moment that the transactions were not sales, they were neither lease of services nor contract jobs by a
Page 20 of 87
contractor. Still, as the doors and windows had been admittedly manufactured by the Sash Factory, such transactions could
be, and should be taxed as transfers thereof under section 186 of the National Revenue Code.
9.
CIR v. Engineering Equipment and Supply [G.R. No. L-27044. June 30, 1975.]
Engineering Equipment and Supply v. CIR [G.R. No. L-27452. June 30, 1975.]
First Division, Esguerra (J): 4 concur
Facts: Engineering Equipment and Supply Co. is an engineering and machinery firm; and being an operator of an integrated
engineering ship, is engaged in the design and installation of central type air conditioning system, pumping plants and steel
fabrications. On 27 July 1956, one Juan de la Cruz, wrote the then Collector, now Commissioner, of Internal Revenue
denouncing the Company for tax evasion by misdeclaring its imported articles and failing to pay the correct percentage taxes
due thereon in connivance with its foreign suppliers. The Company was likewise denounced to the Central Bank for alleged
fraud in obtaining its dollar allocations. Acting on these denunciations, a raid and search was conducted by a joint team of
Central Bank, (CB), National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) and Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) agents on 27 September 1956,
on which occasion voluminous records of the firm were seized and confiscated.
On 30 September 1957, revenue examiners reported and recommended to the then Collector, now Commissioner, of Internal
Revenue that the Company be assessed for P480,912.01 as deficiency advance sales tax on the theory that it misdeclared its
importation of air conditioning units and parts and accessories thereof which are subject to tax under Section 185(m) 1 of the
Tax Code, instead of Section 186 of the same Code. This assessment was revised on 23 January 1959, in line with the
observation of the Chief, BIR Law Division, and was raised to P916,362.56 representing deficiency advance sales tax and
manufacturers sales tax, inclusive of the 25% and 50% surcharges. On 3 March 1959, the Commissioner assessed against, and
demanded upon, the Company payment of the increased amount and suggested that P10,000 be paid as compromise in
extrajudicial settlement of the Companys penal liability for violation of the Tax Code. The firm, however, contested the tax
assessment and requested that it be furnished with the details and particulars of the Commissioners assessment. The
Commissioner replied that the assessment was in accordance with law and the facts of the case.
On 30 July 1959, the Company appealed the case to the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) and during the pendency of the case the
investigating revenue examiners reduced the Companys deficiency tax liabilities from P916,362.65 to P740,587.86, based on
findings after conferences had with the Companys Accountant and Auditor. On 29 November 1966, the CTA rendered its
decision, modifying the decision appealed from, declaring the Company as contractor exempt from the deficiency
manufacturers sales tax covering the period from 1 June 1948 to 2 September 1956 but ordered said company to pay the
Commissioner, or his collection agent, the sum of P174,141.62 as compensating tax and 25% surcharge for the period from 1953
to September 1956; With costs against the Company.
The Commissioner, not satisfied with the decision of the CTA, appealed to the Supreme Court on 18 January 1967, (GR L-27044).
On the other hand, the Company, on 4 January 1967, filed with the CTA a motion for reconsideration; which was denied on 6
April 1967, prompting the Company to file also with the Supreme Court its appeal (GR L-27452). Since the two cases involve the
same parties and issues, the Court decided to consolidate and jointly decide them.
The Supreme Court affirmed the decision appealed from with modification that the Company is also made liable to pay the 50%
fraud surcharge.
1. Manufacturer defined
Section 194 of the Tax code provides that Manufacturer includes every person who by physical or chemical process alters the
exterior texture or form or inner substance of any raw material or manufactured or partially manufactured products in such
manner as to prepare it for a special use or uses to which it could not have been put in its original condition, or who by any such
process alters the quality of any such material or manufactured or partially manufactured product so as to reduce it to
marketable shape, or prepare it for any of the uses of industry, or who by any such process combines any such raw material or
manufactured or partially manufactured products with other materials or products of the same or of different kinds and in such
manner that the finished product of such process of manufacture can be put to special use or uses to which such raw material
or manufactured or partially manufactured products in their original condition could not have been put, and who in addition
alters such raw material or manufactured or partially manufactured products, or combines the same to produce such finished
products for the purpose of their sale or distribution to others and not for his own use or consumption.
2. Test to distinguish contract of sale and contract for work, labor and materials
The distinction between a contract of sale and one for work, labor and materials is tested by the inquiry whether the thing
Page 21 of 87
transferred is one not in existence and which never would have existed but for the order of the party desiring to acquire it, or a
thing which would have existed and has been the subject of sale to some other persons even if the order had not been given. If
the article ordered by the purchaser is exactly such as the plaintiff makes and keeps on hand for sale to anyone, and no change
or modification of it is made at defendants request, it is a contract of sale, even though it may be entirely made after, and in
consequence of, the defendants order for it.
3. Contract of sale distinguished from a contract for a piece of work
The New Civil Code distinguishes a contract of sale from a contract for a piece of work. Article 1467 provides that a contract for
the delivery at a certain price of an article which the vendor in the ordinary course of his business manufactures or procures for
the general market, whether the same is on hand at the time or not, is a contract of sale, but if the goods are to be
manufactured specially for the customer and upon his special order and not for the general market, it is a contract for a piece of
work.
4. Contractor defined; Test to determine contractor
The word contractor has come to be used with special reference to a person who, in the pursuit of the independent business,
undertakes to do a specific job or piece of work for other persons, using his own means and methods without submitting
himself to control as to the petty details. (Araas, Annotations and Jurisprudence on the National Internal Revenue Code, p.
318, par. 191(2), 1970 Ed.) The true test of a contractor as was held in the cases of Luzon Stevedoring Co., vs. Trinidad 43, Phil.
803, 807-808, and La Carlota Sugar Central vs. Trinidad 43, Phil. 816, 819, would seem to be that he renders service in the
course of an independent occupation, representing the will of his employer only as to the result of his work, and not as to the
means by which it is accomplished.
5. Engineering Equipment Co. is a contractor and not a manufacturer
The Company did not manufacture air conditioning units for sale to the general public, but imported some items (as
refrigeration compressors in complete set, heat exchangers or coils), which were used in executing contracts entered into by it.
The Company fabricates, assembles, supplies and installs in the buildings of its various customers the central type air
conditioning system; prepares the plans and specifications therefor which are distinct and different from each other; the air
conditioning units and spare parts or accessories thereof used are not the window type of air conditioner which are
manufactured, assembled and produced locally for sale to the general market; and the imported air conditioning units and
spare parts or accessories thereof are supplied and installed upon previous orders of its customers conformably with their
needs and requirements. The facts and circumstances support the theory that the Company is a contractor rather than a
manufacturer.
6. Engineering Equipment Co. subject to contractors tax (Section 191); As it imports goods not subject to sales tax, it also
liable to 30% compensation tax (Section 190 in relation to Section 18[m], but without the 50% mark up provided in Section
183[b]
The Company, being a contractor and not a manufacturer, is subject to the contractors tax prescribed by Section 191 of the
Code and not to the advance sales tax imposed by Section 185(m) in relation to Section 194 of the same Code. Since it has been
proved that the Company imported air conditioning units parts or accessories thereof for use in its construction business and
these items were never sold resold bartered or exchanged the Company should be held liable to pay taxes prescribed under
Section 190 of the Code. This compensating tax is not a tax on the importation of goods but a tax on the use of imported goods
not subject to sales tax. The Company, therefore, should be held liable to the payment of 30% compensating tax in accordance
with Section 190 of the Tax Code in relation to Section 185(m) of the same, but without the 50% mark up provided in Section
183(b).
7. Air conditioning equipment grouped into 2 classifications, unitary and central system
There is a great variety of equipment in use to do air conditioning. Some devices are designed to serve a specific type of space;
others to perform a specific function; and still others as components to be assembled into a tailor-made system to fit a
particular building. Generally, however, they may be grouped into two classifications, unitary and central system. The unitary
equipment classification includes those designs such as room air conditioner, where all of the functional components are
included in one or two packages, and installation involves only making service connection such as electricity, water and drains.
Central-station systems, often referred to as applied or built-up systems, require the installation of components at different
points in a building and their interconnection. The room air conditioner is a unitary equipment designed specifically for a room
or similar small space. It is unique among air conditioning equipment in two respects: It is in the electrical appliance
classification, and it is made by a great number of manufacturers (Engineering handbook by LC Morrow). The central type air
conditioning system is an engineering job that requires planning and meticulous layout due to the fact that usually architects
assign definite space and usually the spaces they assign are very small and of various sizes, in buildings dissimilar to existing
buildings. The window type air conditioner is a sort of compromise; it cannot control humidity to the desired level; rather the
manufacturers, by hit and miss, were able to satisfy themselves that the desired comfort within a room could be made by a
Page 22 of 87
definite setting of the machine as it comes from the factory; whereas the central type system definitely requires an intelligent
operator.
8. Celestino Co v. CIR, Advertising Associates v. Collector of customs, Manila Trading v. City of Manila not applicable
The Company did not and was not engaged in the manufacture of air conditioning units but had its services contracted for the
installation of a central system. The cases cited by the Commissioner (Advertising Associates, Inc. vs. Collector of Customs, 97,
Phil. 636; Celestino Co & Co. vs. Collector of Internal Revenue, 99 Phil. 841 and Manila Trading & Supply Co. vs. City of Manila,
56 O.G. 3629), are not in point. Neither are they applicable because the facts in all the cases cited are entirely different.
In Celestino Co, the Court held the taxpayer to be a manufacturer rather than a contractor of sash, doors and windows
manufactured in its factory. From the very start, Celestino Co intended itself to be a manufacturer of doors, windows, sashes
etc. as it did register a special trade name for its sash business and ordered company stationery carrying the bold print
ORIENTAL SASH FACTORY (CELESTINO CO AND COMPANY, PROP.) 926 Raon St., Quiapo, Manila, Tel. No. etc., Manufacturers of
All Kinds of Doors, Windows . . . Likewise, Celestino Co never put up a contractors bond as required by Article 1729 of the Civil
Code. Also, as a general rule, sash factories receive orders for doors and windows of special design only in particular cases, but
the bulk of their sales is derived from ready-made doors and windows of standard sizes for the average home, which sales
were reflected in their books of accounts totalling P118,754.69 for the period of only nine (9) months. The Court found said sum
difficult to have been derived from its few customers who placed special orders for these items.
In the present case, the Company advertised itself as Engineering Equipment and Supply Company, Machinery Mechanical
Supplies, Engineers, Contractors, 174 Marques de Comillas, Manila and not as manufacturers. It likewise paid the contractors
tax on all the contracts for the design and construction of central system. Similarly, ot did not have ready-made air conditioning
units for sale.
9. SM Lawrence Co. v. McFarland, CIR of the State of Tennessee and McCanless is on all fours with present case
The case of S.M. Lawrence Co. vs. McFarland, Commissioner of Internal Revenue of the State of Tennessee and McCanless, 355
SW 2d, 100, 101, is the one on all fours with the present case, where the cause presents the question of whether one engaged
in the business of contracting for the establishment of air conditioning system in buildings, which work requires, in addition to
the furnishing of a cooling unit, the connection of such unit with electrical and plumbing facilities and the installation of ducts
within and through walls, ceilings and floors to convey cool air to various parts of the building, is liable for sale or use tax as a
contractor rather than a retailer of tangible personal property. Appellee took the position that appellant was not engaged in the
business of selling air conditioning equipment as such but in the furnishing to its customers of completed air conditioning
systems pursuant to contract, was a contractor engaged in the construction or improvement of real property, and as such was
liable for sales or use tax as the consumer of materials and equipment used in the consummation of contracts, irrespective of
the tax status of its contractors. To transmit the warm or cool air over the buildings, the appellant installed system of ducts
running from the basic units through walls, ceilings and floors to registers. The contract called for completed air conditioning
systems which became permanent part of the buildings and improvements to the realty. The Court held the appellant a
contractor which used the materials and the equipment upon the value of which the tax herein imposed war levied in the
performance of its contracts with its customers, and that the customers did not purchase the equipment and have the same
installed.
10. Engineering Equipment had intent to misdeclare its importation as evidenced by its communications; Company liable to
50% fraud surcharge
The communications (between the Company and various suppliers such as Trane Co., Acme Industries Inc., and Owens-Corning
Fiberglass Corp.) presented as exhibits in the case were strongly indicative of the fraudulent intent of the Company to
misdeclare its importation of air conditioning units and spare parts or accessories thereof to evade payment of the 30% tax.
Since the commission of fraud is altogether too glaring, the Court cannot agree with the CTA in absolving the Company from the
50% fraud surcharge, otherwise it will be tantamount to giving premium to a plainly intolerable act of tax evasion.
11. Company liable to 25% compensation tax; Section 190 as amended
The original text of Section 190 of Commonwealth Act 466, otherwise know as the National Internal Revenue Code, as amended
by CA 503, effective on 1 October 1939, does not provide for the filing of a compensating tax return and payment of the 25%
surcharge for late payment thereof. Under the original text of Section 190 of the Tax Code, as amended by CA 503, the
contention of the Company that it is not subject to the 25% surcharge appears to be legally tenable. However, Section 190 of
the Tax Code was subsequently amended by RA 48, 253, 361, 1511 and 1612 effective 1 October 1946, 1 July 1948, 9 June 1949,
16 June 1956 and 24 August 1956 respectively, which invariably provides among others, that if any article withdrawn from the
customhouse or the post office without payment of the compensating tax is subsequently used by the importer for other
purposes corresponding entry should be made in the looks of accounts if any are kept or a written notice thereof sent to the
Collector of Internal Revenue and payment of the corresponding compensating tax made within 30 days from the date of such
entry or notice and if tax is not paid within such period the amount of the tax shall be increased by 25% the increment to be a
part of the tax, and that since the imported air conditioning units and spare parts or accessories thereof are subject to the
Page 23 of 87
compensating tax of 30% as the same were used in the construction business of Engineering, it is incumbent upon the latter to
comply with the aforequoted requirement of Section 190 of the Code, by posting in its books of accounts or notifying the
Collector of Internal Revenue that the imported articles were used for other purposes within 30 days. . . . Consequently, as the
30% compensating tax was not paid by petitioner within the time prescribed by Section 190 of the Tax Code as amended, it is
therefore subject to the 25% surcharge for delinquency in the payment of the said tax.
12. Prescription not yet set in; Prescription of tax assessment is 10 years if based on false or fraudulent return to evade tax
A review of the record reveals that the Company filed a tax return or declaration with the Bureau of Customs before it paid the
advance sales tax of 7%, and the declaration filed reveals that it did in fact misdeclare its importations. Section 332 (a) of the
Tax Code therefore is applicable. Section 332 (a) provides for the exceptions as to period of limitation of assessment and
collection of taxes, providing that (a) in the case of a false or fraudulent return with intent to evade tax or of a failure to file a
return, the tax may be assessed, or a proceeding in court for the collection of such tax may be begun without assessment at any
time within ten years after the discovery of the falsity, fraud or omission. Thus, considering the preponderance of evidence of
fraud with the intent to evade the higher rate of percentage tax due from the Company, the tax assessment was made within
the period prescribed by law and prescription had not set in against the Government.
10.
Engineering and Machinery Corp. v. CA [G.R. No. 52267. January 24, 1996.]
Third Division, Panganiban (J): 3 concur
Facts: Pursuant to the contract dated 10 September 1962 between the Engineering and Machinery Corporation (the
Corporation) and Almeda, the former undertook to fabricate, furnish and install the air-conditioning system in the latters
building along Buendia Avenue, Makati in consideration of P12,000.00. The Corporation was to furnish the materials, labor,
tools and all services required in order to so fabricate and install said system. The system was completed in 1963 and accepted
by Almeda, who paid in full the contract price. On 2 September 1965, Almeda sold the building to the National Investment and
Development Corporation (NIDC). The latter took possession of the building but on account of NIDCs noncompliance with the
terms and conditions of the deed of sale, Almeda was able to secure judicial rescission thereof. The ownership of the building
having been decreed back to Almeda, he re-acquired possession sometime in 1971. It was then that he learned from some NIDC
employees of the defects of the air-conditioning system of the building. Acting on this information, Almeda commissioned
Engineer David R. Sapico to render a technical evaluation of the system in relation to the contract with the Corporation. In his
report, Sapico enumerated the defects of the system and concluded that it was not capable of maintaining the desired room
temperature of 76F 2F.
On the basis of this report, Almeda filed on 8 May 1971 an action for damages against the Corporation with the then CFI Rizal
(Civil Case 14712). The complaint alleged that the air-conditioning system installed by the Corporation did not comply with the
agreed plans and specifications, hence, Almeda prayed for the amount of P210,000.00 representing the rectification cost,
P100,000.00 as damages and P15,000.00 as attorneys fees. The Corporation moved to dismissed the case, alleging prescription,
but which was denied by the Court. Thereafter, Almeda filed an ex-parte motion for preliminary attachment on the strength of
the Corporations own statement to the effect that it had sold its business and was no longer doing business in Manila. The trial
court granted the motion and, upon Almedas posting of a bond of P50,000.00, ordered the issuance of a writ of attachment.
In due course, and on 15 April 1974, the trial court rendered a decision, which ordered the Corporation to pay Almeda the
amount needed to rectify the faults and deficiencies of the air-conditioning system installed by the Corporation in Almedas
building, plus damages, attorneys fees and costs). Petitioner appealed to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed on 28 November
1978 the decision of the trial court. Hence, it instituted a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court.
The Supreme Court denied the petition and affirmed the decision assailed; without costs.
1. The Courts power to review
The Supreme Court reviews only errors of law in petitions for review on certiorari under Rule 45. It is not the function of this
Court to re-examine the findings of fact of the appellate court unless said findings are not supported by the evidence on record
or the judgment is based on a misapprehension of facts. The Court has consistently held that the factual findings of the trial
court, as well as the Court of Appeals, are final and conclusive and may not be reviewed on appeal. Among the exceptional
circumstances where a reassessment of facts found by the lower courts is allowed are when the conclusion is a finding
grounded entirely on speculation, surmises or conjectures; when the inference made is manifestly absurd, mistaken or
impossible; when there is grave abuse of discretion in the appreciation of facts; when the judgment is premised on a
misapprehension of facts; when the findings went beyond the issues of the case and the same are contrary to the admissions of
Page 24 of 87
both appellant and appellee. After a careful study of the case at bench, we find none of the above grounds present to justify the
re-evaluation of the findings of fact made by the courts below.
2. Contract of a piece of work defined
Article 1713 of the Civil Code defines a contract for a piece of work as by the contract for a piece of work the contractor binds
himself to execute a piece of work for the employer, in consideration of a certain price or compensation. The contractor may
either employ only his labor or skill, or also furnish the material.
3. Contract for a piece of work distinguished from a contract of sale
A contract for a piece of work, labor and materials may be distinguished from a contract of sale by the inquiry as to whether the
thing transferred is one not in existence and which would never have existed but for the order of the person desiring it . In such
case, the contract is one for a piece of work, not a sale. On the other hand, if the thing subject of the contract would have
existed and been the subject of a sale to some other person even if the order had not been given, then the contract is one of
sale.
A contract for the delivery at a certain price of an article which the vendor in the ordinary course of his business manufactures
or procures for the general market whether the same is on hand at the time or not is a contract of sale, but if the goods are to
be manufactured specially for the customer and upon his special order, and not for the general market, it is a contract for a
piece of work (Art. 1467, Civil Code). The mere fact alone that certain articles are made upon previous orders of customers will
not argue against the imposition of the sales tax if such articles are ordinarily manufactured by the taxpayer for sale to the
public. (Celestino Co. vs. Collector, 99 Phil. 8411).
To Tolentino, the distinction between the two contracts depends on the intention of the parties. Thus, if the parties intended
that at some future date an object has to be delivered, without considering the work or labor of the party bound to deliver, the
contract is one of sale. But if one of the parties accepts the undertaking on the basis of some plan, taking into account the work
he will employ personally or through another, there is a contract for a piece of work.
4. Contract in question is one for a piece of work
The contract in question is one for a piece of work. It is not the Corporations line of business to manufacture air-conditioning
systems to be sold off-the-shelf. Its business and particular field of expertise is the fabrication and installation of such systems
as ordered by customers and in accordance with the particular plans and specifications provided by the customers. Naturally,
the price or compensation for the system manufactured and installed will depend greatly on the particular plans and
specifications agreed upon with the customers.
5. Obligations of a contractor for a piece of work
The obligations of a contractor for a piece of work are set forth in Articles 1714 and 1715 of the Civil Code. Article 1714 provides
that if the contractor agrees to produce the work from material furnished by him, he shall deliver the thing produced to the
employer and transfer dominion over the thing. This contract shall be governed by the following articles as well as by the
pertinent provisions on warranty of title and against hidden defects and the payment of price in a contract of sale. Article 1715
provides that the contractor shall execute the work in such a manner that it has the qualities agreed upon and has no defects
which destroy or lessen its value or fitness for its ordinary or stipulated use. Should the work be not of such quality, the
employer may require that the contractor remove the defect or execute another work. If the contractor fails or refuses to
comply with this obligation, the employer may have the defect removed or another work executed, at the contractors cost.
6. Provisions on warranty against hidden defects
The provisions on warranty against hidden defects, referred to in Article 1714, are found in Articles 1561 and 1566. Article 1561
provides that the vendor shall be responsible for warranty against the hidden defects which the thing sold may have, should
they render it unfit for the use for which it is intended, or should they diminish its fitness for such use to such an extent that,
had the vendee been aware thereof, he would not have acquired it or would have given a lower price for it; but said vendor
shall not be answerable for patent defects or those which may be visible, or for those which are not visible if the vendee is an
expert who, by reason of his trade or profession, should have known them. Article 1566 provides that the vendor is
responsible to the vendee for any hidden faults or defects in the thing sold, even though he was not aware thereof, and
provides further that the provision shall not apply if the contrary has been stipulated, and the vendor was not aware of the
hidden faults or defects in the thing sold.
7. Remedy against violation of the warranty against hidden defects
The remedy against violations of the warranty against hidden defects is either to withdraw from the contract (rehibitory action)
or to demand a proportionate reduction of the price (accion quanti minoris), with damages in either case.
8. Prescriptive period as specified in express warranty, or in the absence of which, 4 years; Prescriptive period of 6 months
for rehibitory action is applicable only in implied warranties
While it is true that Article 1571 of the Civil Code provides for a prescriptive period of six months for a rehibitory action, a
Page 25 of 87
cursory reading of the ten preceding articles to which it refers will reveal that said rule may be applied only in case of implied
warranties; and where there is an express warranty in the contract, the prescriptive period is the one specified in the express
warranty, and in the absence of such period, the general rule on rescission of contract, which is four years (Article 1389, Civil
Code) shall apply. (Villostas v. CA)
9. Original complaint is one for arising from breach of a written contact and not a suit to enforce warranty against hidden
defects; Article 1715 in relation to Article 1144 apply, prescription in 10 years; Action not prescribed
The lower courts opined and so held that the failure of the defendant to follow the contract specifications and said omissions
and deviations having resulted in the operational ineffectiveness of the system installed makes the defendant liable to the
plaintiff in the amount necessary to rectify to put the air conditioning system in its proper operational condition to make it serve
the purpose for which the plaintiff entered into the contract with the defendant. Thus, having concluded that the original
complaint is one for damages arising from breach of a written contract, and not a suit to enforce warranties against hidden
defects, the governing law therefore is Article 1715. However, inasmuch as this provision does not contain a specific prescriptive
period, the general law on prescription, which is Article 1144 of the Civil Code, will apply. Said provision states, inter alia, that
actions upon a written contract prescribe in 10 years. Since the governing contract was executed on 10 September 1962 and
the complaint was filed on 8 May 1971, it is clear that the action has not prescribed.
10. Acceptance of the work by the employer does not relieve the contractor of liability for any defect in the work
The mere fact that Almeda accepted the work does not, ipso facto, relieve the Corporation from liability for deviations from and
violations of the written contract, as the law gives him 10 years within which to file an action based on breach thereof. As held
by the Court of Appeals, as the breach of contract consisted in appellants omission to install the equipment *sic+, parts and
accessories not in accordance with the plan and specifications provided for in the contract and the deviations made in putting
into the air-conditioning system parts and accessories not in accordance with the contract specifications, it is evident that the
defect in the installation was not apparent at the time of the delivery and acceptance of the work, considering further that
Almeda is not an expert to recognize the same. From the very nature of things, it is impossible to determine by the simple
inspection of air conditioning system installed in an 8-floor building whether it has been furnished and installed as per agreed
specifications.
11.
Puyat & Sons v. Arco Amusement [G.R. No. 47538. June 20, 1941.]
First Division, Laurel (J): 4 concur
Facts: In the year 1929, the Teatro Arco, was engaged in the business of operating cinematographs. In 1930, its name was
changed to Arco Amusement Company. About the same time, Gonzalo Puyat & Sons, Inc., in addition to its other business, was
acting as exclusive agents in the Philippines for the Starr Piano Company of Richmond, Indiana, USA, which dealt in
cinematograph equipment and machinery. Arco, desiring to equip its cinematograph with sound reproducing devices,
approached Puyat. After some negotiations, it was agreed between the parties, Puyat would, on behalf of Arco Amusement,
order sound reproducing equipment from the Star Piano Company and that Arco Amusement would pay Puyat, in addition to
the price of the equipment, 10% commission, plus all expenses, such as, freight, insurance, banking charges, cables, etc. At the
expense of the Arco, Puyat sent a cable to the Starr Piano Company, inquiring about the equipment desired and making the said
company to quote its price of $1,700 FOB factory Richmond, Indiana. Puyat informed the plaintiff of the price of $1,700, and
being agreeable to the price, Arco, in a letter dated 19 November 1929, formally authorized the order. The equipment arrived
about the end of the year 1929, and upon delivery of the same to Arco and the presentation of necessary papers, the price of
$1,700, plus the 10% commission agreed upon the plus all the expenses and charges, was duly paid by the Arco to Puyat. he
following year, another order for sound reproducing equipment was placed by Arco with Puyat, on the same terms as the first
order. The equipment under the second order arrived in due time, and the defendant was duly paid the price of $1,600 with its
10 per cent commission, and $160, for all expenses and charges. This amount of $160 does not represent actual out-of-pocket
expenses paid by Puyat, but a mere flat charge and rough estimate made by Puyat equivalent to 10% of the price of $1,600 of
the equipment.
Three years later, in connection with a civil case in Vigan, filed by one Fidel Reyes against Puyat, the officials of the Arco
discovered that the price quoted to them by Puyat with regard to their two orders was not the net price but rather the list price,
and that the defendant had obtained a discount from the Starr Piano Company. Moreover, by reading reviews and literature on
prices of machinery and cinematograph equipment, said officials of Arco were convinced that the prices charged them by the
defendant were much too high including the charges for out-of-pocket expenses. For these reasons, they sought to obtain a
reduction from Puyat or rather a reimbursement. Failing in this they brought an action with the CFI Manila.
Page 26 of 87
The trial court held that the contract between the parties was one of the outright purchase and sale, and absolved Puyat from
the complaint. The appellate court, however, held that the relation between the parties was that of agent and principal, Puyat
acting as agent of Arco in the purchase of the equipment in question, and sentenced Puyat to pay Arco alleged overpayments in
the total sum of $1,335.52 or P2,671.04, together with legal interest thereon from the date of the filing of the complaint until
said amount is fully paid, as well as to pay the costs of the suit in both instances. Hence, the petition for the issuance of a writ
of certiorari to the Court of Appeals for the purposed of reviewing its decision in civil case GR 1023.
The Supreme Court granted the writ of certiorari, reversed the decision of the appellate court, and absolved Puyat & Sons from
the complaint in GR 1023, without pronouncement regarding costs.
1. Contract, and those agreed upon, is the law between the parties; What does not appear are regarded as dealers or
traders not binding the parties
The contract is the law between the parties and should include all the things they are supposed to have been agreed upon.
What does not appear on the face of the contract should be regarded merely as dealers or traders talk, which can not bind
either party. (Nolbrook v. Conner, 56 So., 576, 11 Am. Rep., 212; Bank v. Brosscell, 120 Ill., 161; Bank v. Palmer, 47 Ill., 92; Hosser
v. Copper, 8 Allen, 334; Doles v. Merrill, 173 Mass., 411.) The letters which Arco accepted the prices of $1,700 and $1,600,
respectively, for the sound reproducing equipment subject of its contract with Puyat, are clear in their terms and admit of no
other interpretation than that Arco agreed to purchase from Puyat the equipment in question at the prices indicated which are
fixed and determinate.
2. Agency; Agent exempt from all liability in discharge of commission if in accordance with instructions received from
principal
In agency, the agent is exempted from all liability in the discharge of his commission provided he acts in accordance with the
instructions received from his principal (section 254, Code of Commerce), and the principal must indemnify the agent for all
damages which the latter may incur in carrying out the agency without fault or imprudence on his part (article 1729, Civil Code).
The fact that whatever unforseen events might have taken place unfavorable to the defendant (petitioner), such as change in
prices, mistake in their quotation, loss of the goods not covered by insurance or failure of the Starr Piano Company to properly
fill the orders as per specifications, the plaintiff (respondent) might still legally hold the defendant (petitioner) to the prices fixed
of $1,700 and $1,600 is incompatible with the pretended relation of agency between the parties.
3. Commission does not necessarily make one the agent of the other
While the letters state that Puyat was to receive 10% commission, this does not necessarily make the petitioner an agent of the
respondent, as this provision is only an additional price which the respondent bound itself to pay, and which stipulation is not
incompatible with the contract of purchase and sale. (See Quiroga vs. Parsons Hardware Co., 38 Phil., 501.)
4. Puyat & Sons already the agent of Starr Piano Company of Richmond, Indiana, in the Philippines
To hold the petitioner an agent of Arco in the purchase of equipment and machinery from the Starr Piano Company of
Richmond, Indiana, is incompatible with the admitted fact that Puyat is the exclusive agent of Starr Piano in the Philippines. It is
out of the ordinary for one to be the agent of both the vendor and the purchaser. The facts and circumstances indicated to not
point to anything but plain ordinary transaction where Arco enters into a contract transaction, a contract of purchase and sale,
with Puyat, the latter as exclusive agent of the Starr Piano Company in the United States.
5. Vendor not bound to reimburse difference of cost and sales price
A vendor is not bound to the vendee for any difference between the cost price and the sales price which represents the profit
realized by the vendor out of the transaction. This is the very essence of commerce without which merchants or middleman
would not exist.
6. Not every concealment is fraud, maybe business acumen; Buyer estopped when it agreed to conditions and price
It is well known that local dealers acting as agents of foreign manufacturers, aside from obtaining a discount from the home
office, sometimes add to the list price when they resell to local purchasers. It was apparently to guard against an exhorbitant
additional price that Arco sought to limit it to 10%t. Arco is estopped from questioning that additional price. If the respondent
later on discovers itself at the short end of a bad bargain. it alone must bear the blame, and it cannot rescind the contract, much
less compel a reimbursement of the excess price, on that ground alone. The fact that Puyat obtained more or less profit than
Arco calculated before entering into the contract of purchase and sale, is no ground for rescinding the contract of purchase and
sale, is no ground for rescinding the contract or reducing the price agreed upon between the parties. Puyat was not duty bound
to reveal the private arrangement it had with the Starr Piano Company relative to such discount to its prospective customers.
Not every concealment is fraud; and short of fraud, it were better that, within certain limits, business acumen permit of the
loosening of the sleeves and of the sharpening of the intellect of men and women in the business world.
Page 27 of 87
12.
II.
13.
Medina v. Collector of Internal Revenue [G.R. No. L-15113. January 28, 1961.]
En Banc, Reyes JBL (J): 6 concur
Facts: On 20 May 1944, Antonio Medina married Antonia Rodriguez. Before 1946, the spouses had neither property nor
business of their own. Later, however, Antonio acquired forest concessions in the municipalities of San Mariano and Palanan,
Isabela. From 1946 to 1948, the logs cut and removed by the Antonio from his concessions were sold to different persons in
Manila through his agent, Mariano Osorio. In 1949, Antonia started to engage in business as a lumber dealer, and up to around
1952, Antonio sold to her almost all the logs produced in his San Mariano concession. Antonia, in turn, sold in Manila the logs
bought from her husband through the same agent, Mariano Osorio. The proceeds were either received by Osorio for Antonio or
deposited by said agent in Antonios current account with the PNB.
On the thesis that the sales made by Antonio to his wife were null and void pursuant to the provisions of Article 1490 of the Civil
Code of the Philippines, the Collector considered the sales made by Antonia as Antonios original sales taxable under Section
186 of the National Internal Revenue Code and, therefore, imposed a tax assessment on Antonio. On 30 November 1963,
Antonio protested the assessment; however, the Collector insisted on his demand. On 9 July 1954, Antonio filed a petition for
reconsideration, revealing for the first time the existence of an alleged premarital agreement of complete separation of
properties between him and his wife, and contending that the assessment for the years 1946 to 1952 had already prescribed.
After one hearing, the Conference Staff of the Bureau of Internal Revenue eliminated the 50% fraud penalty and held that the
taxes assessed against him before 1948 had already prescribed. Based on these findings, the Collector issued a modified
assessment, demanding the payment of only P3,325.68. Antonio again requested for reconsideration, but the Collector, in his
letter of 4 April 1955, denied the same.
Antonio appealed to the Court of Tax Appeals, which rendered judgment upholding a tax assessment of the Collector of Internal
Revenue except with respect to the imposition of so-called compromise penalties, which were set aside. Hence a petition to
review the decision of the CTA.
The Supreme Court affirmed the appealed decision with cost against the petitioner.
1. No evidence proving pre-marital agreement of absolute separation between the spouses
Aside from the material inconsistencies in the testimony of petitioners witnesses, the circumstantial evidence is against
petitioners claim. (1) It appears that at the time of the marriage between the petitioner and his wife, they neither had any
property nor business of their own, as to have really urged them to enter into the supposed property agreement. (2) The
testimony that the separation of property agreement was recorded in the Registry of Property 3 months before the marriage, is
patently absurd, since such a pre-nuptial agreement could not be effective before marriage is celebrated. (3) Despite their
insistence on the existence of the ante-nuptial contract, the couple, strangely enough, did not act in accordance with its alleged
covenants; but that even during their taxable years, the ownership, usufruct, and administration of their properties and
business were in the husband. (4) Although petitioner already knew that Article 1490 prohibits sales between spouses married
under a community system, it was not until July 1954 that the allege the existence of the alleged property separation
agreement. (5) The Day Book of the Register of Deeds on which the agreement would have been entered, which was saved from
the ravages of war, did not show that the document in question was among those recorded therein.
2. Trial courts judgment on the degree of credence of witness considered seriously by the Supreme Court
When the credibility of witnesses is the one at issue, the trial courts judgment as to their degree of credence deserves serious
consideration by this Court (Collector vs. Bautista, et al., G. R. Nos. L-12250, L-12259, May 27, 1959). This is all the more true
because not every copy of the supposed agreement, particularly the one that was said to have been filed with the Clerk of Court
of Isabela, was accounted for as lost; so that, applying the best evidence rule, the court did right in giving little or no credence
to the secondary evidence to prove the due execution and contents of the alleged document (see Comments on the Rules of
Court, Moran, 1957 Ed., Vol. 3, pp. 10-12).
3. Article 7 and 10 of Code of Commerce does not exempt from the prohibition of sale between spouses under Article 1490
of the Civil Code
Article 7 and 10 of the Code of Commerce merely state, under certain conditions, a presumption that the wife is authorized to
engage in business and for the incidents that flow therefrom when she so engages therein. The transactions permitted therein
however are those entered into with strangers, and do not constitute exceptions to the prohibitory provisions of Article 1490
against sales between spouses.
4. Government always an interested party in taxable transactions
The government is always an interested party to all matters involving taxable transactions and qualified to question their
Page 29 of 87
validity or legitimacy whenever necessary to block tax evasion. It cannot be contended thus that the Collector cannot assail the
questioned sales, he being a stranger to said transactions.
5. Contracts violative of Article 1490 null and void
Contracts violative of the provisions of Article 1490 of the Civil Code are null and void (Uy Sui Pin vs. Cantollas, 70 Phil. 55; Uy
Coque vs. Sioca, 45 Phil. 43). In the present case, being void transactions, the sales made by the petitioner to his wife were
correctly disregarded by the Collector in his tax assessments that considered as the taxable sales those made by the wife
through the spouses common agent, Mariano Osorio.
6. (?) Illegally obtained documents and papers admissible to evidence; Revenue officers can require production of books of
accounts and other records from taxpayers
Illegally obtained documents and papers are admissible in evidence, if they are found to be competent and relevant to the case
(see Wong & Lee vs. Collector of Internal Revenue, 104 Phil., 469). Petitioners imputation, that the documentary evidence is
illegally seized, is vehemently denied by him, and relying on Sections 3, 9, 337 and 338 of the Tax Code and the pertinent
portions of Revenue Regulations No. V-1 and citing this Courts ruling in U.S. vs. Aviado 38 Phil., 10, the Collector maintains that
he and other internal revenue officers and agents could require the production of books of accounts and other records from a
taxpayer.
14.
conjugal assets should be deemed to retroact to the time the conjugal buildings were first constructed thereon or at the very
latest, to the time immediately before the death of one spouse that ended the conjugal partnership. They can not be considered
to have become conjugal property only as of the time their values were paid to the estate of the widow because by that time
the conjugal partnership no longer existed and it could not acquire the ownership of said properties. The acquisition by the
partnership of the properties was, under the 1943 decision, subject to the suspensive condition that their values would be
reimbursed to the widow at the liquidation of the conjugal partnership; once paid, the effects of the fulfillment of the condition
should be deemed to retroact to the date the obligation was constituted (Article 1187, New Civil Code). Thus, in the present
case, considering the foregoing premises, Canullas cannot have alienated the house and lot to Daguines since the wife had not
given her consent to the sale.
3. Contract of sale null and void for being contrary to morals and public policy
Article 1409 of the Civil Code provides contracts whose cause, object, or purpose is contrary to law, morals, good customs,
public order, or public policy are void and inexistent from the very beginning. Article 1352 also provides that contracts without
cause, or with unlawful cause, produce no effect whatsoever. The cause is unlawful if it is contrary to law, morals, good
customs, public order, or public policy. In the present case, the contract of sale was null and void for being contrary to morals
and public policy. The sale was made by a husband in favor of a concubine after he had abandoned his family and left the
conjugal home where his wife and children lived and from whence they derived their support. That sale was subversive of the
stability of the family, a basic social institution which public policy cherishes and protects.
4. Law prohibits sale and donation between husband and wife, such applies even those living together without benefit of
marriage
The law prohibits the spouses from selling property to each other subject to certain exceptions. Similarly, donations between
spouses during marriage are prohibited. And this is so because if transfers or conveyances between spouses were allowed
during marriage, that would destroy the system of conjugal partnership, a basic policy in civil law. It was also designed to
prevent the exercise of undue influence by one spouse over the other, as well as to protect the institution of marriage, which is
the cornerstone of family law. The prohibitions apply to a couple living as husband and wife without benefit of marriage,
otherwise, the condition of those who incurred guilt would turn out to be better than those in legal union. Those provisions
are dictated by public interest and their criterion must be imposed upon the will of the parties. (Buenaventura v. Bautista [CA])
5. Disabilities attached to marriage also applies to concubinage
The ruling in Buenaventura vs. Bautista [CA] was cited in Matabuena vs. Cervantes, reiterating that while Article 133 of the Civil
Code considers as void a donation between the spouses during the marriage, policy considerations of the most exigent
character as well as the dictates of morality require that the same prohibition should apply to a common-law relationship. If the
policy of the law is to prohibit donations in favor of the other consort and his descendants because of fear of undue influence
and improper pressure upon the donor, a prejudice deeply rooted in our ancient law, then there is every reason to apply the
same prohibitive policy to persons living together as husband and wife without benefit of nuptials. For it is not to be doubted
that assent to such irregular connection for thirty years bespeaks greater influence of one party over the other, so that the
danger that the law seeks to avoid is correspondingly increased. Moreover, as pointed out by Ulpian, it would not be just that
such donations should subsist, lest the conditions of those who incurred guilt should turn out to be better. So long as marriage
remains the cornerstone of our family law, reason and morality alike demand that the disabilities attached to marriage should
likewise attach to concubinage.
15.
about this; but instead gave the letter to Mrs. Luzviminda Guiang so that Guiang would advise her father. However, in the
absence of his wife Gilda Corpuz, and on 1 March 1990, Judie Corpuz sold the remaining portion of the lot and the house
thereon to Luzviminda Guiang thru a document known as Deed of Transfer of Rights (Exh. A) for a total consideration of
P30,000.00 of which P5,000.00 was to be paid in June 1990. Judie Corpuzs children Junie and Harriet signed the document as
witnesses. On 5 March 1990, obviously to cure whatever defect in Judie Corpuzs title over the lot transferred, Luzviminda
Guiang as vendee executed another agreement over the lot with Manuela Jimenez Callejo, widow of Manuel Callejo (the
original registered owner), who signed as vendor for a consideration of P9,000.00. Judie Corpuz signed as a witness to the sale.
The new sale describes the lot sold as Lot 8, Block 9, (LRC) Psd-165408. As a consequence of the sale, the Guiangs spent P600.00
for the preparation of the Deed of Transfer of Rights; P9,000.00 as the amount they paid to Mrs. Manuela Callejo, having
assumed the remaining obligation of the Corpuzes to Mrs. Callejo; P100.00; a total of P759.62 basic tax and special educational
fund on the lot; P127.50 as the total documentary stamp tax on the various documents; P535.72 for the capital gains tax; P22.50
as transfer tax; a standard fee of P17.00; certification fee of P5.00. These expenses particularly the taxes and other expenses
towards the transfer of the title to the Guiangs were incurred for the whole Lot 9, Block 8, (LRC) Psd-165409.
On 11 March 1990, Gilda Corpuz returned home. She gathered her children, who were staying in different households, together
and stayed at their house. Her husband was nowhere to be found. She was informed by her children that their father had a wife
already. For staying in their house sold by her husband, Gilda was complained against by the Guiangs before the Barangay
authorities of Barangay General Paulino Santos (Bo. 1), Koronadal, South Cotabato, for trespassing (Barangay Case 38). On 16
March 1990, the parties thereat signed a document known as amicable settlement requiring the Corpuzes to leave the house
voluntarily on or before 7 April 1990, without any charge. Believing that she had received the shorter end of the bargain, Gilda
approached the Barangay Captain for the annulment of the settlement. Annulment not having been made, Gilda stayed put in
her house and lot. The Guiangs followed thru the amicable settlement with a motion for the execution of the amicable
settlement, filing the same with the MTC Koronadal, South Cotabato. The proceedings [are] still pending before the said court,
with the filing of the instant suit.
On 28 May 1990, Gilda Corpuz filed an Amended Complaint against her husband Judie Corpuz and the Guiangs. The said
Complaint sought the declaration of a certain deed of sale, which involved the conjugal property of private respondent and her
husband, null and void. On 9 September 1992, The RTC Koronodal, South Cotabato (Branch 25) rendered a decision in favor of
Gilda Corpuz, recognizing her lawful and valid ownership and possession over the remaining portion of the lot, declaring the
deed of transfer of rights and the amicable settlement null and void, and ordering Gilda Corpuz to reimburse the Guiangs the
amount of P9,000 corresponding to the payment made by the Guiangs to Callejo for the unpaid balance and another P379.62
representing of the amount of realty taxes paid by the Guiangs, both with legal interests thereon computed from the finality
of the decision; without pronouncement as to costs. Dissatisfied, the Guiangs filed an appeal with the Court of Appeals. On 30
January 1996, the appellate court affirmed the decision of the lower court. Their motion for reconsideration was also denied. A
petition for review was before the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court denied the petition, and affirmed the challenged decision and resolution; with costs against the Guiangs.
1. Valid contract, elements
To constitute a valid contract, the Civil Code requires the concurrence of the following elements: (1) cause, (2) object, and (3)
consent. The last element is indubitably absent in the present case, thus the nullity of the contract of sale is premised on the
absence of private respondents consent.
2. Contract void for lack of consent by the other spouse
The consent of one spouse to the contract of sale of the conjugal property was totally inexistent or absent. This being the case,
said contract properly falls within the ambit of Article 124 of the Family Code. Article 124 of the Family Code provides that the
administration and enjoyment of the conjugal partnership property shall belong to both spouses jointly. In case of
disagreement, the husbands decision shall prevail, subject to recourse to the court by the wife for proper remedy, which must
be availed of within five years from the date of the contract implementing such decision and that in the event that one spouse
is incapacitated or otherwise unable to participate in the administration of the conjugal properties, the other spouse may
assume sole powers of administration. These powers do not include the powers of disposition or encumbrance which must have
the authority of the court or the written consent of the other spouse. In the absence of such authority or consent, the
disposition or encumbrance shall be void. However, the transaction shall be construed as a continuing offer on the part of the
consenting spouse and the third person, and may be perfected as a binding contract upon the acceptance by the other spouse
or authorization by the court before the offer is withdrawn by either or both offerors. (165a)
3. Amendatory effect of Article 124 FC to Article 166 NCC in relation to Article 173 NCC
Under Article 166 of the Civil Code, the husband cannot generally alienate or encumber any real property of the conjugal
partnership without the wifes consent. The alienation or encumbrance if so made however is not null and void. It is merely
voidable. The offended wife may bring an action to annul the said alienation or encumbrance. Thus, the provision of Article 173
Page 32 of 87
of the Civil Code of the Philippines provides that the wife may, during the marriage and within ten years from the transaction
questioned, ask the courts for the annulment of any contract of the husband entered into without her consent, when such
consent is required, or any act or contract of the husband which tends to defraud her or impair her interest in the conjugal
partnership property. Should the wife fail to exercise this right, she or her heirs after the dissolution of the marriage, may
demand the value of property fraudulently alienated by the husband. The particular provision giving the wife 10 years during
the marriage to annul the alienation or encumbrance was not carried over to the Family Code. It is thus clear that any alienation
or encumbrance made after 3 August 1988 when the Family Code took effect by the husband of the conjugal partnership
property without the consent of the wife is null and void.
4. Execution of document amicable settlement does not affect void character of deed of sale
The fraud and the intimidation referred to by petitioners were perpetrated in the execution of the document embodying the
amicable settlement. Gilda Corpuz alleged during trial that barangay authorities made her sign said document through
misrepresentation and coercion. In any event, its execution does not alter the void character of the deed of sale between the
husband and the Guiangs. The fact remains that such contract was entered into without the wifes consent.
5. Void contract cannot be ratified
By the specific provision of the law [Article 1390, Civil Code], the Deed of Transfer of Rights cannot be ratified, even by an
amicable settlement. The participation by some barangay authorities in the amicable settlement cannot otherwise validate an
invalid act. Moreover, it cannot be denied that the amicable settlement entered into by Gilda Corpuz and the Guiangs is a
contract. It is a direct offshoot of the Deed of Transfer of Rights. By express provision of law (Article 1422), such a contract is
also void. Article 1422 of the Civil Code provides that a contract which is the direct result of a previous illegal contract, is also
void and inexistent.
6. Amicable settlement cannot be considered a continuing offer
Neither can the amicable settlement be considered a continuing offer that was accepted and perfected by the parties,
following the last sentence of Article 124. The order of the pertinent events is clear: after the sale, the Guiangs filed a complaint
for trespassing against Gilda Corpuz, after which the barangay authorities secured an amicable settlement and the Guiangs
filed before the MTC a motion for its execution. The settlement, however, does not mention a continuing offer to sell the
property or an acceptance of such a continuing offer. Its tenor was to the effect that the Guiangs would vacate the property. By
no stretch of the imagination, can the Court interpret this document as the acceptance mentioned in Article 124.
16.
by the certificate of the treasurer.The land claimed by Batiller as his own was surveyed on 6-7 June 1956, and a plan approved
by Director of Lands on 15 November 1956 was issued, identified as Psu 155241.
On 22 April 1960, Rubias filed a forcible Entry and Detainer case against Batiller in the Justice of the Peace Court of Barotac
Viejo, Iloilo. On May 1961 and after trial, the Municipal Court of Barotac Viejo decided the case in favor of the Batiller. Rubias
appealed from the decision of the Municipal Court of Barotac Viejo to the CFI Iloilo. On 26 November 1964 and after the trial,
the CFI decided the case likewise in favor of Batiller, holding that he has better right to possess the land in question having
been in the actual possession thereof under a claim of title many years before Militante sold the land to Rubias.
On 31 August 1964, Rubias filed a suit to recover the ownership and possession of certain portions of lot under Psu-99791,
bought from his father-in-law, Francisco Militante in 1956, against its present occupant Batiller, who allegedly entered said
portions of the lot in 1945 and in 1959. Rubias prayed also for damages and attorneys fees. On 17 August 1965, the CFI
dismissed the case, the court therein practically agreeing that the contract between Rubias and Militante was null and void.
Rubias filed a motion for reconsideration, which was likewise denied by the lower court on 14 January 1966. Thereafter, Rubias
filed an appeal before the Court of Appeals, which certified said appeal to the Supreme as involving purely legal questions.
The Supreme Court affirmed the order of dismissal appealed, with costs against Rubias.
1. Pre-trial practically amounted to a full dress trial when parties agreed and stipulated on facts and submitted their
respective documentary exhibits
The pre-trial conference held by the trial court at which the parties with their counsel agreed and stipulated on the material and
relevant facts and submitted their respective documentary exhibits as referred to in the pre-trial order, practically amounted to
a full dress trial which placed on record all the facts and exhibits necessary for adjudication of the case. Rubias evidence dealing
with the source of the alleged right and title of Militantes predecessors are already made of record. The chain of Militantes
alleged title and right to the land allegedly tracing back to Demontano in the land registration case and was rejected by the Iloilo
land registration court, the decision of which was affirmed by final judgment by the Court of Appeals. Batillers evidence dealing
with his and his ancestors continuous, open, public and peaceful possession in the concept of owner of the land and the
Director of Lands approval of his survey plan thereof, are likewise already duly established facts of record, in the land
registration case as well as in the ejectment case wherein the Iloilo CFI recognized the superiority of Batillers right to the land
as against Rubias. Therefore, the lower court did not err in dismissing Rubias complaint upon Batillers motion after the pretrial.
2. Rubias had no cause of action
Rubias complaint, to be declared absolute owner of the land and to be restored to possession thereof with damages, was bereft
of any factual or legal basis. The CAs final judgment affirming the dismissal of Militantes application of registration made it
conclusive that Militante lack rightful claim or title to the land. There was no right or title to the land that could be transferred
or sold by Militantes purported sale in favor of Rubias in 1956.
3. Purchase of a lawyer of a property in litigation prohibited; Contract void and cannot be ratified
The purchase by a lawyer of the property in litigation from his client is categorically prohibited by Article 1491, paragraph (5) of
the Philippine Civil Code (The following persons cannot acquire any purchase, even at a public or judicial auction, either in
person or through the mediation of another xxx [5] Justices, judges, prosecuting attorneys, clerks of superior and inferior courts,
and other officers and employees connected with the administration of justice, the property and rights in litigation or levied
upon an execution before the court within whose jurisdiction or territory their exercise their respective functions; this
prohibition includes the act of acquiring by assignment and shall apply to lawyers, with respect to the property and rights which
may be the object of any litigation in which they may take part by virtue of their profession.) and that consequently, Rubias
purchase of the property in litigation from his client(and father-in-law) was void and could produce no legal effect, by virtue of
Article 1409, paragraph (7) of our Civil Code which provides that contracts expressly prohibited or declared void by law are
inexistent and void from the beginning and that (T)hese contracts cannot be ratified. Neither can the right to set up the
defense of illegality be waived.
4. Wolfson v. Estate of Martinez superceded by case of Director of Lands v. Abagat
The 1911 case of Wolfson v. Estate of Martinez which held that a sale of property in litigation to the party litigants lawyer its
not void but voidable at the election of the vendor has been superseded by the 1929 case of Director of Lands vs. Abagat. In
this later case of Abagat, the Court expressly cited two antecedent cases involving the same transaction of purchase of property
in litigation by the lawyer which was expressly declared invalid under Article 1459 of the Civil Code of Spain (of which Article
1491 of our Civil Code of the Philippines is the counterpart) upon challenge thereof not by the vendor-client but by the adverse
parties against whom the lawyer was seeking to enforce his rights as vendee thus acquired. Thus, the Court in Abagat affirmed
the invalidity and nullity of the lawyers purchase of the land in litigation from his client, ordered the issuance of a writ of
possession for the return of the land by the lawyer to the adverse parties without reimbursement of the price paid by him and
Page 34 of 87
other expenses, and ruled that the purchaser-lawyer is a lawyer and is presumed to know the law. He must, therefore, from the
beginning, have been well aware of the defect in his title and is, consequently, a possessor in bad faith.
5. Prohibitions under Article 1491 NCC (Article 1459 Spanish Civil Code)
Article 1491 of our Civil Code (like Article 1459 of the Spanish Civil Code) prohibits in its six paragraphs certain persons, by
reason of the relation of trust or their peculiar control over the property, from acquiring such property in their trust or control
either directly or indirectly and even at a public or judicial auction, as follows: (1) guardians; (2) agents; (3) administrators; (4)
public officers and employees; judicial officers and employees, prosecuting attorneys, and lawyers; and (6) others especially
disqualified by law.
6. Wolfson case decided in line with Manresas view
In Wolfson, the Court expressly reserved decision on whether or not the judgment in question actually falls within the
prohibition of the article and held only that the sales voidability can not be asserted by one not a property to the transaction
or his representative, citing from Manresa that (C)onsidering the question from the point of view of the civil law, the view
taken by the code, the Court must limit ourselves to classifying as void all acts done contrary to the express prohibition of the
statute. Now then: As the code does not recognize such nullity by the mere operation of law, the nullity of the acts hereinbefore
referred to must be asserted by the person having the necessary legal capacity to do so and decreed by a competent court.
7. Manresas view not applicable under the NCC; Spanish Supreme Court and modern authors have veered away from
Manresa on this point
The reason given by Manresa in considering such prohibited acquisitions under Article 1459 of the Spanish Civil Code as merely
voidable at the instance and option of the vendor and not void is that the Code does not recognize such nullity de pleno
derecho. This is no longer true and applicable to the Philippine Civil Code which does recognize the absolute nullity of contracts
whose cause, object, or purpose is contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order or public policy or which are expressly
prohibited or declared void by law and declares such contracts inexistent and void from the beginning.
The Supreme Court of Spain and modern authors have likewise veered from Manresas view of the Spanish codal provision
itself. In its sentencia of 11 June 1966, the Supreme Court of Spain ruled that the prohibition of Article 1459 of the Spanish Civil
Code is based on public policy, that violation of the prohibition contract cannot be validated by confirmation or ratification. The
criterion of nullity of such prohibited contracts under Article 1459 of the Spanish Civil Code (Article 1491 of our Civil Code) as a
matter of public order and policy as applied by the Supreme Court of Spain to administrators and agents should certainly apply
with greater reason to judges, judicial officers, fiscals and lawyers under paragraph 5 of the codal article. [also see viewpoints of
Gullon Ballesteros in Curso de Derecho Civil (Contratos Especiales 1968), of Perez Gonzales, and of Castan]
8. Nullity of prohibited contracts definite and permanent and cannot be cured by ratification; If object has subsequently
become legal, such may be subject to second contract
The nullity of prohibited contracts is definite and permanent and cannot be cured by ratification. The public interest and public
policy remain paramount and do not permit of compromise or ratification. In this aspect, the permanent disqualification of
public and judicial officers and lawyers grounded on public policy differs from the first three cases of guardians, agents and
administrators (Article 1491, Civil Code), as to whose transactions, it has been opined that they may be ratified by means of
and in the form of a new contract, in which case its validity shall be determined only by the circumstances at the time of
execution of such new contract. The causes of nullity which have ceased to exist cannot impair the validity of the new contract.
Thus, the object which was illegal at the time of the first contract, may have already become lawful at the time of the
ratification or second contract; or the service which was impossible may have become possible; or the intention which could not
be ascertained may have been clarified by the parties. The ratification or second contract would then be valid from its
execution; however, it does not retroact to the date of the first contract.
9. Who may invoke the inexistence of contract; Proper action to be filed
Tolentino, in his treaties on the Civil Code, stated that (as to persons affected) any person may invoke the inexistence of the
contract whenever juridical effects founded thereon are asserted against him. Thus, if there has been a void transfer of
property, the transferor can recover it by the accion reivindicatoria; and any possessor may refuse to deliver it to the transferee,
who cannot enforce the contract. Creditors may attach property of the debtor which has been alienated by the latter under a
void contract; a mortgagee can allege the inexistence of a prior encumbrance; a debtor can assert the nullity of an assignment
of credit as a defense to an action by the assignee.
He further stated that (as to action on contract) even when the contract is void or inexistent, an action is necessary to declare
its inexistence, when it has already been fulfilled. Nobody can take the law into his own hands; hence, the intervention of the
competent court is necessary to declare the absolute nullity of the contract and to decree the restitution of what has been given
under it. The judgment, however, will retroact to the very day when the contract was entered into. If the void contract is still
fully executory, no party need bring an action to declare its nullity; but if any party should bring an action to enforce it, the other
party can simply set up the nullity as a defense.
Page 35 of 87
17.
Philippine Trust Co. v. Roldan [G.R. No. L-8477. May 31, 1956.]
En Banc, Bengzon (J): 8 concur
Facts: 17 parcels located in Guiguinto, Bulacan, were part of the properties inherited by Mariano L. Bernardo from his father,
the late Marcelo Bernardo. In view of his minority, guardianship proceedings were instituted, wherein Socorro Roldan, surviving
spouse of Bernardo and stepmother to Mariano, was appointed his guardian. On 27 July 1947, Roldan filed in said guardianship
proceedings (Special Proceeding 2485, Manila), a motion asking for authority to sell as guardian the 17 parcels for the sum of
P14,700 to Dr. Fidel C. Ramos, her brother-in-law, the purpose of the sale being allegedly to invest the money in a residential
house, which the minor desired to have on Tindalo Street, Manila. The motion was granted. On 5 August 1947, Roldan, as
guardian, executed the proper deed of sale in favor of Ramos, and on 12 August 1947 obtained a judicial confirmation of the
sale. On 13 August 1947, Ramos executed in favor of Roldan, a deed of conveyance covering the same 17 parcels, for the sum of
P15,000. On 21 October 1947, Roldan sold 4 parcels out of the 17 to Emilio Cruz for P3,000, reserving to herself the right to
repurchase.
The Philippine Trust Company replaced Roldan as guardian on 10 August 1948. Two months later, the Company, as guardian,
filed before the CFI Manila a complaint against Roldan to annul 2 contracts regarding 17 parcels of land claiming that the stepmother in effect, sold to herself, the properties of her ward, and the sale should be annulled for violating Article 1459 of the
Civil Code prohibiting the guardian from purchasing the property of her ward. The trial court upheld the contracts but allowing
the minor to repurchase all the parcels by paying P15,000, within 1 year. The CA affirmed the judgment. Hence, the appeal.
The Supreme Court annulled the 3 contracts of sale in question; declared the minor as the owner of the 17 parcels of land, with
the obligation to return to Roldan the price of P14,700 with legal interest from 12 August 1947; ordered Roldan and Emilio Cruz
to deliver said parcels of land to the minor; required Roldan to pay him beginning with 1947 the fruits, which her attorney
admits, amounted to P1,522 a year; authorized the minor to deliver directly to Emilio Cruz, out of the price of P14,700 above
mentioned, the sum of P3,000; and charged appellees with the costs.
1. Guardianship is a trust of the highest order; Article 1459 applies
Remembering the general doctrine that guardianship is a trust of the highest order, and the trustee cannot be allowed to have
any inducement to neglect his wards interest and in line with the courts suspicion whenever the guardian acquires the wards
property, the Court has no hesitation to declare that, in the eyes of the law, the guardian (Roldan) took by purchase her wards
parcels (thru Dr. Ramos), and that Article 1459 of the Civil Code applies.
2. Annulment of the transaction, even if no collusion is proved, would uphold equity and justice
The guardian may have acted without malice; there may have been no previous agreement between her and Dr. Ramos to the
effect that the latter would buy the lands for her but the fact remains that she acquired her proteges properties, through her
brother-in-law. That she planned to get them for herself at the time of selling them to Dr. Ramos, may be deduced from the
very short time between the two sales. The temptation which naturally besets a guardian so circumstanced, necessitates the
annulment of the transaction, even if no actual collusion is proved (so hard to prove) between such guardian and the
intermediate purchaser. This would uphold a sound principle of equity and justice.
3. Rodriguez v. Mactal does not apply; length of time different, sufficient to dispel suspicion
In Rodrigues v. Mactal, where the guardian Mactal sold in January 1926 the property of her ward to Silverio Chioco, and in
March 1928 she bought it from Chioco, the Court declared the in order to bring the sale in this case within the part of Article
1459, quoted above, it is essential that the proof submitted establish some agreement between Silverio Chioco and Trinidad
Mactal to the effect that Chioco should buy the property for the benefit of Mactal. If there was no such agreement, either
express or implied, then the sale cannot be set aside. The subsequent purchase of Mactal, in said case, cannot be annulled as
there was no proof of a previous agreement between Chioco and her. Two years had elapsed between the sales, and such
period of time was sufficient to dispel the natural suspicion of the guardians motives or actions. In the present case, only 1
week had elapsed. And if we were technical, only 1 day had elapsed from the judicial approval of the sale (August 12), to the
purchase by the guardian (August 13).
4. Minor on losing end in the transaction
The calculation, that the investment in the Tindalo Street house produces to the minor the rentals of P2,400 yearly while the
parcels of land yield for the stepmother an average o P1,522 yearly, does not include the price of the lot on which the house
was erected. Estimating such lot at P14,700 only, (ordinarily the city lot is more valuable than the building) the result is that the
price paid for the 17 parcels gave the minor an income of only P1,200 a year, whereas the harvest from the seventeen parcels
netted his step-mother a yearly profit of P1,522.00. The minor was on the losing end.
Page 36 of 87
III.
fruits of Lot 21, and not for the lease of the land itself. In clear and express terms, the document defines the object of the
contract thus: the herein sale of coconut fruits are for all the fruits on the aforementioned parcel of land during the years from
15 September 1968; up to 1 January 1976.
4. Contract of sale valid, essential elements valid
The document in question expresses a valid contract of sale as it has the essential elements of a contract of sale as defined
under Article 1458 of the New Civil Code. Article 1458 provides that by the contract of sale one of the contracting parties
obligates himself to transfer the ownership of and to deliver a determinate thing, and the other to pay therefor a price certain in
money or its equivalent, and that a contract of sale may be absolute or conditional. The subject matter of the contract of sale
are the fruits of the coconut trees on the land during the years from 15 September 1968 up to 1 January 1976, which subject
matter is a determinate thing.
5. Things having potential existence may be the object of the contract of sale
Under Article 1461 of the New Civil Code, things having a potential existence may be the object of the contract of sale. A valid
sale may be made of a thing, which though not yet actually in existence, is reasonably certain to come into existence as the
natural increment or usual incident of something already in existence, and then belonging to the vendor, and the title will vest
in the buyer the moment the thing comes into existence (Emerson vs. European Railway Co., 67 Me., 387; Cutting vs. Packers
Exchange, 21 Am. St. Rep., 63). Things of this nature are said to have a potential existence. A man may sell property of which he
is potentially and not actually possessed. He may make a valid sale of the wine that a vineyard is expected to produce; or the
grain a fieldmay grow in a given time; or the milk a cow may yield during the coming year; or the wool that shall thereafter grow
upon sheep; or what may be taken at the next case of a fishermans net; or fruits to grow; or young animals not yet in existence;
or the good will of a trade and the like. The thing sold, however, must be specific and identified. They must be also owned at the
time by the vendor (Hull vs. Hull, 48 Conn., 250; 40 Am. Rep., 165) pp. 522-523). Thus, pending crops which have potential
existence may be the subject matter of sale (Sibal vs. Valdez, 50 Phil. 512).
6. Contract of sale and lease of things distinguished
The essential difference between a contract of sale and a lease of things is that the delivery of the thing sold transfers
ownership, while in lease no such transfer of ownership results as the rights of the lessee are limited to the use and enjoyment
of the thing leased. In the present case, the lower courts holding that the contract in question fits the definition of a lease of
things wherein one of the parties binds himself to give to another the enjoyment or use of a thing for a price certain and for a
period which may be definite or indefinite (Art. 1643, Civil Code of the Philippines) is erroneous.
7. Contract of lease, enjoyment of property
Article 1543 of the Civil Code defines the contract of lease as the giving or the concession of the enjoyment or use of a thing for
a specified time and fixed price, and since such contract is a form of enjoyment of the property, it is evident that it must be
regarded as one of the means of enjoyment referred to in said Article 398, inasmuch as the terms enjoyment, use, and benefit
involve the same and analogous meaning relative to the general utility of which a given thing is capable. (104 Jurisprudencia
Civil, 443; Rodriguez vs. Borromeo, 43 Phil. 479, 490).
8. Transfer of accessory does not transfer principal
The possession and enjoyment of the coconut trees cannot be said to be the possession and enjoyment of the land itself
because these rights are distinct and separate from each other, the first pertaining to the accessory or improvements (coconut
trees) while the second, to the principal (the land). A transfer of the accessory or improvement is not a transfer of the principal.
It is the other way around, the accessory follows the principal. In the present case, the sale of the nuts cannot be interpreted
nor construed to be a lease of the trees, much less extended further to include the lease of the land itself. In cannot be said that
the possession and enjoyment of the coconut trees to be the possession and enjoyment of the land itself because the lessee in
order to enjoy his right under the contract, he actually takes possession of the land, at least during harvest time, gathers all of
the fruits of the coconut trees in the land, and gains exclusive use thereof without the interference or intervention of the lessor.
9. Grantee under RA 477 not prohibited to sell the natural/industrial fruits of the land awarded to him
The grantee of a parcel of land under RA 477 is not prohibited from alienating or disposing of the natural and/or industrial fruits
of the land awarded to him, pursuant to the terms of the first paragraph of Section 8. What the law expressly disallows is the
encumbrance or alienation of the land itself or any of the permanent improvements thereon. Permanent improvements on a
parcel of land are things incorporated or attached to the property in a fixed manner, naturally or artificially. They include
whatever is built, planted or sown on the land which is characterized by fixity, immutability or immovability. Houses, buildings,
machinery, animal houses, trees and plants would fall under the category of permanent improvements, the alienation or
encumbrance of which is prohibited by RA 477. While coconut trees are permanent improvements of a land, their nuts are
natural or industrial fruits which are meant to be gathered or severed from the trees, to be used, enjoyed, sold or otherwise
disposed of by the owner of the land. Hence, the grantee of Lot 21 had the right and prerogative to sell the coconut fruits of the
trees growing on the property.
Page 38 of 87
19.
thereon, to the University of the Philippines (Iloilo branch). The site donated consisted of Lots 1214-B, 1214-C and 1214-D, with
a total area of 15,350 sq. m., more or less. Sometime in 1952, the University of the Philippines enclosed the site donated with a
wire fence. Pio Sian Melliza thereupon made representations, thru his lawyer, with the city authorities for payment of the value
of the lot (Lot 1214-B). No recovery was obtained, because as alleged by Pio Sian Melliza, the City did not have funds. The
University of the Philippines, meanwhile, obtained Transfer Certificate of Title No. 7152 covering the three lots, Nos. 1214-B,
1214-C and 1214-D.
On 10 December 1955 Pio Sian Melizza filed an action in the CFI Iloilo against Iloilo City and the University of the Philippines for
recovery of Lot 1214-B or of its value. After stipulation of facts and trial, the CFI rendered its decision on 15 August 1957,
dismissing the complaint. Said court ruled that the instrument executed by Juliana Melliza in favor of Iloilo municipality included
in the conveyance Lot 1214-B, and thus it held that Iloilo City had the right to donate Lot 1214-B to UP. Pio Sian Melliza
appealed to the Court of Appeals. On 19 May 1965, the CA affirmed the interpretation of the CFI that the portion of Lot 1214
sold by Juliana Melliza was not limited to the 10,788 square meters specifically mentioned but included whatever was needed
for the construction of avenues, parks and the city hall site. Nonetheless, it ordered the remand of the case for reception of
evidence to determine the area actually taken by Iloilo City for the construction of avenues, parks and for city hall site. Hence,
the appeal by Pio San Melliza to the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court affirmed the decision appealed from insofar as it affirms that of the CFI, and dismissed the complaint;
without costs.
1. Interpretation of contract involves question of law
The interpretation of the public instrument dated 15 November 1932 involves a question of law, since the contract is in the
nature of law as between the parties and their successors in interest.
2. Intent of the parties as to the object of the public instrument
The paramount intention of the parties was to provide Iloilo municipality with lots sufficient or adequate in area for the
construction of the Iloilo City hall site, with its avenues and parks. For this matter, a previous donation for this purpose between
the same parties was revoked by them, because of inadequacy of the area of the lot donated. Said instrument described 4
parcels of land by their lot numbers and area; and then it goes on to further describe, not only those lots already mentioned,
but the lots object of the sale, by stating that said lots were the ones needed for the construction of the city hall site, avenues
and parks according to the Arellano plan. If the parties intended merely to cover the specified lots (Lots 2, 5, 1214-C and 1214D), there would scarcely have been any need for the next paragraph, since these lots were already plainly and very clearly
described by their respective lot number and areas. Said next paragraph does not really add to the clear description that was
already given to them in the previous one. It is therefore the more reasonable interpretation to view it as describing those other
portions of land contiguous to the lots that, by reference to the Arellano plan, will be found needed for the purpose at hand, the
construction of the city hall site.
3. Requirement, that sale must have a determinate thing as object, is fulfilled if object of sale is capable of being made
determinate at the time of the contract
The requirement of the law that a sale must have for its object a determinate thing, is fulfilled as long as, at the time the
contract is entered into, the object of the sale is capable of being made determinate without the necessity of a new or further
agreement between the parties (Art. 1273, old Civil Code; Art. 1460, New Civil Code). The specific mention of some of the lots
plus the statement that the lots object of the sale are the ones needed for city hall site; avenues and parks, according to the
Arellano plan, sufficiently provides a basis, as of the time of the execution of the contract, for rendering determinate said lots
without the need of a new and further agreement of the parties.
4. Arellano plan in existence since 1928; Area of land needed for the city hall site known
The Arellano plan was in existence as early as 1928. Tthe previous donation of land for city hall site on 27 November 1931 was
revoked on 6 March 1932 for being inadequate in area under said Arellano plan. The area needed under that plan for city hall
site was then already known; that the specific mention of some of the lots covered by the sale in effect fixed the corresponding
location of the city hall site under the plan; that, therefore, considering the said lots specifically mentioned in the public
instrument, and the projected city hall site, with its area, as then shown in the Arellano plan (Exhibit 2), it could be determined
which, and how much of the portions of land contiguous to those specifically named, were needed for the construction of the
city hall site.
5. Lot 1214-B is contiguous to Lot 1214-C and 1214-D, and is in the heart of the city hall site
Lot 1214-B is contiguous to Lots 1214-C and 1214-D, admittedly covered by the public instrument. It is stipulated that, after
execution of the contract, the Municipality of Iloilo possessed it together with the other lots sold. It sits practically in the heart
of the city hall site.
Page 40 of 87
6. Pio Sian Melliza a notary public and thus aware of the terms of the public instrument
Pio Sian Melliza, from the stipulation of facts, was the notary public of the public instrument. As such, he was aware of its terms.
Said instrument was also registered with the Register of Deeds and such registration was annotated at the back of the
corresponding title certificate of Juliana Melliza. From these stipulated facts, it can be inferred that Pio Sian Melliza knew of the
aforesaid terms of the instrument or is chargeable with knowledge of them; that knowing so, he should have examined the
Arellano plan in relation to the public instrument; that furthermore, he should have taken notice of the possession first by the
Municipality of Iloilo, then by the City of Iloilo and later by the University of the Philippines of Lot 1214-B as part of the city hall
site conveyed under that public instrument, and raised proper objections thereto if it was his position that the same was not
included in the same.
7. Principles of civil law, as well as laches, estoppel and equity applied; Lot included in conveyance
For 20 long years, Pio Sian Melliza and his predecessors-in-interest, did not object to said possession, nor exercise any act of
possession over Lot 1214-B. Applying, therefore, principles of civil law, as well as laches, estoppel, and equity, said lot must
necessarily be deemed included in the conveyance in favor of Iloilo municipality, now Iloilo City.
20.
perfected, be governed by the provisions of articles 1096 and 1182. There is a perfected sale with regard to the thing
whenever the article of sale has been physically segregated from all other articles.
6. Perfected sale; Cases
In McCullough vs. Aenlle & Co. (3 Phil 285), a particular tobacco factory with its contents was held sold under a contract which
did not provide for either delivery of the price or of the thing until a future time. In Barretto vs. Santa Marina (26 Phil 200),
specified shares of stock in a tobacco factory were held sold by a contract which deferred delivery of both the price and the
stock until the latter had been appraised by an inventory of the entire assets of the company. In Borromeo vs. Franco (5 Phil.
Rep., 49) a sale of a specific house was held perfected between the vendor and vendee, although the delivery of the price was
withheld until the necessary documents of ownership were prepared by the vendee. In Tan Leonco vs. Go Inqui (8 Phil. Rep.,
531) the plaintiff had delivered a quantity of hemp into the warehouse of the defendant. The defendant drew a bill of exchange
in the sum of P800, representing the price which had been agreed upon for the hemp thus delivered. Prior to the presentation
of the bill for payment, in said case, the hemp was destroyed. Whereupon, the defendant suspended payment of the bill. It was
held that the hemp having been already delivered, the title had passed and the loss was the vendees. It is our purpose to
distinguish the case at bar from all these cases.
7. Contract in present case merely an executory agreement: a promise of sale and not a sale
The contract in the present case was merely an executory agreement; a promise of sale and not a sale. As there was no
perfected sale, it is clear that articles 1452, 1096, and 1182 are not applicable. The agreement upon the thing which was the
object of the contract was not within the meaning of article 1450. Sugar is one of the staple commodities of this country. For the
purpose of sale its bulk is weighed, the customary unit of weight being denominated a picul.' There was no delivery under the
contract. If called upon to designate the article sold, it is clear that Gonzales could only say that it was sugar. He could only use
this generic name for the thing sold. There was no appropriation of any particular lot of sugar. Neither party could point to
any specific quantity of sugar.
8. Present case different from cases cited with perfected contracts
The contract in the present case is different from the contracts discussed in the cases referred to. In the McCullough case, for
instance, the tobacco factory which the parties dealt with was specifically pointed out and distinguished from all other tobacco
factories. So, in the Barretto case, the particular shares of stock which the parties desired to transfer were capable of
designation. In the Tan Leonco case, where a quantity of hemp was the subject of the contract, it was shown that quantity had
been deposited in a specific warehouse, and thus set apart and distinguished from all other hemp.
9. American jurisprudence; Executory contracts
In Witt Shoe Co. vs. Seegars & Co. (122 La., 145; 47 Sou., 444), a contract was entered into by a traveling salesman for a quantity
of shoes, the sales having been made by sample. Since Mitchell was offering to sell by sample shoes, part of which had not been
manufactured and the rest of which were incorporated in Witt Shoe Co.s stock in Lynchburg, Va., it was impossible that he and
Seegars & Co. should at that time have agreed upon the specific objects, the title to which was to pass, and hence there could
have been no sale.
In State vs. Shields, et al. (110 La., 547, 34 Sou., 673), it was held that in receiving an order for a quantity of goods, of a kind and
at a price agreed on, to be supplied from a general stock, warehoused at another place, the agent receiving the order merely
enters into an executory contract for the sale of the goods, which does not divest or transfer the title of any determinate object,
and which becomes effective for that purpose only when specific goods are thereafter appropriated to the contract; and, in the
absence of a more specific agreement on the subject, that such appropriation takes place only when the goods as ordered are
delivered to the public carriers at the place from which they are to be shipped, consigned to the person by whom the order is
given, at which time and place, therefore, the sale is perfected and the title passes.
10. American jurisprudence: Recovery of payment; Applicability to present case
In Larue & Prevost vs. Rugely, Blair & Co. (10 La. Ann., 242), the defendants therein had made a contract for the sale, by weight,
of a lot of cotton, had received $3,000 on account of the price, and had given an order for its delivery, which had been
presented to the purchaser, and recognized by the press in which the cotton was stored, but that the cotton had been
destroyed by fire before it was weighed. It was held that it was still at the risk of the seller, and that the buyer was entitled to
recover the $3,000 paid on account of the price. Similarly, in the present case, Gonzales having defaulted in his engagement, Yu
Tek & Co. is entitled to recover the P3,000 which it advanced to Gonzales.
11. Contracting parties free to stipulate; Stipulation clear, no room for interpretation; Liquidated damage
The contract plainly states that if Gonzales fails to deliver the 600 piculs of sugar within the time agreed on, the contract will be
rescinded and he will be obliged to return the P3,000 and pay the sum of P1,200 by way of indemnity for loss and damages.
There cannot be the slightest doubt about the meaning of this language or the intention of the parties. There is no room for
either interpretation or construction. Under the provisions of article 1255 of the Civil Code contracting parties are free to
execute the contracts that they may consider suitable, provided they are not in contravention of law, morals, or public order. In
Page 42 of 87
our opinion there is nothing in the contract under consideration which is opposed to any of these principles. Thus, this is a clear
case of liquidated damages.
21.
to the existence of the contract, provided it is possible to determine the same, without the need of a new contract between the
parties. In the present case, there was no need for NFA and Soriano to enter into a new contract to determine the exact
number of cavans of palay to be sold. Soriano can deliver so much of his produce as long as it does not exceed 2,640 cavans.
5. Sale a consensual contract; Acceptance is on the offer and not the goods delivered
Sale is a consensual contract, there is perfection when there is consent upon the subject matter and price, even if neither is
delivered. (Obana vs. C.A., L-36249, March 29, 1985, 135 SCRA 557, 560) Article 1475 of the Civil Code provides that The
contract of sale is perfected at the moment there is a meeting of minds upon the thing which is the object of the contract and
upon the price. The acceptance referred to which determines consent is the acceptance of the offer of one party by the other
and not of the goods delivered.
6. Compliance of mutual obligations once a contract of sale is perfected
From the moment the contract of sale is perfected, it is incumbent upon the parties to comply with their mutual obligations or
the parties may reciprocally demand performance thereof. (Article 1475, Civil Code, 2nd par.)
22.
23.
Nanaman estate. In the document, Deleste agreed to relinquish his rights to of the entire parcel of land in Tambo, Iligan City
sold to him by Hilaria Tabuclin, in favor of all the heirs of the intestate estate for the reason that not all of the heirs of Gregorio
Nanaman have signed and agreed. The court approved the amicable settlement but when it was questioned by some heirs, the
court set aside its approval and declared it null and void.
The court thereafter ordered Noel, as regular administrator, to file an action to recover the 34.7-hectare land from Deleste.
Consequently, on 30 April 1963, Noel filed an action against Deleste for the reversion of title over the 34.7-hectare land to the
Nanaman estate and to order Deleste to pay the rentals and attorneys fees to the estate. On 14 December 1973, the trial court
rendered a decision, holding that the action for annulment of the deed of sale had prescribed in 1958 inasmuch as the sale was
registered in 1954 and that Gregorios heirs had slept on their rights by allowing Hilaria to exercise rights of ownership over
Gregorios share of the conjugal property after his death in 1945. Noel appealed to the Court of Appeals. On 18 February 1980,
the appellate court ruled that the transaction between Hilaria and Virgilio, and Deleste, was indeed a sale. It found that no
fraud, mistake or misrepresentation attended in the execution of the deed of sale and that no proof was shown that the
contract was merely a mortgage. The appellate court, however, agreed with Noel that Hilaria could not validly sell the 37.7hectare land because it was conjugal property, and Hilaria could sell only her share thereof. The Court also ruled that the
prescriptive period of 10 years had not yet elapsed when the action to recover the property was filed in 1963.; and held that in
the absence of proof of adverse possession by Hilaria, she should be considered as holding the property pursuant to her
usufructuary rights over the same under the provisions of the Spanish Civil Code of 1889, the law in force at the time of the
death of Gregorio. The Court further ordered Deleste to return the land in question to the administrator of the estate, to pay
the sum of P2,500 as rental of the interest of the estate from 1957 until the land is returned, and to pay the expenses of
litigation and the sum of P3,000 as attorneys fees.
Deleste filed a motion for the reconsideration of said decision praying for the total affirmance of the decision of the trial court.
On 14 May 1981, the Court of Appeals promulgated an amended decision. It affirmed its previous decision regarding the due
execution of the deed of sale adding that since no fraud attended its execution, there was no basis for the action to annul the
sale and therefore there was no starting point in reckoning the prescriptive period of four years. It reconsidered the Decision of
18 February 1980 insofar as it declared Deleste and the estate of Gregorio as co-owners of the 34.7-hectare land.
Pinito W. Mercado, as new administrator of the estate, appealed to the Supreme Court, questioning the Court of Appeals
Amended Decision applying the doctrine of laches and equating the said doctrine with acquisitive prescription (GR 59550).
Subsequently, another petition for certiorari to declare the sale to Deleste as an equitable mortgage, was filed by Atty. Bonifacio
Legaspi, representing the heirs of Hilaria (GR 60636). The two cases, arising from the same decision of the Court of Appeals,
were consolidated in the resolution of 2 September 1991 and were jointly considered.
The Supreme Court reversed and set aside the amended decision dated 14 May 1981 of the Court of Appeals, and reinstated
and affirmed in toto the Decision dated 18 February 1980.
1. Seemingly inadequate consideration does not render a contract of sale as one of mortgage
The contract involving the 34.7-hectare property was one of sale and not of mortgage in the absence of a showing that the
findings complained of are totally devoid of support in the record or that they are so glaringly erroneous as to constitute serious
abuse of discretion (Andres v. Manufacturers Hanover & Trust Corporation, 177 SCRA 618 [1989]). It should be noted that two
contracts had been executed involving said property (the 1 November 1952 mortgage and the 16 February 1954 sale). In the
absence of proof of gross inadequacy of the price, that the sale was made with what might appear as an inadequate
consideration does not make the contract one of mortgage (Askay v. Cosalan, 46 Phil. 179 [1924]).
2. Succession in the present case governed by the Civil Code of 1889
Gregorio died in 1945 long before the effectivity of the Civil Code of the Philippines on 30 August 1950. Under Article 2263 of
the said Code, rights to the inheritance of a person who died, with or without a will, before the effectivity of this Code, shall be
governed by the Civil Code of 1889, by other previous laws, and by the Rules of Court. Thus, succession to the estate of
Gregorio was governed primarily by the provisions of the Spanish Civil Code of 1889.
3. 1889 Civil Code; Wife has full ownership of undivided half-interest and the usufruct over the other; Right to alienate halfinterest
Under Article 953 thereof, a spouse like Hilaria, who is survived by brothers or sisters or children of brothers or sisters of the
decedent was entitled to receive in usufruct the part of the inheritance pertaining to said heirs. Hilaria, however, had full
ownership, not merely usufruct, over the undivided half of the estate (Spanish Civil Code of 1889, Art. 493). It is only this
undivided half-interest that she could validly alienate. Under the law in force in 1945, the surviving spouse was given the
management of the conjugal property until the affairs of the conjugal partnership were terminated. The surviving spouse
became the owner of one-half interest of the conjugal estate in his own right. He also became a trustee with respect to the
other half for the benefit of whoever may be legally entitled to inherit the said portion.
Page 46 of 87
4. 1889 Civil Code; Virgilio is not a heir of Gregorio, being illegitimate; No right to transfer ownership
Virgilio was not an heir of Gregorio under the Spanish Civil Code of 1889. Although he was treated as a child by the Nanaman
spouses, illegitimate children who were not natural were disqualified to inherit under the said Code (Cid v. Burnaman, 24 SCRA
434 [1968]). Article 998 of the Civil Code of the Philippines, which gave an illegitimate child certain hereditary rights, could not
benefit Virgilio because the right of ownership of the collateral heirs of Gregorio had become vested upon his death (Civil Code
of the Philippines, Art. 2253; Uson v. Del Rosario, 92 Phil. 530 [1953]). Therefore, Virgilio had no right at all to transfer
ownership over which he did not own.
5. Contract of sale; essential that seller is the owner of the property
In a contract of sale, it is essential that the seller is the owner of the property he is selling. The principal obligation of a seller is
to transfer the ownership of the property sold (Civil Code of the Philippines, Art. 1458). This law stems from the principle that
nobody can dispose of that which does not belong to him (Azcona v. Reyes, 59 Phil. 446 [1934]; Coronel v. Ona, 33 Phil. 456
[1916]). NEMO DAT QUAD NON HABET .
6. Mistake attended sale of undivided interest in property belonging to the collateral heirs of Gregorio
While it cannot be said that fraud attended the sale to Deleste, clearly there was a mistake on the part of Hilaria and Virgilio in
selling an undivided interest in the property which belonged to the collateral heirs of Gregorio.
7. Purchaser is a trustee of an implied trust if property is acquired by mistake or fraud
The sale, having been made in 1954, was governed by the Civil Code of the Philippines. Under Article 1456 of said Code, an
implied trust was created on the one-half undivided interest over the 34.7-hectare land in favor of the real owners. Said Article
provides that if the property is acquired through mistake or fraud, the person obtaining it is, by force of law, considered a
trustee of an implied trust for the benefit of the person from whom the property comes. In Diaz v. Gorricho, 103 Phil. 261
(1958), the Court said that Article 1456 merely expresses a rule recognized in Gayondato v. Insular Treasurer, 49 Phil. 244
(1926). Applying said rule, the Gayondato court held that the buyer of a parcel of land at a public auction to satisfy a judgment
against a widow acquired only one-half interest on the land corresponding to the share of the widow and the other half
belonging to the heirs of her husband became impressed with a constructive trust in behalf of said heirs.
8. Surviving spouse cannot acquire a title by prescription over said administered half
Being a trustee with respect to the other half for the benefit of whoever may be legally entitled to inherit the said portion, the
surviving spouse could therefore no more acquire a title by prescription against those for whom he was administering the
conjugal estate than could a guardian against his ward or a judicial administrator against the heirs of an estate. The surviving
husband as the administrator and liquidator of the conjugal estate occupies the position of a trustee of the highest order and is
not permitted by the law to hold that estate or any portion thereof adversely to those for whose benefit the law imposes upon
him the duty of administration and liquidation (Pamittan v. Lasam, 60 Phil. 908 *1934+).
9. Virgilios possession not under the claim of ownership
The possession of Virgilio, his registration of the land in his name for tax purposes, his hiring of tenants to till the land, and his
enjoyment of the produce of the tenants, appear more as acts done to help Hilaria in managing the conjugal property. There is
no evidence to prove indubitably that Virgilio asserted a claim of ownership over the property in his own right and adverse to all
including Hilaria.
10. Laches do not apply; Doctrine cannot prejudice the rights of an owner or original transferee
The doctrine of laches does not apply. Upon orders of the court in the intestate proceedings, Noel, the administrator of the
estate of the Nanaman spouses, immediately filed an action to recover possession and ownership of the property. There is no
evidence showing any failure or neglect on his part, for an unreasonable and unexplained length of time, to do that which, by
exercising due diligence, could or should have been done earlier (Cristobal v. Melchor, 78 SCRA 175 [1977]). The doctrine of
stale demands would apply only where by reason of the lapse of time, *i+t would be inequitable to allow a party to enforce his
legal rights (Z.E. Lotho, Inc. v. Ice and Cold Storage Industries of the Philippines, Inc., 3 SCRA 744 *1961+). Moreover, this Court,
except for very strong reasons, is not disposed to sanction the application of the doctrine of laches to prejudice or defeat the
rights of an owner or original transferee (Raneses v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 187 SCRA 397 [1990]).
11. Prescription is ten years in an action to recover the undivided half-interest
The action to recover the undivided half-interest of the collateral heirs of Gregorio prescribes in 10 years. The cause of action is
based on Article 1456 of the Civil Code of the Philippines, which made Deleste a trustee of an implied trust in favor of the said
heirs. Under Article 1144 of the Civil Code of the Philippines, actions based upon an obligation created by law, can be brought
within ten years from the time the right of action accrues (Rosario v. Auditor General, 103 Phil. 1132 [1958]). The 10-year
prescriptive period within which the collateral heirs of Gregorio could file an action to recover their share in the property sold to
Deleste (prescripcion extintiva) accrued only on 2 March 1954, when the deed of sale was registered with the Register of Deeds
(Cf. Arradaza v. Court of Appeals, 170 SCRA 12 [1987]). From 2 March 1954 to 30 April 1963, when the complaint for the
Page 47 of 87
recovery of the property was filed, less than 10 years had elapsed. Therefore, the action had not been barred by prescription.
The 10-year prescriptive period before title to real estate shall vest by adverse possession (prescripcion adquisitiva) is also
reckoned in the case of Deleste from 2 March 1954 (Corporacion de PP. Agustinos Recoletos v. Crisostomo, 32 Phil. 427 [1915]).
24.
dependent on the validity of the contract of sale, it is itself void. Thus, the principal contract of sale and the auxiliary contract of
repurchase are both void.
4. Clarification of sale of property, when seller is no longer the owner, null and void; Sale possible even if owner is not
owner at time of sale, provided that he acquires title to the property at time of delivery
In the case of Dignos v. CA, the Court did not cite its basis for ruling that a sale is null and void where the sellers were no
longer the owners of the property. Such a situation (where the sellers were no longer owners) does not appear to be one of
the void contracts enumerated in Article 1409 of the Civil Code. Moreover, the Civil Code itself recognizes a sale where the
goods are to be acquired by the seller after the perfection of the contract of sale, clearly implying that a sale is possible even if
the seller was not the owner at the time of sale, provided he acquires title to the property later on.
5. Void contracts (Article 1409 [5]); those which contemplates an impossible service
Article 1459 of the Civil Code provides that the vendor must have a right to transfer the ownership thereof *object of the sale]
at the time it is delivered. Here, delivery of ownership is no longer possible. The sellers can no longer deliver the object of the
sale to the buyers, as the buyers themselves have already acquired title and delivery thereof from the rightful owner, the DBP.
Thus, such contract may be deemed to be inoperative and may thus fall, by analogy, under item 5 of Article 1409 of the Civil
Code: Those which contemplate an impossible service.
6. Nono dat quod non habet, No one can give what he does not have; Contract of repurchase inoperative thus void
Article 1505 of the Civil Code provides that where goods are sold by a person who is not the owner thereof, and who does not
sell them under authority or with consent of the owner, the buyer acquires no better title to the goods than the seller had,
unless the owner of the goods is by his conduct precluded from denying the sellers authority to sell. Jurisprudence, on the
other hand, teaches us that a person can sell only what he owns or is authorized to sell; the buyer can as a consequence
acquire no more than what the seller can legally transfer. No one can give what he does not have nono dat quod non habet.
In the present case, there is no allegation at all that petitioners were authorized by DBP to sell the property to the private
respondents. Further, the contract of repurchase that the parties entered into presupposes that petitioners could repurchase
the property that they sold to private respondents. As petitioners sold nothing, it follows that they can also repurchase
nothing. In this light, the contract of repurchase is also inoperative and by the same analogy, void.
7. Right to repurchase presupposes a valid contract of sale
One repurchases only what one has previously sold. In other words, the right to repurchase presupposes a valid contract of
sale between the same parties. Undisputedly, private respondents acquired title to the property from DBP, and not from
petitioners.
8. Arguendo, Scenario where the Contract of repurchase distinct from that of sale; Petitions still do not acquire a right to
repurchase the property; Unilateral promise to pay only binding if supported by consideration distinct from price
Assuming arguendo that the contract of repurchase is separate and distinct from the contract of sale and is not affected by the
nullity of the latter, still petitioners do not thereby acquire a right to repurchase the property. In that scenario, the contract of
repurchase ceases to be a right to repurchase ancillary and incidental to the contract of sale; rather, it becomes an accepted
unilateral promise to sell. Article 1479 of the Civil Code, however, provides that an accepted unilateral promise to buy or sell a
determinate thing for a price certain is binding upon the promissor if the promise is supported by a consideration distinct from
the price. In the present case, the alleged written contract of repurchase is bereft of any consideration distinct from the price.
Accordingly, as an independent contract, it cannot bind private respondents.
9. Conventional redemption; Compliance with Article 1616 and other agreed stipulations
Article 1601 of the Civil Code provides that conventional redemption shall take place when the vendor reserves the right to
repurchase the thing sold, with the obligation to comply with the provisions of Article 1616 and other stipulations which may
have been agreed upon.
10. Right of repurchase a right granted by vendor in the same instrument of sale, not in a subsequent instrument
In Villarica v. CA (29 November 1968), the Court ruled that the right of repurchase is not a right granted the vendor by the
vendee is a subsequent instrument, but is a right reserved by the vendor in the same instrument of sale as one of the
stipulations of the contract. Once the instrument of absolute sale is executed, the vendor can no longer reserve the right to
repurchase, and any right thereafter granted the vendor by the vendee in a separate instrument cannot be a right of repurchase
but some other right (like the option to buy).
11. Sale, without agreement to repurchase, absolute
In Ramos, et al. vs. Icasiano, et al. (1927) the Court ruled that an agreement to repurchase becomes a promise to sell when
made after the sale, because when the sale is made without such an agreement, the purchaser acquires the thing sold
Page 49 of 87
absolutely. and if he afterwards grants the vendor the right to repurchase, it is a new contract entered into by the purchaser, as
absolute owner already of the object. In that case the vendor has not reserved to himself the right to repurchase.
12. Option to repurchase a promise to sell, governed by Article 1479
The Option to Repurchase executed by private respondent in the present case, was merely a promise to sell, which must be
governed by Article 1479 of the Civil Code which provides that a promise to buy and sell a determinate thing for a price certain
is reciprocally demandable. An accepted unilateral promise to buy or to sell a determinate thing for a price certain is binding
upon the promissor if the promise is supported by a consideration distinct from the price.
13. Arguendo, Section 119 of Public Land Act
The brothers Victorino and Francisco Noel, together with Conchita Nool and Anacleto Nool, were all siblings and heirs qualified
to repurchase the two parcels of land under Section 119 of the Public Land Act which provides that (e)very conveyance of land
acquired under the free patent or homestead provisions, when proper, shall be subject to repurchase by the applicant, his
widow or legal heirs, within a period of 5 years from the date of conveyance. Assuming the applicability of this statutory
provision to the present case, it is indisputable that Anacleto Nool already repurchased from DBP the contested properties.
Hence, there was no more right of repurchase that his sister Conchita or brothers Victorino and Francisco could exercise. The
properties were already owned by an heir of the homestead grantee and the rationale of the provision to keep homestead lands
within the family of the grantee was thus fulfilled.
14. Action/Defense for the declaration of an inexistent contract does not prescribe; Validity of a contract cannot be
acquired through estoppel
The private respondents cannot be estopped from raising the defense of nullity of contract, specially in this case where they
acted in good faith, believing that indeed petitioners could sell the two parcels of land in question. Article 1410 of the Civil Code
mandates that the action or defense for the declaration of the inexistence of a contract does not prescribe. It is a well-settled
doctrine that as between parties to a contract, validity cannot be given to it by estoppel if it is prohibited by law or it is against
public policy. It is not within the competence of any citizen to barter away what public policy by law seeks to preserve. Thus, it
is immaterial that private respondents initially acted to implement the contract of sale, believing in good faith that the same
was valid. A contract void at inception cannot be validated by ratification or prescription and certainly cannot be binding on or
enforceable against private respondents.
15. Petitioners required to return sum of P30,000 with interest and to pay rent
The balance of P14,000.00 under the void contract of sale may not be enforced. Petitioners are the ones who have an obligation
to return what they unduly and improperly received by reason of the invalid contract of sale. Since they cannot legally give title
to what they sold, they cannot keep the money paid for the object of the sale. It is basic that every person who through an
act of performance by another, or any other means, acquires or comes into possession of something at the expense of the latter
without just or legal ground, shall return the same. Thus, if a void contract has already been performed, the restoration of
what has been given is in order.
16. Interest runs from the time tolerance ceased upon counterclaim
Interest to the amount will run only from the time of private respondents demand for the return of this amount in their
counterclaim, for the petitioners possession and cultivation of the two hectares are anchored on private respondents
tolerance. The latters tolerance ceased upon their counterclaim and demand on the former to vacate. Hence, their right to
posses and cultivate the land ipso facto ceased.
25.
On 8 November 1946, Villaflor leased to Nasipit Lumber Co., Inc. a parcel of land, containing an area of 2 hectares, together with
all the improvements existing thereon, for a period of 5 years (from 1 June 1946) at a rental of P200.00 per annum to cover the
annual rental of house and building sites for 33 houses or buildings. The lease agreement allowed the lessee to sublease the
premises to any person, firm or corporation; and to build and construct additional houses with the condition the lessee shall pay
to the lessor the amount of 50 centavos per month for every house and building; provided that said constructions and
improvements become the property of the lessor at the end of the lease without obligation on the part of the latter for
expenses incurred in the construction of the same. On 7 July 1948, in an Agreement to Sell Villaflor conveyed to Nasipit
Lumber, 2 parcels of land. Parcel 1 contains an area of 112,000 hectares more or less, divided into lots 5412, 5413, 5488, 5490,
5491, 5492, 5850, 5849, 5860, 5855, 5851, 5854, 5855, 5859, 5858, 5857, 5853, and 5852; and containing abaca, fruit trees,
coconuts and thirty houses of mixed materials belonging to the Nasipit Lumber Company. Parcel 2 contains an area of 48,000
more or less, divided into lots 5411, 5410, 5409, and 5399, and containing 100 coconut trees, productive, and 300 cacao trees.
From said day, the parties agreed that Nasipit Lumber shall continue to occupy the property not anymore in concept of lessee
but as prospective owners.
On 2 December 1948, Villaflor filed Sales Application V-807 with the Bureau of Lands, Manila, to purchase under the provisions
of Chapter V, XI or IX of CA 141 (The Public Lands Act), as amended, the tract of public lands. Paragraph 6 of the Application,
states: I understand that this application conveys no right to occupy the land prior to its approval, and I recognize that the land
covered by the same is of public domain and any and all rights I may have with respect thereto by virtue of continuous
occupation and cultivation are hereby relinquished to the Government. On 7 December 1948, Villaflor and Nasipit Lumber
executed an Agreement, confirming the Agreement to Sell of 7 July 1948, but with reference to the Sales Application filed
with the Bureau of Land. On 31 December 1949, the Report by the public land inspector (District Land Office, Bureau of Lands, in
Butuan) contained an endorsement of the said officer recommending rejection of the Sales Application of Villaflor for having
leased the property to another even before he had acquired transmissible rights thereto. In a letter of Villaflor dated 23 January
1950, addressed to the Bureau of Lands, he informed the Bureau Director that he was already occupying the property when the
Bureaus Agusan River Valley Subdivision Project was inaugurated, that the property was formerly claimed as private property,
and that therefore, the property was segregated or excluded from disposition because of the claim of private ownership.
Likewise, in a letter of Nasipit Lumber dated 22 February 1950 addressed to the Director of Lands, the corporation informed the
Bureau that it recognized Villaflor as the real owner, claimant and occupant of the land; that since June 1946, Villaflor leased 2
hectares inside the land to the company; that it has no other interest on the land; and that the Sales Application of Villaflor
should be given favorable consideration. On 24 July 1950, the scheduled date of auction of the property covered by the Sales
Application, Nasipit Lumber offered the highest bid of P41.00 per hectare, but since an applicant under CA 141, is allowed to
equal the bid of the highest bidder, Villaflor tendered an equal bid, deposited the equivalent of 10% of the bid price and then
paid the assessment in full.
On 16 August 1950, Villaflor executed a document, denominated as a Deed of Relinquishment of Rights, in favor on Nasipit
Lumber, in consideration of the amount of P5,000 that was to be reimbursed to the former representing part of the purchase
price of the land, the value of the improvements Villaflor introduced thereon, and the expenses incurred in the publication of
the Notice of Sale; in light of his difficulty to develop the same as Villaflor has moved to Manila. Pursuant thereto, on 16 August
1950, Nasipit Lumber filed a Sales Application over the 2 parcels of land, covering an area of 140 hectares, more or less. This
application was also numbered V-807. On 17 August 1950 the Director of Lands issued an Order of Award in favor of Nasipit
Lumber; and its application was entered in the record as Sales Entry V-407.
On 27 November 1973, Villafor wrote a letter to Nasipit Lumber, reminding the latter of their verbal agreement in 1955; but the
new set of corporate officers refused to recognize Villaflors claim. In a formal protest dated 31 January 1974 which Villaflor
filed with the Bureau of Lands, he protested the Sales Application of Nasipit Lumber, claiming that the company has not paid
him P5,000.00 as provided in the Deed of Relinquishment of Rights dated 16 August 1950. On 8 August 1977, the Director of
Lands found that the payment of the amount of P5,000.00 in the Deed and the consideration in the Agreement to Sell were duly
proven, and ordered the dismissal of Villaflors protest.
On 6 July 1978, Villaflor filed a complaint in the trial court for Declaration of Nullity of Contract (Deed of Relinquishment of
Rights), Recovery of Possession (of two parcels of land subject of the contract), and Damages at about the same time that he
appealed the decision of the Minister of Natural Resources to the Office of the President. On 28 January 1983, he died. The trial
court ordered his widow, Lourdes D. Villaflor, to be substituted as petitioner. After trial in due course, the then CFI Agusan del
Norte and Butuan City, Branch III, dismissed the complaint on the grounds that: (1) petitioner admitted the due execution and
genuineness of the contract and was estopped from proving its nullity, (2) the verbal lease agreements were unenforceable
under Article 1403 (2)(e) of the Civil Code, and (3) his causes of action were barred by extinctive prescription and/or laches. It
ruled that there was prescription and/or laches because the alleged verbal lease ended in 1966, but the action was filed only on
6 January 1978. The 6-year period within which to file an action on an oral contract per Article 1145 (1) of the Civil Code expired
in 1972. Nasipit Lumber was declared the lawful owner and actual physical possessor of the 2 parcels of land (containing a total
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area of 160 hectares). The Agreements to Sell Real Rights and the Deed of Relinquishment of Rights over the 2 parcels were
likewise declared binding between the parties, their successors and assigns; with double costs against Villaflor.
The heirs of petitioner appealed to the Court of Appeals which, however, rendered judgment against them via the assailed
Decision dated 27 September 1990 finding petitioners prayers (1) for the declaration of nullity of the deed of relinquishment,
(2) for the eviction of private respondent from the property and (3) for the declaration of petitioners heirs as owners to be
without basis. Not satisfied, petitioners heirs filed the petition for review dated 7 December 1990. In a Resolution dated 23
June 1991, the Court denied this petition for being late. On reconsideration, the Court reinstated the petition.
The Supreme Court dismissed the petition.
1. Doctrine of primary jurisdiction; Court does not interfere if question is within jurisdiction of an administrative tribunal
Underlying the rulings of the trial and appellate courts is the doctrine of primary jurisdiction; i.e., courts cannot and will not
resolve a controversy involving a question which is within the jurisdiction of an administrative tribunal, especially where the
question demands the exercise of sound administrative discretion requiring the special knowledge, experience and services of
the administrative tribunal to determine technical and intricate matters of fact. In cases where the doctrine of primary
jurisdiction is clearly applicable, the court cannot arrogate unto itself the authority to resolve a controversy, the jurisdiction over
which is initially lodged with an administrative body of special competence.
2. Doctrine of primary jurisdiction; may apply even to questions which are judicial character
It has been the jurisprudential trend to apply the doctrine to cases involving matters that demand the special competence of
administrative agencies even if the question involved is also judicial in character. It applies where a claim is originally
cognizable in the courts, and comes into play whenever enforcement of the claim requires the resolution of issues which, under
a regulatory scheme, have been placed within the special competence of an administrative body; in such case, the judicial
process is suspended pending referral of such issues to the administrative body for its view.
3. Doctrine of primary jurisdiction; cases
In Machete vs. Court of Appeals, the Court upheld the primary jurisdiction of the Department of Agrarian Reform Adjudicatory
Board (DARAB) in an agrarian dispute over the payment of back rentals under a leasehold contract. In Concerned Officials of the
Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System vs. Vasquez, the Court recognized that the MWSS was in the best position to
evaluate and to decide which bid for a waterworks project was compatible with its development plan. In the present case, the
questions on the identity of the land in dispute and the factual qualification of private respondent as an awardee of a sales
application require a technical determination by the Bureau of Lands as the administrative agency with the expertise to
determine such matters. Because these issues preclude prior judicial determination, it behooves the courts to stand aside even
when they apparently have statutory power to proceed, in recognition of the primary jurisdiction of the administrative agency.
4. Interpretation of contracts and determination of private rights no longer uniquely judicial function
One thrust of the multiplication of administrative agencies is that the interpretation of contracts and the determination of
private rights thereunder is no longer a uniquely judicial function, exercisable only by our regular courts.
5. Primary jurisdiction of director of lands and minister or natural resources regarding identity of disputed land and
qualification of awardee of a sales patent
The primary jurisdiction of the director of lands and the minister of natural resources over the issues regarding the identity of
the disputed land and the qualification of an awardee of a sales patent is established by Sections 3 and 4 of CA 141, also known
as the Public Land Act. Section 3 of said act provides that the Secretary of Agriculture and Commerce (now Secretary of Natural
Resources) shall be the executive officer charged with carrying out the provisions of this Act through the Director of Lands, who
shall act under his immediate control. Section 4 provides that subject to said control, the Director of Lands shall have direct
executive control of the survey, classification, lease, sale or any other form of concession or disposition and management of the
lands of the public domain, and his decision as to questions of fact shall be conclusive when approved by the Secretary of
Agriculture and Commerce. Sections 3 and 4 of the Public Land Law mean that the Secretary of Agriculture and Natural
Resources shall be the final arbiter on questions of fact in public land conflicts (Heirs of Varela vs. Aquino, 71 Phil 69; Julian vs.
Apostol, 52 Phil 442). The Supreme Court has recognized that the Director of Lands is a quasi-judicial officer who passes on
issues of mixed facts and law (Ortua vs. Bingson Encarnacion, 59 Phil 440).
6. Finding of fact by administrative agency accorded great respect
Reliance by the trial and the appellate courts on the factual findings of the Director of Lands and the Minister of Natural
Resources is not misplaced. By reason of the special knowledge and expertise of said administrative agencies over matters
falling under their jurisdiction, they are in a better position to pass judgment thereon; thus, their findings of fact in that regard
are generally accorded great respect, if not finality, by the courts. The findings of fact of an administrative agency must be
respected as long as they are supported by substantial evidence, even if such evidence might not be overwhelming or even
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preponderant. It is not the task of an appellate court to weigh once more the evidence submitted before the administrative
body and to substitute its own judgment for that of the administrative agency in respect of sufficiency of evidence.
7. Finding of fact by administrative agency accorded great respect ; Exception to the rule
The rule that factual findings of an administrative agency are accorded respect and even finality by courts admits of exceptions.
This is true also in assessing factual findings of lower courts. It is incumbent on the petitioner to show that the resolution of the
factual issues by the administrative agency and/or by the trial court falls under any of the exceptions. Otherwise, this Court will
not disturb such findings.
8. Public land; Lack of Technical description does not prove that the findings lacked substantial evidence
The lack of technical description did not prove that the finding of the Director of Lands lacked substantial evidence. The
evidence adduced by petitioner to establish his claim of ownership over the subject area consists of deeds of absolute sale
executed in his favor. However, an examination of the technical descriptions of the tracts of land subject of the deeds of sale
will disclose that said parcels are not identical to, and do not tally with, the area in controversy.
9. Public land; Property admitted to be public, cannot now be claimed otherwise
The provision of the law is specific that public lands can only be acquired in the manner provided for therein and not otherwise
(Sec. 11, CA. No. 141, as amended). In his sales application, petitioner expressly admitted that said property was public land.
This is formidable evidence as it amounts to an admission against interest. The records show that Villaflor had applied for the
purchase of lands in question with this Office (Sales Application V-807) on 2 December 948. There is a condition in the sales
application to the effect that he recognizes that the land covered by the same is of public domain and any and all rights he may
have with respect thereto by virtue of continuous occupation and cultivation are relinquished to the Government of which
Villaflor is very much aware. It also appears that Villaflor had paid for the publication fees appurtenant to the sale of the land.
He participated in the public auction where he was declared the successful bidder. He had fully paid the purchase price thereof.
It would be a height of absurdity for Villaflor to be buying that which is owned by him if his claim of private ownership thereof is
to be believed. The area in dispute is not the private property of the petitioner.
10. Lands belong to the state, unless alienated
It is a basic assumption of public policy that lands of whatever classification belong to the state. Unless alienated in accordance
with law, it retains its rights over the same as dominus. (Santiago vs. de los Santos, L-20241, November 22, 1974, 61 SCRA 152).
No public land can be acquired by private persons without any grant, express or implied from the government. It is
indispensable then that there be showing of title from the state or any other mode of acquisition recognized by law. (Lee Hong
Hok, et al. vs. David, et al., L-30389, December 27, 1972, 48 SCRA 379).
11. Filing of sales application acknowledges that the land is not the private property of the applicant
As such sales applicant manifestly acknowledged that he does not own the land and that the same is a public land under the
administration of the Bureau of Lands, to which the application was submitted, all of its acts prior thereof, including its real
estate tax declarations, characterized its possessions of the land as that of a sales applicant. And consequently, as one who
expects to buy it, but has not as yet done so, and is not, therefore, its owner. (Palawan Agricultural and Industrial Co., Inc. vs.
Director of Lands, L-25914, March 21, 1972, 44 SCRA 15).
12. Rule on the interpretation of contracts is used in affirming, not negating, their validity
The rule on the interpretation of contracts (Article 1371) is used in affirming, not negating, their validity. Article 1373, which is a
conjunct of Article 1371, provides that, if the instrument is susceptible of two or more interpretations, the interpretation which
will make it valid and effectual should be adopted. In this light, it is not difficult to understand that the legal basis urged by
petitioner does not support his allegation that the contracts to sell and the deed of relinquishment are simulated and fictitious.
13. Simulation not existing in the present case
Simulation occurs when an apparent contract is a declaration of a fictitious will, deliberately made by agreement of the parties,
in order to produce, for the purpose of deception, the appearance of a juridical act which does not exist or is different from that
which was really executed. Such an intention is not apparent in the agreements. The intent to sell, on the other hand, is as clear
as daylight. The fact, that the agreement to sell (7 December 1948) did not absolutely transfer ownership of the land to private
respondent, does not show that the agreement was simulated. Petitioners delivery of the Certificate of Ownership and
execution of the deed of absolute sale were suspensive conditions, which gave rise to a corresponding obligation on the part of
the private respondent, i.e., the payment of the last installment of the consideration mentioned in the Agreement. Such
conditions did not affect the perfection of the contract or prove simulation.
14. Nonpayment of the consideration does not prove simulation
Nonpayment, at most, gives the vendor only the right to sue for collection. Generally, in a contract of sale, payment of the price
is a resolutory condition and the remedy of the seller is to exact fulfillment or, in case of a substantial breach, to rescind the
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contract under Article 1191 of the Civil Code. However, failure to pay is not even a breach, but merely an event which prevents
the vendors obligation to convey title from acquiring binding force.
15. Burden of proof rests upon the party who asserts the affirmative of an issue
Prior to the amendment of the rules on evidence on March 14, 1989, Section 1, Rule 131, states that each party must prove his
or her own affirmative allegations. Thus, the burden of proof in any cause rested upon the party who, as determined by the
pleadings or the nature of the case, asserts the affirmative of an issue and remains there until the termination of the action.
Although nonpayment is a negative fact which need not be proved, the party seeking payment is still required to prove the
existence of the debt and the fact that it is already due. Petitioner showed the existence of the obligation with the presentation
of the contracts, but did not present any evidence that he demanded payment from private respondent. The demand letters
dated January 2 and 5, 1974, adduced in evidence by petitioner, were for the payment of back rentals, damages to
improvements and reimbursement of acquisition costs and realty taxes, not payment arising from the contract to sell.
16. Lack of Notice of the Award not a suppression of evidence
The lack of notice for petitioner (not listed as one of the parties to furnished a copy by the Director of Lands) can be easily
explained. Petitioner was not entitled to said notice of award from the Director of Lands, because by then, he had already
relinquished his rights to the disputed land in favor of private respondent. In the heading of the order, he was referred to as
sales applicant-assignor. In paragraph number 4, the order stated that, on 16 August 1950, he relinquished his rights to the land
subject of the award to private respondent. From such date, the sales application was considered to be a matter between the
Bureau of Lands and private respondent only. Considering these facts, the failure to give petitioner a copy of the notice of the
award cannot be considered as suppression of evidence. Furthermore, this order was in fact available to petitioner and had
been referred to by him since 31 January 1974 when he filed his protest with the Bureau of Lands.
17. Requirement for a sales application under CA 141
The requirements for a sales application under the Public Land Act are: (1) the possession of the qualifications required by said
Act (under Section 29) and (2) the lack of the disqualifications mentioned therein (under Sections 121, 122, and 123). Section
121 of the Act pertains to acquisitions of public land by a corporation from a grantee: The private respondent, not the
petitioner, was the direct grantee of the disputed land. Sections 122 and 123 disqualify corporations, which are not authorized
by their charter, from acquiring public land; the records do not show that private respondent was not so authorized under its
charter.
18. Determination of qualification of applicant included in the powers to dispose public lands
In Espinosa vs. Makalintal, the Court ruled that, by law, the powers of the Secretary of Agriculture and Natural Resources
regarding the disposition of public lands including the approval, rejection, and reinstatement of applications are of
executive and administrative nature. (Such powers, however, do not include the judicial power to decide controversies arising
from disagreements in civil or contractual relations between the litigants.) Consequently, the determination of whether private
respondent is qualified to become an awardee of public land under CA 141 by sales application is included therein.
19. Prohibition of 1973 Constitution against the holding of public alienable lands by corporation not retroactive
In Ayog vs. Cusi, Jr., the Court ruled that the constitutional prohibition of the 1973 Constitution against the holding of alienable
lands of the public domain by corporations had no retroactive effect and could not prevail over a vested right to the land.
Vested rights have to be respected. It could not be abrogated by the new Constitution. Section 2, Article XIII of the 1935
Constitution allowed private corporations to purchase public agricultural lands not exceeding 1,024 hectares. Action for
prohibition is barred by the doctrine of vested rights in constitutional law.
20. Vested right
A right is vested when the right to enjoyment has become the property of some particular person or persons as a present
interest. It is the privilege to enjoy property legally vested, to enforce contracts, and enjoy the rights of property conferred by
existing law or some right or interest in property which has become fixed and established and is no longer open to doubt or
controversy (Downs vs. Blount, 170 Fed. 15, 20, cited in Balboa vs. Farrales, 51 Phil, 498, 502). Generally, the term vested right
expresses the concept of present fixed interest, which in right reason and natural justice should be protected against arbitrary
State action, or an innately just and imperative right which an enlightened free society, sensitive to inherent and irrefragable
individual rights, cannot deny (16 C.J.S. 1174, Note 71, No. 5, citing Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines, Inc. vs. Rosenthal, 192 At.
2nd 587).
21. Due process prohibits annihilation of vested rights
The due process clause prohibits the annihilation of vested rights. A state may not impair vested rights by legislative enactment,
by the enactment or by the subsequent repeal of a municipal ordinance, or by a change in the constitution of the State, except
in a legitimate exercise of the police power.
Page 54 of 87
IV.
Price
26.
complainants; declaring the simulated deed of absolute sale as well as the issuance of the corresponding TCT null and void,
ordering the Register of Deeds of Laguna to cancel TCT T-116087 and to issue another one in favor of the plaintiffs and the
defendants as co-owners and legal heirs of the late Gaudencia, ordering the defendants to reconvey and deliver the possession
of the shares of the plaintiff on the subject property, ordering the defendants to pay P20,000 as attorneys fees and cost of suit,
dismissing the petitioners claim for moral and exemplary damages, and dismissing the defendants counterclaim for lack of
merit.
On appeal, and on 31 August 1993, the appellate court reversed the trial court (CA-GR CV 36090). On September 15, 1993, the
petitioners (as substitute parties for Victorina and Cecilia, the original plaintiffs) filed a motion for reconsideration, which was
denied on 6 June 1994. Hence, the petition for review on certiorari.
The Supreme Court denied the petition, and affirmed the assailed decision of the Court of Appeals; with costs against
petitioners.
1. Presumption of regularity of notarized document
A notarized document carries the evidentiary weight conferred upon it with respect to its due execution, and documents
acknowledged before a notary public have in their favor the presumption of regularity. In the present case, the petitioners
allege that since the notary public who prepared and acknowledged the questioned Bilihan did not personally know Gaudencia,
the execution of the deed was suspect. However, the notary public testified that he interviewed Gaudencia prior to preparing
the deed of sale. By their failure to overcome this presumption, with clear and convincing evidence, petitioners are estopped
from questioning the regularity of the execution of the deed.
2. Jose Zarraga alive when the sale took place
Petitioners charge that one of the vendees, Jose Zarraga, was already dead at the time of the sale. However, the records reveal
that Jose died on 29 July 1981. He was still alive on 24 August 1980, when the sale took place.
3. Simulation defined
Simulation is the declaration of a fictitious will, deliberately made by agreement of the parties, in order to produce, for the
purposes of deception, the appearances of a juridical act which does not exist or is different what that which was really
executed. Characteristic of simulation is that the apparent contract is not really desired or intended to produce legal effect or
in any way alter the juridical situation of the parties. Further, in a simulated contract, the parties have no intention to be bound
by the contract. In the present case, perusal of the questioned deed shows that the sale of the property would convert the coowners to vendors and vendees, a clear alteration of the juridical relationships. This is contrary to the requisite of simulation
that the apparent contract was not really meant to produce any legal effect. The parties clearly intended to be bound by the
contract of sale, an intention they did not deny.
4. Simulation, requisites
The requisites for simulation are: (a) an outward declaration of will different from the will of the parties; (b) the false
appearance must have been intended by mutual agreement; and (c) the purpose is to deceive third persons. In the present case,
none of these are present in the assailed transaction.
5. Contracts binding only upon parties executing them
Contracts are binding only upon the parties who execute them. Article 1311 of the Civil Code clearly covers this situation. In the
present case Romualdo had no knowledge of the sale, and thus, he was a stranger and not a party to it. Even if curiously
Romualdo, one of those included as buyer in the deed of sale, was the one who questioned Gaudencias ownership in Civil Case
B-1094, Romana testified that Romualdo really had no knowledge of the transaction and he was included as a buyer of the land
only because he was a brother.
6. Fraud is never presumed
Fraud is never presumed, but must be both alleged and proved. For a contract to be annulled on the ground of fraud, it must be
shown that the vendor never gave consent to its execution. If a competent person has assented to a contract freely and fairly,
said person is bound. There also is a disputable presumption, that private transactions have been fair and regular. Applied to
contracts, the presumption is in favor of validity and regularity. In the present case, the allegations of fraud was unsupported,
and the presumption stands that the contract Gaudencia entered into was fair and regular.
7. Person not incapacitated to contract merely because of advanced age or due to physical infimities
A person is not incapacitated to contract merely because of advanced years or by reason of physical infirmities. Only when such
age or infirmities impair his mental faculties to such extent as to prevent him from properly, intelligently, and fairly protecting
his property rights, is he considered incapacitated. In the present case, petitioners show no proof that Gaudencia had lost
control of her mental faculties at the time of the sale. The notary public who interviewed her, testified that when he talked to
Page 56 of 87
Gaudencia before preparing the deed of sale, she answered correctly and he was convinced that Gaudencia was mentally fit and
knew what she was doing.
8. Undue influence defined, circumstances considered; Article 1337
Article 1337 of the Civil Code provides that there is undue influence when a person takes improper advantage of his power
over the will of another, depriving the latter of a reasonable freedom of choice. The following circumstances shall be
considered: confidential, family, spiritual, and other relations between the parties, or the fact that the person alleged to have
been unduly influenced was suffering from mental weakness, or was ignorant or in financial distress.
9. Undue influence case-to-case basis; Elements
Undue influence depends upon the circumstances of each case and not on bare academic rules. For undue influence to be
established to justify the cancellation of an instrument, three elements must be present: (a) a person who can be influenced; (b)
the fact that improper influence was exerted; (c) submission to the overwhelming effect of such unlawful conduct.
10. Confidential or fiduciary relationship
In the absence of a confidential or fiduciary relationship between the parties, the law does not presume that one person
exercised undue influence upon the other. A confidential or fiduciary relationship may include any relation between persons,
which allows one to dominate the other, with the opportunity to use that superiority to the others disadvantage. Included are
those of attorney and client, physician and patient, nurse and invalid, parent and child, guardian and ward, member of a church
or sect and spiritual adviser, a person and his confidential adviser, or whenever a confidential relationship exists as a fact. To
prove a confidential relationship from which undue influence may arise, the relationship must reflect a dominant,
overmastering influence which controls over the dependent person. In the present case, that Gaudencia looked after Romana in
her old age is not sufficient to show that the relationship was confidential. Petitioners failed to show that Romana used her
aunts reliance upon her to take advantage or dominate her and dictate that she sell her land.
11. Undue influence cannot be inferred from age, sickness, or debility of body
Undue influence is not to be inferred from age, sickness, or debility of body, if sufficient intelligence remains. In the present
case. petitioners never rebutted the testimony of the notary public that he observed Gaudencia still alert and sharp.
12. Solicitation, importunity, argument, and persuasion not undue influence
In Baez v. Court of Appeals, (59 SCRA 15 [1974]), it was held that solicitation, importunity, argument, and persuasion are not
undue influence. A contract is not to be set aside merely because one party used these means to obtain the consent of the
other. In Martinez v. Hongkong and Shanghai Bank (15 Phil. 252 [1910]), that influence obtained by persuasion, argument, or by
appeal to the affections is not prohibited either in law or morals, and is not obnoxious even in courts of equity. In the present
case, absent any proof that Romana exerted undue influence, the presumption is that she did not.
13. Issue cannot be raised for the first time on appeal
Lesion was not an issue raised before the lower courts. An issue which was neither averred in the complaint nor raised in the
court below, cannot be raised for the first time on appeal. To do so would be offensive to the basic rules of fair play.
14. Grounds of simulated sale and inadequacy of the price not reconcilable
Petitioners seem to be unsure whether they are assailing the sale of Lot 115-A-1 for being absolutely simulated or for
inadequacy of the price. These two grounds are irreconcilable. If there exists an actual consideration for transfer evidenced by
the alleged act of sale, no matter how inadequate it be, the transaction could not be a simulated sale. No reversible error was
thus committed by the Court of Appeals in refusing to annul the questioned sale for alleged inadequacy of the price.
27.
On 22 November 1991, the NHA issued Resolution 2352 cancelling the sale over the 3 parcels of land. The NHA, through
Resolution 2394, subsequently offered the amount of P1.225 million to the landowners as daos perjuicios.
On 9 March 1992, petitioners Uy and Roxas filed before the RTC Quezon City a Complaint for Damages against NHA and its
General Manager Robert Balao. After trial, the RTC rendered a decision declaring the cancellation of the contract to be justified.
The trial court nevertheless awarded damages to plaintiffs in the sum of P1.255 million, the same amount initially offered by
NHA to petitioners as damages.
Upon appeal by petitioners, the Court of Appeals reversed the decision of the trial court and entered a new one dismissing the
complaint. It held that since there was sufficient justifiable basis in cancelling the sale, it saw no reason for the award of
damages. The Court of Appeals also noted that petitioners were mere attorneys-in-fact and, therefore, not the real parties-ininterest in the action before the trial court. Their motion for reconsideration having been denied, petitioners seek relief from
the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court denied the petition.
1. Real party-in-interest defined; Action to be prosecuted in the name of a party whose right is sought to be enforced
Section 2, Rule 3 of the Rules of Court requires that every action must be prosecuted and defended in the name of the real
party-in-interest. The real party-in-interest is the party who stands to be benefited or injured by the judgment or the party
entitled to the avails of the suit. Interest, within the meaning of the rule, means material interest, an interest in the issue and
to be affected by the decree, as distinguished from mere interest in the question involved, or a mere incidental interest. Cases
construing the real party-in-interest provision can be more easily understood if it is borne in mind that the true meaning of real
party-in-interest may be summarized as follows: An action shall be prosecuted in the name of the party who, by the substantive
law, has the right sought to be enforced.
2. Action brought by an attorney-in-fact in his name and not in the name of his principal dismissed
Where the action is brought by an attorney-in-fact of a land owner in his name, (as in our present action) and not in the name of
his principal, the action was properly dismissed (Ferrer vs. Villamor, 60 SCRA 406 [1974]; Marcelo vs. de Leon, 105 Phil. 1175)
because the rule is that every action must be prosecuted in the name of the real parties-in-interest (Section 2, Rule 3, Rules of
Court).
3. Article 1311 of the Civil Code
Article 1311 of the Civil Code, provides that Contracts take effect only between the parties, their assigns, and heirs, except in
case where the rights and obligations arising from the contract are not transmissible by their nature, or by stipulation, or by
provision of law. If a contract should contain some stipulation in favor of a third person, he may demand its fulfillment provided
he communicated his acceptance to the obligor before its revocation. A mere incidental benefit or interest of a person is not
sufficient. The contracting parties must have clearly and deliberately conferred a favor upon a third person.
4. Agents rendering service in behalf of parties do not render them parties to the contract of sale
Petitioners are not parties to the contract of sale between their principals and NHA. They are mere agents of the owners of the
land subject of the sale. As agents, they only render some service or do something in representation or on behalf of their
principals. The rendering of such service did not make them parties to the contracts of sale executed in behalf of the latter.
Since a contract may be violated only by the parties thereto as against each other, the real parties-in-interest, either as plaintiff
or defendant, in an action upon that contract must, generally, either be parties to said contract. Neither has there been any
allegation, much less proof, that petitioners are the heirs of their principals.
5. Assignment of rights
In McMicking vs. Banco Espaol-Filipino, it was held that the rule requiring every action to be prosecuted in the name of the real
party-in-interest recognizes the assignments of rights of action and also recognizes that when one has a right of action assigned
to him he is then the real party in interest and may maintain an action upon such claim or right. The purpose is to require the
plaintiff to be the real party in interest, or, in other words, he must be the person to whom the proceeds of the action shall
belong, and to prevent actions by persons who have no interest in the result of the same. Thus, an agent, in his own behalf,
may bring an action founded on a contract made for his principal, as an assignee of such contract.
6. Section 372 (1) of the Restatement of the Law on Agency
Section 372 (1) of the Restatement of the Law on Agency *Agent as Owner of Contract Right+ declares that Unless otherwise
agreed, an agent who has or who acquires an interest in a contract which he makes on behalf of his principal can, although not a
promisee, maintain such action thereon as might a transferee having a similar interest.
7. Agent-transferee; Section 372 (1) explained
One who has made a contract on behalf of another may become an assignee of the contract and bring suit against the other
Page 58 of 87
party to it, as any other transferee. The customs of business or the course of conduct between the principal and the agent may
indicate that an agent who ordinarily has merely a security interest is a transferee of the principals rights under the contract
and as such is permitted to bring suit. If the agent has settled with his principal with the understanding that he is to collect the
claim against the obligor by way of reimbursing himself for his advances and commissions, the agent is in the position of an
assignee who is the beneficial owner of the chose in action. He has an irrevocable power to sue in his principals name. And,
under the statutes which permit the real party in interest to sue, he can maintain an action in his own name. This power to sue
is not affected by a settlement between the principal and the obligor if the latter has notice of the agents interest. Even though
the agent has not settled with his principal, he may, by agreement with the principal, have a right to receive payment and out of
the proceeds to reimburse himself for advances and commissions before turning the balance over to the principal. In such a
case, although there is no formal assignment, the agent is in the position of a transferee of the whole claim for security; he has
an irrevocable power to sue in his principals name and, under statutes which permit the real party in interest to sue, he can
maintain an action in his own name.
8. Petitioners not assignees
Petitioners have not shown that they are assignees of their principals to the subject contracts. While they alleged that they
made advances and that they suffered loss of commissions, they have not established any agreement granting them the right
to receive payment and out of the proceeds to reimburse themselves for advances and commissions before turning the balance
over to the principals. Further, it does not appear that petitioners are beneficiaries of a stipulation pour autrui under the
second paragraph of Article 1311 of the Civil Code. Indeed, there is no stipulation in any of the Deeds of Absolute Sale clearly
and deliberately conferring a favor to any third person.
9. Section 372 (2) of the Restatement of the Law on Agency
Section 372 (2) of the Restatement of the Law on Agency (Second) provides that An agent does not have such an interest in a
contract as to entitle him to maintain an action at law upon it in his own name merely because he is entitled to a portion of the
proceeds as compensation for making it or because he is liable for its breach. The fact that an agent who makes a contract for
his principal will gain or suffer loss by the performance or nonperformance of the contract by the principal or by the other party
thereto does not entitle him to maintain an action on his own behalf against the other party for its breach. An agent entitled to
receive a commission from his principal upon the performance of a contract which he has made on his principals account does
not, from this fact alone, have any claim against the other party for breach of the contract, either in an action on the contract or
otherwise. An agent who is not a promisee cannot maintain an action at law against a purchaser merely because he is entitled
to have his compensation or advances paid out of the purchase price before payment to the principal.
10. Failure to obtain commissions due non-performance of contract does not entitle petitioners to file action against NHA
In Hopkins vs. Ives, the Supreme Court of Arkansas, citing Section 372 (2) above, denied the claim of a real estate broker to
recover his alleged commission against the purchaser in an agreement to purchase property. In Goduco vs. Court of Appeals, it
was held that granting that appellant had the authority to sell the property, the same did not make the buyer liable for the
commission she claimed. At most, the owner of the property and the one who promised to give her a commission should be the
one liable to pay the same and to whom the claim should have been directed. Similarly, in the present case, that petitioners did
not obtain their commissions or recoup their advances because of the non-performance of the contract did not entitle them to
file the action below against NHA. As petitioners are not parties, heirs, assignees, or beneficiaries of a stipulation pour autrui
under the contracts of sale, they do not, under substantive law, possess the right they seek to enforce.
11. Decision pointless if petitioners are not real parties-in-interest
Petitioners not being the real parties-in-interest, any decision rendered would be pointless since the same would not bind the
real parties-in-interest.
12. Cancellation of contract in present case not rescission under Article 1191
The right of rescission or, more accurately, resolution, of a party to an obligation under Article 1191 is predicated on a breach of
faith by the other party that violates the reciprocity between them. The power to rescind, therefore, is given to the injured
party. Article 1191 states that the power to rescind obligations is implied in reciprocal ones, in case one of the obligors should
not comply with what is incumbent upon him. The injured party may choose between the fulfillment and the rescission of the
obligation, with the payment of damages in either case. He may also seek rescission, even after he has chosen fulfillment, if the
latter should become impossible. In the present case, the NHA did not rescind the contract. Indeed, it did not have the right to
do so for the other parties to the contract, the vendors, did not commit any breach, much less a substantial breach, of their
obligation. Their obligation was merely to deliver the parcels of land to the NHA, an obligation that they fulfilled. The NHA did
not suffer any injury by the performance thereof.
13. Cancellation based on the negation of cause
The cancellation was based on the negation of the cause arising from the realization that the lands, which were the object of the
sale, were not suitable for housing.
Page 59 of 87
28.
Mapalo v. Mapalo [G.R. No. L-21489 and L-21628. May 19, 1966.]
En Banc, Bengzon JP (J): 10 concur
Facts: Spouses Miguel Mapalo and Candida Quiba, simple illiterate farmers, were registered owners of a 1,635 sq.ms. residential
land in Manaoag, Pangasinan (OCT 46503). The spouses-owners, out of love and affection for Maximo Mapalo, brother of
Miguel who was about to get married, decided to donate the eastern half of the land to him. OCT 46503 was delivered. As a
result, however, they were deceived into signing, on 15 October 1936, a deed of absolute sale over the entire land in his favor.
Their signature thereto were procured by fraud, i.e. they were made to believe by Maximo Mapalo and the attorney who acted
as notary public who translated the document, that the same was a deed of donation in Maximos favor covering (the
eastern half) of their land. Although the document of sale stated a consideration of P500, the spouses did not receive anything
Page 60 of 87
of value for the land. The attorneys misbehavior was the subject of an investigation but its result does not appear on record.
Following the execution of the document the spouses immediately built a fence of permanent structure in the middle of their
land segregating the eastern portion from its western portion. Said fence still exists. The spouses have always been in continued
possession over the western half of the land up to the present. Unknown to them, Maximo Mapalo, on 15 March 1938,
registered the deed of sale in his favor and obtained in his name TCT 12829 over the entire land. 13 years later, on 20 October
1951, he sold for P2,500.00 said entire land in favor Evaristo, Petronila, Pacifico and Miguel Narciso. The sale to the Narcisos was
in turn registered on 5 November 1951 and TCT 11350 was issued for the whole land in their names. The Narcisos took
possession only of the eastern portion of the land in 1951, after the sale in their favor was made.
On 7 February 1952 the Narcisos filed suit in the CFI Pangasinan (Civil Case 11991) to be declared owners of the entire land; for
possession of its western portion; for damages; and for rentals. It was brought against the Mapalo spouses as well as against
Floro Guieb and Rosalia Mapalo Guieb who had a house on the western part of the land with the consent of the spouses Mapalo
and Quiba. The Mapalo spouses filed their answer with a counterclaim on 17 March 1952, seeking cancellation of the TCT of the
Narcisos as to the western half of the land, on the grounds that their signatures to the deed of sale of 1936 were procured by
fraud and that the Narcisos were buyers in bad faith. They asked for reconveyance to them of the western portion of the land
and issuance of a TCT in their names as to said portion. In addition, the Mapalo spouses filed on 16 December 1957 their own
complaint in the CFI Pangasinan (Civil Case U-133) against the the Narcisos and Maximo Mapalo. They asked that the deeds of
sale of 1936 and of 1951 over the land in question declared null and void as to the western half of said land. Judge Amado
Santiago of the CFI Pangasinan located in the municipality of Urdaneta the two cases jointly. Said court rendered judgment on
18 January 1961 dismissing the complaint in Civil Case 11991, declaring the deed as that of donation only over the eastern half
portion of the land, and as null and void with respect to the western half portion thereof, declaring TCT 12829 issued to Maximo
Mapalo as regards the western portion of the land null and void and without legal force as well as TCT 11350 subsequently
issued to the Narcisos, ordering the Mapalo spouses and the Narcisos to have the land subdivided by a competent land
surveyor, the expenses of which to be borne out by the parties pro-rata, ordering the Register of Deed to issue in lieu of TCT
11350 two new titles upon completion of the subdivision plan (one in favor of the Mapalo spouses for the western portion, and
one for the Narcisos covering the eastern half), and ordering Maximo Mapalo and the Narcisos to pay the costs.
The Narcisos appealed to the Court of Appeals. In its decision on 28 May 1963, the Court of Appeals reversed the Judgment of
the CFI, solely on the ground that the consent of the Mapalo spouses to the deed of sale of 1936 having been obtained by fraud,
the same was voidable, not void ab initio, and, therefore, the action to annul the same, within 4 years from notice of the fraud,
had long prescribed. It reckoned said notice of the fraud from the date of registration of the sale on 15 March 1938. The CFI and
the CA are therefore unanimous that the spouses Mapalo and Quiba were definitely the victims of fraud. It was only on
prescription that they lost in the Court of Appeals. From said decision of the Court of Appeals, the Mapalo spouses appealed to
the Court.
The Supreme Court reversed and set aside the decision of the Court of Appeals, and rendered another affirming in toto the
judgment of the CFI, with attorneys fees on appeal in favor of the Mapalo Spouses in the amount of P1,000.00, plus the costs,
both against Maximo Mapalo and the Narcisos.
1. Contract; Requisites
Under the Civil Code, either old or the new, for a contract to exist at all, three essential requisites must concur: (1) consent; (2)
object, and (3) cause or consideration.
2. Eastern half donated; Finding of the lower court as to the donation not assailed and thus is final
As regards the eastern portion of the land, the Mapalo spouses are not claiming the same, it being their stand that they had
donated and freely given said half of their land to Maximo Mapalo. And since they did not appeal from the decision of the trial
court finding that there was a valid and effective donation of the eastern portion of their land in favor of Maximo Mapalo, the
same pronouncement has become final as to them, rendering it no longer proper herein to examine the existence, validity or
efficacy of said donation as to said eastern portion.
3. Contracts without a cause void
Under the Civil Code, be it the old or the new, is that contracts without a cause or consideration produce no effect whatsoever.
4. Old Civil Code; Contracts with false consideration voidable; Prescription of voidable contracts
Under the Old Civil Code, the statement of a false consideration renders the contract voidable, unless it is proven that it is
supported by another real and licit consideration. And it is further provided by the Old Civil Code that the action for annulment
of a contract on the ground of falsity of consideration shall last 4 years, the term to run from the date of the consummation of
the contract.
5. False consideration a real consideration but not the one stated in the document
Page 61 of 87
According to Manresa, what is meant by a contract that states a false consideration is one that has in fact a real consideration
but the same is not the one stated in the document. (The difference between simulation and the contract with fraudulent
intention (purpose). This, although illicit is real; but the first is false in fact, although it appears to be real. *Manresa, Civil Code
Volume VIII, vol. II, p. 354]).
6. Only a disturbed man would contract without cause; False cause vitiates consent and annuls contract (Sanchez Roman)
The inspection of cause in the contract is necessary, and that without it they are null; it can only be conceived that a disturbed
man would, in his reason, contract without cause. For the same reason of the necessity of inspection of cause in the contract, it
is precise that such is real and not supposed, as it pretends or appears. The falsification of the cause vitiates the consent and
annuls the contract, that is, not only as a doctrine undoubtedly of scientific law, but also of old laws of Castile, that in multitude
of laws that declare it. (Sanchez Roman, Civil Right, Volume IV, p. 206.)
7. No consideration does not mean false consideration for Article 1276 to be applied
Where there was in fact no consideration, the statement of one in the deed will not suffice to bring it under the rule of Article
1276 of the Old Civil Code as stating a false consideration.
8. Oceio Perez v. Flores applies; Contract null and void if without cause or consideration
The ruling of the Court in Ocejo Perez & Co. vs. Flores (40 Phil. 921), is squarely applicable herein. In that case, it was ruled that
a contract of purchase and sale is null and void and produces no effect whatsoever where the same is without cause or
consideration in that the purchase price which appears thereon as paid has in fact never been paid by the purchaser to the
vendor.
9. Void contract incurable and cannot be subject of prescription
The inexistence of a contract is permanent and incurable and cannot be the subject of prescription. The nonexistence is
perpetual and irreplaceable not being able to be object of confirmation nor prescription. As held in Eugenio vs. Perdido (97 Phil.
41, 42-43 *1932+), it was stated that under the existing classification, such contract would be inexistent and the action or
defense for declaration of such inexistence does not prescribe. (Art. 1410, New Civil Code.) While it is true that this is a new
provision of the New Civil Code, it is nevertheless a principle recognized since Tipton vs. Velasco (6 Phil. 67) that mere a lapse of
time cannot give efficacy to contracts that are null and void.
10. Narcisos not purchasers in good faith
It has been positively shown by the undisputed testimony of Candida Quiba that Pacifico Narciso and Evaristo Narciso stayed for
some days on the western side of the land until their house was removed in 1940 by the spouses Mapalo. Also, Pacifico Narciso
admitted in his testimony that when they bought the property, Miguel Mapalo was still in the premises in question (western
part) which he is occupying and his house is still standing thereon. Moreover, Pacifico Narciso when presented as a rebuttal and
sub-rebuttal witness categorically declared that before buying the land in question he went to the house of spouses Mapalo and
asked them if they will permit Maximo Mapalo to sell the property. Further, as the parties in the cases are neighbors (except
Maximo Mapalo), it is clear that the Narcisos were aware of the extent of the interest of Maximo Mapalo over the land before
and after the execution of the deed of sale. Under the situation, thus, the Narcisos may be considered in value but certainly not
as purchasers in good faith.
11. No need to remand case to trial court as facts of trial court sustained by Court of Appeals
As the Court of Appeals declared that on the merits, the appealed decision called have been upheld under Article 1332 of Civil
Code and the following authorities: Ayola vs. Valderrama Lumber Manufacturers Ca., Inc., 49 OG 980, 982; Trasporte Beltran, 51
OG 1434, 1435; Cortez vs. Cortez, CA- 18451-R, August 8, 1961; Castilllo vs. Laberinto, CA-G.R. No. 18118-R, December 20, 1961;
and 13 C. J. 372-373, as well as the several facts and circumstances appreciated by the trial court as supporting the Mapalo
spouses case, it thus sustained barring only its ruling on prescription the judgment and findings of the trial court,
including that of bad faith on the part of the Narcisos in purchasing the land in question. The Supreme Court thus do not see the
need to further remand the case to the Court of Appeals for a ruling on the point in the event that the 1936 contract is held to
be inexistent as regards the western portion of the land.
12. Bad faith justifies award of attorneys fees
In view of the Narcisos bad faith under the circumstances we deem it just and equitable to award, in the Mapalo spouses favor,
attorneys fees on appeal, in the amount of P1,000.00 as prayed for in the counterclaim.
29.
Facts: On 25 February 1976, Imelda Ong for and in consideration of P1 and other valuable considerations, executed in favor of
Sandra Maruzzo, then a minor, a Quitclaim Deed whereby she transferred, released, assigned and forever quitclaimed to Sandra
Maruzzo, her heirs and assigns, all her rights, title, interest and participation in 1/2 undivided portion of a parcel of land (Lot 10B of the subdivision plan (LRC) Psd-157841, a portion of lot 10 Block 18 of PSD-13288 LCR (GLRC) Record 2029, situated in
Makati, containing 125 square meters. On 19 November 1980, Imelda Ong revoked the aforesaid Deed of Quitclaim and,
thereafter, on 20 January 1982 donated the whole property to her son, Rex Ong Jimenez.
On 20 June 1983, Sandra Maruzzo, through her guardian ad litem Alfredo Ong, filed with the RTC Makati an action against
Imelda Ong, for the recovery of ownership/possession and nullification of the Deed of Donation over the portion belonging to
her and for accounting. Imelda Ong claimed that the Quitclaim Deed is null and void inasmuch as it is equivalent to a Deed of
Donation, acceptance of which by the donee is necessary to give it validity. Further, it is averred that the donee, Sandra
Maruzzo, being a minor, had no legal personality and therefore incapable of accepting the donation. Upon admission of the
documents involved, the parties filed their responsive memoranda and submitted the case for decision. On 12 December 1983,
the trial court rendered judgment in favor of Maruzzo and held that the Quitclaim Deed is equivalent to a Deed of Sale and,
hence, there was a valid conveyance in favor of the latter.
Imelda Ong appealed to the Intermediate Appellate Court. On 20 June 1984, IAC promulgated its Decision affirming the
appealed judgment and held that the Quitclaim Deed is a conveyance of property with a valid cause or consideration; that the
consideration is P1 which is clearly stated in the deed itself; that the apparent inadequacy is of no moment since it is the usual
practice in deeds of conveyance to place a nominal amount although there is a more valuable consideration given. Hence, the
petition for review on certiorari.
On 15 March 1985, Sandra Maruzzo, through her guardian ad litem Alfredo Ong, filed an Omnibus Motion informing this Court
that she has reached the age of majority as evidenced by her Birth Certificate and she prays that she be substituted as private
respondent in place of her guardian ad litem. On 15 April 1985, the Court issued a resolution granting the same.
The Supreme Court affirmed the appealed decision of the IAC, with costs against Imelda Ong.
1. Consideration or cause is not P1 alone but also other valuable considerations
The subject deed reveals that the conveyance of the 1/2 undivided portion of the property was for and in consideration of P1
and the other valuable considerations paid by Sandra Maruzzo, through her representative, Alfredo Ong, to petitioner Imelda
Ong. Stated differently, the cause or consideration is not P1 alone but also the other valuable considerations.
2. Cause not stated in contract is presumed existing unless proven to the contrary; Execution of deed a prima facie evidence
of existence of valuable consideration
Although the cause is not stated in the contract it is presumed that it is existing unless the debtor proves the contrary (Article
1354 of the Civil Code). One of the disputable presumptions is that there is a sufficient cause of the contract (Section 5, (r), Rule
131, Rules of Court). It is a legal presumption of sufficient cause or consideration supporting a contract even if such cause is not
stated therein (Article 1354, New Civil Code) This presumption cannot be overcome by a simple assertion of lack of
consideration especially when the contract itself states that consideration was given, and the same has been reduced into a
public instrument with all due formalities and solemnities. To overcome the presumption of consideration the alleged lack of
consideration must be shown by preponderance of evidence in a proper action. (Samanilla vs. Cajucom, et al., 107 Phil. 432).
The execution of a deed purporting to convey ownership of a realty is in itself prima facie evidence of the existence of a valuable
consideration, the party alleging lack of consideration has the burden of proving such allegation. (Caballero, et al. vs. Caballero,
et al., (CA), 45 O.G. 2536).
3. Acceptance by legal representatives of minor applies to onerous and conditional donations
Granting that the Quitclaim deed is a donation, Article 741 of the Civil Code provides that the requirement of the acceptance of
the donation in favor of minor by parents of legal representatives applies only to onerous and conditional donations where the
donation may have to assume certain charges or burdens (Article 726, Civil Code). The acceptance by a legal guardian of a
simple or pure donation does not seem to be necessary (Perez vs. Calingo, CA-40 O.G. 53). Thus, Supreme Court ruled in
Kapunan vs. Casilan and CA (109 Phil. 889) that the donation to an incapacitated donee does not need the acceptance by the
lawful representative if said donation does not contain any condition. In simple and pure donation, the formal acceptance is not
important for the donor requires no right to be protected and the donee neither undertakes to do anything nor assumes any
obligation. The Quitclaim in question does not impose any condition.
4. Bad faith and inadequacy of monetary consideration does not render conveyance inexistent, assignors liberality may be
sufficient cause for a valid contract
It is not unusual in deeds of conveyance adhering to the Anglo-Saxon practice of stating that the consideration given is the sum
of P1, although the actual consideration may have been much more. Moreover, assuming that said consideration of P1 is
Page 63 of 87
suspicious, this circumstance, alone, does not necessarily justify the inference that the vendees were not purchasers in good
faith and for value. Neither does this inference warrant the conclusion that the sales were null and void ab initio. Indeed, bad
faith and inadequacy of the monetary consideration do not render a conveyance inexistent, for the assignors liberality may be
sufficient cause for a valid contract (Article 1350, Civil Code), whereas fraud or bad faith may render either rescissible or
voidable, although valid until annulled, a contract concerning an object certain entered into with a cause and with the consent
of the contracting parties(See Morales Development v. CA, 27 SCRA 484).
30.
transaction are in existent and void from the beginning. The same is true of contracts stating a false cause (consideration) unless
the persons interested in upholding the contract should prove that there is another true and lawful consideration therefor.
(Article 1353).
2. Intestate heirs have legal standing; Property subject of void contract does not leave patrimony of transferor and
recoverable by the heirs or the estate administrator
The heirs intestate have legal standing to contest the conveyance made by the deceased if the same were made without any
consideration, or for a false and fictitious consideration. If therefore the contract has no causa or consideration, or the causa is
false and fictitious (and no true hidden causa is proved) the property allegedly conveyed never really leaves the patrimony of
the transferor, upon the latters death without a testament, such property would passed to the transferors hairs intestate and
be, recoverable by them or by the Administrator of the transferors estate.
3. Armentia ruling clarified Concepcion and Solis rulings; False cause without hidden cause now not merely voidable, but
void ab initio
The Armentia ruling does not reject, and is not to be construed as rejecting, the Concepcion and Solis rulings (Concepcion vs.
Sta. Ana, 87 Phil. 787 and Solis vs. Chua Pua Hermanos, 50 Phil. 536) as outrightly erroneous. On the contrary, those rulings
undoubtedly read and applied correctly the law extant in their time: Article 1276 of the Civil Code of 1889 under which the
statement of a false cause in a contract rendered it voidable only, not void ab initio. The fact that the law as it is now (during the
time of Armentia) no longer deems contracts with a false cause, or which are absolutely simulated or fictitious, merely voidable,
but declares them void, i.e., inexistent (nulo) unless it is shown that they are supported by another true and lawful cause or
consideration.
4. Armentia case; Effect of the change in the juridical status of contracts based on false cause
A logical consequence of that change is the juridical status of contracts without, or with a false, cause is that conveyances of
property affected with such a vice cannot operate to divest and transfer ownership, even if unimpugned. If afterwards the
transferor dies the property descends to his heirs, and without regard to the manner in which they are called to the succession,
said heirs may bring an action to recover the property from the purported transferee. Such an action is not founded on fraud,
but on the premise that the property never leaves the estate of the transferor and is transmitted upon his death to heirs, who
would labor under no incapacity to maintain the action from the mere fact that they may be only collateral relatives and bound
neither principally or subsidiarily under the deed / contract of conveyance.
5. Armentia case; Conveyance merely annullable as action based on fraud vitiating conveyance
In Armentia, the Court determined that the conveyance questioned was merely annullable, not void ab initio, and that the
action was based on fraud vitiating said conveyance. The court found that Marta Armentia executed the document, a fact
uncontroverted by the cases plaintiff. Also, the vendees, being minors, makes the contract, at worst, only annullable by them.
Moreover, inadequacy of consideration does not imply total want of consideration. Further, the purported acts of Marta
Armentia after the sale did not indicate that the said sale was void from the beginning. Thus, in essence the plaintiffs case is
bottomed on fraud, which renders the contract merely voidable.
6. Armentia case applies to voidable contracts obtained or made fraudulently; does not apply to transfers which are void
for lack or falsity of consideration
As a precedent, Armentia only ruled that transfers made by a decedent in his lifetime, which are voidable for having been
fraudulently made or obtained, cannot be posthumously impugned by collateral relatives succeeding to his estate who are not
principally or subsidiarily bound by such transfers. That ruling is not extendible to transfers which, though made under closely
similar circumstances, are void ab initio for lack or falsity of consideration.
7. False and fictitious consideration, without any alternative true or lawful cause presented, renders contract void
Upon the consideration alone that the apparent gross, not to say enormous, disproportion between the stipulated price in each
deed of P1 plus unspecified and unquantilled services and the undisputably valuable real estate allegedly sold (worth at least
P10,500.00 going only by assessments for tax purposes which, it is well-known, are notoriously low indicators of actual value)
plainly and unquestionably demonstrates that they state a false and fictitious consideration, and no other true and lawful cause
having been shown, the Court finds both said deeds, insofar as they purport to be sales, not merely voidable, but void ab initio.
10. Donations of immovable property must be made and accepted in a public document; Liberality as cause denied
The validity of the conveyances cannot be defended on the theory that their true causa is the liberality of the transferor and
they may be considered in reality donations, because the law also prescribes that donations of immovable property, to be valid,
must be made and accepted in a public instrument, and it is not denied by Retonil, et. al. that there has been no such
acceptance which they claim is not required.
Page 65 of 87
31.
The Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the Court of Appeals dated 29 August 1994, and denied due course to the petition
for review for lack of merit.
1. Consideration exist in the Deed of Sale with Right to Repurchase (Sale with Pacto de Retro)
To ensure that he could repurchase his lots, Mate got a check of P1,400,000.00 from Josie. By allowing his titles to be in
possession of Tan for a period of 6 months, Mate secured from her another check for P420,000.00. It is thus plain that
consideration existed at the time of the execution of the deed of sale with right of repurchase. It is not only Mates kindness to
Josefina, being his cousin, but also his receipt of P420,000.00 from her which impelled him to execute such contract. While
Mate did not receive the P1.4M purchase price from Tan, he had in his possession a postdated check of Josie in an equivalent
amount precisely to repurchase the 2 lots on or before the 6th month.
2. No basis to file an action to annul the pacto de retro sale; Proper cause of action is BP 22 against Josie; Filing of criminal
case a tacit admission that there is consideration of the pacto de retro sale
There is absolutely no basis for Mate to file a complaint against Tan and Josie to annul the pacto de retro sale on the ground of
lack of consideration, invoking his failure to encash the two checks. Mates cause of action was to file criminal actions against
Josie under BP 22, which he did. The filing of the criminal cases was a tacit admission by petitioner that there was a
consideration of the pacto de retro sale. Mate knew that he was bound by the deed of sale with right to repurchase, as
evidenced by his filing criminal cases against Josie when the two checks bounced.
3. Singson v. Isabela Sawmill does not apply
Mates reliance on the doctrine in Singson vs. Isabela Sawmill (88 SCRA 633, 643), where the Court said that where one or two
innocent persons must suffer, that person who gave occasion for the damages to be caused must bear consequences is
misplaced. He is not an innocent person. As a matter of fact, he gave occasion for the damage caused by virtue of the deed of
sale with right to repurchase which he prepared and signed. Thus, there is the equitable maxim that between two innocent
parties, the one who made it possible for the wrong to be done should be the one to bear the resulting loss.
4. Tan incurred no false pretense; Mate has no one to blame but himself for his misfortune; Mate a lawyer
Tan did not employ any devious scheme to make the former sign the deed of sale. Tan waived his right to collect from Josie by
virtue of the pacto de retro sale. In turn, Josie gave Mate a postdated check in the amount of P1.4M to ensure that the latter
would not lose his two lots. Mate, a lawyer, should have known that the transaction was fraught with risks since Josie and family
had a checkered history of issuing worthless checks. But had Mate not agreed to the arrangement, Tan would not have agreed
to waive prosecution of Josie. Apparently, it was Mates greed for a huge profit that impelled him to accede to the scheme of
Josie even if he knew it was a dangerous undertaking. When he drafted the pacto de retro document, he threw caution to the
winds forgetting that prudence might have been the better course of action. When Josies checks bounced, he should have
repurchased his lots with his own money. Instead, he sued not only Josie but also Tan for annulment of contract on the ground
of lack of consideration and false pretenses on their part.
5. Contracts
A contract is a contract. Once agreed upon, and provided all the essential elements are present, it is valid and binding between
the parties.
32.
hand any money to Clemencia for the purported sale when the deed was signed in the registry of deeds. The trial court declared
void the sale of the Paco property.
Clemencia died on 21 May 1977 at the age of 80. She allegedly bequeathed her properties in a holographic will dated 23
November 1973 to Doctor Maninang. In that will she disinherited Bernardo. The will was presented for probate. The testate
case was consolidated with the intestate proceeding filed by Bernardo in the sala of Judge Ricardo L. Pronove at Pasig, Rizal. He
dismissed the testate case. He appointed Bernardo as administrator in the intestate case.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of the CFI, ordered the register of deeds to issue a new title to Clemencia,
and ordered the spouses to pay Clemencias estate P21,000 as moral and exemplary damages and attorneys fees and to render
to Bernardo an accounting of the rentals of the property from 6 April 1974. The spouses appealed to the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the Appellate Court with the modification that the adjudication for moral and
exemplary damages is discarded; Without costs.
1. Only legal issues may be raised in a review of the decision of the appellate court
As a rule, only important legal issues, as contemplated in section 4, Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, may be raised in a review of
the Appellate Courts decision. The present case does not fall within any of the exceptions to that rule (2 Morans Comments on
the Rules of Court, 1979 Ed. p. 475; Ramos vs. Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co., 125 Phil. 701).
2. Burden of proof
Clemencia herself testified that the price of P26,000 was not paid to her; and thus, the burden of the evidence shifted to the
Ladanga spouses. They were not able to prove the payment of that amount, thus the sale was fictitious.
3. Void contract in the absence of price being paid; Sale inexistent and cannot be considered consummated
A contract of sale is void and produces no effect whatsoever where the price, which appears therein as paid, has in fact never
been paid by the purchaser to the vendor (Meneses Vda. de Catindig vs. Heirs of Catalina Roque, L-25777, November 26, 1976,
74 SCRA 83, 88; Mapalo vs. Mapalo, 123 Phil. 979, 987; Syllabus, Ocejo, Perez & Co. vs. Flores and Bas, 40 Phil. 921). Such a sale
is inexistent and cannot be considered consummated (Borromeo vs. Borromeo, 98 Phil. 432; Cruzado vs. Bustos and Escaler, 34
Phil. 17; Garanciang vs. Garanciang, L-22351, May 21, 1969, 28 SCRA 229).
4. No evidence of intention of vendor to donate the property
Clemencia did not intended to donate the Paco property to the Ladangas. Her testimony and the notarys testimony destroyed
any presumption that the sale was fair and regular and for a true consideration. It seemed that the Ladangas abused
Clemencias confidence and defrauded her of properties with a market value of P393,559.25 when she was already 78 years old.
5. Bernardos capacity to sue
Bernardo was Clemencias adopted son. Moreover, Clemencia, by testifying in this case, tacitly approved the action brought in
her behalf. Bernardo had the right to institute the instant action.
6. Award of moral damages not sanctioned
The moral damages awarded by the trial court is not sanctioned by articles 2217 to 2220 of the Civil Code. Clemencias own
signature in the deed brought about the mess within which she was entangled.
33.
On 1 April 1980, Aurelio sold his 6/10 share in TCT 135671 to spouses Aurora Tuazon-Repuyan and Jose Repuyan as evidenced
by a Deed of Absolute Sale. On 21 July 1980, Aurora Tuazon Repuyan caused the annotation of her affidavit of adverse claim
on the TCT 135671, claiming that she bought 6/10 portion of the property from Aurelio Roque for the amount of P50,000.00
with a downpayment of P5,000.00 and the balance of P45,000.00 to be paid after the partition and subdivision of the property.
On 20 August 1980, Aurelio Roque filed a complaint for Rescission of Contract against spouses Repuyan before the then CFI
Manila (Branch IV, Civil Case 134131). The complaint is grounded on spouses Repuyans failure to pay the balance of P45,000.00
of the purchase price. On 5 September 1980, spouses Repuyan filed their answer with counterclaim.
In the meantime, the trial court issued an order in Civil Case 109032 (Partition case) dated 2 February 1982, ordering the Deputy
Clerk of the court to sign the deed of absolute sale for and in behalf of Roque children pursuant to Section 10, Rule 39 of the
Rules of Court, in order to effect the partition of the property involved in the case (P100,000 purchase price for the 84 sq. ms. In
Callejon Sulu, Sta. Cruz, Manila is reasonable and fair; and that opportunities have been given to the children to sign the deed
voluntarily). A deed of absolute sale was executed on 4 February 1982 between Aurelio, Corazon, Feliciano, Severa and
Osmundo Roque and Clara Balatbat, married to Alejandro Balatbat. On 14 April 1982, Clara Balatbat filed a motion for the
issuance of a writ of possession which was granted by the trial court on 14 September 1982 subject, however, to valid rights
and interest of third persons over the same portion thereof, other than vendor or any other person or persons privy to or
claiming any rights or interest under it. The corresponding writ of possession was issued on 20 September 1982.
On 20 May 1982, Clara Balatbat filed a motion to intervene in Civil Case 134131 which was granted as per courts resolution of
21 October 1982. However, Clara Balatbat failed to file her complaint in intervention. On 15 April 1986, the trial court rendered
a decision dismissing the complaint, and declaring the Deed of Absolute Sale dated 1 April 1980 as valid and enforceable and
Aurelio is, as he is hereby ordered, to partition and subdivide the land covered by TCT 135671, and to aggregate therefrom a
portion equivalent to 6/10 thereof, and cause the same to be titled in the name of spouses Repuyan, and after which, the latter
to pay Aurelio the sum of P45,000.00. Considering further that the spouses suffered damages since they were forced to litigate
unnecessarily, by way of their counterclaim, Aurelio is hereby ordered to pay the spouses the sum of P15,000.00 as moral
damages, attorneys fees in the amount of P5,000.00; with costs against Aurelio.
On 3 March 1987, Balatbat filed a notice of lis pendens in Civil Case 109032 before the Register of Deeds of Manila.
On 9 December 1988, Balatbat and her husband filed a complaint for delivery of the owners duplicate copy of TCT 135671
before the RTC Manila (Branch 24, Civil Case 88-47176) against Jose and Aurora Repuyan. On 27 January 1989, spouses Repuyan
filed their answer with affirmative defenses and compulsory counterclaim. The Repuyans and the Balatbats submitted their
memoranda on 13 November 1989 and 23 November 1989, respectively. On 2 August 1990, the RTC Manila rendered a decision
dismissing the complaint, finding that the Balatbats were not able to establish their cause of action against the Repuyans and
have no right to the reliefs demanded in the complaint, and ordering Balatbat to pay the Repuyans the amount of P10,000 as
attorneys fees, P5,000 as costs of litigation, and to pay the costs of the suit.
Dissatisfied, Balatbat filed an appeal before the Court of Appeals (CA-GR CV 29994) which rendered decision on 12 August 1992,
affirming the judgment appealed from with modification deleting the awards of P10,000 for attomeys fees and P5,000 as costs
of litigation. On 22 March 1993, the Court of Appeals denied Balatbats motion for reconsideration. Hence, the petition for
review pursuant to Rule 45 of the Revised Rules of Court.
The Supreme Court dismissed the petition for review for lack of merit; without pronouncement as to costs.
1. 1 April 1980 sale consummated, valid and enforceable
The sale dated 1 April 1980 in favor the Repuyan spouses is consummated, hence, valid and enforceable; not merely executory
for the reason that there was no delivery of the subject property and that consideration/price was not fully paid. In a decision
dated 15 April 1986 of the RTC Manila (Branch IV, Civil Case 134131), the Court dismissed Aurelio complaint for rescission of the
deed of sale and declared that the sale dated 1 April 1980, as valid and enforceable. No appeal having been made, the decision
became final and executory. It must be noted that Balatbat filed a motion for intervention in that case but did not file her
complaint in intervention.
2. 1 April 1980 Deed of Sale devoid of stipulation withholding ownership of thing until full payment; Ownership pass upon
delivery of thing sold even if purchase price not fully paid
The terms and conditions of the Deed of Sale dated 1 April 1980, the P45,000.00 balance is payable only after the property
covered by TCT 135671 has been partitioned and subdivided, and title issued in the name of the buyer hence, the vendor cannot
demand payment of the balance unless and until the property has been subdivided and titled in the name of the Repuyan
spouses. Devoid of any stipulation that ownership in the thing shall not pass to the purchaser until he has fully paid the price,
ownership in the thing shall pass from the vendor to the vendee upon actual or constructive delivery of the thing sold even if
the purchase price has not yet been fully paid.
Page 69 of 87
3. Non-payment in a contract of sale merely creates right to demand fulfillment of obligation or rescission of contract;
Article 1191
The failure of the buyer to make good the price does not, in law, cause the ownership to revest to the seller unless the bilateral
contract of sale is first rescinded or resolved pursuant to Article 1191 of the New Civil Code. Non-payment only creates a right
to demand the fulfillment of the obligation or to rescind the contract.
With respect to the non-delivery of the possession of the subject property to the private respondent, suffice it to say that
ownership of the thing sold is acquired only from the time of delivery thereof, either actual or constructive. 28
4. Ownership of a thing sold acquired from time of actual or constructive delivery; Possession of public instrument of the
land accords buyer rights of ownership
Article 1498 of the Civil Code provides that when the sale is made through a public instrument, the execution thereof shall be
equivalent to the delivery of the thing which is the object of the contract, if from the deed the contrary does not appear or
cannot be inferred. The execution of the public instrument, without actual delivery of the thing, transfers the ownership from
the vendor to the vendee, who may thereafter exercise the rights of an owner over the same. It is not necessary that vendee be
physically present at every square inch of the land bought by him, possession of the public instrument of the land is sufficient to
accord him the rights of ownership. Thus, delivery of a parcel of land may be done by placing the vendee in control and
possession of the land (real) or by embodying the sale in a public instrument (constructive). In the present case, vendor Roque
delivered the owners certificate of title to the Repuyan spouses.
5. Necessity of public document merely for convenience, and not for validity or enforceability of a contract of sale
The provision of Article 1358 on the necessity of a public document is only for convenience, not for validity or enforceability. It is
not a requirement for the validity of a contract of sale of a parcel of land that this be embodied in a public instrument.
6. Contract of sale consensual, perfected by mere consent of the parties; Non-payment does not render sale null and void
for lack of consideration
A contract of sale being consensual, it is perfected by the mere consent of the parties. Delivery of the thing bought or payment
of the price is not necessary for the perfection of the contract; and failure of the vendee to pay the price after the execution of
the contract does not make the sale null and void for lack of consideration but results at most in default on the part of the
vendee, for which the vendor may exercise his legal remedies.
7. Present case is a double sale
The present case is a case of double sale contemplated under Article 1544 of the New Civil Code. In the present case, Aurelio
Roque sold 6/10 portion of his share in TCT 135671 to the Repuyan spouses on 1 April 1980. Subsequently, the same lot was
sold again by vendor Aurelio Roque (6/10) and his children (4/10), represented by the Clerk of Court pursuant to Section 10,
Rule 39 of the Rules of Court, on 4 February 1982.
8. Article 1544; Double sale
Article 1544 of the New Civil Code provides that if the same thing should have been sold to different vendees, the ownership
shall be transferred to the person who may have first taken possession thereof in good faith, if it should be movable property.
Should it be movable property, the ownership shall belong to the person acquiring it who in good faith first recorded it in the
Registry of Property. Should there be no inscription, the ownership shall pertain to the person who in good faith was first in the
possession and in the absence thereof, to the person who present the oldest title, provided there is good faith. Article 1544 of
the Civil Code provides that in case of double sale of an immovable property, ownership shall be transferred (1) to the person
acquiring it who in good faith first recorded it in the Registry of Property; (2) in default thereof, to the person who in good faith
was first in possession; and (3) in default thereof, to the person who presents the oldest title, provided there is good faith.
9. Ownership vests in person who acquired the immovable property in good faith and who first recorded it in the Registry
of Property; Annotation of adverse claim sufficient
In an instance of a double sale of an immovable property, the ownership shall vests in the person acquiring it who in good faith
first recorded it in the Registry of Property. In the present case, the Repuyan spouses caused the annotation of an adverse claim
on the title of the subject property denominated as Entry 5627/T-135671 on 21 July 1980. The annotation of the adverse claim
on TCT 135671 in the Registry of Property is sufficient compliance as mandated by law and serves notice to the whole world.
Balatbat, on the other hand, filed a notice of lis pendens only on 2 February 1982. Accordingly, the Repuyan spouses who first
caused the annotation of the adverse claim in good faith shall have a better right over Balatbat.
10. Possession of Balatbat merely provisionary
The physical possession of Balatbat by virtue of a writ of possession issued by the trial court on 20 September 1982 is subject
to the valid rights and interest of third persons over the same portion thereof, other than vendor or any other person or persons
privy to or claiming any rights to interest under it.
Page 70 of 87
34.
deposited with the RTC on 7 September 1982. Being former lessees, Escanlar and Holgado continued in possession of Lots 1616
and 1617. Interestingly, they continued to pay rent based on their lease contract.
On 10 September 1981, Escanlar and Holgado moved to intervene in the probate proceedings of Nombre and Cari-an as the
buyers of the Cari-ans share in Lots 1616 and 1617. Their motion for approval of the 15 September 1978 sale before the same
court, filed on 10 November 1981, was opposed by the Cari-ans on 5 January 1982. On 16 September 1982, the probate court
approved a motion filed by the heirs of Cari-an and Nombre to sell their respective shares in the estate. On 21 September 1982,
the Cari-ans, in addition to some heirs of Guillermo Nombre, sold their shares in 8 parcels of land including Lots 1616 and 1617
to the spouses Ney Sarrosa Chua and Paquito Chua for P1,850,000.00. A week later, the vendor-heirs, including the Cari-ans,
filed a motion for approval of sale of hereditary rights, i.e. the sale made on 21 September 1982 to the Chuas.
The Cari-ans instituted a case for cancellation of sale against Escanlar and Holgado on 3 November 1982. They complained of
the latters failure to pay the balance of the purchase price by 31 May 1979 and alleged that they only received a total of
P132,551.00 in cash and goods. Escanlar and Holgado replied that the Cari-ans, having been paid, had no right to resell the
subject lots; that the Chuas were purchasers in bad faith; and that the court approval of the sale to the Chuas was subject to
their existing claim over said properties. On 20 April 1983, Escanlar and Holgado also sold their rights and interests in the
subject parcels of land (Lots 1616 and 1617) to Edwin Jayme for P735,000.00 and turned over possession of both lots to the
latter. The Jaymes in turn, were included in the civil case as fourth-party defendants.
On 3 December 1984, the probate court approved the 21 September 1982 sale without prejudice to whatever rights, claims
and interests over any of those properties of the estate which cannot be properly and legally ventilated and resolved by the
court in the same intestate proceedings. The certificates of title over the 8 lots sold by the heirs of Nombre and Cari-an were
later issued in the name of the spouses Chua.
The trial court allowed a third-party complaint against the spouses Chua on 7 January 1986 where Escanlar and Holgado alleged
that the Cari-ans conspired with the Chuas when they executed the second sale on 21 September 1982 and that the latter sale is
illegal and of no effect. Spouses Chua countered that they did not know of the earlier sale of portion of the subject lots to
Escanlar and Holgado. Both parties claimed damages. On 28 April 1988, the trial court approved the Chuas motion to file a
fourth-party complaint against the spouses Jayme. Spouses Chua alleged that the Jaymes refused to vacate said lots despite
repeated demands; and that by reason of the illegal occupation of Lots 1616 and 1617 by the Jaymes, they suffered materially
from uncollected rentals.
Meanwhile, the RTC Himamaylan which took cognizance of Special Proceeding 7-7279 (Intestate Estate of Guillermo Nombre
and Victoriana Cari-an) had rendered its decision on 30 October 1987. The probate court concluded that since all the properties
of the estate were disposed of or sold by the declared heirs of both spouses, the case is considered terminated and the intestate
estate of Guillermo Nombre and Victoriana Cari-an is closed, and thus found it unnecessary to resolve the Motion for
Subrogation of movants Escanlar and Holgado in view of the proceedings summary nature and the probate courts lack of
jurisdiction upon the validity of sale of rights of the Nombre and Cari-an heirs to third parties.
On 18 December 1991, the trial court resolved the case in favor of the cancellation of the 15 September 1978 sale as it was not
approved by the probate court as required by the contested deed of sale of rights, interests and participation and because the
Cari-ans were not fully paid. Consequently, the Deed of Sale executed by the heirs of Nombre and Cari-an in favor of the
spouses Chua, which was approved by the probate court, was upheld. Thus, the court declared the 15 September 1978 Deed of
Sale, and likewise the Deed of Agreement of the same date, executed by the heirs in favor of Escanlar and Holgado; the 20 April
1983 Deed of sale, and likewise the sale of leasehold rights, executed by Escanlar and Holgado in favor of spouses Jayme; were
declared null and void and of no effect. The court also declared the amount of P50,000 as forfeited in favor of the heirs but
ordering the heirs to return to Escanlar and Holgado the amounts they received after 31 May 1979 and the amount of
P35,218.75 deposited with the Treasurer of Himamaylan; declared the 23 September 1982 Deed of Sale in favor of spouses
Chua as legal, valid and enforceable subject to the burdens of the estate; ordered Holgado, Escanlar and spouses Jayme to pay
in solidum the amount of P100,000 as moral damages, P30,000 as attorneys fees to spouses Chua; ordered spouses Jayme to
pay spouses Chua the sum of P157,000 as rentals for the Riceland and P3,200,000 as rentals for the fishpond from October 1985
to 24 July 1989 plus rentals from the latter date until the property is delivered to the spouses Chua; ordered Escanlar, Holgado
and spouses Jayme to immediately vacate Lots 1616 and 1617, and to pay the costs.
Escanlar and Holgado raised the case to the Court of Appeals (CA-GR CV 39975). The appellate court affirmed the decision of the
trial court on 17 February 1995 and held that the questioned deed of sale of rights, interests and participation is a contract to
sell because it shall become effective only upon approval by the probate court and upon full payment of the purchase price.
Their motion for reconsideration was denied by the appellate court on 3 April 1995. Hence, the consolidated petitions for
review.
Page 72 of 87
The Supreme Court granted the petitions; reversed and set aside the decision of the Court of Appeals under review; remanded
the case to the RTC Negros Occidental (Branch 61) for Escanlar and Holgado and the Cari-ans or their successors-in-interest to
determine exactly which portion of Lots 1616 and 1617 will be owned by each party, at the option of Escanlar and Holgado;
and directed the trial court to order the issuance of the corresponding certificates of title in the name of the respective parties
and to resolve the matter of rental payments of the land not delivered to the Chua spouses subject to the rates specified by the
Court with legal interest from date of demand.
1. Distinction with contracts of sale and contract to sell with reserved title
The distinction between contracts of sale and contracts to sell with reserved title has been recognized by the Court in repeated
decisions, such as that in Luzon Brokerage Co. Inc. v. Maritime Building Co., Inc., upholding the power of promisors under
contracts to sell in case of failure of the other party to complete payment, to extrajudicially terminate the operation of the
contract, refuse the conveyance, and retain the sums of installments already received where such rights are expressly provided
for.
2. Contract to sell vs. Deed of conditional sale
In contracts to sell, ownership is retained by the seller and is not to pass until the full payment of the price. Such payment is a
positive suspensive condition, the failure of which is not a breach of contract but simply an event that prevented the obligation
of the vendor to convey title from acquiring binding force. To illustrate, although a deed of conditional sale is denominated as
such, absent a proviso that title to the property sold is reserved in the vendor until full payment of the purchase price nor a
stipulation giving the vendor the right to unilaterally rescind the contract the moment the vendee fails to pay within a fixed
period, by its nature, it shall be declared a deed of absolute sale.
3. The 15 September 1978 Deed of Sale of Rights, Interests and Participation a contract of sale
The 15 September 1978 sale of rights, interests and participation as to portion pro indiviso of the 2 subject lots is a contract of
sale for the reasons that (1) the sellers did not reserve unto themselves the ownership of the property until full payment of the
unpaid balance of P225,000.00; (2) there is no stipulation giving the sellers the right to unilaterally rescind the contract the
moment the buyer fails to pay within the fixed period.
4. Delivery effected for the 15 September 1978 deed of sale; Traditio brevi manu
Prior to the sale, Escanlar were in possession of the subject property as lessees. Upon sale to them of the rights, interests and
participation as to the portion pro indiviso, they remained in possession, not in concept of lessees anymore but as owners
now through symbolic delivery known as traditio brevi manu. Under Article 1477 of the Civil Code, the ownership of the thing
sold is acquired by the vendee upon actual or constructive delivery thereof.
5. Non-payment of price in a contract of sale; Remedies
In a contract of sale, the non-payment of the price is a resolutory condition which extinguishes the transaction that, for a time,
existed and discharges the obligations created thereunder. The remedy of an unpaid seller in a contract of sale is to seek either
specific performance or rescission.
6. Contracts, Requisites
Under Article 1318 of the Civil Code, the essential requisites of a contract are: consent of the contracting parties; object certain
which is the subject matter of the contract and cause of the obligation which is established. Absent one of the above, no
contract can arise. Conversely, where all are present, the result is a valid contract.
7. Modalities and restrictions do not affect validity of the contract, merely its effectivity
Some parties introduce various kinds of restrictions or modalities, the lack of which will not, however, affect the validity of the
contract. In the present case, the Deed of Sale is a valid one, even if it did not bear the stamp of approval of the probate court.
The contracts validity was not affected for in the words of the stipulation, this Contract of Sale of rights, interests and
participations shall become effective only upon the approval by the Honorable Court. Only the effectivity and not the validity of
the contract is affected.
8. Need of probate courts approval exists where specific properties of the estate are sold and not when ideal and
indivisible shares of an heir are disposed of
The need for approval by the probate court exists only where specific properties of the estate are sold and not when only ideal
and indivisible shares of an heir are disposed of. In Dillena v. Court of Appeals, the Court declared that it is within the
jurisdiction of the probate court to approve the sale of properties of a deceased person by his prospective heirs before final
adjudication. The probate courts approval is necessary for the validity of any disposition of the decedents estate. However,
reference to judicial approval cannot adversely affect the substantive rights of the heirs to dispose of their ideal share in the coheirship and/or co-ownership among the heirs. It must be recalled that during the period of indivision of a decedents estate,
each heir, being a co-owner, has full ownership of his part and may therefore alienate it. But the effect of the alienation with
Page 73 of 87
respect to the co-owners shall be limited to the portion which may be allotted to him in the division upon the termination of the
co-ownership.
9. Hereditary rights in an estate validly sold without need of court approval
Hereditary rights in an estate can be validly sold without need of court approval. In the present case, when the Cari-ans sold
their rights, interests and participation in Lots 1616 and 1617, they could legally sell the same without the approval of the
probate court.
10. Contractual stipulations considered law between parties; Exception: contemporaneous acts of parties
As a general rule, the pertinent contractual stipulation (requiring court approval) should be considered as the law between the
parties. However, the presence of two factors militate against this conclusion: (1) the evident intention of the parties appears to
be contrary to the mandatory character of said stipulation. Whoever crafted the document of conveyance, must have been of
the belief that the controversial stipulation was a legal requirement for the validity of the sale. But the contemporaneous and
subsequent acts of the parties reveal that the original objective of the parties was to give effect to the deed of sale even without
court approval. Receipt and acceptance of the numerous installments on the balance of the purchase price by the Cari-ans,
although the period to pay the balance of the purchase price expired in May 1979, and leaving Escanlar and Holgado in
possession of Lots 1616 and 1617 reveal their intention to effect the mutual transmission of rights and obligations. The Cari-ans
did not seek judicial relief until late 1982 or three years later; (2) the requisite approval was virtually rendered impossible by the
Cari-ans because they opposed the motion for approval of the sale filed by Escanlar and Holgado, and sued the latter for the
cancellation of that sale. Having provided the obstacle and the justification for the stipulated approval not to be granted, the
Cari-ans should not be allowed to cancel their first transaction with Escanlar and Holgado because of lack of approval by the
probate court, which lack is of their own making.
11. Rescission of a sale of real property; Vendee may pay beyond due date as long as there is no judicial or notarial demand
for rescission
With respect to rescission of a sale of real property, Article 1592 of the Civil Code governs. The provides that in the sale of
immovable property, even though it may have been stipulated that upon failure to pay the price at the time agreed upon the
rescission of the contract shall of right take place, the vendee may pay, even after the expiration of the period, a long as no
demand for rescission of the contract has been made upon him either judicially or by a notarial act. After the demand, the court
may not grant him a new term. In the present case, the sellers gave the buyers until May 1979 to pay the balance of the
purchase price. After the latter failed to pay installments due, the former made no judicial demand for rescission of the contract
nor did they execute any notarial act demanding the same, as required under Article 1592. Consequently, the buyers could
lawfully make payments even after the May 1979 deadline, as in fact they paid several installments to the sellers which the
latter accepted.
12. Acceptance of payment beyond due date a waiver to right to rescind; Sellers estopped
As the sellers, upon the expiration of the period to pay, made no move to rescind but continued accepting late payments, such
act cannot but be construed as a waiver of the right to rescind. When the sellers, instead of availing of their right to rescind,
accepted and received delayed payments of installments beyond the period stipulated, and the buyers were in arrears, the
sellers in effect waived and are now estopped from exercising said right to rescind.
13. Evidence does not prove Escanlar and Holgado were unable to complete payments
Despite all her claims, Fredismindas testimony fails to convince the Court that the heirs were not fully compensated by Escanlar
and Holgado. Fredisminda admits that her mother and her sister signed their individual receipts of full payment on their own
and not in her presence. The receipts presented in evidence show that Generosa Martinez was paid P45,625.00; Carmen Carian, P45,625.00; Rodolfo Cari-an, P47,500.00 on June 21, 1979; Nelly Chua vda. de Cari-an, P11,334.00 and the sum of
P34,218.00 was consigned in court for the minor Leonell Cari-an. Fredisminda insists that she signed a receipt for full payment
without receiving the money therefor and admits that she did not object to the computation. It is incredible that a mature
woman like Fredisminda Cari-an, would sign a receipt for money she did not receive. Furthermore, her claims regarding the
actual amount of the installments paid to her and her kin are quite vague and unsupported by competent evidence. She even
admits that all the receipts were taken by Escanlar. Supporting testimony from her co-heirs and siblings Carmen Cari-an, Rodolfo
Cari-an and Nelly Chua vda. de Cari-an is also absent. Thus, in the absence of proof on the contrary, the Cari-ans were indeed
paid the balance of the purchase price, despite having accepted installments therefor belatedly. There is thus no ground to
rescind the contract of sale because of non-payment.
14. Continued payment of lease indicate vendees did not take undue advantage of the Cari-an heirs
Escanlar and Holgado, in continuing to pay the rent for the parcels of land they allegedly bought until 1986 in compliance with
their lease contract, only proves that they respected the contract and did not take undue advantage of the heirs of Nombre and
Cari-an who benefited from the lease; contrary to the findings of the lower court that such act admits that the purchase price
was not fully paid the Cari-ans. It should be stressed that Escanlar and Holgado purchased the hereditary shares solely of the
Page 74 of 87
35.
Republic v. Philippine Development Corp. [G.R. No. L-10141. January 31, 1958.]
En Banc, Padilla (J): 10 concur
Facts: On 6 May 1955, the Republic of the Philippines in representation of the Bureau of Prisons instituted against Macario
Apostol and the Empire Insurance Co. a complaint with the CFI Manila (Civil Case 26166). The complaint alleges that Apostol
submitted the highest bid in the amount of P450.00 per ton for the purchase of 100 tons of Palawan Almaciga from the Bureau
of Prisons; that a contract therefor was drawn and by virtue of which, Apostol obtained goods from the Bureau of Prisons
valued P15,878.59; that of said account, Apostol paid only P691.10 leaving a balance obligation of P15, 187.49. The complaint
further avers that Apostol submitted the best bid with the Bureau of Prisons for the purchase of 3 million board feet of logs at
P88.00 per 1,000 board feet; that a contract was executed between the Director of Prisons and Apostol pursuant to which
contract Apostol obtained deliveries of logs valued at P65,830.00; and that Apostol failed to pay a balance account of
P18,827.57. All told, the total demand set forth in complaint against Apostol is for P34,015.06 with legal interests thereon from
8 January 1952. The Empire Insurance Company was included in the complaint having executed a performance bond of
P10,000.00 in favor of Apostol.
In his answer, Apostol interposed payment as a defense and sought the dismissal of the complaint. On 19 July 1955, the
Philippine Resources Development Corp. moved to intervene, appending to its motion, the complaint in intervention of even
date. The complaint recites that for sometime prior to Apostols transactions the corporate had some goods deposited in a
warehouse at 1201 Herran, Manila; that Apostol, then the president of the corporation but without the knowledge or consent
of the stockholders thereof, disposed of said goods by delivering the same to the Bureau of Prisons in an attempt to settle his
personal debts with the latter entity; that upon discovery of Apostols act, the corporation took steps to recover said goods by
demanding from the Bureau of Prisons the return thereof; and that upon the refusal of the Bureau to return said goods, the
corporation sought leave to intervene in Civil Case 26166. The Judge (Magno Gatmaitan) denied the motion for intervention and
Page 75 of 87
thereby issued an order to this effect on 23 July 1955. A motion for the reconsideration of said order was filed by the
corporation and the same was likewise denied on 18 August 1955.
On 3 September 1955, the corporation filed a petition for a writ of certiorari with the Court of Appeals by. On 12 December
1955 the Court of Appeals set aside the order denying the motion to intervene and ordered the trial court to admit the
corporations complaint-in-intervention, with costs against Macario Apostol. On 9 January 1956 the Government filed a petition
under Rule 46 to review the judgment rendered by the appellate court (CA-GR 15767-R) with the Supreme Court. The
Government contends that the intervenor has no legal interest in the matter in litigation, because the action brought in the CFI
Manila against Macario Apostol and the Empire Insurance Company (Civil Case 26166) is just for the collection from the
defendant Apostol of a sum of money, the unpaid balance of the purchase price of logs and almaciga bought by him from the
Bureau of Prisons, whereas the intervenor seeks to recover ownership and possession of G.I. sheets, black sheets, M.S. plates,
round bars and G.I. pipes that it claims it owns an intervention which would change a personal action into one ad rem and
would unduly delay the disposition of the case.
The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment under review, without pronouncement as to costs.
1. Intervenor has legal capacity as it stands to be adversely affected by the judgment of the court
It is true that the very subject matter of the original case is a sum of money, but it is likewise true as borne out by the records,
that the materials purportedly belonging to the corporation have been assessed and evaluated and their price equivalent in
terms of money have been determined; and that said materials for whatever price they have been assessed, have been assigned
by Apostol as tokens of payment of his private debts with the Bureau of Prisons. In view of these considerations, it becomes
enormously plain in the event the judge decides to credit Macario Apostol with the value of the goods delivered by the latter to
the Bureau of Prisons, the corporation stands to be adversely affected by such judgment. The conclusion is inescapable that the
corporation possesses a legal interest in the matter in litigation and that such interest is of an actual, material, direct and
immediate nature as to entitle the corporation to intervene.
2. Lower court has discretion to allow or disapprove a motion for intervention; Principle
Section 3 of Rule 13 of the Rules of Court endows the lower court with discretion to allow or disapprove a motion for
intervention (Santarromana et al. vs. Barrios, 63 Phil. 456); and that in the exercise of such discretion, the court shall consider
whether or not the intervention will unduly delay or prejudice the adjudication of the rights of the original parties and whether
or not the intervenors rights may be fully protected in a separate proceeding. In the present case, the corporation is positively
authorized to file a separate action against any of all the respondents; but considering that the resolution of the issues raised in
and joined by the pleadings in the main case, would vitally affect the rights not only of the original parties but also of the
corporation; that far from unduly delaying or prejudicing the adjudication of the rights of the original parties or bringing about
confusion in the original case, the admission of the complaint in intervention would help clarify the vital issue of the true and
real ownership of the materials involved, besides preventing an abhorrent multiplicity of suits. The motion to intervene should
be given due course.
3. Article 1458 admits purchaser may pay a price certain in money or its equivalent
The Government argues that Price is always paid in terms of money and the supposed payment being in kind, it is no payment
at all, citing article 1458 of the new Civil Code. However, the same article provides that the purchaser may pay a price certain
in money or its equivalent, which means that payment of the price need not be in money. Whether the G.I. sheets, black
sheets, M.S. plates, round bars and G.I. pipes claimed by the corporation to belong to it and delivered to the Bureau of Prisons
by Apostol in payment of his account is sufficient payment therefor, is for the Court to pass upon and decide after hearing all
the parties in the case. Should the trial court hold that it is as to credit Apostol with the value or price of the materials delivered
by him, certainly the corporation would be affected adversely if its claim of ownership of such sheets, plates, bars and pipes is
true.
4. Authority of corporate counsel presumed
By virtue of Section 20 of Rule 127, the authority of corporations counsel is presumed. Withal, the claim of the counsel for the
petitioner that a resolution to proceed against Apostol, had been unanimously adopted by the stockholders of the corporation,
has not been refuted. It cannot be said that the counsel is acting merely in an individual capacity without the benefit of a
corporate act authorizing him to bring suit. As counsels authority to appear for the corporation was never questioned in the
CFI, it is to be presumed that he was properly authorized to file the complaint-in intervention and appear for his client. It was
only in the Court of Appeals where his authority to appear was questioned. As the Court of Appeals was satisfied that counsel
was duly authorized by his client to file the complaint-in-intervention and to appear in its behalf, the resolution of the Court of
Appeals should not be disturbed.
5. Corporation has separate personality from president or stockholder; Power to sue lodged in the board of directors and
not the president
Page 76 of 87
Philippine Resource Corporation is a duly organized corporation with offices at the Samanillo Building and that as such, it is
endowed with a personality distinct and separate from that of its president or stockholders. It has the right to bring suit to
safeguard its interests and ordinarily, such right is exercised at the instance of the president. However, under the circumstance,
such right properly devolves upon the other officers of the corporation as said right is sought to be exercised against the
president himself who is the very object of the intended suit. The power of a corporation to sue and be sued in any court is
lodged in the board of directors which exercises its corporate powers, and not in the president.
6. Counsel is the secretary-treasurer of the corporation
Granting that counsel has not been actually authorized by the board of directors to appear for and in behalf of the corporation,
the fact that counsel is the secretary-treasurer of the corporation and a member of the board of directors; and that the other
members of the board, namely, Macario Apostol, the president, and his wife Pacita R. Apostol, who should normally initiate the
action to protect the corporate properties and interests are the ones to be adversely affected thereby, a single stockholder
under such circumtances may sue in behalf of the corporation. Counsel as a stockholder and director of the corporation may sue
in its behalf and file the complaint-in-intervention in the proper court.
36.
and the subdivision of the land. He developed the roads, the curbs and the gutters of the subdivision and entered into a
contract to construct low-cost housing units on the property. Manuels actions clearly belie Antonias and Emeterias contention
that he made no contribution to the partnership. Under Article 1767 of the Civil Code, a partner may contribute not only money
or property, but also industry.
3. Contract binds party to stipulations and all necessary consequences thereof
Under Article 1315 of the Civil Code, contracts bind the parties not only to what has been expressly stipulated, but also to all
necessary consequences thereof. Article 1315 provides that Contracts are perfected by mere consent, and from that moment
the parties are bound not only to the fulfillment of what has been expressly stipulated but also to all the consequences which,
according to their nature, may be in keeping with good faith, usage and law. It is undisputed that Antonia and Emeteria are
educated and are thus presumed to have understood the terms of the contract they voluntarily signed. If it was not in
consonance with their expectations, they should have objected to it and insisted on the provisions they wanted.
4. Courts may not extricate parties from the necessary consequences of their acts
Courts may not extricate parties from the necessary consequences of their acts, and the fact that the terms of a contract turn
out to be financially disadvantageous to them will not relieve them of their obligations therein. They cannot now disavow the
relationship formed from such agreement due to their supposed misunderstanding of its terms.
5. Article 1773 must be interpreted in relation to Article 1771; Present case does not prejudice third parties
The lack of an inventory of real property will not ipso facto release the contracting partners from their respective obligations to
each other arising from acts executed in accordance with their agreement. Article 1773 providing that a contract of partnership
is void, whenever immovable property is contributed thereto, if an inventory of said property is not made, signed by the parties,
and attached to the public instrument was intended primarily to protect third persons. Tolentino states that under the
provision which is a complement of Article 1771, the execution of a public instrument would be useless if there is no inventory
of the property contributed, because without its designation and description, they cannot be subject to inscription in the
Registry of Property, and their contribution cannot prejudice third persons. This will result in fraud to those who contract with
the partnership in the belief [in] the efficacy of the guaranty in which the immovables may consist. Thus, the contract is
declared void by the law when no such inventory is made. The present case does not involve third parties who may be
prejudiced.
6. Parties cannot adopt inconsistent positions in regard to a contract
Antonia and Emeteria invoke the allegedly void contract as basis for their claim that Manuel should pay them 60% of the value
of the property. They cannot in one breath deny the contract and in another recognize it, depending on what momentarily suits
their purpose. Parties cannot adopt inconsistent positions in regard to a contract and courts will not tolerate, much less
approve, such practice.
7. Nullity of partnership does not prevent courts from considering Joint Venture Agreement as an ordinary contract
The alleged nullity of the partnership will not prevent courts from considering the Joint Venture Agreement an ordinary contract
from which the parties rights and obligations to each other may be inferred and enforced.
8. Joint Venture Agreement states consideration
The Joint Venture Agreement clearly states that the consideration for the sale was the expectation of profits from the
subdivision project. Its first stipulation states that Antonia and Emeteria did not actually receive payment for the parcel of land
sold to Manuel. Thus, it cannot be contended that the Joint Venture Agreement is void under Article 1422 of the Civil Code,
because it is the direct result of an earlier illegal contract, which was for the sale of the land without valid consideration.
9. Consideration or cause may take many forms
Consideration, more properly denominated as cause, can take different forms, such as the prestation or promise of a thing or
service by another. In the present case, the cause of the contract of sale consisted not in the stated peso value of the land, but
in the expectation of profits from the subdivision project, for which the land was intended to be used. The land was in effect
given to the partnership as Antonias and Emeterias participation therein. There was therefore a consideration for the sale,
Antonia and Emeteria acting in the expectation that, should the venture come into fruition, they would get 60% of the net
profits.
10. Factual issues cannot be resolved on a petition of review under Rule 45; Damages not due
Factual issues cannot be resolved in a petition for review under Rule 45, as in the present case. Antonia and Emeteria have not
alleged, not to say shown, that their petition constitutes one of the exceptions to this doctrine. The Court of Appeals held that
the acts of Antonia and Emeteria did not cause the failure of the project, nor was Manuel responsible therefore. In imputing the
blame solely to him, Antonia and Emeteria failed to give any reason why the Court should disregard the factual findings of the
appellate court relieving him of fault. Antonia and Emeteria, thus, are not entitled to damages.
Page 78 of 87
37.
Dissatisfied with the trial courts judgment, Toyota appealed to the Court of Appeals (CA-GR CV 40043). In its decision
promulgated on 29 July 1994, the Court of Appeals affirmed in toto the appealed decision. Hence the petition for review by
certiorari by Toyota Shaw.
The Supreme Court granted the petition, and dismissed the challenged decision of the Court of Appeals and that of Branch 38 of
the Regional Trial Court of Marinduque, and the counterclaim therein; without pronouncement as to costs.
1. Contract of sale defined; Kinds
Article 1458 of the Civil Code defines a contract of sale as By the contract of the sale one of the contracting parties obligates
himself to transfer the ownership of and to deliver a determinate thing, and the other to pay therefor a price certain in money
or its equivalent. A contract of sale may be absolute or conditional.
2. Contract of sale, when perfected; Effect
Article 1475 of the Civil Code specifically provides when the contract of sale is deemed perfected, i.e. The contract of sale is
perfected at the moment there is a meeting of minds upon the thing which is the object of the contract and upon the price.
From that moment, the parties may reciprocally demand performance, subject to the provisions of the law governing the form
of contracts.
3. Agreement between Mr. Sosa & Popong Bernardo of Toyota Shaw, Inc. not a contract of sale
The Agreements between Mr. Sosa & Popong Bernardo of Toyota Shaw, Inc. executed on 4 June 1989, is not a contract of
sale. No obligation on the part of Toyota to transfer ownership of a determinate thing to Sosa and no correlative obligation on
the part of the latter to pay therefor a price certain appears therein. The provision on the downpayment of P100,000.00 made
no specific reference to a sale, it could only refer to a sale on installment basis, as the VSP executed the following day
confirmed. But nothing was mentioned about the full purchase price and the manner the installments were to be paid. Neither
logic nor recourse to ones imagination can lead to the conclusion that such agreement is a perfected contract of sale.
4. Definitive price is an essential element in the formation of a binding and enforceable contract of sale
A definite agreement on the manner of payment of the price is an essential element in the formation of a binding and
enforceable contract of sale. This is so because the agreement as to the manner of payment goes into the price such that a
disagreement on the manner of payment is tantamount to a failure to agree on the price. Definiteness as to the price is an
essential element of a binding agreement to sell personal property.
5. No meeting of the minds
The Agreements between Mr. Sosa & Popong Bernardo of Toyota Shaw, Inc. shows the absence of a meeting of minds
between Toyota and Sosa. Sosa did not even sign it. Further, Sosa was well aware from its title, written in bold letters, and thus
knew that he was not dealing with Toyota but with Popong Bernardo and that the latter did not misrepresent that he had the
authority to sell any Toyota vehicle.
6. Prudence and reasonable diligence in inquiring authority of agent
Sosa knew that Bernardo was only a sales representative of Toyota and hence a mere agent of the latter. It was incumbent upon
Sosa to act with ordinary prudence and reasonable diligence to know the extent of Bernardos authority as an agent in respect
of contracts to sell Toyotas vehicles. A person dealing with an agent is put upon inquiry and must discover upon his peril the
authority of the agent.
7. Three stages in the contract of sale
There are three stages in the contract of sale, namely (a) preparation, conception, or generation, which is the period of
negotiation and bargaining, ending at the moment of agreement of the parties; (b) perfection of birth of the contract, which is
the moment when the parties come to agree on the terms of the contract; and (c) consummation or death, which is the
fulfillment or performance of the terms agreed upon in the contract. In the present case, the Agreements between Mr. Sosa &
Popong Bernardo of Toyota Shaw, Inc. may be considered as part of the initial phase of the generation of negotiation stage of a
contract sale. The second phase of the generation or negotiation stage was the execution of the VSP (the downpayment of the
purchase price was P53,148.00 while the balance to be paid on installment should be financed by B.A. Finance. It is assumed
that B.A Finance was acceptable to Toyota).
8. Financing companies defined
Financing companies are defined in Section 3(a) of RA 5980, as amended by PDs 1454 and 1793, as corporations or
partnerships, except those regulated by the Central Bank of the Philippines, the Insurance Commission and the and the
Cooperatives Administration Office, which are primarily organized for the purpose of extending credit facilities to consumers
and to industrial, commercial, or agricultural enterprises, either by discounting or factoring commercial papers or accounts
receivable, or by buying and selling contracts, leases, chattel mortgages, or other evidence of indebtedness, or by leasing of
Page 80 of 87
motor vehicles, heavy equipment and industrial machinery, business and office machines and equipment, appliances and other
movable property.
9. Parties in a sale on installment basis financed by a financing company; No meeting of minds as financing application was
disapproved
In a sale on installment basis which is financed by a financing company, 3 parties are thus involved: (1) the buyer who executes a
note or notes for the unpaid balance of the price of the thing purchased on installment, (2) the seller who assigns the notes or
discounts them with a financing company, and (3) the financing company which is subrogated in the place of the seller, as the
creditor of the installment buyer. Since B.A. Finance did not approve Sosas application, there was then no meeting of minds on
the sale on installment basis.
10. Toyotas version of circumstances leading to non-release of vehicle more credible
Toyotas version that B.A. Finance disapproved Sosas application for which reason it suggested to Sosa that he pay the full
purchase price is more credible. When the latter refused, Toyota cancelled the VSP and returned to him his P100,000.00. Sosas
version, that the VSP was cancelled because the vehicle was delivered to another because of a more influential client, is
contradicted by paragraph 7 of his complaint which states that Bernardo for reasons known only to its representatives, refused
and/or failed to release the vehicle to the plaintiff . Plaintiff demanded for an explanation, but nothing was given.
11. VSP mere proposal and did not create demandable right in favor of Sosa when it was aborted
The VSP was a mere proposal which was aborted in lieu of subsequent events. Thus, the VSP created no demandable right in
favor of Sosa for the delivery of the vehicle to him, and its non-delivery did not cause any legally indemnifiable injury.
12. Award of moral damages without legal basis
The award of moral damages is without legal basis. The only ground upon which Sosa claimed moral damages is that since it was
known to his friends, townmates, and relatives that he was buying a Toyota Lite Ace which they expected to see on his birthday,
he suffered humiliation, shame, and sleepless nights when the van was not delivered. The van became the subject matter of
talks during his celebration that he may not have paid for it, and this created an impression against his business standing and
reputation created an impression against his business standing and reputation. At the bottom of this claim is nothing but
misplaced pride and ego. He should not have announced his plan to buy Toyota Lite Ace knowing that he might not be able to
pay the full purchase price. It was he who brought embarrassment upon himself by bragging about a thing which he did not own
yet.
13. Award of exemplary damages without basis; Purpose of exemplary damages
Since Sosa is not entitled to moral damages and there being no award for temperate, liquidated, or compensatory damages, he
is likewise not entitled to exemplary damages. Under Article 2229 of the Civil Code, exemplary or corrective damages are
imposed by way of example or correction for the public good, in addition to moral, temperate, liquidated, or compensatory
damages.
14. Award of attorneys fees without basis
For attorneys fees to be granted the court must explicitly state in the body of the decision, and not only in the dispositive
portion thereof, the legal reason for the award of attorneys fees. No such explicit determination thereon was made in the body
of the decision of the trial court. Thus, no reason exists for such award.
38.
regarding the property in question, and contends that the alleged contract described in the document attached to the
complaint is entirely unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds; that the truth of the matter is that a portion of the property in
question was being leased by a certain Socorro Velasco who, on 29 November 1962, went to the office of Magdalena Estate
indicated her desire to purchase the lot; that the latter indicated its willingness to sell the property to her at the price of
P100,000.00 under the condition that a down payment of P30,000.00 be made, P20,000.00 of which was to be paid on 31
November 1962, and that the balance of P70,000.00 including interest at 9% per annum was to be paid on installments for a
period of 10 years at the rate of P5,381.32 on June 30 and December of every year until the same shall have been fully paid;
that on 29 November 1962, Socorro Velasco offered to pay P10,000.00 as initial payment instead of the agreed P20,000.00 but
because the amount was short of the alleged P20,000.00 the same was accepted merely as deposit and upon request of Socorro
Velasco the receipt was made in the name of her brother-in-law ,Lorenzo Velasco; that Socorro Velasco failed to complete the
down payment of P30,000.00 and neither has she paid any installments on the balance of P70,000.00 up to the present time;
that it was only on 8 January 1964 that Socorro Velasco tendered payment of P20,000.00, which offer Magdalena Estate refused
to accept because it had considered the offer to sell rescinded on account of her failure to complete the down payment on or
before 31 December 1962. On 3 November 1968, the CFI Quezon City rendered a decision, dismissing the complaint filed by
Lorenzo and Socorro Velasco against the Magdalena Estate, Inc. for the purpose of compelling specific performance by
Magdalena Estate of an alleged deed of sale of a parcel of residential land in favor of the Velascos. The basis for the dismissal of
the complaint was that the alleged purchase and sale agreement was not perfected.
On 18 November 1968, after the perfection of their appeal to the Court of Appeals, the Velascos received a notice from the said
court requiring them to file their printed record on appeal within 60 days from receipt of said notice. This 60-day term was to
expire on 17 January 1969. Allegedly on 15 January 1969, the Velascos allegedly sent to the CA and to counsel for Magdalena
Estate, by registered mail allegedly deposited personally by its mailing clerk, one Juanito D. Quiachon, at the Makati Post Office,
a Motion For Extension of Time To File Printed Record on Appeal. The extension of time was sought on the ground of
mechanical failures of the printing machines, and the voluminous printing job now pending with the Vera Printing Press. On 10
February 1969, the Velascos filed their printed record on appeal in the CA. Thereafter, the Velascos received from Magdalena
Estate a motion filed on 8 February 1969 praying for the dismissal of the appeal on the ground that the Velascos had failed to
file their printed record on appeal on time. The CA, on 25 February 1969, denied the Magdalena Estates motion to dismiss,
granted the Velascos motion for 30-day extension from 15 January 1969, and admitted the latters printed record on appeal.
On 11 March 1969, Magdalena Estate prayed for a reconsideration of said resolution. The Velascos opposed the motion for
reconsideration and submitted to the CA the registry receipts (0215 and 0216), both stamped 15 January 1969, which were
issued by the receiving clerk of the registry section of the Makati Post Office covering the mails for the disputed motion for
extension of time to file their printed record on appeal and the affidavit of its mailing clerk. After several other pleadings and
manifestations relative to the motion for reconsideration and on 28 June 1969, the CA promulgated a resolution granting the
motion for reconsideration and ordered Atty. Patrocinio Corpuz (Velascos counsel) to show cause within 10 days from notice
why he should not be suspended from the practice of his profession for deceit, falsehood and violation of his sworn duty to the
Court, and directed the Provincial Fiscal of Rizal to conduct the necessary investigation against Juanito D. Quiachon of the
Salonga, Ordoez, Yap, Sicat & Associates Law Office and Flaviano O. Malindog, a letter carrier at the Makati Post Office, and to
file the appropriate criminal action against them (it appears that Malindog postmark the letters 15 January 1969 on 7 February
1969 at the request of Quiachon). On 5 September 1969, the CA promulgated another resolution, denying the motion for
reconsideration of the Velascos but, at the same time, accepting as satisfactory the explanation of Atty. Corpuz why he should
not be suspended from the practice of the legal profession.
On 20 September 1969, the First Assistant Fiscal of Rizal notified the Court of Appeals that he had found a prima facie case
against Malindog and would file the corresponding information for falsification of public documents against him, but dismissed
the complaint against Quiachon for lack of sufficient evidence.
A petition for certiorari and mandamus was filed by the Velascos against the resolution of the Court of Appeals dated 28 June
1969 in CA-GR 42376, which ordered the dismissal of the appeal interposed by them from a decision of the CFI Quezon City on
the ground that they had failed seasonably to file their printed record on appeal.
The Supreme Court denied the instant petition; without pronouncement as to costs.
1. Issues raised by Velascos; Some issues are subject of appeal on certiorari under Rule 45 rather than that of certiorari
under Rule 65
The Velascos contend that the Court of Appeals acted without or in excess of jurisdiction, or with such whimsical and grave
abuse of discretion as to amount to lack of jurisdiction, because (a) it declared that the motion for extension of time to file the
printed record on appeal was not mailed on 15 January 1969, when, in fact, it was mailed on the said date as evidenced by the
registry receipts and the post office stamp of the Makati Post Office; (b) it declared that the record on appeal was filed only on
10 February 1969, beyond the time authorized by the appellate court, when the truth is that the said date of filing was within
Page 82 of 87
the 30-day extension granted by it; (c) the adverse conclusions of the appellate court were not supported by the records of the
case, because the said court ignored the affidavit of the mailing clerk of the petitioners counsel, the registry receipts and
postmarked envelopes and, instead, chose to rely upon the affidavit of the mail carrier Malindog, which affidavit was prepared
by counsel for Magdalena Estate at the affiant himself so declared at the preliminary investigation at the Fiscals office which
absolved the Velascos counsel mailing clerk Quiachon from any criminal liability; (d) section 1, Rule 50 of the Rules of Court,
which enumerates the grounds upon which the Court of Appeals may dismiss an appeal, does not include as a ground the failure
to file a printed record on appeal; (e) the said section does not state either that the mismailing of a motion to extend the time
to file the printed record on appeal, assuming this to be the case, may be a basis for the dismissal of the appeal; (f) the Court of
Appeals has no jurisdiction to revoke the extension of time to file the printed record on appeal it had granted to the petitioners
based on a ground not specified in section 1, Rule 50 of the Rules of Court; and (g) the objection to an appeal may be waived as
when the appellee has allowed the record on appeal to be printed and approved. Some of the objections raised by the Velascos
to the questioned resolution of the Court of Appeals are obviously matters involving the correct construction of our rules of
procedure and, consequently, are proper subjects of an appeal by way of certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, rather
than a special civil action for certiorari under Rule 65. The petitioners, however, have correctly appreciated the nature of its
objections and have asked this Court to treat the instant petition as an appeal by way of certiorari under Rule 45 in the event
that the Supreme Court should deem that an appeal is an adequate remedy The nature of the present case permits a
disquisition of both types of assignments.
2. Date stamped on receipts and envelopes; Henning and Caltex cases do not apply
While it is true that stamped on the registry receipts 0215 and 0216 as well as on the envelopes covering the mails in question is
the date 15 January 1969, this, by itself, does not establish an unrebuttable presumption of the fact or date of mailing. The
Henning and Caltex cases are not in point because the specific adjective issue resolved in those cases was whether or not the
date of mailing a pleading is to be considered as the date of its filing, The issue in the present case is whether or not the motion
of the petitioners for extension of time to file the printed record on appeal was, in point of fact, mailed (and, therefore, filed) on
15 January 1969.
3. Certification of postmasters and Malindogs sworn declaration believable; Malindog induced to issue false registry
receipts for the Velascos counsel
The certifications issued by the two postmasters of Makati, Rizal and the sworn declaration of the mail carrier Malindog
describing how the said registry receipts came to be issued, are worthy of belief. It will be observed that the said certifications
explain clearly and in detail how it was improbable that the registry receipts in question could have been issued to Velascos
counsel in the ordinary course of official business, while Malindogs sworn statement, which constitutes a very grave admission
against his own interest, provides ample basis for a finding that where official duty was not performed it was at the behest of a
person interested in the Velascos side of the action below. That at the preliminary investigation at the Fiscals office, Malindog
failed to identify Quiachon as the person who induced him to issue falsified receipts, contrary to what he declared in his
affidavit, is of no moment since the findings of the inquest fiscal as reflected in the information for falsification filed against
Malindog indicate that someone did induce Malindog to make and issue false registry receipts to the counsel for the Velascos.
4. Right to appeal a statutory privilege and not a natural right nor a part of due process
In Bello vs. Fernando, it was held that the right to appeal is not a natural right nor a part of due process; it is merely a statutory
privilege. and may he exercised only in the manner provided by law.
5. Duty of appellant to file printed record on appeal with CA within 60 days from receipt of notice
The Rules of Court expressly makes it the duty of an appellant to file a printed record on appeal with the Court of Appeals within
60 days from receipt of notice from the clerk of that court that the record on appeal approved by the trial court has already
been received by the said court. Section 5 of Rule 46 (Duty of appellant upon receipt of notice) states that It shall be the duty
of the appellant within 15 days from the date of the notice referred to in the preceding section, to pay the clerk of the Court of
Appeals the fee for the docketing of the appeal, and within 60 days from such notice to submit to the court 40 printed copies of
the record on appeal, together with proof of service of 15 printed copies thereof upon the appellee.
6. Appellate court did not abuse its discretion
After a careful study and appraisal of the pleadings, admissions and denials respectively adduced and made by the parties, it is
clear that the Court of Appeals did not gravely abuse its discretion and did not act without or in excess of its jurisdiction. As the
Velascos failed to comply with the duty to file the printed record on appeal within 60 days from receipt of notice which the
Rules of Court enjoins, and considering that there was a deliberate effort on their part to mislead the said Court in granting
them an extension of time within which to file their printed record on appeal, it stands to reason that the appellate court cannot
be said to have abused its discretion or to have acted without or in excess of its jurisdiction in ordering the dismissal of their
appeal.
Page 83 of 87
7. Jurisprudence replete with cases where Court dismissed appeal on grounds not mentioned specifically in Rule 50, Section
1
Jurisprudence is replete with cases in which this Court dismissed an appeal on grounds not mentioned specifically in Section 1,
Rule 50 of the Rules of Court. (See, for example, De la Cruz vs. Blanco, 73 Phil. 596 (1942); Government of the Philippines vs.
Court of Appeals. 108 Phil. 86 (1960); Ferinion vs. Sta. Romana, L-25521, February 28, 66, 16 SCRA 370, 375).
8. Motion for extension of period must be made before the expiration of the period to be extended
Inasmuch as the motion for extension of the period to file the printed record on appeal was belatedly filed, then, it is as though
the same were non-existent. In Baquiran vs. Court of Appeals, it was stated that the motion for extension of the period for
filing pleadings and papers in court must be made before the expiration of the period to be extended. The soundness of this
dictum in matters of procedure is self-evident. For, were the doctrine otherwise, the uncertainties that would follow when
litigants are left to determine and redetermine for themselves whether to seek further redress in court forthwith or take their
own sweet time will result in litigations becoming more unbearable than the very grievances they are intended to redress.
9. Objection to appeal not waived
Magdalena Estate did file a motion in the Court of Appeals on 8 February 1969 praying for the dismissal of the appeal on the
ground that up to the said date the Velascos had not yet filed their record on appeal and, therefore, must be considered to have
abandoned their appeal. The objection to an appeal was thus not waived, contrary to Velascos argument that it was waived
when the appellee allows the record on appeal to be printed and approved/
10. No contract of sale perfected because the minds of the parties did not meet in regard to the manner of payment
No contract of sale was perfected because the minds of the parties did not meet in regard to the manner of payment. The
material averments contained in Velascos complaint themselves disclose a lack of complete agreement in regard to the
manner of payment of the lot in question. The complaint states pertinently that plaintiff and defendant further agreed that
the total down payment shall be P30,000.00, including the P10,000.00 partial payment mentioned in paragraph 3 hereof, and
that upon completion of the said down payment of P30,000.00, the balance of P70,000.00 shall be paid by the plaintiff to the
defendant in 10 years from November 29, 1962; and that the time within which the full down payment of the P30,000.00 was to
be completed was not specified by the parties but the defendant was duly compensated during the said time prior to
completion of the down payment of P30,000.00 by way of lease rentals on the house existing thereon which was earlier leased
by defendant to the plaintiffs sister-in-law, Socorro J. Velasco, and which were duly paid to the defendant by checks drawn by
plaintiff. The Velascos themselves admit that they and Magdalena Estate still had to meet and agree on how and when the
down payment and the installment payments were to be paid. Such being the situation, it cannot be said that a definite and
firm sales agreement between the parties had been perfected over the lot in question.
11. Definite agreement on the matter of payment of purchase price an essential element to form binding and enforceable
contract of sale
A definite agreement on the manner of payment of the purchase price is an essential element in the formation of a binding and
enforceable contract of sale. In the present case, the Velascos delivered to Magdalena Estate the sum of P10,000 as part of the
downpayment that they had to pay cannot be considered as sufficient proof of the perfection of any purchase and sale
agreement between the parties under article 1482 of the new Civil Code, as the Velascos themselves admit that some essential
matter (the terms of payment) still had to be mutually covenanted.
39.
Intestate Estate of Emilio Camon; Ereneta v. Bezore [G.R. No. L-29746. November 26, 1973.]
First Division, Castro (J): 5 concur
Facts: Emilio Camon was the lessee of the hacienda Rosario, located in Pontevedra, Negros Occidental, for the period from crop
year 1940-41 to crop year 1960-61. pro-indiviso of the said sugar plantation belonged to Ignatius Henry Bezore, Elwood
Knickerbocker and Mary Irene Fallon McCormick (as their inheritance from the late Thomas Fallon), while the other half
belonged to Petronila Alunan vda. de Sta. Romana, Amparo Sta. Romana and Alberta vda. de Hopon (as their inheritance from
their mother Rosario Sta. Romana).
Upon the death of Emilio Camon in 1967, his widow, Concepcion Ereeta, filed a petition in the CFI Negros Occidental (Special
Proceeding 8366) praying for the grant to her of letters of administration of the estate of the deceased Camon. The petition was
granted. Thereafter, the court issued an order requiring all persons with money claims against the estate to file their claims
within the period prescribed in the order.Thru their judicial administrator and counsel, Martiniano O. de la Cruz, Bezore, et al.
filed a claim against the estate in the amounts of P62,065 as the money value of sugar allotments and allowances and P2,100 as
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the money value of palay and rentals, or a total of P64,165, appertaining to the claimants half-share in the hacienda. Bezore, et.
al. and Ereneta are agreed that the late Emilio Camon appropriated for himself the amounts claimed. Bezore, et. al. had
demanded payment of their claim from Emilio Camon when he was still alive, but Ereneta ignored the demands. At the trial, 3
documents were submitted in evidence by Ereneta, the authenticity of each of which is not controverted by Bezore, et.al.; i.e.
(1) An Agreement to Sell, executed on 11 January 1961, whereby Bezore, et al., agreed to sell their share in the hacienda
Rosario to Amparo Sta. Romana and Alberta vda. de Hopon; (2) A Release and Waiver of Claims, executed on 12 January 961,
whereby Amparo Sta. Romana and Alberta vda. de Hopon, for and in consideration of their gratitude for the various services,
financial and personal extended to them by Emilio Camon, released him from any and all claims that may have accrued
pertaining to the 2/4 pro-indiviso share in Hacienda Rosario owned by Bezore, et. al. who had bound themselves to sell their
share in the said Hacienda Rosario to Amparo and Alberta, including rights accrued or accruing, and whereby Amparo and
Alberta bound themselves to waive in favor of Mr. Emilio Camon for his own use and benefit said rights accrued or accruing;
and (3) A Deed of Sale, executed on 4 August 1961, whereby Bezore, et al., for and in consideration of the sum of P78,000, to
be paid in the manner stated in the instrument, sold, transferred and conveyed all their rights, title, interest and participation,
whether accrued or accruing in their 2/4 pro-indiviso share in the hacienda Rosario, together with all the improvements
existing thereon, including its sugar quota, in favor of Amparo Sta. Romana and Alberta vda. de Hopon. On 20 July 1968, the
lower court dismissed the claim, rejecting Bezore et.als contention that the sugar allotments and allowances, subject of their
claim against the estate of Emilio Camon, were not included in the sale, and held that by the positive and categorical terms of
the deed of sale, all benefits accrued and accruing to the appellants before 4 August 1961 were included in the sale. Bezore,
et.al. filed a direct appeal with the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court affirmed the order of the lower court, at Bezore et. al.s cost.
1. Right to accrued claims not waived in January 1961
At the time of the execution, on 12 January 1961, of the deed of Release and Waiver of Claims, Amparo Sta. Romana and
Alberta vda. de Hopon could not release or waive accrued claims belonging to Bezore et..al, because the right that Amparo and
Alberta then had was a mere promise by Bezore, et.al. to sell their share in the hacienda, not the right to the accrued claims.
What was agreed to be sold in the future was different from what was purportedly waived; and even if the object in both
contracts were the same, the waiver would still be invalid for it is essential that a right, in order that it may be validly waived,
must be in existence at the time of the waiver.
2. Defect in waiver cured in August 1961; Bezore, et.al. parted with their accrued rights
Whatever defect there was in the waiver was subsequently cured by the deed of sale of 4 August 1961 by virtue of which
Bezore, et.al. sold not only their pro-indiviso half-share in the hacienda but also their accrued rights therein. It is immaterial that
Emilio Camon was not the vendee since what mattered is that Bezore, et.al. parted with their accrued rights for a valuable
consideration.
3. Question of fact not reviewable in direct appeal to Supreme Court
Whether the vendees (Bezore etal) represented to Martiniano O. de la Cruz that the sugar quedans and palay were not included
in the sale and that such was the intention of the parties, involves a question of fact which is not reviewable in a direct appeal to
the Supreme Court.
4. Accrued or accruing; Literal meaning of contractual stipulations control if terms are clear
The words accrued or accruing in the deed of sale are not obscure and, as the lower court declared, are in fact positive and
categorical enough to include accrued allotments and allowances. Since the said words are not ambiguous, there is no need to
interpret them. Article 1370 of the Civil Code provides that if the terms of a contract are clear and leave no doubt upon the
intention of the contracting parties, the literal meaning of its stipulations shall control.
5. Inadequacy of cause does not of itself invalidates the contract
That the consideration in the sale was cheap is not a ground for the infirmity of the sale. Inadequacy of cause in a contract
does not of itself invalidate the contract.
6. Silence as to demand letters not admission of debt
The silence of Camon with respect to the several demand letters sent to him was an admission of his debt, is without support or
sanction in law of evidence.
7. No change in the juridical relationship between hacienda owners and Emilio Camon after the written contract of lease;
Continued cultivation merely implied a new lease, did not convert into express trust
There was no change in the juridical relationship between the hacienda owners and Emilio Camon when, after the expiration of
their written contract of lease, he continued cultivating the hacienda during the crop years 1952-53 to 1960-61. The
continuance in the cultivation, with the acquiescence of the owners, did not convert the original relationship into an express
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trust but merely implied a new lease over the property, with the same terms and conditions provided in the original contract,
except as to the period of the lease.
8. Article 1670 of the Civil Code
Article 1670 of the Civil Code provides that if at the end of the contract the lessee should continue enjoying the thing leased for
15 days with the acquiescence of the lessor, and unless a notice to the contrary by either party has previously been given, it is
understood that there is an implied new lease, not for the period of the original contract, but for the time established in articles
1682 and 1687. The other terms of the original contract shall be revived.
9. Fiduciary relationship an essential characteristic of trust; No express trust
There is nothing in the record that evidence the creation of a fiduciary relationship between the lessors and the lessee after the
expiration of their written contract of lease. Fiduciary relationship is an essential characteristic of trust, and no written
instrument has been pointed to as establishing an express trust, which writing is required in express trusts over immovables.
There is no basis for the claim that an express trust was created when Camon continued to cultivate the land after the
expiration of the written contract of lease.
40.
4. (CA Decision) Director of Lands v. Abarca: Price inadequate to shock conscience of court
In Director of Lands vs. Abarca (61 Phil. 70), the Supreme Court considered the price of P877.25 as so inadequate to shock the
conscience of the court because the assessed value of the property in question was P60,000.00. The assessed value of the land
was more than 60 times the price paid at the auction sale. In the present case, the price of P10,500.00 is about 1/6 of the total
assessed value of the two parcels of land in question and the residential house thereon. The finding of the lower court that the
house and land in question have a fair market value of not less than P200,000.00 has no factual basis. It cannot be said,
therefore, that the price of P10,500.00 is so inadequate as to be shocking to the conscience of the court.
5. (CA Decision) Mere inadequacy of price not ground to annul public sale, unlike in ordinary sale; Inadequacy of price an
advantage in relation to owners right to redeem
Mere inadequacy of the price alone is not sufficient ground to annul the public sale. (Barrozo vs. Macaraeg, 83 Phil. 378) In
Velasquez vs. Coronel (5 SCRA 985, 988), it was held that while in ordinary sales for reasons of equity a transaction may be
invalidated on the ground of inadequacy of price, or when such inadequacy shocks ones conscience as to justify the courts to
interfere, such does not follow when the law gives to the owner the right to redeem, as when a sale is made at public auction,
upon the theory that the lesser the price the easier it is for the owner to effect the redemption. And so it was aptly said: When
there is the right to redeem, inadequacy of price should not be material, because the judgment debtor may reacquire the
property or also sell his right to redeem and thus recover the loss he claims to have suffered by reason of the price obtained at
the auction sale.
6. (CA Decision) Public Sale governed by Section 40 of CA 470
The public sale is governed by Section 40 of Commonwealth Act 470 which gives the delinquent taxpayer a period of 1 year from
the date of the sale within which to repurchase the property sold. In case the delinquent taxpayer does not repurchase the
property sold within the period of 1 year from the date of the sale, it becomes a mandatory duty of the provincial treasurer to
issue in favor of the purchaser a final deed of sale. (Velasquez vs. Coronel)
7. No lack of personal notice of tax sale
The alleged lack of personal notice of the tax sale is negated by her own averments in her own opposition filed in the lower
court a quo that the Oppositor in the petition is a woman 80 years of age. She was not aware of the auction sale conducted by
the City Treasurer of Quezon City on 3 December 1964 or if there was any notice sent to her, the same did not reach her or it
must have escaped her mind considering her age.
8. Quezon City Charter (CA 502), not RA 1275, controlling on length of redemption period; Special law prevails over general
law
The period for redemption is not the 2-year period provided in RA 1275, since the specific law governing tax sales of properties
in Quezon City is the Quezon City Charter, Commonwealth Act 502 which provides in section 31 thereof for a 1-year redemption
period. The special law covering Quezon City necessarily prevails over the general law. In the present case, since the filing of
Duazos brief in 1974, Vda. De Gordon had not sought to exercise her alleged right of redemption or make an actual tender
thereof.
9. Gross inadequacy of purchase price not material if owner has right to redeem
As held in Velasquez vs. Coronel, alleged gross inadequacy of price is not material when the law gives the owner the right to
redeem as when a sale is made at public auction, upon the theory that the lesser the price the easier it is for the owner to effect
the redemption.
10. Laws on tax sales for delinquent taxes necessary as taxes essential to life of Government
As stressed in Tajonera vs. Court of Appeals, the law governing tax sales for delinquent taxes may be harsh and drastic, but it is
a necessary means of insuring the prompt collection of taxes so essential to the life of the Government.
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