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I've long been contemplating to come up with a blog that would help the barristers,law

students and anyone who wishes to get legal updates, review materials, and digested
cases to aid them in their respective endeavors. Finally, it came into fruition. Thanks to
my boredom coz it drives me to nuts in setting this up.
SABADO, MAYO 05, 2012
FAMILY RELATIONS

ARTICLE 173

HEIRS OF CHRISTINA AYUSTE vs.


COURT OF APPEALS
G.R. No. 118784, September 2, 1999

Facts: Christina and Rafael Ayuste bought a house and lot, the title to which was in the name
of Rafael Ayuste married to Christina Ayuste.
Rafael sold the property to Viena Malabonga in 1987 without the consent of his wife.
The deed of sale was registered and a TCT was issued in the name of the buyer during the
same year.
After her husband’s death in 1989, Christina discovered the unauthorized sale. In 1990,
she filed a complaint seeking the annulment of the sale against the buyer. The TC annulled the
sale. The CA however, reversed the decision invoking Art. 172 CC, holding that the right of
Christina to bring an action for the annulment of the sale is barred for failure to file the same
during the existence of the marriage.

Issue: Is the action of Christina barred for having been filed out of time?

Held: Yes. Art. 173 is clear. The wife may during the marriage and within 10 years from the
transaction ask the courts for the annulment of any contract entered into by the husband without
her consent.
Although the action was filed within 10 years from the questioned transaction, it was not brought
during the existence of the marriage which was dissolved upon the death of Rafael in 1989.

PROPERTY, OWNERSHIP & ITS MODIFICATIONS

Ownership vs. Possession

GARCIA vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. NO. 133140, AUGUST 10, 1999
Facts: In 1981, a lot was registered and sold by Pedro Garcia to the Magpayo spouses. The
Magpayos mortgaged the land to the Philippine Bank of Commerce (PBCom). The spouses
failed to pay, hence, the mortgage was extra-judicially closed. The petition filed by PBCom for
the issuance of the writ of possession was granted, however, upon service of the writ of
possession, Mrs. Magpayo’s brother, Jose Garcia, who was in possession of the land, refused
to honor it and filed a motion for intervention. He alleged that he inherited the land as one of the
heirs of his mother.
The lower court held that the mortgage was void but, upon appeal, CA reversed its decision.
Petitioner appealed to the SC and raised, as one of the errors, that CA decided the case based on issues not
raised in the trial court nor in the appellant’s brief.

Issue: Did the Court of Appeals err in resolving the issues of “ownership” and “possession”?

Held: No. PBCom’s appellate brief alleged that the trial court could not distinguish ownership
from possession; that plaintiff- appellee’s possession could not ripen into ownership; that he was
an intruder in bad faith and his possession is certainly not in the concept of an owner.
We stress again that the possession and ownership are distinct legal concepts. Ownership exists
when a thing pertaining to one person is completely subjected to his will in a manner not prohibited by
law and consistent with the rights of others. Ownership confers certain rights to the owner, one of which
is the right to dispose of the thing by way of sale. Pedro Garcia and his wife exercised their right to
dispose of what they owned when they sold the subject property to the Magpayo spouses.
On the other hand, possession is defined as the holding of a thing or the enjoyment of a
right. Literally, to possess means to actually and physically occupy a thing with or without right.
Possession may be had in one of two ways: possession in the concept of an owner and
possession of a holder. “A possessor in the concept of an owner may be the owner himself or
one who claims to be so.” On the other hand, “one who possesses as a mere holder
acknowledges in another a superior right which he believes to be ownership, whether his belief
is right or wrong.” The records show that petitioner occupied the property not in the concept of
an owner for his stay was merely tolerated by his parents.

CO-OWNERSHIP: ARTICLES 493 AND 494

TOMAS CLAUDIO MEMORIAL COLLEGE vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 124262, October 12, 1999

Facts: Private Respondents De Castro filed an action for partition over a parcel of land which
was sold, without their knowledge, by their brother Mariano in favor of Petitioner Tomas Claudio
Memorial College. It is the contention of the private respondent De Castros that Mariano was
only able to sell his undivided share on the lot in question but not the other co-owners’
equivalent to four-fifths (4/5) of the property. Mariano, on the other hand, raises the defense of
prescription/laches.

Issue: 1) Did the sale by Mariano effectively include the entire land?
2) Was the action for partition filed by the siblings of Mariano barred by prescription?
Held: 1) No. Even if a co-owner sells the whole property as his, the sale will affect only his
own share but not those of the other co-owners who did not consent to the sale. Under Article
493 of the Civil Code, the sale or other disposition affects only the seller’s share pro indiviso,
and the transferee gets only that which corresponds to his grantor’s share in the property owned
in common.

2) No. In the light of the foregoing, petitioner’s defense of prescription against an action for
partition is a vain proposition. Pursuant to Article 494 of the Civil Code, ‘no co-owner shall be
obliged to remain in the co-ownership. Such co-owner may demand at anytime the partition of
the thing owned in common, insofar as his share is concerned.’ In Budlong vs. Bondoc, this
Court has interpreted said provision of law to mean that the action for partition is
imprescriptible. It cannot be barred by prescription.

Article 539; Rights of a Possessor

PHILIPPINE TRUST COMPANY vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 124658, December 15, 1999

Facts: Private respondent Simeon Policarpio Shipyard and Shipping Corporation filed a
complaint for damages and injunction against petitioner Philtrust company for the fraudulent
possession of the land occupied by the former on the basis of an alias writ of execution. The
writ of execution was based on a judgment previously decided that upheld the validity of
foreclosure of Philtrust of the properties mortgaged by private respondents and Philtrust’s right
to possess the property.
Private respondent contends that the property fraudulently possessed by Philtrust was
not included in the foreclosed mortgaged property. Thus, SPSSC is anchoring its complaint for
damages on the improper implementation of the alias writ of execution which as a result it was
deprived of possession of the property (OCT-R-165). Petitioner, on the other hand, contends
that SPSSC no longer owns the subject property because it was already foreclosed by
Landbank; thus, not being the owner, Philtrust alleges that SPSSC cannot be entitled to
possession.

Issue: Does private respondent SPSSC have a right to institute the complaint for damages?

Held: Since private respondent was in possession of the aforesaid land when the writ of
possession was improperly implemented, it is not correct therefore to say that private
respondent does not have a cause of action. It is elementary that a lawful possessor of a thing
has the right to institute an action should he be disturbed in its enjoyment.
Verily, Article 539 of the Civil Code states that – “Every possessor has a right to be
respected in his possession; and should he be disturbed therein, he shall be restored to said
possession by the means established by the laws and rules of court.” The phrase “every
possessor” in the article indicates that all kinds of possession, from that of the owner to that of a
mere holder, except that which constitutes a crime, should be respected and protected by the
means established and the laws of procedure. Consequently, private respondent having been
in lawful possession of the property covered by OCT-R-165 at the time of possession was
implemented, may institute an action for having been disturbed in its enjoyment.
Partition

NOCEDA vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 119730, September 2, 1999

Facts: On June 1, 1981, Directo, Noceda, and Arbizo, heirs of the late Celestino Arbizo,
extrajudicially settled a parcel of land known as Lot 1121. However, on August 17, 1981,
another extrajudicial settlement – partition of Lot 1121 was executed: 3/5 of the said land went
to Maria Arbizo while Direto and Noceda got only 1/5 each. Later, it was found out that Lot 1121
contained an area in excess of that stated in its tax declaration, which was the basis of partition.
After Directo demanded from Noceda to vacate her land on the ground that the latter
fenced the entire land of the former without her consent, a complaint for the recovery of
possession and ownership and rescission/annulment of donation was filed against Noceda.
Noceda claimed that the discrepancies between the two deeds of partition with respect
to the area of Lot 1121 and the respective share of the parties therein indicated that they never
intended any of the deeds to be the final determination of the portions of Lot 1121 allotted to
them.

Issue: Should Lot 1121 be partitioned in accordance with the extra-judicial settlement dated
August 17, 1981?

Held: Yes. The discrepancies between the extra-judicial settlements executed by Directo,
Noceda and Maria Arbizo on June 1, 1981 and August 17, 1981 only meant that the latter was
intended to supersede the former. Although in the extra-judicial settlement dated August 17, the
heirs of Celestino partitioned only less than the actual land area to conform with the area
declared under tax declaration, the heirs were actually occupying a bigger portion the total land
area of which exceeded that of what is stated in the tax declaration.
The purpose of partition is to put an end to co-ownership. It seeks a severance of the
individual interest of each co-owner, vesting in each a sole estate in specific property and giving
to each one a right to enjoy his estate without supervision or interference from the other. There
is no co-ownership where portion owned is concretely determined and identifiable, though not
technically described, or that said portions are still embraced in one and the same certificate of
title does not make said portions less determinable or identifiable, or distinguishable, one from
the other, or that dominion over each portion less exclusive, in their respective owners. A
partition legally made confers upon each heir the exclusive ownership of the property
adjudicated to him.

Partition; Compromise Agreement

ABARINTOS vs. COURT OF APPEALS


September 30, 1999

Facts: Petitioners and private respondents are co-owners of a hacienda. The co-owners
appointed petitioner Jose Garcia as administrator of the property. When private respondents,
found out that the hacienda was mismanaged, they decided to manage directly the hacienda.
Subsequently, the co-owners agreed to terminate the co-ownership and divide the property
among themselves. The co-owners entered into a compromise agreement to resolve the several
cases for partition filed by the co-owners and such agreement was approved by the lower court.
Private respondents, however, brought an action seeking to annul the compromise
agreement on the ground that it decides the action for the partition and appointment of a
receiver without the benefit of trial on the merits.

Issue: Is the compromise agreement conclusive as to the civil cases filed by the co-owners.

Held: Under Article 2028 of the Civil Code, a compromise is a contract whereby the parties,
by making reciprocal concessions, avoid a litigation or put an end to one already commenced.
A judicial compromise has the force of law and is conclusive between the parties. Once an
agreement is stamped with approval, it becomes more than a mere contract binding the parties,
and having the sanction of the court and entered as its determination of the controversy, it has
the force and effect of any other judgment.
It is settled that every act which is intended to put an end to indivision among co-heirs
and legatees or devisees is deemed to be a partition, although it should purport to be a sale, an
exchange, a compromise, or any other transaction.

SUCCESSION

ART. 811; PROBATE OF A HOLOGRAPHIC WILL

CODOY vs. CALUGAY


G.R. No. 123486, August 12, 1999

Facts: Matilde Seno Vda. de Ramonal died on January 16, 1990. On April 6, 1990,
Evangeline Calugay, Josephine Salcedo and Eufemia Patigas, devisees and legatees of the
holographic will of Matilde, filed a petition for probate of the will. On June 28, 1990, Eugenia
Codoy and Manuel Ramonal filed an opposition to the petition for probate, alleging that the will
was a forgery and that it is illegible. The legatees and devisees presented 6 witnesses and
various documentary evidence. The oppositors instead of presenting their evidence, filed a
demurrer to evidence, claiming that the legatees and devisees failed to establish sufficient
factual and legal basis for the probate of the will.

Issues: 1) Are the provisions of Art. 811 NCC permissive or mandatory?


2) Should the probate of the will be allowed?

Held: 1) Art. 811 is mandatory. The word “shall” connotes a mandatory order. We have
ruled that “shall” in a statute denotes an imperative obligation and is inconsistent with the idea of
discretion and that the presumption is that the word “shall”, when used in a statute, is
mandatory. The object of the solemnities surrounding the execution of wills is to close the door
against bad faith and fraud, to avoid substitution of wills and testaments and to guaranty their
truth and authenticity. Therefore the laws on this subject should be interpreted in such a way as
to attain these primordial ends. But, on the other hand, also one must not lose sight of the fact
that it is not the object of the law to restrain and curtail the exercise of the right to make a will.
However, we cannot eliminate the possibility of a false document being adjudged as the will of
the testator, which is why if the holographic will is contested, that law requires 3 witnesses to
declare that the will was in the handwriting of the deceased.

2) Not all the witnesses presented by the legatees and devisees testified explicitly that
they were familiar with the handwriting of the testator. There was no opportunity for an expert to
compare the signature and the handwriting of the deceased with other documents signed and
executed by her during her lifetime. The records are ordered remanded to the court of origin
with instructions to allow the oppositors to the probate to adduce evidence in support of their
opposition to the probate of the will.

Legitime

IMPERIAL vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 112483, October 8, 1999

Facts: Petitioner Eloy Imperial purchased a parcel of land from his father Leoncio Imperial.
Although the transaction was denominated as a sale, both admit that it was a donation.
Subsequently, Leoncio filed an action for the annulment of the supposed deed of sale
but a compromise agreement was then made by both parties. When Leoncio died, his adopted
son, Victor, substituted him in the Compromise agreement. When Victor also died, his heirs
(herein private respondents) filed an action for annulment of the donation on the ground that
the conveyance of said property in favor of petitioner Eloy impaired the legitime of Victor, their
natural brother and predecessors-in-interest.
Petitioner Imperial raises the defense that the donation did not impair Victor’s legitime
and that the action of respondents has already prescribed.

Issue: Was the donation made by Leoncio Imperial in favor of petitioner Eloy Imperial
inofficious and should be reduced?

Held: No. Unfortunately for private respondents, a claim for legitime does not amount to a
claim of title. In the recent case of Vizconde vs. CA, we declared that what is brought to
collation is not the donated property itself, but the value of the property at the time it was
donated. The rationale for this is that the donation is a real alienation which conveys ownership
upon its acceptance, hence, any increase in value or any deterioration or loss thereof is for the
account of the heir of the donee.

OBLIGATIONS & CONTRACTS

Article 1249
CEBU INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION
vs. COURT OF APPEALS
Facts: Private respondent, Vicente Alegre, invested with CIFC, a banking institution engaged
in money market operations, P500,000.00 in cash. Petitioner issued a promissory note for which
it issued a BPI check on the due date. However, when the check was deposited, the same was
dishonored by BPI. Alegre filed a complaint for recovery of money. In response, CIFC filed a
motion for leave of court to file a third party complaint against BPI.
Petitioner contends that the provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Law (not par. 2 of
Art. 1249 of the Civil Code) are the pertinent laws to govern its money market transactions.
RTC decided in favor of Alegre, CA affirms the decision.

Issue: Is Art. 1249 of the New Civil Code applicable in the present case?

Held: Yes. Art. 1249 of NCC provides that:


“The payment of debts in money shall be made in the currency stipulated, and if it is not
possible to deliver such currency, then in the currency, which is legal tender in the Philippines.
The delivery of the promissory notes payable to order or bills of exchange or other mercantile
documents shall produce the effect of payment only when they have been cashed, or when
through the fault of the creditor they have been impaired.”
Considering the nature of money market transaction, the above-quoted provision should
be applied in the present controversy. As held in Perez Vs CA, “a money market is a market
dealing in standardized short-term credit instruments (involving large amounts) where lenders
and borrowers do not deal directly with each other but through a middle man or dealer in open
market. In money market transaction, the investor is a lender who loans his money to a
borrower through a middle man or dealer.”
In the case at bar, the money market transaction between the petitioner and private respondent is in the
nature of a loan.

Article 1278; Compensation

E.G.V. REALTY DEVELOPMENT


CORPORATION vs. COURT OF
APPEALS
G.R. NO. 120236, JULY 20, 1999

Facts: E.G.V. Realty is the owner/developer of a seven-storey condominium building known


as Cristina Condominium Corporation (CCC). CCC holds title to all common areas of the
condominium and is in charge of managing, maintaining and administering the Condominium’s
common areas and providing for the building’s security. Unisphere International, Inc. is the
owner/occupant of unit 301 of said condominium. Unisphere was robbed twice of various items.
The incidents were reported to CCC. When Unisphere demanded compensation and
reimbursement from petitioner CCC for losses incurred as a result of the robbery, CCC denied
any liability. As a consequence, Unisphere withheld payment of its monthly due.
Unit 301 was sold to Unisphere but the condominium certificate of title bore an annotation of a
lien in favor of petitioners. Petitioners thereafter filed with SEC for the collection of unpaid monthly
dues.
The second order of the Hearing Officer declared that the petitioners were not liable for the
articles burglarized. Their appeal was likewise dismissed for having been filed out of time after several
extensions to file its memorandum of appeal.
The CA reversed SEC en banc’s order and declared that the monthly dues of Unisphere to the
corporation should be offset by the losses suffered by Unisphere, and for the latter to pay the balance.

Issue: Is set-off or compensation proper in the instant case?

Held: No. In Art. 1278 of the Civil Code, compensation is said to take place when two
persons, in their own right, are creditors and debtors of each other. Compensation is “a mode of
extinguishing to the concurrent amount, the obligations of those persons who in their own right
are reciprocally debtors and creditors of each other and the offsetting of two obligations which
are reciprocally extinguished if they are of equal value, or extinguished to the concurrent
amount if of different value.”
For compensation to take place, a distinction must be made between a debt and a mere claim. A
debt is a claim which has been formally passed upon by the highest authority to which it can in law be
submitted and has been declared to be a debt. A claim, on the other hand, is a debt in embryo. It is mere
evidence of a debt and must pass thru the process prescribed by law before it develops into what is
properly called a debt.
While respondent Unisphere does not deny its liability for its unpaid dues to petitioners, the latter
do not admit any responsibility for the loss suffered by the former occasioned by the burglary. At best,
what respondent Unisphere has against petitioner is just a claim, not a debt.
Tested by the foregoing yardstick, it has not been sufficiently established that compensation/set-
off is proper here as there is lack of evidence to show that petitioner EGV Realty and CCC and
respondent Unisphere are mutually debtors and creditors of each other.

NOVATION; INTERESTS
BAUTISTA vs. PILAR DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

G.R. No. 135046, August 17, 1999


Facts: To secure a loan obtained from Apex Mortgage & Loan Corp., petitioners executed a
promissory note (PN) obligating themselves to pay a sum equivalent to the loan with interest
rate of 12% for a period of 240 months to be paid in monthly installments. However, petitioners
failed to pay several installments. They executed another PN in favor of Apex for a bigger
amount at the increased rate of 21% per annum to be paid in monthly installments within a
period of 196 months. Petitioners again failed to pay the installments. Subsequently, Apex
assigned the second PN to respondent Pilar Dev’t Corp.
Issues:
1. Was the 1st PN novated by the 2nd PN?
2. Was the interest rate of 21%, as provided in the 2nd PN, valid?

Held: 1. YES. The 1st PN was cancelled by the express terms of the 2nd PN. The 2nd PN
bears a note that it cancels the 1st PN. To cancel is to strike out, to revoke, rescind or abandon,
to terminate. In fine, the 1st note was revoked and terminated. Simply put, it was novated. The
extinguishment of an obligation by the substitution or change of the obligation by a subsequent
one which extinguishes or modifies the first is a novation.
Novation has 4 essential requisites: (1) the existence of a previous valid obligation; (2)
the agreement of all parties to the new contract; (3) the extinguishment of the old contract; and
(4) the validity of the new one. In the instant case, all 4 requisites have been complied with.

2. YES. When the 2nd PN was executed on Sept. 20, 1982, Central Bank Circular No.
705 and 712 were already in effect. These Circulars fixed the effective interest rate for secured
loan transactions with maturiites of more than 730 days at 21% per annum. The interest rate of
21% provided in the 2nd PN was therefore authorized under these Circulars.

Reformation of Instrument; Fortuitous event; Novation; Interests

HUIBONHOA vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 102604, December 14, 1999

Facts: On June 30, 1983, Huibonhoa entered into a contract of lease with siblings Rufina
Gojocco Lim, Severino Gojocco and Loreta Gojocco Chua stipulating that Hiponhoa would lease
from them 3 commercial lots for a period of 15 year commencing on July 1, 1983 and renewable
upon agreement of the parties. Based on the said contract, the lessors authorized Huibonhua
to construct a building that must be completed within 8 months from the date of the execution of
the contract. During the aforesaid period, no monthly rental would be collected from
Huibonhua. The parties further agreed that upon termination of the lease, ownership and title to
the building thus constructed would automatically transfer to the lessor.
During the construction of the building, former Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr was
assasinated. This incident affected adversely the construction of the building such that
Huibonhua failed to complete the same with the stipulated eight-month period. It was
completed only in September 1984 or 7 seven months after the target date. Under the contract,
Huibonhua was supposed to start paying rental in March 1984 but she failed to do. On
December 19, 1984, the lessors sent a final letter of demand to pay the rental arrearages and to
vacate the leased premises.
On January 14, 1985, Huibonhua brought an action for reformation of contract alleging
that their true intention as to when the monthly rental would accrue was not therein expressed
due to mistake or accident. She claimed that their true intention was that no rents would accrue
during the entire period of actual construction. Moreover, she averred that by reason of mistake
or accident, the lease contract failed to provide that should an unforeseen event dramatically
increase the cost of construction, such as the assassination of Sen. Aquino, the monthly rental
would be reduced and the term of the lease would be extended for such duration as may fair
and equitable to both the lessors and the lessee. Eleven days later, the lessors filed a
complaint for ejectment against Huabonhua. On January 31, 1995, Rufina Gojocco Lim agreed
with Huibonhua on the accrual of monthly rental, the reduction of its amount and the extension
of the lease by 3 years. After trial on the merits, the RTC dismissed the complaint. It
considered as misplaced Huibonhua’s contention that the Aquino assassination was an accident
within the purview of Art. 1359 of the Civil Code. It also held that the act of Rufina in entering an
agreement was not binding upon the 2 other lessees since they were separate and independent
owner of the lots subject of the lease. Subsequently, the Court of Appeals affirmed the decision
of the RTC.

Issues:
1. Will the action for reformation of instrument prosper?
2. Was the tragic assassination of Former Senator Benigno Aquino a fortuitous event or
force majeure which justified the adjustment of the terms of the contract of lease?
3. Did the act of Rufina in entering an agreement with Huibonhua novated the original
lease contract?
4. Are Severino Gojocco and Loreto Gojocco Chua entitled to interest? If yes, at what
rate?

Held: 1. NO. An action for reformation of instrument under Article 1359 may prosper only
upon the concurrence of the following requisites: (1) there must have been a meeting of the
minds of the parties to the contract; (2) the instrument does not express the true intention of the
parties; and (3) the failure of the instrument to express the true intention of the parties is due to
mistake, fraud, inequitable conduct or accident. In case at bar, Huibonhua failed to discharge
the burden of proving that the intention of the parties has not been accurately expressed the
lease contract sought to be reformed; thus, the trial court correctly held that no clear and
convincing proof warrants the reformation thereof. In actions for reformation of contract, the
onus probandi is upon the party who insists that the contract should be reformed.
A contract duly executed is the law between the parties who are obliged to comply with
its terms. Events occurring subsequent to the signing of the agreement may suffice to alter its
terms only if, upon failure of the parties to arrive at a valid compromise, the court deems the
same to be sufficient reasons in law for altering the terms of the contract.

2. NO. A fortuitous event is that which could not be foreseen, or which even if foreseen,
was inevitable. To exempt the obligor from liability for a breach of an obligation due to an “act of
God,” the following requisites must concur: (a) the cause of the breach of the obligation must be
independent of the will of the debtor; (b) the event must be either unforeseeable or unavoidable;
(c) the event must be such as to render it impossible for the debtor to fulfill his obligation in a
normal manner; and (d) the debtor must be free from any participation in, or aggravation of the
injury to the creditor.
In the case under scrutiny, the assassination of Sen. Aquino may indeed be considered
a fortuitous event. However, the said incident per se could not have caused the delay in the
construction of the building. What might have caused the delay was the resulting escalation of
prices of commodities including construction materials. Be that as it may, there is no merit in
Huibonhoa’s argument that the inflation justified the accrual of monthly rental, the reduction of
its amount and the extension of the lease by 3 years. It is only when an extraordinary inflation
supervenes that the law affords the parties a relief in contractual obligation. For Huibonhua to
claim exemption from liability by reason of fortuitous event under Art. 1174 of the Civil Code, she
must prove that inflation was the sole and proximate cause of the loss or destruction of the
contract. Having failed to do so , Huibonhua’s contention is untenable.
3. NO. Under the law, novation is never presumed. The parties to a contract must
expressly agree that they are abrogating their old contract in favor of a new one. No novation of
a contract had occurred when the new agreement entered into between the parties was
intended “to give life” to the old one. “Giving life” to the contract was the very purpose for which
Rufina signed the agreement. It was intended to graft into the lease contract provisions that
would facilitate fulfillment of Huibonhua’s obligation therein. That the new agreement was
meant to strengthen the enforceability of the lease is further evidenced by the fact that the
agreement does not even hint that the lease itself would be abrogated. Where the parties to the
new obligation expressly recognize the continuing existence and validity of the old one, where,
in other words, the parties expressly negated the lapsing of the obligation, there can be no
novation.

4. YES. Loreto is also entitled to interest at the rate of 6% per annum from the accrual of the rent
in accordance with Art. 2209 of the Civil Code until it is fully paid because monetary award does not
partake of a loan or forbearance in money. However, the interim period from the finality of the judgment
until the monetary award is fully satisfied, is equivalent to a forbearance of credit and therefore, during
that interim period, the applicable rate of legal interest shall be 12%. As regards Severino, he shall be
entitled to such interests only from the time that Huibonhua defaulted paying her monthly rentals to him
considering that he had already received from her the amount of P270,825 as rentals.

CAUSE in Contracts; Rescission

UY vs. COURT OF APPEALS


GR No. 120465, September 9, 1999

Facts: Petitioners Uy and Roxas offered to sell eight parcels of land, as agents of the owners
thereof, to private respondent National Housing Authority (NHA) for the latter to utilize and
develop as a housing project. The NHA thereafter approved the acquisition but for only 5
parcels of land since it was determined that the other 3 were located at an active landslide area
and thus, not suitable for development into a housing project. Subsequently, the NHA cancelled
the purchase of the 3 lots.
Petitioners then filed an action for damages against the NHA for the cancellation of
purchase contending that there was no basis for its rescission by the NHA. The lower court and
respondent Court of Appeals ruled that the cancellation was justified and that petitioners are not
entitled to damages.

Issue: Does the cancellation of the sale by the NHA for the 3 lots amount to a rescission of
that part of the contract?

Held: No. In this 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. 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.
The cancellation, therefore, was not a rescission under Article 1191. Rather, 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. Cause is the essential reason
which moves the contracting parties to enter into it.
Ordinarily, a party’s motives for entering into a contract do not affect the contract.
However, when the motive predetermines the cause, the motive may be regarded as the cause.
In this case, it is clear that the NHA would not have entered into the contract were the
lands not suitable for housing. In other words, the quality of the land was an implied condition
for the NHA to enter into the contract. On the part of the NHA, therefore, the motive was the
cause for its being a party to the sale.
Accordingly, we hold that the NHA was justified in cancelling the contract. The
realization of the mistake as regards the quality of the land resulted in the negation of
the motive/cause thus rendering the contract inexistent.

Article 1177; Requisites for Rescission of a


Fraudulent Sale

ADORABLE vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 119466, November 25, 1999

Facts: Private respondent Saturnino Bareng was the registered owner of 2 parcels of land.
Petitioners were lessees of a 200 sq.m. portion of one of the said 2 lands.
On April 29, 1985, Saturnino Bareng and his son, Francisco Bareng, obtained a loan from
petitioner amounting to P26,000 in consideration of which they promised to transfer the possession and
enjoyment of the fruits of Lot No. 661-E.
On Aug 3, 1986, Saturnino sold to his son Francisco 18,500 sq.m. of lot No. 661-D-5-A.
In turn, Francisco sold on Aug. 27, 1986 to private respondent Jose Ramos 3,000 sq. m. of the
lot.
Petitioner filed a complaint for the annulment of the sale on the ground that the sale was
fraudulently prepared.

Issue: Does petitioner have a cause of action?

Held: No. Petitioners do not have such material interest as to allow them to sue for
rescission of the contract of sale. At the outset, petitioner’s right against private respondents is
only a personal right to receive payment of the loan; it is not a real right over the lot subject of
the deed of sale.
Nor can we sustain petitioner’s claim that the sale was made in fraud of creditors under
Art. 1177 of the Civil Code. The following successive measures must be taken by a creditor
before he may bring an action for rescission of an allegedly fraudulent sale: 1) exhaust the
property of the debtor through levying by attachment and execution upon all the property of the
debtor, except such as are exempt by law from execution; 2) exercise all the rights and actions
of the debtor, save those personal to him; 3) seek rescission of the contracts executed by the
debtor in fraud of their rights. Without availing of the first and second remedies, i.e.,
exhausting the properties of the debtor or subrogating themselves in Francisco Bareng’s
transmissible rights and action, petitioners simply undertook the third measure and filed an
action for annulment of sale.

CONDITIONAL OBLIGATION

GONZALES vs. HEIRS OF THOMAS AND PAULA CRUZ


G.R. No. 131784, September 16, 1999

Facts: Petitioner Gonzales entered into a Contract of Lease/Purchase with the heirs of
Thomas and Paula Cruz. Based on the said contract, the petitioner was given an option to
purchase the leased property after the expiration of the one-year lease. The option was subject
to a condition contained in par. 9 of the Contract which provided that: “The LESSORS (heirs) x x
x shall undertake to obtain a separate and distinct TCT over the leased portion to the LESSEE
within a reasonable period of time which shall not in any case exceed 4 years, x x x”. After the
expiration of the lease, petitioner Gonzales did not exercise his option to purchase the property.
He remained in possession without paying the purchase price. Alleging breach of the provisions
of the Contract, the heirs filed a complaint for the recovery of possession of the property. For
his part, the petitioner defended that there was no breach since the heirs had not yet registered
the leased property in their names in accordance with par. 9 of the Contract.

Issues: (1) Is par. 9 of the Lease/Purchase Contract a condition precedent before petitioner could
exercise his option to buy the property?
(2) Can respondents rescind the Contract after the one-year period?

Held: (1) YES. The clear intent of the 9th par. was for respondents to obtain a separate and
distinct TCT in their names. This was necessary to enable them to show their ownership of the
stipulated portion of the land and their concomitant right to dispose of it. It is a well-settled
principle in law that no one can give what one does not have – nemo dat quod non habet.
Accordingly, one can sell only what one owns or is authorized to sell, and the buyer can acquire
no more that what the seller can transfer legally. Because the 9th clause required respondents
to obtain a separate and distinct TCT in their names and not in the name of petitioner, it logically
follows that such under taking was a condition precedent to the latter’s obligation to purchase
and pay for the land. Put differently, petitioner’s obligation to purchase the land is a conditional
one and is governed by Article 1181 of the Civil Code. Condition has been defined as “every
future and uncertain event upon which an obligation or provision is made to depend”. Without it,
the sale of the property under the Contract cannot be perfected, and the petitioner cannot be
obliged to purchase the property. The obligatory force of a conditional obligation is subordinated
to the happening of a future and uncertain event, so that if that event does not take place, the
parties would stand as if the conditional obligation had never existed.
(2) NO. Respondents cannot rescind the contract because they have not caused the
transfer of the TCT in their names, which is a condition precedent to petitioner’s obligation.
There can be no rescission (or more properly, resolution) of an obligation as yet non-existent,
because the suspensive condition has not happened.

Fraud in Art. 1338

RURAL BANK OF STA. MARIA, PANGASINAN vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 110672, September 14, 1999

Facts: A Deed of Absolute Sale with Assumption of Mortgage was executed between Behis
as vendor/assignor and private respondents Rayandayan and Arceno as vendees/assignees for
the sum of P250,000. On the same day, private respondents, together with Behis, executed
another Agreement embodying the real consideration of the sale of the land in the sum of
P2,400,000. Thereafter, private respondents negotiated with the principal stockholder of the
bank, Engr. Natividad, for the assumption of the indebtedness of Behis and the subsequent
release of the mortgage on the property by the bank. Private respondents did not show to the
bank the Agreement with Behis providing for the real consideration of P2,400,000.
Subsequently, the bank consented to the substitution of private respondents as mortgage
debtors in place of Behis in a Memorandum of Agreement. Instead of the bank foreclosing
immediately for non-payment of the delinquent account of Behis, petitioner bank agreed to
receive only a partial payment of P143,000 by installment on specific dates. After payment
thereof, the bank agreed to release the mortgage of Behis; to give its consent to the transfer of
title to the private respondents; and to the payment of the balance of P200,000 under new terms
with a new mortgage to be executed by the private respondent over the same land. Despite
repeated demands by the private respondents, the bank refused to perform its obligations under
the Memorandum of Agreement on the ground of fraud for withholding from the said bank the
real consideration of the sale.

Issue: Is the Memorandum of Agreement voidable on the ground of bad faith or fraud on the
part of the private respondents in concealing the real consideration of the sale during
negotiations with the petitioner bank on the assumption of the mortgage debt?

Held: NO. The kind of fraud that will vitiate a contract refers to those insidious word or
machinations resorted to by one of the contracting parties to induce the other to enter into a
contract which without them he would not have agreed to. Simply stated, the fraud must be the
determining cause of the contract, or must have caused the consent to be given. It is believed
that the non-disclosure to the bank of the purchase price of the sale of the land between private
respondents and Behis cannot be fraud contemplated by Article 1338 of the Civil Code. First of
all, the consideration could not have been the determining cause for the petitioner bank to enter
into the memorandum of agreement. To all intents and purposes, the bank entered into said
agreement in order to effect payment on the indebtedness of Behis. Secondly, pursuant to
Article 1339, silence or concealment, does not constitute fraud unless there is a special duty to
disclose certain facts, or unless according to good faith and the usages of commerce the
communication should be made. Verily, private respondents had no duty and therefore did not
act in bad faith in failing to disclose the real consideration. Thirdly, the bank had other means
and opportunity of verifying the financial capacity of private respondents. Furthermore, the bank
security remained unimpaired regardless of the consideration of the sale.
Consequently, not all elements of fraud vitiating consent for purposes of annulling a
contract concur to wit: (a) It was employed by a contracting party upon the other; (b) It induced
the other party to enter into contract; (c) It was serious; and (d) It resulted in damages and injury
to the party seeking annulment. Petitioner bank has not sufficiently shown that it was induced to
enter into the agreement by the non-disclosure of the purchase price, and that the same
resulted in damages to the bank.

APPLICATION OF IN PARI DELICTO RULE

MODINA vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 109355, October 29, 1999

Facts: The parcels of land in question were sold to Ramon Chiang by his wife, Merlinda.
Ramon subsequently sold the subject properties to Serfin Modina as evidenced by a Deed of
Absolute Sale.
Modina brought a complaint for recovery of possession with damages against the
respondents.
Merlinda sought the declaration of nullity of the Deed of Sale on the ground that the titles
of the parcels of land in dispute were never legally transferred to her husband, the sale being
violative of Article 1490 of the NCC.
Modina stressed that what is applicable is Article 1412 on the principle of in pari delicto.

Issue: Is Merlinda barred by the principle of in pari delicto from questioning subject deed of
sale?

Held: No. The principle of in pari delicto is inapplicable as the sale was void for want of
consideration. In effect, Merlinda can recover the lots sold by her husband to Modina.
The principle of in pari delicto non oritur action denies all recovery to the guilty parties
inter se. It applies to cases where the nullity arises from the illegality of the consideration or the
purpose of the contract. When two persons are equally at fault, the law does not relieve them.
The exception to this general rule is when the principle is invoked with respect to inexistent
contracts, like in the case at bar.
As the contracts under controversy are inexistent contracts within legal contemplation,
Articles 1411 and 1412 of the NCC are inapplicable. In pari delicto doctrine applies only to
contracts with illegal consideration or subject matter, whether the attendant facts constitute an
offense or misdemeanor or whether the consideration involved is merely rendered illegal.
Rescission; Damages

ASUNCION vs. EVANGELISTA


G.R. No. 133491, October 13, 1999

Facts: Asuncion and Evangelista entered into a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) whereby
the former agreed to pay latter certain amounts of money and to assume all the liabilities of
Embassy Farms which is controlled by respondent. In return, Evangelista will transfer control of
Embassy Farms and transfer to Asuncion all the real properties held under real estate mortgage
with several savings banks and finance corporations.
While Asuncion fulfilled his payment commitments under the MOA, Evangelista failed to
transfer the title of the real properties and the shares of stock of Embassy Farms in the name of
Asuncion. However, it was respondent who filed a complaint for the rescission of the MOA
arguing that petitioner failed to comply with his obligations under the agreement.
During the trial, Evangelista explained that the reason he did not transfer the real
properties is because Asuncion did not agree to make a formal assumption of the mortgage
under the MOA. Both the TC and CA ruled in favor of Evangelista and ordered the rescission of
the MOA with damages based on the alleged proceeds of the sale of hogs during the period
control of the Embassy Farms was with Asuncion.

Issue: Is Evangelista entitled to damages?

Held: No. In case of rescission, while damages may be assessed in favor of the prejudiced
party, only those kinds of damages consistent with the remedy of rescission may be granted,
keeping in mind that had the parties opted for specific performance, other kinds of damages
would have been called for which are absolutely distinct from those kinds of damages accruing
in the case of rescission. Compensatory damages consisting of the value of the private
landholdings would have been proper in case he resorted to the remedy of specific
performance, not rescission.

Art. 1434
PISUENA vs. HEIRS OF PETRA UNATING
G.R. No. 132803, August 31, 1999

Facts: Petra Unating inherited Lot No. 1201 from her mother. During her marriage to Aquilino
Villar, she registered the lot in her name. They had two children Felix and Catalina. In 1948,
Petra died. In 1949, Felix and Catalina sold the entire lot to Agustin Navarra but repossessed
the same upon the latter’s death in 1958. Meanwhile Aquilino died in 1953.
In 1982, defendant Jessie Pisuena, son-in-law of Agustin wrested possession of the
property from the heirs of Felix and Catalina. The latter filed a complaint for its recovery,
assailing the validity of the deed of sale in favor of Agustin.

Issue: Did the Deed of Sale in 1949 transfer the whole lot in favor of Agustin despite the fact
that Aquilino did not consent to the sale of his share?

Held: No. In 1949, Felix and Catalina’s interest in the share of their father is still inchoate.
They cannot dispose such share without the consent of their father. At most they conveyed only
their 2/3 share over the lost. However, when Aquilino died in 1953 without disposing of his1/3
share, Felix and Catalina’s interest on it was actualized because succession vested in them the
title to their father’s share and consequently, the entire lot. Thus, the title passed to Agustin
pursuant to Art. 1434 of the present Civil Code, which provides: “When a person who is not the
owner of the thing sells or alienates or delivers it, and later, the seller of grantor acquires title
thereto, such title passes by operation of law to the buyer or grantee.”

LACHES
IMPERIAL vs. COURT OF APPEALS
G.R. No. 112483, October 8, 1999

Facts: Petitioner Eloy Imperial purchased a parcel of land from his father Leoncio Imperial.
Although the transaction was denominated as a sale, both admit that it was a donation.
Subsequently, Leoncio filed an action for the annulment of the supposed deed of sale
but a compromise agreement was then made by both parties. When Leoncio died, his adopted
son, Victor, substituted him in the Compromise agreement. When Victor also died, his heirs
(herein private respondents) filed an action for annulment of the donation on the ground that
the conveyance of said property in favor of petitioner Eloy impaired the legitime of Victor, their
natural brother and predecessors-in-interest.
Petitioner Imperial raises the defense that the donation did not impair Victor’s legitime
and that the action of respondents has already prescribed.

Issue: Is the action to question the donation barred by prescription?

Held: Yes. The case of Mateo vs. Lagua, which involved the reduction for inofficiousness of a
donation propter nuptias, recognized that the cause of action to enforce a legitime accrues upon
the death of the donor-decedent. Clearly so, since it is only then that the net estate may be
ascertained and on which basis, the legitimes may be determined.
It took private respondents 24 years since the death of Leoncio to initiate this case, long
beyond the 10 year prescriptive period. The action, therefore, has long prescribed.

TRUST

SALTIGA DE ROMERO vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 109307, November 25, 1999
Facts: On Dec. 12, 1939 Eugenio Romero bought from spouses Macan the latter’s rights,
interest, participation in a 12-hectare land. The land in question was then public land. When
Eugenio Romero applied for a homestead patent for said land, the same was disapproved by
the Bureau of Lands because said Romero already had applied for a homestead patent for 24
hectares and was disqualified from owning additional 12 hectares.
Eugenio Romero placed the application in the name of his eldest son, Eutiquio
Romero, allegedly in trust for all the children of Eugenio. When Eutiquio got married and had
children, the application was transferred in the name of Lutero Romero. When Lutero in turn
got married, he relinquished the application in favor of his younger brother Ricardo.
Eugenio Romero died in 1948. In 1961, his widow Teodora caused the land in question
to be subdivided among 6 of her children. The appellants claimed that after the partition, they
had been in occupancy of their respective shares through their tenants.
However, Lutero claimed that in 1969, he was picked up by a policeman and brought to
the office of the mayor. He was then made to sign 3 affidavits conveying his share to his sister
Gloriosa, brother-in-law Sabdullah and to Meliton Pacas. He said that he could not sell his land
because the 5-year period had not yet elapsed. He was made to sign anyway.
Subsequently, he repudiated the affidavits. He then filed an action for the annulment of
the affidavits.

Issue: Was there a trust constituted?

Held: No trust is constituted. Petitioners contend that Lutero merely holds Lot 23Pls-35 in
trust for the benefit of the heirs of his father Eugenio since it was actually Eugenio who first
applied for the homestead but considering that Eugenio was already granted a homestead, the
application had to be placed in the name of his eldest son, which was later transferred to
Lutero.
xxx
However, it has been held that a trust will not be created when, for the purpose of
evading the law prohibiting one from taking or holding real property, he takes conveyance
thereof in the name of a third person.

SALES AND LEASE

CONSENT AS ESSENTIAL ELEMENT OF CONTRACT


OF SALE

DELOS REYES vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 129103, September 3, 1999

Facts: Daluyong Gabriel owns a parcel of land in Tagum, Davao. Because he lives in Manila,
Gabriel appointed his sister as administratrix for the collection of the rentals for those portions
which have been leased to certain tenants. In 1985, Gabriel sent his son Renato to collect the
rentals.
One of the tenants, Lydia Delos Reyes, verbally agreed to buy a portion of the land of
Gabriel. Receipt of payment of the purchase price was acknowledged by Renato. However, no
deed of sale was executed covering the transactions. The purchaser proceeded with the
construction therein of a 2-storey building. Gabriel demanded the purchaser to cease and
desist from the construction. Delos Reyes filed a complaint for specific performance.

Issue: Was there a valid contract of sale covering a portion of the land of Daluyong Gabriel?

Held: No. Renato Gabriel was neither the owner of the subject property nor a duly
designated agent of the registered owner (Daluyong Gabriel) authorized to sell subject property
in his behalf, and there was also no sufficient evidence adduced to show that Daluyong
subsequently ratified Renato’s act. In this connection, it must be pointed out that pursuant to
Article 1874 of the Civil Code, when the sale of a piece of land or any interest therein is through
an agent, the authority of the latter shall be in writing, otherwise the sale shall be void. In other
words, for want of capacity to give consent on the part of Renato, the oral contract of sale lacks
one of the essential requisites for its validity prescribed under Article 1318 and is therefore null
and void ab initio.

PRICE; ELEMENT OF A CONTRACT OF SALE

DAVID vs. TIONGSON


G.R. No. 108169, August 25, 1999

Facts: Spouses David purchased a parcel of land from respondents spouses Tiongson for a
total consideration of P15,000. The parties expressly agreed that as soon as the petitioners
fully paid the purchase price, respondents would execute a deed of absolute sale and cause the
issuance of the certificate of title in petitioners’ favor. After paying a total of P15,050, the Davids
demanded the execution of the deed of sale and the issuance of the corresponding title, but the
respondents refused. Hence, the Davids filed a complaint for specific performance with
damages. The lower court ruled in favor of the Davids. However, the Court of Appeals modified
the trial court’s decision. According to the Appellate Court, there was no agreement as to the
price since the receipts issued by the Mr. Tiongson failed to state the total purchase price or
prove that full payment was made. Hence, there was no meeting of minds regarding the price,
and consequently, there was no perfected contract of sale.

Issue: Is there an agreement as to the price of the lot?

Held: YES. The Court of Appeals relied heavily on the receipts issued by Mr. Tiongson.
However, Mrs. David testified that there was an agreement to purchase the lot for P15,000
which respondents failed to rebut. However, in the brief, the Tiongsons alleged that the agreed
price was P120 per sq. m. Hence, they are now estopped to deny the existence of an agreed
price. The question to be determined should not be whether there was an agreed price, but
what that agreed price was, whether for a total of P15,000 or P120 per sq. m. The sellers could
not render invalid a perfected contract of sale by merely contradicting the buyers’ allegation
regarding the price, and subsequently raising the lack of agreement as to the price. Also, an
overpayment of P50 does not negate the existence of an agreed purchase price – instead, this
entitles the buyer to claim reimbursement of any overpayment made.

Contract of sale

CO v. COURT OF APPEALS
312 SCRA 528

Facts:
Plaintiff Adoracion Custodio entered into a verbal contract with defendants’ spouses Co
for the purchase of the latter’s house and lot located at Alabang, Metro Manila at the agreed
purchase price of $100,000.00 payable in two payments $40,000.00 in Dec. 4, 1984 and the
balance of $60,000.00 on January 5, 1985. A week thereafter, plaintiff paid defendants the
amount of $1,000.00 and Php40,000.00 as earnest money. On January 25, 1985, although the
period of payment had already expired, plaintiff paid to defendants the sum of $30,000.00 as
partial payment. On March 15, 1985, defendants demanded from plaintiff payment of the
balance of purchase price but to no avail. On Aug. 8, 1986, defendants informed plaintiff that
she lost her option to purchase the property and that her other rights to the property including
payments already made are forfeited. On Sept. 5, 1986, plaintiff informed defendants that she is
now ready to pay the remaining balance but was ignored by the latter. Plaintiff then filed an
action for rescission.
The lower court ruled that the earnest money is forfeited. It also ordered defendants to
remit to plaintiff the peso equivalent of $30,000.00 representing the partial payment of purchase
price. Defendants appealed arguing that plaintiff had already lost her right on option to purchase
and that her failure to exercise said option resulted in forfeiture of any amounts paid.

Issue:
Whether or not there is a perfected contract of sale and whether defendants can
unilaterally and extra-judicially rescind said contract of sale.

Held:
A contract of sale is a consensual contract and 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.
Earnest money given in sale transaction is considered part of the purchase price and proof of
the perfection of the sale.
In the absence of an express stipulation authorizing the sellers to extra-judicially rescind
the contract of sale, the defendants cannot unilaterally and extra-judicially rescind the contract
of sale. Despite the fact that plaintiff’s failure to pay the amounts of $40,000.00 and $60,000.00
on or before Dec. 4, 1984 and January 5, 1985, respectively, was a breach of her obligation
under Article 1191 of the Civil Code, the defendants did not sue for either specific performance
or rescission of the contract. The defendants were of the mistaken belief that plaintiff had lost
her “option” over the property when she failed to pay the remaining balance.
SUFFICIENCY OF CONSIDERATION IN CONTRACT OF
SALE

J.R. BLANCO vs. QUASHA


G.R. No. 133148, November 17, 1999

Facts: Mary Ruth Elizalde, an American citizen, owned a house and lot situated in Forbes
Park, Makati. On May 22, 1975, she, through her attorney-in-fact, sold the lot to Parex Realty
Corp., excluding the house thereon, payable in 25 equal annual installments of P25,000 each.
Simultaneously with the execution of the contract of sale, Parex and Elizalde entered into a
lease contract whereby Parex leased back to Elizalde the same land for a period of 25 years at
a monthly rental of P2,083.34 which totals P25,000 in a year. By virtue of the sale, a new title
was issued in the name of Parex on May 27, 1975. Elizalde died on March 1, 1990. The
special administrator of her estate, J.R. Blanco, brought an action against Parex and its
incorporators for the reconveyance of the parcel of land. Blanco alleged that the sale was
absolutely simulated and fictitious, and was made in order to circumvent the effects of the
Courts ruling in Republic vs. Quasha which declared that under the “Parity Amendment” to the
Constitution, US citizens and corporations owned and controlled by them cannot acquire and
own, save in cases of hereditary succession, private agricultural lands in the Philippines.
Blanco also argued that Elizalde did not receive a single centavo from the transactions.

Issue: Is the sale-lease-back agreement between Elizalde and Parex null and void for being
absolutely simulated or fictitious?

Held: No. The fact that the amount of the annual installments of the purchase price dovetails
with the rate of rentals stipulated in the lease contract is not enough reason to claim that there
was no consideration for the contracts of sale and lease. Petitioner argues that Elizalde did not
receive money in the sale of her property. While that may be true, her continued occupancy of
the premises even after she sold it to Parex constitutes valuable consideration which she
received as compensation for the sale.
To resolve the issue of whether or not a sale-lease-back is simulated, it is imperative that
the true intention of the parties, rather than the correct interpretation of the written stipulations in
the contracts, be looked into. However, to do so is to pass upon an issue of fact, a function not
within the province of the SC.

Perfection of Contract of Sale; Rescission


CO vs. COURT OF APPEALS
312 SCRA 528

Facts: Plaintiff Adoracion Custodio entered into a verbal contract with defendants’ spouses
Co for the purchase of the latter’s house and lot located at Alabang, Metro Manila at the agreed
purchase price of $100,000.00 payable in two payments $40,000.00 in Dec. 4, 1984 and the
balance of $60,000.00 on January 5, 1985. A week thereafter, plaintiff paid defendants the
amount of $1,000.00 and Php40,000.00 as earnest money. On January 25, 1985, although the
period of payment had already expired, plaintiff paid to defendants the sum of $30,000.00 as
partial payment. On March 15, 1985, defendants demanded from plaintiff payment of the
balance of purchase price but to no avail. On Aug. 8, 1986, defendants informed plaintiff that
she lost her option to purchase the property and that her other rights to the property including
payments already made are forfeited. On Sept. 5, 1986, plaintiff informed defendants that she is
now ready to pay the remaining balance but was ignored by the latter. Plaintiff then filed an
action for rescission.
The lower court ruled that the earnest money is forfeited. It also ordered defendants to
remit to plaintiff the peso equivalent of $30,000.00 representing the partial payment of purchase
price. Defendants appealed arguing that plaintiff had already lost her right on option to purchase
and that her failure to exercise said option resulted in forfeiture of any amounts paid.

Issue: Is there a perfected contract of sale and can defendants unilaterally and extra-
judicially rescind said contract of sale?

Held: Yes, there is a perfected contract of sale. A contract of sale is a consensual contract
and 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. Earnest money given in sale transaction is considered
part of the purchase price and proof of the perfection of the sale.
No. In the absence of an express stipulation authorizing the sellers to extra-judicially
rescind the contract of sale, the defendants cannot unilaterally and extra-judicially rescind the
contract of sale. Despite the fact that plaintiff’s failure to pay the amounts of $40,000.00 and
$60,000.00 on or before Dec. 4, 1984 and January 5, 1985, respectively, was a breach of her
obligation under Article 1191 of the Civil Code, the defendants did not sue for either specific
performance or rescission of the contract. The defendants were of the mistaken belief that
plaintiff had lost her “option” over the property when she failed to pay the remaining balance.

RIGHT OF FIRST PRIORITY TO PURCHASE;


PERFECTION OF CONTRACT OF SALE

GABELO vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 111743, October 8, 1999
Facts: Philippine Realty Corporation (PRC) entered into a contract of lease with private
respondent Maglente over a parcel of land for a period of three years. The agreement provided
for the Lessee to have a first priority to buy in case the Lessor chooses to sell the land.
Maglente subleased portions of the land to the petitioners.
Subsequently, PRC made a written offer to sell the subject property to Maglente.
Thereafter, PRC and Maglente agreed on the price and terms of the purchase and the latter
completed the required downpayment.
Later on, petitioners also expressed their intention to purchase the property. They also
asked PRC to prevent Maglente from demolishing their houses. The parties then filed an action
in court which ruled that Maglente as the rightful party to purchase the land in controversy.
Petitioners appealed contending that as the actual occupants of the property, they have
preferential right to purchase the land and that a contract of sale was yet to be perfected
between PRC and Maglente as they have yet to sign on any written agreement.

Issue: 1) Do petitioners have preferential right to purchase the leased land?


2) Was there a perfected contract of sale between Maglente and PRC?

Held: 1) No. There is no legal basis for the assertion by the petitioners that as actual
occupants of the said property, they have the right of first priority to purchase the same.
As regards the freedom of contract, it signifies or implies the right to choose with whom
to contact. PRC is thus free to offer its subject property for sale to any interested person. It is
not duty bound to sell the same to the petitioners simply because the latter were in actual
occupation of the property absent any prior agreement vesting in them as occupants the right of
first priority to buy.

2) Yes. In the case under consideration, the contract of sale was already perfected. As
a matter of fact, respondents have already completed payment of their downpayment. Anent
petitioner’s submission that the sale has not been perfected because the parties have not
affixed their signature thereto, suffice to state that under the law, the meeting of the minds
between the parties gives rise to a binding contract although they have not affixed their
signatures to its written form.

EQUITABLE MORTGAGE

LAPAT vs. ROSARIO

G.R. No. 127348, August 17, 1999


Facts: In 1991, petitioner sold to respondents an Isuzu Elf truck, which the latter could use
for hauling their agricultural products, for P300,000 payable as follows: P120,000 as
downpayment upon delivery and the balance on or before 30 May 1992. Respondents paid the
downpayment upon delivery of the truck. Later however it was discovered that the vehicle had
a defective motor; consequently, respondents offered to return the vehicle to the petitioner.
Instead of accepting the vehicle, petitioner lent the respondents P60,000 at 40% interest in
order for the latter to replace the defective motor. To secure payment of the balance of the
purchase price and the P60,000 loan, respondents executed 2 documents purporting to be
deeds of sale of 2 parcels of land with right to repurchase the same on or before 30 May 1992.
The total consideration was P500,000 which the petitioner claimed she paid in cash. Due to
poor harvests, respondents returned the truck. Petitioner accepted it and released respondents
from paying the balance of the purchase price and the P60,000 loan. As regards the 2 Deeds of
Sale with Right to Repurchase, petitioner promised to cancel them. However, petitioner
reneged on her promise when she filed a complaint for consolidation of ownership due to the
failure of the respondents to redeem the properties on or before 30 May 1992. Both the
Regional Trial Court and Court of Appeals dismissed the complaint declaring the 2 deeds of sale
with right to repurchase as equitable mortgages.

Issue: Were the 2 Deeds of Sale of Realty with Right to Repurchase equitable mortgages
under Art. 1602 of the Civil Code?

Held: YES. The instant case falls squarely under par. (6) of Art. 1602 of the Civil Code, to
wit: The Contract shall be presumed to be an equitable mortgage x x x in any other case where
it may be inferred that the real intention of the parties is that the transaction shall secure the
payment of a debt or the performance of any other obligation. Circumstances abound pointing
to this conclusion.
First. Petitioner claims she bought 2 parcels of land from respondents paying the latter
P500,000 in cash. If this were true then why could not respondents afford the P60,000 needed
for the repair of the truck?
Second. Petitioner supposedly paid P500,000 cash to the respondents. If petitioner
indeed paid, why did she have to shell out the full amount of P500,000 considering that
respondents were allegedly indebted to her in the amount of P60,000.
Third. The last day to redeem the 2 parcels of land purportedly fell on 30 May 1992
which interestingly coincided with the date respondents were supposed to pay the remaining
balance of the purchase price of the tuck.
Fourth. The cash receipts signed by the respondents failed to state that they were
intended as payment for the 2 parcels of land supposedly sold by respondents. On the contrary,
they were purportedly advances by respondents who in turn obliged themselves to deliver their
rice produce to petitioner at harvest time.
Fifth. The amounts stated in the 2 deeds of sale with right to repurchase were written
using a different typewriter. In one deed, the TCT was not typewritten along with other details
pertaining to the land. Furthermore, the residence certificate number of one respondent was not
the same.
These circumstances attending the execution of the 2 Deeds of Sale with Right to
repurchase cast serious doubt on petitioner’s claim that the real intention of the parties was sale
over the properties and not equitable mortgage. The form of the instrument cannot prevail over
the true intent of the parties as established by the evidence. On determining the nature of a
contract, courts are not bound by the title or name given by the parties. The decisive factor in
evaluating such agreement is the intention of the parties, as shown not necessarily by the
terminology used in the contract but by their conduct, word, actions and deeds, prior to, during
and immediately after execution of the agreement. And, in case of doubt, a contract purporting
to be a sale with right of repurchase shall be construed as an equitable mortgage.

AMIL vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 125272, October 7, 1999
Facts: Candido Amil, as seller, and the spouses Gador, as buyers executed a document
entitled “Deed of Pacto de Retro Sale.” After the redemption period had expired, the spouses
Gador filed a petition for the consolidation of their ownership over the property. Amil was
declared in default as his counsel failed to file an answer to the petition. The case was heard
and a judgment rendered declaring the spouses Gador as the absolute owners of the lot and
ordering the Register of Deeds to make the annotation of the Consolidation of Ownership in the
vendees-a-retro upon payment of prescribed fees. Amil, through new counsel, filed a motion for
a new trial which was denied. The CA affirmed the denial of a new trial.

Issue: Is the contract between Amil and Spouses Gador a Pacto de Retro Sale?

Held: It would appear that the contract between Amil and the Spouses Gador is an equitable
mortgage rather than a pacto de retro sale. The price was unusually inadequate. The words
‘mortgage,’ ‘motgagor,’ and ‘mortgagee,’ appear in the Addendum to the Deed of Pacto de Retro
Sale. There is a stipulation which is considered a pactum commissorium and is therefore void.
Considering all these, the case is remanded to the TC to enable Amil to present evidence on the
true nature of the contract in question.

CHING SEN BEN vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 124355, September 21, 1999

Facts: Petitioner sold to private respondent a parcel of land in Marikina. Partial payment was
made through a housing loan granted to private respondent by the SSS. A promissory note was
also executed by private respondent. To secure the loan, he also made a Deed of Real Estate
Mortgage both in favor of SSS. Meanwhile, after petitioner constructed a house on the lot (as
per agreement), said petitioner reminded private respondent about the latter’s unpaid balance
of P45,000. Thereafter, the two parties executed a Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage
and with Right to Repurchase, whereby petitioner paid private respondent the amount of
P60,242.86. Private respondent remained in possession of the subject lot. After the latter failed
to heed petitioner’s demand to execute a Deed of Sale in his favor, he filed a petition with the
court a quo for the consolidation of his title to the property. The court however denied his
petition. The CA affirmed.

Issue: Is the Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage and with Right to Repurchase
actually an equitable mortgage?

Held: Yes. For one, the purported consideration for the sale with the right to repurchase in the
amount of P62,242.86 is unusually inadequate compared to the purchase price (P150,000) of
the property when private respondent bought it from petitioner only 6 mos. before the execution
of the said deed of sale. For another, private respondent, the supposed vendor, remained in
possession of the property even after the execution of the deed.

ART. 1544
CAVILES, JR. vs. BAUTISTA
G.R. No. 102648, November 24, 1999

Facts: A writ of preliminary attachment was issued by the CFI on September 24, 1982 over a
land owned by Renato Plata. The Notice of Attachment was entered in the Primary Entry Book
(Day Book) on Oct. 6, but was not annotated on the original TCT nor on Plata’s duplicate TCT
by the Register of Deeds. On Oct. 18, Plata sold the same property to the spouses Bautista.
When the spouses Bautista verified the original title with the Office of the Register of Deeds,
they found the same unblemished by any liens or encumbrances. Plata’s TCT was cancelled
and a new TCT was issued in the name of the spouses Bautista. Notice of levy was entered in
the Day Book on Feb. 22, 1984 and on March 30, the property was sold on execution to the
spouses Caviles. The certificate of sale was entered in the Day Book on April 2, 1987, but when
its inscription was sought to be made, it was found out that Plata’s certificate had been
cancelled and a new one issued to the spouses Bautista.

Issue: Whose interest will prevail, that of the spouses Bautista or that of the spouses
Caviles?

Held: There was good faith and absence of negligence on both parties. The spouses
Bautista clearly had no notice of any defect, irregularity or encumbrance in the title of the
property they purchased. The spouses Caviles, on the other hand, paid the corresponding fees
for the annotation of the notice of attachment and they had every right to presume that the
Register of Deeds would perform his duty properly, i.e., inscribe said notice on the original title
covering the subject property. Entry alone produces the effect of registration, whether the
transaction entered is a voluntary or involuntary one, as long as the registrant has complied with
all that is required of him for purposes of entry and annotation, and nothing remains to be done
but a duty incumbent solely on the Register of Deeds. In involuntary registration, such as an
attachment, levy on execution, lis pendens and the like, entry thereof in the Day Book is a
sufficient notice to all persons of such adverse claim.
Art. 1544 of the NCC provides: “Should it be immovable property, the ownership shall
belong to the person acquiring it who in good faith first recorded it in the Registry of Property. “
The spouses Caviles’ lien of attachment was properly recorded when it was entered in the Day
Book of the Register of Deeds on October 6, 1982. The execution sale retroacts to the date of
levy of the lien of attachment. The earlier registration of the spouses Caviles’ levy on
preliminary attachment gave them superiority and preference in rights over the attached
property as against spouses Bautista.

Right of First Refusal

LITONJUA vs. L & R CORPORATION


G.R. No. 130722, December 9, 1999

Facts: Petitioner-spouses Litonjua obtained a loan from L & R Corporation. It was stipulated
in the contract of mortgage which secured the loan that (1) the mortgagor shall not sell the
mortgaged property without the prior written consent of mortgagee; and (2) that the mortgagee
shall be given priority should the mortgagor decide to sell the mortgaged property.
Spouses Litonjuas failed to pay the loan. L & R then foreclosed the mortgaged property.
But when respondent tried to register the certificate of sale for the auction sale, it learned that
Petitioners Litonjua had already sold the mortgaged property to Philippine White House Auto
Supply (PWHAS) without its the prior written consent and without allowing it to exercise the first
option to buy the property. L & R consolidated title to the property when it refused to accept the
redemption price offered by PWHAS. Thereafter, a complaint for Quieting of Title and
Annulment of Title was filed by the spouses Litonjua and PWHAS against respondents.
The lower court dismissed the case. The Court of Appeals, however, reversed the
decision and held that (1) the stipulation in the mortgage contract requiring prior written consent
of the mortgagee before the mortgagor can sell is valid; and (2) the sale between the Litonjuas
and PWHAS must be rescinded because it violated L & R’s right of first refusal.

Issue: Is rescission available in case of violation of the Right of First Refusal?

Held: The right of first refusal has long been recognized as valid in our jurisdiction. The
consideration for the loan-mortgage includes the consideration for the right of first refusal. The
case of Guzman, Bocaling & Co v. Bonnevie is instructive on this point – “Under Article 1380 to
1381(3) of the Civil Code, a contract otherwise valid may nonetheless be subsequently
rescinded by reason of injury to third persons, like creditors. The status of creditors could be
validly accorded the Bonnevies for they had substantial interests that were prejudiced by the
sale of the subject property to the petitioner without recognizing their right of first priority under
the contract of lease.”

Sublease

PEREZ vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 107737, October 1, 1999
Facts: Juan Perez, along with four others, is a usufructuary of a parcel of land called ‘Papaya
Fishpond.’ On June 5, 1975, the usufructuaries enterd into a contract leasing the fishpond to
Luis Keh for 5 years renewable for another 5 years. Paragraph 5 of the lease contract states
that the lessee cannot sublease the fishpond nor assign his rights to anyone. Despite the
prohibition, the lessee, Keh offered the operation of the fishpond to Luis Crisostomo. A written
agreement dated January 9, 1978 ceded, conveyed and transferred all the rights and interests
of Keh over the fishpond to Lee until June 1985. Lee acceded to take over Keh’s rights as a
lessee of the fishpond. In June 1979, Juan Perez and his counsel, in the company of armed
men, went to the fishpond and presented Crisostomo with a letter dated June 7, 1979 showing
that Keh had surrendered possession of the fishpond to the usufructuaries. According to
petitioners Juan Perez and Luis Keh, Luis Crisostomo is not a sublessee of the fishpond under
the law because no contract authorized him to be so.

Issue: Is private respondent Luis Crisostomo a sublessee of the fishpond and entitled to
continuous possession until June 1985?
Held: Although the contract between the usufructuaries and the lessee Keh has a provision
barring the sublease of the fishpond, it was Keh himself who violated that provision in offering
the operation of the fishpond to Crisostomo. The established facts also show that Juan Perez
and his counsel knew of and acquiesced to the arrangement of Keh and Crisostomo by the act
of Perez of receiving from Crisostomo the rent for 1978-79. Perez is estopped to question
Crisostomo’s right to possess the fishpond as a lessee.
However, the Court hesitate to grant Crisostomo’s prayer that he should be restored to
the possession of the fishpond as a consequence of his unjustified ejectment therefrom. To
restore possession of the fishpond to him would entail violation of contractual obligations that
the usufructuaries have entered into over quite a long period of time now. Supervening events,
such as the devaluation of the peso as against the dollar as well as the addition of
improvements in the fishpond that the succeeding lessees could have introduced, have
contributed to the increase in rental value of the property. To place Crisostomo in the same
position he was in 1980 when he was deprived the right to operate the fishpond under the
contract that already expired in 1985 shall be to sanction injustice and inequity. Nonetheless, it
is but proper that Crisostomo should be properly compensated for the improvements he
introduced in the fishpond as well as awarded moral and exemplary damages and attorney’s
fees.

PARTNERSHIP

FORMATION OF A PARTNERSHIP; LIABILITY OF A


PARTNER

LIM TONG LIM vs. PHILIPPINE FISHING GEAR INDUSTRIES, INC.


G.R. No. 136448, November 3, 1999

Facts: Antonio Chua, Peter Yao and Lim Tong Lim decided to engage in a fishing business
which they started by buying boats worth P 3.35 million financed by a loan secured from Jesus
Lim who was petitioner’s brother. They subsequently revealed their intention to pay the loan
with the proceeds of the sale of the boats and to divide equally among them the excess or
loss. In pursuance to their business agreement, Yao and Chua, purchased nets from private
respondent, in behalf of Ocean Quest Fishing Corporation, their purported business name. Yao
and Chua failed to pay. Private respondent filed a collection suit. Chua admitted his liability
while Yao waived his right to cross examine and to present evidence. Lim Tong Lim, on the
other hand, refused contending that he was not one of the signatory in the purchase of the nets
and that Ocean Quest is a nonexistent corporation as shown by the SEC. The TC ruled that
petitioner is liable as a partner. The CA affirmed the decision.

Issue: May Lim Tong Lim be held liable as a partner?

Held: Yes. A partnership may be deemed to exist among parties who agree to borrow money
to pursue a business and to divide the profits or losses that may arise therefrom, even if it is
shown that they have not contributed any capital of their own to a “common fund.” Their
contribution may be in the form of credit or industry, not necessarily cash or fixed assets. Being
partners, they are all liable for debts incurred by or on behalf of the partnership. The liability for
a contract entered into on behalf of an unincorporated association or ostensible corporation may
lie in a person who may not have directly transacted on its behalf, but reaped benefits from that
contract.

ART. 1768

AGUILA, JR. vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 127347, November 25, 1999

Facts: Petitioner Aguila Jr and private respondent Abrogar entered into an agreement
whereby the former shall buy from the latter her house and lot with option to repurchase within
90 days. At the same time, a Deed of Sale concerning the subject property was executed by
the parties. Abrogar failed to repurchase and as per agreement, a new TCT was issued in the
name of the partnership. However, Abrogar remained in possession of the premises prompting
Aguila to file an ejectment case with the MTC. The MTC ruled in favor of Aguila. Abrogar
appealed to the RTC, then to the CA, and finally to the SC, but lost in all cases.
Abrogar thereafter filed with the RTC a petition for declaration of nullity of deed of sale
with the RTC, alleging that the signature of her husband on the deed of sale was a forgery
because he was already dead when the deed was executed. However, the RTc denied her
petition. The CA however reversed the RTC’s ruling, holding that the transaction between the
parties herein is an equitable mortgage because the price paid is unusually inadequate.
Abrogar remained in the possession of the subject property and paid taxes thereon. (Art. 1602,
Civil Code)

Issue: Did Abrogar correctly file the case against Aguila Jr.?

Held: No. Aguila Jr. is not the real party in interest but A.C. Aguila & Co., against which this case
should have been brought. Under the Rules of Court, a complaint filed against a party who is not a real
party in interest should be dismissed for failure to state a cause of action. A partnership has a juridical
personality separate and distinct from that of each of the partners. It is the partnership, not its officers or
agents, which should be impleaded in any litigation involving property registered in its name.

Article 1773
TORRES vs. COURT OF APPEALS
G.R. No. 134559, December 9, 1999

Facts: Petitioners Torres and Baring entered into a joint venture agreement with private
respondent Manuel Torres for the development of a parcel of land into a subdivision. The
project, however, did not push through and the land was subsequently foreclosed by the
creditor-bank.
Later on, petitioners filed a civil case against private respondent for damages for the
latter’s mismanagement and lack of skills. Respondent court, in affirming the lower court ruled
that petitioners and respondent had formed a partnership for the development of the land and
thus, must bear the loss proportionately. On appeal to the Supreme Court, petitioners deny the
existence of a partnership contending that their joint venture agreement is void since they did
not comply with Article 1773 of the Civil Code which required an inventory of the real property to
be contributed in the partnership.

Issue: Is the inventory of real property contributed in the partnership necessary for the
validity of the partnership agreement?

Held: We clarify. Article 1773 of the Civil Code was intended primarily to protect third
persons. Thus, the eminent Arturo Tolentino states that under the aforecited 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 with
the belief in the efficacy of the guaranty in which the immovables may consist. Thus, the
contract is declared void by law when no such inventory is made.” The case at bar does not
involve third parties who may be prejudiced.
In short, 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.

Dissolution of Partnership; Receivership

SY vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 94285, August 31, 1999

Facts: Sy Yong Hu & Sons is a partnership. In September, 1977, Keng Sian, Sy Yong Hu’s common-
law wife sued the partnership for the reconveyance of ½ of its properties and the fruits thereof.
During the pendency of the suit, one of the partners. Marciano Sy, filed a petition against his
partners with the SEC asking that he be appointed managing partner to replace Jose Sy who earlier died.
SC hearing officer Sison dismissed the petition and declared the partnership dissolved and named one of
the remaining partners as the managing partner.
The SEC en banc affirmed Sison’s decision, ordering the distribution and partition of partnership
assets.
However, before the same can be implemented, Keng Sian’s children with Sy Yong Hu were
allowed by the SEC to intervene. The intervenors contend that their civil suit against the partnership is
still pending and that no petition for distribution should be commenced.
SEC Hearing Officer Tongco who replaced Sison placed the partnership under receivership
thereby preventing the partition and distribution of partnership assets. This was affirmed by the SEC en
banc.
The remaining partners of the firm appealed.
The CA ultimately affirmed the Tongco ruling.

Issue: Is the preservation of the partnership assets through receivership inconsistent with the earlier
decision declaring the partnership’s dissolution?

Held: The Sison decision declaring the partnership’s dissolution did not pose any obstacle to the
hearing officer to issue orders not inconsistent therewith. From the time the dissolution is ordered until
the actual termination of the partnership the SEC retained jurisdiction to adjudicate all incidents relative
thereto. Thus, the Tongco order cannot be said to have varied the final order of dissolution. Neither did it
suspend the dissolution of the partnership. It only suspended the partition and distribution of the
partnership assets. Further, the dissolution of a partnership is the change in relation of the parties caused
by any partner ceasing to be associated in the carrying on, as might be distinguished from the winding up,
of its business. Upon its dissolution, the partnership continues and its legal personality is retained until
the complete winding up of its business culminating in its termination.
The dissolution of the partnership did not mean that the juridical entity was immediately
terminated and that the distribution of the assets to its partners should perfunctorily follow. On the
contrary, the dissolution simply effected a change in the relationship among the partners. The partnership,
although dissolved, continues to exist until its termination, at which time the winding up of its affairs
should have been completed and the net partnership assets are partitioned and distributed to the partners.

CREDIT TRANSACTIONS

ARTICLE 1731

LIMA vs. TRANSWAY SALES


CORPORATION
G.R. No. 106770, October 22, 1999

Facts: Plaintiff contracted the respondent to install an airconditioner in her car. Four months
after the installation, the respondent impounded the car due to the plaintiff’s failure to pay. The
respondent based its right on the existence of mechanic lien over the car.
The TC and the CA ruled for the respondent in the replevin case filed by the plaintiff.
Hence, this appeal.

Issue: Does respondent have mechanic’s lien over the car?

Held: Yes. On the matter of the existence of mechanic’s lien in favor of the respondent
corporation, explicit is the applicable provision of Art. 1731 of the NCC that the latter can retain
by way of pledge, the movable upon which it executed work.
Art. 2126
ASUNCION vs. EVANGELISTA
G.R. No. 133491, October 13, 1999

Facts: Asuncion and Evangelista entered into a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) whereby
the former agreed to pay latter certain amounts of money and to assume all the liabilities of
Embassy Farms which is controlled by respondent. In return, Evangelista will transfer control of
Embassy Farms and transfer to Asuncion all the real properties held under real estate mortgage
with several savings banks and finance corporations.
While Asuncion fulfilled his payment commitments under the MOA, Evangelista failed to
transfer the title of the real properties and the shares of stock of Embassy Farms in the name of
Asuncion. However, it was respondent who filed a complaint for the rescission of the MOA
arguing that petitioner failed to comply with his obligations under the agreement.
During the trial, Evangelista explained that the reason he did not transfer the real
properties is because Asuncion did not agree to make a formal assumption of the mortgage
under the MOA. Both the TC and CA ruled in favor of Evangelista and ordered the rescission of
the MOA with damages based on the alleged proceeds of the sale of hogs during the period
control of the Embassy Farms was with Asuncion.

Issue: Is there a need to formally assume the mortgage on the real properties to be
transferred under the MOA?

Held: No. Even without the formal assumption of mortgage, the mortgage follows the
property whoever the possessor may be. It is an elementary principle in civil law that real
mortgage subsists notwithstanding changes of ownership and all subsequent purchases of the
property must respect the mortgage, whether the transfer to them be with or without the consent
of the mortgagee.

Assignment of Credit; Assignment of Mortgaged Property

SERVICEWIDE SPECIALISTS,
INCORPORATED vs. COURT OF
APPEALS
G.R. No. 116363, December 10, 1999

Facts: Sometime in 1975, spouses Atty. Jesus and Elizabeth Ponce bought a vehicle on
installment from C.R. Tecson Enterprises. A chattel mortgage was constituted on the vehicle as
security for payment. On Dec. 24, 1975, C.R. Tecson assigned the credit and mortgage to
Filinvest Credit Corp. with the implied consent of the spouses. In 1976, respondent spouses
assigned the vehicle to Conrado Tecson by way of sale with assumption of mortgage. In 1978,
Filinvest assigned the credit to petitioner Servicewide Specialists, Inc. (SSI) without notice to the
spouses. Due to failure of respondent spouses to pay 6 installments, despite demands, SSI
filed a complaint for replevin with damages against them. Respondent spouses denied liability
claiming their assignment of the car to Conrado. TC found respondent spouses liable with a
right to claim reimbursement from Conrado. On appeal, the CA reversed the decision holding
that respondent spouses were not notified of the assignment of the credit to SSI.

Issue: Is the debtor-mortgagor who sold the property to another entitled to notice of the
assignment of credit made by the creditor to another party? Conversely, is the consent of the
creditor-mortgagee necessary when the debtor-mortgagor alienates the property to a third
person?

Held: Only notice to the debtor of the assignment of credit is required. His consent is
not required. In contrast, consent of the creditor-mortgagee to the alienation of the
mortgaged property is necessary in order to bind said creditor.
The sale with assumption of mortgage made by respondent spouses is tantamount to a substitution
of debtors. In such case, mere notice to the creditor is not enough, his consent is always necessary as
provided in Art. 1293. Without such consent by the creditor, the alienation made by respondent spouses is
not binding on the former. On the other hand, Arts. 1625, 1626 and 1627 of the CC on assignment of
credits do not require the debtor’s consent for the validity thereof and so as to render him liable to the
assignee. The law speaks not of consent but of notice to the debtor, the purpose of which is to inform the
latter that from the date of assignment he should make payment to the assignee and not to the original
creditor. Notice is thus for the protection of the assignee because before said date, payment to the original
creditor is valid.
Respondent spouses should have obtained the consent of Filinvest before selling the
property. In the absence of such consent, respondent spouses stands as the debtor insofar as
Filinvest is concerned and the sale of the vehicle to Conrado Tecson was not binding on
Filinvest. Having subsequently stepped into the shoes of Filinvest, petitioner acquired the same
right as the former had against respondent spouses. When the credit was assigned by Filinvest to
petitioner, respondent spouses stood on record as the debtor-mortgagor.

Article 2130

LITONJUA vs. L & R CORPORATION


G.R. No. 130722, December 9, 1999

Facts: Petitioner-spouses Litonjua obtained a loan from L & R Corporation. It was stipulated in
the contract of mortgage which secured the loan that (1) the mortgagor shall not sell the
mortgaged property without the prior written consent of mortgagee; and (2) that the mortgagee
shall be given priority should the mortgagor decide to sell the mortgaged property.
Spouses Litonjuas failed to pay the loan. L & R then foreclosed the mortgaged property.
But when respondent tried to register the certificate of sale for the auction sale, it learned that
Petitioners Litonjua had already sold the mortgaged property to Philippine White House Auto
Supply (PWHAS) without its the prior written consent and without allowing it to exercise the first
option to buy the property. L & R consolidated title to the property when it refused to accept the
redemption price offered by PWHAS. Thereafter, a complaint for Quieting of Title and
Annulment of Title was filed by the spouses Litonjua and PWHAS against respondents.
The lower court dismissed the case. The Court of Appeals, however, reversed the
decision and held that (1) the stipulation in the mortgage contract requiring prior written consent
of the mortgagee before the mortgagor can sell is valid; and (2) the sale between the Litonjuas
and PWHAS must be rescinded because it violated L & R’s right of first refusal.

Issue: Is a stipulation requiring prior written consent of mortgagor before mortgagee can sell,
valid?

Held: No. True, the provision does not absolutely prohibit the mortgagor from selling his
mortgaged property; but what it does not outrightly prohibit, it nevertheless achieves. For all
intents and purposes, the stipulation practically gives the mortgagee the sole prerogative to
prevent any sale of mortgaged property to a third party. The mortgagee can simply withhold its
consent and thereby, prevent the mortgagor from selling the property. This creates an
unconscionable advantage for the mortgagee and amounts to a virtual prohibition on the owner
to sell his mortgaged property. In other words, the stipulation circumvent the law, specifically,
Article 2130 of the Civil Code.

REQUISITE FOR A VALID FORECLOSURE OF


MORTGAGE

LUCENA vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 77468, August 25, 1999

Facts: Petitioners obtained a loan from private respondent Rural Bank of Najuan, Inc. in the
amount of P3,000 secured by a real estate mortgage constituted on their parcel of land. After
the loan had matured, they were able to pay the Bank the sum of P2,000, thereby leaving a
balance of P1,000.
After previous demand by the rural bank for the petitioners to settle the balance of their
matured loan went unheeded, the subject property was extrajudicially foreclosed and sold at
public auction where the rural bank as the highest bidder acquired the property. Prior to the
auction sale, notice of foreclosure were post in at least 3 conspicuous public places in the
municipality where the subject property was located. No notices were posted in the barrio
where the property was located, nor were any published in a newspaper of general circulation.
The Certificate of Sale was subsequently issued and registered.

Issue: Was there a valid foreclosure sale of the subject property?


Held: No. Failure to comply with statutory requirements as to publication of notice of auction
sale constitutes a jurisdictional error which invalidates the sale. Even the slight deviations
therefrom are not allowed. RA 5939, Sec. 5 provides:
“The foreclosure of mortgages covering loans granted by rural banks shall be exempt
from the publication in newspapers were the total amount of the loan, including interests due
and unpaid, does not exceed three thousand pesos. It shall be sufficient publication in such
cases if the notices of foreclosure are posted in at least three of the most conspicuous places in
the municipality and barrio where the land mortgaged is situated during the period of sixty days
immediately preceding the public auction.”
In the case at bar, the affidavit of posting executed by the sheriff states that notices of
public auction sale were posted in three conspicuous public places in the municipality such as
1) the bulletin board of the Municipal Building; 2)the Public Market; 3) the Bus Station. There is
no indication that notices were posted in the barrio where the subject property lies. Clearly,
there was a failure to publish the notice of auction sale as required by law.
Further, there was a failure on the part of the private respondents to publish notices of
foreclosure sale in a newspaper of general circulation. Sec. 5 provides that such foreclosure
are exempt from the publication requirement when the total amount of the loan including
interests due and unpaid does not exceed three thousand pesos. The law clearly refers to the
total amount of the loan along with interests and not merely the balance thereof, as stressed by
the word “total.”

Right to Consolidate in Mortgage Foreclosure

DEVELOPMENT BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 111737, October 13, 1999

Facts: Spouses Pineda obtained a loan from Petitioner Development Bank of the Philippines
(DBP) using as collateral a parcel of land covered by a homestead patent. The Pinedas failed
to comply with the conditions of the loan and subsequently, DBP foreclosed the property. In the
certificate of sale, it was indicated that the property is subject to redemption within 5 years from
date of registration. After the expiration of the one year redemption period provided under
section 6 of Act 3135, however, DBP consolidated its title to the foreclosed property.
When Pinedas offered to redeem the property, DBP refused the redemption and
explained that the property cannot be redeemed as it is within the provisions of PD 27 which
prohibited the redemption of tenanted land.
The Pinedas subsequently filed an action for the cancellation of title and specific performance against
DBP contending that the latter acted in bad faith for consolidating its title on the foreclosed property
although the 5 year redemption period stated in the certificate of sale has not yet expired.
The trial court and respondent court ruled that DBP violated the stipulation in the sheriff’s
certificate of title and ordered DBP to assume liability for the fruits that the property produced
from said land. On appeal, respondent court ruled that DBP was in bad faith when it unlawfully
took possession of the land and that Pinedas were entitled to recover the fruits produced by the
property.

Issue: Was DBP in bad faith when it consolidated title and took possession of the foreclosed
property?
Held: No. A possessor in good faith is one who is not aware that there exists in his title or
mode of acquisition any flaw, which invalidates it. Good faith is always presumed, and upon him
who alleges bad faith on the part of a possessor rests the burden of proof. It was therefore
incumbent upon the Pinedas to prove that DBP was aware of the flaw in its title. This, they
failed to do.
If no redemption is made within one year, the purchaser is entitled as a matter of right to
consolidate and to possess the property. Accordingly, DBP’s act of consolidating its title and
taking possession of the subject property after the expiration of the period of redemption was in
accordance with law.
The right of DBP to consolidate its title and take possession of the subject property is not
affected by the Pinedas’ right to repurchase said property within 5 years from date of
conveyance granted by Section 119 of CA 141. In fact, without the act of DBP consolidating its
title in its name, the Pinedas would not be able to assert their right to repurchase granted under
the aforementioned section.

Mortgage; Effect

LAGROSA vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 115981- 82, August 12, 1999

Facts: The City of Manila awarded a parcel of land in favor of Julio Arizapa, private
respondent Banua’s predecessor-in-interest. Arizapa used the land as collateral for a loan he
obtained from a certain Presentacion Quimbo. When Arizapa died, his wife convinced Quimbo
not to foreclose the property and instead execute an Assignment of Rights to the Real Estate
Mortgage in favor of Petitoner Ruben Lagrosa, in whom she had outstanding debts. In the
meantime, Lagrosa’s relatives were allowed to occupy some areas of the property.
Lagrosa subsequently filed an action for ejectment against the caretaker of private respondent
Banua. Respondent court ruled that the assignment of rights in the real estate mortgage made
by Quimbo to Lagrosa is void because at the time of mortgage, title to the property still belonged
to the City of Manila; and therefore, Lagrosa has no basis in demanding possession of the
property.

Issue: Is Lagrosa entitled to the possession of the property?

Held: For a person to constitute a valid mortgage on real estate, he must be the absolute
owner thereof as required by Article 2085 of the Civil Code. Since the mortgage to Presentacion
Quimbo of the lot is null and void, the assignment by Quimbo of her rights to Lagrosa is likewise
void. Even if the mortgage is valid as insisted by petitioner, it is well-settled that a mere
mortgagee has no right to reject the occupants of the property mortgaged. This is so, because
a mortgage passes no title to the mortgagee. Indeed, by mortgaging a piece of property, a
debtor merely subjects it to a lien but ownership is not parted with.
As to Lagrosa’s prior possession of the subject property, their stay in the property was by
mere tolerance or permission. It is well-settled that “a person who occupies the land of another
at the latter’s tolerance or permission, without any contract between them, is necessarily bound
by an implied promise that he will vacate upon demand, failing which a summary action for
ejectment is the proper remedy against him.”
ARTICLE 2212

DAVID vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 115821, October 13, 1999

Facts: Petitioner David questions the bid price in the public auction of the attached properties
of respondent Afable. David contends that judgment award in his favor should be P
3,207,238.50 to include compounded interest as provided under Art. 2209 and 2219 of the Civil
Code. The sheriff, on the other hand, refuses to make a certificate of sale on the properties
auctioned as David’s bid price exceeds the total judgment as computed by the lower court (P
271,039.84) since the decision only provided for computation of simple legal interest as the
promissory note made by David and Afable under their compromise agreement stipulated no
interest.

Issue: What should be the interest in the judgment award?

Held: This Court has already interpreted Article 2212 and defined the standards for its
application in Philippine American Accident Insurance vs. Flores. As therein held, Article 2212
contemplates the presence of stipulated or conventional interest which has accrued when
demand was judicially made. In cases where no interest had been stipulated by the parties, no
accrued conventional interest could further earn interest upon judicial demand.

TORTS & DAMAGES


Tortuous Interference of Contract

SO PING BUN vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 120554, September 21, 1999

Facts: Tek Hua Trading Co., thru its managing parrtner So Pek Giok, entered into lease
agreements with lessor DCCSI. The leased areas were used by Tek Hua Trading to store its
textiles. The contracts each had a one-year term. The contracts provided that should the
lessee continue to occupy the premises after the term, the lease should be on a month-to-
month basis. When the contracts expired, the parties did not renew the contracts, but Tek Hua
Trading continued to occupy the premises.
So Pek Giok, managing partner of Tek Hua, subsequently died. So Pek Giok’s
grandson, petitioner So Ping Bun, occupied the warehouse for his own textiles business,
Trendsetter Marketing.
After a few years, the president of Tek Hua Corp., Manuel Tiong, wrote a letter to
petitioner, informing him of the corporation’s intent to occupy the warehouse again. Petitioner
refused to vacate. Subsequently, a lease contract was executed between DCCSI and
Trendsetter Marketing. Private respondent then filed this action for tortuous interference of
contracts.

Issue: Was there a tortuous interference of contracts?

Held: None. The elements of tortuous interference are: 1)existence of a valid contract; 2)
knowledge on the part of the third person of the existence of contract; and 3) interference of the
third persons is without legal justification or excuse.
As early as Gilchrist v. Cuddy, we held that where there was no malice in the
interference of a contract, and the impulse behind one’s conduct lies in a proper business
interest rather than in wrongful motives, a party cannot be a malicious interferer. Where the
alleged interferer is financially interested, and such interest motivates his conduct, it cannot be
said that he is an officious or malicious intermeddler.
In the instant case, it is clear that So Ping Bun prevailed upon DCCSI to lease the
warehouse to his enterprise at the expense of respondent corporation. Though petition took
interest in the property of respondent corporation and benefited from it, nothing on record
imputes deliberate wrongful motives or malice on him.

MALICIOUS PROSECUTION

TIONGCO vs. DEGUMA


G.R. No. 133619, October 26, 1999

Facts: Petitioner Tiongco filed a complaint for damages seeking redress and remedy from the
aggrieved wrong he allegedly suffered from respondents Atty. Deguma and Major Carmelo’s act
of (1) inducing his aunt Estrella Yared, through ruse and artifice, in the execution and signing of
documents that transferred in their favor the latter’s rights, interests, claims, etc. over certain
parcels of property to his (Tiongco’s) prejudice and exclusion, and of (2) engaging in an illicit
liaison perpetrated in his house which created public scandal and caused him shame and
embarrassment. On the other hand, private respondents set up separate counterclaims for
damages against the petitioner on the theory of malicious prosecution. After trial, the lower
court dismissed the complaint for lack of evidence but awarded moral and exemplary damages
to the private respondents. Subsequently, the Court of Appeals affirmed the said decision.
Hence, this petition.

Issue: Are private respondents in a civil case entitled to moral damages based on the theory
of malicious prosecution?

Held: YES. Generally, denuncia falsa or malicious prosecution refers to unfounded criminal actions.
The term had already been expanded to include unfounded civil suits instituted to vex and humiliate
defendants despite the absence of a cause of action or probable cause. Thus, malicious prosecution has
been defined as an action for damages brought by one against whom a criminal prosecution, civil suit, or
other legal proceeding has been instituted maliciously and without probable cause, after the termination of
such prosecution, suit or other proceeding in favor of the defendant therein. It has been enumerated as
one of the instances in Article 2219 of the Civil Code whereby moral damages can be recovered. To merit
an award for moral damages predicated on malicious prosecution, claimant must prove that they had been
denounced or charged falsely, that complainant knew that the charge was false, that the latter acted with
malice and of course, the damages they suffered.

Damages

FRANCISCO vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 116320, November 29, 1999

Facts: A Land Development and Construction Contract was entered into by A. Francisco Realty and
Development Corporation (AFRDC), of which petitioner Francisco is the president and private
respondent Herby Commercial and Construction Corporation (HCCC) represented by its president Ong,
pursuant to a housing project financed by GSIS. HCCC agreed to undertake the construction and it was to
be paid on the basis of completed houses. GSIS and AFRDC put up an Executive Committee account
with the Insular Bank of Asia and America (ABAA) in the amount of P4,000,000.00 from which checks
would be issued and co-signed by GSIS vice-president Diaz.
Later Ong discovered that Diaz and Francisco executed and signed seven checks drawn
against IBAA and payable to HCCC which Ong claims were never delivered to HCCC. It
appeared that Francisco forged Ong’s signature making it appear that HCCC indorsed the
check; Francisco then signed her name at the back of the checks and deposited it in her IBAA
savings account. Ong filed a complaint charging Francisco with estafa thru falsification of
commercial documents. The trial court ordered IBAA and Francisco to pay jointly and severally
the amount of the checks plus interest, moral and exemplary damages, litigation expenses and
attorney’s fees.
IBAA and HCCC entered into a Compromise Agreement wherein HCCC acknowledged
receipt of the amount in full satisfaction of its claims against IBAA, without prejudice to the right
of the latter to pursue its claims against Francisco.
CA affirmed the ruling, hence, this petition for review on certiorari; filed by petitioner.

Issue: Is petitioner liable to pay damages?

Held: Yes. Every person who contrary to law, willfully or negligently causes damage to another, shall
indemnify the latter for the same. Due to her forgery of Ong’s signature which enabled her to deposit the
checks in her own account, Francisco deprived HCCC of the money due it from GSIS pursuant to the
contract. Thus, award for compensatory damages is affirmed with an interest rate of 6% per annum
computed from the date of filing the complaint; however the rate shall be 20% per annum from the time
the judgment in this case becomes final and executory.
The award of exemplary damages is also sustained. Under Art. 2229 of the Civil Code,
exemplary damages are imposed by way of example or correction for the public good, in
addition to the moral, temperate, liquidated or compensation damages. Considering petitioner’s
fraudulent act, the award of P50,000 is adequate, fair and reasonable. The grant of exemplary
damages justifies the award of attorney’s fees in the amount of P50,000 and the award of
P5,000 for litigation expenses.
The award of P50,000 in moral damages is warranted. Under Art. 2217 of the Civil
Code, moral damages maybe granted upon proof of physical suffering, mental anguish, fright,
serious anxiety, besmirched reputation, wounded feelings, moral shock, social humiliation and
similar injury, Ong justified that he suffered sleepless nights, embarrassment, humiliation and
anxiety upon discovering that the checks due his company were forged by the petitioner and
that petitioner had filed baseless criminal charges against him which disrupted HCCC’s
business operations.

Moral Damages

PHILIPPINE VETERAN’S BANK vs. NLRC


G.R. No. 130439, October 26, 1999

Facts: Philippine Veteran’s Bank was placed under receivership by Central Bank. To assist
in the liquidation, Molina was reemployed in 1985.
In 1991, Molina filed a complaint against the liquidating team demanding the
implementation of Wage Orders NCR-01 and NCR-02 as well as moral damages and attorney’s
fees in the amount of P300,000.00
The Labor Arbiter, as affirmed by the NLRC awarded P100,000.00 in moral damages
and attorney’s fees. Hence, this certiorari. Petitioner avers that the award for attorney’s fees
and moral damages was inappropriate because the complaint did not specify the same and that
Molina failed to prove these claims.

Issue: Is the moral damages and attorney’s fees proper?

Held: No. The NLRC did not distinguish between moral damages and attorney’s fees.
Awards for moral damages and attorney’s fees cannot be consolidated for they are different in
nature and each must be separately determined.
The records show that Molina’s basis of his claim is the alleged failure of the liquidation
team to implement the wage orders without submitting any proof in support thereof. It is basic
that for moral damages to be awarded the claimant must satisfactorily prove its factual basis
and causal connection with the respondent’s act.

DAMAGES IN RAPE CASES

PEOPLE vs. BATOON


G.R. No. 134194, October 26, 1999

Facts: A criminal action for rape was filed by Regina against her stepfather Batoon. After trial
on the merits, the lower court found Batoon guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of rape
and sentenced him to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and to pay the victim P50,000 in
moral damages and P20,000 in exemplary damages. Batoon assailed the said decision
questioning, among other things, the grant of moral and exemplary damages to the victim.
Issue: Is the offended party in a rape case entitled to moral and exemplary damages?

Held: YES. In as much as Batoon was found guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of
rape, Regina is entitled to indemnity which current jurisprudence fixes at P50,000, and moral
and exemplary damages. Moral damages are imposed in rape cases involving young girls
between 13 and 19 years of age, taking into account the immeasurable havoc wrought on their
youthful feminine psyche. It may be awarded without need of showing that the victim suffered
mental anguish, fright, serious anxiety, and the like. The award of P50,000 for moral damages
is in order. Exemplary damages may be awarded in criminal cases as part of the civil liability if
the crime was committed with one or more aggravating circumstances. Batoon being the
stepfather of Regina, relationship should be appreciated as an aggravating circumstance in
Article 15 of the Revised Penal Code.

CIVIL LIABILITY ARISING FROM CRIMINAL OFFENSE

SAPIERA vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 128927, September 14, 1999

Facts: Petitioner was an indorser of a check issued by a certain Arturo de Guzman. Such
check was presented for payment to Monrico Mart for certain grocery items for petitioner’s sari-
sari store. The check was dishonored, hence both were charged with the crime of estafa.
However, petitioner was acquitted by the TC but did not rule on her civil liability. On appeal to
CA, it was given due course and damages were awarded. Hence, this appeal.

Issue: Can petitioner be held liable for damages?

Held: Based on the findings of the TC, the exoneration of petitioner from the charges of
estafa was based on the failure of the prosecution to present sufficient evidence showing
conspiracy between her and the other accused in defrauding private respondent, and not from a
declaration that the fact from which the civil action might arise did not exist. An accused
acquitted of estafa may nevertheless be held civilly liable where the facts established by the
evidence so warrant. The accused should be adjudged liable for the unpaid value of the checks
signed by her in favor of the complainant.

LAND TITLES AND DEEDS


Lands of Public Domain

REPUBLIC vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 122269, September 30, 1999

Facts: On Dec. 17, 1991, RTC of Pangasinan adjudicated a certain parcel of land, belonging
to the public domain, classified land available for fishpond development, to a certain Zenaida
Bustria. Petitioner seeks to annul such decision alleging that the disposition of the land in
question is within the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources. The CA
dismissed the petition.

Issue: Does the RTC have jurisdiction to declare the land in question to belong to private
respondents?

Held: It is settled under the Public Land Law that alienable public land held by a possessor,
personally or through his predecessor-in-interest, openly, continuously and exclusively for 30
years is ipso jure converted to private property by the mere lapse of time. However, only public
lands classified as agricultural are alienable. Lands declared for fishery purposes are not
alienable and their possession, no matter how long, cannot ripen into ownership.
Since the disposition of lands declared suitable for fishpond purposes falls within the
jurisdiction of the BFR, in accordance with PD 704, the TC’s decision is null and void. The TC
has no jurisdiction to make a disposition of inalienable public land.

PROOF OF TITLE; TAX DECLARATIONS

ALBA VDA. DE RAZ vs. COURT OF


APPEALS
G.R. No. 120066, September 9, 1999

Facts: Private respondent Jose Lachica filed an application for title to land in April, 1958 with
the claim that the land applied for was purchased by him and his wife. Petitioners opposed
contending that the applicant did not show proof of the alleged sale because the deed of
conveyance was allegedly lost and therefore was not presented in the proceedings. However,
the TC rendered judgment in favor of the applicant noting that said oppositors never offered any
explanation as to the nonpayment of realty taxes for the disputed portions of the land from
1941-1958 while respondent continuously paid taxes thereon. It stressed that while it is true
that tax receipts and tax declaration of ownership for tax purposes are not incontrovertible
evidence of ownership, they become strong evidence of ownership acquired by prescription
when accompanied by proof of actual possession. The CA affirmed stating that it is of no
moment that the applicant failed to produce the original of the deed/conveyances for he was
able to present sufficient substantial secondary evidence in accordance with the Rules of Court.
Hence this appeal.

Issue: Is private respondent entitled to the confirmation of his ownership of the subject land?

Held: Both the TC and CA placed undue reliance on the Tax declarations which by itself is not
a conclusive evidence of ownership. Tax declaration for a certain number of years although
constituting proof of claim of title to land is not incontrovertible evidence of ownership unless
they are supported by other effective proof. A belated declaration is, furthermore, indicative that
the applicant had no real claim of ownership over the subject land prior to the declaration and
where there are serious discrepancies in the tax declarations, as in this case, registration should
be denied.

Land Registration; Sec. 78 of PD 1529

ESTRELLA REAL ESTATE CORPORATION vs. COURT OF APPEALS

GR No. 128862, September 30, 1999

Facts: Gonzalo Tan, predecessors-in-interest of private respondents, owned a parcel of land


where a two-storey house (known as House No. 285) were constructed and which was owned
by Cenon Tan, brother of Gonzalo. Gonzalo later sold the parcel of land in favor of Gaw Bros &
Co. specifying that the property subject thereof was “a parcel of land together with the
improvements thereon (except those belonging to other persons).” Said land was later on sold
by Gaw Bros & Co to petitoner Estrella Real Estate Corporation (ESTRELLA). The two-storey
house, was also sold by Cenon to Gonzalo.
ESTRELLA later on leased another house located in the land to a certain Josephine
Catalan. When Catalan failed to pay the rents, ESTRELLA filed an ejectment suit against the
former. When the lower court ruled in favor of ESTRELLA, the writ of execution was enforced
also against the private respondents, who were residents of House No. 285. Private
respondents subsequently filed a complaint for Quieting of Title.
The lower court ruled that House No 285 was owned by the heirs of Gonzalo Tan. The
respondent Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of the lower court and ordered the annotation
of the ownership of the house in the certificate of title of the parcel of land (TCT No 22003).

Issue: Do private respondents have the right to annotate on the certificate of title the
ownership of a house, allegedly owned by them, but built on the land owned by petitioner?

Held: Yes. The evidence on record indubitably supports the finding of the Court of Appeals
that when the parcel of land covered by TCT No 22003 in the name of Gonzalo Tan was sold by
the latter to Gaw Bros, House No. 285 belonging to Cenon Tan was among the improvements
excluded from the sale as expressly provided in the deed of sale.
As correctly found by the Court of Appeals, private respondents have the right to have
their ownership of the House No. 285 annotated in the certificate of title of petitioner over the
land after the same is judicially settled. Section 78 of PD 1529 provides that whenever in any
action to recover possession or ownership of real estate or any interest therein affecting
registered land judgment is entered for the plaintiff such judgment shall be entitled to
registration on presentation of certificate of entry thereof from the Clerk of Court where the
action is pending to the Register of Deeds for the province or city where the land lies, who shall
enter a memorandum upon the certificate of title of the land to which such judgment relates. If
the judgment does not apply to all the land described in the certificate of title, the certificate of
the clerk of court where the action is pending and the memorandum entered by the Register of
Deeds shall contain a description of the land affected by the judgment.

PURCHASER IN GOOD FAITH

VOLUNTAD vs. DIZON


G.R. No. 132294, August 26, 1999

Facts: Petitioners obtained a loan from the Rural Bank of Pandi secured by a mortgage over
one-half of a parcel of land. For failure to pay the loan, the Rural Bank of Pandi foreclosed the
mortgage and sold the property at the public auction with itself as the highest bidder. Without
the knowledge of petitioners, the Bank assigned its rights over the property to respondent-
spouses Magtanggol and Corazon Dizon. So petitioners filed a petition with the trial court to
allow them to exercise their right of redemption.
On February 16, 1993, petitioners caused the annotation of a notice of lis pendens on
the subject property. On May 20, 1993, the trial court issued an order dismissing the case on
the ground of res judicata. Pursuant to this, the Registry of Deeds cancelled the notice of lis
pendens. Upon denial of the motion for reconsideration, petitioners went to the CA questioning
said order of the TC. Meanwhile, on August 30, 1993, respondent-spouses Dizon sold the
property to respondent-spouses Reyes. It was only on August 31, 1994 that the appellate court
rendered a decision setting aside the order of the TC and remanded the case to it for further
proceedings. The TC rendered decision in favor of petitioners, granting them the right of
redemption. However, the writ of execution was not satisfied as the land is in the possession of
spouses Reyes.

Issue: Are respondent-spouses Reyes purchasers in good faith?

Held: No. From the attendant circumstances, an examination of the certificate of title and the
annotations therein would disclose that a civil action was filed with the TC involving the property
described in the title. The annotation in the title that the property was involved in a suit should
have prompted the prudent purchaser to inquire and verify if the suit was finally terminated and
the property freed from any legal infirmity or judicial inquiry. Although the notice of lis pendens
was cancelled pursuant to the order of the TC dismissing the civil action, the cancellation
effected after barely 4 days was premature because the court order was not yet final, as
petitioners still had the remaining period of 11 days to appeal the order. In fact, a mere inquiry
with the TC which issued the order would reveal that petitioners timely appealed the dismissal to
the CA.
The general rule that a person dealing with registered land has a right to rely on the
Torrens Certificate of Title without the need of inquiring further cannot apply when the party has
actual knowledge of facts and circumstances that would impel a reasonably cautious man to
make such inquiry or when the purchaser has knowledge of a defect or lack of title in his vendor
or of sufficient fats to induce a reasonably prudent man to inquire into the status of the title of
the property in litigation. If he does not do so, he is deemed to have acted in mala fide.

Indefeasibility of a Valid Title

HEMEDES vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 107132, October 8, 1999

Facts: In 1947, Jose Hemedes conveyed ownership over an unregistered parcel of land in
favor of his third wife, Justa Kausapin subject to the resolutory condition of her death or
remarriage. In 1960, Justa conveyed to Maxima Hemedes, heir of Jose, the property and
constituted herself as usufructuary during her lifetime or widowhood. Later, Maxima and her
husband constituted a real estate mortgage over the property in favor of R&B Insurance to
serve as security for a loan. Extrajudicial foreclosure of the mortgage followed after failure of
Maxima to pay, with R&B as the higest bidder. After Maxima failed to redeem the property within
the redemption period, a new TCT in the name of R&B Insurance was issued. However, Justa
also executed a ‘Kasunduan’ in 1971 whereby she transferred the same land to her stepson
Enrique Hemedes. In 1979, Enrique sold the property to Dominium Realty & Construction
Corp.. In 1981, Justa executed an affidavit affirming the conveyance of the subject property in
favor of Enrique and denying the conveyance made to Maxima.

Issue: Which of the two conveyances by Justa Kausapin, the first in favor of Maxima
Hemedes and the second in favor of Enrique Hemedes, effectively transferred ownership over
the subject land?

Held: The conveyance in favor of Maxima effectively transferred ownership over the property
and R&B Insurance, being an innocent purchaser of the land, has the right to assert ownership
over the property.
A party to a contract, like Justa, cannot just evade compliance with her contractual
obligations by the simple expedience of denying the execution of such contract. If, after a
perfect and binding contract has been executed between the parties, it occurs to one of them to
allege some defect therein as a reason for annulling it, the alleged defect must be conclusively
proven, since the validity and fulfillment of contracts cannot be left to the will of one of the
contracting parties.
The declarations of real property by Enrique, his payment of realty taxes and his being
designated as owner of the subject property in the cadastral survey and in the records of the
Ministry of Agrarian Reform office in Laguna cannot defeat a certificate of title, which is an
absolute and indefeasible evidence of ownership of the property in favor of the person whose
name appears therein. It is also a well-established principle that every person dealing with
registered land may safely rely on the correctness of the certificate of title issued and the law
will in no way oblige him to go behind the certificate to determine the condition of the property.
The annotation of usufructuary rights in favor of Justa upon Maxima’s title does not impose
upon R&B the obligation to investigate the validity of it’s mortgagor’s title. The owner retains the
jus disponendi or the power to alienate.

Prescription of Annulment Action based on


Fraud

STILIANOPULOS vs. CITY OF LEGASPI


G.R. No. 133913, October 12, 1999

Facts: The City of Legaspi filed an action for the judicial reconstitution of several titles of
parcels of land, the certificates of which had allegedly been lost or destroyed during WWII. The
lower court ordered the reconstitution of the OCTs. Thereafter, the City of Legaspi filed an
action for quieting of title against the petitioner’s predecessor-in-interest. The TC upheld,
however, the validity of the title of Stilianopulos. On appeal, the CA reversed the lower court’s
decision.
Later on, Stilianopulos filed an action for cancellation of the OCT under the name of
respondent City. When this action was dismissed by the lower court and CA, he filed a new
action for the annulment of the order for the reconstitution of the OCTs in favor of Legaspi City
based on fraud. The CA ruled that the action for annulment based on extrinsic fraud has
already prescribed and that Stilianopulos is guilty of laches in the filing of the case for
annulment.

Issue: Is the action for the annulment of the order for the reconstitution of the OCTs in favor
of the City of Legaspi barred by prescription?

Held: Under Art. 1391 CC, an action for annulment shall be brought within 4 years from the
discovery of the fraud; that is, within 4 years from the discovery of the fraudulent statements
made in the application. Clearly, the period for raising this issue lapsed a long time ago.
Petitioner should have raised the issue of fraud in the action for quieting of title. It was then that
he became aware of the reconstituted title in the name of the respondent.

Prescription of an Action for Reconveyance

REYES vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 127608, September 30, 1999
Facts: Petitioner Guadalupe Reyes sold to respondent Juanita Raymundo on June 21, 1967
one-half (1/2) of a 300 sq. m. lot. Consequently, a new title was issued for the whole lot in the
name of the original owner Reyes and vendee Raymundo in equal shares.
Thereafter, respondent was granted a P17,000.00 loan by GSIS with her ½ share of the
property as collateral. On September 24, 1969, petitioner sold her remaining interest in the
property to respondent for P15,000.00 as evidenced by a deed of absolute sale.
Since 1967, the house standing on the property subject of the second sale was being
leased by the Spouses Mario and Zenaida Palacios from petitioner. The Palacios were ejected
form the premises but managed to return. When a contempt case was filed by petitioner
against her lessees, respondent intervened and claimed ownership of the entire property as well
as the existence of a lease contract between her and the Palacios supposedly dated March 17,
1987 but retroactive to January 1, 1987. On August 12, the TC dismissed the case and from
then on, the Palacios paid rentals to respondent.
Petitioner filed a complaint against respondent before the RTC for cancellation of TCT
and reconveyance with damages.
CA found that petitioner’s cause of action had prescribed since the complaint should
have been filed wither within 10 years from 1969 as an action to recover title to real property, or
within 10 years from 1970 as an action based on a written contract.

Issue: Is petitioner’s action barred by prescription?

Held: NO.
In Heirs of Jose Olviga vs. CA the Court restated the rule that an action for
reconveyance of a parcel of land based on implied or constructive trust prescribes in 10 years,
the point of reference being the date of registration of the deed or the date of the issuance of the
certificate of title over the property. However, the Court emphasized that this rule applies only
when the plaintiff or the person enforcing the trust is not in possession of the property since if a
person claiming to be the owner thereof is in actual possession of the property the right to seek
reconveyance, which in effect seeks to quiet title to the property, does not prescribe. The
reason is that the one who is in actual possession of a piece of land claiming to be the owner
thereof may wait until his possession is disturbed or his title is attacked before taking steps to
vindicate his right. His undisturbed possession gives him a continuing right to seek the aid of a
court of equity to ascertain and determine the nature of the adverse claim of a third party and its
effect on his own title, which right can be claimed only by one who is in possession.
An example of actual possession of real property by an owner through another is a lease
agreement whereby the lessor transfers merely the temporary use and enjoyment of the thing
leased. In the case at bar, it was only in 1987-when respondent asserted ownership over the
property and showed a lease contract between her and the Palacioses-that petitioner’s
possession was disturbed. Consequently, the action for reconveyance filed on August 23, 1987
has not prescribed.
REMEDY TO ASSAIL VALIDITY OF TITLE OVER
REGISTERED LAND; RECOVERY OF POSSESSION;
LACHES

EDUARTE vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 121038, July 22, 1999

Facts: Respondents Domingo Belda and Estelita Ana are the registered owners of a parcel of
land denominated as Lot No. 118 and covered by OCT issued on October 5, 1962.
On Aug. 9, 1963, petitioner Teotimo Eduarte wrote a letter to the Director of Lands
requesting him not to give due course to respondent’s application for a free patent over Lot 118
since what respondent is occupying is Lot 138 which was also titled in the name of Bulan who
refused to accept said title.
The investigation conducted by the District Land Officer revealed that petitioner is in
actual possession of Lot 118 while respondents occupy Lot 138.
Based on the report, the Director of Lands on March 26, 1968, issued an Order, the
dispositive portion of which reads that the Homestead Application of petitioner is amended to
cover Lot 118.
However, in spite of the said findings, neither the Director of Lands nor petitioner
initiated a suit to cancel the free patent issued to respondents.
Petitioner remained and continuously occupied Lot 118 until on Dec. 10, 1986,
respondents filed with the RTC a complaint for recovery of possession and damages against
herein petitioner.
Affirming the decision of the lower court, the CA held that petitioner’s long inaction to
take the necessary steps to ask for judicial relief is fatal to his cause of action and that petitioner
can attack the validity of respondents’ title only through a direct and not collateral proceeding.

Issue: 1) Can petitioner assail the validity of the respondents’ title in an ordinary action for
recovery of possession, which was filed by the latter?
2) Is private respondents’ right to recover possession barred by laches?

Held: 1) No. It must be stressed that a certificate of title serves as evidence of an


indefeasible title to the property in favor of the person whose name appears therein. After the
expiration of the one year period from the issuance of the decree of registration upon which it is
based, it becomes incontrovertible. The decree of registration and the certificate of title issued
pursuant thereto may be attacked on the ground of fraud within one year from the date of its
entry and such an attack must be direct and not by a collateral proceeding.

2) Yes. While jurisprudence is settled as to the imprescriptibility of indefeasibility of a


Torrens title, the Court, in plethora of cases categorically ruled that a registered landowner may
lose his right to recover the possession of his registered property by reason of laches. Similarly,
it cannot be denied that no title to registered land in derogation to that of the registered owner
shall be acquired by prescription or adverse possession, however, the legal guarantee may in
appropriate cases yield to the right of a third person on equitable principle of laches.
In the case at bar, there is no dispute that petitioner has been in possession of the land
in question since 1942. Such possession was known to respondents but in spite of it, they did
not do anything to assert their right over the subject property. They have waited for almost 45
years before instituting the action for recovery of possession in 1986.

Laches

BALUYOT vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 122947, July 22, 1999
Facts: Petitioners filed an action for specific performance and damages against private
respondent University of the Philippines (UP) and Quezon City government for the execution of
the legal instrument for the donation of the land that they are occupying in the Diliman, Quezon
City.
Petitioners contend that they have been occupying the land since time immemorial and
that respondent UP has failed to formally execute the deed of donation on the land that they
have been occupying which has already been previously approved by the UP Board of Regents.
Petitioners also contend that they have acquired ownership of the land by acquisitive
prescription. Respondents, on the other hand, contend that the approved donation has already
been revoked. In addition, respondents contend that petitioners have no cause of action
inasmuch as prescription does not run against registered lands..

Issue: Does prescription or laches run against registered lands.

Held: While prescription does not run against registered lands, nonetheless a registered
owner’s action to recover possession may be barred by laches.
Laches is a defense against a registered owner suing to recover possession of the land
registered in its name. But UP is not suing in this case. It is petitioners who are, and their suit
is mainly to seek enforcement of the deed of donation made by UP in favor of the Quezon City
government. Indeed, the petitioners do not invoke laches. What they allege in their complaint is
that they have been occupying the land in question from time immemorial, adversely, and
continuously in the concept of an owner, but they are not invoking laches. Nor can petitioners
question the validity of UP’s title to the land. This constitutes a collateral attack on registered title
which is not permitted.

STILIANOPULOS vs. CITY OF LEGASPI


G.R. No. 133913, October 12, 1999
Facts: The City of Legaspi filed an action for the judicial reconstitution of several titles of
parcels of land, the certificates of which had allegedly been lost or destroyed during WWII. The
lower court ordered the reconstitution of the OCTs. Thereafter, the City of Legaspi filed an
action for quieting of title against the petitioner’s predecessor-in-interest. The TC upheld,
however, the validity of the title of Stilianopulos. On appeal, the CA reversed the lower court’s
decision.
Later on, Stilianopulos filed an action for cancellation of the OCT under the name of
respondent City. When this action was dismissed by the lower court and CA, he filed a new
action for the annulment of the order for the reconstitution of the OCTs in favor of Legaspi City
based on fraud. The CA ruled that the action for annulment based on extrinsic fraud has
already prescribed and that Stilianopulos is guilty of laches in the filing of the case for
annulment.

Issue: Is petitioner Stilianopulos guilty of laches?

Held: Yes. Laches is the failure or neglect, for an unreasonable or unexplained length of time,
to do that which by exercising due diligence could or should have been done earlier, warranting
the presumption that the right holder has abandoned the right or declined to assert it. This
inaction or neglect to assert a right converts a valid claim into a stale demand. Further, laches
prevents a litigant from raising the issue of lack of jurisdiction.
True, the petitioner filed the annulment complaint right after the dismissal of the cancellation-of-title case
and arguing therein his defenses against the legality of the title of the respondent in order to establish his
rights over the disputed property. Petitioner, however, is deemed to have chosen the action for
cancellation over the annulment of the reconstitution proceedings.

Reconstitution of Title

HEIRS OF MARIANO SANGLE vs. CA


G.R. No. 109024, November 25, 1999

Facts: Mariano Sangle filed an application for registration of two parcels of land, Lots 2 & 3
of Psu-46856 of the Aliaga Cadastre before the then CFI. Sangle claimed ownership by
purchase from the previous owners-possessors, Sps. Marciano Castro and Maria Macalla.
Dionisio Puno, a lessee on said parcels of land, opposed the application insofar as Lot
3, was concerned, claiming that the same was sold to him by the same spouses.
After trial or on Aug. 17, 1981, the lower court rendered judgment confirming the title of
applicant Marciano Sangle. Appellants filed notice of appeal to the CA, together with their cash
appeal bond and record on appeal.
Meanwhile, the applicant died. Record on appeal was held in abeyance pending
substitution of the deceased Marciano Sangle.
On June 14, 1987, fire gutted the building housing the lower court, destroying all court
records.
After the lapse of almost 4 years, the heirs of applicant Marciano Sangle, filed a motion
for the issuance of decrees of registration, substituting them as registered owners, contending
that the lower court’s decision has become final and executory.
Respondents-spouses opposed contending that they have appealed the decision and
the CA has not acted on their appeal.
After hearing, the lower court denied the petitioner’s motion without prejudice to the
filing of a new application for local registration.
Instead of filing new application, the petitioners presented a motion for reconsideration
of the burned records. The lower court denied on the ground that the right of petitions to seek
reconstitution had lapsed by prescription, as it was filed beyond 6 mos as required in Sec.29 of
Act 3110

Issue: Did the lower court err in denying the reconstitution?

Held: Yes. As modified in the case of Nacua v. de Beltran: Sec. 29 of Act 3110 should be
applied only where the records in CFI as well as in the appellate court were destroyed or lost
and were not reconstituted, but not where the records of the CFI are intact and complete and
only the records in the appellate court were lost or destroyed and were not reconstituted. The
whole theory of reconstitution is to reproduce or replace records lost or destroyed so that said
records may be complete and court proceedings may continue from the point or stage where
said proceeding stopped due to the loss of the records. The law contemplates different stages
for purposes of reconstitution.

RIGHT OF REPURCHASE UNDER SEC. 119 PUBLIC


LAND ACT

FONTANILLA, SR. vs. COURT OF


APPEALS
G.R. No. 119341, November 29, 1999

Facts: Private respondent Luis Duanan transferred the ownership of his homestead patent to
his two sons, Ernesto and Elpidion, in order for them to expedite their loan application with
DBP. Thereafter, due to the imminent foreclosure of the subject lot, the Duanan brothers sold
a portion thereof to Eduardo Fontanilla, Sr., although the vendee named in the Deed of Sale
was Ellen M.T. Fontanilla. Later, Luis Duanan informed Fontanilla, Sr. of his desire to
repurchase the subject lot. An action in pursuance thereof was filed by Luis Duanan but was
dismissed by the lower court for failure to state a cause of action. The CA revered the ruling of
the lower court on the ground that Luis Duanan can still exercise the right to repurchase
pursuant to Sec. 119 of the Public Land Act. As a result, Fontanilla Sr., went to this court
contending that Luis Duanan, not being the vendor in the sale of the subject lot to petitioner,
could no longer exercise his right to repurchase.

Issue: Can Luis Duana still repurchase the subject lot?

Held: Yes. There is nothing in Sec. 119 which provides that the “applicant, his widow or legal
heirs” must be the conveyor of the homestead before any of them can exercise the right to
repurchase. Since the transfer of the subject lot by private respondent to his sons does not fall
within the purview of Sec. 119, it necessarily follows that the five-year period to repurchase
cannot be reckoned from the date of said conveyance. The date of conveyance for the purpose
of counting the five-year period to repurchase under Sec. 119 is that “alienation made to a third
party outside of the family circle”.

MATA vs. COURT OF APPEALS

G.R. No. 103476, November 18, 1999


Facts: On June 10, 1945, Marcos Mata executed a Deed of Absolute sale conveying the
ownership of a lot in favor of Claro Laureta. On May 10, 1947, Mata executed another
document selling the same property to Fermin Caram, Jr., who caused the cancellation of OCT
No. 3019. In lieu thereof, TCT No. 140 was issued in Caram’s name. On June 25, 1956,
Laureta filed before the CFI an action to declare the first sale of the subject lot in his favor valid
and the second sale thereof to Caram void. The lower court declared that the deed of sale in
favor of Laureta prevails over the deed of sale in favor of Caram. The CA affirmed the decision
of the CFI. The petitioners seek to reverse the decision of the CA to permanently enjoin the
RTC from proceeding with the petitioner’s right to repurchase the subject lot under Sec. 119 of
the Public Land Act (CA 141, as amended).

Issue: Can petitioners validly exercise their right to repurchase the subject property pursuant
to Sec. 119 of the Public Land Act?

Held: No. Sec. 119 provides: “Every conveyance of land acquired under the free patent or
homestead provisions, where proper, shall be subject to repurchase by the applicant, his widow,
or legal heirs within a period of 5 years from date of conveyance.” For the purpose of reckoning
the five-year period to exercise the right to repurchase, the date of conveyance is construed to
refer to the date of the execution of the deed transferring the ownership of the land to the buyer.
Mata conveyed the ownership of the subject property to Laureta by virtue of a Deed of Absolute
Sale dated June 10, 1945. Petitioners, as heirs of Mata, filed the action for reconveyance on
November 24, 1990, or more than 45 years later. Petitioners’ right to redeem the property had
already prescribed by the time they went to the court.

GABELO vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 111743 October 8, 1999

FACTS: Philippine Realty Corporation (PRC) entered into a contract of lease with private
respondent Maglente over a parcel of land for a period of three years. The agreement provided
for the Lessee to have a first priority to buy in case the Lessor chooses to sell the land.
MAglente subleased portions of the land to the petitioners.
Subsequently, PRC made a written offer to sell the subject property to Maglente.
Thereafter, PRC and Maglente agreed on the price and terms of the purchase and the latter
completed the required downpayment.
Later on, petitioners also expressed their intention to purchase the property. They also
asked PRC to prevent Maglente from demolishing their houses. The parties then filed an action
in court which ruled that Maglante as the rightful party to purchase the land in controversy.
Petitioners appealed contending that as the actual occupants of the property, they have
preferential right to purchase the land and that a contract of sale was yet to be perfected
between PRC and Maglente as they have yet to sign on any written agreement.

ISSUE: Whether or not Petitioners have preferential right to purchase the leased land.

HELD: There is no legal basis for the assertion by the petitioners that as actual occupants of the
said property, they have the right of first priority to purchase the same.
As regards the freedom of contract, it signifies or implies the right to choose with whom
to contract. PRC is thus free to offer its subject property for sale to any interested person. It is
not duty bound to sell the same to the petitioners simply because the latter were in actual
occupation of the property absent any prior agreement vesting in them as occupants the right of
first priority to buy.
So also, the contract of sale having been perfected, the parties thereto are already
bound thereby and petitioners can no longer assert their right to buy. In the case under
consideration, the contract of sale was already perfected. As a matter of fact, respondents have
already completed payment of their downpayment.
Anent petitioner’s submission that the sale has not been perfected because the parties
have not affixed their signature thereto, suffice to state that under the law, the meeting of the
minds between the parties give rise to a binding contract although they have not affixed their
signatures to its written form.

TOMAS CLAUDIO MEMORIAL COLLEGE vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 124262 October 12, 1999
FACTS: Private Respondents De Castro filed an action for partition over a parcel of land which
was sold, without their knowledge, by their brother Mariano in favor of Petitioner Tomas Claudio
Memorial College. It is the contention of the private repondent De Castros that Mariano was
only able to sell his undivided share on the lot in question but not the other co-owners
equivalent to four-fifths (4/5) of the property. Mariano, on the other hand, raises the defense of
prescription/laches.

ISSUE: Whether or not the sale by Mariano effectively sold the entire land and whether the
rights of his siblings for partitioning of the land have prescribed.

HELD: On the issue of prescription, we have ruled that even if a co-owner sells the whole
property as his, the sale will affect only his own share but not those of the other co-owners who
did not consent to the sale. Under Article 493 of the Civil Code, the sale or other disposition
affects only the seller’s share pro indivisio, and the transferee gets only the what corresponds to
his grantor’s share in the partition of the property owned in common.
In the light of the foregoing, petitioner’s defense of prescription against an action for
partition is a vain proposition. Pursuant to Article 494 of the Civil Code, “no co-owner shall be
obliged to remain in the co-ownership. Such co-owner may demand at anytime the partition of
the thing owned in common, insofar as his share is concerned.” In Budlong v. Bondoc, this
Court has interpreted said provision of law to mean that the action for partition is imprescriptible.
It cannot be barred by prescription.
DAVID vs. COURT OF APPEALS
G.R. No. 115821 October 13, 1999

FACTS: Petitioner David questions the bid price in the public auction of the attached properties
of respondent Afable. David contends that judgment award in his favor should be P
3,207,238.50 to include compounded interest as provided under 2209 and 2219. The sheriff, on
the other hand refuses to make a certificate of sale on the properties auctioned as David’s bid
price exceeds the total judgment as computed by the lower court (P 271,039.84) since the
decision only provided for computation of simple legal interest as the promissory note made by
David and Afable under their compromise agreement stipulated no interest.

ISSUE: Whether or not the interest to be computed should be simple legal interest or compund
interest in the judgment award.

HELD: This Court has already interpreted Article 2212 and defined the standards for its
application in Philippine American Accident Insurance v. Flores. As therein held, Article 2212
contemplates the presence of stipulated or conventional interest which has accrued when
demand was judicially made. In cases where no interest had been stipulated by the parties, no
accrued conventional interest could further earn interest upon judicial demand.

DEVELOPMENT BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 111737 October 13, 1999

FACTS: Spouses Pineda obtained an agricultural loan from Petitioner Development Bank of the
Philippines using as collateral a parcel of land covered by a homestead patent. The Pinedas
failed to comply with the conditions of the loan and subsequently, DBP foreclosed the property.
In the certificate of sale, it was indicated that the property is subject to redemption within 5 years
from date of registration.
Subsequently, The Pinedas offered to redeem the property but DBP explained that the
property cannot be redeemed as it is tenanted and thus, within the prohibition provided under
PD 27. The Pinedas then filed an action for the cancellation of title and specific performance
against DBP contending that DBP acted in bad faith for consolidating of its title on the
foreclosed property although the 5 year redemption period has not yet expired.
The trial court and respondent court ruled in favor of the Pinedas. DBP further appealed
contending that it consolidated the title and took possession of the property in good faith.

ISSUE: Whether or not the DBP was in bad faith when it consolidated title and took possession
of the foreclosed property.

HELD: Possessor in good faith is one who is not aware that there exists in his title or mode of
acquisition any flaw, which invalidates it. Good faith is always presumed, and upon him who
alleges bad faith on the part of a possessor rests the burden of proof. It was therefore
incumbent upon the Pinedas to prove that DBP was aware of the flaw in its title. This, they
failed to do.
If no redemption is made within one year, the purchaser is entitled as a matter of right to
consolidate and to possess the property. Accordingly, DBP’s act of consolidating its title and
taking possession of the subject property after the expiration of the period of redemption was in
accordance with law.
The right of DBP to consolidate its title and take possession of the subject property is not
affected by the Pinedas’ right to repurchase said property within 5 years from date of
conveyance granted by Section 119 of CA 141. In fact, without the act of DBP consolidating its
title in its name, the Pinedas would not be able to assert their right to repurchase granted under
the aforementioned section.

IMPERIAL vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 112483 October 8, 1999
FACTS: Petitioner Eloy Imperial purchased a parcel of land from his father Leoncio Imperial.
Although the transaction was denominated as a sale, both admit that it was a donation.
Subsequently, Leoncio filed an action for the annulment of the supposed deed of sale
but a compromise agreement was then made by both parties. When Leoncio died, his adopted
son Victor, substituted him in the compromise agreement. When Victor also died, his heirs
(herein private responsents), filed an action for annulment of the donation on the ground that the
conveyance of said property in favor of petitioner Eloy Imperial impaired the legitime of Victor
Imperial, their natural brother and predecessors-in-interest.
Petitioner Imperial raises the defense that the donation did not impair Victor’s legitime
and that the action of respondents has already prescribed.

ISSUE: Whether or not the donation made by Leoncio Imperial in favor of Petitioner is
inofficious and should be reduced; and that the action of private respondents in questioning the
donation is barred by presciption.

HELD: Unfortunately for private respondents, a claim for legitime does not amount to a claim of
title. In the recent case of Vizconde v. Court of Appeals, we declared that what is brought to
collation is not the donated property itself, but the value of the property at the time it was
donated. The rationale for this is that the donation is a real alienation which conveys ownership
upon its acceptance, hence, any increase in value or any deterioration or loss thereof is for the
account of the heir of the donee.
From when shall the ten year period be reckoned? The case of Mateo v. Lagua, which
involved the reduction for inofficiousness of a donation propter nuptias, recognized that the
cause of action to enforce a legitime accrues upon the death of the donor-decedent. Clearly so,
since it is only then that the net estate may be ascertained and on which basis, the legitimes
may be determined.
It took private respondents 24 years since the death of Leoncio to initiate this case. The
action, therefore, has long prescribed.

STILIANOPULOS vs. CITY OF LEGASPI


G.R. No. 133913 October 12, 1999
FACTS: The City of Legaspi filed an action for the judicial reconstitution of several titles of
parcels of land, the certificates of which had allegedly been lost or destroyed during World War
II. The Lower court ordered the reconstitution of the OCTs. Thereafter, the City of Legaspi filed
an action for quieting of title against the Petitioner’s predecessors-in-interest. The trial court
upheld, however, the validity of the title of Stilianopulos. On appeal, the Court of Appeals,
reversed the lower court’s decision.
Later on, Stilianopulos filed an action for cancellation of the OCT under the name of
respondent city. When this action was dismissed by the lower court and Court of Appeals, he
filed a new action for the annulment of the order for the reconstitution of the OCTs in favor of
Legaspi City based on fraud. The Court of Appeals ruled that the action for annulment based on
extrinsic fraud has already prescribed and that petitioner is guilty of laches in the filing of the
case for annulment.

ISSUE: Whether or not the action for the annulment of the order for the reconstitution of the
OCTs in favor of the City of Legaspi has already prescribed.

HELD: Under Article 1391 of the Civil Code, an action for annulment shall be brought within four years
from the discovery of the fraud; that is, within four years from the discovery of the fraudulent statements
made in the application. Clearly, the period for raising this issue lapsed a long time ago. Petitioner should
have raised the issue of fraud in the action of quieting of title. It was then that he became aware of the
reconstituted title in the name of the respondent.
Laches is the failure or neglect, for an unreasonable or unexplained length of time, to do that
which by exercising due diligence could or should have done earlier, warranting the presumption that the
right holder has abandoned the right or declined to assert it. This inaction or neglect to assert a right
converts a valid claim into a stale demand.
Laches prevents a litigant from raising the issue of lack of jurisdiction. True, the
petitioner filed the annulment Complaint right after the dismissal of the cancellation-of-title case
and arguing therein his defenses against the legality of the title of the respondent in order to
establish his rights over the disputed property, petitioner is deemed to have chosen this action
over the annulment of the reconstitution proceedings.

ASUNCION vs. EVANGELISTA


G.R. No. 133491 October 13, 1999

FACTS: Asuncion and Evangelista entered into a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) whereby
the former agreed to pay latter certain amounts of money and to assume all the liabilities of
Embassy Farms which is controlled by respondent. In return, Evangelista will transfer control of
Embassy Farms and transfer to Asuncion all the real properties held under real estate mortgage
with several savings banks and finance corporations.
While Asuncion fulfilled his payment commitments under the MOA, Evangelista, failed to
transfer the title of the real properties and the shares of stock of Embassy Farms in the name of
Asuncion. However, it was respondent who filed a complaint for the rescission of the MOA
arguing that petitioner failed to comply with his obligations under the agreement.
During the trial, Evangelista explained that the reason he did not transfer the real
properties because Asuncion did not agree to make a formal assumption of the mortgage under
the MOA. Both the trial court and Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Evangelista and ordered the
rescissison of the MOA with damages based on the alleged proceeds of the sale of hogs during
the period control of the Embassy Farms was with Asuncion.

ISSUE: Whether or not there is a need to formally assume the mortgage on the real properties
to be transferred under the MOA ; and whether Evangelista is entitled to damages.

HELD: Even without the formal assumption of mortgage, the mortgage follows the property
whoever the possessor may be. It is an elementary principle in civil law that real mortgage
subsists notwithstanding changes of ownership and all subsequent purchases of the property
must respect the mortgage, whether the transfer to them be with or without the consent of the
mortgagee.
In case of rescission, while damages may be assessed in favor of the prejudiced party,
only those kinds of damages consistent with the remedy of rescission may be granted, keeping
in mind that had the parties opted for specific performance, other kinds of damages would have
been called for which are absolutely distinct from those kinds of damages accruing in the case
of rescission. Compensatory damages consisting of the value of the private landholdings would
have been proper in case he resorted to the remedy of specific performance, not rescission.

LITONJUA vs. L & R CORPORATION


G.R. No. 130722 December 9, 1999

FACTS: Petitioner-spouses Litonjua obtained a loan from L & R Corporation. It was stipulated in
the contract of mortgage which secured the loan that (1) the mortgagor shall not sell the
mortgaged property without the prior written consent of mortgagee; and (2) that the mortgagee
shall be given priority in should the mortgagor decide to sell the mortgaged property.
Spouses Litonjuas failed to pay the loan. L & R then foreclosed the mortgaged property.
But when respondent tried to register the certificate of sale for the auction sale, it learned that
Petitioners Litonjua had already sold the mortgaged property to Philippine White House Auto
Supply (PWHAS) without its the prior written consent and without allowing it to exercise the first
option to buy the property. L & R consolidated title to the property when it refused to accept the
redemption price offered by PWHAS. Thereafter, a complaint for Quieting of Title and
Annulment of Title was filed by the spouses Litonjua and PWHAS against respondents.
The lower court dismissed the case. The Court of Appeals, however, reversed the
decision and held that (1) the stipulation in the mortgage contract requiring prior written consent
of the mortgagee before the mortgagor can sell is valid; and (2) the sale between the Litonjuas
and PWHAS must be rescinded because it violated L & R’s right of first refusal.

ISSUES: Whether or not (a) a stipulation requiring prior written consent of mortgagor before
mortgagee can sell is valid, and (b) rescission is available in case a right of first refusal is
violated.

HELD: True, the provision does not absolutely prohibit the mortgagor from selling his
mortgaged property; but what it does not outrightly prohibit, it nevertheless achieves. For all
intents and purposes, the stipulation practically gives the mortgagee the sole prerogative to
prevent any sale of mortgaged property to a third party. The mortgagee can simply withhold its
consent and thereby, prevent the mortgagor from selling the property. This creates an
unconscionable advantage for the mortgagee and amounts to a virtual prohibition on the owner
to sell his mortgaged property. In other words, the stipulation circumvent the law, apecifically,
Article 2130 of the Civil Code.
The right of first refusal has long been recognized as valid in our jurisdiction. The
consideration for the loan-mortgage includes the consideration for the right of first refusal. The
case of Guzman, Bocaling & Co v. Bonnevie is instructive on this point – “Under Article 1380 to
1381(3) of the Civil Code, a contract otherwise valid may nonetheless be subsequently
rescinded by reason of injury to third persons, like creditors. The status of creditors could be
validly accorded the Bonnevies for they had substantial interests that were prejudiced by the
sale of the subject property to the petitioner without recognizing their right of first priority under
the contract of lease.”
Dissenting Opinion: (Justice Vitug)
I must stress that a right of first refusal is not a perfected contract. Neither does it qualify as an
option under the second paragraph of Article 1479, which itself must be supported by a consideration
separate and distinct from the price itself, nor an offer which Article 1319 of the Code requires to be
definitive and certain both as to object and cause. Even while the object in right of first refusal might be
determinate, the exercise of the right, nevertheless, would still be dependent not only on the grantor’s
eventual intention to enter into a binding juridical relation but also on terms, including the price, that are
obviously yet to be fixed.

TORRES vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 134559 December 9, 1999
FACTS: Petitioners Torres and Baring entered into a joint venture agreement with private
respondent Manuel Torres for the development of a parcel of land into a subdivision. The
project, however, did not push through and the land was subsequently foreclosed by the
creditor-bank.
Later on, petitioners filed a civil case against private respondent for damages for the
latter’s mismanagement and lack of skills. Respondent court, in affirming the lower court ruled
that petitioners and respondent had formed a partnership for the development of the land and
thus, must bear the loss proportionately. On appeal to the Supreme Court, petitioners deny the
existence of a partnership contending that their joint venture agreement is void since they did
not comply with Article 1773 of the Civil Code which required an inventory of the real property to
be contributed in the partnership.

ISSUE: Whether or not a contract of partnership was perfected.

HELD: We clarify. Article 1773 of the Civil Code was intended primarily to protect third persons.
Thus, the eminent Arturo Tolentino states that under the aforecited 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 with
the belief in the efficacy if the guaranty in which the immovables may consist. Thus, the
contract is declared void by law when no such inventory is made.” The case at bar does not
involve third parties who may be prejudiced.
In short, 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.

ABARINTOS vs. COURT OF APPEALS


315 SCRA 551

FACTS: Petitioners and private respondents are co-owners of a hacienda. The co-owners
appointed petitioner Jose Garcia as administrator of the property. When private respondents,
found out that the hacienda was mismanaged, they decided to manage directly the hacienda.
Subsequently, the co-owners agreed to terminate the co-ownership and divide the property
among themselves. The co-owners entered into a compromise agreement to resolve the several
cases for partition filed by the co-owners and such agreement was approved by the lower court.
Private respondents, however, brought an action seeking to annul the compromise
agreement on the ground that it decides the action for the partition and appointment of a
receiver without the benefit of trial on the merits.

ISSUE: Whether or not the compromise agreement is conclusive as to the civil cases filed by
the co-owners.

HELD: Under Article 2028 of the Civil Code, a compromise is a contract whereby the parties, by
making reciprocal concessions, avoid a litigation or put an end to one already commenced. A
judicial compromise has the force of law and is conclusive between the parties. Once an
agreement is stamped with approval, it becomes more than a mere contract binding the parties,
and having the sanction of the court and entered as its determination of the controversy, it has
the force and effect of any other judgment.
It is settled that every act which is intended to put an end to indivision among co-heirs
and legatees or devisees is deemed to be a partition, although it should purport to be a sale, an
exchange, a compromise, or any other transaction.

LAGROSA vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 115981- 82 August 12, 1999

FACTS: The City of Manila awarded a parcel of land was in favor of Julio Arizapa, private
respondent Banua’s predecessor-in-interest. Arizapa used the land as collateral for a loan he
obtained from a certain Presentacion Quimbo. When Arizapa died, his wife convinced Quimbo
not to foreclose the property and instead execute an Assignment of Rights to the Real Estate
Mortgage in favor of Petitoner Ruben Lagrosa, in whom she had outstanding debts. In the
meantime, Lagrosa’s relatives were allowed to occupy some areas of the property.
Lagrosa subsequently filed an action for ejectment against the caretaker of private respondent
Banua. Respondent court ruled that the assignment of rights in the real estate mortgage made
by Quimbo to Lagrosa is void because at the time of mortgage, title to the property still belonged
to the City of Manila; and therefore, Lagrosa has no basis is demanding possession of the
property.

ISSUE: Whether or not Lagrosa is entitled to possession of the property.

HELD : For a person to validly constitute a valid mortgage on real estate, he must be the
absolute owner thereof as required by Article 2085 of the Civil Code. Since the mortgage to
Presentacion Quimbo of the lot is null and void, the assignment by Quimbo of her rights to
Lagrosa is likewise void. Even if the mortgage is valid as insisted by petitioner, it is well-settled
that a mere mortgagee has no right to reject the occupants of the property mortgaged. This is
so, because a mortgage passes no title to the mortgagee. Indeed, by mortgaging a piece of
property, a debtor merely subjects it to a lien but ownership is not parted with.
As to Lagrosa’s prior possession of the subject property, their stay in the property was by
mere tolerance or permission. It is well-settled that “a person who occupies the land of another
at the latter’s tolerance or permission, without any contract between them, is necessarily bound
by an implied promise that he will vacate upon demand, failing which a summary action for
ejectment is the proper remedy against him.”

PHILIPPINE TRUST COMPANY vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 124658 December 15, 1999

FACTS: Private respondent Simeon Policarpio Shipyard and Shipping Corporation filed a
complaint for damages and injunction against petitioner Philtrust company for the fraudulent
possession of the land occupied by the former on the basis of an alias writ of execution. The
writ of execution was based on a judgment previously decided that held the validity of
foreclosure of
Philtrust of the properties mortgaged by private respondents and Philtrust’s right to possess the
property.
Private respondent contends that the property fraudulently possessed by Philtrust was
not included in the foreclosed mortgaged property. Thus, SPSSC is anchoring its complaint for
damages on the improper implementation of the alias writ of execution which as a result it was
deprived of possession of the property (OCT-R-165). Petitioner, on the other hand, contends
that SPSSC no longer owns the subject property because it was already foreclosed by
Landbank; thus, not being the owner, Philtrust alleges that SPSSC cannot be entitled to
possession.

ISSUE: Whether or not private respondent SPSSC is entitled to possession of subject property.

HELD: Since private respondent was in possession of the aforesaid land when the writ of
possession was improperly implemented, it is not correct therefore to say that private
respondent does not have a cause of action. It is elementary that a lawful possessor of a thing
has the right to institute an action should he be disturbed in its enjoyment.
Verily, Article 539 of the Civil Code states that – “Every possessor has a right to be
respected in his possession; and should he be disturbed therein, he shall be restored to said
possession by the means established by the laws and rules of court.” The phrase “every
possessor” in the article indicates that all kinds of possession, from that of the owner to that of a
mere holder, except that which constitutes a crime, should be respected and protected by the
means established and the laws of procedure. Consequently, private respondent having been
in lawful possession of the property covered by OCT-R-165 at the time of possession was
implemented, may institute an action for having been disturbed in its enjoyment.

BALUYOT vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 122947 July 22, 1999
FACTS: Petitioners filed an action for specific performance and damages against private
respondent University of the Philippines (UP) and Quezon City government for the execution of
the legal instrument for the donation of the land that they are occupying in the Diliman, Quezon
City.
Petitoners contend that they have been occupying the land since time immemorial and
that respondent UP has failed to formally execute the deed of donation on the land that they
have been occupying which has already been previously approved by the UP Board of Regents.
Petitoners also contend that they have acquired ownership of the land by acquisitive
prescription. Respondents, on the other hand, contend that the approved donation has already
been revoked. In addition, respondents contend that petitioners have no cause of action
inasmuch as prescription does not run against registered lands..

ISSUES: Whether or not prescription or laches run against registered lands.

HELD: While prescription does not run against registered lands, nonetheless a registered
owner’s action to recover possession may be barred by laches.
Laches is a defense against a registered owner suing to recover possession of the land
registered in its name. But UP is not suing in this case. It is petitioners who are, and their suit
is mainly to seek enforcement of the deed of donation made by UP in favor of the Quezon City
government. Indeed, the petitioners do not invoke laches. What they allege in their complaint is
that they have been occupying the land in question from time immemorial, adversely, and
continuously in the concept of an owner, but they are not invoking laches. Nor can petitioners
question the validity of UP’s title to the land. This constitutes a collateral attack on registered title
which is not permitted.

DEVELOPMENT BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 111737 October 13, 1999

FACTS: Spouses Pineda obtained a loan from Petitioner Development Bank of the Philippines
(DBP) using as collateral a parcel of land covered by a homestead patent. The Pinedas failed
to comply with the conditions of the loan and subsequently, DBP foreclosed the property. In the
certificate of sale, it was indicated that the property is subject to redemption within 5 years from
date of registration. After the expiration of the one year redemption period provided under
section 6 of Act 3135, however, DBP consolidated its title to the foreclosed property.
When Pinedas offered to redeem the property, DBP refused the redemption and
explained that the property cannot be redeemed as it is within the provisions of PD 27 which
prohibited the redemption of tenanted land.
The Pinedas subsequently filed an action for the cancellation of title and specific
performance against DBP contending that the latter acted in bad faith for consolidating its title
on the foreclosed property although the 5 year redemption period stated in the certificate of sale
has not yet expired.
The trial court and respondent court ruled that DBP violated the stipulation in the sheriff’s
certificate of title and ordered DBP to assume liability for the fruits that the property produced
from said land. On appeal, respondent court ruled that DBP was in bad faith when it unlawfully
took possession of the land and that Pinedas were entitled to recover the fruits produced by the
property.

ISSUE: Whether or not the DBP was in bad faith when it consolidated title and took possession
of the foreclosed property.

HELD: A possessor in good faith is one who is not aware that there exists in his title or mode of
acquisition any flaw, which invalidates it. Good faith is always presumed, and upon him who
alleges bad faith on the part of a possessor rests the burden of proof. It was therefore
incumbent upon the Pinedas to prove that DBP was aware of the flaw in its title. This, they
failed to do.
If no redemption is made within one year, the purchaser is entitled as a matter of right to
consolidate and to possess the property. Accordingly, DBP’s act of consolidating its title and
taking possession of the subject property after the expiration of the period of redemption was in
accordance with law.
The right of DBP to consolidate its title and take possession of the subject property is not
affected by the Pinedas’ right to repurchase said property within 5 years from date of
conveyance granted by Section 119 of CA 141. In fact, without the act of DBP consolidating its
title in its name, the Pinedas would not be able to assert their right to repurchase granted under
the aforementioned section.

UY vs. COURT OF APPEALS


GR No. 120465 September 9, 1999

FACTS: Petitioners Uy and Roxas offered to sell eight parcels of land, as agents of the owners
thereof, to private respondent National Housing Authority (NHA) for the latter to utilize and
develop as a housing project. The NHA thereafter approved the acquisition but for only 5
parcels of land since it was determined that the other 3 were located at an active landslide area
and thus, not suitable for development into a housing project. Subsequently, the NHA cancelled
the purchase of the 3 lots.
Petitioners then filed an action for damages against the NHA for the cancellation of
purchase contending that there was no basis for its rescission by the NHA. The lower court and
respondent Court of Appeals ruled that the cancellation was justified and that petitioners are not
entitled to damages.

ISSUE: Whether or not the cancellation of the sale by the NHA for the 3 lots is a rescission of
that part of the contract.

HELD:In this 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. 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.
The cancellation, therefore, was not a rescission under Article 1191. Rather, 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. Cause is the essential reason
which moves the contracting parties to enter into it.
Ordinarily, a party’s motives for entering into a contract do not affect the contract. However,
when the motive predetermines the cause, the motive may be regarded as the cause.
In this case, it is clear that the NHA would not have entered into the contract were the
lands not suitable for housing. In other words, the quality of the land was an implied condition
for the NHA to enter into the contract. On the part of the NHA, therefore, the motive was the
cause for its being a party to the sale.
Accordingly, we hold that the NHA was justified in cancelling the contract. The
realization of the mistake as regards the quality of the land resulted in the negation of
the motive/cause thus rendering the contract inexistent.

ESTRELLA REAL ESTATE CORPORATION vs. COURT OF APPEALS


GR No. 128862 September 30, 1999

FACTS: Gonzalo Tan, predecessors-in-interest of private respondents, owned a parcel of land


where a two-storey house (known as House No. 285) were constructed and which was owned
by Cenon Tan, brother of Gonzalo. Gonzalo later sold the parcel of land in favor of Gaw Bros &
Co. specifying that the property subject thereof was “a parcel of land together with the
improvements thereon (except those belonging to other persons).” Said land was later on sold
by Gaw Bros & Co to petitoner Estrella Real Estate Corporation (ESTRELLA). The two-storey
house, was also sold by Cenon to Gonzalo.
ESTRELLA later on leased another house located in the land to a certain Josephine
Catalan. When Catalan failed to pay the rents, ESTRELLA filed an ejectment suit against the
former. When the lower court ruled in favor of ESTRELLA, the writ of execution was enforced
also against the private respondents, who were residents of House No. 285. Private
respondents subsequently filed a complaint for Quieting of Title.
The lower court ruled that House No 285 was owned by the heirs of Gonzalo Tan. The
respondent Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of the lower court and ordered the annotation
of the ownership of the house in the certificate of title of the parcel of land (TCT No 22003).

ISSUE: Whether or not private respondents have the right to annotate on the certificate of title
the ownership of a house, allegedly owned by them, but built on the land owned by petitioner.

HELD: The evidence on record indubitably supports the finding of the Court of Appeals that
when the parcel of land covered by TCT No 22003 in the name of Gonzalo Tan was sold by the
latter to Gaw Bros, House No. 285 belonging to Cenon Tan was among the improvements
excluded from the sale as expressly provided in the deed of sale.
As correctly found by the Court of Appeals, private respondents have the right to have
their ownership of the House No. 285 annotated in the certificate of title of petitioner over the
land after the same is judicially settled. Section 78 of PD 1529 provides that whenever in any
action to recover possession or ownership of real estate or any interest therein affecting
registered land judgment is entered for the plaintiff such judgment shall be entitled to
registration on presentation of certificate of entry thereof from the Clerk of Court where the
action is pending to the Register of Deeds for the province or city where the land lies, who shall
enter a memorandum upon the certificate of title of the land to which such judgment relates. If
the judgment does not apply to all the land described in the certificate of title, the certificate of
the clerk of court where the action is pending and the memorandum entered by the Register of
Deeds shall contain a description of the land affected by the judgment.
Posted by Unknown at 12:16 AM

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Joebell ParagguaHulyo 30, 2013 nang 10:51 AM

Thanks... big help..


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