PROBLEM NO. 1. Petitioner Heirs
of Paulino Atienza, namely, Rufina L. Atienza, Anicia A. Ignacio, Roberto
Atienza, Maura A. Domingo, Ambrocio Atienza, Maxima Atienza, Luisito Atienza,
Celestina A. Gonzales, Regalado Atienza and Melita A. Dela Cruz (collectively,
the Atienzas)[1] own a 21,959
square meters of registered agricultural land at Valle Cruz, Cabanatuan City.[2] They
acquired the land under an emancipation patent[3] through the
government's land reform program.[4]
On August 12, 2002
the Atienzas and respondent Domingo P. Espidol entered into a contract called Kasunduan
sa Pagbibili ng Lupa na may Paunang-Bayad (contract to sell land with a
down payment) covering the property.[5] They agreed on a price of
P130.00 per square meter or a total of P2,854,670.00, payable in three
installments: P100,000.00 upon the signing of the contract; P1,750,000.00 in
December 2002, and the remaining P974,670.00 in June 2003. Respondent Espidol
paid the Atienzas P100,000.00 upon the execution of the contract and paid
P30,000.00 in commission to the brokers.
When the Atienzas
demanded payment of the second installment of P1,750,000.00 in
December 2002, however, respondent Espidol could not pay it. He offered
to pay the Atienzas P500.000.00 in the meantime,[6] which they did not
accept. Claiming that Espidol breached his obligation, on February 21,
2003 the Atienzas filed a complaint[7] for the annulment of their agreement
with damages before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Cabanatuan City in Civil
Case 4451.
QUESTIONS: (1) Can the Atienzas validly sell to respondent
Espidol the subject land which they acquired through land reform under
Presidential Decree 27 ?
2. Are the Atienzas
entitled to the cancellation of the contract to sell they entered into
with respondent Espidol on the ground of the latter's failure to pay the second
installment when it fell due?
3. Is Atienzas' action for cancellation of title
premature absent the notarial notice of cancellation required by R.A. 6552?
Explain your answer.
One. That the Atienzas brought up
the illegality of their sale of subject land only when they filed their motion
for reconsideration of the CA decision is not lost on this Court. As a rule, no
question will be entertained on appeal unless it was raised before the court
below. This is but a rule of fairness.16
Nonetheless, in order to settle a
matter that would apparently undermine a significant policy adopted under the
land reform program, the Court cannot simply shirk from the issue. The
Atienzas’ title shows on its face that the government granted title to them on
January 9, 1990 by virtue of P.D. 27. This law explicitly prohibits any form of
transfer of the land granted under it except to the government or by hereditary
succession to the successors of the farmer beneficiary.
Upon the enactment of Executive Order
22817
in 1987, however, the restriction ceased to be absolute. Land reform
beneficiaries were allowed to transfer ownership of their lands provided that
their amortizations with the Land Bank of the Philippines (Land Bank) have been
paid in full.18
In this case, the Atienzas’ title categorically states that they have fully
complied with the requirements for the final grant of title under P.D. 27. This
means that they have completed payment of their amortization with Land Bank.
Consequently, they could already legally transfer their title to another.
Two. Regarding the right to cancel
the contract for non-payment of an installment, there is need to initially
determine if what the parties had was a contract of sale or a contract to sell.
In a contract of sale, the title to the property passes to the buyer upon the delivery
of the thing sold. In a contract to sell, on the other hand, the ownership is,
by agreement, retained by the seller and is not to pass to the vendee until
full payment of the purchase price. In the contract of sale, the buyer’s
non-payment of the price is a negative resolutory condition; in the contract to
sell, the buyer’s full payment of the price is a positive suspensive condition
to the coming into effect of the agreement. In the first case, the seller has
lost and cannot recover the ownership of the property unless he takes action to
set aside the contract of sale. In the second case, the title simply remains in
the seller if the buyer does not comply with the condition precedent of making
payment at the time specified in the contract.19
Here, it is quite evident that the contract involved was one of a contract
to sell since the Atienzas, as sellers, were to retain title of ownership to
the land until respondent Espidol, the buyer, has paid the agreed price.
Indeed, there seems no question that the parties understood this to be the
case.20
Admittedly, Espidol was unable to
pay the second installment of P1,750,000.00 that fell due in December
2002.1awph!1 That payment, said both the RTC and
the CA, was a positive suspensive condition failure of which was not regarded a
breach in the sense that there can be no rescission of an obligation (to turn
over title) that did not yet exist since the suspensive condition had not taken
place. And this is correct so far. Unfortunately, the RTC and the CA concluded
that should Espidol eventually pay the price of the land, though not on time,
the Atienzas were bound to comply with their obligation to sell the same to
him.
But this is error. In the first
place, since Espidol failed to pay the installment on a day certain fixed in
their agreement, the Atienzas can afterwards validly cancel and ignore the
contract to sell because their obligation to sell under it did not arise. Since
the suspensive condition did not arise, the parties stood as if the conditional
obligation had never existed.21
Secondly, it was not a pure
suspensive condition in the sense that the Atienzas made no undertaking while
the installments were not yet due. Mr. Justice Edgardo L. Paras gave a fitting
example of suspensive condition: "I’ll buy your land for P1,000.00
if you pass the last bar examinations." This he said was suspensive for
the bar examinations results will be awaited. Meantime the buyer is placed
under no immediate obligation to the person who took the examinations.22
Here, however, although the Atienzas
had no obligation as yet to turn over title pending the occurrence of the
suspensive condition, it was implicit that they were under immediate obligation
not to sell the land to another in the meantime. When Espidol failed to pay
within the period provided in their agreement, the Atienzas were relieved of
any obligation to hold the property in reserve for him.
The ruling of the RTC and the CA
that, despite the default in payment, the Atienzas remained bound to this day
to sell the property to Espidol once he is able to raise the money and pay is
quite unjustified. The total price was P2,854,670.00. The Atienzas
decided to sell the land because petitioner Paulino Atienza urgently needed
money for the treatment of his daughter who was suffering from leukemia.23
Espidol paid a measly P100,000.00 in down payment or about 3.5% of the
total price, just about the minimum size of a broker’s commission. Espidol
failed to pay the bulk of the price, P1,750,000.00, when it fell due
four months later in December 2002. Thus, it was not such a small default as to
justify the RTC and the CA’s decision to continue to tie up the Atienzas to the
contract to sell upon the excuse that Espidol tried his honest best to pay.
Although the Atienzas filed their
action with the RTC on February 21, 2003, four months before the last
installment of P974,670.00 fell due in June 2003, it cannot be said that
the action was premature. Given Espidol’s failure to pay the second installment
of P1,750,000.00 in December 2002 when it was due, the Atienzas’
obligation to turn over ownership of the property to him may be regarded as no
longer existing.24
The Atienzas had the right to seek judicial declaration of such non-existent
status of that contract to relieve themselves of any liability should they
decide to sell the property to someone else. Parenthetically, Espidol never
offered to settle the full amount of the price in June 2003, when the last
installment fell due, or during the whole time the case was pending before the
RTC.
Three. Notice of cancellation by notarial
act need not be given before the contract between the Atienzas and respondent
Espidol may be validly declare non-existent. R.A. 6552 which mandated the
giving of such notice does not apply to this case. The cancellation envisioned
in that law pertains to extrajudicial cancellation or one done outside of
court,25
which is not the mode availed of here. The Atienzas came to court to seek the
declaration of its obligation under the contract to sell cancelled. Thus, the
absence of that notice does not bar the filing of their action.
Since the contract has ceased to
exist, equity would, of course, demand that, in the absence of stipulation, the
amount paid by respondent Espidol be returned, the purpose for which it was
given not having been attained;26
and considering that the Atienzas have consistently expressed their desire to
refund the P130,000.00 that Espidol paid.27
PROBLEM NO. 2 What is a contract
to sell? Distinguish it from a contract of sale.
PROBLEM NO. 3. The undisputed
facts of this case show that on 11 June 1997, Elias Colarina bought on
installment from Magna Financial Services Group, Inc., one (1) unit of Suzuki
Multicab.
After making a down payment, Colarina executed a
promissory note for the balance of P229,284.00 payable in thirty-six (36) equal
monthly installments at P6,369.00 monthly, beginning 18 July 1997. To secure
payment thereof, Colarina executed an integrated promissory note and deed of
chattel mortgage over the motor vehicle.
Colarina failed to pay the monthly amortization
beginning January 1999, accumulating an unpaid balance of P131,607.00. Despite
repeated demands, he failed to make the necessary payment. On 31 October 2000
Magna Financial Services Group, Inc. filed a Complaint for Foreclosure of
Chattel Mortgage with Replevin[2] before the Municipal Trial Court in
Cities (MTCC), Branch 2, Legaspi City, docketed as Civil Case No. 4822.[3] Upon the filing of
a Replevin Bond, a Writ of Replevin was issued by the MTCC. On 27 December
2000, summons, together with a copy of the Writ of Replevin, was served on
Colarina who voluntarily surrendered physical possession of the vehicle to the
Sheriff, Mr. Antonio Lozano. On 02 January 2001, the aforesaid motor vehicle
was turned over by the sheriff to Magna Financial Services Group, Inc.[4] On 12 July 2001,
Colarina was declared in default for having filed his answer after more than
six (6) months from the service of summons upon him. Thereupon, the trial court
rendered judgment based on the facts alleged in the Complaint. In a decision
dated 23 July 2001, it held:[5]
WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of
plaintiff Magna Financial Services Group, Inc. and against the defendant Elias
Colarina, ordering the latter:
a)
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to pay plaintiff the principal sum of one hundred thirty one thousand
six hundred seven (P131,607.00) pesos plus penalty charges at 4.5% per month
computed from January, 1999 until fully paid;
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(b)
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to pay plaintiff P10,000.00 for attorney's fees; and
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c)
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to pay the costs.
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`The foregoing money judgment shall be paid within
ninety (90) days from the entry of judgment. In case of default in such
payment, the one (1) unit of Suzuki Multicab, subject of the writ of replevin
and chattel mortgage, shall be sold at public auction to satisfy the said
judgment.[6]
QUESTIONS: (1) In a contract of sale of personal
property the price of which is payable in installment, what are the remedies
available to the vendor?
(2) Based on the
facts of the above case, is the Decision of the trial court correct?
G.R. No. 158635 December 9, 2005
MAGNA FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP,
INC., Petitioner, vs.ELIAS
COLARINA, Respondent.
It is, however, unmistakable from the Complaint that petitioner
preferred to avail itself of the first and third remedies under Article 1484,
at the same time suing for replevin. For this reason, the Court of Appeals
justifiably set aside the decision of the RTC. Perusing the Complaint, the petitioner,
under its prayer number 1, sought for the payment of the unpaid amortizations
which is a remedy that is provided under Article 1484(1) of the Civil Code,
allowing an unpaid vendee to exact fulfillment of the obligation. At the same
time, petitioner prayed that Colarina be ordered to surrender possession of the
vehicle so that it may ultimately be sold at public auction, which remedy is
contained under Article 1484(3). Such a scheme is not only irregular but is a
flagrant circumvention of the prohibition of the law. By praying for the
foreclosure of the chattel, Magna Financial Services Group, Inc. renounced
whatever claim it may have under the promissory note.18
Article 1484, paragraph 3, provides that if the vendor has availed
himself of the right to foreclose the chattel mortgage, "he shall have no
further action against the purchaser to recover any unpaid balance of the
purchase price. Any agreement to the contrary shall be void." In other
words, in all proceedings for the foreclosure of chattel mortgages executed on
chattels which have been sold on the installment plan, the mortgagee is limited
to the property included in the mortgage.19
Contrary to petitioner’s claim, a contract of chattel mortgage, which is
the transaction involved in the present case, is in the nature of a conditional
sale of personal property given as a security for the payment of a debt, or the
performance of some other obligation specified therein, the condition being
that the sale shall be void upon the seller paying to the purchaser a sum of
money or doing some other act named.20 If the condition is
performed according to its terms, the mortgage and sale immediately become
void, and the mortgagee is thereby divested of his title.21 On the other hand, in
case of non payment, foreclosure is one of the remedies available to a
mortgagee by which he subjects the mortgaged property to the satisfaction of
the obligation to secure that for which the mortgage was given. Foreclosure may
be effected either judicially or extrajudicially, that is, by ordinary action
or by foreclosure under power of sale contained in the mortgage. It may be
effected by the usual methods, including sale of goods at public auction.22 Extrajudicial
foreclosure, as chosen by the petitioner, is attained by causing the mortgaged
property to be seized by the sheriff, as agent of the mortgagee, and have it
sold at public auction in the manner prescribed by Section 14 of Act No. 1508,
or the Chattel Mortgage Law.23 This rule governs
extrajudicial foreclosure of chattel mortgage.
In sum, since the petitioner has undeniably elected a remedy of
foreclosure under Article 1484(3) of the Civil Code, it is bound by its
election and thus may not be allowed to change what it has opted for nor to ask
for more. On this point, the Court of Appeals correctly set aside the trial
court’s decision and instead rendered a judgment of foreclosure as prayed for
by the petitioner.
The next issue of consequence is whether or not there has been an actual
foreclosure of the subject vehicle.
In the case at bar, there is no dispute that the subject vehicle is
already in the possession of the petitioner, Magna Financial Services Group, Inc.
However, actual foreclosure has not been pursued, commenced or concluded by it.
Where the mortgagee elects a remedy of foreclosure, the law requires the
actual foreclosure of the mortgaged chattel. Thus, in Manila Motor Co. v.
Fernandez,24 our Supreme Court
said that it is actual sale of the mortgaged chattel in accordance with Sec. 14
of Act No. 1508 that would bar the creditor (who chooses to foreclose) from recovering
any unpaid balance.25 And it is deemed that
there has been foreclosure of the mortgage when all the proceedings of the
foreclosure, including the sale of the property at public auction, have been
accomplished.26
That there should be actual foreclosure of the mortgaged vehicle was
reiterated in the case of De la Cruz v. Asian Consumer and Industrial
Finance Corporation:27
It is thus clear that while ASIAN eventually succeeded in taking
possession of the mortgaged vehicle, it did not pursue the foreclosure of the
mortgage as shown by the fact that no auction sale of the vehicle was ever
conducted. As we ruled in Filinvest Credit Corp. v. Phil. Acetylene Co., Inc.
(G.R. No. 50449, 30 January 1982, 111 SCRA 421) –
Under the law, the delivery of possession of the mortgaged property to
the mortgagee, the herein appellee, can only operate to extinguish appellant’s
liability if the appellee had actually caused the foreclosure sale of the
mortgaged property when it recovered possession thereof (Northern Motors, Inc.
v. Sapinoso, 33 SCRA 356 [1970]; Universal Motors Corp. v. Dy Hian Tat, 28 SCRA
161 [1969]; Manila Motors Co., Inc. v. Fernandez, 99 Phil. 782 [1956]).
Be that as it may, although no actual foreclosure as contemplated under
the law has taken place in this case, since the vehicle is already in the
possession of Magna Financial Services Group, Inc. and it has persistently and
consistently avowed that it elects the remedy of foreclosure, the Court of
Appeals, thus, ruled correctly in directing the foreclosure of the said vehicle
without more.
PROBLEM NO. 4. Desiring to have safe drinking water at home, herein petitioner Villostas and her husband decided to buy a water purifier. At about this time, private respondent's Electrolux sales agents were making door to door selling of its products in the subdivision where petitioner has her residence. Because private respondent's sales agents had assured petitioner of the very special features of their brand of water purifier, petitioner Villostas placed an order for one (1) unit of said water purifier. On September 13, 1986, an Electrolux Aqua Guard water purifier was delivered and installed at petitioner's residence (Rollo, p. 38; 49). Consequently, petitioner signed the Sales Order (Annex "B", p. 31) and the Contract of Sale with Reservation of Title (Annex "A", p. 31) in October 1986 (Rollo, p. 38, 22). A warranty certificate, Exhibit "l", was issued by private respondent which provides that:
ELECTROLUX
MARKETING, INCORPORATED WARRANTS THIS QUALITY ELECTROLUX PRODUCT TO PERFORM
EFFICIENTLY FOR ONE FULL YEAR FROM DATE OF ORIGINAL PURCHASE. (Rollo, p.
49)
The purchase of
said unit was on installment basis under which petitioner would pay the amount
of P16,190.00 in 20 monthly installments of P635.00 a month.
After two (2)
weeks, petitioner verbally complained for the first time about the impurities,
dirtiness and bad odor coming out of the unit (Rollo, p. 22). On October
21, 1986, private respondent Electrolux sent its service technician to examine
and test the water purifier. The water which came out was dirty so the unit was
shut off automatically (Ibid.).The technician changed the filter of the
unit on said date without charge with an instruction that the filter should be
changed every 6 months otherwise the unit will not last long as the water in
the area was dirty (Ibid.).
After the filter
was replaced, petitioner paid the amount of Pl,650.00 on November 18, 1986
which included the first amortization of P700.00 (Ibid.).
Petitioner
complained for the second and third time when dirty water still came out of the
water purifier after the replacement of the filter. It was on the third
complaint of petitioner Villostas when the service technician gave advise that
the filter should be changed every six (6) months costing about P300.00 which
was considered to be uneconomical by the former (Rollo, pp. 22-23).
On December 9,
1986, petitioner sent a letter to the private respondent's branch manager
stating therein her complaint that the actual performance of the carbon filter
was only for a month instead of the private respondent's claim that the
replacement of such filter will be only once every six (6) months. The
petitioner, citing the above incident as uneconomical, decided to return the
unit and demand a refund for the amount paid (Rollo, p. 76),
Electrolux's branch manager offered to change the water purifier with another
brand of any of its appliance of the unit in her favor. Petitioner did not
accept it as she was disappointed with the original unit which did not perform
as warranted. Consequently, petitioner did not pay any more the subsequent
installments in the amount of P14,540.00 exclusive of interests (Rollo,
p. 23, 120).
What transpired
next was an exchange of demand letter and reply between petitioner and private
respondent.
Ultimately,
respondent Electrolux Marketing, Inc. filed a complaint against petitioner
Villostas with the MTC of Makati for the recovery of the sum of P14,540.00
representing the unpaid balance of the purchase price of one (1) Electrolux
Water Purifier plus interest thereon at the rate of 42% per annum in
accordance with the Sales Contract with Reservation of Title (Rollo, pp.
28-30).
In her amended
answer, petitioner Villostas asserted that by reason of private respondent's
breach of warranty she was availing of the remedy of rescission of the contract
of sale and offered to return the water purifier to the seller as in fact, it
was already being offered for return as early as December 9, 1986, aside from claiming
for the refund of her payments. Petitioner prayed that the contract of sale be
declared rescinded and the payments refunded to her together with the full
grant of the claims asserted in her counterclaims (Rollo, pp. 35-36).
After trial on
the merits. the MTC of Makati rendered its decision, the dispositive portion of
which reads:
WHEREFORE,
judgment is hereby rendered ordering the defendant to pay plaintiff as follows:
1) the amount of
P14,540.00 representing the unpaid outstanding balance of the aforesaid unit,
plus interest thereon at the rate of P42% per annum until fully paid;
QUESTIONS: (1) Is petitioner
entitled to rescind the contract in violation of the warranty for hidden
defect? (2) Is Petitioner bound to pay respondent the remaining balance of
P14,540 plus interest thereon pursuant to the contract of sale? Explain your
answer.
WHETHER OR NOT
PETITIONER IS BOUND TO PAY RESPONDENT HER REMAINING BALANCE OF P14,540.00 PLUS
INTEREST THEREON PURSUANT TO THE CONTRACT OF SALE.
Anent the jurisdictional competence of the Metropolitan Trial Court
to order rescission of contract, suffice it to say that the action was
initiated by herein private respondent Electrolux when it filed a complaint for
collection of a sum of money worth P14,540.00, against petitioner Villostas.
Said amount is indubitably within the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Trial
Court since it does not exceed P20,000.00 exclusive of interest and costs but
inclusive of damages of whatever (Maceda v. CA, G.R. No. 83545, 176 SCRA 440
[1989]). Moreover, the jurisdiction of the court over the subject matter is
determined by the allegations of the complaint irrespective of whether or not
the plaintiff is entitled to recover upon all or some of the claims asserted
therein (Caparros v. CA, G.R. No. 56803, 170 SCRA 758 [1989]). When the
petitioner, therefore, raised rescission of contract in her answer, the court
is not divested of its jurisdiction over the case on account of defenses raised
by the answer. The court is then merely authorized to receive evidence thereon
(Dela Cruz v. Bautista, G.R. No. 39692, 186 SCRA 517, [1990]). Clearly, the
jurisdiction of the court cannot be made to depend upon the defenses set up in
the answer or upon the motion to dismiss. Otherwise, the question of
jurisdiction would depend almost entirely upon the defendant (Caparros v. CA, supra.).
As regards the contention that the action for rescission is barred
by prescription under Art. 1571 of the Civil Code, the same is bereft of merit.
It must be pointed out that at the time the Electrolux Aqua Guard water
purifier was delivered and installed at petitioner Villostas' residence a
Warranty Certificate was issued by private respondent Electrolux which reads:
ELECTROLUX MARKETING, INCORPORATED
WARRANTS THIS QUALITY ELECTROLUX PRODUCT TO PERFORM EFFICIENTLY FOR ONE FULL
YEAR FROM DATE OF ORIGINAL PURCHASE.
The foregoing is clearly an express warranty regarding the
efficiency of the water purifier. On this regard the court said that while it
is true that Article 1571 of the Civil Code provides for a prescriptive period
of six months for a redhibitory action, a cursory reading of the ten preceding
articles to which it refers will reveal that said rule may be applied only in
case of implied warranties. The present case involves one with an express
warranty. Consequently, the general rule on rescission of contract, which is
four years (Article 1389, Civil Coded) shall apply (Moles v. IAC, G.R. No.
73913, 169 SCRA 777 [1989]). Inasmuch as the instant case involves an express
warranty, the filing of petitioner's amended answer on September 30, 1988 is
well within the four-year prescriptive period for rescission of contract from
September 13, 1986, which was the delivery date of the unit.
PROBLEM NO. 5.What is a contract for a piece of work? Distinguish is from a contract of sale.
PROBLEM NO. 6 On November 27,
1997, petitioner purchased from respondent a brand new white Toyota Hi-Lux 2.4
SS double cab motor vehicle, 1996 model, in the amount of P508,000.
Petitioner made a down payment of P152,400, leaving a balance of P355,600
which was payable in 36 months with 54% interest. The vehicle was delivered to
petitioner two days later. On October 18, 1998, petitioner demanded the
replacement of the engine of the vehicle because it developed a crack after
traversing Marcos Highway during a heavy rain. Petitioner asserted that
respondent should replace the engine with a new one based on an implied
warranty. Respondent countered that the alleged damage on the engine was not
covered by a warranty.
On April 20, 1999, petitioner filed a complaint for damages 2 against respondent
with the RTC. Respondent moved to dismiss the case on the ground that under
Article 1571 of the Civil Code, the petitioner’s cause of action had prescribed
as the case was filed more than six months from the date the vehicle was sold
and/or delivered.
QUESTIONS: (1) Is contention of respondent that the
action has already prescribed correct?
(2) What is the prescriptive period for (a) an implied
warranty (b) for an express warranty?
(3) Distinguish an express warrant from an implied
warranty.
(4) Is there an express warranty in the above-stated
facts? Explain your answer.
G.R. No. 141480
November 29, 2006CARLOS B. DE GUZMAN, Petitioner,vs. TOYOTA CUBAO, INC., Respondent.
First, on procedural grounds, the petition should
forthwith be denied for violation of the hierarchy of courts. Petitioner states
that the present petition is an "appeal by certiorari on pure
questions of law, from the final Order of Branch 105 of the Regional Trial
Court of Quezon City in Civil Case No. Q-99-37381 … under Rule 45 of the Rules
of Court." Upon receipt of the Order of the RTC, dated September 9, 1999,
on September 21, 1999, petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration on
September 28, 1999. On December 21, 1999, the RTC denied petitioner’s motion.
When petitioner received a copy of the said order on January 18, 2000, he had
fifteen (15) days from receipt within which to appeal to the Court of Appeals
by filing a notice of appeal under Section 2(a) of Rule 41, from an order of
the RTC issued in the exercise of its original jurisdiction. The RTC’s order
dated September 9, 1999 and its subsequent order dated December 21, 1999
partake of the nature of a final disposition of the case. Hence, the appropriate
remedy petitioner should have taken was to file a notice of appeal from the RTC
to the Court of Appeals, not a petition for review on certiorari directly
with this Court.
Although petitioner intended his petition, filed on
February 2, 2000, to be one filed under Rule 45 and he filed it well within the
15-day reglementary period counted from January 18, 2000, the same was in
effect a petition for certiorari under Rule 65, and is therefore
dismissible for violation of the hierarchy of courts under Section 4 thereof.
Petitioner failed to show that special and important reasons or exceptional and
compelling circumstances exist to justify a direct filing of the petition with
this Court instead of first taking an appeal to the Court of Appeals. 5
Likewise, petitioner cannot find refuge in the argument that he was raising
pure questions of law. The sole matter petitioner assails in this action is the
RTC’s order of dismissal of his complaint for damages on the ground of
prescription which was tantamount to an adjudication on the merits. Again,
petitioner should have resorted to the remedy of appealing the case to the
Court of Appeals by filing a notice of appeal with the RTC.
Second, even if the Court were to disregard the
procedural infirmity, the petition should be denied for lack of merit.
In his complaint, petitioner alleged and prayed, thus:
2. Last 27 November 1997, the plaintiff purchased from
the defendant a brand new Toyota Hilux 2.4 motor vehicle with [E]ngine [N]o.
2-L-9514743. It was delivered to the plaintiff on 29 November 1997. Copies of
the Vehicle Sales Invoice and Vehicle Delivery Note issued by the defendant are
hereto attached as Annexes "A" and "B," respectively.
3. Last 18 October 1998, after only 12,000 kilometers of
use, the vehicle’s engine cracked. Although it was previously driven through a
heavy rain, it didn’t pass through flooded streets high enough to stop sturdy
and resistant vehicles. Besides, vehicles of this class are advertised as being
capable of being driven on flooded areas or rugged terrain.
4. As plaintiff knows no reason why the vehicle’s engine
would crack just like that, the same could only be due to the fact that said
engine and/or the vehicle itself was defective even from the time it was
bought.
5. Brought to the attention, defendant refused to answer
for this defect saying it is not covered by the vehicle’s warranty. It refused
to replace the vehicle as plaintiff demanded (or at least its engine, or even
repair the damage).
6. As a result of defendant’s actions, plaintiff suffered
mental anxiety and sleepless nights for which he demands an award of P200,000.00
moral damages.
7. By way of example for the public good, plaintiff
should also be awarded exemplary damages in the amount of P200,000.00.
8. Forced to litigate to enforce his rights, plaintiff
incurred, and shall further incur, litigation-related expenses (including those
for his counsel’s fees) in the total estimated sum of P100,000.
WHEREFORE, it is respectfully prayed that judgment be
rendered ordering defendant:
a. to replace the subject vehicle with a brand new one or
at least to replace its engine all at defendant’s cost;
b. pay the plaintiff:
i. P200,000 – moral damages;
ii. P200,000 – exemplary damages;
iii. P200,000 – attorney’s fees and litigation
expenses; and
iv. the costs of suit.
Other reliefs just and equitable are, likewise, prayed
for. 6
Petitioner contends that the dismissal on the ground of
prescription was erroneous because the applicable provision is Article 169 of
Republic Act No. 7394 (otherwise known as "The Consumer Act of the
Philippines" which was approved on April 13, 1992), and not Article 1571
of the Civil Code. Petitioner specifies that in his complaint, he neither asked
for a rescission of the contract of sale nor did he pray for a proportionate
reduction of the purchase price. What petitioner claims is the enforcement of
the contract, that is, that respondent should replace either the vehicle or its
engine with a new one. In this regard, petitioner cites Article 169 of Republic
Act No. 7394 as the applicable provision, so as to make his suit come within
the purview of the two-year prescriptive period. Tangentially, petitioner also
justifies that his cause of action has not yet prescribed because this present
suit, which was an action based on quasi-delict, prescribes in four years.
On the other hand, respondent maintains that petitioner’s
cause of action was already barred by the statute of limitations under Article
1571 of the Civil Code for having been filed more than six months from the time
the vehicle was purchased and/or delivered. Respondent reiterates that Article
169 of Republic Act No. 7394 does not apply.
Petitioner’s argument is erroneous. Article 1495 of the
Civil Code states that in a contract of sale, the vendor is bound to transfer
the ownership of and to deliver the thing that is the object of sale.
Corollarily, the pertinent provisions of the Code set forth the available
remedies of a buyer against the seller on the basis of a warranty against
hidden defects:
Art. 1561. The vendor shall be responsible for warranty
against the hidden defects which the thing sold may have, should they
render it unfit for the use for which it is intended, or should they diminish
its fitness for such use to such an extent that, had the vendee been aware
thereof, he would not have acquired it or would have given a lower price for
it; but said vendor shall not be answerable for patent defects or those which
may be visible, or for those which are not visible if the vendee is an expert
who, by reason of this trade or profession, should have known them. (Emphasis
supplied)
Art. 1566. The vendor is responsible to the vendee for
any hidden faults or defects in the thing sold, even though he was not aware
thereof.
This provision shall not apply if the contrary has been
stipulated and the vendor was not aware of the hidden faults or defects in the
thing sold.
Art. 1571. Actions arising from the provisions of the
preceding ten articles shall be barred after six months from the delivery of
the thing sold.
(Emphasis supplied)
Under Article 1599 of the Civil Code, once an express
warranty is breached, the buyer can accept or keep the goods and maintain an
action against the seller for damages. In the absence of an existing express
warranty on the part of the respondent, as in this case, the allegations in
petitioner’s complaint for damages were clearly anchored on the enforcement of
an implied warranty against hidden defects, i.e., that the engine of the
vehicle which respondent had sold to him was not defective. By filing this
case, petitioner wants to hold respondent responsible for breach of implied
warranty for having sold a vehicle with defective engine. Such being the case,
petitioner should have exercised this right within six months from the delivery
of the thing sold. 7
Since petitioner filed the complaint on April 20, 1999, or more than nineteen
months counted from November 29, 1997 (the date of the delivery of the motor
vehicle), his cause of action had become time-barred.
Petitioner contends that the subject motor vehicle comes
within the context of Republic Act No. 7394. Thus, petitioner relies on Article
68 (f) (2) in relation to Article 169 of Republic Act No. 7394. Article 4 (q)
of the said law defines "consumer products and services" as goods,
services and credits, debts or obligations which are primarily for personal,
family, household or agricultural purposes, which shall include, but not
limited to, food, drugs, cosmetics, and devices. The following provisions of
Republic Act No. 7394 state:
Art. 67. Applicable Law on Warranties. — The
provisions of the Civil Code on conditions and warranties shall govern all
contracts of sale with conditions and warranties.
Art. 68. Additional Provisions on Warranties. — In
addition to the Civil Code provisions on sale with warranties, the
following provisions shall govern the sale of consumer products with warranty:
e) Duration of warranty. The seller and the consumer may stipulate
the period within which the express warranty shall be enforceable. If the
implied warranty on merchantability accompanies an express warranty, both will
be of equal duration.
Any other implied warranty shall endure not
less than sixty (60) days nor more than one (1) year following the sale of new
consumer products.
f) Breach of warranties — xxx
x x x
2) In case of breach of implied warranty, the consumer
may retain in the goods and recover damages, or reject the goods, cancel the
contract and recover from the seller so much of the purchase price as
has been paid, including damages. (Emphasis supplied.)
Consequently, even if the complaint is made to fall under
the Republic Act No. 7394, the same should still be dismissed since the
prescriptive period for implied warranty thereunder, which is one year, had
likewise lapsed.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED for being in violation
of the hierarchy of courts, and in any event, for lack of merit.
PROBLEM NO.
7 On 7 May 1990, Lydia L. Geronimo, the herein private respondent,
filed a complaint for damages against petitioner with the Regional Trial Court
(RTC) of Dagupan City. 1 The case was docketed as Civil Case No.
D-9629. She alleges in her complaint that she was the proprietress of
Kindergarten Wonderland Canteen docketed as located in Dagupan City, an
enterprise engaged in the sale of soft drinks (including Coke and Sprite) and
other goods to the students of Kindergarten Wonderland and to the public; on or
about 12 August 1989, some parents of the students complained to her that the
Coke and Sprite soft drinks sold by her contained fiber-like matter and other
foreign substances or particles; he then went over her stock of softdrinks and
discovered the presence of some fiber-like substances in the contents of some
unopened Coke bottles and a plastic matter in the contents of an unopened
Sprite bottle; she brought the said bottles to the Regional Health Office of
the Department of Health at San Fernando, La Union, for examination;
subsequently, she received a letter from the Department of Health informing her
that the samples she submitted "are adulterated;" as a consequence of
the discovery of the foreign substances in the beverages, her sales of soft
drinks severely plummeted from the usual 10 cases per day to as low as 2 to 3
cases per day resulting in losses of from P200.00 to P300.00 per day, and not
long after that she had to lose shop on 12 December 1989; she became jobless
and destitute; she demanded from the petitioner the payment of damages but was
rebuffed by it. She prayed for judgment ordering the petitioner to pay her
P5,000.00 as actual damages, P72,000.00 as compensatory damages, P500,000.00 as
moral damages, P10,000.00 as exemplary damages, the amount equal to 30% of the
damages awarded as attorney's fees, and the costs. 2
The petitioner
moved to dismiss 3 the complaint on the grounds of failure to
exhaust administrative remedies and prescription. Anent the latter ground, the
petitioner argued that since the complaint is for breach of warranty under
Article 1561 of the said Code. In her Comment 4 thereto, private
respondent alleged that the complaint is one for damages which does not involve
an administrative action and that her cause of action is based on an injury to
plaintiff's right which can be brought within four years pursuant to Article
1146 of the Civil Code; hence, the complaint was seasonably filed.
Questions (a) Is
petitioner correct in his allegation that the action for a breach of warranty
had already prescribed?
(b) In your analysis,
what is really the basis of the action filed by Lydia Geronimo?
(c) If you were
the judge will you dismiss the case? Explain your answers.
G.R. No. 110295 October 18,
1993COCA-COLA BOTTLERS PHILIPPINES, INC., vs.THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS (Fifth
Division) and MS. LYDIA GERONIMO, respondents.
The petitioner insists that a cursory reading of the complaint will
reveal that the primary legal basis for private respondent's cause of action is
not Article 2176 of the Civil Code on quasi-delict — for the complaint
does not ascribe any tortious or wrongful conduct on its part — but Articles
1561 and 1562 thereof on breach of a seller's implied warranties under the law
on sales. It contends the existence of a contractual relation between the parties
(arising from the contract of sale) bars the application of the law on
quasi-delicts and that since private respondent's cause of action arose
from the breach of implied warranties, the complaint should have been filed
within six months room delivery of the soft drinks pursuant to Article 171 of
the Civil Code.
In her Comment the private respondent argues that in case of breach of
the seller's implied warranties, the vendee may, under Article 1567 of the
Civil Code, elect between withdrawing from the contract or demanding a
proportionate reduction of the price, with damages in either case. She asserts
that Civil Case No. D-9629 is neither an action for rescission nor for
proportionate reduction of the price, but for damages arising from a quasi-delict
and that the public respondent was correct in ruling that the existence of a
contract did not preclude the action for quasi-delict. As to the issue
of prescription, the private respondent insists that since her cause of action
is based on quasi-delict, the prescriptive period therefore is four (4)
years in accordance with Article 1144 of the Civil Code and thus the filing of
the complaint was well within the said period.
We find no merit in the petition. The public respondent's conclusion
that the cause of action in Civil Case No. D-9629 is found on quasi-delict
and that, therefore, pursuant to Article 1146 of the Civil Code, it prescribes
in four (4) years is supported by the allegations in the complaint, more
particularly paragraph 12 thereof, which makes reference to the reckless and
negligent manufacture of "adulterated food items intended to be sold for
public consumption."
The vendee's remedies against a vendor with respect to the warranties
against hidden defects of or encumbrances upon the thing sold are not limited
to those prescribed in Article 1567 of the Civil Code which provides:
Art. 1567. In the case of Articles 1561, 1562, 1564, 1565 and 1566, the
vendee may elect between withdrawing from the contract and demanding a
proportionate reduction of the price, with damages either
case. 13
case. 13
The vendee may also ask for the annulment of the contract upon proof of
error or fraud, in which case the ordinary rule on obligations shall be
applicable. 14 Under the law on obligations, responsibility arising
from fraud is demandable in all obligations and any waiver of an action for
future fraud is void. Responsibility arising from negligence is also demandable
in any obligation, but such liability may be regulated by the courts, according
to the circumstances. 15 Those guilty of fraud, negligence, or delay
in the performance of their obligations and those who in any manner contravene
the tenor thereof are liable for damages. 16
The vendor could likewise be liable for quasi-delict under
Article 2176 of the Civil Code, and an action based thereon may be brought by
the vendee. While it may be true that the pre-existing contract between the
parties may, as a general rule, bar the applicability of the law on
quasi-delict, the liability may itself be deemed to arise from quasi-delict,
i.e., the acts which breaks the contract may also be a quasi-delict.
Thus, in Singson vs. Bank of the Philippine Islands, 17
this Court stated:
We have repeatedly held, however, that the existence of a contract
between the parties does not bar the commission of a tort by the one against
the other and the consequent recovery of damages therefor. 18
Indeed, this view has been, in effect, reiterated in a comparatively recent
case. Thus, in Air France vs. Carrascoso, 19 involving
an airplane passenger who, despite hi first-class ticket, had been illegally
ousted from his first-class accommodation and compelled to take a seat in the
tourist compartment, was held entitled to recover damages from the air-carrier,
upon the ground of tort on the latter's part, for, although the relation
between the passenger and a carrier is "contractual both in origin and
nature . . . the act that breaks the contract may also be a tort.
Otherwise put, liability for quasi-delict may still exist despite
the presence of contractual relations. 20
Under American law, the liabilities of a manufacturer or seller of
injury-causing products may be based on negligence, 21 breach of
warranty, 22 tort, 23 or other grounds such as fraud,
deceit, or misrepresentation. 24 Quasi-delict, as defined in
Article 2176 of the Civil Code, (which is known in Spanish legal treaties as culpa
aquiliana, culpa extra-contractual or cuasi-delitos) 25 is
homologous but not identical to tort under the common law, 26 which
includes not only negligence, but also intentional criminal acts, such as
assault and battery, false imprisonment and deceit. 27
It must be made clear that our affirmance of the decision of the public
respondent should by no means be understood as suggesting that the private
respondent's claims for moral damages have sufficient factual and legal basis.
IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the instant petition is hereby DENIED for
lack of merit, with costs against the petitioner.
PROBLEM NO. 8. Spouses Pablo and
Escolastica Mabanta were the registered owners of two lots located in Patul and
Capaltitan, Santiago, Isabela, with an area of 512 and 15,000 square meters,
covered by Transfer Certificates of Title (TCT) Nos. 72705 and 72707,
respectively. On October 25, 1975, they mortgaged both lots with the
Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) as collateral for a loan of
P14,000.00.3
Five years thereafter or on September 1, 1980, spouses Mabanta sold the
lots to Susana Soriano by way of a "Deed of Sale of Parcels of Land With
Assumption of Mortgage."4 Included in the Deed is an agreement
that they could repurchase the lots within a period of two (2) years.
Spouses Mabanta failed to repurchase the lots. But sometime in 1984,
they were able to convince Alejandro Gabriel to purchase the lots from Susana
Soriano. As consideration, Alejandro delivered to Susana a 500-square meter
residential lot with an actual value of P40,000.00 and paid spouses Mabanta the
sum of P5,000.00. On May 15, 1984, spouses Mabanta executed a "Deed of
Sale with Assumption of Mortgage"5 in favor of Alejandro. For
her part, Susana executed a document entitled "Cancellation of
Contract"6 whereby she transferred to Alejandro all her rights
over the two lots.
Alejandro and his son Alfredo cultivated the lots. They also caused the
restructuring of spouses Mabanta’s loan with the DBP.7 However, when
they were ready to pay the entire loan, they found that spouses Benito and Pura
Tan had paid it and that the mortgage was already cancelled.8
On August 18, 1985, Benito Tan and Alejandro Tridanio, a barangay
official, approached Alejandro to refund to him the P5,000.00 he paid to
spouses Mabanta. Alejandro refused because Tan was unwilling to return the
former’s 500-square meter lot delivered to Susana as purchase price for the
lots. Thereafter, spouses Tan tried to eject Alejandro from the lot covered by
TCT No. 72707.
On September 17, 1985, Alejandro and Alfredo filed with the Regional
Trial Court, Branch 21, Santiago, Isabela a complaint (involving the lot
covered by TCT No. 72707) for specific performance, reconveyance and damages
with an application for a preliminary injunction against spouses Mabanta,
spouses Tan, the DBP and barangay officials Dominador Maylem and Alejandro
Tridanio. In due time, these defendants filed their respective answers.
During the proceedings, it turned out that it was spouses Tan’s
daughter, Zenaida Tan-Reyes who bought one of the lots (covered by TCT No.
72707) from spouses Mabanta on August 21, 1985. Not having been
impleaded as a party-defendant, she filed an answer-in-intervention alleging
that she is the registered owner of the lot covered by TCT No. 72707; that she
purchased it from spouses Mabanta "in good faith and for value"; that
she paid their loan with the DBP in the amounts of P17,580.88 and P16,845.17
per Official Receipts Nos. 1749539 and 1749540, respectively; that the mortgage
with the DBP was cancelled and spouses Mabanta executed a "Deed of
Absolute Sale"9 in her favor; and that TCT No. T-72707 was
cancelled and in lieu thereof, TCT No. T-160391 was issued in her name.
On April 12, 1991, the trial court rendered its Decision sustaining the
right of Alejandro and Alfredo Gabriel over the lot covered by TCT No. 72707
(now TCT No. T-160391), thus:
"WHEREFORE, in the light of the foregoing considerations judgment
is hereby rendered:
1. DECLARING Exhibit "A", the deed of sale with assumption of
mortgage executed by the spouses Pablo Mabanta and Escolastica Colobong (in
favor of Alejandro and Alfredo Gabriel) valid and subsisting.
2. ORDERING the plaintiff Alejandro Gabriel to pay to the spouses Pablo
Mabanta and Escolastica Colobong the sums of P5,000.00 plus P34,426.05
(representing the loan with the DBP which plaintiff assumed) within 30 days
from receipt hereof.
3. DECLARING the deed of sale executed by the spouses Pablo Mabanta
and Escolastica Colobong in favor of Zenaida Tan Reyes as null and void.
4. ORDERING the
intervenor Zenaida Tan-Reyes to reconvey the land covered by T.C.T. No.
T-160391 in favor of Alejandro Gabriel.
QUESTION: Peruse
carefully the decision of the Court and rule whether it is correct or not.
G.R. No. 142403
March 26, 2003
ALEJANDRO GABRIEL and ALFREDO
GABRIEL,
petitioners,
vs.
SPOUSES PABLO MABANTA and ESCOLASTICA COLOBONG, DEVELOPMENT BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES (Isabela Branch) and ZENAIDA TAN-REYES, respondents.
vs.
SPOUSES PABLO MABANTA and ESCOLASTICA COLOBONG, DEVELOPMENT BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES (Isabela Branch) and ZENAIDA TAN-REYES, respondents.
The petition is impressed with
merit.
The issue for our resolution is
whether or not respondent Zenaida Tan-Reyes acted in good faith when she
purchased the subject lot and had the sale registered.
Settled is the principle that this
Court is not a trier of facts. In the exercise of its power of review, the
findings of fact of the Court of Appeals are conclusive and binding and
consequently, it is not our function to analyze or weigh evidence all over again.11
This rule, however, is not an iron-clad rule.12 In Floro vs.
Llenado,13 we enumerated the various exceptions and one which
finds application to the present case is when the findings of the Court of
Appeals are contrary to those of the trial court.
We start first with the applicable
law.
Article 1544 of the Civil Code
provides:
"ART. 1544. If the same thing
should have been sold to different vendees, the ownership shall be transferred
to the person who may have first possession thereof in good faith, if it should
be movable property.
"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.
"Should there be no
inscription, the ownership shall pertain to the person who in good faith was
first in possession; and, in the absence thereof; to the person who presents
the oldest title, provided there is good faith."
Otherwise stated, where it is an
immovable property that is the subject of a double sale, ownership shall be
transferred (1) to the person acquiring it who in good faith first recorded
it in the Registry of Property; (2) in default thereof, to the person who
in good faith was first in possession; and (3) in default thereof, to the
person who presents the oldest title, provided there is good faith.14
The requirement of the law then is two-fold: acquisition in good faith and
registration in good faith.15 The rationale behind this is
well-expounded in Uraca vs. Court of Appeals,16 where this
Court held:
"Under the foregoing, the prior
registration of the disputed property by the second buyer does not by itself
confer ownership or a better right over the property. Article 1544 requires
that such registration must be coupled with good faith. Jurisprudence
teaches us that "(t)he governing principle is primus tempore, potior
jure (first in time, stronger in right). Knowledge gained by the first
buyer of the second sale cannot defeat the first buyer’s right except where the
second buyer registers in good faith the second sale ahead of the first, as
provided by the Civil Code. Such knowledge of the first buyer does not bar her
from availing of her rights under the law, among them, to register first
her purchase as against the second buyer. But in converso, knowledge gained
by the second buyer of the first sale defeats his right even if he is first to
register the second sale, since such knowledge taints his prior registration
with bad faith. This is the price exacted by Article 1544 of the Civil Code
for the second buyer being able to displace the first buyer, that before the
second buyer can obtain priority over the first, he must show that he acted in
good faith throughout (i.e. in ignorance of the first sale and of the first
buyer’s right) – from the time of acquisition until the title is transferred to
him by registration or failing registration, by delivery of possession."
(Emphasis supplied)
In the case at bar, certain pieces
of evidence, put together, would prove that respondent Reyes is not a buyer in
good faith. The records show that on August 18, 1985, spouses Mabanta offered
to her for sale the disputed lot. They told her it was mortgaged with
respondent DBP and that she had to pay the loan if she wanted to buy it.17
She readily agreed to such a condition. The following day, her father Benito
Tan, accompanied by barangay official Tridanio, went to petitioner Alejandro’s
house offering to return to him the P5,000.00 he had paid to spouses Mabanta.
Tan did not suggest to return the 500-square meter lot petitioner delivered to
Susana Soriano.18 For this reason, petitioner refused Tan’s offer
and even prohibited him from going to respondent DBP. We quote the following
testimony of petitioner who, despite his blindness as shown by the records,
testified to assert his right, thus:
"ATTY. CHANGALE:
Q What
can you say to that statement?
A That
is their mistake, sir.
Q Why do
you say that is their mistake?
A
Because her husband and Tridanio went at home offering to return the money
but I did not accept, sir.
Q Who is
this Benito Tan you are referring to?
A The
husband of Pura Masa, sir.
Q What
is the relationship with the intervenor Zenaida Tan?
A The
daughter, sir.
Q When
did Benito Tan together with Councilman Tridanio came?
A Before
they went to the Development Bank of the Philippines they came at home and I
prohibit them, sir.
Q How
did you prohibit them?
A No,
I said please I am just waiting for the Bank to inspect then I will pay my
obligation.
x x x
x x x x x x
Q You
stated earlier that you will just pay the payments. What are those payments you
are referring to?
A The
payment I have given to Colobong and to the Bank, sir. They do not want to
return the payment I have given to Susana Soriano and that is the beginning of
our quarrel."19
We are thus convinced that
respondent Reyes had knowledge that petitioner previously bought the disputed
lot from respondent spouses Mabanta. Why should her father approach petitioner
and offer to return to him the money he paid spouses Mabanta? Obviously, aware
of the previous sale to petitioner, respondent Reyes informed her father about
it. At this juncture, it is reasonable to conclude that what prompted him to go
to petitioner’s house was his desire to facilitate his daughter’s acquisition
of the lot, i.e., to prevent petitioner Alejandro from contesting it. He
did not foresee then that petitioner would insist he has a prior right over the
lot.
Now respondent Reyes claims that she
is a purchaser in good faith. This is preposterous. Good faith is something
internal. Actually, it is a question of intention. In ascertaining one’s
intention, this Court must rely on the evidence of one’s conduct and
outward acts. From her actuations as specified above, respondent Reyes cannot
be considered to be in good faith when she bought the lot.
Moreover, it bears noting that on September
16, 1985, both petitioners filed with the trial court their complaint
involving the lot in question against respondents. After a month, or on October
17, 1985, respondent Reyes had the "Deed of Absolute Sale"
registered with the Registry of Property. Evidently, she wanted to be the first
one to effect its registration to the prejudice of petitioners who, although in
possession, have not registered the same. This is another indicum of bad faith.
We have consistently held that
"in cases of double sale of immovables, what finds relevance and
materiality is not whether or not the second buyer was a buyer in good faith
but whether or not said second buyer registers such second sale in good faith,
that is, without knowledge of any defect in the title of the property sold."20
In Salvoro vs. Tanega,21 we had the occasion to rule that:
"If a vendee in a double sale
registers the sale after he has acquired knowledge that there was a previous
sale of the same property to a third party or that another person claims said
property in a previous sale, the registration will constitute a registration in
bad faith and will not confer upon him any right."
Mere registration of title is not
enough, good faith must concur with the registration. To be entitled to
priority, the second purchaser must not only establish prior recording of his
deed, but must have acted in good faith, without knowledge of the existence of
another alienation by the vendor to the other.22 In the old case of Leung
Yee vs. F. L. Strong Machinery, Co. and Williamson, this Court ruled:
"One who purchases a real
estate with knowledge of a defect of title in his vendor cannot claim that he
has acquired title thereto in good faith as against the true owner of the land
or of an interest therein; and the same rule must be applied to one who has knowledge of facts
which should have put him upon such inquiry and investigation as might be
necessary to acquaint him with the defects in the title of his vendor. A
purchaser cannot close his eyes to facts which should put a reasonable man upon
his guard, and then claim that he acted in good faith under the belief that
there was no defect in the title of the vendor. His mere refusal to believe
that such a defect exists, or his willful closing of his eyes to the
possibility of the existence of a defect in his vendor’s title will not make
him an innocent purchaser for value, if it afterwards develops that the title
was in fact defective, and it appears that he had such notice of the defect as
would have led to its discovery had he acted with that measure of precaution
which may reasonably be required of a prudent man in a like situation. x x
x "23
In fine, we hold that respondent
Zenaida Tan-Reyes did not act in good faith when she bought the lot and had the
sale registered.
WHEREFORE, the assailed Decision of
the Court of Appeals is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The Decision of the trial court
is hereby reinstated.
PROBLEM NO.
9. On April 13, 1970, defendant spouses Enrique Castro and Herminia
R. Castro sold to plaintiff-appellee Manuelito Palileo (private respondent
herein), a parcel of unregistered coconut land situated in Candiis, Mansayaw,
Mainit, Surigao del Norte. The sale is evidenced by a notarized Deed of
Absolute Sale (Exh. "E"). The deed was not registered in the Registry
of Property for unregistered lands in the province of Surigao del Norte. Since
the execution of the deed of sale, appellee Manuelito Palileo who was then
employed at Lianga Surigao del Sur, exercised acts of ownership over the land
through his mother Rafaela Palileo, as administratrix or overseer. Appellee has
continuously paid the real estate taxes on said land from 1971 until the
present (Exhs. "C" to "C-7", inclusive).
On November 29,
1976, a judgment was rendered against defendant Enrique T. Castro, in Civil
Case No. 0103145 by the then Court of First Instance of Manila, Branch XIX, to
pay herein defendant-appellant Radiowealth Finance Company (petitioner herein),
the sum of P22,350.35 with interest thereon at the rate of 16% per annum
from November 2, 1975 until fully paid, and the further sum of P2,235.03 as
attorney's fees, and to pay the costs. Upon the finality of the judgment, a
writ of execution was issued. Pursuant to said writ, defendant provincial
Sheriff Marietta E. Eviota, through defendant Deputy Provincial Sheriff
Leopoldo Risma, levied upon and finally sold at public auction the subject land
that defendant Enrique Castro had sold to appellee Manuelito Palileo on April
13,1970. A certificate of sale was executed by the Provincial Sheriff in favor
of defendant- appellant Radiowealth Finance Company, being the only bidder.
After the period of redemption has (sic) expired, a deed of final sale
was also executed by the same Provincial Sheriff. Both the certificate of sale
and the deed of final sale were registered with the Registry of Deeds. 3
Learning
of what happened to the land, private respondent Manuelito Palileo filed an
action for quieting of title over the same. After a trial on the merits, the
court a quo rendered a decision in his favor. On appeal, the decision of
the trial court was affirmed.
Question:
IS THE DECISION OF THE COURT CORRECT?
G.R. No.
83432 May 20, 1991
RADIOWEALTH
FINANCE COMPANY, petitioner,
vs.
MANUELITO S. PALILEO, respondent.
vs.
MANUELITO S. PALILEO, respondent.
As regards
the first and second assigned errors, suffice it to state that findings of fact
of the Court of Appeals are conclusive on this Court and will not be disturbed
unless there is grave abuse of discretion. The finding of the Court of Appeals
that the property in question was already sold to private respondent by its
previous owner before the execution sale is evidenced by a deed of sale. Said
deed of sale is notarized and is presumed authentic. There is no substantive
proof to support petitioner's allegation that the document is fictitious or
simulated. With this in mind, We see no reason to reject the conclusion of the
Court of Appeals that private respondent was not a mere administrator of the
property. That he exercised acts of ownership through his mother also remains
undisputed.
Going now
to the third assigned error which deals with the main issue presented in the
instant petition, We observe that the Court of Appeals resolved the same in
favor of private respondent due to the following reason; what the Provincial
Sheriff levied upon and sold to petitioner is a parcel of land that does not
belong to Enrique Castro, the judgment debtor, hence the execution is contrary
to the directive contained in the writ of execution which commanded that the
lands and buildings belonging to Enrique Castro be sold to satisfy the
execution. 5
There is
no doubt that had the property in question been a registered land, this case
would have been decided in favor of petitioner since it was petitioner that had
its claim first recorded in the Registry of Deeds. For, as already mentioned
earlier, it is the act of registration that operates to convey and affect
registered land. Therefore, a bona fide purchaser of a registered land
at an execution sale acquires a good title as against a prior transferee, if such
transfer was unrecorded.
However,
it must be stressed that this case deals with a parcel of unregistered land and
a different set of rules applies. We affirm the decision of the Court of
Appeals.
Under Act
No. 3344, registration of instruments affecting unregistered lands is
"without prejudice to a third party with a better right". The
aforequoted phrase has been held by this Court to mean that the mere
registration of a sale in one's favor does not give him any right over the land
if the vendor was not anymore the owner of the land having previously sold the
same to somebody else even if the earlier sale was unrecorded.
The case
of Carumba vs. Court of Appeals 6 is a case
in point. It was held therein that Article 1544 of the Civil Code has no
application to land not registered under Act No. 496. Like in the case at bar,
Carumba dealt with a double sale of the same unregistered land. The first sale
was made by the original owners and was unrecorded while the second was an
execution sale that resulted from a complaint for a sum of money filed against
the said original owners. Applying Section 35, Rule 39 of the Revised Rules of
Court, 7 this Court held that Article 1544 of the Civil Code cannot be
invoked to benefit the purchaser at the execution sale though the latter was a
buyer in good faith and even if this second sale was registered. It was
explained that this is because the purchaser of unregistered land at a sheriffs
execution sale only steps into the shoes of the judgment debtor, and merely
acquires the latter's interest in the property sold as of the time the property
was levied upon.
Applying
this principle, the Court of Appeals correctly held that the execution sale of
the unregistered land in favor of petitioner is of no effect because the land
no longer belonged to the judgment debtor as of the time of the said execution
sale.
WHEREFORE,
in view of the foregoing, the decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV
No. 10788 is hereby AFFIRMED. No costs.
PROBLEM
NO. 10. Petitioner spouses instituted against respondents an action for
specific performance, recovery of sum of money and damages, docketed as Civil
Case No. 8148 of the Regional Trial Court of Dumaguete City, Branch XLII,
seeking the reimbursement of the expenses they incurred in connection with the
preparation and registration of two public instruments, namely a “Deed of Sale”[3] and an “Option to
Buy.”[4] In their answer,
respondents raised the defense that the transaction covered by the “Deed of Sale” and “Option to Buy,” which appears to be a Deed of Sale with Right of Repurchase, was in truth, in fact, in law,
and in legal construction, a mortgage.[5]
On October 29, 1990, the trial court ruled in favor of petitioners and
declared that the transaction between the parties was not an equitable
mortgage. Citing Villarica v. Court of Appeals,[6] it ratiocinated
that neither was the said transaction embodied in the “Deed of Sale”
and “Option to Buy” a pacto de retro
sale, but a sale giving respondents until
August 31, 1983 within which to buy back the seventeen lots subject of the
controversy. The dispositive portion thereof reads:
IN THE LIGHT OF THE FOREGOING, it is the considered opinion of this
Court that plaintiffs have proven by preponderance of evidence their case and
judgment is therefore rendered in their favor as follows:
- Ordering defendants to pay plaintiffs the sum of P171,483.40 representing the total expenses incurred by plaintiffs in the preparation and registration of the Deed of Sale, amount paid to the Bank of Asia and America (IBAA) and capital gains tax with legal rate of interest from the time the same was incurred by plaintiffs up to the time payment is made by defendants; P10,000.00 as attorney’s fees; P15,000.00 moral damages; P10,000.00 expenses of litigation and to pay cost.
- The Philippine National Bank, Dumaguete City Branch is directed to release in favor of plaintiffs, the spouses Ronaldo P. Abilla and Gerald A. Dizon all the money deposited with the said bank, representing the rentals of a residential house erected inside in one of the lots in question;
- For insufficiency of evidence, defendants’ counterclaim is ordered dismissed.
QUESTIONS: (1) What is a pacto de retro sale? (2) What is an
equitable mortgage? (3) May the vendors in a sale judicially declared as a pacto
de retro exercise the right of repurchase
under Article 1606, third paragraph, of the Civil Code, after they have taken
the position that the same was an equitable mortgage?(4) Ultimately, is the decision
of the court correct? Explain your answer.
G.R. No. 146651
January 17, 2002
RONALDO P. ABILLA and GERALDA A.
DIZON, petitioners,
vs.
CARLOS ANG GOBONSENG, JR. and THERESITA MIMIE ONG, respondents.
vs.
CARLOS ANG GOBONSENG, JR. and THERESITA MIMIE ONG, respondents.
At the outset, it must be stressed
that it has been respondents’ consistent claim that the transaction subject
hereof was an equitable mortgage and not a pacto de retro sale or a sale
with option to buy. Even after the Court of Appeals declared the transaction to
be a pacto de retro sale, respondents maintained their view that the
transaction was an equitable mortgage. Seeing the chance to turn the decision
in their favor, however, respondents abandoned their theory that the
transaction was an equitable mortgage and adopted the finding of the Court of
Appeals that it was in fact a pacto de retro sale. Respondents now
insist that they are entitled to exercise the right to repurchase pursuant to
the third paragraph of Article 1606 of the Civil Code, which reads:
However, the vendor may still
exercise the right to repurchase within thirty days from the time final
judgment was rendered in a civil action on the basis that the contract was a
true sale with right to repurchase.
The question now is, can respondents
avail of the aforecited provision? Following the theory of the respondents
which was sustained by the trial court, the scenario would be that although
respondents failed in their effort to prove that the contract was an equitable
mortgage, they could nonetheless still repurchase the property within 30 days
from the finality of the judgment declaring the contract to be truly a pacto
de retro sale. However, under the undisputed facts of the case at bar, this
cannot be allowed.
In the parallel case of Vda. de Macoy
v. Court of Appeals,15
the petitioners therein raised the defense that the contract was not a sale
with right to repurchase but an equitable mortgage. They further argued as an
alternative defense that even assuming the transaction to be a pacto de
retro sale, they can nevertheless repurchase the property by virtue of
Article 1606, third paragraph of the Civil Code. It was held that the said
provision was inapplicable, thus:
The application of the third
paragraph of Article 1606 is predicated upon the bona fides of the
vendor a retro. It must appear that there was a belief on his part,
founded on facts attendant upon the execution of the sale with pacto de retro,
honestly and sincerely entertained, that the agreement was in reality a
mortgage, one not intended to affect the title to the property ostensibly sold,
but merely to give it as security for a loan or other obligation. In that
event, if the matter of the real nature of the contract is submitted for
judicial resolution, the application of the rule is meet and proper; that the
vendor a retro be allowed to repurchase the property sold within 30 days
from rendition of final judgment declaring the contract to be a true sale with
right to repurchase. Conversely, if it should appear that the parties’
agreement was really one of sale — transferring ownership to the vendee, but
accompanied by a reservation to the vendor of the right to repurchase the
property — and there are no circumstances that may reasonably be accepted as
generating some honest doubt as to the parties' intention, the proviso is
inapplicable. The reason is quite obvious. If the rule were otherwise, it would
be within the power of every vendor a retro to set at naught a pacto
de retro, or resurrect an expired right of repurchase, by simply
instituting an action to reform the contract — known to him to be in truth a
sale with pacto de retro — into an equitable mortgage. As postulated by the
petitioner, "to allow herein private respondents to repurchase the
property by applying said paragraph x x x to the case at bar despite the fact
that the stipulated redemption period had already long expired when they
instituted the present action, would in effect alter or modify the stipulation
in the contract as to the definite and specific limitation of the period for
repurchase (2 years from date of sale or only until June 25, 1958) thereby not
simply increasing but in reality resuscitating the expired right to repurchase
x x x and likewise the already terminated and extinguished obligation to resell
by herein petitioner." The rule would thus be made a tool to spawn,
protect and even reward fraud and bad faith, a situation surely never
contemplated or intended by the law.
This Court has already had occasion
to rule on the proper interpretation of the provision in question. In Adorable
v. Inacala, where the proofs established that there could be no honest
doubt as to the parties’ intention, that the transaction was clearly and
definitely a sale with pacto de retro, the Court adjudged the vendor a
retro not to be entitled to the benefit of the third paragraph of Article
1606.16
In the case at bar, both the trial
court and the Court of Appeals were of the view that the subject transaction
was truly a pacto de retro sale; and that none of the circumstances
under Article 1602 of the Civil Code exists to warrant a conclusion that the
transaction subject of the "Deed of Sale" and "Option to
Buy" was an equitable mortgage. The Court of Appeals correctly noted that
if respondents really believed that the transaction was indeed an equitable
mortgage, as a sign of good faith, they should have, at the very least,
consigned with the trial court the amount of P896,000.00, representing their
alleged loan, on or before the expiration of the right to repurchase on August
21, 1983.
Clearly, therefore, the declaration
of the transaction as a pacto de retro sale will not, under the
circumstances, entitle respondents to the right of repurchase set forth under
the third paragraph of Article 1606 of the Civil Code.
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, the
instant petition is GRANTED and the January 14, 2001 Order of the
Regional Trial Court of Dumaguete City, Branch 41, in Civil Case No. 8148, is REVERSED
and SET ASIDE.
End of the Examination
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