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Alberto Vs CA

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Clarizze E.

ZAIDA RUBY S. ALBERTO, petitioner, vs.


COURT OF APPEALS, EPIFANIO J. ALANO, CECILIA P. ALANO, YOLANDA P. ALANO,
and NATALIA REALTY, INC., respondents.
FACTS:
-Petitioner herein, filed a Complaint for the collection of money against the respondentspouses when they dismiss the case filed by them on which she is their counsel against
Natalia Realty based on a retainer agreement between them.
-The RTC ruled in favor of the plaintiff. However, per Sheriffs Return,5 only P3,500.00 of
personal properties of respondent-spouses were levied because apparently, Natalia Realty,
Inc. had sold to private respondent Yolanda Alano, respondent-spouses daughter, 23
hectares out of the 32.4 hectares given to them as settlement of the SEC case.
-The sale was executed on December 28, 1988 or six days before respondent-spouses
moved to dismiss the SEC case on January 3, 1989.
-This discovery prompted petitioner to file a complaint, attaching the Deed of Sale as Annex
C and thereafter, a second Amended Complaint 7 to declare the deed of sale null and
void ab initio on the ground that the transfer of the subject parcels of land to Yolanda Alano
was simulated.
-The trial court, in an Omnibus Order, dismissed petitioners Complaint for insufficiency of
cause of action. The Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of the complaint stating that
well -settled is the rule that in resolving a motion to dismiss on the ground of failure to state a
cause of action, only the averments of the complaint, and no other, are to be consulted.
Extraneous matters are irrelevant.
ISSUE: WON annexes to the complaint may be considered in determining whether or not
complaint states a cause of action.
HELD: Yes, annexes to the complaint may be considered in determining causes of action.
The sufficiency of petitioners cause of action in the second Amended Complaint is readily
apparent.

-A right in her favor was created by virtue of the retainer agreement executed between her
and respondent-spouses. When petitioner moved for the issuance of a writ of execution, she
discovered to her dismay that respondent-spouses had no more leviable properties except a
few personal properties amounting to only P3,500.00. In fact, by making it appear that it was
Natalia Realty, Inc. which sold respondent-spouses 23 hectares to respondent Yolanda P.
Alano, petitioner not only had a cause of action against respondent-spouses but likewise
against Yolanda P. Alano. Clearly, all these instances which were alleged and enumerated in
the second Amended Complaint constitute a sufficient cause of action on the part of
petitioner.
-The trial court and the Court of Appeals should not have been too rigid in applying the rule
that in resolving a motion to dismiss on the ground of failure to state a cause of action, only
the averments in the complaint and no other are to be consulted. The rule admits of
exceptions. All documents attached to a complaint, the due execution and genuineness of
which are not denied under oath by the defendant, must be considered as part of the
complaint without need of introducing evidence thereon.
-Attached to the second Amended Complaint is the Deed of Sale the due execution and
genuineness of which were never denied by respondents. So long as those attached
pleadings are procedurally responsive to the complaint, then they may be considered in
evaluating the sufficiency of the cause of action in the complaint.
-In addition, since the dismissal of a complaint by virtue of a motion to dismiss for failure to
state or for insufficiency of cause of action would be tantamount to a summary judgment, the
lower court should at least have considered the attached documents and pleadings as a
matter of due process. It must be remembered that the complaint itself is accompanied by
documentary evidence attached as annexes. The responsive pleadings, in addition, though
not attachments to the complaint, clarify its merits since they are already part of the records
of the case and should therefore be considered.

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