Cases Article 1256-1269
Cases Article 1256-1269
Cases Article 1256-1269
December 9, 1997]
ETERNAL GARDENS MEMORIAL PARK CORPORATION, petitioner,
vs. COURT OF APPEALS and NORTH PHILIPPINE UNION MISSION OF
THE SEVENTH DAY ADVENTISTS, respondents.
The P1.5 million initial payment mentioned in the Deed of Absolute Sale,
covering the first phase of the project, shall be deducted out of the proceeds
from the FIRST PARTYs 40% at the end of the 5th year. Subsequent payments
made by the SECOND PARTY on account of the stated purchase price in said
Deed of Absolute Sale shall be charged against what is due to the FIRST
PARTY under this LAND DEVELOPMENT AGREEMENT.
Later, two claimants of the parcel of land surfaced - Maysilo Estate and
the heirs of a certain Vicente Singson Encarnacion. EGMPC thus filed an
action for interpleader against Maysilo Estate and NPUM. The Singson heirs
in turn filed an action for quieting of title against EGMPC and NPUM.
From these two cases, several proceedings ensued. One such case, from
the interpleader action, culminated in the filing and subsequent resolution
wherein EGMPC assailed that the appellate court’s resolution
requiring petitioner Eternal Gardens [to] deposit whatever amounts are due
from it under the Land Development Agreement with a reputable bank to be
designated by the respondent court.
From the consolidated decision, the Singson heirs, Maysilo Estate and
EGMPC each filed with this Court their petitions for review on certiorari. The
petition filed by the Singson heirs was denied and entry of judgment was
made. G.R. No. 105159 filed by the Maysilo Estate was denied for failure of
petitioner to raise substantial legal issues, and entry of judgment made. G.R.
Nos. 103230-31 filed by EGMPC was denied for failure to comply with Circular
No. 19-91, and entry of judgment made. EGMPCs other petition, this time
under Rule 65, was dismissed for having been filed out of time and for lack of
merit.
Following these, the Court, through the Third Division, issued a Resolution
dated, thus:
(e) THAT the SECOND PARTY shall keep proper books and accounting records
of all transactions affecting the sale of said memorial lots, which records
shall be open for inspection by the FIRST PARTY at any time during usual
office hours. The SECOND PARTY shall also render to the FIRST PARTY a
monthly accounting report of all sales and cash collections effected the
preceding month. It is also understood that all financial statements shall be
subject to annual audit by a reputable external accounting firm which should
be acceptable to the FIRST PARTY.
It appears that EGMPC did not submit any document whatsoever to aid
the appellate court in its mandated task. Thus, in a Resolution, the appellate
court declared:
x x x (1) that Eternal Gardens Memorial Park Corporation has waived its
rights to present the records and documents necessarily for accounting,
which records they were specifically required to preserve under the parties
Land Development Agreement; and (2) that it will now proceed to the mutual
accounting required to determine the remaining accrued rights and liabilities
of the said parties x x x ordered by the Supreme Court in its Resolution of
December 1, 1993 (p. 7, rec.), and that the Court will proceed to do what it is
required to do on the basis of the documents submitted by the North
Philippine Union Mission of the Seventh Day Adventists only.
Ms. Angelo submitted her Report dated January 31, 1995, to which the
appellate court required the parties to comment on.
EGMPC took exception to the appellate courts having considered it to
have waived its right to present documents. Considering EGMPCs arguments,
the court set a hearing date where NPUM would present its
documents according to the Rules [of Court], and giving the private
respondent [EGMPC] the opportunity to object thereto.
Subsequently, NPUM asked for and the appellate court issued a subpoena
duces tecum and subpoena ad testificandum to EGMPCs President, Mr.
Gabriel O. Vida requiring him to produce the following documents:
1. Copies of Deeds of Sale corresponding to each memorial lot sold
subject of the Land Development Agreement between the parties;
2. Lists of all memorial lots sold under or affecting the said Land
Development Agreement with an indication of the types/ kinds of
memorial lots and the corresponding prices at which each was sold
and the dates when each lot was sold;
3. Lists of all the owners of the memorial lots affected by the Land
Development Agreement;
4. Copies of all the annual audits made by the external accounting
firm pursuant to provision (a) of the Land Development Agreement;
5. Copies of all audited financial statements of ETERNAL from 1978 to
the present;
6. Copies of all monthly accounting reports of all sales and cash
collections regarding all the memorial lots sold under the Land
Development Agreement pursuant to provision (e) of the said Land
Development Agreement;
7. The name/s of the Depository/Trustee Bank/s which acted as the
depository/trustee of funds collected by ETERNAL pursuant to
provision (f) of the subject Land Development Agreement;
8. All other accounting books and records on all transactions affecting
all the memorial lots covered under the Land Development
Agreement;
9. List of all the corporate officers and employees of ETERNAL from
1975 up to the present whose duties and responsibilities involved
the recording of all sales and other transactions and the
safekeeping of such records relating to the sale of the memorial
lots subject of the Land Development Agreement.
NPUM also filed a Request for Admission of the documents it had earlier
submitted to the Court annexed to the Summary of Sales and Total Amounts
Due, addressed to Mr. Vida. EGMPC, however, filed a Denial to the Request
for Admission, alleging that it was without knowledge or information of the
documents, except for the Land Development Agreement of October 6, 1976.
NPUM then reiterated its request for and was granted by the appellate
court, a subpoena duces tecum and subpoena ad testificandum, this time
addressed to the Chief of the Records Division of EGMPC. NPUM further filed
a Motion for Production, Inspection and Photocopying of Documents and
Books of Accounts of EGMPC, in particular:
It is quite clear that after the denial of its motion for reconsideration,
Eternal Gardens had only three (3) days left of the reglementary period to file
a petition for review, but Eternal Gardens allowed that period to lapse, and
then filed its motion to extend to file its petition - which is eight (8) days
beyond the period of finality of the resolution sought to be reviewed by the
Supreme Court. Consequently, the resolution had attained finality before
Eternal Gardens filed its motion to extend before this Honorable Court.
Following the above incidents, EGMPC filed an Opposition and/or
Comment to the Report of the Court of Appeals dated 31 May 1996 with the
prayer:
x x x to disregard and nullify the Report of the Court of Appeals and at the
same time allow or tolerate the First Division of the Honorable Supreme
Court to resolved (sic) the petitioner Eternal Gardens Petition
for Certiorari against the Court of Appeals and NPUM.
In retort to EGMPCs opposition, also in G.R. No. 73794, NPUM filed on June
11, 1996 an Omnibus Motion (a) to dismiss the petition in G.R. No. 124554,
or (b) to consolidate the two petitions, and (c) for the issuance of a writ of
execution. NPUM contended that as a consequence of the appellate courts
resolutions in CA G.R. SP No. 04869 having attained finality, a writ of
execution may be issued under G.R. No. 73794, and EGMPC could no longer
file a separate petition such as that docketed as G.R. No. 124554.
In its Comment filed on July 17, 1996, in G.R. No. 124554, NPUM prayed
for the denial of the petition for being frivolous and dilatory, citing EGMPCs
violation of Circular No. 04-94 on forum shopping, in reference to its
(EGMPCs) pleadings filed in G.R. No. 73794. NPUM pointed out that the reliefs
sought by EGMPC in G.R. No. 124554 were identical to those in its Opposition
And/Or Comment to the Report of the Court of Appeals dated 31 May 1996
filed in G.R. No. 73794.
On December 26, 1996, the Regional Trial Court of Kalookan City, Branch
120, issued an Order in the case of origin, Civil Case No. 9556,
granting NPUMs motion for execution of judgment. A writ of execution was
subsequently issued by that trial court on January 7, 1997.
EGMPC received a copy of the January 15, 1996 Resolution on January 22,
1996. Twelve days from such receipt, or on February 2, 1996, EGMPC filed its
Motion for Reconsideration. On April 18, 1996, EGMPC received the appellate
courts Resolution of April 12, 1996 denying its Motion for Reconsideration. On
April 29, 1996, or eleven days from its receipt of the denial of its motion for
reconsideration, EGMPC filed a motion for extension of time to file its Petition
for Certiorari and Prohibition and concurrently paid the legal fees.
We find that EGMPCs Motion for Extension of Time to File a Petition for
Review was timely filed on April 29, 1996, such motion having been filed
eleven days from receipt of the appellate courts denial of its motion for
reconsideration. Supreme Court Circular No. 10 dated August 28, 1986 on
modes and periods of appeal provides thus:
On 21 July 1975, the trial court issued a pre-trial order setting the case for
trial on the merits and stating that the "parties and counsels did not submit
any stipulation of facts but relied on their pleadings." 4
Private respondents opposed the motion to dismiss arguing that since the
pre-trial order has long become final, the petitioner has lost her right to
redeem or repurchase the property and is thus estopped from changing her
position that the pacto de retro sale is an equitable mortgage and not a sale
with the option to repurchase.
On 13 January 1976, the trial court ordered the petitioner to file an amended
answer based on her new stand as presented in the motion to dismiss.
On 3 November 1976, petitioner filed with the trial court a manifestation that
she is reinstating and refilling her 4 September 1975 Motion to Dismiss.
On 27 May 1977, the trial court dismissed the complaint in an Order stating
that:
Their motion for the reconsideration of this Order having been denied for
lack of merit, private respondents appealed to the Court of Appeals, which
docketed the case as C.A.-G.R. No. 62677-R.
In its decision promulgated on 4 May 1981, the Court of Appeals reversed the
appealed Order principally on the ground that since petitioner abandoned
her theory of equitable mortgage, she should have exercised her right of
redemption within two (2) years from 9 March 1973, or on or before 9 March
1975. Since she failed to do so, she lost that right. The appellant court held:
The facts show that the defendant failed to redeem the land on
May 9, 1975, which is the expiration date of the two-year period
from the execution of the contract on March 9, 1973. This is
admitted by the appellee in both her answer and amended
answer. We cannot over emphasis (sic) this point. And this fact is
confirmed by the fact that the defendant requested for an
extension of time to redeem the land. This too is admitted by the
appellee in her amended answer. But the plaintiffs did not grant
the request of the appellee but filed instead the present suit on
April 17, 1975.
Petitioner sought reconsideration of the foregoing decision but the same was
denied.
Hence, the petitioner filed the instant petition for review on certiorari on 25
August 1981. Petitioner contends that she neither changed nor
abandoned her theory that the contract in question is an equitable
mortgage but merely alleged alternative defenses, including the
defense that if the contract is a true sale with right to repurchase,
then there is nothing more to litigate in view of her exercise of the
right to repurchase; granting even that the contract is a true sale
with right to repurchase, she still had the time to exercise her right;
the dismissal of the case by the trial court was justified because it
became moot and academic; and that there is no procedural or
substantive justification for the Court of Appeals to declare the
private respondents as the lawful owners of the property by
consolidation, without any trial on the merits.
To the mind of this Court, the principal issue is whether or not petitioner
was able to repurchase the property in question within the period
stipulated in the deed of sale with right to repurchase. The fourth
paragraph of said deed expressly provides:
It is to be noted, however, that while the parties agreed on the period within
which the right may not be exercised or will be deemed suspended, they did
not specify the period within which such may be exercised
thereafter. This suspension remains valid as long as Article 1606 of
the Civil Code is not violated. Said Article reads:
While the counting of this four-year period shall begin from the execution of
the contract, where the right is suspended by agreement until after a
certain time, event or condition, the period shall be counted from
the time such right could be exercised, but not exceeding ten (10)
years from the execution of the contract. Applying the provision to the
instant case, the period to repurchase the property must be deemed to be
four (4) years from 9 March 1975 or until 9 March 1979. Since petitioner
consigned the repurchase price on 11 August 1975, a fact private
respondents did not deny, this Court declares that this consignation
operated as a valid offer or tender of the redemption price. It must
be emphasized that consignation was not necessary for the reason
that the relationship that existed between petitioner and private
respondents, in respect to the right of redemption, was not one of
debtor-creditor. Petitioner was exercising a right, not discharging an
obligation, hence a mere tender of payment is sufficient to preserve
the right of a vendor a retro.
The main issues presented for resolution in this petition for review
on certiorari of the judgment of respondent Court of appeals, dated April 6,
1993, in CA-G.R. CV No. 34767 are (1) whether of not the "Exclusive
Option to Purchase" executed between petitioner Adelfa Properties,
Inc. and private respondents Rosario Jimenez-Castañeda and Salud
Jimenez is an option contract; and (2) whether or not there was a
valid suspension of payment of the purchase price by said
petitioner, and the legal effects thereof on the contractual relations
of the parties.
2. On July 28, 1988, Jose and Dominador Jimenez sold their share consisting
of one-half of said parcel of land, specifically the eastern portion thereof, to
herein petitioner pursuant to a "Kasulatan sa Bilihan ng Lupa.” Subsequently,
a "Confirmatory Extrajudicial Partition Agreement" was executed by the
Jimenezes, wherein the eastern portion of the subject lot was adjudicated to
Jose and Dominador Jimenez, while the western portion was allocated to
herein private respondents.
8. On February 23, 1990, the Regional Trial Court of Makati dismissed Civil
Case No. 89-5541. Thus, on February 28, 1990, petitioner caused to be
annotated anew on TCT No. 309773 the exclusive option to purchase as
Entry No. 4442-4.
10. On April 16, 1990, Atty. Bernardo wrote private respondents informing
the latter that in view of the dismissal of the case against them, petitioner
was willing to pay the purchase price, and he requested that the
corresponding deed of absolute sale be executed. This was ignored by
private respondents.
11. On July 27, 1990, private respondents' counsel sent a letter to petitioner
enclosing therein a check for P25,000.00 representing the refund of fifty
percent of the option money paid under the exclusive option to purchase.
Private respondents then requested petitioner to return the owner's duplicate
copy of the certificate of title of respondent Salud Jimenez. Petitioner failed
to surrender the certificate of title, hence private respondents filed Civil Case
No. 7532 in the Regional Trial Court of Pasay City, Branch 113, for annulment
of contract with damages, praying, among others, that the exclusive option
to purchase be declared null and void; that defendant, herein petitioner, be
ordered to return the owner's duplicate certificate of title; and that the
annotation of the option contract on TCT No. 309773 be cancelled. Emylene
Chua, the subsequent purchaser of the lot, filed a complaint in intervention.
12. The trial court rendered judgment therein on September 5, 1991
holding that the agreement entered into by the parties was merely
an option contract, and declaring that the suspension of payment by
herein petitioner constituted a counter-offer which, therefore, was
tantamount to a rejection of the option. It likewise ruled that herein
petitioner could not validly suspend payment in favor of private respondents
on the ground that the vindicatory action filed by the latter's kin did not
involve the western portion of the land covered by the contract between
petitioner and private respondents, but the eastern portion thereof which
was the subject of the sale between petitioner and the brothers Jose and
Dominador Jimenez. The trial court then directed the cancellation of the
exclusive option to purchase, declared the sale to intervenor Emylene Chua
as valid and binding, and ordered petitioner to pay damages and attorney's
fees to private respondents, with costs.
There are two features which convince us that the parties never intended to
transfer ownership to petitioner except upon the full payment of the
purchase price. Firstly, the exclusive option to purchase, although it provided
for automatic rescission of the contract and partial forfeiture of the amount
already paid in case of default, does not mention that petitioner is obliged to
return possession or ownership of the property as a consequence of non-
payment. There is no stipulation anent reversion or reconveyance of the
property to herein private respondents in the event that petitioner does not
comply with its obligation. With the absence of such a stipulation, although
there is a provision on the remedies available to the parties in case of
breach, it may legally be inferred that the parties never intended to transfer
ownership to the petitioner to completion of payment of the purchase price.
In effect, there was an implied agreement that ownership shall not pass to
the purchaser until he had fully paid the price. Article 1478 of the civil code
does not require that such a stipulation be expressly made. Consequently, an
implied stipulation to that effect is considered valid and, therefore, binding
and enforceable between the parties. It should be noted that under the law
and jurisprudence, a contract which contains this kind of stipulation is
considered a contract to sell.
Moreover, that the parties really intended to execute a contract to sell, and
not a contract of sale, is bolstered by the fact that the deed of absolute sale
would have been issued only upon the payment of the balance of the
purchase price, as may be gleaned from petitioner's letter dated April 16,
1990 wherein it informed private respondents that it "is now ready and
willing to pay you simultaneously with the execution of the corresponding
deed of absolute sale."
Secondly, it has not been shown there was delivery of the property, actual or
constructive, made to herein petitioner. The exclusive option to purchase is
not contained in a public instrument the execution of which would have been
considered equivalent to delivery. Neither did petitioner take actual,
physical possession of the property at any given time. It is true that after the
reconstitution of private respondents' certificate of title, it remained in the
possession of petitioner's counsel, Atty. Bayani L. Bernardo, who thereafter
delivered the same to herein petitioner. Normally, under the law, such
possession by the vendee is to be understood as a delivery. However, private
respondents explained that there was really no intention on their part to
deliver the title to herein petitioner with the purpose of transferring
ownership to it. They claim that Atty. Bernardo had possession of the title
only because he was their counsel in the petition for reconstitution. We have
no reason not to believe this explanation of private respondents, aside from
the fact that such contention was never refuted or contradicted by petitioner.
A perusal of the contract in this case, as well as the oral and documentary
evidence presented by the parties, readily shows that there is indeed a
concurrence of petitioner's offer to buy and private respondents' acceptance
thereof. The rule is that except where a formal acceptance is so required,
although the acceptance must be affirmatively and clearly made and must
be evidenced by some acts or conduct communicated to the offeror, it may
be made either in a formal or an informal manner, and may be shown by
acts, conduct, or words of the accepting party that clearly manifest a present
intention or determination to accept the offer to buy or sell. Thus,
acceptance may be shown by the acts, conduct, or words of a party
recognizing the existence of the contract of sale.
The records also show that private respondents accepted the offer of
petitioner to buy their property under the terms of their contract. At the time
petitioner made its offer, private respondents suggested that their transfer
certificate of title be first reconstituted, to which petitioner agreed. As a
matter of fact, it was petitioner's counsel, Atty. Bayani L. Bernardo, who
assisted private respondents in filing a petition for reconstitution. After the
title was reconstituted, the parties agreed that petitioner would pay either in
cash or manager's check the amount of P2,856,150.00 for the lot. Petitioner
was supposed to pay the same on November 25, 1989, but it later offered to
make a down payment of P50,000.00, with the balance of P2,806,150.00 to
be paid on or before November 30, 1989. Private respondents agreed to the
counter-offer made by petitioner. As a result, the so-called exclusive option
to purchase was prepared by petitioner and was subsequently signed by
private respondents, thereby creating a perfected contract to sell between
them.
It cannot be gainsaid that the offer to buy a specific piece of land was
definite and certain, while the acceptance thereof was absolute and without
any condition or qualification. The agreement as to the object, the price of
the property, and the terms of payment was clear and well-defined. No other
significance could be given to such acts that than they were meant to finalize
and perfect the transaction. The parties even went beyond the basic
requirements of the law by stipulating that "all expenses including the
corresponding capital gains tax, cost of documentary stamps are for the
account of the vendors, and expenses for the registration of the deed of sale
in the Registry of Deeds are for the account of Adelfa properties, Inc." Hence,
there was nothing left to be done except the performance of the respective
obligations of the parties.
At any rate, the same cannot be considered a counter-offer for the simple
reason that petitioner's sole purpose was to settle the civil case in order that
it could already comply with its obligation. In fact, it was even indicative of a
desire by petitioner to immediately comply therewith, except that it was
being prevented from doing so because of the filing of the civil case which, it
believed in good faith, rendered compliance improbable at that time. In
addition, no inference can be drawn from that suggestion given by petitioner
that it was totally abandoning the original contract.
More importantly, it will be noted that the failure of petitioner to pay the
balance of the purchase price within the agreed period was attributed by
private respondents to "lack of word of honor" on the part of the former. The
reason of "lack of word of honor" is to us a clear indication that private
respondents considered petitioner already bound by its obligation to pay the
balance of the consideration. In effect, private respondents were demanding
or exacting fulfillment of the obligation from herein petitioner. with the arrival
of the period agreed upon by the parties, petitioner was supposed to comply
with the obligation incumbent upon it to perform, not merely to exercise an
option or a right to buy the property.
This is not a case where no right is as yet created nor an obligation declared,
as where something further remains to be done before the buyer and seller
obligate themselves. An agreement is only an "option" when no obligation
rests on the party to make any payment except such as may be agreed on
between the parties as consideration to support the option until he has made
up his mind within the time specified. An option, and not a contract to
purchase, is effected by an agreement to sell real estate for payments to be
made within specified time and providing forfeiture of money paid upon
failure to make payment, where the purchaser does not agree to purchase,
to make payment, or to bind himself in any way other than the forfeiture of
the payments made. As hereinbefore discussed, this is not the situation
obtaining in the case at bar.
While there is jurisprudence to the effect that a contract which provides that
the initial payment shall be totally forfeited in case of default in payment is
to be considered as an option contract, still we are not inclined to conform
with the findings of respondent court and the court a quo that the contract
executed between the parties is an option contract, for the reason that the
parties were already contemplating the payment of the balance of the
purchase price, and were not merely quoting an agreed value for the
property. The term "balance," connotes a remainder or something remaining
from the original total sum already agreed upon.
In other words, the alleged option money of P50,000.00 was actually earnest
money which was intended to form part of the purchase price. The amount of
P50,000.00 was not distinct from the cause or consideration for the sale of
the property, but was itself a part thereof. It is a statutory rule that whenever
earnest money is given in a contract of sale, it shall be considered as part of
the price and as proof of the perfection of the contract. It constitutes an
advance payment and must, therefore, be deducted from the total price.
Also, earnest money is given by the buyer to the seller to bind the bargain.
There are clear distinctions between earnest money and option money, viz.:
(a) earnest money is part of the purchase price, while option money ids the
money given as a distinct consideration for an option contract; (b) earnest
money is given only where there is already a sale, while option money
applies to a sale not yet perfected; and (c) when earnest money is given, the
buyer is bound to pay the balance, while when the would-be buyer gives
option money, he is not required to buy.
II
1. This brings us to the second issue as to whether or not there was valid
suspension of payment of the purchase price by petitioner and the legal
consequences thereof. To justify its failure to pay the purchase price within
the agreed period, petitioner invokes Article 1590 of the civil Code which
provides:
Both lower courts, however, are in accord that since Civil Case No. 89-5541
filed against the parties herein involved only the eastern half of the land
subject of the deed of sale between petitioner and the Jimenez brothers, it
did not, therefore, have any adverse effect on private respondents' title and
ownership over the western half of the land which is covered by the contract
subject of the present case. We have gone over the complaint for recovery of
ownership filed in said case and we are not persuaded by the factual
findings made by said courts. At a glance, it is easily discernible that,
although the complaint prayed for the annulment only of the contract of sale
executed between petitioner and the Jimenez brothers, the same likewise
prayed for the recovery of therein plaintiffs' share in that parcel of land
specifically covered by TCT No. 309773. In other words, the plaintiffs therein
were claiming to be co-owners of the entire parcel of land described in TCT
No. 309773, and not only of a portion thereof nor, as incorrectly interpreted
by the lower courts, did their claim pertain exclusively to the eastern half
adjudicated to the Jimenez brothers.
Such being the case, petitioner was justified in suspending payment of the
balance of the purchase price by reason of the aforesaid vindicatory action
filed against it. The assurance made by private respondents that petitioner
did not have to worry about the case because it was pure and simple
harassment is not the kind of guaranty contemplated under the exceptive
clause in Article 1590 wherein the vendor is bound to make payment even
with the existence of a vindicatory action if the vendee should give a security
for the return of the price.
Furthermore, petitioner no longer had the right to suspend payment after the
disturbance ceased with the dismissal of the civil case filed against it.
Necessarily, therefore, its obligation to pay the balance again arose and
resumed after it received notice of such dismissal. Unfortunately, petitioner
failed to seasonably make payment, as in fact it has deposit the money with
the trial court when this case was originally filed therein.
We are not unaware of the ruling in University of the Philippines vs. De los
Angeles, etc. that the right to rescind is not absolute, being ever subject to
scrutiny and review by the proper court. It is our considered view, however,
that this rule applies to a situation where the extrajudicial rescission is
contested by the defaulting party. In other words, resolution of reciprocal
contracts may be made extrajudicially unless successfully impugned in court.
If the debtor impugns the declaration, it shall be subject to judicial
determination otherwise, if said party does not oppose it, the extrajudicial
rescission shall have legal effect.
In the case at bar, it has been shown that although petitioner was duly
furnished and did receive a written notice of rescission which specified the
grounds therefore, it failed to reply thereto or protest against it. Its silence
thereon suggests an admission of the veracity and validity of private
respondents' claim. Furthermore, the initiative of instituting suit was
transferred from the rescinder to the defaulter by virtue of the automatic
rescission clause in the contract. But then, the records bear out the fact that
aside from the lackadaisical manner with which petitioner treated private
respondents' latter of cancellation, it utterly failed to seriously seek redress
from the court for the enforcement of its alleged rights under the contract. If
private respondents had not taken the initiative of filing Civil Case No. 7532,
evidently petitioner had no intention to take any legal action to compel
specific performance from the former. By such cavalier disregard, it has been
effectively estopped from seeking the affirmative relief it now desires but
which it had theretofore disdained.
DECISION
PURISIMA, J.:
At bar is a Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 of the Revised Rules of Court
questioning the Decision[1] of the Court of Appeals[2] dated March 31, 1992 in CA-G.R. Nos.
19145 and 19146, which modified the decision of Branch 138 of the Regional Trial Court of
Makati in Civil Case Nos. 41059 and 42381.
The antecedent facts are as follows:
Petitioner Dolores Ligaya de Mesa owns several parcels of land in Makati, Pasay City,
Cavite, and General Santos City[3] which were mortgaged to the Development Bank of the
Philippines (DBP) as security for a loan she obtained from the bank. Failing to pay her mortgage
debt, all her mortgaged properties were foreclosed and sold at public auction held on different
days. On April 30, 1977, the Makar property was sold and the corresponding certificate of sale
inscribed on March 10, 1978. On August 25, 1977, the Naic, Cavite property was sold and the
certificate of sale registered on the same day. On August 30, 1977, the two (2) parcels of land in
Makati were sold at public auction and the certificate of sale was inscribed on November 25,
1977. And on January 12, 1978, the three (3) parcels of land in Pasay City were also sold and the
certificate of sale was recorded on the same date. In all the said auction sales, DBP was the
winning bidder.
In a letter dated May 29, 1978, petitioner de Mesa requested DBP that she be allowed to
repurchase her foreclosed properties.
On October 23, 1978, Mrs. de Mesa, under a Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage,
sold the foreclosed properties to private respondent OSSA under the condition that the latter
[4]
was to assume the payment of the mortgage debt by the repurchase of all the properties
mortgaged on installment basis, with an initial payment of P90,000.00 representing 20% of the
total obligation.
On October 23, 1978, private respondent OSSA remitted to DBP the initial payment
of P90,000.00, in addition to the amount of P10,000.00 previously paid to the petitioner.
On February 22, 1979, DBP granted petitioners request to repurchase the foreclosed
properties such that in March 1979 a Deed of Conditional Sale was executed under which DBP
agreed to sell the said properties to the petitioner for the sum of P363,408.20, P90,000.00 of
which was to be paid as initial payment and the balance in seven (7) years on a quarterly
amortization plan, with a first quarterly installment of P15,475.17.
Private respondent OSSA paid DBP the first to eight quarterly installments from April 11,
1979 to May 8, 1991, in the total amount of P137,595.31, which installment payments were
applied to petitioners obligation with DBP pursuant to the Deed of Conditional Sale.
On March 11, 1981, petitioner de Mesa notified private respondent OSSA that she was
rescinding the Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage she executed in favor of the latter on
the ground that OSSA failed to comply with the terms and conditions of their agreement,
particularly the payment of installments to the Development Bank of the Philippines, the
discharge and cancellation of the mortgage on the property listed in item IV of the first whereas
clause, and the payment of the balance of more or less P45,000.00 to petitioner, representing the
difference between the purchase price of subject properties and the actual obligation to the DBP.
On April 11, 1981, OSSA offered to pay the amount of P34,363.08, which is the difference
between the purchase price of P500,000.00 and the mortgage obligation to DBP of P455,636.92,
after deducting the downpayment of P10,000.00 stipulated in said Deed of Sale with Assumption
of Mortgage, but the petitioner refused to accept such payment. So, on April 28, 1981, OSSA
brought a Complaint for Consignation against the petitioner, docketed as Civil Case No. 41059
before the then Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XV, and at the same time, deposited the
amount of P34,363.08 with said court.
On August 5, 1981, DBP refused to accept the 9th quarterly installment paid by OSSA,
prompting the latter to file against DBP and the petitioner, on August 11, 1981, Civil Case No.
42381 for specific performance and consignation, with the then Court of First Instance of Pasig,
Rizal, depositing in said case the amount of P15,824.92.
On October 21, 1981, upon petitioner de Mesas motion, Civil Case Nos. 41059 and 42381
were consolidated before the then Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XV, Makati, Metro
Manila, now Regional Trial Court of Makati City , Branch CXXXVIII (138).
In an Order dated July 23, 1982, the lower court allowed OSSA to deposit with the Court a
quo by way of consignation, all future quarterly installments without need of formal tenders of
payment and service of notices of consignation. Correspondingly and over the period of time
stipulated, OSSA deposited with the lower court the 10 to the 20th installments in the aggregate
th
(b) Ordering defendant Development Bank of the Philippines to furnish plaintiff with
a statement of payments and balance, if any, still due from defendant de Mesa after
applying all payments already received, including the amounts placed under
consignation;
(c) Upon payment by the plaintiff of the balance if any, still due on the properties,
defendant Development Bank of the Philippines shall execute a Deed of Absolute Sale
in favor of the plaintiff over the properties subject matter of the Deed of Absolute Sale
with Assumption of Mortgage executed by and between plaintiff and defendant de
Mesa;
(d) Ordering plaintiff to pay defendant de Mesa the difference, if any, between the
agreed purchase price of P500,000.00 and the payments made to the defendant
Development Bank of the Philippines, less the P10,000.00 down payment already paid
and the P34,363.08 consigned with the Court; and
(e) Ordering defendant de Mesa to pay plaintiff the sum of P10,000.00 as attorneys
fees.
SO ORDERED.' [5]
The petitioner appealed to the Court of Appeals which handed down on March 31, 1992, its
decision modifying the challenged decision, as follows:
(a) declaring the consignation made by OSSA as proper and valid as far as de Mesa
is concerned, and ordering de Mesa to receive the said amount consigned with the
court and pay DBP with the said amount;
(b) ordering DBP to furnish de Mesa with a statement of payments and the balance, if
any, still due from de Mesa after applying all payments already received, including
the amounts paid under consignation;
(c) ordering de Mesa to furnish OSSA with a copy of the statement of payments
described in the preceding paragraph, and the balance appearing therein, if any, shall
be paid by OSSA for the account of de Mesa;
(d) ordering DBP to execute a Deed of Absolute Sale in favor of de Mesa over the
properties subject of the Deed of Conditional Sale;
(e) ordering Ossa to pay de Mesa the difference, if any, between the agreed purchase
price of P500,000.00 and the payments made to DBP, less the P10,000.00 down
payment and the P34,363.08 consigned with the court;
(f) ordering de Mesa thereafter, to execute a Deed of Absolute Sale in favor of OSSA
over the properties subject of the Deed of Sale with assumption of Mortgage; and
(g) ordering de Mesa to pay OSSA the sum of P10,000.00 as and for attorneys fees.
No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.[6]
I
THIS COURT ERRED WHEN IT HELD THAT WHAT WAS SOLD UNDER THE
DEED OF SALE WITH ASSUMPTION OF MORTGAGE WERE THE
PROPERTIES LISTED THEREIN AND NOT MERELY THE RIGHT OF
REDEMPTION DESPITE THE TESTIMONIES OF BOTH CONTRACTING
PARTIES THAT WHAT SOLD AND BOUGHT WAS MERELY THE RIGHT OF
REDEMPTION.
II
III
IV
With the denial of her aforestated motion for reconsideration, petitioner found her way to
this Court via the present petition, raising the issues:
(i) Whether or not the requirements of Articles 1256 to 1261 can be relaxed or
substantially complied with.
(ii) Whether or not the Court can supplant its own reading of an ambiguous contract
for the actual intention of the contracting parties as testified to in open court and under
oath.
(iii) Whether or not petitioner de Mesa can be held in estoppel for the acts of the DBP.
"Art. 1370. If the terms of a contract are clear and leave no doubt upon the intention
of the contracting parties, the literal meaning of its stipulation shall control.
xxx
When the words of a contract are plain and readily understood, there is no room for
construction. As the agreement of the parties are reduced to writing, such agreement is
considered as containing all its terms and there can be, between the parties and their successors-
in-interest, no evidence of the terms of the written agreement other than the contents of the
writing.[8]
In the case under consideration, the terms of the Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage
Debt are clear and leave no doubt as to what were sold thereunder. It provided as follows:
"WHEREAS, the VENDOR has agreed to sell to the VENDEE (plaintiff Ossa House,
Inc.), and the VENDEE has agreed to purchase form the VENDOR, all the properties
described in Items I, II, and III, of the First Whereas Clause, for the price and under
the terms hereinafter contained;
NOW, THEREFORE, for and in consideration of the premises and the sum of TEN
THOUSAND PESOS (P10,000.00), the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, and
the assumption by the VENDEE of the total mortgage obligation of the VENDOR has
sold, transferred, and conveyed, and by these presents does sell, transfer and convey,
unto the said VENDEE, its administrators and assigns, free from all liens and
encumbrances except as noted herein, the parcels of land hereinabove described in
Items I, II, and III, together with all the buildings and improvements thereon;
The VENDEE does hereby assume the payment of the mortgage obligations by
repurchase of all the properties mortgaged on installment, with an initial payment
of P90,000.00 representing payment 20% of the total obligation; and consequently,
the within sale is subject to the mortgage in favor of the Development Bank of the
Philippines;
Nowhere is it provided in the aforequoted provisions, as the petitioner insists, that what she
sold to respondent OSSA was merely the right to redeem the mortgaged properties and not the
foreclosed properties themselves. On the contrary, the very words of the contract reveal that the
subject of the sale were all the properties described in items I, II, III of the First Whereas Clause.
Indeed, the contract under scrutiny is so explicit and unambiguous that it does not justify
any attempt to read into it any supposed intention of the parties, as the said contract is to be
understood literally, just as they appear on its face.[9]
Petitioner capitalizes on the following prefatory clause of the contract, to wit:
However, not the slightest indication can be gleaned from the abovequoted provision that the
subject of the Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage was petitioners right of
redemption. The said provision merely speaks of the preferential right of the latter to redeem the
real properties involved.
Furthermore, the court discerns no inconsistency between the contracts recognition of the
preferential right of petitioner to redeem the mortgaged properties, and the sale of the said
properties to respondent OSSA. Petitioner can validly redeem subject properties and still
recognize the sale thereof to the respondent corporation because nothing therein is contrary to
law, morals, good customs, public order or public policy. Besides, it is a well-settled doctrine that
in the construction of an instrument where there are several provisions, or particulars, such a
construction is, if possible, to be adopted as will give effect to all. [10] Thus, the recognition of both
the preferential right of the petitioner to redeem the mortgaged properties and the sale of the
same properties to respondent OSSA is in order, as it would harmonize and give effect to all the
provisions of the Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage under controversy.
As aptly ruled by the respondent court, the grant by DBP of petitioners request to repurchase
the mortgaged properties redounded to the benefit of respondent OSSA, the sale of the said
properties having been previously agreed upon by the petitioner and respondent OSSA.
Petitioner contends that she is not estopped from questioning DBPs application to her
account of OSSAs initial payment of P90,000.00 as well as the first to eight quarterly
installments. It bears stressing, however, that the remittance of the said payment was made in
implementation of the provisions of their contract. The belated claim of the petitioner, which was
not given credence by the trial court, that she objected to the application by DBP to her account
of all the remittances of OSSA is tainted with bad faith as this is an attempt to renegade against
her contract with respondent OSSA. Besides, the issue of whether or not petitioner objected is a
question of fact that has already been settled by the trial court which best performs the matter of
assigning values to the testimony of witnesses,[11] and whose findings are accorded great weight
especially when affirmed by the Court of Appeals[12], as in the case at bar.
Petitioner next argues that there was no notice to her regarding OSSAs consignation of the
amounts corresponding to the 12 up to the 20 quarterly installments. The records, however,
th th
show that several tenders of payment were consistently turned down by the petitioner, so much
so that the respondent OSSA found it pointless to keep on making formal tenders of payment and
serving notices of consignation to petitioner. Moreover, in a motion dated May 7, 1987, OSSA
prayed before the lower court that it be allowed to deposit by way of consignation all the
quarterly installments, without making formal tenders of payment and serving notice of
consignation, which prayer was granted by the trial court in the Order dated July 3, 1982. The
motion and the subsequent court order served on the petitioner in the consignation proceedings
sufficiently served as notice to petitioner of OSSAs willingness to pay the quarterly installments
and the consignation of such payments with the court. For reasons of equity, the procedural
requirements of consignation are deemed substantially complied with in the present case.[13]
Petitioner also insists that there was no valid tender of payment because the amount tendered
was P34,363.08, not P51,243.26, and assuming ex gratia argumenti that it was the correct
amount, the tender thereof was still not valid, the same having been made by check. This claim,
however, does not accord with the records on hand. Thus, the Court of Appeals ratiocinated:
It is thus beyond cavil that the respondent OSSA tendered the correct amount, the tender of
which was in cash and not by check, as theorized by petitioner.
Premises studiedly considered, the Court is of the ineluctable conclusion, and so holds, that
the Court of Appeals erred not in affirming the decision of the trial court of origin.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED and the assailed Decision of the Court of Appeals
in CA-G.R. Nos. 19145 and 19156 dated March 31, 1992 AFFIRMED. No pronouncement as to
costs.
SO ORDERED.
TRENT, J.:
The basis of this action is a written contract, Exhibit A, the pertinent paragraphs of which follow:
1. That Mr. Basilio Gonzalez hereby acknowledges receipt of the sum of P3,000 Philippine
currency from Messrs. Yu Tek and Co., and that in consideration of said sum be obligates
himself to deliver to the said Yu Tek and Co., 600 piculs of sugar of the first and second
grade, according to the result of the polarization, within the period of three months, beginning
on the 1st day of January, 1912, and ending on the 31st day of March of the same year,
1912.
2. That the said Mr. Basilio Gonzales obligates himself to deliver to the said Messrs. Yu Tek
and Co., of this city the said 600 piculs of sugar at any place within the said municipality of
Santa Rosa which the said Messrs. Yu Tek and Co., or a representative of the same may
designate.
3. That in case the said Mr. Basilio Gonzales does not deliver to Messrs. Yu Tek and Co. the
600 piculs of sugar within the period of three months, referred to in the second paragraph of
this document, this contract will be rescinded and the said Mr. Basilio Gonzales will then be
obligated to return to Messrs. Yu Tek and Co. the P3,000 received and also the sum of
P1,200 by way of indemnity for loss and damages.
Plaintiff proved that no sugar had been delivered to it under this contract nor had it been able to
recover the P3,000. Plaintiff prayed for judgment for the P3,000 and, in addition, for P1,200 under
paragraph 4, supra. Judgment was rendered for P3,000 only, and from this judgment both parties
appealed.
The points raised by the defendant will be considered first. He alleges that the court erred in refusing
to permit parol evidence showing that the parties intended that the sugar was to be secured from the
crop which the defendant raised on his plantation, and that he was unable to fulfill the contract by
reason of the almost total failure of his crop. This case appears to be one to which the rule which
excludes parol evidence to add to or vary the terms of a written contract is decidedly applicable.
There is not the slightest intimation in the contract that the sugar was to be raised by the defendant.
Parties are presumed to have reduced to writing all the essential conditions of their contract. While
parol evidence is admissible in a variety of ways to explain the meaning of written contracts, it
cannot serve the purpose of incorporating into the contract additional contemporaneous conditions
which are not mentioned at all in the writing, unless there has been fraud or mistake. In an early
case this court declined to allow parol evidence showing that a party to a written contract was to
become a partner in a firm instead of a creditor of the firm. (Pastor vs. Gaspar, 2 Phil. Rep., 592.)
Again, in Eveland vs. Eastern Mining Co. (14 Phil. Rep., 509) a contract of employment provided
that the plaintiff should receive from the defendant a stipulated salary and expenses. The defendant
sought to interpose as a defense to recovery that the payment of the salary was contingent upon the
plaintiff's employment redounding to the benefit of the defendant company. The contract contained
no such condition and the court declined to receive parol evidence thereof.
In the case at bar, it is sought to show that the sugar was to be obtained exclusively from the crop
raised by the defendant. There is no clause in the written contract which even remotely suggests
such a condition. The defendant undertook to deliver a specified quantity of sugar within a specified
time. The contract placed no restriction upon the defendant in the matter of obtaining the sugar. He
was equally at liberty to purchase it on the market or raise it himself. It may be true that defendant
owned a plantation and expected to raise the sugar himself, but he did not limit his obligation to his
own crop of sugar. Our conclusion is that the condition which the defendant seeks to add to the
contract by parol evidence cannot be considered. The rights of the parties must be determined by
the writing itself.
The second contention of the defendant arises from the first. He assumes that the contract was
limited to the sugar he might raise upon his own plantation; that the contract represented a perfected
sale; and that by failure of his crop he was relieved from complying with his undertaking by loss of
the thing due. (Arts. 1452, 1096, and 1182, Civil Code.) This argument is faulty in assuming that
there was a perfected sale. Article 1450 defines a perfected sale as follows:
The sale shall be perfected between vendor and vendee and shall be binding on both of
them, if they have agreed upon the thing which is the object of the contract and upon the
price, even when neither has been delivered.
Article 1452 reads: "The injury to or the profit of the thing sold shall, after the contract has been
perfected, be governed by the provisions of articles 1096 and 1182."
This court has consistently held that there is a perfected sale with regard to the "thing" whenever the
article of sale has been physically segregated from all other articles Thus, a particular tobacco
factory with its contents was held sold under a contract which did not provide for either delivery of
the price or of the thing until a future time. McCullough vs. Aenlle and Co. (3 Phil. Rep., 295). Quite
similar was the recent case of Barretto vs. Santa Marina (26 Phil. Rep., 200) where specified shares
of stock in a tobacco factory were held sold by a contract which deferred delivery of both the price
and the stock until the latter had been appraised by an inventory of the entire assets of the company.
In Borromeo vs. Franco (5 Phil. Rep., 49) a sale of a specific house was held perfected between the
vendor and vendee, although the delivery of the price was withheld until the necessary documents of
ownership were prepared by the vendee. In Tan Leonco vs. Go Inqui (8 Phil. Rep., 531) the plaintiff
had delivered a quantity of hemp into the warehouse of the defendant. The defendant drew a bill of
exchange in the sum of P800, representing the price which had been agreed upon for the hemp thus
delivered. Prior to the presentation of the bill for payment, the hemp was destroyed. Whereupon, the
defendant suspended payment of the bill. It was held that the hemp having been already delivered,
the title had passed and the loss was the vendee's. It is our purpose to distinguish the case at bar
from all these cases.
In the case at bar the undertaking of the defendant was to sell to the plaintiff 600 piculs of sugar of
the first and second classes. Was this an agreement upon the "thing" which was the object of the
contract within the meaning of article 1450, supra? Sugar is one of the staple commodities of this
country. For the purpose of sale its bulk is weighed, the customary unit of weight being denominated
a "picul." There was no delivery under the contract. Now, if called upon to designate the article sold,
it is clear that the defendant could only say that it was "sugar." He could only use this generic name
for the thing sold. There was no "appropriation" of any particular lot of sugar. Neither party could
point to any specific quantity of sugar and say: "This is the article which was the subject of our
contract." How different is this from the contracts discussed in the cases referred to above! In the
McCullough case, for instance, the tobacco factory which the parties dealt with was specifically
pointed out and distinguished from all other tobacco factories. So, in the Barretto case, the particular
shares of stock which the parties desired to transfer were capable of designation. In the Tan Leonco
case, where a quantity of hemp was the subject of the contract, it was shown that that quantity had
been deposited in a specific warehouse, and thus set apart and distinguished from all other hemp.
A number of cases have been decided in the State of Louisiana, where the civil law prevails, which
confirm our position. Perhaps the latest is Witt Shoe Co. vs. Seegars and Co. (122 La., 145; 47
Sou., 444). In this case a contract was entered into by a traveling salesman for a quantity of shoes,
the sales having been made by sample. The court said of this contract:
But it is wholly immaterial, for the purpose of the main question, whether Mitchell was
authorized to make a definite contract of sale or not, since the only contract that he was in a
position to make was an agreement to sell or an executory contract of sale. He says that
plaintiff sends out 375 samples of shoes, and as he was offering to sell by sample shoes,
part of which had not been manufactured and the rest of which were incorporated in
plaintiff's stock in Lynchburg, Va., it was impossible that he and Seegars and Co. should at
that time have agreed upon the specific objects, the title to which was to pass, and hence
there could have been no sale. He and Seegars and Co. might have agreed, and did (in
effect ) agree, that the identification of the objects and their appropriation to the contract
necessary to make a sale should thereafter be made by the plaintiff, acting for itself and for
Seegars and Co., and the legend printed in red ink on plaintiff's billheads ("Our responsibility
ceases when we take transportation Co's. receipt `In good order'" indicates plaintiff's idea of
the moment at which such identification and appropriation would become effective. The
question presented was carefully considered in the case of State vs. Shields, et al. (110 La.,
547, 34 Sou., 673) (in which it was absolutely necessary that it should be decided), and it
was there held that in receiving an order for a quantity of goods, of a kind and at a price
agreed on, to be supplied from a general stock, warehoused at another place, the agent
receiving the order merely enters into an executory contract for the sale of the goods, which
does not divest or transfer the title of any determinate object, and which becomes effective
for that purpose only when specific goods are thereafter appropriated to the contract; and, in
the absence of a more specific agreement on the subject, that such appropriated takes place
only when the goods as ordered are delivered to the public carriers at the place from which
they are to be shipped, consigned to the person by whom the order is given, at which time
and place, therefore, the sale is perfected and the title passes.
This case and State vs. Shields, referred to in the above quotation are amply illustrative of the
position taken by the Louisiana court on the question before us. But we cannot refrain from referring
to the case of Larue and Prevost vs.Rugely, Blair and Co. (10 La. Ann., 242) which is summarized by
the court itself in the Shields case as follows:
. . . It appears that the defendants had made a contract for the sale, by weight, of a lot of
cotton, had received $3,000 on account of the price, and had given an order for its delivery,
which had been presented to the purchaser, and recognized by the press in which the cotton
was stored, but that the cotton had been destroyed by fire before it was weighed. It was held
that it was still at the risk of the seller, and that the buyer was entitled to recover the $3,000
paid on account of the price.
We conclude that the contract in the case at bar was merely an executory agreement; a promise of
sale and not a sale. At there was no perfected sale, it is clear that articles 1452, 1096, and 1182 are
not applicable. The defendant having defaulted in his engagement, the plaintiff is entitled to recover
the P3,000 which it advanced to the defendant, and this portion of the judgment appealed from must
therefore be affirmed.
The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment of the trial court on the ground that it is entitled to
recover the additional sum of P1,200 under paragraph 4 of the contract. The court below held that
this paragraph was simply a limitation upon the amount of damages which could be recovered and
not liquidated damages as contemplated by the law. "It also appears," said the lower court, "that in
any event the defendant was prevented from fulfilling the contract by the delivery of the sugar by
condition over which he had no control, but these conditions were not sufficient to absolve him from
the obligation of returning the money which he received."
The above quoted portion of the trial court's opinion appears to be based upon the proposition that
the sugar which was to be delivered by the defendant was that which he expected to obtain from his
own hacienda and, as the dry weather destroyed his growing cane, he could not comply with his part
of the contract. As we have indicated, this view is erroneous, as, under the contract, the defendant
was not limited to his growth crop in order to make the delivery. He agreed to deliver the sugar and
nothing is said in the contract about where he was to get it.
We think is a clear case of liquidated damages. The contract plainly states that if the defendant fails
to deliver the 600 piculs of sugar within the time agreed on, the contract will be rescinded and he will
be obliged to return the P3,000 and pay the sum of P1,200 by way of indemnity for loss and
damages. There cannot be the slightest doubt about the meaning of this language or the intention of
the parties. There is no room for either interpretation or construction. Under the provisions of article
1255 of the Civil Code contracting parties are free to execute the contracts that they may consider
suitable, provided they are not in contravention of law, morals, or public order. In our opinion there is
nothing in the contract under consideration which is opposed to any of these principles.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment appealed from is modified by allowing the recovery of
P1,200 under paragraph 4 of the contract. As thus modified, the judgment appealed from is affirmed,
without costs in this instance.
MALCOLM, J.:
This is an action for damage in the amount of P28,620 for the
alleged breach of a contract to grind sugar cane in 1920-1921. After
a rehearing, the defendant was absolved from the complaint,
andthe plaintiff was condemned, on the cross-complaint, to pay the
defendant the sum of P12,114, without special pronouncement as to
costs.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
MUTUAL OBLIGATIONS
There is another aspect to the case which has to do with the tenth
paragraph of the mutual obligations of the contract and which
concerned the securing of the right- of-way for the proposed
railroad. To get from the Hacienda Esmeralda No. 2 to
the Hacienda Dos Hermanos, the railroad would have to pass
through the haciendas of Esteban de la Rama. But he would not
grant permission to use his land for this purpose in 1920, and only
consented to do so in 1924. Here then was a clear case of such a
condition of affairs as was contemplated by the contract. chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library