YAP Vs CA
YAP Vs CA
YAP Vs CA
CA
- The lot was registered in the name of Ramon Yap under Transfer
Certificate of Title No. 102132; forthwith, he also declared the
property in his name for tax purposes and paid the real estate taxes
due thereon from 1966 to 1992.
- Upon its completion, the improvement was declared for real estate
tax purposes in the name of Lorenzo Yap in deference to the wishes
of the old woman.
- Lorenzo Yap died on 11 July 1970. A few months later, his heirs
(herein petitioners) left their family dwelling in Lucena City to reside
permanently in Manila. Ramon Yap allowed petitioners to use one
unit of the apartment building.irtual law library
- On 18 March 1992, Ramon Yap sold the land and his share of the
3-door apartment to his brother, his herein co-respondent Benjamin
Yap, for the sum of P337,500.00 pursuant to a Deed of Sale,
recorded on even date in the Memorandum of Encumbrances of the
title to said property. Transfer Certificate of Title No. 73002 was in
due time issued in the name of Benjamin Yap.
Assessing the evidence before it, the trial court found for the
respondents and adjudged Benjamin Yap to be the true and lawful
owner of the disputed property.
"I
"THE RESPONDENT COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED REVERSIBLE
ERROR WHEN IT HOLDS THAT DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS FATHER,
LORENZO YAP, BEING CHINESE CAN NOT ENTER INTO A TRUST
AGREEMENT AND THE EXISTENCE OF A TRUST AGREEMENT CAN
NOT BE PROVEN BEING CHINESE.chanrobles.com : virtual law
library
"II
"III
"IV
"V
"VI
"VIII
Express trusts are those which are created by the direct and
positive acts of the parties, by some writing or deed, or will, or by
words evincing an intention to create a trust.
Implied trusts are those which, without being express, are deducible
from the nature of the transaction as matters of intent or,
independently of the particular intention of the parties, as being
superinduced on the transaction by operation of law basically by
reason of equity. These species of implied trust are ordinarily
subdivided into resulting and constructive trusts.
The Court of Appeals, sustaining the court a quo, has found the
evidence submitted by petitioners to be utterly wanting, 12
consisting mainly of the self-serving testimony of Sally Yap.
Upon the other hand, Ramon Yap was by then an accountant with
apparent means to buy the property himself.
The mandate has also been adopted in Section 14, Article XIV, of
the 1973 Constitution and now reiterated under Section 7, Article
XII, of the 1987 Constitution. A trust or a provision in the terms of a
trust would be invalid if the enforcement of the trust or provision is
against the law even though its performance does not involve the
commission of a criminal or tortuous act. It likewise must follow
that what the parties are not allowed to do expressly is one that
they also may not do impliedly as, for instance, in the guise of a
resulting trust. 13
SO ORDERED.