Answer: Plaintiff, - Versus
Answer: Plaintiff, - Versus
Answer: Plaintiff, - Versus
-versus-
ANSWER
COMES NOW, the Defendants VISITACION BUCOD and
FERDINAND BUCOD, through the undersigned counsel, unto this
Honorable Court, most respectfully avers THAT:
PREFATORY STATEMENT
Page 1 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
Assignment and Transfer of Rights1 dated April 11, 2011 between
Rogelio T. Torreon and the Plaintiff was only executed to
accommodate the wishes of Defendant Visitacion Bucod to grant her
granddaughter, whom she raised since infancy until her teenage
years, a place to come home whenever she decides to reside back in
the Philippines from Japan. Furthermore, as will be explained
hereunder, the said Deed of Assignment and Transfer of Rights is a
mere simulated contract between Rogelio T. Torreon and the Plaintiff
which can simply be gleaned from the consideration thereof for a
mere amount of Fifteen Thousand Pesos for the entire Thirty Seven
(37) square meters including the three-storey house erected thereon.
4. Thus, as can be initially gleaned from the dates of the two documents
– the Extrajudicial Settlement of Estate with Deed of Absolute Sale
(August 9, 2018) and the Extrajudicial Settlement of Estate with
Waiver of Rights (December 16, 2016), it is clear that the former
document was an afterthought by the parties therein to do away with
the cost and hassle of multiple transfers of the property and to
execute such document in order to facilitate the wishes of their
mother, herein Defendant Visitacion Bucod.
6. The real agreement of the parties was that the Plaintiff and Defendant
Visitacion Bucod agreed that the Agdao Property would be
1
A copy is herein attached as Annex “A”.
2
A copy is herein attached as Annex “B”.
3
A copy is herein attached as Annex “C”.
Page 2 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
purchased by the former from the latter for a total consideration of
Two Million Pesos (P2,000,000.00) which is broken down as follows:
Amount Details
P1,600,000.00 For buying the house and lot at Wellspring
Highland in Catalunan Pequeno where
Defendant Visitacion Bucod will transfer so
that the Agdao Property can be renovated to
the wishes of Plaintiff Mika Bucod
200,000.00 Cash to be received by Defendant Visitacion
Bucod
100,000.00 Budget for the processing of the transfer of
titles
100,000.00 Renovation and appliances for the Wellspring
Property
Page 3 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
11.Defendants ADMITS paragraph 8.
Page 4 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
16.Defendants DENY the allegations in paragraph 13 for lack of
sufficient basis to form a belief as to the truth or falsity thereof.
Page 5 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
deprivation or withholding of possession, bring an action
in the proper Municipal Trial Court against the person or
persons unlawfully withholding or depriving of
possession, or any person or persons claiming under
them, for the restitution of such possession, together with
damages and costs.
23.Under this provision, for a forcible entry suit to prosper, the plaintiff
must allege and prove: (1) prior physical possession of the property.
and (2) unlawful deprivation of it by the defendant through force,
intimidation, strategy, threat or stealth.4
24.In the instant case, herein Plaintiff failed to allege as to how and
when she was able to acquire possession over the Agdao Property.
Thus, absent any proof as to prior physical possession, an action for
forcible entry must fail.
26.Thus, in a forcible entry case, "a party who can prove prior
possession can recover such possession even against the owner
himself. Whatever may be the character of his possession, if he has in
his favor prior possession in time, he has the security that entitles
him to remain on the property until a person with a better right
lawfully ejects him."46 He cannot be ejected by force, violence or
terror -- not even by its owners.
27.In the instant case, herein Defendants have been in actual possession
over the Agdao Property and remained in actual possession of the
same even when they temporarily lived in Wellspring Property. In
fact, herein Plaintiff had never stayed at the subject property and in
fact, is most of the time out of the country.
4
Gonzaga v. Court of Appeals, supra note 36, at 540, citing Bejar v. Caluag, G.R. No. 171277, February 15, 2007,
516 SCRA 84, 91.
5
Gonzaga v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 130841, February 26, 2008, 546 SCRA 532, 542.
6
Ibid.
Page 6 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
28.Plaintiff’s mere allegation that she allegedly entrusted one Sonny
Bucod as her right hand to manage the Agdao Property and handed
him the key, such mere allegation does not in any way prove actual
possession by herein Plaintiff.
29.The truth of the matter is that herein Defendants did not entirely
abandon the Agdao Property when the temporarily stayed at the
Wellspring Property. In fact, when the Extrajudicial Settlement with
Deed of Absolute Sale was executed last August 9, 2018, the Agdao
Property was still under the full possession of herein Defendant
Visitacion Bucod. After the signing of such Extrajudicial Settlement
with Deed of Absolute Sale, herein Plaintiff immediately went back
to Japan considering that she needs to return to her work
immediately.
31.Thus, from the time that herein Defendants were still transferring to
the Wellspring Property, the alleged key that herein Plaintiff claimed
that she entrusted to Sonny Bucod is still with the Defendants. Thus,
when the Defendants was forced to return to the Agdao Property,
they did so freely and without the alleged stealth and strategy that
herein Plaintiff is incessantly trying to prove.
32.Lastly, other than the bare allegation of stealth and strategy on the
entry of the herein Defendants in the Agdao Property, Plaintiff failed
to state the facts and circumstances on the alleged stealth and
strategy that the Defendants employed in entering the subject
property.
33.Plaintiff, in trying to bring the instant case within the ambit of the
elements of stealth and strategy for a forcible entry case to prosper,
simply alleged the Defendants, “without the knowledge, consent and
authority of Plaintiff, obtained the key of the Agdao Property from
Sonny Bucod and immediately entered, encroached and took
possession of the abovementioned property through stealth and
strategy.”
Page 7 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
the instant complaint, but what can be derived from the allegations in
the Complaint, at most, is that the alleged entry by herein
Defendants, was simply without “the knowledge, consent and
authority of the Plaintiff.”
35.The Plaintiff in the instant case prays for the issuance of a writ of
preliminary injunction. However, it is respectfully submitted that the
Plaintiff failed to allege sufficient facts to comply with the requisites
to be entitled to the same.
40.In the instant case, the amount of damages, if there be any, can be
easily determined and quantifiable in terms of monetary value. The
alleged cost of disposition as well as the cost of despoliation and
destruction that the Plaintiff grounded her prayer for injunctive relief
are well within quantifiable terms.
AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSES
“ xxxx
(g) That the pleading asserting the claim states no cause
of action; xxxx”
43.The test for determining the existence of a cause of action was amply
discussed in Insular Investment and Trust Corporation v. Capital One
Equities Corporation,14 citing Perpetual Savings Bank v. Fajardo,15 to wit:
11
Almeida v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 159124, 17 January 2005, 448 SCRA 681, 703.
12
PNB v. RJ Ventures, G.R. No. 164548, September 27, 2006.
13
Social Security Com. v. Hon. Bayona, 115 Phil. 106, 111 (1962), citing 28 Am. Jur., 244 and 43 C.J.S., 427, 446.
14
G.R. No. 183308, April 25, 2012, 671 SCRA 112.
15
G.R. No. 79760, June 28, 1993, 223 SCRA 720.
Page 9 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
“The familiar test for determining whether a complaint
did or did not state a cause of action against the
defendants is whether or not, admitting hypothetically
the truth of the allegations of fact made in the complaint,
a judge may validly grant the relief demanded in the
complaint. In Rava Development Corporation v. Court of
Appeals, the Court elaborated on this established
standard in the following manner:
44.It is well to point out that the plaintiff’s cause of action should not
merely be "stated" but, importantly, the statement thereof should be
"sufficient." This is why the elementary test in a motion to dismiss on
such ground is whether or not the complaint alleges facts which if
true would justify the relief demanded.16 As a corollary, it has been
held that only ultimate facts and not legal conclusions or evidentiary
facts are considered for purposes of applying the test. 17 This is
consistent with Section 1, Rule 8 of the Rules of Court which states
that the complaint need only allege the ultimate facts or the essential
facts constituting the plaintiff’s cause of action. A fact is essential if
they cannot be stricken out without leaving the statement of the
cause of action inadequate.18 Since the inquiry is into the sufficiency,
not the veracity, of the material allegations, it follows that the
analysis should be confined to the four corners of the complaint, and
no other.19
45.In the instant case, an examination of the Complaint readily shows its
failure to state a cause of action. In fact, the allegations there does not
proffer ultimate facts which warrant an action for forcible entry.
16
See Unicapital, Inc. v. Consing, Jr., G.R. Nos. 175277 and 175285, September 11, 2013, 705 SCRA 511, 526;
citations omitted.
17
See Abacan, Jr. v. Northwestern University, Inc., 495 Phil. 123, 133 (2005).
18
Cañete v. Genuino Ice Company, Inc., 566 Phil. 204, 218 (2008).
19
Santos v. Gran, G.R. No. 197380, October 8, 2014.
Page 10 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
Considering that for a forcible entry suit to prosper, the plaintiff must
allege and prove both prior physical possession of the property and
unlawful deprivation of it by the defendant through force,
intimidation, strategy, threat or stealth.
46.To prove prior possession, Plaintiff merely alleged that she allegedly
handed the key to Sonny Bucod. As the alleged entry, Plaintiff merely
alleged that the entry of the Defendants was made through stealth
and strategy without any supporting fact of circumstance as to the
alleged stealth and strategy employed by herein Defendants.
50.It must be noted that Defendant Mika was only 19 years old at the
time the “Deed of Assignment and Transfer of Rights” was executed
on 11 April 2011 and had no independent source of livelihood. This
obviously demonstrates that fact she had no financial capacity to
20
G.R. Nos. 58507-08, February 26, 1992, 206 SCRA 567.
Page 11 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
make any payment as the consideration over the Lot 1 of the Agdao
Property.
57.In the case of Valerio vs. Refresca, the Supreme Court held that one of
the most striking badges of absolute simulation is the complete
absence of any attempt on the part of a vendee to assert his right of
dominion over the property.
61.The real agreement of the parties was that the Plaintiff and Defendant
Visitacion Bucod agreed that the Agdao Property would be
purchased by the former from the latter for a total consideration of
Two Million Pesos (P2,000,000.00) which is broken down as follows:
Amount Details
P1,600,000.00 For buying the house and lot at Wellspring
Highland in Catalunan Pequeno where
Defendant Visitacion Bucod will transfer so
that the Agdao Property can be renovated to
the wishes of Plaintiff Mika Bucod
200,000.00 Cash to be received by Defendant Visitacion
Bucod
100,000.00 Budget for the processing of the transfer of
titles
100,000.00 Renovation and appliances for the Wellspring
Property
23
498 Phil 128 (2205) cited in the case of Maglasang vs. Northwestern Inc., G.R. No. 188986, 20 March 2013.
Page 14 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
68.It is a settled principle of law that rescission will not be permitted for
a slight or casual breach of the contract but only for such breaches as
are so substantial and fundamental so as to warrant the exercise of
the right to rescind the contract under Article 1191 of the Civil Code.24
70.In the case of Gotesco Properties, Inc., et.al. vs. Spouses Fajardo 26, the
Supreme Court underscored effect of rescission under Article 1191:
71.Of similar import is the case of Spouses Lam, et. al. vs. Kodak
Philippines27, where the Supreme Court held that:
24
Tan vs. Court of Appeals, et.al, G.R. No. 80479, 28 July 1989
25
G.R. No. 190080, 11 June 2014.
26
G.R. No. 167615, 11 January 2016 citing the case of Velarde vs. Court of Appeals, 413 Phil
360 (2001).
27
G.R. No. 167615, 11 January 2016 citing the case of Velarde vs. Court of Appeals, 413 Phil
360 (2001).
28
Emphasis and underscoring supplied.
Page 15 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
72.In view of the foregoing circumstances and doctrinal
pronouncements rendered by the Supreme Court, Plaintiff’s act of
selling the Well Spring Property is tantamount to a substantial and
material breach of her reciprocal obligation towards the heirs of
Eulalio, including Defendants herein. As a consequence thereof, the
exercise of the right to rescind the “Extrajudicial Settlement with
Deed of Absolute Sale” under Article 1191 of the Civil Code by the
heirs of Eulalio is warranted.
COMPULSORY COUNTERCLAIM
PRAYER
Page 16 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC
1. An Order be granted to set the case for preliminary hearing on the
affirmative defenses or otherwise, to immediately dismiss the case
based on the following affirmative defenses;
Other reliefs that are just and equitable are likewise prayed for.
Copy furnished:
Page 18 of 18
ANSWER
Shirato vs. Bucod
Civil Case No. M-DVO-19-02120-SC