Agrarian Reform
Agrarian Reform
Agrarian Reform
A.
1. Section 12
Section 12. Determination of Lease Rentals. In order to protect and
improve the tenurial and economic status of the farmers in tenanted lands
under the retention limit and lands not yet acquired under this Act, the
DAR is mandated to determine and fix immediately the lease rentals
thereof in accordance with Section 34 of Republic Act No. 3844, as
amended: provided, that the DAR shall immediately and periodically review
and adjust the rental structure for different crops, including rice and corn,
or different regions in order to improve progressively the conditions of the
farmer, tenant or lessee.
B.
1. Sections 4 to 10
Section 4. Abolition of Agricultural Share Tenancy - Agricultural share
tenancy, as herein defined, is hereby declared to be contrary to public
policy and shall be abolished: Provided, That existing share tenancy
contracts may continue in force and effect in any region or locality, to be
governed in the meantime by the pertinent provisions of Republic Act
Numbered Eleven hundred and ninety-nine, as amended, until the end of
the agricultural year when the National Land Reform Council proclaims that
all the government machineries and agencies in that region or locality
relating to leasehold envisioned in this Code are operating, unless such
contracts provide for a shorter period or the tenant sooner exercise his
option to elect the leasehold system: Provided, further, That in order not to
jeopardize international commitments, lands devoted to crops covered by
marketing allotments shall be made the subject of a separate proclamation
that adequate provisions, such as the organization of cooperatives,
marketing agreements, or other similar workable arrangements, have been
made to insure efficient management on all matters requiring
synchronization of the agricultural with the processing phases of such
crops: Provided, furthermore, That where the agricultural share tenancy
contract has ceased to be operative by virtue of this Code, or where such a
tenancy contract has been entered into in violation of the provisions of this
Code and is, therefore, null and void, and the tenant continues in
possession of the land for cultivation, there shall be presumed to exist a
leasehold relationship under the provisions of this Code, without prejudice
to the right of the landowner and the former tenant to enter into any other
lawful contract in relation to the land formerly under tenancy contract, as
long as in the interim the security of tenure of the former tenant under
Republic Act Numbered Eleven hundred and ninety-nine, as amended, and
event the agricultural lessor fails to exercise his choice within the periods
herein provided, the priority shall be in accordance with the order herein
established.
In case of death or permanent incapacity of the agricultural lessor, the
leasehold shall bind his legal heirs.
Section 10. Agricultural Leasehold Relation Not Extinguished by
Expiration of Period, etc. - The agricultural leasehold relation under this
Code shall not be extinguished by mere expiration of the term or period in
a leasehold contract nor by the sale, alienation or transfer of the legal
possession of the landholding. In case the agricultural lessor sells,
alienates or transfers the legal possession of the landholding, the
purchaser or transferee thereof shall be subrogated to the rights and
substituted to the obligations of the agricultural lessor.
2. Sections 15 to 16
Section 15. Agricultural Leasehold Contract in General - The agricultural
lessor and the agricultural lessee shall be free to enter into any kind of
terms, conditions or stipulations in a leasehold contract, as long as they
are not contrary to law, morals or public policy. A term, condition or
stipulation in an agricultural leasehold contract is considered contrary to
law, morals or public policy:
(1) If the agricultural lessee is required to pay a rental in excess of that
which is hereinafter provided for in this Chapter;
(2) If the agricultural lessee is required to pay a consideration in excess of
the fair rental value as defined herein, for the use of work animals and/or
farm implements belonging to the agricultural lessor or to any other
person; or
(3) If it is imposed as a condition in the agricultural leasehold contract: (a)
that the agricultural lessee is required to rent work animals or to hire farm
implements from the agricultural lessor or a third person, or to make use of
any store or services operated by the agricultural lessor or a third person;
or (b) that the agricultural lessee is required to perform any work or render
any service other than his duties and obligations provided in this Chapter
with or without compensation; or (c) that the agricultural lessee is required
to answer for any fine, deductions and/or assessments.
Any contract by which the agricultural lessee is required to accept a loan or
to make payment therefor in kind shall also be contrary to law, morals or
public policy.
(2) Non-compliance on the part of the agricultural lessor with any of the
obligations imposed upon him by the provisions of this Code or by his
contact with the agricultural lessee;
(3) To take reasonable care of the work animals and farm implements
delivered to him by the agricultural lessor and see that they are not used
for purposes other than those intended or used by another without the
knowledge and consent of the agricultural lessor: Provided, however, That
if said work animals get lost or die, or said farm implements get lost or are
destroyed, through the negligence of the agricultural lessee, he shall be
held responsible and made answerable therefor to the extent of the value
of the work animals and/or farm implements at the time of the loss, death
or destruction;
(4) To keep his farm and growing crops attended to during the work
season. In case of unjustified abandonment or neglect of his farm, any or
all of his expected produce may, upon order of the Court, be forfeited in
favor of the agricultural lessor to the extent of the damage caused
thereby;
(5) To notify the agricultural lessor at least three days before the date of
harvesting or, whenever applicable, of threshing; and
(6) To pay the lease rental to the agricultural lessor when it falls due.
Section 27. Prohibitions to Agricultural Lessee - It shall be unlawful for the
agricultural lessee:
(1) To contract to work additional landholdings belonging to a different
agricultural lessor or to acquire and personally cultivate an economic
family-size farm, without the knowledge and consent of the agricultural
lessor with whom he had entered first into household, if the first
landholding is of sufficient size to make him and the members of his
immediate farm household fully occupied in its cultivation; or
(2) To employ a sub-lessee on his landholding: Provided, however, That in
case of illness or temporary incapacity he may employ laborers whose
services on his landholding shall be on his account.
Section 28. Termination of Leasehold by Agricultural Lessee During
Agricultural Year - The agricultural lessee may terminate the leasehold
during the agricultural year for any of the following causes:
(1) Cruel, inhuman or offensive, treatment of the agricultural lessee or any
member of his immediate farm household by the agricultural lessor or his
representative with the knowledge and consent of the lessor;
In no case shall the agricultural lessor require the agricultural lessee to file
a bond, make a deposit or pay the rental in advance, in money or in kind or
in both, but a special and preferential lien is hereby created in favor of the
agricultural lessor over such portion of the gross harvest necessary for the
payment of the rental due in his favor.
Section 34. Consideration for the Lease of Riceland and Lands Devoted to
Other Crops - The consideration for the lease of riceland and lands devoted
to other crops shall not be more than the equivalent of twenty-five per
centum of the average normal harvest during the three agricultural years
immediately preceding the date the leasehold was established after
deducting the amount used for seeds and the cost of harvesting, threshing,
loading, hauling and processing, whichever are applicable: Provided, That if
the land has been cultivated for a period of less than three years, the initial
consideration shall be based on the average normal harvest during the
preceding years when the land was actually cultivated, or on the harvest of
the first year in the case of newly-cultivated lands, if that harvest is
normal: Provided, further, That after the lapse of the first three normal
harvests, the final consideration shall be based on the average normal
harvest during these three preceding agricultural years: Provided,
furthermore, That in the absence of any agreement between the parties as
to the rental, the maximum allowed herein shall apply: Provided, finally,
That if capital improvements are introduced on the farm not by the lessee
to increase its productivity, the rental shall be increased proportionately to
the consequent increase in production due to said improvements. In case
of disagreement, the Court shall determine the reasonable increase in
rental.
Section 35. Exemption from Leasehold of Other Kinds of Lands Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding Sections, in the case of
fishponds, saltbeds, and lands principally planted to citrus, coconuts,
cacao, coffee, durian, and other similar permanent trees at the time of the
approval of this Code, the consideration, as well as the tenancy system
prevailing, shall be governed by the provisions of Republic Act Numbered
Eleven hundred and ninety-nine, as amended.
Section 36. Possession of Landholding; Exceptions - Notwithstanding any
agreement as to the period or future surrender, of the land, an agricultural
lessee shall continue in the enjoyment and possession of his landholding
Section 37. Burden of Proof - The burden of proof to show the existence of
a lawful cause for the ejectment of an agricultural lessee shall rest upon
the agricultural lessor.
Section 38. Statute of Limitations - An action to enforce any cause of
action under this Code shall be barred if not commenced within three years
after such cause of action accrued.
C.
D.
Cases
1. Guerrero, et. al. vs. Court of Appeals, GR No. L-44570, May 30,
1986.
Whether or not a tenancy relationship exists between the parties Manuel
Guerrero, et al and Apolinario Benitez, et al. as to determine their
respective rights and obligations to one another is the issue in this petition
to review the decision of the then Court of Appeals, now the Intermediate
Appellate Court, which affirmed in toto the decision of the Court of
Agrarian Relations in CAR Case No. 6793-NE (SA-Q) '73, the dispositive
portion of which reads:
In view of all the foregoing, judgment is hereby rendered:
(1) ordering defendants-spouses Manuel and Maria Guerrero to reinstate
plaintiff Apolinario Benitez to the 10-hectare portion of the 16-hectare
coconut holding in question, located at Bo. San Joaquin, Maria Aurora Subprovince Quezon and to maintain said plaintiff in the peaceful possession
and cultivation thereof, with all the rights accorded and obligations
imposed upon him by law;
(2) ordering defendants Paulino and Rogelio both surnamed Latigay to
vacate the said ten-hectare portion and deliver possession thereof to
plaintiff Apolinario Benitez;
(3) ordering defendants-spouses Manuel and Maria Guerrero to pay
damages to plaintiffs in the amount of P14,911.20 beginning from July,
1973 and to pay the same amount every year thereafter until plaintiff is
effectively reinstated to the ten-hectare portion;
(4) denying plaintiff-tenants' prayer for reconstruction of the copra
cottage: and
(5) ordering defendants-spouses Manuel and Maria Guerrero to pay
plaintiff the amount of P200.00 by way of litigation expenses.
All other claims of the parties are denied. With costs against defendantsspouses.
Act 1199; delos Reyes vs. Espinelli, 30 SCRA 574). Respondent Benitez
lives on the landholding. He built his house as an annex to the petitioner's
copra kiln. A hired laborer would not build his own house at his expense at
the risk of losing the same upon his dismissal or termination any time.
Such conduct is more consistent with that of an agricultural tenant who
enjoys security of tenure under the law.
Cultivation is another important factor in determining the existence of
tenancy relationships. It is admitted that it had been one Conrado
Caruruan, with others, who had originally cleared the land in question and
planted the coconut trees, with the respondent coming to work in the
landholding only after the same were already fruit bearing. The mere fact
that it was not respondent Benitez who had actually seeded the land does
not mean that he is not a tenant of the land. The definition of cultivation is
not limited merely to the tilling, plowing or harrowing of the land. It
includes the promotion of growth and the care of the plants, or husbanding
the ground to forward the products of the earth by general industry. The
raising of coconuts is a unique agricultural enterprise. Unlike rice, the
planting of coconut seedlings does not need harrowing and plowing. Holes
are merely dug on the ground of sufficient depth and distance, the
seedlings placed in the holes and the surface thereof covered by soil. Some
coconut trees are planted only every thirty to a hundred years. The major
work in raising coconuts begins when the coconut trees are already
fruitbearing. Then it is cultivated by smudging or smoking the plantation,
taking care of the coconut trees, applying fertilizer, weeding and watering,
thereby increasing the produce. The fact that respondent Benitez, together
with his family, handles all phases of farmwork from clearing the
landholding to the processing of copra, although at times with the aid of
hired laborers, thereby cultivating the land, shows that he is a tenant, not a
mere farm laborer. (delos Reyes vs. Espinelli, supra Marcelo vs. de Leon,
105 Phil. 1175).
Further indicating the existence of a tenancy relationship between
petitioners and respondent is their agreement to share the produce or
harvest on a "tercio basis" that is, a 1/3 to 2/3 sharing in favor of the
petitioner-landowners. Though not a positive indication of the existence of
tenancy relations perse the sharing of harvest taken together with other
factors characteristic of tenancy shown to be present in the case at bar,
strengthens the claim of respondent that indeed, he is a tenant. The case
of delos Reyes vs. Espinelli (supra) clearly explains the matter thus:
The agricultural laborer works for the employer, and for his labor he
receives a salary or wage, regardless of whether the employer makes a
profit. On the other hand, the share tenant par ticipates in the agricultural
produce. His share is necessarily dependent on the amount of harvest.
Hence, the lower court's computation of damages in favor of respondent
based on the number of normal harvests. In most cases, we have
considered the system of sharing produce as convincing evidence of
tenancy relations.
l)
Violation or failure of the tenant to comply with any of the terms and
conditions of the tenancy contract or any of the provisions of the
Agricultural Tenancy Act;
xxx xxx
3) Use by the tenant of the land for purposes other than that specified
by the agreement of the parties;
xxx
by
the
petitioners'
counsel
of
the
ATTY. ESTEBAN:
Q
You said you are living at San Joaquin, who cause the sowing of the
lumber you made as annex in the house?
ATTY. NALUNDASAN
Please remember that under the law, tenant is given the right to live in the
holding in question. We admit him as tenant.
xxxxxxxxx
(Apolinario Benitez on Redirect, TSN, June 25, 1974, pp. 4950).
The respondent's status as agricultural tenant should be without question.
Once a tenancy relationship is established, the tenant has the right to
continue working until such relationship is extinguished according to law.
The Agricultural Tenancy Act of 1954 (Republic Act 1199), the Agricultural
Land Reform Code of 1963 (Republic Act 3844), the Code of Agrarian
Reforms (Republic Act 6389) and Presidential Decree 1038 (Strengthening
the Security of Tenure of Tenant Tillers in Non-Rice/Corn Producing
Agricultural Lands) all provide for the security of tenure of agricultural
tenants. Ejectment may be effected only for causes provided by law, to wit:
4)
Case SC-663 is whether or not the penal liability of a share-tenant for prereaping or pre-threshing under the Agricultural Tenancy Act (Republic Act
No. 1199, enacted on August 30, 1954) has been obliterated by the
Agricultural Land Reform Code (Republic Act No. 3844, enacted on August
8, 1963) and the subsequent agrarian laws.
The defendant-appellee Elias Adillo was a share-tenant of one Saturnino L.
Rebong on a parcel of riceland situated at Victoria, Laguna. On January 4,
1962, he was charged before the Court of First Instance of Laguna for
violation of Section 39 of the Agricultural Tenancy Act in that:
(O)n or about October 3, 1960 in the Municipality of Victoria, Province of
Laguna, Republic of the Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the accused above-named being then the tenant of a
piece of land owned by Saturnino L. Rebong under a share system, did
then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously reap and thresh a
portion of palay planted on said piece of land without the knowledge and
consent of Saturnino Rebong and even before a date has been fixed for the
reaping and threshing of the palay, to the damage and prejudice of
Saturnino Rebong.
On August 24, 1964, the counsel for the defendant-appellee 1 moved for
the quashal of the information on the submission that the Agricultural
Tenancy Act, on which the accusatory pleading against defendant-appellee
was based, has been repealed or abrogated by the new Agricultural Land
Reform Code, thereby resulting in the extinction of defendant-appellee's
criminal responsibility for pre-reaping and pre-threshing under the former
law. The lower court favorably resolved the motion and ordered the
dismissal of the case.
prohibition of doing it in advance of the date set," said the Court, "is to
enable the landholder to witness, personally or by representative, the
reaping and threshing operations. Pre-reaping in the absence of one party,
due to unilateral advancing of the date of the harvest, inevitably generates
ill feeling and strains relations between landholder and tenant due to the
suspicion aroused that part of the harvest may have been illegally
diverted. Such suspicion tends to poison the tenancy relation and is
inimical to agricultural peace and progress; wherefore, strict compliance
with the legal and contractual prescriptions as to the date of reaping and
threshing are of the essence of the statutory policy." This applies
particularly to rice share tenancy and may not be extended to embrace the
agricultural leasehold. The two tenancy systems are distinct and different
from each other. In sharehold, the tenant may choose to shoulder, in
addition to labor, any one or more of the items of contributions (such as
farm implements, work animals, final harrowing, transplanting), while in
leasehold, the tenant or lessee always shoulders all items of production
except the land. Under the sharehold system, the tenant and the
landholder are co-managers, whereas in leasehold system, the tenant is
the sole manager of the farmholding. Finally, in sharehold tenancy, the
tenant and the landholder divide the harvest in proportion to their
contributions, while in leasehold tenancy, the tenant or lessee gets the
whole produce with the mere obligation to pay a fixed rental. 3 There is
thus justification for the view that notice for reaping or threshing is not
required by the Act in leasehold system, because the lessee's principal
obligation is to pay the rental, which is to deliver a generic thing in the
absence of any specific agreement to the contrary, and that the rental is
supposed to be a specific amount, as fixed and limited in Section 45 of the
Act. Without any legal obligation imposed on the lessee to give such
notice, the lessor should take it upon himself to verify from the tenantlessee the date of reaping and threshing. 4
the amended statute repeated in the new one are retained (Idem, at p.
620, citing State ex rel Nagle v. Leader Co., 97 Mont. 586,37 Pac. (2) 561).
Thus confronted with the issue as to whether or not the penal liability of a
share tenancy for pre-reaping or pre-threshing under the Agricultural
Tenancy Act (Republic Act No. 1199) enacted on August 30, 1954, has been
obliterated by the Agricultural Land Reform Code (Republic Act No. 3844,
as amended by Republic Act No. 6389) and the subsequent Presidential
Decrees and Proclamations, the solution to the issue seems to be clear that
the injunction against pre-reaping and pre-threshing under the Agricultural
Tenancy Act of 1954 has lost its operative force and effect, and the penal
sanction therein subdued. Specifically, Section 39 of the Act, upon which
the accusatory pleading against defendant-appellee is predicted, is no
longer carried in the subsequent agrarian laws and decrees and its
violation thereof considered no longer an offense. As a result it would be
illogical to prosecute or sentence defendant-appellee for such offense
which no longer exists. 9
The whole failure of the laws and decrees subsequent to the Agricultural
Tenancy Act of 1954 to penalize the acts of pre-reaping and pre-threshing
which constituted the offense defined and penalized under the said Section
39 carries with it the deprivation of the courts of jurisdiction to try, convict,
and sentence persons charged with its
violations. 10
ACCORDINGLY, the order of dismissal of the information against defendantappellee for violation of Section 39 of the Agricultural Tenancy Act
(Republic Act No. 1199) is hereby affirmed without pronouncement as to
costs.
Gabriel and Pablo O. Gabriel, and prayed that appellee Trinidad Gabriel be
substituted by her heirs herein named. By order of this Court of December
4, 1973 the prayer for substitution was granted.
contending that the action should have been filed with the Court of
Agrarian Relations, which has original and exclusive jurisdiction, as their
relationship is one of leasehold tenancy.
In its resolution dated April 19, 1967 certifying the case to this Court, the
Court of Appeals made the following findings, which We adopt:
After the motion to dismiss was denied on the basis of the allegations of
the complaint, the parties were ordered to adduce evidence for the
purpose of determining which Court shall take cognizance of the case.
On June 18, 1960 Trinidad Gabriel filed a complaint in the Court of First
Instance of Pampanga against Eusebio Pangilinan alleging that she is the
owner of a fishpond situated in barrio Sta. Ursula, Betis, Pampanga and
measuring about 169,507 square meters; that sometime during the last
war she entered into an oral contract of lease thereof with the defendant
on a year to year basis, i.e., from January 1 to December 31, at a rental of
P1,200, plus the amount of real estate taxes, payable in advance in the
month of January; that desiring to develop and cultivate the fishpond by
herself, she notified the defendant in a letter dated June 26, 1957 that she
was terminating the contract as of December 31, 1957; that upon request
of the defendant, she extended the lease for another year; that on
November 19, 1958 she again wrote the defendant that he should
surrender possession of the fishpond on January 1, 1959, which demand he
however ignored. Plaintiff accordingly prayed that the defendant be
ordered to restore the possession of the fishpond to her and to pay her
P1,200, plus the amount of real estate taxes, a year from 1959, attorney's
fees and costs.
The defendant moved for the dismissal of the complaint on the ground that
the trial court had no jurisdiction over the case which properly pertains to
the Court of Agrarian Relations, there being an agricultural leasehold
tenancy relationship between the parties. Upon opposition by the plaintiff,
the motion was denied. The defendant thereafter filed his answer with
counterclaim alleging, inter alia, that the land in question was originally
leased to him, also verbally, by the plaintiff's father, Potenciano Gabriel in
1923 for as long as the defendant wanted subject to the condition that he
would convert the major portion into a fishpond and the part which was
already a fishpond be improved at his expense which would be reimbursed
by Potenciano Gabriel or his heirs at the termination of the lease for
whatever cause; that when the plaintiff became the owner of the property
through inheritance, she told the defendant that she would honor her
father's contract with the defendant, and likewise assured him that he
could continue leasing the property, whose original rental of P400.00 a
year had been progressively increased to P1,200.00, for as long as he
wanted since she was not in a position to attend to it personally. As a
special defense, the defendant reiterated the alleged lack of jurisdiction of
the trial court to take cognizance of the case.
On February 12, 1962 the trial court issued an order herein below quoted
in full:
The plaintiff sinks to eject the defendant from the fishpond described in the
complaint which is under lease to the said defendant, who, however,
refuses to vacate. Instead, he has impugned the jurisdiction of this Court
After the parties adduced their respective evidence on the merits, decision
was rendered wherein the trial court Pursuant to Article 1197 of the Civil
Code, fixed the period of the low up to June 30, 1964, the defendant on
said date to surrender possession of the fishpond to the plaintiff and to pay
the rentals due the latter. The plaintiff, on her part, was required upon
surrender of on to her, to pay the defendant the sum of P1,000.00 as
reimbursement of the expenses he incurred in improving the fishpond, and
upon failure by either party to pay the amount due the other, the same
would bear interest at the legal rate until full payment is made.
the fishpond personally or with the aid of the members of his immediate
farm household (Section 4, Republic Act No. 1199) the tenancy relationship
between the parties has been extinguished (Section 9, id.) and become of
civil lease and therefore the trial court properly assumed jurisdiction over
the case.
Those are the findings and conclusions of facts made by the Court of
Appeals which, as a general rule, bind this Court. 2
1. Let Us now discuss the issues raised in this appeal. First, was the
relationship between the appellee and appellant a leasehold tenancy or a
civil law lease?
2. The lower court erred in not holding that the Court of First Instance is
without jurisdiction, the cue being that of an agrarian relation in nature
pursuant to Rep Act. NO. 1199 as amended.
3. The lower court erred in appreciating the evidence of the appellant
particularly the basis for the expenditure for the development of the
fishpond in question.
4. The lower court erred in rendering judgment in favor of the appellant in
them easily amount of one thousand pesos for reimbursement and for
seven hundred pesos for the cost of the floodgate.
Anent the question of jurisdiction, it is an admitted fact that plaintiff leased
the fishpond to the defendant in 1943 without a fixed term, the annual
rental payable at the end of the year (Exhibit C, Deposition of plaintiff, Dec.
13, 1962, pp. 2 and 3). It is likewise undisputed that the work in the
fishpond consisted in letting out the water so algae (lumut) would grow or
if algae would not grow, getting some from the river and putting them in
the fishpond, changing the dirty water with fresh water, repairing leaks in
the dikes, and planting of fingerlings and attending to them; that these
were done by defendant, with some help; that he personally attended to
the fishpond until 1956 when he became ill; that thereafter his nephew
Bernardo Cayanan, who was living with him, helped in the work to be done
in the fishpond and his daughter Pilar Pangilinan helped in the
management, conveying his instructions to the workers (t.s.n., pp. 4-8,
Magat).
It does appear that the controversy on the issue of jurisdiction calls for the
interpretation of cultivating or working the land by the tenant personally or
with the aid of the members of his immediate farm household. 1
Upon the foregoing facts, the defendant insists that the relationship
between the parties is an agricultural leasehold tenancy governed by
Republic Act No. 1199, as amended, pursuant to section 35 of Republic Act
No. 3844, and the present case is therefore within the original and
exclusive jurisdiction of the Court of Agrarian Relations. Plaintiff, on the
other hand, maintains in effect that since defendant has ceased to work
the same Act requires for the existence of leasehold tenancy that the
tenant and his immediate farm household work the land. It provides that
leasehold tenancy exists when a person, who either personally or with the
aid of labor available from members of his immediate farm household,
undertakes to cultivate a piece of agricultural land susceptible of
cultivation by a single person together with members of his immediate
farm household, belonging to, or legally possessed by, another in
consideration of a fixed amount in money or in produce or in both.
A person, in order to be considered a tenant, must himself and with the aid
available from his immediate farm household cultivate the land. Persons,
therefore, who do not actually work the land cannot be considered tenants;
8 and he who hires others whom he pays for doing the cultivation of the
land, ceases to hold, and is considered as having abandoned the land as
tenant within the meaning of sections 5 and 8 of Republic Act. No. 1199,
and ceases to enjoy the status, rights, and privileges of one.
We are, therefore, constrained to agree with the court a quo that the
relationship between the appellee Trinidad Gabriel and appellant Eusebio
Pangilinan was not a leasehold tenancy under Republic Act No. 1199.
Hence, this case was not within the original and exclusive jurisdiction of
the Court of Agrarian Relations. 9
2. Regarding the second assignment of error, We accordingly rule that the
Court of First Instance correctly assumed jurisdiction over the case at bar,
this being a case of civil law lease.
3. We deem it unnecessary to discuss the third and fourth assigned errors
as these are issues involving findings of facts which have been settled by
the lower court, and unless there is grave abuse of discretion, which we do
not find in the record of the case, We shall not venture to discuss the
merits of the factual findings of the court a quo.
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the decision of the Court of First Instance of
Pampanga in its Civil Case No. 1823, appealed from, is affirmed, with costs
against the appellants.
This decision should apply to the heirs and successors-in-interest of the
original parties, as named in this decision. In consonance with the decision
of the lower court, the heirs and successors-in-interest of appellant Eusebio
Pangilinan should deliver the possession of the fishpond in question to the
heirs and successors-in-interest of appellee Trinidad Gabriel; and said heirs
and successors-in-interest of appellant Eusebio Pangilinan should pay the
heirs and successors-in-interest of appellee Trinidad Gabriel the accrued
rentals. From January 1, 1960, at the rate of P1,200.00 a year, until the
actual delivery of the possession of the fishpond as herein ordered, with
interest at the legal rate until full payment is made.
4. Coconut Cooperative Marketing Association vs.
Appeals, et. al., GR No. 46281-83, August 19, 1988.
Court
of
said Fule and Eddie A. Escudero, respectively, in compliance with the terms
of their marketing agreements with petitioner COCOMA. 5
On 9 October 1971, or after seven (7) years from 1964 that all the workers
had been receiving their wages as hired workers in said land from Fule and
later from Eddie A. Escudero, through the petitioner COCOMA, the
respondents Pedro, Hermogenes and Lucas, all surnamed Cosico, started to
claim to be the tenants in three (3) separate portions of said landholding,
consisting of about four (4) hectares each, more or less. They instituted
individually CAR Cases Nos. 2236, 2237 and 2238 against defendants
Rosario Paraiso Vda. de Fule and Villa Escudero Corporation (VESCO).
Respondents later amended their complaint in said cases by including,
petitioner COCOMA as defendant. 6
On 26 January 1976 the Court of Agrarian Relations (CAR) rendered a joint
decision:' in the three (3) cases, the dispositive part of which is as follows:
WHEREFORE, Judgment is hereby rendered:
1. Declaring plaintiffs Pedro Cosico (CAR CASE No. 2236) and Hermogenes
Cosico (CAR CASE No. 2237), as true and lawful tenants of the Coconut
Marketing Association (COCOMA), its duly authorized representatives,
successors in interest and/or assigns, over four (4) hectares each of
coconut land described in their respective complaints;
2. Declaring, furthermore, plaintiff Hermogenes Cosico as the true and
lawful tenant of defendant COCOMA, its duly authorized representatives,
successors in interest and/or assigns, over that four (4) hectares of coconut
land described in CAR CASE No. 2238, which is contiguous to that referred
to in CAR CASE No. 2237;
3. Declaring that no tenancy relations exists between defendant COCOMA
and Lucas Cosico, plaintiff in CAR CASE No. 2238;
4. Ordering defendant COCOMA, its representatives, successors in interest
and/or assigns, to immediately reinstate plaintiffs Pedro Cosico and
Hermogenes Cosico to the landholdings mentioned in the next preceding
paragraphs and to maintain them in peaceful possession and tenancy
thereof, on a sharing arrangement of 70-30 in favor of the defendant
COCOMA on the proceeds of the net harvest until such time as said parties
shall have mutually agreed on fixed rentals;
5. Ordering defendant COCOMA, its representatives, successors in interest
and/or assigns to deliver to plaintiffs Pedro Cosico and Hermogenes Cosico
the amount of P28,994.00 representing the 30% share of the said plaintiffs
from the coconuts harvested from the land in question for the period
covering November 12, 1971 up to June 4, 1975
6. Ordering defendant COCOMA, its representatives, successors in interest
and/or assigns to render an accounting of the harvests of the land for the
period starting June 5, 1975, up to the present and to deposit to the Court,
that respondent Benitez, together with his family, handles all phases of
farmwork from clearing the landholding to the processing of copra,
although at times with the aid of hired laborers, thereby cultivating the
land, shows that he is a tenant, not a mere farm laborer. 18
It may thus be said that the caretaker of an agricultural land can also be
considered the cultivator of the land. 19
In Marcelo v. De Leon, plaintiff therein argued that the defendant was not a
tenant inasmuch as the latter did not till or cultivate the land in order to
grow the fruit-bearing trees because they were already full-grown; that he
did not do the actual gathering of the fruits but merely supervised the
gathering; that after deducting the expenses, he gave one-half of the fruits
to the plaintiff all in consideration of the land. Ruling in the abovementioned case, this Court held:
Anyone who has had fruit trees in his yard, will disagree with the above
description of the relationship. He knows the caretaker must water the
trees, even fertilize them for better production, uproot weeds and turn the
soil, sometimes fumigate to eliminate plant pests, etc. Those chores
obviously mean 'working or cultivating' the land. Besides, it seems that
defendant planted other crops, (i.e. cultivated the lot) giving the landowner
his corresponding share. 20
Applying the foregoing precedents to the case at bar, and given the kind of
work performed by respondents on the landholding in question, the Court
holds that respondents are share tenants, not hired workers, of the
petitioner.
Further supportive of the existence of a share tenancy relationship
between petitioner and respondents is their agreement to share the
produce or harvest on a 1/7 to 6/7 basis in favor of the petitioner COCOMA.
Though not a decisive indication per se of the existence of tenancy
relationship, such sharing of the harvests, taken together with the other
factors characteristic of tenancy shown to be present in the case at bar,
strengthens the claim of respondents that, indeed, they are tenants.
To prove petitioner's claim that the private respondents are hired workers
and not its tenants, petitioner would rely mainly on the receipts signed by
respondents and other persons tending to show that they were paid by
petitioner for services rendered especially for cutting grass. 21
This Court cannot re-examine the facts as found by the Court of Appeals,
except for unusual and urgent reasons which however do not exist in this
case. Whether a person is a tenant or not is basically a question of fact and
the findings of the respondent court and the trial court are, generally,
entitled to respect and non-disturbance. 22
The conclusion then, anent the first issue, as borne out by the evidence on
record, is that private respondents Pedro and Hermogenes, both surnamed
Cosico, are share tenants of the land in dispute.
On the second issue, petitioner questions the recognition by the trial court
and the Court of Appeals of respondent Hermogenes Cosico as tenant in
the landholding where his co-respondent Lucas Cosico claims to be the
tenant, when the former is not even a party to the separate case filed by
the latter and he (Hermogenes Cosico) did not allege such tenancy in his
own amended complaint. In other words, it is petitioner's submission that
even if respondent Hermogenes Cosico were to be considered a tenant in
the landholding described in his amended complaint, the court had no
legal basis, however, in declaring him also a tenant of a landholding
described and claimed by another person in another case in which he
(Hermogenes) is not a party and which he did not claim to be a tenant of,
in his own complaint. 23
It is our considered judgment, since the return by the lessee of the leased
property to the lessor upon the expiration of the contract involves also a
transfer of legal possession, and taking into account the manifest intent of
the lawmaking body in amending the law, i.e., to provide the tenant with
security of tenure in all cases of transfer of legal possession, that the
instant case falls within and is governed by the provisions of Section 9 of
Republic Act 1199, as amended by Republic Act 2263. (Joya v. Pareja, 106
Phil. 645)
... that the tenant may proceed against the transferee of the land to
enforce obligation incurred by the former landholder in relation to said
land, for the reason that 'such obligation. . . falls upon the assignee or
transferee of the land' pursuant to Sec. 9 abovementioned. Since
respondents are in turn free to proceed against the former landholder for
reimbursement, it is not iniquitous to hold them responsible to the tenant
for said obligations. Moreover, it is the purposes of Republic Act 1199,
particularly Sec. 9 thereof, to insure that the right of the tenant to receive
his lawful share of the produce of the land is unhampered by the transfer
of said land from one landholder to another. (Almarinez v. Potenciano, 120
Phil. 1154.)
Therefore, petitioner, being a landholder, can be held liable to private
respondents for their shares in the coconuts harvested from the
landholding in question.
As to the fourth issue, i.e., that the computation of the private respondents
thirty percent (30%) share in the harvest from 1971 to 1975, made by the
Court of Agrarian Relations and affirmed by the Court of Appeals, is
erroneous, this Court finds no compelling reason to depart from such
computation, as it is a part of the findings of fact and conclusions drawn
therefrom by the respondent appellate court. Such findings and
conclusions should not be disturbed on appeal, in the absence of proof that
they are unfounded or were arbitrarily arrived at or that the Court of
Appeals had failed to consider important evidence to the contrary.
xxx
Under this rule, all that the appellate court has to do, insofar as the
evidence is concerned, is to find out if the decision:' is supported by
substantial evidence. So much so that the findings of fact of the Court of
Agrarian Relations, if supported by such evidence, are conclusive on the
appellate tribunal. 29
The respondent appellate court, in the case at bar, acted correctly when it
ruled:
On the whole, we are not at liberty to reverse the foregoing findings of fact
of the Agrarian Court in the absence of any proof that are unfounded or
where arbitrarily arrived at or that the court had failed to consider
important evidence to the contrary. It is well-established that so long as the
findings of fact of the Agrarian Court attain the minimum, evidentiary
support demanded by law, that is, supported by substantial evidence, such
findings cannot be reversed by the appellate tribunals. In the present case,
We do not find any cogent reason to adopt a conclusion different from that
reached by the court a quo. 30
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The decision:' appealed from is
AFFIRMED. Costs against the petitioner.
SO ORDERED.