1) Power Commercial vs. Court of Appeals - CDCP or PNCC 274 Scra 597 Ponente: Panganiban, J.
1) Power Commercial vs. Court of Appeals - CDCP or PNCC 274 Scra 597 Ponente: Panganiban, J.
1) Power Commercial vs. Court of Appeals - CDCP or PNCC 274 Scra 597 Ponente: Panganiban, J.
follows:
1.
Facts:
washed sand,
2.
3.
4.
sub-base.
1.
2.
3.
4.
ARTICLE V DELIVERY
'The FIRST PARTY [respondent] shall deliver a minimum of SIX
THOUSAND (6,000) cubic meters of combined concrete
aggregate per month until the entire requirements of the
SECOND PARTY [petitioner] to complete the Philphos Project
shall have been satisfied. (Underscoring supplied.)
BREACH:
CONTROVERSY: S-l-x
LOWER COURT:nigella
Rendered in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant ordering
the defendant to pay plaintiff:
a.) the amount of P680,000.00 as lucrum cessans;
b.) the amount of P33,387.91 for the outstanding obligation of
PNCC in favor of plaintiff (118,518.68 less price differential of
P85,120.77);
c.) attorneys fees x x x reduced to the reasonable amount of
P50,000.00; and as the costs of litigation."
Ruling of the Court of Appeals
Petitioner denied that it breached the contract and counterclaimed for the amount of P85,120 as price differential of the
procurement cost over the agreed price, plus reimbursement
of overpayment of P23,256.80 it had made arising from error
in measurement. (Answer, Counterclaim).
Issues
Whether PNCC was compelled to accept the delivery of the
17,000 cubic meters of washed 1-" gravel which is not in accord
with law and jurisprudence
Whether the damages award of the amount of P680,000.00 as
lucrum cessans is not in accord with law and jurisprudence.Slxsc
SO ORDERED.
2) Romero v ca 250 scra 223,
to the area of said second parcel, and even if he did make such
false representations as are now imputed to him by the
defendant, the latter accepted such representations at her own
risk and she is the only one responsible for the consequences of
her inexcusable credulousness.
As to the alleged error to the effect that the trial court failed to
order the reduction from the price due on the second parcel as
stated in the contract of sale Exhibit A, the proportional price of
the area lacking, we are of the opinion that said error has no
legal ground.
It appears that by the contract Exhibit A, the parties agreed to the
sale of two parcels of land, the first one containing 102 hectares,
67 acres and 32 centares, and the second one containing about
98 hectares, for the lump sum of P47,000 payable partly in cash
and partly in installments. Said two parcels are defind by means
of the boundaries given in the instrument. Therefore, the case
falls within the provision of article 1471 of the Civil Code, which
reads as follows:
There is no such thing. So long as the vendor can deliver, and for
that reason, delivers all the land included within the boundaries
assigned to the property, there can be no claim whatsoever either
on his part, although the area may be found to be much greater
than what was expressed, nor on the part of the puchaser
although that area may be in reality much smaller. But as he sold
everything within the boundaries and this is all the purchaser has
paid, or must pay for whether much or little, if afterwards it is
found that he cannot deliver all, because, for instance, a part, a
building, a valley, various pieces of land, a glen, etc., are not his,
there is no sale of a determinate object, there is no longer a sale
of the object agreed upon, and the solution given by the article is
then just and logical: Either the contract is annulled or the price
reduced proportionately.
o
o
o
o
ISSUES:
1) Whether the Court of Appeals erred in applying strictly to
the instant case the provisions of Articles 1558 and 1559 of
the new Civil Code;
2) Whether the decision of the Court of First Instance of Rizal
should have been affirmed by the Court of Appeals or at
least, the, Court of Appeals should have remanded the
case to the trial court, for hearing on the merits.
HELD: AFFIRMS CA. The petition is devoid of merit.
Consequently, it must be dismissed.
Issue:
WON the real transaction was lease or sale? SALE ON
INSTALLMENTS.
Held:
The real intention of the parties should prevail. The nomenclature
of the agreement cannot change its true essence, i.e., a sale on
installments. It is basic that a contract is what the law defines it
and the parties intend it to be, not what it is called by the parties.
It is apparent here that the intent of the parties to the subject
contract is for the so-called rentals to be the installment
payments. Upon the completion of the payments, then the rock
crusher, subject matter of the contract, would become the
property of the private respondents. This form of agreement has
been criticized as a lease only in name.
Sellers desirous of making conditional sales of their goods, but
who do not wish openly to make a bargain in that form, for one
reason or another, have frequently resorted to the device of
making contracts in the form of leases either with options to the
buyer to purchase for a small consideration at the end of term,
provided the so-called rent has been duly paid, or with stipulations
that if the rent throughout the term is paid, title shall thereupon
vest in the lessee. It is obvious that such transactions are leases
only in name. The so-called rent must necessarily be regarded as
payment of the price in installments since the due payment of the
agreed amount results, by the terms of bargain, in the transfer of
title to the lessee.
Indubitably, the device contract of lease with option to buy is at
times resorted to as a means to circumvent Article 1484,
particularly paragraph (3) thereof.Through the set-up, the vendor,
by retaining ownership over the property in the guise of being the
lessor, retains, likewise, the right to repossess the same, without
going through the process of foreclosure, in the event the vendeelessee defaults in the payment of the installments. There arises
therefore no need to constitute a chattel mortgage over the
movable sold. More important, the vendor, after repossessing the
property and, in effect, canceling the contract of sale, gets to keep
all the installments-cum-rentals already paid.
Even if there was a contract of sale, Filinvest is still not liable
because Sy Bang is presumed to be more knowledgeable, if not
experts, on the machinery subject of the contract, they should not
therefore be heard now to complain of any alleged deficiency of
the said machinery. It was Sy Bang who was negligent, not
Filinvest. Further, Sy Bang is precluded to complain because he
signed a Waiver of Warranty.
7) jm Tuazon v ca 94 scra 413,
J.M. TUASON & CO., INC., petitioner, vs.HON. COURT OF
APPEALS, ALFONSO DE LEON and ROSARIO G. DE LEON,
respondents.
Araneta, Mendoza & Papa for petitioner.
Martin B. Laurea for private respondents.
DE CASTRO, J.:
Appeal by certiorari from the decision of respondent Court of
Appeals (CA-G.R. No. 54695-R) affirming with modification the
decision of the Court of First Instance of Manila in Civil Case No.
89119, which is an action based on warranty against eviction, and
to recover the value of a subdivision lot at the time of eviction,
plus damages.
The following facts may be regarded as without any dispute:
On January 31, 1952, petitioner J.M. Tuason & Co., Inc.
executed, in favor of Ricardo de Leon, a contract to sell Lot No.
15, Block 460 of the Sta. Mesa Heights Subdivision containing an
area of 1,703.6 square meters with the agreed price of P24.60 per
advantage of the other party dealing with it. "Good faith consists
in an honest intention to abstain from taking any unconscientious
advantage of another. Good faith is an opposite of fraud and of
bad faith and its non-existence must be established by competent
proof." (Leung Yee vs. Strong Machinery Company, 37 PhiL 645;
Cui vs. Henson, 51 Phil. 606, 612; Fule vs. De Legare, 7 SCRA
351).
Moreover, at the time of the execution of the contract to sell it is
an admitted fact that Ricardo de Leon knew that a third party was
occupying a part of the lot subject of the sale. Ricardo de Leon
ought to have known that he was buying a property with the
distinct possibility of not being able to possess and own the land
due to the occupancy of another person on the same. So there
had to be an understanding between him and the petitioner for the
latter to eject the occupant, something which, by the facts then
obtaining and the law relevant thereto, would make the ejectment
more speculative than certain. Nonetheless, Ricardo de Leon
knowingly assumed the risk when he bought the, land, and was
even called a vendee in bad faith by the Court of Appeals in doing
so, clearly not an innocent purchaser in good faith. If petitioner
that it would eject Ramon Rivera, he did so, not knowing that the
compromise agreement would stand on the way, as it had
thought, in all good faith, that paragraph 7 of the compromise
agreement excluded the lot in question, having been already sold
to Ricardo de Leon before the agreement was executed in court.
This Court is impelled to declare that private respondents were
lacking in good faith for knowing beforehand, at the time of the
sale, the presence of an obstacle to their taking over the
possession of the land, which, in effect, would amount to eviction
from said land, and still they bought the land without first
removing that obstacle. (Angelo vs. Pacheco, 56 Phil. 70; Andaya
vs. Manansala, 107 Phil 1151).
One who purchases real estate with knowledge of a defect or lack
of title in his vendor cannot claim that he has acquired title thereto
in good faith, as against the true owner of the land or of an
interest therein; and the same rule must be applied to one who
has knowledge of facts which should have put him upon such
inquiry and investigation as might be necessary to acquaint him
with the defects in the title of his vendor. A purchaser cannot
close his eyes to facts which should put a reasonable man upon
his guard and then claim that he acted in good faith under the
belief that there was no defect in the title of the vendor (Leung
Yee vs. Strong Machinery Company, supra; Manancop Jr. vs.
Cansino, 1 SCRA 572; Paylago vs. Jarabe, 22-SCRA 1247;
Barrios vs. Court of Appeals, 78 SCRA 427; Emphasis supplied).
Without being shown to be vendees in good faith, herein
respondents are not entitled to the warranty against eviction nor
are they On titled to recover damages (Article 1555 of the Civil
Code). However, for justice and equity sake, and in consonance
with the salutary principle of non-enrichment at another's
expense, herein petitioner J.M. Tuason & Co., Inc. should
compensate respondents De Leons in the total sum of ONE
HUNDRED TWENTY SIX THOUSAND (P126,000.00) PESOS,
representing the aggregate value of the 1,050 square meters
(which petitioner was judicially ordered to sell to Ramon Rivera at
the year 1958 prevailing rate of P60.00 per square meter) at the
value of P120.00 per square meter, doubling the price of P60.00
per square meter which amount petitioner voluntarily offered to
pay herein respondents following how indemnity for death had
been raised from P6,000.00 to P12,060.00 (People vs. Pantoja,
25 SCRA 468, 474 [1968]) based on grounds of equity, due to the
reduced purchasing power of the peso, with the legal rate of
interest from December 5, 1972, the date respondents filed their
complaint, until the said total sum is fully paid.
WHEREFORE, the judgment of respondent court is hereby
modified by ordering petitioner J.M. Tuason & Co., Inc. to pay the
respondents the amount of ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-SIX
THOUSAND (Pl26,000.00) PESOS plus the legal rate of interest
from December 5, 1972, the date of filing the complaint until the s
aid total sum is fully paid. No costs.
8) Santiago land v ca 276 scra 674
SANTIAGO
LAND
DEVELOPMENT
CORPORATION,
petitioner, vs. The HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS and
the HEIRS OF NORBERTO J. QUISUMBING, respondents.
DECISION
MENDOZA, J.:
This is a petition for review on certiorari of the decision of the
Court of Appeals, annulling certain orders issued by the Regional
Trial Court of Makati, Branch 62 in Civil Case No. 10513, entitled
Norberto J. Quisumbing v. Philippine National Bank, to wit:
(1) Order, dated March 30, 1990, granting petitioner Santiago
Land Development Corporation's motion for intervention and
order admitting its answer in intervention;
(2) Order, dated March 21, 1991, denying private respondent
Quisumbing's motion to quash or disallow interrogatories and
(3) Order, dated July 30, 1991, denying Quisumbing's motion for
reconsideration.
The facts are as follows:
Norberto J. Quisumbing brought an action against the Philippine
National Bank to enforce an alleged right to redeem certain real
properties foreclosed by the Philippine National Bank.
Quisumbing brought the suit as assignee of the mortgagor,
Komatsu Industries (Phils.), Incorporated.
On November 21, 1989, with notice of the pending civil action,[1]
petitioner Santiago Land Development Corporation purchased
from PNB one of the properties subject of the litigation, situated
along Pasong Tamo Extension in Makati, for P90 Million.[2]
On December 11, 1989, petitioner SLDC filed a motion to
intervene, with its answer in intervention attached, alleging that it
was the transferee pendente lite of the property and that any
adverse ruling or decision which might be rendered against PNB
would necessarily affect it (petitioner).[3] In its attached answer,
SLDC, aside from adopting the answer filed by PNB, raised as
affirmative defenses the trial court's lack of jurisdiction based on
the alleged failure of plaintiff Quisumbing to pay the docket fee
In its petition before the Court, SLDC contends that the Court of
Appeals erred thus:
[1]
THE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ABUSED ITS
DISCRETION, EXCEEDED ITS JURISDICTION AND/OR WAS
PATENTLY IN ERROR IN TAKING COGNIZANCE OF AND
RULING UPON THE FIRST ISSUE RAISED BY PRIVATE
RESPONDENTS IN CA-G.R. SP NO. 25826 WHEN THIS ISSUE
WAS NOT EVEN RAISED BY THEM BEFORE THE TRIAL
COURT.
[2]
THE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ABUSED ITS
DISCRETION EXCEEDED ITS JURISDICTION AND/OR WAS
PATENTLY IN ERROR IN TAKING COGNIZANCE OF THE
PETITION RAISED BY PRIVATE RESPONDENTS IN CA-G.R.
SP NO. 25826 SINCE THEY DID NOT RAISE ANY
JURISDICTIONAL ERROR THEREIN BUT ONLY RAISED
QUESTIONS AS TO PROCEDURAL ORDERS ISSUED BY THE
TRIAL COURT IN THE RIGHTFUL EXERCISE OF ITS
JURISDICTION AND DISCRETION.
[3]
EVEN IF THE COURT OF APPEALS WAS
AUTHORIZED TO PASS UPON THE PROCEDURAL QUESTION
RAISED BY PRIVATE RESPONDENTS IN CA-G.R. SP NO.
25826, IT ERRED IN BARRING THE TRIAL COURT, IN THE
SOUND EXERCISE OF ITS SOUND DISCRETION, FROM
ALLOWING PETITIONER TO INTERVENE IN ONE OF THE
CLASSIC OR RECOGNIZED INSTANCES OF INTERVENTION
IN THE CIVIL ACTION UNDER SECTION 2 OF RULE 12 OF
THE RULES OF COURT DESPITE COMPLIANCE WITH THE
STANDARDS FOR INTERVENTION PRESCRIBED THEREIN.
[4]
THE COURT OF APPEALS DENIED PETITIONER OF
THE RIGHT TO GENUINELY OR EFFECTIVELY DEFEND
ITSELF IN THE CIVIL ACTION DESPITE ITS HAVING
ACQUIRED A REAL AND SUBSTANTIVE INTEREST IN THE
SUBJECT MATTER OF THE CIVIL ACTION.
[5]
PRIVATE RESPONDENTS FAILED TO OBJECT TO
THE INTERROGATORIES IN THE MANNER PRESCRIBED BY
THE RULES OF COURT AND THEY WERE THEREFORE
Sec. 20.
Transfer of interest. In case of any transfer of
interest, the action may be continued by or against the original
party, unless the court upon motion directs the person to whom
the interest is transferred to be substituted in the action or joined
with the original party.
In applying the rule on transfer of interest pendente lite (Rule 3,
20) rather than the rule on intervention (Rule 12, 2), the Court
of Appeals stated:
While it may be that respondent SLDC has a legal interest in the
subject matter of the litigation, its interest as transferee pendente
lite is different from that of an intervenor. Section 2 of Rule 12
refers to all other persons or entities whose legal interests stand
to be affected by a litigation, but it does not cover a transferee
pendente lite because such transferee is already specifically
governed by Section 20 of Rule 3. Otherwise, Section 20 of Rule
3 on transferees pendente lite would be rendered ineffectual and
useless. Since it specifically covers transferees pendente lite, any
such transferee cannot just disregard said provision and instead,
opt to participate as an intervenor when it is more convenient for it
to do so. Indeed, there has never been a rule, authority or
decision holding that a transferee pendente lite has the option to
avail of either Rule 3, Section 20 or Rule 12, Section 2.
. . . It has been consistently held that a transferee pendente lite
stands in exactly the same position as its predecessor-in-interest,
that is, the original defendant. . . . However, should the transferee
pendente lite choose to participate in the proceedings, it can only
do so as a substituted defendant or as a joint party-defendant.
The transferee pendente lite is a proper but not an indispensable
party as it would in any event be bound by the judgment against
his predecessor-in-interest. This would be true even if
respondent SLDC is not formally included as a party-defendant
through an amendment of the complaint. As such the transferee
pendente lite is bound by the proceedings already had in the case
before the property was transferred to it (Jocson vs. CA, 183
SCRA 589, citing Fetalino vs. Sanz, 44 Phil. 691; Associacion de
Agricultores de Talisay Silay, Inc. vs. Talisay Silay Milling Co., Inc.,
88 SCRA 294)
Petitioner asserts that Rule 12, 2 and Rule 3, 20 can be applied
interchangeably and that the Court of Appeals is in error in its
insistence on the application of Rule 3, 20 solely. Petitioner thus
overlooks a substantial difference in the nature and
consequences of the two rules. The purpose of Rule 12, 2 on
intervention is to enable a stranger to an action to become a party
to protect his interest and the court incidentally to settle all
conflicting claims.[13] On the other hand, the purpose of Rule 3,
20 is to provide for the substitution of the transferee pendente
lite precisely because he is not a stranger but a successor-ininterest of the transferor, who is a party to the action. As such, a
transferee's title to the property is subject to the incidents and
results of the pending litigation and is in no better position than
the vendor in whose shoes he now stands.[14] As held in Fetalino
v. Sanz:[15]
As such, he stands exactly in the shoes of his predecessor in
interest, the original defendant, and is bound by the proceedings
had in the case before the property was transferred to him. He is
a proper, but not an indispensable, party as he would, in any
event, have been bound by the judgment against his predecessor.
How then can it legally be possible for a transferee pendente lite
to still intervene when, for all intents and purposes, the law
already considers him joined or substituted in the pending action,
commencing at the exact moment when the transfer of interest is
perfected between the original party-transferor and the transferee
pendente lite? And this even if the transferee is not formally
joined as a party in the action. On the other hand, one who
intervenes has a choice not to intervene and thus not to be
concluded by any judgment that may be rendered between the
original parties to the action.
Because the transferee pendente lite simply takes the place of the
transferor, he is barred from presenting a new or different claim.
The appellate court therefore properly refused to pass upon