Conde Vs CA
Conde Vs CA
Conde Vs CA
Civil Law; Agency; Implied agency created from silence or lack of action or failure to repudiate
the agency.If, as opined by both the Court a quo and the Appellate Court, petitioner had done
nothing to formalize her repurchase, by the same token, neither have the vendees-a-retro done
anything to clear their title of the encumbrance therein regarding petitioners right to repurchase.
No new agreement was entered into by the parties as stipulated in the deed of pac to de retro, if
the vendors a retro failed to exercise their right of redemption after ten years. If, as alleged,
petitioner exerted no effort to procure the signature of Pio Altera after he had recovered from his
illness, neither did the Alteras repudiate the deed that their son-in-law had signed. Thus, an
implied agency must be held to have been created from their silence or lack of action, or their
failure to repudiate the agency.
Same; Laches; Respondents delay for 24 years in instituting action for quieting of title and
adverse and uninterrupted possession of the lot by the petitioner renders respondent guilty of
laches.Possession of the lot in dispute having been adversely and uninterruptedly with
petitioner from 1945 when the document of repurchase was executed, to 1969, when she
instituted this action, or for 24 years, the Alteras must be deemed to have incurred in laches.
Same; Sale; Purchaser in bad faith; Vendors who bought property despite being put on notice
of the condition in the title that the property was subject to repurchase deemed purchasers in
bad faith.Private respondents Ramon Conde and Catalina Conde, to whom Pio Altera sold the
disputed property in 1965, assuming that there was, indeed, such a sale, cannot be said to be
purchasers in good faith. OCT No. 534 in the name of the Alteras specifically contained the
condition that it was subject to the right of repurchase within 10 years from 1938. Although the
ten-year period had lapsed in 1965 and there was no annotation of any repurchase by
petitioner, neither had the title been cleared of that encumbrance. The purchasers were put on
notice that some other person could have a right to or interest in the property. It behooved
Ramon Conde and Catalina Conde to have looked into the right of redemption inscribed on the
title, and particularly the matter of possession, which, as also admitted by them at the pre-trial,
had been with petitioner since 1945.
Same; Same; Contracts; Interpretation; Vendors bound by clear terms of memorandum of
repurchase; Where contract is plain and unequivocal in its terms, vendors are bound thereby;
Duty of every contracting party to learn and know contents of document before he signs and
delivers it.Private respondent must be held bound by the clear terms of the Memorandum of
Repurchase that he had signed wherein he acknowledged the receipt of P165.00 and assumed
the obligation to maintain the repurchasers in peaceful possession should they be disturbed by
other persons. It was executed in the Visayan dialect which he understood. He cannot now be
allowed to dispute the same. x x x If the contract is plain and unequivocal in its terms he is
ordinarily bound thereby. It is the duty of every contracting party to learn and know its contents
before he signs and delivers it. [Conde vs. Court of Appeals, 119 SCRA 245(1982)]