24 Dantis Vs Maghinang
24 Dantis Vs Maghinang
24 Dantis Vs Maghinang
191696
ROGELIO DANTIS vs. JULIO MAGHINANG, JR
Principle: The best evidence rule requires that the highest available degree of proof
must be produced. For documentary evidence, the contents of a document are best
proved by the production of the document itself to the exclusion of secondary or
substitutionary evidence.
Facts:
Petitioner Dantis filed a complaint for quieting of title and recovery of
possession against Respondent Maghinang. Petitioner alleged that he was the
registered owner of subject land, acquiring such thru an extrajudicial partition
of the estate from his deceased father. That respondent built a house on a
part of his estate; that his demands for respondent to vacate were unheeded.
Respondent Julio denied the allegations. He said that his father bought the
land from the Petitioners father and that he has succeeded to its ownership.
He also claims that he was entitled to a separate registration of said lot on
the basis of the documentary evidence of sale, and his open and
uninterrupted possession of the property.
Defendant presented the ff evidence to prove the sale of land to his father:
1. Exhibit 3 affidavit executed by Ignacio Dantis, grandfather of the Petitioner
of the agreement to sell such land
2. Exhibit 4 an undated handwritten receipt evidencing downpayment for said
lot
But defendant admitted that the affidavit was not signed by the alleged
vendor, Emilio Dantis, the father of petitioner. Also, he admitted that the
receipt he presented was admittedly a mere photocopy.
RTC rendered its decision in favor of petitioner. RTC found that the documents
would only serve as proofs that the purchase price for the subject lot had not
yet been completely paid and, hence, Rogelio was not duty-bound to deliver
the property to Julio, Jr. The RTC found Julio, Jr. to be a mere possessor by
tolerance.
CA ruled in favor of Defendant Maghinang. It held that the undated receipt
was proof of the sale of the lot. It also ruled that the partial payment of the
purchase price, coupled with the delivery gave efficacy to the oral sale, and
that Petitioner was duty-bound to convey what had been sold after full
payment of the selling price.
Issue: WON the pieces of evidence (affidavit and photocopy of the receipt)
submitted by the defendant are adequate proofs of the existence of the alleged oral
contract of sale of the lot in dispute.
Ruling:
No.
Exhibit "3," the affidavit of Ignacio, is hearsay evidence and, thus, cannot be
accorded any evidentiary weight. Evidence is hearsay when its probative force depends on the
competency and credibility of some persons other than the witness by whom it is sought to be produced. The
exclusion of hearsay evidence is anchored on three reasons: 1) absence of cross-examination; 2) absence of
demeanor evidence; and 3) absence of oath. The affidavit was not identified and its averments were not affirmed by affiant
Ignacio. Accordingly, it must be excluded from the judicial proceedings being an inadmissible hearsay evidence.