Endaya vs. CA PDF
Endaya vs. CA PDF
Endaya vs. CA PDF
SYLLABUS
DECISION
ROMERO , J : p
Assailed in this petition for review on certiorari is the decision of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. No. 15724 dated April 26, 1989 1 reversing the judgment of the
Regional Trial Court of Tanauan, Batangas (Branch 6) in Civil Case No. T-430 2 and
holding that private respondent is an agricultural lessee in the land of petitioner whose
security of tenure must be respected by the latter.
The antecedent facts are as follows:
The Spouses Natividad Trinidad and Cesar San Diego owned a piece of
agricultural land consisting of 20,200 square meters situated at San Pioquinto, Malvar,
Batangas, devoted to rice and corn. As far back as 1934, private respondent Fideli has
been cultivating this land as a tenant of the Spouses San Diego under a fty- fty (50-
50) sharing agreement. This fact, petitioners do not dispute. prcd
On May 2, 1974, a lease contract was executed between the Spouses San Diego
and one Regino Cassanova for a period of four years from May 1974 up to May 1978. 3
The lease contract obliged Cassanova to pay P400.00 per hectare per annum and gave
him the authority to oversee the planting of crops on the land. 4 Private respondent
signed this lease contract as one of two witnesses. 5
The lease contract was subsequently renewed to last until May 1980 but the
rental was raised to P600.00. Again, private respondent signed the contract as witness.
6
During the entire duration of the lease contract between the Spouses San Diego
and Cassanova, private respondent continuously cultivated the land, sharing equally
with Cassanova the net produce of the harvests.
On January 6, 1980, the Spouses San Diego sold the land to petitioners for the
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sum or P26,000.00. The sale was registered with the Register of Deeds of Batangas
and a Transfer Certi cate of Title was duly issued on January 7, 1981. 7 Private
respondent continued to farm the land although petitioners claim that private
respondent was told immediately after the sale to vacate the land. 8 In any case, it is
undisputed that private respondent deposited with the Luzon Development Bank an
amount of about P8,000.00 as partial payment of the landowner's share in the harvests
for the years 1980 until 1985. 9
Due to petitioners' persistent demand for private respondent to vacate the land,
private respondent led in April 1985 a complaint 1 0 with the Regional Trial Court of
Tanauan, Batangas praying that he be declared the agricultural tenant of petitioners.
After trial, the trial court decided in favor of petitioners by holding that private
respondent is not an agricultural lessee of the land now owned by petitioners. The
dispositive portion of the RTC decision reads:
"WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered dismissing plaintiff's complaint to be
declared a tenant of the landholding consisting of 20,200 square meters, located
at San Pioquinto, Malvar, Batangas, and owned by the defendants; ordering Pedro
Fideli to vacate the landholding and deliver possession thereof to the defendants;
and ordering the amount of P8,000.00 deposited under Account No. 2940029826
Civil Case No. T-430 to be withdrawn and delivered to the defendants. No
pronouncement as to costs."
On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed the RTC decision and declared private
respondent to be the agricultural lessee of the subject landholding. Hence, this petition
wherein private respondent's status as an agricultural lessee and his security of tenure
as such are being disputed by petitioners. LexLib
Closer to, although not identical with the factual setting of the case at bar is
Novesteras v. Court of Appeals . 1 7 Petitioner in said case was a share tenant of the
respondent over two parcels of land. Respondent entered into a contract of civil lease
with Rosendo Porculas for a term of three years. Porculas did not farm the land himself
but left it to petitioner to till the land. After the expiration of the lease between
respondent and Porculas, petitioner entered into an agreement denominated as a
contract of civil lease with respondent. On expiration of this lease contract, respondent
denied petitioner possession over the land. Resolving the rights and obligations of the
parties, the Court, through Justice Paras, held that the petitioner therein became an
agricultural tenant of respondent by virtue of R.A. No. 3844 (1963), as amended by R.A.
No. 6839 (1971). The lease contract between the respondent and Porculas did not
terminate the agricultural leasehold relationship between petitioner and respondent. If
at all, the said lease agreement, coupled by the fact that Porculas allowed petitioner to
continue cultivating in his capacity as tenant of the subject landholding, served to
strengthen petitioner's security of tenure as an agricultural tenant of the farmland in
question. Accordingly, the subsequent contract between petitioner and respondent
denominated as a contract of civil lease was held by the Court to be in fact an
agricultural leasehold agreement.
Again, in Coconut Cooperative Marketing Association, Inc. (COCOMA) v. Court of
Appeals, 1 8 it was held that the agricultural leasehold is preserved, notwithstanding the
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transfer of the legal possession of the subject landholding, with the transferee,
COCOMA in that case, being accountable to the agricultural lessees for their rights. The
Court, through Justice Padilla, summarized the rule as follows:
"There is also no question that, in this case, there was a transfer of the legal
possession of the land from one landholder to another (Fule to petitioner
COCOMA). In connection therewith, Republic Act 3344, Sec. 10 states:
'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 landholdings, the
purchaser or transferee thereof shall be subrogated to the rights and
substituted to the obligations of the agricultural lessor.'
Further, in several cases, this Court sustained the preservation of the landholder-
tenant relationship, in cases of transfer of legal possession:
'. . . 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 purpose of Republic Act 1198,
particularly Sec. 8 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.)." 1 9
In the instant case, private respondent has been cultivating the subject farm
landholding with a fty- fty (50-50) sharing arrangement with the Spouses San Diego,
petitioners' predecessors-in-interest. The passage of R.A. 6839 in 1971, amending R.A.
3844 (1963), secured to private respondent all the rights pertaining to an agricultural
lessee. The execution of a lease agreement between the Spouses San Diego and Regino
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Cassanova in 1974 did not terminate private respondent's status as an agricultural
lessee. The fact that private respondent knew of, and consented to, the said lease
contract by signing as witness to the agreement may not be construed as a waiver of
his rights as an agricultural lessee. On the contrary, it was his right to know about the
lease contract since, as a result of the agreement, he had to deal with a new person
instead of with the owners directly as he used to. No provision may be found in the
lease contract and the renewal contract even intimating that private respondent has
waived his rights as an agricultural lessee. Militating against petitioners' theory that the
agricultural leasehold was terminated or waived upon the execution of the lease
agreement between the San Diegos and Cassanova is the fact that the latter desisted
from personally cultivating the land but left it to private respondent to undertake the
farming, the produce of the land being shared between Cassanova and private
respondent, while the former paid P400.00 and later P600.00 per hectare per annum to
the San Diegos, as agreed upon in the lease contract. prcd
SO ORDERED.
Gutierrez, Jr., Bidin, Davide, Jr. and Melo, JJ ., concur.
Footnotes
1. Penned by Associate Justice Alfredo M. Marigomen with the concurrence of Associate
Justices Josue N. Bellosillo and Alicia V. Sempio-Diy.
11. Sections 4 and 5 of R.A. No. 3844 (1963), as amended by R.A. No. 6839 (1971),
provide: