#49. Montecillo vs. Reynes
#49. Montecillo vs. Reynes
#49. Montecillo vs. Reynes
The Case
On March 24, 1993, the Regional Trial Court of Cebu City, Branch 18, rendered a
Decision declaring the deed of sale of a parcel of land in favor of petitioner null and
void ab initio. The Court of Appeals, in its July 16, 1998 Decision as well as its
February 11, 1999 Order denying petitioners Motion for Reconsideration, affirmed the
trial courts decision in toto. Before this Court now is a Petition for Review on
Certiorari assailing the Court of Appeals decision and order.
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
The Facts
Respondents Ignacia Reynes (Reynes for brevity) and Spouses Abucay (Abucay
Spouses for brevity) filed on June 20, 1984 a complaint for Declaration of Nullity and
Quieting of Title against petitioner Rido Montecillo (Montecillo for brevity). Reynes
asserted that she is the owner of a lot situated in Mabolo, Cebu City, covered by
Transfer Certificate of Title No. 74196 and containing an area of 448 square meters
(Mabolo Lot for brevity). In 1981, Reynes sold 185 square meters of the Mabolo Lot to
the Abucay Spouses who built a residential house on the lot they bought.
Reynes alleged further that on March 1, 1984 she signed a Deed of Sale of the
Mabolo Lot in favor of Montecillo (Montecillos Deed of Sale for brevity). Reynes,
being illiterate, signed by affixing her thumb-mark on the document. Montecillo
promised to pay the agreed P47,000.00 purchase price within one month from the
signing of the Deed of Sale. Montecillos Deed of Sale states as follows:
[6]
[7]
That I, IGNACIA T. REYNES, of legal age, Filipino, widow, with residence and
postal address at Mabolo, Cebu City, Philippines, for and in consideration
of FORTY SEVEN THOUSAND (P47,000.00) PESOS, Philippine Currency,
Reynes further alleged that Montecillo failed to pay the purchase price after the
lapse of the one-month period, prompting Reynes to demand from Montecillo the return
of the Deed of Sale. Since Montecillo refused to return the Deed of Sale, Reynes
executed a document unilaterally revoking the sale and gave a copy of the document to
Montecillo.
[9]
Subsequently, on May 23, 1984 Reynes signed a Deed of Sale transferring to the
Abucay Spouses the entire Mabolo Lot, at the same time confirming the previous sale in
1981 of a 185-square meter portion of the lot. This Deed of Sale states:
Reynes and the Abucay Spouses alleged that on June 18, 1984 they received
information that the Register of Deeds of Cebu City issued Certificate of Title No. 90805
in the name of Montecillo for the Mabolo Lot.
Reynes and the Abucay Spouses argued that for lack of consideration there (was)
no meeting of the minds between Reynes and Montecillo. Thus, the trial court should
declare null and void ab initio Montecillos Deed of Sale, and order the cancellation of
Certificate of Title No. 90805 in the name of Montecillo.
[11]
In their Reply, Reynes and the Abucay Spouses contended that Montecillo did not
have authority to discharge the chattel mortgage, especially after Reynes revoked
Montecillos Deed of Sale and gave the mortgagee a copy of the document of
revocation. Reynes and the Abucay Spouses claimed that Montecillo secured the
release of the chattel mortgage through machination. They further asserted that
Montecillo took advantage of the real property taxes paid by the Abucay Spouses and
surreptitiously caused the transfer of the title to the Mabolo Lot in his name.
During pre-trial, Montecillo claimed that the consideration for the sale of the Mabolo
Lot was the amount he paid to Cebu Ice and Cold Storage Corporation (Cebu Ice
Storage for brevity) for the mortgage debt of Bienvenido Jayag (Jayag for
brevity). Montecillo argued that the release of the mortgage was necessary since the
mortgage constituted a lien on the Mabolo Lot.
Reynes, however, stated that she had nothing to do with Jayags mortgage debt
except that the house mortgaged by Jayag stood on a portion of the Mabolo
Lot. Reynes further stated that the payment by Montecillo to release the mortgage on
Jayags house is a matter between Montecillo and Jayag. The mortgage on the house,
being a chattel mortgage, could not be interpreted in any way as an encumbrance on
the Mabolo Lot. Reynes further claimed that the mortgage debt had long prescribed
since the P47,000.00 mortgage debt was due for payment on January 30, 1967.
The trial court rendered a decision on March 24, 1993 declaring the Deed of Sale to
Montecillo null and void. The trial court ordered the cancellation of Montecillos Transfer
Certificate of Title No. 90805 and the issuance of a new certificate of title in favor of the
Abucay Spouses. The trial court found that Montecillos Deed of Sale had no cause or
consideration because Montecillo never paid Reynes the P47,000.00 purchase price,
contrary to what is stated in the Deed of Sale that Reynes received the purchase price.
The trial court ruled that Montecillos Deed of Sale produced no effect whatsoever for
want of consideration. The dispositive portion of the trial courts decision reads as
follows:
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Still dissatisfied, Montecillo filed the present petition for review on certiorari.
The Issues
Montecillo raises the following issues:
1. Was there an agreement between Reynes and Montecillo that the stated
consideration of P47,000.00 in the Deed of Sale be paid to Cebu Ice and Cold
Storage to secure the release of the Transfer Certificate of Title?
2. If there was none, is the Deed of Sale void from the beginning or simply
rescissible?[15]
Payment shall be made to the person in whose favor the obligation has been
constituted, or his successor in interest, or any person authorized to receive
it.
Thus, Montecillos payment to Cebu Ice Storage is not the payment that would
extinguish Montecillos obligation to Reynes under the Deed of Sale.
[16]
It militates against common sense for Reynes to sell her Mabolo Lot for P47,000.00
if this entire amount would only go to Cebu Ice Storage, leaving not a single centavo to
her for giving up ownership of a valuable property. This incredible allegation of
Montecillo becomes even more absurd when one considers that Reynes did not benefit,
directly or indirectly, from the payment of the P47,000.00 to Cebu Ice Storage.
The trial court found that Reynes had nothing to do with Jayags mortgage debt with
Cebu Ice Storage. The trial court made the following findings of fact:
x x x. Plaintiff Ignacia Reynes was not a party to nor privy of the obligation in
favor of the Cebu Ice and Cold Storage Corporation, the obligation being
exclusively of Bienvenido Jayag and wife who mortgaged their residential
house constructed on the land subject matter of the complaint. The payment
by the defendant to release the residential house from the mortgage is a
matter between him and Jayag and cannot by implication or deception be
made to appear as an encumbrance upon the land.
[17]
Thus, Montecillos payment to Jayags creditor could not possibly redound to the
benefit of Reynes. We find no reason to disturb the factual findings of the trial
court. In petitions for review on certiorari as a mode of appeal under Rule 45, as in the
instant case, a petitioner can raise only questions of law. This Court is not the proper
venue to consider a factual issue as it is not a trier of facts.
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Second issue: whether the Deed of Sale is void ab initio or only rescissible.
Under Article 1318 of the Civil Code, [T]here is no contract unless the following
requisites concur: (1) Consent of the contracting parties; (2) Object certain which is the
subject matter of the contract; (3) Cause of the obligation which is established. Article
1352 of the Civil Code also provides that [C]ontracts without cause x x x produce no
effect whatsoever.
Montecillo argues that his Deed of Sale has all the requisites of a valid
contract. Montecillo points out that he agreed to purchase, and Reynes agreed to sell,
the Mabolo Lot at the price of P47,000.00. Thus, the three requisites for a valid contract
concur: consent, object certain and consideration. Montecillo asserts there is no lack of
consideration that would prevent the existence of a valid contract. Rather, there is only
non-payment of the consideration within the period agreed upon for payment.
Montecillo argues there is only a breach of his obligation to pay the full purchase
price on time. Such breach merely gives Reynes a right to ask for specific performance,
or for annulment of the obligation to sell the Mabolo Lot. Montecillo maintains that in
reciprocal obligations, the injured party can choose between fulfillment and rescission,
or more properly cancellation, of the obligation under Article 1191 of the Civil
Code. This Article also provides that the court shall decree the rescission claimed,
unless there be just cause authorizing the fixing of the period. Montecillo claims that
because Reynes failed to make a demand for payment, and instead unilaterally revoked
Montecillos Deed of Sale, the court has a just cause to fix the period for payment of the
balance of the purchase price.
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From the allegations in the pleadings of both parties and the oral and
documentary evidence adduced during the trial, the court is convinced that the
Deed of Sale (Exhibits 1 and 1-A) executed by plaintiff Ignacia Reynes
acknowledged before Notary Public Ponciano Alvinio is devoid of any
consideration. Plaintiff Ignacia Reynes through the representation of Baudillo
Baladjay had executed a Deed of Sale in favor of defendant on the promise
that the consideration should be paid within one (1) month from the execution
of the Deed of Sale. However, after the lapse of said period, defendant failed
to pay even a single centavo of the consideration. The answer of the
defendant did not allege clearly why no consideration was paid by him except
for the allegation that he had a balance of only P10,000.00. It turned out
during the pre-trial that what the defendant considered as the consideration
was the amount which he paid for the obligation of Bienvenido Jayag with the
Cebu Ice and Cold Storage Corporation over which plaintiff Ignacia Reynes
did not have a part except that the subject of the mortgage was constructed
on the parcel of land in question. Plaintiff Ignacia Reynes was not a party to
nor privy of the obligation in favor of the Cebu Ice and Cold Storage
Corporation, the obligation being exclusively of Bienvenido Jayag and wife
who mortgaged their residential house constructed on the land subject matter
of the complaint. The payment by the defendant to release the residential
house from the mortgage is a matter between him and Jayag and cannot by
implication or deception be made to appear as an encumbrance upon the
land.
[23]
Factual findings of the trial court are binding on us, especially if the Court of Appeals
affirms such findings. We do not disturb such findings unless the evidence on record
clearly does not support such findings or such findings are based on a patent
misunderstanding of facts, which is not the case here. Thus, we find no reason to
deviate from the findings of both the trial and appellate courts that no valid consideration
supported Montecillos Deed of Sale.
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This is not merely a case of failure to pay the purchase price, as Montecillo claims,
which can only amount to a breach of obligation with rescission as the proper remedy.
What we have here is a purported contract that lacks a cause - one of the three
essential requisites of a valid contract. Failure to pay the consideration is different from
lack of consideration. The former results in a right to demand the fulfillment or
cancellation of the obligation under an existing valid contract while the latter prevents
the existence of a valid contract
[26]
Where the deed of sale states that the purchase price has been paid but in fact has
never been paid, the deed of sale is null and void ab initio for lack of
consideration. This has been the well-settled rule as early as Ocejo Perez & Co. v.
Flores, a 1920 case. As subsequently explained in Mapalo v. Mapalo
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In our view, therefore, the ruling of this Court in Ocejo Perez & Co. vs. Flores,
40 Phil. 921, is squarely applicable herein. In that case we ruled that a
contract of purchase and sale is null and void and produces no effect
whatsoever where the same is without cause or consideration in that the
purchase price which appears thereon as paid has in fact never been paid by
the purchaser to the vendor.
The Court reiterated this rule in Vda. De Catindig v. Heirs of Catalina Roque, to
wit
[29]
The Appellate Courts finding that the price was not paid or that the statement
in the supposed contracts of sale (Exh. 6 to 26) as to the payment of the price
was simulated fortifies the view that the alleged sales were void. If the price is
simulated, the sale is void . . . (Art. 1471, Civil Code)
A contract of sale is void and produces no effect whatsoever where the price,
which appears thereon as paid, has in fact never been paid by the purchaser
to the vendor (Ocejo, Perez & Co. vs. Flores and Bas, 40 Phil. 921; Mapalo
vs. Mapalo, L-21489, May 19, 1966, 64 O.G. 331, 17 SCRA 114, 122). Such a
sale is non-existent (Borromeo vs. Borromeo, 98 Phil. 432) or cannot be
considered consummated (Cruzado vs. Bustos and Escaler, 34 Phil. 17;
Garanciang vs. Garanciang, L-22351, May 21, 1969, 28 SCRA 229).
Applying this well-entrenched doctrine to the instant case, we rule that Montecillos
Deed of Sale is null and void ab initio for lack of consideration.
Montecillo asserts that the only issue in controversy is the mode and/or manner of
payment and/or whether or not payment has been made. Montecillo implies that the
mode or manner of payment is separate from the consideration and does not affect the
validity of the contract. In the recent case of San Miguel Properties Philippines, Inc.
v. Huang, we ruled that
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contract of sale can exist. Although the Civil Code does not expressly state
that the minds of the parties must also meet on the terms or manner of
payment of the price, the same is needed, otherwise there is no sale. As held
in Toyota Shaw, Inc. v. Court of Appeals (244 SCRA 320 [1995]), agreement
on the manner of payment goes into the price such that a disagreement on
the manner of payment is tantamount to a failure to agree on the
price. (Emphasis supplied)
One of the three essential requisites of a valid contract is consent of the parties on
the object and cause of the contract. In a contract of sale, the parties must agree not
only on the price, but also on the manner of payment of the price. An agreement on the
price but a disagreement on the manner of its payment will not result in consent, thus
preventing the existence of a valid contract for lack of consent. This lack of consent is
separate and distinct from lack of consideration where the contract states that the
price has been paid when in fact it has never been paid.
Reynes expected Montecillo to pay him directly the P47,000.00 purchase price
within one month after the signing of the Deed of Sale. On the other hand, Montecillo
thought that his agreement with Reynes required him to pay the P47,000.00 purchase
price to Cebu Ice Storage to settle Jayags mortgage debt. Montecillo also
acknowledged a balance of P10,000.00 in favor of Reynes although this amount is not
stated in Montecillos Deed of Sale. Thus, there was no consent, or meeting of the
minds, between Reynes and Montecillo on the manner of payment. This prevented the
existence of a valid contract because of lack of consent.
In summary, Montecillos Deed of Sale is null and void ab initio not only for lack of
consideration, but also for lack of consent. The cancellation of TCT No. 90805 in the
name of Montecillo is in order as there was no valid contract transferring ownership of
the Mabolo Lot from Reynes to Montecillo.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED and the assailed Decision dated July 16,
1998 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 41349 is AFFIRMED. Costs against
petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Puno, (Chairman), Panganiban, and Sandoval-Gutierrez, JJ., concur.
[1]
Penned by Judge Galicano C. Arriesgado; Records of Civil Case No. CEB-2335, pp. 70-77.
Fourth Division composed of Justices Omar U. Amin (ponente), Minerva P. Gonzaga-Reyes (now retired
Justice of the Supreme Court) and Hector L. Hofilena; CA-G.R. CV No. 41349.
[2]
[3]
Rollo, pp. 14-15; signed by Justice Omar U. Amin and concurred in by Justices Hector L. Hofilena and
Presbitero J. Velasco, Jr. (now Court Administrator of the Supreme Court).
[4]
[5]
[6]
TSN dated October 27, 1987, cross-examination of Ignacia Reynes, p. 5; Exhibit 1, Defendants Offer of
Exhibits dated August 26, 1989.
[7]
[8]
[9]
TSN dated August 26, 1985, direct testimony of Bartolome Reynes, p. 29.
[10]
[11]
[12]
[13]
Rollo, pp. 18-24; Court Of Appeals Decision dated July 16, 1998.
[14]
Rollo, pp. 14-15; Court Of Appeals Resolution dated February 11, 1999.
[15]
Article 1231 of the Civil Code provides as follows: Obligations are extinguished: (1) By payment or
performance; x x x.
[16]
[17]
The second paragraph of Article 1241 of the Civil Code provides as follows: Payment made to a third
person shall also be valid insofar as it has redounded to the benefit of the creditor. x x x.
[18]
[19]
As used here, the term rescission refers to cancellation of a reciprocal obligation under Article 1191 of
the Civil Code, and does not mean a rescissible contract under Article 1381 of the same Code.
[20]
[21]
This is understood to be without prejudice to the rights of third persons who have acquired the
thing in accordance with Articles 1385 and 1388 and the Mortgage Law.
[22]
[23]
Philippine National Construction Corporation v. Mars Construction Enterprises, Inc., 325 SCRA 624
(2000).
[24]
[25]
San Miguel Properties Philippines., Inc. v. Huang, 336 SCRA 737 (2000), citing Ang Yu
Asuncion v. Court of Appeals, 238 SCRA 602 (1994).
[26]
[27]
40 Phil. 921.
[28]
17 SCRA 114.
74 SCRA 83; See also Rongavilla v. Court of Appeals, 294 SCRA 289 (1998); Yu Bu Guan v. Elvira
Ong, G.R. No. 144735, October 18, 2001.
[29]
[30]
Rollo, p. 8; Petition, p. 6.
[31]