Sps Uy Vs Ariza
Sps Uy Vs Ariza
The facts of the case are very clear. [Petitioners] bought from [respondents] a
200 square meter lot which was part of a bigger parcel of land covered by TCT No.
20007 registered in the names of [respondents], and which [petitioners]
immediately took possession of. After a year, [petitioners] again bought from
[respondents] and took possession of the adjacent lot also measuring 200 square
meters. Since the sale, [petitioners] had been in peaceful possession of the lots
until they were evicted from the same by third persons claiming to be the owners of
the said lots. Thus, if [petitioners] have a cause of action against [respondents], it
would be one for the enforcement of warranty against eviction and not one for
specific performance.
What is before Us is a clear case of eviction. Thus, the action for specific
performance filed by [petitioners] against [respondents] must necessarily fail. If at
all, [petitioners] may file an action for the enforcement of warranty in case of
eviction which every vendor of a parcel of land is enjoined by law to guarantee as
provided under Article 1548 of the New Civil Code:
Art. 1548. Eviction shall take place whenever by a final judgment based on a
right prior to the sale or an act imputable to the vendor, the vendee is deprived of
the whole or part of the thing purchased.
The vendor shall answer for the eviction even though nothing has been said
in the contract on the subject.
But even if [petitioners] would file an action for the enforcement of warranty
in case of eviction against [respondents], We are afraid that the same will not
prosper. The records of the case reveal that the unlawful detainer case filed by third
persons against [petitioners], which led to the ouster of the latter from the subject
lots, was decided by compromise agreement without impleading [respondents] as
third-party defendants. It should be stressed that in order for the case to prosper, it
is a precondition that the seller must have been summoned in the suit for the
eviction of the buyer. This rule is provided under the provisions of Articles 1558 and
1559 of the New Civil Code, to wit:
Art. 1558. The vendor shall not be obliged to make good the proper warranty,
unless he is summoned in the suit for eviction at the instance of the vendee.
Art. 1559. The defendant vendee shall ask, within the time fixed in the Rules
of Court for answering the complaint, that the vendor be made a co-defendant.
In order that a vendors liability for eviction may be enforced, the following
requisites must concur a) there must be a final judgment; b) the purchaser has been
deprived of the whole or part of the thing sold; c) said deprivation was by virtue of a
right prior to the sale made by the vendor; and d) the vendor has been summoned
and made co-defendant in the suit for eviction at the instance of the vendee. In the
case at bar, the fourth requisite that of being summoned in the suit for eviction
(Case No. 4252) at the instance of the vendee is not present.