Cannu vs. Galang and National Home Mortgage Finance Corporation
Cannu vs. Galang and National Home Mortgage Finance Corporation
Cannu vs. Galang and National Home Mortgage Finance Corporation
Oblicon Concept:
Settled is the rule that rescission or, more accurately, resolution, of a party to an obligation under Article 1191 is
predicated on a breach of faith by the other party that violates the reciprocity between them. Article 1191 reads:
Art. 1191. The power to rescind obligations is implied in reciprocal ones, in case one of the obligors should not
comply
with what is incumbent upon him.
The injured party may choose between the fulfillment and the rescission of the obligation, with the payment of
damages in
either case. He may also seek rescission, even after he has chosen fulfillment, if the latter should become impossible.
Rescission will not be permitted for a slight or casual breach of the contract. Rescission may be had only for such
breaches that are substantial and fundamental as to defeat the object of the parties in making the agreement. The
question of whether a breach of contract is substantial depends upon the attending circumstances and not merely on
the
percentage of the amount not paid.
Facts:
Respondents-spouses Gil and Fernandina Galang obtained a loan from Fortune Savings & Loan Association for
P173,800
to purchase a house and lot. To secure payment, a real estate mortgage was constituted on the said house and lot in
favor of Fortune Savings & Loan Association. In early 1990, NHMFC purchased the mortgage loan of
respondentsspouses
from
Fortune
Savings
&
Loan
Association
for
P173,800.
Respondent Fernandina Galang authorized4 her attorney-in-fact, Adelina R. Timbang, to sell the subject house and
lot.
Petitioner Leticia Cannu agreed to buy the property for P120,000 (P75,000 paid, P45,000 remaining balance unpaid)
and
Amber Gagajena Oblicon Digests – Block 1F
to assume the balance of the mortgage obligations with the NHMFC and with CERF Realty5 (the Developer of the
property).
A Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage Obligation dated 20 August 1990 was made and entered into by and
between spouses Fernandina and Gil Galang (vendors) and spouses Leticia and Felipe Cannu (vendees) over the
house
and lot. In the Deed of Sale, the contract price is P200,000. There was confusion but since the contract does not
show the
real intent of the parties (as evidenced in their testimonies and pleadings), the P120,000 price was followed.
Petitioners made payment to NHMFC amounting to P55,312 only. This payment is insufficient even to cover
arrears and
penalties. Petitioners paid the "equity" or second mortgage to CERF Realty.
Despite requests from Adelina R. Timbang and Fernandina Galang to pay the balance of P45,000 or in the
alternative to
vacate the property in question, petitioners refused to do so.
Petitioners‘ formal assumption of mortgage was not approved by the NHMFC because the Cannus failed to fully
comply
with their obligations, respondent Fernandina Galang, on 21 May 1993, paid P233,957 as full payment of her
remaining
mortgage loan with NHMFC.
Thereupon, a Complaint for Specific Performance and Damages was filed asking, among other things, that
petitioners
(plaintiffs therein) be declared the owners of the property involved subject to reimbursements of the amount made by
respondents-spouses (defendants therein) in preterminating the mortgage loan with NHMFC.
RTC and CA decided in favor of respondents.
Issue:
W/N the petitioners‘ breach of the obligation was substantial.
W/N there was no substantial compliance with the obligation to pay the monthly amortization of NHMFC.
W/N the CA erred when it failed to consider the other facts and circumstance that militate against rescission.
W/N the action for rescission is subsidiary.
Held:
Yes. In the case at bar, we find petitioners‘ failure to pay the remaining balance of P45,000 to be substantial. Even
assuming arguendo that only said amount was left out of the supposed consideration of P250,000, or eighteen (18%)
percent thereof, this percentage is still substantial.
Yes. The Court finds that petitioners were not religious in paying the amortization with the NHMFC. As admitted by
them,
in the span of three years from 1990 to 1993, their payments covered only thirty months. This, indeed, constitutes
another
breach or violation of the Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage. On top of this, there was no formal assumption
of
the mortgage obligation with NHMFC because of the lack of approval by the NHMFC on account of petitioners‘
nonsubmission