Flora v. Prado
Flora v. Prado
WHEREFORE, the appealed Decision is AFFIRMED, with the MODIFICATION that the
sale in dispute is declared valid only with respect to the one-seventh (1/7) share of plaintiff-
appellant NARCISA H. PRADO in the subject property, which is equivalent to 78.8857
square meters. In all other respects, the same decision stands. No pronouncement as to
costs.
SO ORDERED.[11]
II
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED A GRAVE ABUSE OF
DISCRETION IN MODIFYING THE DECISION RENDERED BY THE REGIONAL
TRIAL COURT WITHOUT TAKING INTO CONSIDERATION THE CLEAR AND
UNEQUIVOCAL STATEMENT IN THE SALE THAT THE SAME PERTAINS TO THE
CONJUGAL SHARE OF RESPONDENT NARCISA PRADO AND THE OTHER
RESPONDENTS HAD NO FINANCIAL CAPACITY TO ACQUIRE THE SAID
PROPERTY SINCE THEY WERE MINORS THEN AT THE ISSUANCE OF THE SAID
TCT NO. 71344 ON AUGUST 15, 1963.
III
IV
At the outset, it must be stressed that only questions of law may be raised in
petitions for review before this Court under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court. [14] It was
thus error for petitioners to ascribe to the Court of Appeals grave abuse of
discretion. This procedural lapse notwithstanding, in the interest of justice, this
Court shall treat the issues as cases of reversible error. [15]
The issues for resolution are: (1) Is the subject property conjugal or
paraphernal? (2) Is the transaction a sale or a mortgage? (3) Assuming that the
transaction is a sale, what was the area of the land subject of the sale?
Article 160 of the Civil Code, which was in effect at the time the sale was
entered into, provides that all property of the marriage is presumed to belong to the
conjugal partnership unless it is proved that it pertains exclusively to the husband
or to the wife. Proof of acquisition during the marriage is a condition sine qua
non in order for the presumption in favor of conjugal ownership to operate.[16]
In the instant case, while Narcisa testified during cross-examination that she
bought the subject property from Peoples Homesite Housing Corporation with her
own funds,[17] she, however admitted in the Agreement of Purchase and Sale and
the Deed of Absolute Sale that the property was her conjugal share with her first
husband, Patricio, Sr.[18] A verbal assertion that she bought the land with her own
funds is inadmissible to qualify the terms of a written agreement under the parole
evidence rule.[19] The so-called parole evidence rule forbids any addition to or
contradiction of the terms of a written instrument by testimony or other evidence
purporting to show that, at or before the execution of the parties written agreement,
other or different terms were agreed upon by the parties, varying the purport of the
written contract. Whatever is not found in the writing is understood to have been
waived and abandoned.[20]
Anent the second issue, the Deed of Absolute Sale executed by Narcisa in
favor of Tomas is contained in a notarized [21] document. In Spouses Alfarero, et al.
v. Spouses Sevilla, et al.,[22] it was held that a public document executed and
attested through the intervention of a notary public is evidence of the facts in a
clear, unequivocal manner therein expressed. Otherwise stated, public or notarial
documents, or those instruments duly acknowledged or proved and certified as
provided by law, may be presented in evidence without further proof, the certificate
of acknowledgment being prima facie evidence of the execution of the instrument
or document involved. In order to contradict the presumption of regularity of a
public document, evidence must be clear, convincing, and more than merely
preponderant.
It is well-settled that in civil cases, the party that alleges a fact has the burden
of proving it.[23] Except for the bare allegation that the transaction was one of
mortgage and not of sale, respondents failed to adduce evidence in support
thereof. Respondents also failed to controvert the presumption that private
transactions have been fair and regular. [24]
Furthermore, Narcisa, in fact did not deny that she executed an Affidavit
allowing spouses Wilfredo and Flordeliza Flora to construct a firewall between the
two-storey duplex and her house sometime in 1976. The duplex was made of
strong materials, the roofing being galvanized sheets. While the deed of sale
between Tomas and Narcisa was never registered nor annotated on the title,
respondents had knowledge of the possession of petitioners of the northern half
portion of the property. Obviously, respondents recognized the ownership of
Tomas, petitioners predecessor-in-interest.
Respondents belatedly claimed that only P5,000.00 out of the P10,500.00
consideration was paid. Both the Agreement of Purchase and Sale and the Deed
of Absolute Sale state that said consideration was paid in full. Moreover, the
presumption is that there was sufficient consideration for a written contract. [25]
The property being conjugal, upon the death of Patricio Prado, Sr., one-half of
the subject property was automatically reserved to the surviving spouse, Narcisa,
as her share in the conjugal partnership. Particios rights to the other half, in turn,
were transmitted upon his death to his heirs, which includes his widow Narcisa,
who is entitled to the same share as that of each of the legitimate children. Thus,
as a result of the death of Patricio, a regime of co-ownership arose between
Narcisa and the other heirs in relation to the property. The remaining one-half was
transmitted to his heirs by intestate succession. By the law on intestate succession,
his six children and Narcisa Prado inherited the same at one-seventh (1/7)
each pro indiviso.[26]Inasmuch as Narcisa inherited one-seventh (1/7) of her
husband's conjugal share in the said property and is the owner of one-half (1/2)
thereof as her conjugal share, she owns a total of 9/14 of the subject
property. Hence, Narcisa could validly convey her total undivided share in the
entire property to Tomas. Narcisa and her children are deemed co-owners of the
subject property.
Neither can the respondents invoke the proscription of encumbering the
property within 25 years from acquisition. In Sarmiento, et al. v. Salud, et al.,[27] it
was held that:
xxx The condition that the appellees Sarmiento spouses could not resell the property except
to the Peoples Homesite and Housing Corporation (PHHC for short) within the next 25
years after appellees purchasing the lot is manifestly a condition in favor of the PHHC, and
not one in favor of the Sarmiento spouses. The condition conferred no actionable right on
appellees herein, since it operated as a restriction upon their jus disponendi of the property
they bought, and thus limited their right of ownership. It follows that on the assumption that
the mortgage to appellee Salud and the foreclosure sale violated the condition in the
Sarmiento contract, only the PHHC was entitled to invoke the condition aforementioned,
and not the Sarmientos. The validity or invalidity of the sheriff's foreclosure sale to
appellant Salud thus depended exclusively on the PHHC; the latter could attack the sale as
violative of its right of exclusive reacquisition; but it (PHHC) also could waive the
condition and treat the sale as good, in which event, the sale can not be assailed for breach
of the condition aforestated.