FIRST DIVISION
B & I REALTY CO.,
INC., G.R.
No. 146972
Petitioner,
Present:
PUNO, C.J., Chairperson,
SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ,
- v e r s u s - CORONA,
AZCUNA
and
LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, JJ.
TEODORO CASPE and
PURIFICACION AGUILAR CASPE,
Respondents. Promulgated:
January
29, 2008
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D E C I S I O N
CORONA, J.:
This petition for review on certiorari seeks to set aside the
February 7, 2001 decision[1] of the
Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. C.V. No. 57273.
This
case stems from two earlier complaints filed by Spouses Arsenio and Consorcia
L. Venegas[2] against
herein petitioner B & I Realty Co., Inc., respondent spouses Teodoro and
Purificacion Aguilar Caspe, and a certain Arturo G. Datuin.[3]
Consorcia
L. Venegas was the owner of a parcel of land located in Barrio Bagong-Ilog in Pasig,
Rizal and covered by TCT No. 247434. She delivered said title to, and executed
a simulated deed of sale in favor of, Datuin for purposes of obtaining a loan
with the Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation (RCBC). Datuin claimed that he
had connections with the management of RCBC and offered his assistance to
Venegas in obtaining a loan from the bank. He issued a receipt to the
Venegases, acknowledging that the lot was to be used as a collateral for bank
financing and that the deed of sale (with a resolutory condition) was executed
only as a device to obtain the loan.
However,
Datuin prepared a deed of absolute sale and, through forgery, made it appear
that the spouses Venegas executed the document in his favor. He was then able
to have the TCT transferred to his name. Consequently, TCT No. 247434 was
cancelled and a new title, TCT No. 377734, was issued to him by the register of
deeds. Thereafter, he obtained a loan from petitioner in the amount of P75,000
using the title of the property as collateral for the loan. The mortgage
was annotated at the back of the title.
Venegas
learned of Datuin's fraudulent scheme when she sold the lot (subject of the
mortgage) to herein respondents for P160,000 in a deed of conditional
sale.[4] She,
along with her husband, instituted a complaint against Datuin in the then Court
of First Instance (CFI) of Rizal, Branch 11, docketed as Civil Case No. 188893,
for recovery of property and nullification of TCT No. 377734, with damages.
However, when the case was called for pre-trial, the Venegases' counsel failed
to appear and the complaint was eventually dismissed without prejudice.
Thereafter,
Venegas and her husband, respondents and Datuin entered into a compromise
agreement whereby the Venegases agreed to sell and transfer the property to
respondents with the condition that they (respondents) would assume and settle
Datuin's mortgage debt to petitioner. The amount corresponding to the unpaid
mortgage would be deducted from the consideration.
As
provided for in the agreement, Datuin executed a deed of absolute sale over the property covered by TCT No. 377734
in favor of respondents. On February 12, 1976, the respondents started paying
their assumed mortgage obligation to petitioner.
However,
on August 27, 1980, Venegas brought a new action before the CFI of Pasig,
Branch 6, docketed as Civil Case No. 36852, for annulment of
the transfer of the property to Datuin and the declaration of nullity of all
transactions involving and annotated on TCT No. 377734, including the
mortgage executed in favor of petitioner, as well as the
cancellation of the conditional deed of sale to respondents. On January 10,
1986, the trial court ruled in favor of respondents, to wit:
WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of
the defendants spouses Teodoro Caspe and Purificacion A. Caspe on their
counterclaims and ordering the complaint of plaintiffs [spouses Venegas] as
well as the counterclaims of B & I Realty Co, Inc. dismissed. Arturo G.
Datuin is ordered to pay the damages suffered by the defendants-Caspe[s]
PhP10,000.00 as compensatory and consequential damages; PhP5,000.00 moral
damages and PhP5,000.00 attorney's fees and to pay the costs.
The sale between Consorcia Venegas and Arturo
G. Datuin is declared void from the beginning. Consequently, the transfer of
title no. 247434 from Venegas to Datuin is hereby ordered non-existent and
Transfer Certificate of Title No. 377734 in the name of Arturo G. Datuin is hereby cancelled. The
Conditional Deed of Sale between the Venegas and the Caspes is declared valid
and approved. All payments of Caspes to Venegas or agents, to Datuin and to B
& I Realty Co. Inc. are considered part of the PhP160,000.00 consideration
or purchase price.
The mortgage between Datuin and the
B & I Realty Co., Inc. is hereby declared cancelled and B & I Realty
Co., Inc. is hereby ordered to deliver the title to the Caspes upon the latter
paying said financing company the remaining balance of PhP15,132.00. The
Register of Deeds of Rizal is hereby ordered to cancel Transfer Certificate of
Title No. 377734 in the name of Arturo G. Datuin and in lieu to issue a new
title in the name of Teodoro Caspe and Purificacion A. Caspe.
Petitioner
interposed an appeal to the CA. On October 31, 1989, the CA held that all
pronouncements in the aforesaid CFI decision pertaining to petitioner had no
binding effect on it. It reasoned that the appealed decision adversely affected
petitioner on the basis of evidence presented ex-parte by respondents without
according the former the opportunity to controvert the same, in violation of
the due process clause. However, the CA affirmed the rest of the judgment.[5]
Respondents
filed a motion for reconsideration[6] which was
denied on January 25, 1990.[7] It
became final and executory as respondents did not appeal the denial thereof.
On
May 12, 1993, petitioner sent a demand letter to respondents for the payment of
their loan. The latter refused to pay.
On
August 27, 1993, petitioner filed an action for judicial foreclosure of
mortgage, the subject of the instant petition for review, against respondents
before the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 166, Pasig City. It was docketed
as SCA 447. In their answer, respondents argued that the action had
already prescribed.
On August 26, 1997, the RTC ruled in
favor of petitioner. The trial court held that the defense of prescription could
not prosper as it was not pleaded by respondents in their motion to dismiss.
Respondents
appealed to the CA which reversed the RTC decision and dismissed petitioner's
action for judicial foreclosure. It stated that, although the defense of
prescription was not pleaded in the motion to dismiss,[8] the same
was, however, pleaded in the answer[9] and in
their motion to set case for hearing on the special affirmative defenses.[10] As
such, respondents could not have waived the defense of prescription. The CA
further held that the action had indeed prescribed. It cited Section 1, Rule 9
of the 1997 Rules of Court:
Section
1. Defenses and objections not pleaded. - Defenses and objections not pleaded
either in a motion to dismiss or in the answer are deemed waived. However,
when it appears from the pleadings or the evidence on record that the court
has no jurisdiction over the subject matter, that there is another action
pending between the same parties for the same cause, or that the
action is barred by a prior judgment or by statute of limitations, the
court shall dismiss the claim. (emphasis supplied by the CA)
Petitioner
questioned the CA ruling that respondents did not waive the defense of
prescription. It argued that, as its complaint for judicial foreclosure of
mortgage was filed on August 27, 1993 before the effectivity of the 1997 Rules
of Court, the provision did not apply to the instant case. It invoked the old
rule in the 1964 Rules of Court as basis that its cause of action had not yet
prescribed.
Petitioner's contention is untenable.
Before
addressing the merits of the controversy, we shall first discuss a preliminary
matter relating to the application of the mode of appeal under Rule 45 of the
Rules of Court.
It
should be noted that the jurisdiction of this Court in a petition for review on
certiorari under Rule 45 is limited only to questions of law. This Court is not
a trier of facts. The findings of fact of the CA are binding and conclusive on this
Court. However, the application of this rule is not absolute and admits of
certain exceptions. For instance, factual findings of the CA may be reviewed by
this Court when the findings of fact of the RTC and the CA are conflicting.[11] In this
case, the RTC held that the action had already prescribed; the CA ruled
otherwise. Thus, although the petition now before us involves a question of
fact, that is, whether or not the action for judicial foreclosure of mortgage
has already prescribed, we may still rule on the same.
We
now proceed to the merits of this controversy.
On
one hand, the CA erred when it held that there was no waiver of the defense of
prescription even if it was invoked only in the answer and in the motion to set
case for hearing on the affirmative defenses, and not in the motion to dismiss,
because it should have been raised at the earliest possible time, in this case,
in the motion to dismiss. Thus, it was deemed waived in accordance with the
“omnibus motion rule.”[12]
On
the other hand, however, the CA was correct in applying the 1997 Rules of
Court. Procedural laws may be given retroactive application in cases of actions
pending and undetermined at the time of their passage.[13] In this
case, the action was still pending in the RTC when the 1997 Rules of Court was
promulgated on July 1, 1997. The RTC decided the case on August 26, 1997. Thus,
retroactive application of the 1997 Rules was proper. Ultimately, the CA did
not commit any error when it granted respondents’ appeal. It correctly applied
the 1997 Rules of Court and rightly ruled in favor of prescription as the same
was supported by the evidence on record.
In
fact, it was the evidence of the petitioner itself which proved that
prescription had set in:
1.
a duplicate original of the deed of real estate
mortgage,[14]
executed by Arturo G. Datuin, showing that the mortgage was executed on May 17,
1973. This deed of real estate mortgage expressly provided that the mortgage
loan (was to) be repaid within one year from the date thereof, or on May 17,
1974.
2.
a duplicate original of the promissory note,[15]
executed by Datuin on May 17, 1973, showing that he was indebted to petitioner
in the amount of P75,000 secured by a deed of real estate mortgage.
3.
a machine copy of the compromise agreement,[16] dated
June 11, 1975, executed by spouses Venegas, Datuin and respondents, showing
that the mortgaged property was sold and transferred to respondents on the
condition that they would assume and settle in full Datuin's mortgage loan to
petitioner.
4.
a machine copy of the deed of absolute sale,[17] dated
October 30, 1975, showing the sale of the mortgaged property between Arturo G.
Datuin and respondents. In this instrument, respondents acknowledged their
assumption of Datuin's mortgage.
5.
a statement of account of defendants[18] showing
the computation of the interests and service fees on the loan. In the said
statement of account, payments made by respondents to petitioner were duly
reflected. The series of payments began on February 12, 1976 and ended on
January 14, 1980.
6.
the complaint for judicial foreclosure of real state
mortgage was instituted on August 27, 1993.
Article
1142 of the Civil Code provides:
Art.
1142. A mortgage action prescribes after
ten years.
Article
1155 also provides that the prescription of actions is interrupted in the
following instance:
Art. 1155. The prescription of actions is interrupted when they are filed before the court, when there is a written extrajudicial demand by the creditors, and when there is any written acknowledgment of the debt by the debtor.
Although
the deed of real estate mortgage and the promissory note executed by Datuin
expressly declared that the date of maturity of the loan was May 14, 1974 or
one year after the real estate mortgage was entered into between Datuin and
petitioner, the same could not be the reckoning point for purposes of counting
the prescriptive period of the mortgage. This is because Datuin and respondents
executed a deed of absolute sale on October 30, 1975 whereby the latter
acknowledged and assumed the mortgage obligation of the former in favor of
petitioner. Under Article 1155 of the Civil Code, the written acknowledgment
and assumption of the mortgage obligation by respondents had the effect of
interrupting the prescriptive period of the mortgage action.[19]
A
perusal of the evidence for the petitioner, as may be gleaned from the
statement of account of respondents prepared by petitioner itself, revealed
that respondents made payments to the former beginning February 12, 1976 up to
January 14, 1980. No other payments were made thereafter.
We
have held in a number of cases that the computation of the prescriptive period
of any cause of action (the same as prescription of actions) starts from the
date when the cause of action accrues.[20] Here, petitioner's
cause of action accrued from the time respondents stopped paying the mortgage
debt they assumed from Datuin, in accordance with Article 1151 of the Civil Code:
Art.
1151. The time for the prescription of actions which have for their object the
enforcement of obligations to pay principal with interest or annuity runs from
the last payment of the annuity or of the interest.
It
was then that respondents committed a breach of duty to pay their remaining
obligation to the former.[21] Thus, the ten-year prescriptive period
should be reckoned from January 14, 1980. Petitioner had until January 14, 1990
to file suit so that, when it sued on August 27, 1993, the action had already
prescribed.
However,
even if we apply the 1964 Rules of Court as petitioner wants, its cause of
action had prescribed just the same.
Section 8,
Rule 15 of the 1964 Rules of Court provided:
Sec. 8. Omnibus
motion. - A motion attacking a pleading or a proceeding shall include all
objections then available, and all objections not so included shall be
deemed waived. (emphasis supplied)
Petitioner contends that the 1964 Rules unequivocally
provided that a motion attacking a pleading should state all the objections
available at the time of its filing. Otherwise, they were deemed waived. This
was in stark contrast to the present rule which provides for instances when
other objections may be made even after such an omnibus motion has already been
filed.
Admittedly,
respondents interposed the defense of prescription only in their answer after
having filed their motion to dismiss without alleging the said defense. Hence,
in accordance with the old rule, respondents' defense could not prosper as the
same was deemed waived.
It
should be pointed out that the difference between the two provisions is more
apparent than real. A review of the pertinent jurisprudence under the old rule
reveals the existence of exceptions to the general rule.
In
Philippine National Bank v. Perez, et al.,[22] the
Court held that:
The
rule does not obtain when the evidence shows that the cause of action upon
which plaintiff's complaint is based is already barred by the statute of
limitations. (emphasis supplied)
The Court made the same pronouncement in Philippine
National Bank v. Pacific Commission House[23] when, despite defendant's having been declared in
default for failure to answer after service of summons, it held that:
xxx
[T]he fact that the plaintiff's own allegation in the complaint or the evidence
it presented shows clearly that the action had prescribed removes this case
from the rule regarding waiver of the defense by failure to plead the same.
In
the case at bar, and as already explained, the evidence of the petitioner
itself showed that prescription had in fact set in.
Petitioner,
however, argues that the filing of Civil Case No. 36852 by the Venegases had
the effect of interrupting the prescriptive period for the filing of the
complaint for judicial foreclosure of mortgage. We disagree.
Petitioner
is clutching at straws to justify its failure to institute the action within
the required period. We agree with the CA's ruling that Civil Case No. 36852
did not have the effect of interrupting the prescription of the action for
foreclosure of mortgage as it was not an action for foreclosure but one for
annulment of title and nullification of the deed of mortgage and the deed of
sale. It was not at all the action contemplated in Article 1155 of the Civil
Code which explicitly provides that the prescription of an action is
interrupted only when the action itself is filed in court.
Petitioner
nevertheless claims that it had to wait for the decision in Civil Case No.
36852 before it could file a complaint for judicial foreclosure of mortgage as
the same would have constituted forum shopping. Petitioner's argument is misplaced.
Petitioner
could have protected its right over the property by filing a cross-claim[24] for
judicial foreclosure of mortgage against respondents in Civil Case No. 36852.
The filing of a cross-claim would have been proper there. All the issues
pertaining to the mortgage — validity of the mortgage and the propriety of
foreclosure — would have been passed upon concurrently and not on a piecemeal
basis. This should be the case as the issue of foreclosure of the subject mortgage
was connected with, or dependent on, the subject of annulment of mortgage in
Civil Case No. 36852.
The
records indicate that petitioner even threatened to foreclose on the mortgage
during the pendency of Civil Case No. 36852. This prompted respondents to ask
the trial court to issue an order to restrain petitioner from proceeding with
the institution of such an action pending the disposition of the case, to
maintain the status quo.[25]
Petitioner cannot now claim that it had to wait for the decision of the court
in Civil Case No. 36852 before it could institute the foreclosure. Its
actuations clearly manifested that it knew its rights under the law but chose
to sleep on the same.
WHEREFORE,
the petition is hereby DENIED. The February 7, 2001 decision of the
Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. C.V. No. 57273 is AFFIRMED.
Costs against petitioner.
SO
ORDERED.
RENATO C. CORONA
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
Chairperson
ANGELINA SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ ADOLFO S. AZCUNA
Associate Justice Associate Justice
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO
Associate Justice
C E R T
I F I C A T I O N
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the
Constitution, I certify that the conclusions in the above decision had been
reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the
opinion of the Court's Division.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
[1] Penned by Associate Justice Ma. Alicia Austria-Martinez (now a member of this Court) and concurred in by Associate Justices Hilarion L. Aquino (retired) and Jose L. Sabio, Jr. of the Fourth Division of the Court of Appeals. Rollo, pp. 23-31.
[2] Not a party to this case.
[3] Also not a party to this case.
[4] Exhibit “H,” rollo, pp. 31-39.
[5] Penned by Justice Jesus M. Elbinias (retired) and concurred in by Associate Justices Ricardo J. Francisco (who subsequently became a member of this Court; now deceased) and Antonio M. Martinez (who also subsequently became a member of this Court; also deceased). Exhibit “M,” id., pp. 101-106.
[6] Dated December 11, 1989. Annex N of the Complaint, id., pp. 107-116.
[7] Exhibit “N,” id., pp. 117-118.
[8] Dated November 3, 1993, RTC records, pp. 132-140.
[9] Dated January 29, 1996, id., pp. 309-314.
[10] Dated February 8, 1996, id., pp. 315-320.
[11] Baricuatro, Jr. v. CA, 382 Phil. 15, 24 (2000).
[12] Citibank, N.A. v. CA, G.R. No. 61508, 17 March 1999, 304 SCRA 679, 693-694; Manacop v. CA, G.R. No. 104875, 13 November 1992, 215 SCRA 773, 778.
[13] Ruiz v. CA, G.R. No. 116909, 25 February 1999, 303 SCRA 637, 644; Municipal Government of Coron, Palawan v. Carino, No. L-65894, 24 September 1987, 154 SCRA 216, 222.
[14] Annex A of the Complaint, RTC records, pp. 17-18.
[15] Annex B of the Complaint, id., p. 19.
[16] Annex E of the Complaint, id., pp. 26-30. This machine copy was stipulated as a faithful reproduction of the original.
[17] Annex C of the Complaint, id., pp. 20-22. This machine copy was stipulated as a faithful reproduction of the original.
[18] Exhibit “O-4,” Plaintiff's Offer of Evidence.
[19] Provident Savings Bank v. CA, G.R. No. 97218, 17 May 1993, 222 SCRA 125, 132, citing Osmena v. Rama, 14 Phil. 99, 102 (1909) and 4 Tolentino, Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the Civil Code of the Philippines, 1991 ed., p. 50.
[20] Elido, Sr. v. CA, G.R. No. 95441, 16 December 1992, 216 SCRA 637, 644; Nabus v. CA, G.R. No. 91670, 7 February 1991, 193 SCRA 732, 747.
[21] Young v. CA, G.R. No. 83271, 8 May 1991, 196 SCRA 795, 801; Nabus v. CA, supra at note 20.
[22] No. L-20412, 28 February 1966, 16 SCRA 270, 272.
[23] No. L-22675, 28 March 1969, 27 SCRA 766, 768.
[24] Section 7, Rule 6 of the 1964 Rules of Court
provided:
Sec.
7. Cross-claim. - A cross-claim is any claim by one party against a co-party
arising out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter either
of the original action or of a counterclaim therein. Such cross-claim may
include a claim that the party against whom it is asserted is or may be liable
to the cross-claimant for all or part of a claim asserted in the action against
the cross-claimant.
See Ligon v. CA,
G.R. No. 127683, 7 August 1998, 294 SCRA 73, 76. Although the issue therein did
not touch on the prescriptive period of mortgages, it illustrates that a
cross-claim may be filed by a mortgagee against the mortgagor in an action for
annulment of mortgage, impleading the former, filed by a person not a party to
the mortgage.
In the aforementioned case, petitioner was the mortgagee in three deeds of mortgage covering two parcels of land executed by the Islamic Directorate of the Philippines (IDP). IDP sold the two parcels of land to Iglesia ni Cristo (INC). When IDP failed to comply with a condition stipulated in the deed of absolute sale executed by the parties, the INC filed a complaint for specific performance with damages against IDP with the RTC of Quezon City. The trial court ruled in favor of INC. Thereafter, INC filed with the same RTC a complaint for the annulment of the deeds of mortgage over the two lots, impleading as defendants Ligon, IDP and two other parties. Ligon filed an answer with counter-claim, a cross-claim against IDP for the foreclosure of the mortgages and a third-party complaint against several other parties.
[25] Exhibit “J,” RTC records, p. 49.