FRANCISCO MUÑOZ, JR.,
Petitioner, -
versus - ERLINDA RAMIREZ and ELISEO CARLOS,
Respondents. |
G.R.
No. 156125
Present: CARPIO
MORALES, J., Chairperson, BRION, BERSAMIN, VILLARAMA, JR., and SERENO, JJ. Promulgated: August 25, 2010 |
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D E C I S I O N
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BRION, J.:
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We
resolve the present petition for review on certiorari[1] filed by petitioner
Francisco Muñoz, Jr. (petitioner) to
challenge the decision[2] and the resolution[3] of the
Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV
No. 57126.[4] The CA
decision set aside the decision[5] of the
Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch
166, Pasig City, in Civil Case No. 63665. The CA resolution denied the
petitioner’s subsequent motion for reconsideration.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The
facts of the case, gathered from the records, are briefly summarized below.
Subject
of the present case is a seventy-seven (77)-square meter residential house and
lot located at 170 A. Bonifacio Street, Mandaluyong City (subject property), covered by Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 7650 of the Registry of Deeds
of Mandaluyong City in the name of the petitioner.[6]
The
residential lot in the subject property was previously covered by TCT No. 1427,
in the name of Erlinda Ramirez, married to Eliseo Carlos (respondents).[7]
On
April 6, 1989, Eliseo, a Bureau of Internal Revenue employee, mortgaged TCT No.
1427, with Erlinda’s consent, to the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) to secure a P136,500.00
housing loan, payable within twenty (20) years, through monthly salary
deductions of P1,687.66.[8] The respondents then constructed a thirty-six
(36)-square meter, two-story residential house on the lot.
On
July 14, 1993, the title to the subject property was transferred to the petitioner
by virtue of a Deed of Absolute Sale, dated April 30, 1992, executed by Erlinda,
for herself and as attorney-in-fact of Eliseo, for a stated consideration of P602,000.00.[9]
On
September 24, 1993, the respondents filed a complaint with the RTC for the nullification
of the deed of absolute sale, claiming that there was no sale but only a
mortgage transaction, and the documents transferring the title to the
petitioner’s name were falsified.
The
respondents alleged that in April 1992, the petitioner granted them a P600,000.00
loan, to be secured by a first mortgage on TCT No. 1427; the petitioner gave Erlinda
a P200,000.00[10] advance to
cancel the GSIS mortgage, and made her sign a document purporting to be the
mortgage contract; the petitioner promised to give the P402,000.00
balance when Erlinda surrenders TCT No. 1427 with the GSIS mortgage cancelled,
and submits an affidavit signed by Eliseo stating that he waives all his rights
to the subject property; with the P200,000.00 advance, Erlinda paid GSIS
P176,445.27[11] to cancel
the GSIS mortgage on TCT No. 1427;[12]
in May 1992, Erlinda surrendered to the
petitioner the clean TCT No. 1427, but returned Eliseo’s affidavit, unsigned;
since Eliseo’s affidavit was unsigned, the petitioner refused to give the P402,000.00
balance and to cancel the mortgage, and demanded that Erlinda return the P200,000.00
advance; since Erlinda could not return the P200,000.00 advance because
it had been used to pay the GSIS loan, the petitioner kept the title; and in
1993, they discovered that TCT No. 7650 had been issued in the petitioner’s
name, cancelling TCT No.1427 in their name.
The
petitioner countered that there was a valid contract of sale. He alleged that
the respondents sold the subject property to him after he refused their offer
to mortgage the subject property because they lacked paying capacity and were unwilling
to pay the incidental charges; the sale was with the implied promise to
repurchase within one year,[13] during which
period (from May 1, 1992 to April 30, 1993), the respondents would lease the subject
property for a monthly rental of P500.00;[14]
when the respondents failed to repurchase the subject property within the
one-year period despite notice, he caused the transfer of title in his name on
July 14, 1993;[15] when the
respondents failed to pay the monthly rentals despite demand, he filed an
ejectment case[16] against
them with the Metropolitan Trial Court (MeTC),
Branch 60, Mandaluyong City, on September 8, 1993, or sixteen days before the
filing of the RTC case for annulment of the deed of absolute sale.
During
the pendency of the RTC case, or on March 29, 1995, the MeTC decided the
ejectment case. It ordered Erlinda and her family to vacate the subject
property, to surrender its possession to the petitioner, and to pay the overdue
rentals.[17]
In
the RTC, the respondents presented the results of the scientific examination[18] conducted
by the National Bureau of Investigation of Eliseo’s purported signatures in the
Special Power of Attorney[19] dated
April 29, 1992 and the Affidavit of waiver of rights dated April 29, 1992,[20] showing
that they were forgeries.
The
petitioner, on the other hand, introduced evidence on the paraphernal nature of
the subject property since it was registered in Erlinda’s name; the residential
lot was part of a large
parcel of land owned by Pedro Ramirez and Fructuosa Urcla, Erlinda’s parents;
it was the subject of Civil Case No. 50141, a complaint for annulment of sale,
before the RTC, Branch 158, Pasig City, filed by the surviving heirs of Pedro
against another heir, Amado Ramirez, Erlinda’s brother; and, as a result of a
compromise agreement, Amado agreed to transfer to the other compulsory heirs of
Pedro, including Erlinda, their rightful shares of the land.[21]
THE RTC RULING
In
a Decision dated January 23, 1997, the RTC dismissed the complaint. It found that the subject property was
Erlinda’s exclusive paraphernal property that was inherited from her
father. It also upheld the sale to the
petitioner, even without Eliseo’s consent as the deed of absolute sale bore the
genuine signatures of Erlinda and the petitioner as vendor and vendee,
respectively. It concluded that the NBI
finding that Eliseo’s signatures in the special power of attorney and in the affidavit
were forgeries was immaterial because Eliseo’s consent to the sale was not necessary.[22]
The
respondents elevated the case to the CA via an ordinary appeal under Rule 41 of
the Revised Rules of Court.
THE CA RULING
The
CA decided the appeal on June 25, 2002. Applying the second paragraph of Article
158[23] of the
Civil Code and Calimlim-Canullas v. Hon. Fortun,[24] the CA
held that the subject property, originally Erlinda’s exclusive paraphernal
property, became conjugal property when it was used as collateral for a housing
loan that was paid through conjugal funds – Eliseo’s monthly salary deductions;
the subject property, therefore, cannot be validly sold or mortgaged without
Eliseo’s consent, pursuant to Article 124[25]
of the Family Code. Thus, the CA declared void the deed of absolute sale, and set
aside the RTC decision.
When
the CA denied[26] the
subsequent motion for reconsideration,[27]
the petitioner filed the present petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Revised Rules of Court.
THE PETITION
The
petitioner argues that the CA misapplied the second paragraph of Article 158 of
the Civil Code and Calimlim-Canullas[28] because
the respondents admitted in the complaint that it was the petitioner who gave
the money used to cancel the GSIS mortgage on TCT No. 1427; Article 120[29] of the Family
Code is the applicable rule, and since the value of the house is less than the
value of the lot, then Erlinda retained ownership of the subject property. He
also argues that the contract between the parties was a sale, not a mortgage,
because (a) Erlinda did not deny her signature in the document;[30] (b)
Erlinda agreed to sign a contract of lease over the subject property;[31] and, (c)
Erlinda executed a letter, dated April 30, 1992, confirming the conversion of
the loan application to a deed of sale.[32]
THE CASE FOR THE RESPONDENTS
The
respondents submit that it is unnecessary to compare the respective values of
the house and of the lot to determine ownership of the subject property; it was
acquired during their marriage and, therefore, considered conjugal property. They
also submit that the transaction between the parties was not a sale, but an
equitable mortgage because (a) they remained in possession of the subject
property even after the execution of the deed of absolute sale, (b) they paid the
1993 real property taxes due on the subject property, and (c) they received P200,000.00
only of the total stated price of P602,000.00.
THE ISSUE
The
issues in the present case boil down to (1) whether the subject property is paraphernal
or conjugal; and, (2) whether the contract between the parties was a sale or an
equitable mortgage.
OUR RULING
We deny the present
Petition but for reasons other than those advanced by the CA.
This Court is not a trier of facts. However, if the
inference, drawn by the CA, from the facts is manifestly mistaken, as in the present
case, we can review the evidence to allow us to arrive at the correct factual
conclusions based on the record.[33]
First
Issue:
Paraphernal or Conjugal?
As a general rule, all
property acquired during the marriage, whether the acquisition appears to have
been made, contracted or registered in the name of one or both spouses, is
presumed to be conjugal unless the contrary is proved.[34]
In the present case, clear evidence that Erlinda
inherited the residential lot from her father has sufficiently rebutted this presumption
of conjugal ownership.[35]
Pursuant to
Articles 92[36] and 109[37] of the Family Code, properties acquired by gratuitous
title by either spouse, during the marriage, shall be excluded from the
community property and be the exclusive property of each spouse.[38]
The residential lot, therefore, is
Erlinda’s exclusive paraphernal property.
The CA, however, held that the residential lot
became conjugal when the house was built thereon through conjugal funds,
applying the second paragraph of Article 158 of the
Civil Code and Calimlim-Canullas.[39]
Under the second paragraph of Article 158 of the
Civil Code, a land that originally belonged to one spouse becomes conjugal upon
the construction of improvements thereon at the expense of the partnership. We
applied this provision in Calimlim-Canullas,[40] where we held that when the conjugal house is
constructed on land belonging exclusively to the husband, the land ipso facto becomes conjugal, but the
husband is entitled to reimbursement of the value of the land at the
liquidation of the conjugal partnership.
The
CA misapplied Article 158 of the
Civil
Code and Calimlim-Canullas
We cannot subscribe to the CA’s misplaced reliance on
Article 158 of the Civil Code and Calimlim-Canullas.
As the respondents were married during the effectivity
of the Civil Code, its provisions on conjugal partnership of gains (Articles
142 to 189) should have governed their property relations. However, with the enactment of the Family
Code on August 3, 1989, the Civil Code provisions on conjugal partnership of
gains, including Article 158, have been superseded by those found in the Family
Code (Articles 105 to 133). Article 105
of the Family Code states:
x x x x
The provisions of this Chapter [on the Conjugal Partnership of Gains] shall also apply to conjugal partnerships of gains already established between spouses before the effectivity of this Code, without prejudice to vested rights already acquired in accordance with the Civil Code or other laws, as provided in Article 256.
Thus, in determining the nature of the subject property, we refer to the
provisions of the Family Code, and not the Civil Code, except with respect to
rights then already vested.
Article 120 of the Family Code, which supersedes
Article 158 of the Civil Code, provides the solution in determining the
ownership of the improvements that are made on the separate property of the
spouses, at the expense of the partnership or through the acts or efforts of
either or both spouses. Under this provision, when the cost of the improvement
and any resulting increase in value are more than the value of the property at
the time of the improvement, the entire property of one of the spouses shall
belong to the conjugal partnership, subject to reimbursement of the value of
the property of the owner-spouse at the time of the improvement; otherwise,
said property shall be retained in ownership by the owner-spouse, likewise
subject to reimbursement of the cost of the improvement.[41]
In the present case, we find that Eliseo paid a
portion only of the GSIS loan through monthly salary deductions. From April 6,
1989[42] to April 30, 1992,[43] Eliseo paid
about P60,755.76,[44] not the entire amount of the GSIS housing loan plus
interest, since the petitioner advanced the P176,445.27[45] paid by Erlinda
to cancel the mortgage in 1992. Considering the P136,500.00 amount of
the GSIS housing loan, it is fairly reasonable to assume that the value of the
residential lot is considerably more than the P60,755.76 amount
paid by Eliseo through monthly salary deductions.
Thus,
the subject property remained the exclusive paraphernal property of Erlinda at
the time she contracted with the petitioner; the written consent of Eliseo to
the transaction was not necessary. The NBI finding that Eliseo’s signatures in
the special power of attorney and affidavit were forgeries was immaterial.
Nonetheless,
the RTC and the CA apparently failed to consider the real nature of the
contract between the parties.
Second
Issue:
Sale or Equitable Mortgage?
Jurisprudence has defined an equitable mortgage
"as one which although lacking in some formality, or form or words, or
other requisites demanded by a statute, nevertheless reveals the intention of
the parties to charge real property as security for a debt, there being no
impossibility nor anything contrary to law in this intent."[46]
Article 1602 of the Civil Code enumerates the
instances when a contract, regardless of its nomenclature, may be presumed to
be an equitable mortgage: (a) when the price of a sale with right to repurchase
is unusually inadequate; (b) when the vendor remains in possession as lessee
or otherwise; (c) when upon or after the expiration of the right to
repurchase another instrument extending the period of redemption or granting a
new period is executed; (d) when the purchaser retains for himself a part of
the purchase price; (e) when the vendor binds himself to pay the taxes
on the thing sold; and, (f) in any other case where it may be
fairly inferred that the real intention of the parties is that the transaction
shall secure the payment of a debt or the performance of any other obligation.
These instances apply to a contract purporting to be an absolute sale.[47]
For the presumption of an equitable mortgage to
arise under Article 1602 of the Civil Code, two (2) requisites must concur: (a)
that the parties entered into a contract denominated as a contract of sale;
and, (b) that their intention was to secure an existing debt by way of a
mortgage. Any of the circumstances laid out in Article 1602 of the Civil Code,
not the concurrence nor an overwhelming number of the enumerated circumstances,
is sufficient to support the conclusion that a contract of sale is in fact an
equitable mortgage.[48]
Contract is an equitable mortgage
In the present case, there are four (4) telling
circumstances pointing to the existence of an equitable mortgage.
First, the respondents
remained in possession as lessees of the subject property; the parties, in
fact, executed a one-year contract of lease, effective May 1, 1992 to April 30,
1993.[49]
Second, the petitioner
retained part of the “purchase price,” the petitioner gave a P200,000.00
advance to settle the GSIS housing loan, but refused to give the P402,000.00
balance when Erlinda failed to submit Eliseo’s signed affidavit of waiver of
rights.
Third, respondents
paid the real property taxes on July 8, 1993, despite the alleged sale on April
30, 1992;[50] payment of real property taxes is a usual burden
attaching to ownership and when, as here, such payment is coupled with
continuous possession of the property, it constitutes evidence of great weight
that the person under whose name the realty taxes were declared has a valid and
rightful claim over the land.[51]
Fourth, Erlinda
secured the payment of the principal debt owed to the petitioner with the
subject property. The records show that the petitioner, in fact, sent Erlinda a
Statement of Account showing that as of February 20, 1993, she owed P384,660.00,
and the daily interest, starting February 21, 1993, was P641.10.[52] Thus, the parties clearly intended an equitable
mortgage and not a contract of sale.
That the petitioner advanced the sum of P200,000.00
to Erlinda is undisputed. This advance,
in fact, prompted the latter to transfer the subject property to the petitioner.
Thus, before the respondents can recover
the subject property, they must first return the amount of P200,000.00
to the petitioner, plus legal interest of 12% per annum, computed from April
30, 1992.
We cannot sustain the ballooned obligation of P384,660.00,
claimed in the Statement of Account sent by the petitioner,[53] sans any
evidence of how this amount was arrived at.
Additionally, a daily interest of P641.10 or P19,233.00
per month for a P200,000.00 loan is patently unconscionable. While
parties are free to stipulate on the interest to be imposed on monetary
obligations, we can step in to temper the interest rates if they are
unconscionable.[54]
In Lustan v. CA,[55] where we established the reciprocal obligations of
the parties under an equitable mortgage, we ordered the reconveyance of the
property to the rightful owner therein upon the payment of the loan within ninety
(90) days from the finality of the decision.[56]
WHEREFORE, in light of all the foregoing, we hereby DENY
the present petition. The assailed decision and resolution
of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 57126 are AFFIRMED with the following MODIFICATIONS:
1.
The Deed of Absolute Sale dated April
30, 1992 is hereby declared an equitable mortgage; and
2. The petitioner is obligated to RECONVEY to the respondents
the property covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 7650 of the Register
of Deeds of Mandaluyong City, UPON THE PAYMENT OF P200,000.00, with 12% legal
interest from April 30, 1992, by respondents within NINETY DAYS FROM THE
FINALITY OF THIS DECISION.
Costs
against the petitioner.
SO
ORDERED.
ARTURO D. BRION
Associate Justice
WE
CONCUR:
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice |
|
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN Associate Justice |
MARTIN S. VILLARAMA, JR. Associate Justice |
MARIA LOURDES P. A. SERENO
Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I attest 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.
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice
Chairperson
CERTIFICATION
RENATO
C. CORONA
Chief Justice
[1] Filed under Rule 45 of the Revised Rules of Court; rollo, pp. 11-16.
[2] Dated June 25, 2002, penned by Associate Justice Juan Q. Enriquez, Jr., with the concurrence of Associate Justices Eugenio S. Labitoria and Mariano C. del Castillo (now a member of this Court); id. at 21-28.
[3] Dated November 13, 2002; id. at 31.
[4] Entitled “Erlinda Ramirez and Eliseo Carlos v. Francisco E. Muñoz, Jr.”
[5] Dated January 23, 1997; Original Records, pp. 296-299.
[6] Id. at 71-72.
[7] Id. at 68-69.
[8] Folder of Plaintiffs’ Formal Offer of Additional Evidence, pp. 6-8.
[9] Original Records, pp. 76-77.
[10] TSN dated September 19, 1994, Testimony of Erlinda Ramirez, p. 4.
[11] Id. at 80-81.
[12] Memorandum of Encumbrances of TCT No. 1427; id. at 69.
[13] TSN dated July 14, 1995, Testimony of Francisco Muñoz, Sr., pp. 7-8.
[14] Original Records, p. 152.
[15] Id. at 71-72.
[16] Civil Case No. 14271, entitled Francisco Muñoz, Jr., rep. by his attorney-in-fact, Francisco Muñoz, v. Sps. Eliseo & Erlinda Ramirez; id. at 153-155.
[17] Id. at 156-162.
[18] Folder of Plaintiffs’ Formal Offer of Additional Evidence.
[19] Original Records, p. 70.
[20] Id. at 74.
[21] Id. at 163-169 and 170-172.
[22] Supra note 5.
[23] Art. 158. x x x
Buildings
constructed, at the expense of the partnership, during the marriage on land
belonging to one of the spouses, also pertain to the partnership, but the value
of the land shall be reimbursed to the spouse who owns the same.
[24] 214 Phil. 593 (1984).
[25] Art. 124. The administration and enjoyment of the conjugal partnership shall belong to both spouses jointly. In case of disagreement, the husband's decision shall prevail, subject to recourse to the court by the wife for proper remedy, which must be availed of within five years from the date of the contract implementing such decision.
In the event that one spouse is incapacitated or otherwise unable to participate in the administration of the conjugal properties, the other spouse may assume sole powers of administration. These powers do not include disposition or encumbrance without authority of the court or the written consent of the other spouse. In the absence of such authority or consent, the disposition or encumbrance shall be void. However, the transaction shall be construed as a continuing offer on the part of the consenting spouse and the third person, and may be perfected as a binding contract upon the acceptance by the other spouse or authorization by the court before the offer is withdrawn by either or both offerors.
[26] Resolution of November 13, 2002; supra note 3.
[27] Rollo, pp. 131-136.
[28] Supra note 24.
[29] Art. 120. The
ownership of improvements, whether for utility or adornment, made on the
separate property of the spouses at the expense of the partnership or through
the acts or efforts of either or both spouses shall pertain to the conjugal
partnership, or to the original owner-spouse, subject to the following rules:
When the cost of the improvement
made by the conjugal partnership and any resulting increase in value are more
than the value of the property at the time of the improvement, the entire
property of one of the spouses shall belong to the conjugal partnership,
subject to reimbursement of the value of the property of the owner-spouse at
the time of the improvement; otherwise, said property shall be retained in
ownership by the owner-spouse, likewise subject to reimbursement of the cost of
the improvement.
In either case, the ownership of the entire property shall be vested upon the reimbursement, which shall be made at the time of the liquidation of the conjugal partnership.
[30] TSN dated September 19, 1994, Testimony of Erlinda Ramirez, p. 14.
[31] Original Records, p. 152.
[32] Id. at 151.
[33] Hi-Cement Corporation v. Insular Bank of Asia and America, G.R. Nos. 132403 & 132419, September 28, 2007, 534 SCRA 269; Heirs of Flores Restar v. Heirs of Dolores R. Cichon, G.R. No. 161720, November 22, 2005, 475 SCRA 731, 739; Casol v. Purefoods Corporation, G.R. No. 166550, September 22, 2005, 470 SCRA 585, 589.
[34] FAMILY CODE, Art. 116.
[35] Supra note 21.
[36] Art. 92. The following shall be excluded
from the community property:
(1) Property acquired during the marriage by gratuitous title by either spouse[.]
[37] Art.
109. The following shall be the exclusive property of each spouse:
x x x x
(2) That which each acquires during the marriage by gratuitous title[.]
[38] Previously Articles 148 and 201 of the Civil Code.
[39] Supra note 24.
[40] Ibid.
[41] Ferrer v. Ferrer, G.R. No. 166496, November 29, 2006, 508 SCRA 570, 581.
[42] Date GSIS granted the loan; supra note 8.
[43] Date Erlinda settled the loan; supra note 11.
[44] P1,687.66 x 36 months’ salary deductions (May 1989 to April 1992) = P60,755.76.
[45] Supra note 11.
[46] Rockville Excel International Exim Corporation v. Culla, G.R. No. 155716, October 2, 2009, 602 SCRA 128, 136.
[47] CIVIL CODE, Article 1604.
[48] Bacungan v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 170282, December 18, 2008, 574 SCRA 642, 648-649; Sps. Salonga v. Sps. Concepcion, 507 Phil. 287, 303 (2005); Sps. Reyes v. Court of Appeals, 393 Phil. 479, 490 (2000).
[49] Supra note 14.
[50] Original Records, p. 174.
[51] Lumayag v. Heirs of Jacinto Nemeño, G.R. No. 162112, July 3, 2007, 526 SCRA 315, 327-328; Go v. Bacaron, G.R. No. 159048, October 11, 2005, 472 SCRA 339, 352.
[52] Original Records, p. 82.
[53] Ibid.
[54] Toring v. Ganzon-Olan, G.R. No. 168782, October 10, 2008, 568 SCRA 376, 383.
[55] 334 Phil. 609 (1997).
[56] Id. at 620. See also Bacungan v. Court of Appeals, supra note 47, at 650.