Republic of the Philippines
Supreme Court
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
LUZON DEVELOPMENT
BANK, |
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G.R. No. 168646 |
Petitioner, |
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versus - |
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ANGELES CATHERINE
ENRIQUEZ, |
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Respondent.
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DELTA DEVELOPMENT and
MANAGEMENT SERVICES, INC., |
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G.R. No. 168666 |
Petitioner, |
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Present: |
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CORONA, C.J., Chairperson, |
- versus - |
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VELASCO, JR., |
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LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, |
ANGELES CATHERINE ENRIQUEZ
and LUZON DEVELOPMENT BANK, |
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DEL CASTILLO, and PEREZ, JJ. Promulgated: |
Respondents. |
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January 12, 2011 |
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D E C I S I O N
DEL CASTILLO, J.:
The protection afforded to a
subdivision lot buyer under Presidential Decree (PD) No. 957 or The Subdivision
and Condominium Buyer’s Protective Decree
will not be defeated by someone who is not an innocent purchaser for
value. The lofty aspirations of PD 957
should be read in every provision of the statute, in every contract that
undermines its objects, in every transaction which threatens its fruition. “For a statute derives its vitality from the
purpose for which it is enacted and to construe it in a manner that disregards
or defeats such purpose is to nullify or destroy the law.”[1]
These cases involve the separate
appeals of Luzon Development Bank[2] (BANK) and Delta Development and Management
Services, Inc.[3]
(DELTA) from the November 30, 2004 Decision of the Court of Appeals (CA), as
well as its June 22, 2005 Resolution in CA-G.R. SP No. 81280. The dispositive portion of the assailed
Decision reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the
Decision dated June 17, 2003 and Resolution dated November 24, 2003 are
AFFIRMED with [m]odification in so far as Delta Development and Management
Services, Inc. is liable and directed to pay petitioner Luzon Development Bank
the value of the subject lot subject matter of the Contract to Sell between
Delta Development and Management Services, Inc. and the private respondent
[Catherine Angeles Enriquez].
SO ORDERED.[4]
Factual
Antecedents
The BANK is a domestic financial
corporation that extends loans to subdivision developers/owners.[5]
Petitioner DELTA is a domestic
corporation engaged in the business of developing and selling real estate
properties, particularly Delta Homes I in Cavite. DELTA is owned by Ricardo De Leon (De Leon),[6] who is
the registered owner of a parcel of land covered by Transfer Certificate of
Title (TCT) No. T-637183[7] of the
Registry of Deeds of the Province of Cavite, which corresponds to Lot 4 of
Delta Homes I. Said Lot 4 is the subject
matter of these cases.
On July 3, 1995, De Leon and his
spouse obtained a P4 million loan from the BANK for the express purpose of
developing Delta Homes I.[8] To secure the loan, the spouses De Leon
executed in favor of the BANK a real estate mortgage (REM) on several of their
properties,[9]
including Lot 4. Subsequently, this REM
was amended[10]
by increasing the amount of the secured loan from P4 million to P8
million. Both the REM and the amendment
were annotated on TCT No. T-637183.[11]
DELTA then obtained a Certificate of
Registration[12]
and a License to Sell[13] from
the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board (HLURB).
Sometime in 1997, DELTA executed a
Contract to Sell with respondent Angeles Catherine Enriquez (Enriquez)[14] over the
house and lot in Lot 4 for the purchase price of P614,950.00. Enriquez made a downpayment of P114,950.00. The Contract to Sell contained the following provisions:
That
the vendee/s offered to buy and the Owner agreed to sell the above-described
property subject to the following terms and conditions to wit:
x
x x x
6. That the (sic) warning shall be served upon
the Vendee/s for failure to pay x x x Provided, however, that for failure to
pay three (3) successive monthly installment payments, the Owner may consider
this Contract to Sell null and void ab initio without further proceedings or
court action and all payments shall be forfeited in favor of the Owner as
liquidated damages and expenses for documentations. x x x
That
upon full payment of the total consideration if payable in cash, the Owner
shall execute a final deed of sale in favor of the Vendee/s. However, if the term of the contract is for a
certain period of time, only upon full payment of the total consideration that
a final deed of sale shall be executed by the Owner in favor of the Vendee/s.[15]
When DELTA defaulted on its loan
obligation, the BANK, instead of foreclosing the REM, agreed to a dation in
payment or a dacion en pago. The Deed of Assignment in Payment of Debt was
executed on September 30, 1998 and stated that DELTA “assigns, transfers, and
conveys and sets over [to] the assignee that real estate with the building and
improvements existing thereon x x x in payment of the total obligation owing
to [the Bank] x x x.”[16] Unknown to Enriquez, among the properties
assigned to the BANK was the house and lot of Lot 4,[17] which
is the subject of her Contract to Sell with DELTA. The records do not bear out and the parties
are silent on whether the BANK was able to transfer title to its name. It appears, however, that the dacion en pago was not annotated on the
TCT of Lot 4.[18]
On November 18, 1999, Enriquez filed
a complaint against DELTA and the BANK before the Region IV Office of the HLURB[19]
alleging that DELTA violated the terms of its License to Sell by: (a) selling
the house and lots for a price exceeding that prescribed in Batas Pambansa (BP)
Bilang 220;[20]
and (b) failing to get a clearance for the mortgage from the HLURB. Enriquez sought a full refund of the P301,063.42
that she had already paid to DELTA, award of damages, and the imposition of
administrative fines on DELTA and the BANK.
In his June 1, 2000 Decision,[21] HLURB Arbiter
Atty. Raymundo A. Foronda upheld the validity of the purchase price, but
ordered DELTA to accept payment of the balance of P108,013.36 from
Enriquez, and (upon such payment) to
deliver to Enriquez the title to the house and lot free from liens and encumbrances.
The dispositive portion reads:
WHEREFORE,
premises considered, a decision is hereby rendered as follows:
1.
Ordering [DELTA] to accept complainant[’]s payments in the amount of P108,013.36
representing her balance based on the maximum selling price of P375,000.00;
2.
Upon full payment, ordering Delta to deliver the title in favor of the
complainant free from any liens and encumbrances;
3.
Ordering [DELTA] to pay complainant the amount of P50,000.00 as
and by way of moral damages;
4.
Ordering [DELTA] to pay complainant the amount of P50,000.00 as
and by way of exemplary damages;
5.
Ordering [DELTA] to pay complainant P10,000.00 as costs of suit;
and
6.
Respondent DELTA to pay administrative fine of P10,000.00[[22]]
for violation of Section 18 of P.D. 957[[23]]
and another P10,000.00 for violation of Section 22 of P.D. 957.[[24]]
SO
ORDERED.[25]
DELTA appealed the arbiter’s Decision
to the HLURB Board of Commissioners.[26] DELTA questioned the imposition of an
administrative fine for its alleged violation of Section 18 of PD 957. It argued that clearance was not required for
mortgages that were constituted on a subdivision project prior to
registration. According to DELTA, it
did not violate the terms of its license because it did not obtain a new
mortgage over the subdivision project. It
likewise assailed the award of moral and exemplary damages to Enriquez on the
ground that the latter has no cause of action.[27]
Ruling
of the Board of Commissioners (Board)[28]
The Board held that all developers
should obtain a clearance for mortgage from the HLURB, regardless of the date
when the mortgage was secured, because the law does not distinguish. Having
violated this legal requirement, DELTA was held liable to pay the
administrative fine.
The Board upheld the validity of the
contract to sell between DELTA and Enriquez despite the alleged violation of
the price ceilings in BP 220. The Board
held that DELTA and Enriquez were presumed to have had a meeting of the minds
on the object of the sale and the purchase price. Absent any circumstance vitiating Enriquez’consent,
she was presumed to have willingly and voluntarily agreed to the higher
purchase price; hence, she was bound by the terms of the contract.
The Board, however, deleted the
arbiter’s award of damages to Enriquez on the ground that the latter was not
free from liability herself, given that she was remiss in her monthly
amortizations to DELTA.
The dispositive portion of the
Board’s Decision reads:
Wherefore, in view of the foregoing,
the Office below’s decision dated June 01, 2000 is hereby modified to read as
follows:
1. Ordering [Enriquez] to pay [DELTA] the amount
due from the time she suspended payment up to filing of the complaint with 12%
interest thereon per annum; thereafter the provisions of the Contract to Sell
shall apply until full payment is made;
2. Ordering [DELTA] to pay an [a]dministrative
[f]ine of P10,000.00 for violation of its license to sell and for
violation of Section 18 of P.D. 957.
So
ordered. Quezon City.[29]
Enriquez moved for a reconsideration
of the Board’s Decision[30]
upholding the contractual purchase price.
She maintained that the price for Lot 4 should not exceed the price
ceiling provided in BP 220.[31]
Finding Enriquez’s arguments as
having already been passed upon in the decision, the Board denied
reconsideration. The board, however,
modified its decision, with respect to the period for the imposition of
interest payments. The Board’s
resolution[32]
reads:
WHEREFORE,
premises considered, to [sic] directive No. 1 of the dispositive portion of the
decision of our decision [sic] is MODIFIED as follows:
1. Ordering complainant to pay respondent DELTA
the amount due from the time she suspended (sic) at 12% interest per annum,
reckoned from finality of this decision[,] thereafter the provisions of the
Contract to Sell shall apply until full payment is made.
In
all other respects, the decision is AFFIRMED.
SO
ORDERED.[33]
Both Enriquez and the BANK appealed
to the Office of the President (OP).[34] The BANK disagreed with the ruling upholding
Enriquez’s Contract to Sell; and insisted on its ownership over Lot 4. It argued that it has become impossible for
DELTA to comply with the terms of the contract to sell and to deliver Lot 4’s title
to Enriquez given that DELTA had already relinquished all its rights to Lot 4
in favor of the BANK[35] via the
dation in payment.
Meanwhile, Enriquez insisted that
the Board erred in not applying the ceiling price as prescribed in BP 220.[36]
Ruling
of the Office of the President[37]
The OP adopted by reference the findings
of fact and conclusions of law of the HLURB Decisions, which it affirmed in toto.
Enriquez filed a motion for
reconsideration, insisting that she was entitled to a reduction of the purchase
price, in order to conform to the provisions of BP 220.[38] The motion was denied for lack of merit.[39]
Only the BANK appealed the OP’s Decision
to the CA.[40] The BANK reiterated that DELTA can no longer
deliver Lot 4 to Enriquez because DELTA had sold the same to the BANK by virtue
of the dacion en pago.[41] As an alternative argument, in case the
appellate court should find that DELTA retained ownership over Lot 4 and could
convey the same to Enriquez, the BANK prayed that its REM over Lot 4 be respected
such that DELTA would have to redeem it first before it could convey the same
to Enriquez in accordance with Section 25[42] of PD
957.[43]
The BANK likewise sought an award of
exemplary damages and attorney’s fees in its favor because of the baseless suit
filed by Enriquez against it.[44]
Ruling
of the Court of Appeals[45]
The CA ruled against the validity of
the dacion en pago executed in favor
of the BANK on the ground that DELTA had earlier relinquished its ownership over Lot 4 in favor of Enriquez via the Contract
to Sell.[46]
Since the dacion en pago is invalid with respect to Lot 4, the appellate
court held that DELTA remained indebted to the BANK to the extent of Lot 4’s
value. Thus, the CA ordered DELTA to pay
the corresponding value of Lot 4 to the BANK.[47]
The CA also rejected the BANK’s
argument that, before DELTA can deliver the title to Lot 4 to Enriquez, DELTA
should first redeem the mortgaged property from the BANK. The CA held that the BANK does not have a
first lien on Lot 4 because its real estate mortgage over the same had already
been extinguished by the dacion en
pago. Without a mortgage, the BANK
cannot require DELTA to redeem Lot 4 prior to delivery of title to Enriquez.[48]
The CA denied the BANK’s prayer for
the award of exemplary damages and attorney’s fees for lack of factual and
legal basis.[49]
Both DELTA[50] and the
BANK[51] moved
for a reconsideration of the CA’s Decision, but both were denied.[52]
Hence, these separate petitions of
the BANK and DELTA.
Petitioner
Delta’s arguments[53]
DELTA
assails the CA Decision for holding that DELTA conveyed its ownership over Lot
4 to Enriquez via the Contract to Sell.
DELTA points out that the Contract to Sell contained a condition that
ownership shall only be transferred to Enriquez upon the latter’s full payment
of the purchase price to DELTA. Since
Enriquez has yet to comply with this suspensive condition, ownership is
retained by DELTA.[54] As the owner of Lot 4, DELTA had every right
to enter into a dation in payment to extinguish its loan obligation to the
BANK. The BANK’s acceptance of the
assignment, without any reservation or
exception, resulted in the extinguishment of the entire loan obligation;
hence, DELTA has no more obligation to pay the value of Enriquez’s house and
lot to the BANK.[55]
DELTA prays for the reinstatement of
the OP Decision.
The BANK’s
arguments[56]
Echoing
the argument of DELTA, the BANK argues that the Contract to Sell did not
involve a conveyance of DELTA’s ownership over Lot 4 to Enriquez. The Contract to Sell expressly provides that
DELTA retained ownership over Lot 4 until Enriquez paid the full purchase
price. Since Enriquez has not yet made
such full payment, DELTA retained ownership over Lot 4 and could validly convey
the same to the BANK via dacion en pago.[57]
Should the dacion en pago over Lot 4 be invalidated and the property ordered
to be delivered to Enriquez, the BANK contends that DELTA should pay the
corresponding value of Lot 4 to the BANK.
It maintains that the loan obligation extinguished by the dacion en pago only extends to the value
of the properties delivered; if Lot 4 cannot be delivered to the BANK, then the
loan obligation of DELTA remains to the extent of Lot 4’s value.[58]
The BANK prays to be declared the
rightful owner of the subject house and lot and asks for an award of exemplary
damages and attorney’s fees.
Enriquez’s
waiver
Enriquez did not file comments[59] or memoranda
in both cases; instead, she manifested that she will just await the outcome of
the case.[60]
Issues
The following are the issues raised
by the two petitions:
1. Whether the Contract to Sell conveys
ownership;
2. Whether the dacion en pago extinguished the loan obligation, such that DELTA
has no more obligations to the BANK;
3. Whether the BANK is entitled to damages and
attorney’s fees for being compelled to litigate; and
4. What is the effect of Enriquez’s failure to
appeal the OP’s Decision regarding her obligation to pay the balance on the
purchase price.
Our Ruling
Mortgage
contract void
As the HLURB Arbiter and Board of
Commissioners both found, DELTA violated Section 18 of PD 957 in mortgaging the
properties in Delta Homes I (including Lot 4) to the BANK without prior
clearance from the HLURB. This point
need not be belabored since the parties have chosen not to appeal the
administrative fine imposed on DELTA for violation of Section 18.
This
violation of Section 18 renders the mortgage executed by DELTA void. We have held before that “a mortgage contract
executed in breach of Section 18 of [PD 957] is null and void.”[61] Considering that “PD 957 aims to protect
innocent subdivision lot and condominium unit buyers against fraudulent real
estate practices,” we have construed Section 18 thereof as “prohibitory and
acts committed contrary to it are void.”[62]
Because
of the nullity of the mortgage, neither DELTA nor the BANK could assert any
right arising therefrom. The BANK’s loan
of P8 million to DELTA has effectively become unsecured due to the
nullity of the mortgage. The said loan,
however, was eventually settled by the two contracting parties via a dation in
payment. In the appealed Decision, the
CA invalidated this dation in payment on the ground that DELTA, by previously entering
into a Contract to Sell, had already conveyed its ownership over Lot 4 to
Enriquez and could no longer convey the same to the BANK. This is error, prescinding from a wrong
understanding of the nature of a contract to sell.
Contract
to sell does not transfer ownership
Both parties are correct in arguing
that the Contract to Sell executed by DELTA in favor of Enriquez did not
transfer ownership over Lot 4 to Enriquez.
A contract to sell is one where the prospective seller reserves the transfer of title to the
prospective buyer until the happening of an event, such as full payment of the
purchase price. What the seller obliges
himself to do is to sell the subject property only when the entire amount of
the purchase price has already been delivered to him. “In other words, the full payment of the
purchase price partakes of a suspensive condition, the non-fulfillment of which
prevents the obligation to sell from arising and thus, ownership is retained by
the prospective seller without further remedies by the prospective buyer.”[63] It does not, by itself, transfer ownership to
the buyer.[64]
In the instant case, there is
nothing in the provisions of the contract entered into by DELTA and Enriquez
that would exempt it from the general definition of a contract to sell. The terms thereof provide for the reservation
of DELTA’s ownership until full payment of the purchase price; such that DELTA
even reserved the right to unilaterally void the contract should Enriquez fail
to pay three successive monthly amortizations.
Since the Contract to Sell did not
transfer ownership of Lot 4 to Enriquez, said ownership remained with DELTA. DELTA could then validly transfer such
ownership (as it did) to another person (the BANK). However, the transferee BANK is bound by the
Contract to Sell and has to respect Enriquez’s rights thereunder. This is because the Contract to Sell,
involving a subdivision lot, is covered and protected by PD 957. One of the protections afforded by PD 957 to buyers
such as Enriquez is the right to have her contract to sell registered with the
Register of Deeds in order to make it binding on third parties. Thus, Section 17 of PD 957 provides:
Section 17. Registration. All contracts to sell, deeds of sale, and
other similar instruments relative to the
sale or conveyance of the subdivision lots and condominium units, whether
or not the purchase price is paid in full, shall be registered by the seller in the Office of the Register of Deeds of
the province or city where the property is situated.
x x x x (Emphasis supplied.)
The
purpose of registration is to protect the buyers from any future unscrupulous
transactions involving the object of the sale or contract to sell, whether the
purchase price therefor has been fully paid or not. Registration of the sale or contract to sell makes
it binding on third parties; it serves as a notice to the whole world that the
property is subject to the prior right of the buyer of the property (under a
contract to sell or an absolute sale), and anyone who wishes to deal with the
said property will be held bound by such prior right.
While DELTA, in the instant case, failed
to register Enriquez’s Contract to Sell with the Register of Deeds, this failure
will not prejudice Enriquez or relieve the BANK from its obligation to respect
Enriquez’s Contract to Sell. Despite the
non-registration, the BANK cannot be considered, under the circumstances, an
innocent purchaser for value of Lot 4
when it accepted the latter (together with other assigned properties) as
payment for DELTA’s obligation. The BANK
was well aware that the assigned properties, including Lot 4, were subdivision
lots and therefore within the purview of PD 957. It knew that the loaned amounts were to be
used for the development of DELTA’s subdivision project, for this was indicated
in the corresponding promissory notes.
The technical description of Lot 4 indicates its location, which can
easily be determined as included within the subdivision development. Under these circumstances, the BANK knew or
should have known of the possibility and risk that the assigned properties were
already covered by existing contracts to sell in favor of subdivision lot
buyers. As observed by the Court in
another case involving a bank regarding a subdivision lot that was already
subject of a contract to sell with a third party:
[The Bank] should have considered that it was dealing
with a property subject of a real estate development project. A reasonable
person, particularly a financial institution x x x, should have been aware
that, to finance the project, funds other than those obtained from the loan
could have been used to serve the purpose, albeit partially. Hence, there was a
need to verify whether any part of the property was already intended to be the
subject of any other contract involving buyers or potential buyers. In granting
the loan, [the Bank] should not have been content merely with a clean title,
considering the presence of circumstances indicating the need for a thorough
investigation of the existence of buyers x x x. Wanting in care and prudence,
the [Bank] cannot be deemed to be an innocent mortgagee. x x x[65]
Further,
as an entity engaged in the banking business, the BANK is required to observe
more care and prudence when dealing with registered properties. The Court cannot accept that the BANK was
unaware of the Contract to Sell existing in favor of Enriquez. In Keppel
Bank Philippines, Inc. v. Adao,[66] we held
that a bank dealing with a property that is already subject of a contract to
sell and is protected by the provisions of PD 957, is bound by the contract to
sell (even if the contract to sell in that case was not registered). In the Court’s words:
It is true that persons dealing with
registered property can rely solely on the certificate of title and need not go
beyond it. However, x x x, this rule
does not apply to banks. Banks are
required to exercise more care and prudence than private individuals in dealing
even with registered properties for their business is affected with public
interest. As master of its business,
petitioner should have sent its representatives to check the assigned
properties before signing the compromise agreement and it would have discovered
that respondent was already occupying one of the condominium units and that a
contract to sell existed between [the vendee] and [the developer]. In our view, petitioner was not a purchaser
in good faith and we are constrained to rule that petitioner is bound by the
contract to sell.[67]
Bound
by the terms of the Contract to Sell, the BANK is obliged to respect the same
and honor the payments already made by Enriquez for the purchase price of Lot
4. Thus, the BANK can only collect the
balance of the purchase price from Enriquez and has the obligation, upon full
payment, to deliver to Enriquez a clean title over the subject property.[68]
Dacion
en pago extinguished the loan obligation
The
BANK then posits that, if title to Lot 4 is ordered delivered to Enriquez,
DELTA has the obligation to pay the BANK the corresponding value of Lot 4. According to the BANK, the dation in payment
extinguished the loan only to the extent of the value of the thing
delivered. Since Lot 4 would have no
value to the BANK if it will be delivered to Enriquez, DELTA would remain
indebted to that extent.
We
are not persuaded. Like in all contracts,
the intention of the parties to the dation in payment is paramount and
controlling. The contractual intention
determines whether the property subject of the dation will be considered as the
full equivalent of the debt and will therefore serve as full satisfaction for
the debt. “The dation in payment
extinguishes the obligation to the extent of the value of the thing delivered,
either as agreed upon by the parties or as may be proved, unless the parties by agreement, express or implied, or by their
silence, consider the thing as equivalent to the obligation, in which case the
obligation is totally extinguished.”[69]
In the case at bar, the Dacion en Pago executed by DELTA and the
BANK indicates a clear intention by the parties that the assigned properties
would serve as full payment for DELTA’s entire obligation:
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS:
This
instrument, made and executed by and between:
x x x x
THAT,
the ASSIGNOR acknowledges to be justly indebted to the ASSIGNEE in the sum of
ELEVEN MILLION EIGHT HUNDRED SEVENTY-EIGHT THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED PESOS (P11,878,800.00),
Philippine Currency as of August 25, 1998.
Therefore, by virtue of this instrument, ASSIGNOR hereby ASSIGNS,
TRANSFERS, and CONVEYS AND SETS OVER [TO] the ASSIGNEE that real estate with
the building and improvements existing thereon, more particularly described as
follows:
x x x x
of which the ASSIGNOR is the registered owner
being evidenced by TCT No. x x x issued by the Registry of Deeds of Trece
Martires City.
THAT, the ASSIGNEE does hereby accept
this ASSIGNMENT IN PAYMENT OF THE TOTAL OBLIGATION owing to him by the ASSIGNOR
as above-stated;[70]
Without
any reservation or condition, the Dacion
stated that the assigned properties served as full payment of DELTA’s “total obligation”
to the BANK. The BANK accepted said
properties as equivalent of the loaned amount and as full satisfaction of
DELTA’s debt. The BANK cannot complain
if, as it turned out, some of those assigned properties (such as Lot 4) are
covered by existing contracts to sell. As noted earlier, the BANK knew that the
assigned properties were subdivision lots and covered by PD 957. It was aware of the nature of DELTA’s
business, of the location of the assigned properties within DELTA’s subdivision
development, and the possibility that some of the properties may be subjects of
existing contracts to sell which enjoy protection under PD 957. Banks dealing with subdivision properties are
expected to conduct a thorough due diligence review to discover the status of the
properties they deal with. It may thus
be said that the BANK, in accepting the assigned properties as full payment of
DELTA’s “total obligation,” has assumed the risk that some of the assigned
properties (such as Lot 4) are covered by contracts to sell which it is bound to
honor under PD 957.
A dacion en pago is governed by the law of sales.[71] Contracts of sale come with warranties,
either express (if explicitly stipulated by the parties) or implied (under
Article 1547 et seq. of the Civil
Code). In this case, however, the BANK
does not even point to any breach of warranty by DELTA in connection with the
Dation in Payment. To be sure, the
Dation in Payment has no express
warranties relating to existing contracts to sell over the assigned
properties. As to the implied warranty in case of eviction, it
is waivable[72]
and cannot be invoked if the buyer knew of the risks or danger of eviction and
assumed its consequences.[73] As we have noted earlier, the BANK, in
accepting the assigned properties as full payment of DELTA’s “total
obligation,” has assumed the risk that some of the assigned properties are
covered by contracts to sell which must be honored under PD 957.
Award
of damages
There is nothing on record that
warrants the award of exemplary damages[74] as well
as attorney’s fees[75] in
favor of the BANK.
Balance
to be paid by Enriquez
As
already mentioned, the Contract to Sell in favor of Enriquez must be respected
by the BANK. Upon Enriquez’s full
payment of the balance of the purchase price, the BANK is bound to deliver the
title over Lot 4 to her. As to the
amount of the balance which Enriquez must pay, we adopt the OP’s ruling thereon
which sustained the amount stipulated in the Contract to Sell. We will not review Enriquez’s initial claims
about the supposed violation of the price ceiling in BP 220, since this issue
was no longer pursued by the parties, not even by Enriquez, who chose not to
file the required pleadings[76] before
the Court. The parties were informed in
the Court’s September 5, 2007 Resolution that issues that are not included in
their memoranda shall be deemed waived or abandoned. Since Enriquez did not file a memorandum in
either petition, she is deemed to have waived the said issue.
WHEREFORE,
premises considered, the appealed November 30, 2004 Decision of the Court of
Appeals, as well as its June 22, 2005 Resolution in CA-G.R. SP No. 81280 are
hereby AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATIONS
that Delta Development and Management Services, Inc. is NOT LIABLE TO PAY Luzon Development Bank the value of the subject
lot; and respondent Angeles Catherine Enriquez is ordered to PAY the balance of the purchase price
and the interests accruing thereon, as decreed by the Court of Appeals, to the
Luzon Development Bank, instead of Delta Development and Management Services,
Inc., within thirty (30) days from finality of this Decision. The
Luzon Development Bank is ordered to DELIVER
a CLEAN TITLE to Angeles Catherine Enriquez upon the latter’s full payment
of the balance of the purchase price and the accrued interests.
SO
ORDERED.
MARIANO C.
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
RENATO C. CORONA
Chief Justice
Chairperson
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR. Associate Justice |
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO Associate Justice |
JOSE
Associate Justice
C E R T I F I C A T I O N
Pursuant to Section 13,
Article VIII of the Constitution, it is hereby certified 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.
RENATO C. CORONA
Chief
Justice
[1] Pilipinas Kao, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 423 Phil. 834, 858 (2001).
[2] Rollo of
G.R. No. 168646, pp. 3-27.
[3] Rollo of G.R.
No. 168666, pp. 3-16.
[4] CA Decision, pp. 9-10; id. at
125-126.
[5] Petition in G.R. No. 168646, p. 3; rollo of G.R. No. 168646, p. 5.
[6] Id. at 3-4; id. at 5-6.
[7]
[8] The loan contract itself was not
attached to the parties’ pleadings; only the promissory notes covering the said
loan were attached. The promissory notes
contained the condition that the loan proceeds shall be used only for the
purpose of subdivision development, particularly the development of Delta Homes
I, Aniban, Bacoor,
[9] Id. at 57-59.
[10] Id. at 70. The amendment to the real estate
mortgage was dated November 8, 1995.
[11] Rollo of
G.R. No. 168646, p. 60.
[12] CA rollo,
p. 81. Pertinent portions of the
registration certificate dated September 22, 1995 read as follows:
BE IT KNOWN:
That DELTA
HOMES I x x x is hereby REGISTERED pursuant to Section 21 of BP 220 and its
rules and regulations.
THAT any
misrepresentation or material falsehood made in connection with the application
for this registration or the forgery or falsification of any of the supporting
documents thereof and other legal grounds provided by law shall be a valid
cause for the revocation of this Registration.
x x x x
AND THAT
the project owner(s), RICARDO S. DE LEON and the developer(s) DELTA DEVELOPMENT
AND MANAGEMENT SERVICES, INC. take the solidary responsibilities of complying
with the law and the rules and regulations for the issuance for this
CERTIFICATE and the License to Sell, if any.
[13] Id. at 82.
The License to Sell was dated September 19, 1995.
[14] Rollo of G.R. No. 168646, pp. 61-64.
[15] Id. at 61-62.
[16] CA rollo,
pp. 71-80.
[17] Id. at 76.
[18] Rollo of
G.R. No. 168646, p. 60.
[19] Docketed as R-106-111899-117-5; id. at 65-70.
[20] An Act Authorizing the
Ministry of Human Settlements to Establish and Promulgate Different Levels of
Standards and Technical Requirements for Economic and Socialized Housing
Projects in Urban and Rural Areas from those provided under Presidential
Decrees Numbered Nine Hundred Fifty-Seven, Twelve Hundred Sixteen, Ten Hundred
Ninety-Six and Eleven Hundred Eighty-Five.
[21] HLURB Decision, p. 1; CA rollo, p. 26. A copy of the
HLURB Arbiter’s decision itself was not included in the available records of
the case.
[22] Section 38. Administrative
Fines. The [HLURB] may prescribe and
impose fines not exceeding ten thousand pesos for violations of the provisions
of this Decree or of any rule or regulation thereunder. Fines shall be payable to the [HLURB] and
enforceable through writs of execution in accordance with the provisions of the
Rules of Court. (PD 957, as amended)
[23] Section
18. Mortgages. No mortgage on any unit or lot shall be
made by the owner or developer without prior
written approval of the [HLURB].
Such approval shall not be granted unless it is shown that the proceeds
of the mortgage loan shall be used for the development of the condominium or
subdivision project and effective measures have been provided to ensure such
utilization. The loan value of each lot
or unit covered by the mortgage shall be determined and the buyer thereof, if
any, shall be notified before the release of the loan. The buyer may, at his option, pay his installment
for the lot or unit directly to the mortgagee who shall apply the payments to
the corresponding mortgage indebtedness secured by the particular lot or unit
being paid for, with a view to enabling said buyer to obtain title over the lot
or unit promptly after full payment thereto. [Emphasis supplied.]
[24] Section 22. Alteration
of Plans. No owner or developer
shall change or alter the roads, open spaces, infastructures, facilities for
public use and/or other form of subdivision development as contained in the
approved subdivision plan and/or represented in its advertisements, without the
permission of the [HLURB] and the written conformity or consent of the duly
organized homeowners association, or in the absence of the latter, by the
majority of the lot buyers in the subdivision.
[25] CA rollo,
p. 26.
[26]
[27] Id. at 27.
[28] Id. at 26-28. Decided by Deinrado Simon D.
Dimalibot (HUDCC Deputy Secretary General), Francisco L. Dagñalan
(Commissioner), and Elias F. Fernandez, Jr. (DILG representative).
[29] Id. at 28.
[30] Id. at 46.
[31] Id. at 47.
[32] Id. at 46-48.
[33] Id. at 47-48.
[34] Id. at 23.
The case was docketed as OP Case No. 02-E-234. The decision was signed by Undersecretary
Enrique D. Perez, by authority of the President.
[35] CA Decision, p. 5; id. at 121.
[36] Id.; id.
[37] CA rollo,
p. 23.
[38] CA Decision, p. 6; CA rollo, p. 122.
[39] CA rollo,
p. 25. The Resolution was signed by
Senior Deputy Executive Secretary Waldo Q. Flores, by authority of the
President.
[40] Id. at 2-22. The petition was initially dismissed in the
CA’s January 29, 2004 Resolution for failure of the petition to state the
material dates and to attach a proof of the signatory’s authority to sign the
verification against forum-shopping (
[41] Petition in CA-G.R. SP No. 81280, pp. 11-14; id.
at 12-15.
[42] Section 25.
Issuance of Title. The owner or developer shall deliver the
title of the lot or unit to the buyer upon full payment of the lot or
unit. No fee, except those required for
the registration of the deed of sale in the Registry of Deeds, shall be
collected for the issuance of such title.
In the event a mortgage over the lot or unit is outstanding at the time
of the issuance of the title to the buyer, the owner or developer shall redeem
the mortgage or the corresponding portion thereof within six months from such
issuance in order that the title over any fully paid lot or unit may be secured
and delivered to the buyer in accordance herewith.
[43] Petition in CA-GR SP No. 81280, pp. 14-16; CA rollo, pp. 15-17.
[44] Id. at 16-18; id. at 17-19.
[45] CA rollo,
pp. 117-126; penned by Associate Justice Bienvenido L Reyes and concurred in by
Associate Justices Eugenio S. Labitoria and Rosalinda Asuncion-Vicente.
[46] CA Decision, pp. 7-8; CA rollo, pp. 123-124.
[47] Id. at 8; id. at 124.
[48] Id. at 8-9; id. at 124-125.
[49] Id. at 9; id. at 125.
[50] CA rollo,
pp. 127-134.
[51] Id. at 135-144.
[52] Id. at 156-158.
[53] Delta’s Memorandum in G.R. No. 168646, pp.
113-122; Delta’s Memorandum in G.R. No. 168666, pp. 98-107.
[54] Id. at 116-118; id. at 101-103.
[55] Id. at 118-199; id. at 103-104.
[56] Memorandum in G.R. No. 168646, pp. 165-195;
Memorandum in G.R. No. 168666, pp. 146-176.
[57] Bank’s Memorandum in G.R. No. 168646, pp.
178-186; Bank’s Memorandum in G.R. No. 168666, pp. 159-167.
[58] Id. at 190-192; id. at 171-173.
[59] Compliance and Comment in G.R. No. 168646, pp.
77-78; Compliance and Comment in G.R. No. 168666, pp. 65-66.
[60] Manifestation in G.R. No. 168646, p. 193;
Manifestation in G.R. No. 168666, p. 177.
[61] Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company, Inc. v. SLGT Holdings, Inc., G.R. Nos. 175181-175182, 175354 &175387-175388,
September 14, 2007, 533 SCRA 516, 526.
[62] Id.
[63] Coronel v. Court of Appeals, 331 Phil. 294, 309 (1996); Spouses Ramos v. Spouses Heruela, 509 Phil. 658, 664-667 (2005).
[64] See China
Banking Corporation v. Lozada, G.R. No. 164919, July 4, 2008, 557 SCRA 177,
204.
[65] Development Bank of the Philippines v. Capulong, G.R. No. 181790,
January 30, 2009, 577 SCRA 582, 587-588.
[66] 510 Phil. 158 (2005).
[67] Id. at 165-166.
[68] See Home
Bankers Savings & Trust Co. v. Court of Appeals, 496 Phil. 637, 655
(2005).
[69] Tolentino, Commentaries on the Civil Code
(1987), Vol. IV, p. 294, citing
[70] CA rollo,
pp. 71-79.
[71] Article 1245.
Dation in payment, whereby property is alienated to the creditor in
satisfaction of a debt in money, shall be governed by the law of sales.
[72] Article 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 of a part of the thing purchased.
The
vendor shall answer for the eviction even though nothing has been said in the
contract on the subject.
The
contracting parties, however, may increase, diminish, or suppress this legal
obligation of the vendor. (Civil Code)
[73] Andaya v. Manansala, 107 Phil.
1151, 1154-1155 (1960); J.M. Tuason &
Co., Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 183 Phil. 105, 113-114 (1979).
[74] Article 2231.
In quasi-delicts, exemplary damages may be granted if the defendant
acted with gross negligence.
Article
2232. In contracts and quasi-contracts,
the court may award exemplary damages if the defendant acted in a wanton,
fraudulent, reckless, oppressive, or malevolent manner.
Article
2233. Exemplary damages cannot be
recovered as a matter of right; the court will decide whether or not they
should be adjudicated. (Civil Code)
[75] Article 2208.
In the absence of stipulation, attorney’s fees and expenses of
litigation, other than judicial costs, cannot be recovered, except:
(1) When
exemplary damages are awarded;
(2) When the
defendant’s act or omission has compelled the plaintiff to litigate with third
person or to incur expenses to protect his interest;
(3) In criminal cases
of malicious prosecution against the plaintiff;
(4) In case of a
clearly unfounded civil action or proceeding against the plaintiff;
(5) Where the
defendant acted in gross and evident bad faith in refusing to satisfy the
plaintiff’s plainly valid, just and demandable claim;
(6) In actions for
legal support;
(7) In actions for the
recovery of wages of household helpers, laborers and skilled workers;
(8) In actions for
indemnity under workmen’s compensation and employer’s liability laws;
(9) In a separate
civil action to recover civil liability arising from a crime;
(10) When at least
double judicial costs are awarded;
(11) In any other case
where the court deems it just and equitable that attorney’s fees and expenses
of litigation should be recovered.
In
all cases, the attorney’s fees and expenses of litigation must be reasonable.
(Civil Code)
[76] Enriquez
made a reservation in her comment to the two petitions, in this wise:
3. It may be recalled that respondent Enriquez
was not able to succeed in her position to pay a lesser amount on the
consideration of [sic] buying a house and lot.
She did not pursue anymore her case but the petitioners herein raised
matters which would directly affect them.
By way of comment therefore to the said petitions, respondent Enriquez
asserts that she will take appropriate remedies after this Honorable Court
resolves the issues raised by the petitioners Luzon Development Bank and Delta
Development and Management Services, Inc. against each other. But she
insists that she is liable to pay to either of the petitioners based on lesser
amount she previously claimed. (Rollo of G.R. No. 168646, p. 78; rollo of G.R. No. 168666, p. 66)