Case 2

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(Contract : Principle of Relativity)

G.R. No. 182128, February 19, 2014


PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK, versus TERESITA TAN DEE,
ANTIPOLO PROPERTIES, INC., (NOW PRIME EAST PROPERTIES,
INC.) AND AFPRSBS, INC.
Facts of the Case
Some time in July 1994, Teresita Tan Dee (Dee) bought from
Prime East Properties Inc.(PEPI) on an installment basis a residential lot
located in Binangonan, Rizal, with an area of 204 square meters and
covered by Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 619608. Subsequently,
PEPI assigned its rights over a 213,093sq m property on August 1996
to Armed Forces of the PhilippinesRetirement and Separation Benefits
System, Inc. (AFPRSBS), which included the property purchased by
Dee.
On September 10, 1996, PEPI obtained a P205,000,000.00 loan
from Philippine National Bank, secured by a mortgage over several
properties, including Dees property. The mortgage was cleared by the
Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board (HLURB) on September 18,
1996.
cralawred

After Dees full payment of the purchase price, a deed of sale


was executed by PEPI and AFPRSBS on July 1998 in Dees favor.
Consequently, Dee sought from the PNB the delivery of the owners
duplicate title over the property, to no avail. Thus, she filed with the
HLURB a complaint for specific performance to compel delivery of TCT
No. 619608 by the PNB, PEPI and AFPRSBS, among others. In its
Decision dated May 21, 2003, the HLURB ruled in favor of Dee,
directing PNB to cancel/release the mortgage on Lot 12, Block 21A,
Village East Executive Homes covered by Transfer Certificate of Title
No. 619608 (TCT No. 619608), and accordingly, surrender/release
the title thereof to [Dee].
The HLURB decision was affirmed by its Board of Commissioners
per Decision dated March 15, 2004. On appeal, the Board of
Commissioners decision was affirmed by the Office of the President
(OP) in its Decision dated August 4, 2004.
lawred

PNB claims that it has a valid mortgage over Dees property,


which was part of the property mortgaged by PEPI to it to secure its
loan obligation, and that Dee and PEPI are bound by such mortgage.
The PNB also argues that it is not privy to the transactions between the
subdivision project buyers and PEPI, and has no obligation to perform
any of their respective undertakings under their contract.
.
PNB also maintains that Presidential Decree (P.D.) No. 957 cannot
nullify the subsisting agreement between it and PEPI, and that the
PNBs rights over the mortgaged properties are protected by Act 3135 .
If at all, the petitioner can be compelled to release or cancel the
mortgage only after the provisions of P.D. No. 957 on redemption of the
mortgage by the owner/developer (Section 25) are complied with. The

PNB also objects to the denomination by the CA of the provisions in the


Affidavit of Undertaking as stipulations pour autrui, arguing that the
release of the title was conditioned on Dees direct payment to it.
Respondent AFPRSBS, meanwhile, contends that it cannot be
compelled to pay or settle the obligation under the mortgage contract
between PEPI and the PNB as it is merely an investor in the subdivision
project
and
is
not
privy
to
the
mortgage.
PEPI, on the other hand, claims that the title over the subject
property is one of the properties due for release by the PNB as it has
already been the subject of a Memorandum of Agreement and dacion
en pago entered into between them. The agreement was reached after
PEPI filed a petition for rehabilitation, and contained the stipulation
that the petitioner agreed to release the mortgage lien on fully paid
mortgaged properties upon the issuance of the certificates of title over
the
dacioned
properties.
Issues: Whether or not PNB is not privy to the transactions between
the subdivision project buyers and PEPI, and has no obligation to
perform any of their respective undertakings under their contract.
Ruling of the Court
The PNB is correct in arguing that it is not obliged to perform any
of the undertaking of respondent PEPI and AFPRSBS in its transactions
with Dee because it is not a privy thereto. The basic principle of
relativity of contracts is that contracts can only bind the parties who
entered into it, and cannot favor or prejudice a third person, even if he
is aware of such contract and has acted with knowledge thereof.
Where there is no privity of contract, there is likewise no obligation or
liability
to
speak
about..
lawred

PNB, however, is not being tasked to undertake the obligations of


PEPI and AFPRSBS. In this case, there are two phases involved in the
transactions between respondents PEPI and Dee the first phase is the
contract to sell, which eventually became the second phase, the
absolute sale, after Dees full payment of the purchase price. In a
contract of sale, the parties obligations are plain and simple. The law
obliges the vendor to transfer the ownership of and to deliver the thing
that is the object of sale. On the other hand, the principal obligation of
a vendee is to pay the full purchase price at the agreed time. Based on
the final contract of sale between them, the obligation of PEPI, as
owners and vendors of Lot 12, Block 21A, Village East Executive
Homes, is to transfer the ownership of and to deliver Lot 12, Block 21
A to Dee, who, in turn, shall pay, and has in fact paid, the full purchase
price of the property. There is nothing in the decision of the HLURB, as
affirmed by the OP and the CA, which shows that the PNB is being
ordered to assume the obligation of any of the respondents. There is
also nothing in the HLURB decision, which validates the PNBs claim
that the mortgage has been nullified. The order of cancellation/release
of the mortgage is simply a consequence of Dees full payment of the
purchase price, as mandated by Section 25 of P.D. No. 957.

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