Robes-Francisco v. CFI

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Republic of the Philippines

SUPREME COURT
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
G.R. No. L-41093 October 30, 1978
ROBES-FRANCISCO REALTY &
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, petitioner,
vs.
COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE OF RIZAL
(BRANCH XXXIV), and LOLITA
MILLAN, respondents.
Purugganan & Bersamin for petitioner.
Salvador N. Beltran for respondent.

MUOZ PALMA, J.:


This is a direct appeal on questions of law from a
decision of the Court of First Instance of Rizal,
Branch XXXIV, presided by the Honorable
Bernardo P. Pardo, the dispositive portion of
which reads:

WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby


rendered commanding the defendant to
register the deed of absolute sale it had
executed in favor of plaintiff with the
Register of Deeds of Caloocan City and
secure the corresponding title in the name
of plaintiff within ten (10) days after finality
of this decision; if, for any reason, this not
possible, defendant is hereby sentenced
to pay plaintiff the sum of P5,193.63 with
interest at 4% per annum from June 22,
1972 until fully paid.
In either case, defendant is sentenced to
pay plaintiff nominal damages in the
amount of P20,000.00 plus attorney's fee
in the amount of P5,000.00 and costs.
SO ORDERED.
Caloocan City, February 11, 1975. (rollo,
p. 21)
Petitioner corporation questions the award for
nominal damages of P20,000.00 and attorney's
fee of P5,000.00 which are allegedly excessive
and unjustified.

In the Court's resolution of October 20, 1975, We


gave due course to the Petition only as regards
the portion of the decision awarding nominal
damages. 1
The following incidents are not in dispute:
In May 1962 Robes-Francisco Realty &
Development Corporation, now petitioner, agreed
to sell to private respondent Lolita Millan for and
in consideration of the sum of P3,864.00, payable
in installments, a parcel of land containing an area
of approximately 276 square meters, situated in
Barrio Camarin, Caloocan City, known as Lot No.
20, Block No. 11 of its Franville Subdivision. 2
Millan complied with her obligation under the
contract and paid the installments stipulated
therein, the final payment having been made on
December 22, 1971. The vendee made a total
payment of P5,193.63 including interests and
expenses for registration of title. 3
Thereafter, Lolita Millan made repeated demands
upon the corporation for the execution of the final
deed of sale and the issuance to her of the
transfer certificate of title over the lot. On March 2,
1973, the parties executed a deed of absolute

sale of the aforementioned parcel of land. The


deed of absolute sale contained, among others,
this particular provision:
That the VENDOR further warrants that
the transfer certificate of title of the abovedescribed parcel of land shall be
transferred in the name of the VENDEE
within the period of six (6) months from
the date of full payment and in case the
VENDOR fails to issue said transfer
certificate of title, it shall bear the
obligation to refund to the VENDEE the
total amount already paid for, plus an
interest at the rate of 4% per annum.
(record on appeal, p. 9)
Notwithstanding the lapse of the above-mentioned
stipulated period of six (6) months, the corporation
failed to cause the issuance of the corresponding
transfer certificate of title over the lot sold to
Millan, hence, the latter filed on August 14, 1974 a
complaint for specific performance and damages
against Robes-Francisco Realty & Development
Corporation in the Court of First Instance of Rizal,
Branch XXXIV, Caloocan City, docketed therein
as Civil Case No. C-3268. 4

The complaint prayed for judgment (1) ordering


the reformation of the deed of absolute sale; (2)
ordering the defendant to deliver to plaintiff the
certificate of title over the lot free from any lien or
encumbrance; or, should this be not possible, to
pay plaintiff the value of the lot which should not
be less than P27,600.00 (allegedly the present
estimated value of the lot); and (3) ordering the
defendant to pay plaintiff damages, corrective and
actual in the sum of P15 000.00. 5
The corporation in its answer prayed that the
complaint be dismissed alleging that the deed of
absolute sale was voluntarily executed between
the parties and the interest of the plaintiff was
amply protected by the provision in said contract
for payment of interest at 4% per annum of the
total amount paid, for the delay in the issuance of
the title. 6
At the pretrial conference the parties agreed to
submit the case for decision on the pleadings
after defendant further made certain admissions
of facts not contained in its answer. 7
Finding that the realty corporation failed to cause
the issuance of the corresponding transfer
certificate of title because the parcel of land

conveyed to Millan was included among other


properties of the corporation mortgaged to the
GSIS to secure an obligation of P10 million and
that the owner's duplicate certificate of title of the
subdivision was in the possession of the
Government Service Insurance System (GSIS),
the trial court, on February 11, 1975, rendered
judgment the dispositive portion of which is
quoted in pages 1 and 2 of this Decision. We hold
that the trial court did not err in awarding nominal
damages; however, the circumstances of the case
warrant a reduction of the amount of P20,000.00
granted to private respondent Millan.
There can be no dispute in this case under the
pleadings and the admitted facts that petitioner
corporation was guilty of delay, amounting to
nonperformance of its obligation, in issuing the
transfer certificate of title to vendee Millan who
had fully paid up her installments on the lot
bought by her. Article 170 of the Civil Code
expressly provides that those who in the
performance of their obligations are guilty of
fraud, negligence, or delay, and those who in any
manner contravene the tenor thereof, are liable
for damages.

Petitioner contends that the deed of absolute sale


executed between the parties stipulates that
should the vendor fail to issue the transfer
certificate of title within six months from the date
of full payment, it shall refund to the vendee the
total amount paid for with interest at the rate of
4% per annum, hence, the vendee is bound by
the terms of the provision and cannot recover
more than what is agreed upon. Presumably,
petitioner in invoking Article 1226 of the Civil Code
which provides that in obligations with a penal
clause, the penalty shall substitute the indemnity
for damages and the payment of interests in case
of noncompliance, if there is no stipulation to the
contrary.
The foregoing argument of petitioner is totally
devoid of merit. We would agree with petitioner if
the clause in question were to be considered as a
penal clause. Nevertheless, for very obvious
reasons, said clause does not convey any penalty,
for even without it, pursuant to Article 2209 of the
Civil Code, the vendee would be entitled to
recover the amount paid by her with legal rate of
interest which is even more than the 4%
provided for in the clause. 7-A

It is therefore inconceivable that the aforecited


provision in the deed of sale is a penal clause
which will preclude an award of damages to the
vendee Millan. In fact the clause is so worded as
to work to the advantage of petitioner corporation.
Unfortunately, the vendee, now private
respondent, submitted her case below without
presenting evidence on the actual damages
suffered by her as a result of the nonperformance
of petitioner's obligation under the deed of sale.
Nonetheless, the facts show that the right of the
vendee to acquire title to the lot bought by her
was violated by petitioner and this entitles her at
the very least to nominal damages.
The pertinent provisions of our Civil Code follow:
Art. 2221. Nominal damages are
adjudicated in order that a right of the
plaintiff, which has been violated or
invaded by the defendant, may be
vindicated or recognized, and not for the
purpose of indemnifying the plaintiff for
any loss suffered by him.
Art. 2222. The court may award nominal
damages in every obligation arising from

any source enumerated in article 1157, or


in every case where any property right has
been invaded.
Under the foregoing provisions nominal damages
are not intended for indemnification of loss
suffered but for the vindication or recognition of a
right violated or invaded. They are recoverable
where some injury has been done the amount of
which the evidence fails to show, the assessment
of damages being left to the discretion of the court
according to the circumstances of the case. 8
It is true as petitioner claims that under American
jurisprudence nominal damages by their very
nature are small sums fixed by the court without
regard to the extent of the harm done to the
injured party.
It is generally held that a nominal damage
is a substantial claim, if based upon the
violation of a legal right; in such case, the
law presumes a damage, although actual
or compensatory damages are not proven;
in truth nominal damages are damages in
name only and not in fact, and are
allowed, not as an equivalent of a wrong
inflicted, but simply in recogniton of the

existence of a technical injury. (Fouraker


v. Kidd Springs Boating and Fishing Club,
65 S. W. 2d 796-797, citing 17 C.J. 720,
and a number of authorities). 9
In this jurisdiction, in Vda. de Medina, et al. v.
Cresencia, et al. 1956, which was an action for
damages arising out of a vehicular accident, this
Court had occasion to eliminate an award of
P10,000.00 imposed by way of nominal damages,
the Court stating inter alia that the amount cannot,
in common sense, be demeed "nominal". 10
In a subsequent case, viz: Northwest Airlines, Inc.
v. Nicolas L. Cuenca, 1965, this Court, however,
through then Justice Roberto Concepcion who
later became Chief Justice of this
Court, sustained an award of P20,000.00 as
nominal damagesin favor of respnodent Cuenca.
The Court there found special reasons for
considering P20,000.00 as "nominal". Cuenca
who was the holder of a first class ticket from
Manila to Tokyo was rudely compelled by an
agent of petitioner Airlines to move to the tourist
class notwithstanding its knowledge that Cuenca
as Commissioner of Public Highways of the
Republic of the Philippines was travelling in his

official capacity as a delegate of the country to a


conference in Tokyo." 11
Actually, as explained in the Court's decision
in Northwest Airlines, there is no conflict between
that case and Medina, for in the latter, the
P10,000.00 award for nominal damages was
eliminated principally because the aggrieved party
had already been awarded P6,000.00 as
compensatory damages, P30,000.00 as moral
damages and P10,000.00 as exemplary
damages, and "nominal damages cannot coexist
with compensatory damages," while in the case of
Commissioner Cuenca, no such compensatory,
moral, or exemplary damages were granted to the
latter. 12
At any rate, the circumstances of a particular case
will determine whether or not the amount
assessed as nominal damages is within the scope
or intent of the law, more particularly, Article 2221
of the Civil Code.
In the situation now before Us, We are of the view
that the amount of P20,000.00 is excessive. The
admitted fact that petitioner corporation failed to
convey a transfer certificate of title to respondent
Millan because the subdivision property was

mortgaged to the GSIS does not in itself show


that there was bad faith or fraud. Bad faith is not
to be presumed. Moreover, there was the
expectation of the vendor that arrangements were
possible for the GSIS to make partial releases of
the subdivision lots from the overall real estate
mortgage. It was simply unfortunate that petitioner
did not succeed in that regard.
For that reason We cannot agree with respondent
Millan Chat the P20,000.00 award may be
considered in the nature of exemplary damages.
In case of breach of contract, exemplary damages
may be awarded if the guilty party acted in
wanton, fraudulent, reckless, oppressive or
malevolent manner. 13 Furthermore, exemplary or corrective damages are to be
imposed by way of example or correction for the public good, only if the injured party has shown that he is
entitled to recover moral, temperate or compensatory damages."

Here, respondent Millan did not submit below any


evidence to prove that she suffered actual or
compensatory damages. 14
To conclude, We hold that the sum of Ten
Thousand Pesos (P10,000.00) by way of nominal
damages is fair and just under the following
circumstances, viz: respondent Millan bought the
lot from petitioner in May, 1962, and paid in full

her installments on December 22, 1971, but it was


only on March 2, 1973, that a deed of absolute
sale was executed in her favor, and
notwithstanding the lapse of almost three years
since she made her last payment, petitioner still
failed to convey the corresponding transfer
certificate of title to Millan who accordingly was
compelled to file the instant complaint in August of
1974.
PREMISES CONSIDERED, We modify the
decision of the trial court and reduce the nominal
damages to Ten Thousand Pesos (P10,000.00).
In all other respects the aforesaid decision stands.
Without pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
Teehankee (Chairman), Makasiar, Fernandez and
Guerrero, JJ., concur.

Footnotes
1 rollo, p. 33
2 record on appeal, p. 2

3 ibid., p. 3
4 ibid., p. 1
5 ibid., pp. 6-7
6 ibid., pp. 11 - 1 4.
7 ibid., pp. 15-16
7-A Art. 2209. Civil Code: If the obligation
consists in the payment of a sum of
money, and the debtor incurs in delay,
the indemnity for damages, there being no
stipulation to the contrary, shall be the
payment of the interest agreed upon and
in the absence of stipulation, the legal
which is six per cent per annum
(Emphasis supplied)
8 Ventanilla v. Centeno, 1961, 1 SCRA
215
9 See also Mathis v. State, Dept. of
Roads, 135 N.W. 2d, 17 20 Quillet, et al. v.
Johnson, et al., 71 N.E. 2d. 488, among
others.
10 99 Phil. 506, 510, per Justice J.B.L.
Reyes.

11 14 SCRA 1063, 1066.


12 ibid., p. 1065.
13 Article 2232, Civil Code Tolentino, on
the Civil Code, 1959 ed., Vol. V p. 561.
14 Articles 2229, 2234, Civil Code.
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