ECE Realty V Mandap - Digest
ECE Realty V Mandap - Digest
ECE Realty V Mandap - Digest
In 1998, more than two years after the execution of the Contract to Sell,
respondent, through her counsel, wrote petitioner a letter demanding the return of
P422,500.00, representing the payments she made, on the ground that she
subsequently discovered that the condominium project was being built in Pasay City
and not in Makati City as indicated in its printed advertisements. However, instead
of answering Mandaps letter, the petitioner sent her a written communication
dated informing her that her unit is ready for inspection and occupancy.
Aggrieved, respondent filed an appeal with the Office of the President but it
dismissed the case and affirmed in toto the decision of the HLURB Board of
Commissioners.
Hence, this petition by ECE Realty assailing the decision of the CA.
Issue: Whether petitioner ECE Realty committed fraud against respondent Mandap
and if so, whether such fraud is sufficient ground to nullify its contract with
respondent.
Held: Yes, petitioner committed fraud but it was not sufficient to nullify its contract
with petitioner. The Supreme Court sustained the decision of the Housing and Land
Use Arbiter, the HLURB Board of Commissioners and the Office of the President.
Petition granted.
Ruling:
Article 1344 of the same Code provides that [i]n order that fraud may make
a contract voidable, it should be serious and should not have been employed by
both contracting parties.
Jurisprudence has shown that in order to constitute fraud that provides basis
to annul contracts, it must fulfil two conditions:
2. The fraud must be proven by clear and convincing evidence and not
merely by a preponderance thereof.
In the present case, this Court finds that petitioner is guilty of false
representation of a fact. This is evidenced by its printed advertisements indicating
that its subject condominium project is located in Makati City when, in fact, it is in
Pasay City.
However, the Court agrees with the Housing and Land Use Arbiter, the HLURB
Board of Commissioners, and the Office of the President, that the misrepresentation
made by petitioner in its advertisements does not constitute causal fraud since
respondent failed to prove that the location of the said project was the causal
consideration or the principal inducement which led her into buying her unit in the
said condominium project.
The Court is not persuaded by the ruling of the CA which expresses doubt on
the due execution of the Contract to Sell. The fact remains that the said Contract to
Sell was notarized. It is settled that absent any clear and convincing proof to the
contrary, a notarized document enjoys the presumption of regularity and is
conclusive as to the truthfulness of its contents.
The Court does not agree that the presumption of regularity accorded to the
notarized Contract to Sell was overcome by evidence to the contrary. Respondents
allegation that she signed the said
Contract to Sell with several blank spaces, and which allegedly did not indicate the
location of the condominium, was not supported by proof. The basic rule is that
mere allegation is not evidence and is not equivalent to proof.
The contention that Mandap signed the Contract to Sell in blank, and [that] it
was ECE Realty that supplied the details on it is remarkably threadbare for no
evidence was submitted to support such claim in all the proceedings before the
ENCRFO and the Board of Commissioners.