Rural Bank of Bombon vs. CA

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Republic of the Philippines

SUPREME COURT
Manila

FIRST DIVISION

G.R. No. 95703 August 3, 1992

RURAL BANK OF BOMBON (CAMARINES SUR), INC., petitioner,


vs.
HON. COURT OF APPEALS, EDERLINDA M. GALLARDO, DANIEL MANZO and RUFINO S.
AQUINO, respondents.

L.M. Maggay & Associates for petitioner.

GRIÑO-AQUINO, J.:

This petition for review seeks reversal of the decision dated September 18, 1990 of the Court of
Appeals, reversing the decision of the Regional Trial Court of Makati, Branch 150, which dismissed
the private respondents' complaint and awarded damages to the petitioner, Rural Bank of Bombon.

On January 12, 1981, Ederlinda M. Gallardo, married to Daniel Manzo, executed a special power of
attorney in favor of Rufina S. Aquino authorizing him:

1. To secure a loan from any bank or lending institution for any amount or otherwise
mortgage the property covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. S-79238 situated
at Las Piñas, Rizal, the same being my paraphernal property, and in that connection,
to sign, or execute any deed of mortgage and sign other document requisite and
necessary in securing said loan and to receive the proceeds thereof in cash or in
check and to sign the receipt therefor and thereafter endorse the check representing
the proceeds of loan. (p. 10, Rollo.)

Thereupon, Gallardo delivered to Aquino both the special power of attorney and her owner's copy of
Transfer Certificate of Title No. S-79238 (19963-A).

On August 26, 1981, a Deed of Real Estate Mortgage was executed by Rufino S. Aquino in favor of
the Rural Bank of Bombon (Camarines Sur), Inc. (hereafter, defendant Rural Bank) over the three
parcels of land covered by TCT No. S-79238. The deed stated that the property was being given as
security for the payment of "certain loans, advances, or other accommodations obtained by the
mortgagor from the mortgagee in the total sum of Three Hundred Fifty Thousand Pesos only
(P350,000.00), plus interest at the rate of fourteen (14%) per annum . . ." (p. 11, Rollo).

On January 6, 1984, the spouses Ederlinda Gallardo and Daniel Manzo filed an action against
Rufino Aquino and the Bank because Aquino allegedly left his residence at San Pascual, Hagonoy,
Bulacan, and transferred to an unknown place in Bicol. She discovered that Aquino first resided at
Sta. Isabel, Calabanga, Camarines Sur, and then later, at San Vicente, Calabanga, Camarines Sur,
and that they (plaintiffs) were allegedly surprised to discover that the property was mortgaged to pay
personal loans obtained by Aquino from the Bank solely for personal use and benefit of Aquino; that
the mortgagor in the deed was defendant Aquino instead of plaintiff Gallardo whose address up to
now is Manuyo, Las Piñas, M.M., per the title (TCT No. S-79238) and in the deed vesting power of
attorney to Aquino; that correspondence relative to the mortgage was sent to Aquino's address at
"Sta. Isabel, Calabanga, Camarines Sur" instead of Gallardo's postal address at Las Piñas, Metro
Manila; and that defendant Aquino, in the real estate mortgage, appointed defendant Rural Bank as
attorney in fact, and in case of judicial foreclosure as receiver with corresponding power to sell and
that although without any express authority from Gallardo, defendant Aquino waived Gallardo's
rights under Section 12, Rule 39, of the Rules of Court and the proper venue of the foreclosure suit.

On January 23, 1984, the trial court, thru the Honorable Fernando P. Agdamag, temporarily
restrained the Rural Bank "from enforcing the real estate mortgage and from foreclosing it either
judicially or extrajudicially until further orders from the court" (p.36, Rollo).

Rufino S. Aquino in his answer said that the plaintiff authorized him to mortgage her property to a
bank so that he could use the proceeds to liquidate her obligation of P350,000 to him. The obligation
to pay the Rural Bank devolved on Gallardo. Of late, however, she asked him to pay the Bank but
defendant Aquino set terms and conditions which plaintiff did not agree to. Aquino asked for
payment to him of moral damages in the sum of P50,000 and lawyer's fees of P35,000.

The Bank moved to dismiss the complaint and filed counter-claims for litigation expenses, exemplary
damages, and attorney's fees. It also filed a crossclaim against Aquino for P350,000 with interest,
other bank charges and damages if the mortgage be declared unauthorized.

Meanwhile, on August 30, 1984, the Bank filed a complaint against Ederlinda Gallardo and Rufino
Aquino for "Foreclosure of Mortgage" docketed as Civil Case No. 8330 in Branch 141, RTC Makati.
On motion of the plaintiff, the foreclosure case and the annulment case (Civil Case No. 6062) were
consolidated.

On January 16, 1986, the trial court rendered a summary judgment in Civil Case No. 6062,
dismissing the complaint for annulment of mortgage and declaring the Rural Bank entitled to
damages the amount of which will be determined in appropriate proceedings. The court lifted the writ
of preliminary injunction it previously issued.

On April 23, 1986, the trial court, in Civil Case No. 8330, issued an order suspending the foreclosure
proceedings until after the decision in the annulment case (Civil Case No. 6062) shall have become
final and executory.

The plaintiff in Civil Case No. 6062 appealed to the Court of Appeals, which on September 18, 1990,
reversed the trial court. The dispositive portion of the decision reads:

UPON ALL THESE, the summary judgment entered by the lower court is hereby
REVERSED and in lieu thereof, judgment is hereby RENDERED, declaring the deed
of real estate mortgage dated August 26, 1981, executed between Rufino S. Aquino
with the marital consent of his wife Bibiana Aquino with the appellee Rural Bank of
Bombon, Camarines Sur, unauthorized, void and unenforceable against plaintiff
Ederlinda Gallardo; ordering the reinstatement of the preliminary injunction issued at
the onset of the case and at the same time, ordering said injunction made
permanent.

Appellee Rural Bank to pay the costs. (p. 46, Rollo.)


Hence, this petition for review by the Rural Bank of Bombon, Camarines Sur, alleging that the Court
of Appeals erred:

1. in declaring that the Deed of Real Estate Mortgage was unauthorized, void, and
unenforceable against the private respondent Ederlinda Gallardo; and

2. in not upholding the validity of the Real Estate Mortgage executed by Rufino S.
Aquino as attorney-in-fact for Gallardo, in favor of the Rural Bank of Bombon, (Cam.
Sur), Inc.

Both assignments of error boil down to the lone issue of the validity of the Deed of Real Estate
Mortgage dated August 26, 1981, executed by Rufino S. Aquino, as attorney-in-fact of Ederlinda
Gallardo, in favor of the Rural Bank of Bombon (Cam. Sur), Inc.

The Rural Bank contends that the real estate mortgage executed by respondent Aquino is valid
because he was expressly authorized by Gallardo to mortgage her property under the special power
of attorney she made in his favor which was duly registered and annotated on Gallardo's title. Since
the Special Power of Attorney did not specify or indicate that the loan would be for Gallardo's benefit,
then it could be for the use and benefit of the attorney-in-fact, Aquino.

However, the Court of Appeals ruled otherwise. It held:

The Special Power of Attorney above quoted shows the extent of authority given by
the plaintiff to defendant Aquino. But defendant Aquino in executing the deed of Real
Estate Mortgage in favor of the rural bank over the three parcels of land covered by
Gallardo's title named himself as the mortgagor without stating that his signature on
the deed was for and in behalf of Ederlinda Gallardo in his capacity as her attorney-
in-fact.

At the beginning of the deed mention was made of "attorney-in-fact of Ederlinda H.


Gallardo," thus: " (T)his MORTGAGE executed by Rufino S. Aquino attorney in fact
of Ederlinda H. Gallardo, of legal age, Filipino, married to Bibiana Panganiban with
postal address at Sta. Isabel . . .," but which of itself, was merely descriptive of the
person of defendant Aquino. Defendant Aquino even signed it plainly as mortgagor
with the marital consent yet of his wife Bibiana P. Aquino who signed the deed as
"wife of mortgagor."

xxx xxx xxx

The three (3) promissory notes respectively dated August 31, 1981, September 23,
1981 and October 26, 1981, were each signed by Rufino Aquino on top of a line
beneath which is written "signature of mortgagor" and by Bibiana P. Aquino on top of
a line under which is written "signature of spouse," without any mention that
execution thereof was for and in behalf of the plaintiff as mortgagor. It results, borne
out from what were written on the deed, that the amounts were the personal loans of
defendant Aquino. As pointed out by the appellant, Aquino's wife has not been
appointed co-agent of defendant Aquino and her signature on the deed and on the
promissory notes can only mean that the obligation was personally incurred by them
and for their own personal account.

The deed of mortgage stipulated that the amount obtained from the loans shall be
used or applied only for "fishpond (bangus and sugpo production)." As pointed out by
the plaintiff, the defendant Rural Bank in its Answer had not categorically denied the
allegation in the complaint that defendant Aquino in the deed of mortgage was the
intended user and beneficiary of the loans and not the plaintiff. And the special power
of attorney could not be stretched to include the authority to obtain a loan in said
defendant Aquino's own benefit. (pp. 40-41, Rollo.)

The decision of the Court of Appeals is correct. This case is governed by the general rule in the law
of agency which this Court, applied in "Philippine Sugar Estates Development Co. vs. Poizat," 48
Phil. 536, 538:

It is a general rule in the law of agency that, in order to bind the principal by a
mortgage on real property executed by an agent, it must upon its face purport to be
made, signed and sealed in the name of the principal, otherwise, it will bind the agent
only. It is not enough merely that the agent was in fact authorized to make the
mortgage, if he has not acted in the name of the principal. Neither is it ordinarily
sufficient that in the mortgage the agent describes himself as acting by virtue of a
power of attorney, if in fact the agent has acted in his own name and has set his own
hand and seal to the mortgage. This is especially true where the agent himself is a
party to the instrument. However clearly the body of the mortgage may show and
intend that it shall be the act of the principal, yet, unless in fact it is executed by the
agent for and on behalf of his principal and as the act and deed of the principal, it is
not valid as to the principal.

In view of this rule, Aquino's act of signing the Deed of Real Estate Mortgage in his name alone as
mortgagor, without any indication that he was signing for and in behalf of the property owner,
Ederlinda Gallardo, bound himself alone in his personal capacity as a debtor of the petitioner Bank
and not as the agent or attorney-in-fact of Gallardo. The Court of Appeals further observed:

It will also be observed that the deed of mortgage was executed on August 26, 1981
therein clearly stipulating that it was being executed "as security for the payment of
certain loans, advances or other accommodation obtained by the Mortgagor from the
Mortgagee in the total sum of Three Hundred Fifty Thousand Pesos only
(P350,000.00)" although at the time no such loan or advance had been obtained.
The promissory notes were dated August 31, September 23 and October 26, 1981
which were subsequent to the execution of the deed of mortgage. The appellant is
correct in claiming that the defendant Rural Bank should not have agreed to extend
or constitute the mortgage on the properties of Gallardo who had no existing
indebtedness with it at the time.

Under the facts the defendant Rural Bank appeared to have ignored the
representative capacity of Aquino and dealt with him and his wife in their personal
capacities. Said appellee Rural Bank also did not conduct an inquiry on whether the
subject loans were to benefit the interest of the principal (plaintiff Gallardo) rather
than that of the agent although the deed of mortgage was explicit that the loan was
for purpose of the bangus and sugpo production of defendant Aquino.

In effect, with the execution of the mortgage under the circumstances and assuming
it to be valid but because the loan taken was to be used exclusively for Aquino's
business in the "bangus" and "sugpo" production, Gallardo in effect becomes a
surety who is made primarily answerable for loans taken by Aquino in his personal
capacity in the event Aquino defaults in such payment. Under Art. 1878 of the Civil
Code, to obligate the principal as a guarantor or surety, a special power of attorney is
required. No such special power of attorney for Gallardo to be a surety of Aquino had
been executed. (pp. 42-43, Rollo.)

Petitioner claims that the Deed of Real Estate Mortgage is enforceable against Gallardo since it was
executed in accordance with Article 1883 which provides:

Art. 1883. If an agent acts in his own name, the principal has no right of action
against the persons with whom the agent has contracted; neither have such persons
against the principal.

In such case the agent is the one directly bound in favor of the person with whom he
has contracted, as if the transaction were his own, except when the contract involves
things belonging to the principal.

The above provision of the Civil Code relied upon by the petitioner Bank, is not applicable to the
case at bar. Herein respondent Aquino acted purportedly as an agent of Gallardo, but actually acted
in his personal capacity. Involved herein are properties titled in the name of respondent Gallardo
against which the Bank proposes to foreclose the mortgage constituted by an agent (Aquino) acting
in his personal capacity. Under these circumstances, we hold, as we did in Philippine Sugar Estates
Development Co. vs. Poizat, supra, that Gallardo's property is not liable on the real estate mortgage:

There is no principle of law by which a person can become liable on a real mortgage
which she never executed either in person or by attorney in fact. It should be noted
that this is a mortgage upon real property, the title to which cannot be divested
except by sale on execution or the formalities of a will or deed. For such reasons, the
law requires that a power of attorney to mortgage or sell real property should be
executed with all of the formalities required in a deed. For the same reason that the
personal signature of Poizat, standing alone, would not convey the title of his wife in
her own real property, such a signature would not bind her as a mortgagor in real
property, the title to which was in her name. (p. 548.)

WHEREFORE, finding no reversible error in the decision of the Court of Appeals, we AFFIRM it in
toto. Costs against the petitioner.

SO ORDERED.

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