Case-Analysis Legal-Technique FEU Lim Romy-Ian

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First Decision: Abigail L. Mendiola Vs. Venerando P. Sangalang


G.R. No. 205283. June 7, 2017 (only four cases were cited)

I.

II.

Second Decision: PARADIGM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION OF THE PHILIPPINES vs. BANK OF THE
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
G.R. No. 191174. June 7, 2017

III. Facts: Sengkon Trading (Sengkon), a sole proprietorship, obtained a loan from Far East Bank and
Trust Company (FEBTC) under a credit facility. FEBTC again granted Sengkon another credit facility. Two
real estate mortgage (REM) contracts were executed by PDCP’s President to partially secure Sengkon’s
obligations under this Credit Line.

Sengkon defaulted in the payment of its loan obligations. FEBTC demanded payment from PDCP.
Negotiations were put on hold because BPI acquired FEBTC and assumed the rights and obligations of
the latter.

Upon verification with the Registry of Deeds, PDCP discovered that FEBTC extra-judicially foreclosed the
first and second mortgage without notice to it as mortgagor and sold the mortgaged properties to FEBTC
as the lone bidder. Thereafter, the corresponding Certificate of Sale was registered. PDCP filed a
Complaint for Annulment of Mortgage, Foreclosure, Certificate of Sale and Damages. PDCP alleged that
FEBTC assured it that the mortgaged properties will only secure the Credit Line sub-facility of the
Omnibus Line. With this understanding, PDCP President allegedly agreed to sign on two separate dates a
pro-forma and blank REM. PDCP, however, claimed that it had no intent to be bound under the second
REM, which was not intended to be a separate contract, but only a means to reduce registration
expenses. According to PDCP, when FEBTC registered both REMs, even if the intent was only to register
one, the validity of both REMs was vitiated by lack of consent. PDCP claims that said intent is supported
by the fact that the REMs were constituted merely as “partial security” for Sengkon’s obligations and
therefore there was really no intent to be bound under both – but only in one – REM.
The RTC rendered its Decision nullifying the REMs and the foreclosure proceedings. The CA reversed the
RTC’s ruling.

Issues:

Whether or not the validity of both REMs was vitiated by lack of consent.

Ruling:

No. To begin with, the registration of the REM contract is not essential to its validity under Article 2085.
In relation thereto, Article 2125 of the Civil Code reads:
Article 2125. In addition to the requisites stated in Article 2085, it is indispensable, in order that a
mortgage may be validly constituted, that the document in which it appears be recorded in the Registry
of Property. If the instrument is not recorded, the mortgage is nevertheless binding between the parties.
The codal provision is clear and explicit. Even if the instrument were not recorded, “the mortgage is
nevertheless binding between the parties.”

Hence, even assuming that the parties indeed agreed to register only one of the two REMs, the
subsequent registration of both REMs did not affect an already validly executed REM if there was no
other basis for the declaration of its nullity. That the REMs were intended merely as “partial security”
does not make PDCP’s argument more plausible because as aptly observed by the CA, the PDCP’s act of
surrendering all the titles to the properties to FEBTC clearly establishes PDCP’ s intent to mortgage all of
the four properties in favor of FEBTC to secure Sengkon’s obligation under the Credit Line.
PDCP’s Amended Complaint is essentially premised on the supposed fraud employed on it by FEBTC
consisting of the latter’s assurances that the REMs it already signed would not be registered.
In Solidbank Corporation v. Mindanao Ferroalloy Corporation, the Court discussed the nature of fraud
that would annul or avoid a contract, thus:
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Fraud refers to all kinds of deception – whether through insidious machination, manipulation,
concealment or misrepresentation- that would lead an ordinarily prudent person into error after taking
the circumstances into account. In contracts, a fraud known as dolo causante or causal fraud is basically
a deception used by one party prior to or simultaneous with the contract, in order to secure the consent
of the other. Needless to say, the deceit employed must be serious. In contradistinction, only some
particular or accident of the obligation is referred to by incidental fraud or dolo incidente, or that which
is not serious in character and without which the other party would have entered into the contract
anyway.

Under Article 1344 of the Civil Code, the fraud must be serious to annul or avoid a contract and render it
voidable. This fraud or deception must be so material that had it not been present, the defrauded party
would not have entered into the contract.
In the present case, even if FEBTC represented that it will not register one of the REMs, PDCP cannot
disown the REMs it executed after FEBTC reneged on its alleged promise. As earlier stated, with or
without the registration of the REMs, as between the parties thereto, the same is valid and PDCP is
already bound thereby. The signature of PDCP’s President coupled with its act of surrendering the titles
to the four properties to FEBTC is proof that no fraud existed in the execution of the contract. Arguably
at most, FEBTC’s act of registering the mortgage only amounted to dolo incidente which is not the kind
of fraud that avoids a contract.

Third Decision: Sps. Roberto Aboitiz and Maria Cristina Cabarrus Vs. Sps. Peter L. Po and Victoria L.
Po/Sps. Peter L. Po and Victoria L. Po Vs. Sps. Roberto Aboitiz, et al.
G.R. No. 208450/G.R. No. 208497. June 5, 2017

IV.

1. Regarding the issue relating to the invalid contract due to the person being considered as an “Alien”,
the ruling was just. It was shown that respondent was an alien therefore, under the Philippine laws, he is
not allowed to own properties except in hereditary successions.
2. Yes.
3. Yes. In Frenzel v. Catito, the court explained that a deed of absolute sale made in favor of an alien is
invalid and that he is barred from recovering any amount thereto.
4. Yes. They were able to use the jurisprudence cited in the present case due to the fact that the person
who obtained the parcel of land through absolute sale was an alien
5. No, insofar as the case was written down, it became a manner of application of existing laws and that
no new substance is obtained in this case.
6. Yes. The court was just in this case in not considering the evidences of the petitioner regarding the
forged signature and the stamps he used to show that he was in the US during the time the transfer of
the property took place.
7. The reasoning is consistent as it follows the rules of the previous cases in where they don’t allow an
alien to obtain any property except in cases of hereditary succession. Contracts made in favor of an alien
would be void ab initio.
8. No.
9. The policy implication of the decision is that in a contract of conveyance of property to an alien, a
contract that violates the Constitution and the law is null and void and vests no rights and creates no
obligations. It produces no legal effect at all. That the alien is barred from recovering any amount he
paid for the subject property, the action being proscribed by the constitution
10. Based on my limited understand and comprehension in the field known as “Law”, I would say that
this is the best approach to a case with near-similar facts and issues as it is clear and convincing.

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