Santiago Cruzado vs. Estefania Bustos Digest

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2

ARTICLE 1163 -- OWNERSHIP ACQUIRED BY DELIVERY

SANTIAGO CRUZADO vs. ESTEFANIA BUSTOS and MANUEL ESCALER, [No. 10244 February 29, 1916.]

Facts: Counsel for the plaintiff Santiago Cruzado filed a written complaint on October 8, 1910,
amended on September 25, 1913, in which he alleged that plaintiff was the owner of certain rural
property situated in the barrio of Dolores, formerly San Isidro, Bacolor, Pampanga, containing an area of
65 balitas; that Estefania Bustos, during her lifetime, and now the administrator of her estate, together
with the other defendant, Manuel Escaler, had, since the year 1906 up to the present, been detaining
the said parcel of land, and had refused to deliver the possession thereof to plaintiff and to recognize his
ownership of the same, notwithstanding the repeated demands made upon them; that by such
detention, the plaintiff had suffered losses and damages to the amount of P3,500. He therefore asked
for judgment declaring plaintiff to be the owner of the said parcel of land and ordering defendants to
return it to plaintiff and to pay the latter P3,500 for losses and damages, and the costs.
This appeal, by bill of exceptions, was taken from the judgment of June 17, 1914, in which the
trial judge absolved defendants from the complaint and plaintiff from the cross-complaint. Counsel for
plaintiff appealed but was denied, exception was taken by appellant, and, on the filing of the proper bill
of exceptions, the same was approved, certified, and transmitted to the clerk of this court, together with
a
transcript of the evidence introduced at the trial.
The alleged contract of sale of the 65 balitas of land was perfect and binding upon both
contracting parties, since they both appear in that instrument to have agreed upon the thing sold, to
wit, the 65 balitas of land, and upon the price, P2,200; but it is also undeniable that the said contract
was not consummated. The procurador Cruzado
Bustos, the responded, alleged that the title to the said land, produced by the plaintiff, was not
a lawful one, for the reason that only a simulated sale of the land was made by and between herself and
the deceased Agapito Geronimo Cruzado, plaintiff's father, and that for more than thirty years preceding
the present time she had been the sole, exclusive, and lawful owner of the said parcel of land in
question; that she had been holding it quietly, peaceably, publicly and in good faith; that it formed an
integral part of another larger parcel of land, both parcels aggregating a total area of 100 balitas. And
that in September, 1891, with plaintiff's knowledge, the defendant Bustos sold and conveyed all the said
property to the other defendant Manuel Escaler who then acquired the possession and ownership (in
good faith) of the said parcel of land, and had retained such ownership and possession up to the present
time with no objection from Cruzado.

Issue: Whether Escaler is the owner of the subject land

Ruling: A contract of sale was simulated for the sole purpose of making it appear that the vendee
acquired for the sum of P2,200, and became the owner of a piece of real property, which was to serve
him as security to enable him to hold the office of procurador of a Court of First Instance pursuant to the
statutes in force during the previous sovereignty. Such contract was perfect and binding upon both
contracting parties, it appearing in the public instrument executed for the purpose that the vendor and
the vendee agreed upon the property sold and on the price stipulated; but such contract cannot be
considered to have been consummated, unless it is proved that the purchaser paid the price and took
possession of the property.
Even though the said fictitious deed of sale be considered valid and effective, as being a perfect
and binding contract between the contracting parties, yet when the vendee has not paid the price nor
taken possession of the property which continued in the possession of the vendors until they later sold
it to a third person, such contract cannot give rise to an action for the recovery of possession. Such an
action arises from a consummated contract and the contract is what confers a title which transfers the
ownership
The legal fiction of the delivery, by the vendor to the vendee, of the public instrument executed
for the purpose, instead of the tradition or possession of the thing sold, produces no effect, nor is -the
sale consummated, if the vendee does not take possession of the thing and pay the price thereof.
Fallo: For all the foregoing reasons, whereby the errors assigned to the judgment appealed from have
been duly refuted, the said judgment should be, as it is hereby, affirmed, with the costs against the
appellant. So ordered.

You might also like