Quintin C. Pardes For Petitioner. Romeo L. Mendoza & Assoc. Law Office For Private Respondent
Quintin C. Pardes For Petitioner. Romeo L. Mendoza & Assoc. Law Office For Private Respondent
Quintin C. Pardes For Petitioner. Romeo L. Mendoza & Assoc. Law Office For Private Respondent
petitioner,
vs.
COURT OF APPEALS, SERGIO VALDEZ, AND VIRGINIA VALDEZ, respondents.
GUTIERREZ, JR., J.:
This is a petition for review which seeks to annul and set aside the decision of the Court of Appeals, now Intermediate
Appellate Court affirming the trial court's decision, ordering, among others, the rescission of the contract of sale entered into
between the petitioner and the private respondents.
The private respondents, spouses Valdez are the owners of a parcel of land containing an area of 155 square meters, more or
less, and the house constructed thereon, situated at No. 333 Jefferson Street, Makati, and covered by Transfer Certificate of Title
No. 32718 of the Registry of Deeds of Rizal. There is no dispute that the petitioner and private respondents entered into a
contract of sale regarding the said property. The controversy, however, stemmed from subsequent agreements executed by the
parties.
The first agreement entered into by the petitioner and private respondents was the Deed of Conditional Sale (Exh. A) whereby
for and in consideration of P22,000.00, the private respondents as vendors agreed to sell to the petitioner as vendee the lot
covered by TCT No. 32718 with all the improvements thereon. The sale was subject to the condition that immediately upon the
approval of the petitioner's loan with the Social Security System (SSS) and its payment to the respondents, the vendor shall
execute the deed of absolute sale in favor of the vendee. The petitioner applied for a loan with the SSS, through the Home
Financing Commission (HFC). Since the property in question was mortgaged to the Government Service Insurance System
(GSIS), the HFC requested both parties to execute a Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage (Exh. G) which they did,
stating among others that the respondents sell, transfer, and convey to the petitioner the property for and in consideration of the
sum of P22,000.00, of which P6,400.00 (representing the amount allegedly incurred by the petitioners for improvements on said
property) had been paid and the balance of P15,600. 00 payable upon approval of the petitioners loan with the SSS. In reality,
however, the respondents had not received a single centavo from the petitioner at the time. Subsequently, the parties executed
three more contracts. The first contract (Exh. I) which was executed more than one month after Exhibit A provided that the
respondents agreed to sell the property to the petitioner at P14,000.00 while the latter must negotiate a loan with the SSS in
order to settle the amount within a period of thirty days from March 17, 1963. The contract also provided for the payment of
rentals by the petitioner at P50.00 a month from March 1, 1963 until the date of final settlement and damages at the rate of
P30.00 a day for each day of delay. The next day, another contract was executed by the parties which was essentially the same
as Exh. "1". Respondent Virginia Valdez explained that she did not agree with the granting of another thirty-day extension to
the petitioner and so Exh. "1" was torn up. However, the respondents changed their minds after the mother of the petitioner
pleaded with them for another extension. Thus, Exh. "2" came into being. It provided that the full amount of P14,000.00 would
be paid on or before the 30th day from the date of the execution of the contract and that failure of the petitioner to settle his
obligation within that period shall make him liable for damages at P30.00 for every day of delay.
The last agreement entered into by the parties, (Exh. 5), provided among others, that the respondents agreed to receive the
partial amount of P12,000.00 on the condition that the balance of P4,376.00 is completely paid forty-five days after the date
fixed by them and that failure of the petitioner to pay the said balance on the agreed time will entitle the respondents to damages
at P20.00 for every day of delay until said balance shall have been fully paid.
Within the forty-five (45) days deadline, however, the petitioner failed to pay both the P12,000.00 which was supposed to be
received by the respondents upon the execution of the agreement, (Exh. 5) and the balance of P4,376.00. Thus, when the
petitioner's loan with the SSS was finally ready for release, he requested the respondents to sign the deed of absolute sale and
other papers required by the SSS but the latter refused on the ground that the petitioner had already breached their latest
agreement (Exh. 5). The petitioner filed an action for specific performance with writ of preliminary mandatory injunction
seeking to compel the respondents to execute the deed of absolute sale of the property and other such documents required by the
SSS for the immediate release of the approved loan.
In its first decision, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of the petitioner making the following findings:
Apparently, the defendants are of the impression that the provision in the agreement that 'failure of the plaintiff
to settle said balance on or before the stipulated date will entitle the defendants to collect P20.00 for every day
of delay until balance is fully paid' and just because plaintiff so failed to comply with it this will release them
from compliance with the condition mentioned in Exhibits 'A' and 'G'. The court agrees with the defendant that
plaintiff committed a breach granting that plaintiff failed to comply with the stated proviso, but this is not the
breach contemplated by law and cannot be considered a sufficient cause for them to depart from their
unfulfilled obligation to the plaintiff because as the provision clearly states, defendants' rights are adequately
protected and compensated in the form of damages recoverable from the plaintiff in case of non-compliance by
the plaintiff.
Under the law (Article 119, New Civil Code), in reciprocal obligations, in case one of the obligors should not
comply with what is incumbent upon him, the injured party may choose between the fulfillment and the
rescission of the obligation with the payment of damages in either case. In the instant case, plaintiff seeks not
rescission but fulfillment of the obligation. It is obvious when the parties herein agreed that the consideration
mentioned in Exhibits 'A' & 'G ' that will be paid upon the approval of the loan, they mean approval and
release of the loan. Weighing the evidence presented both by the plaintiff and defendants, it is the opinion of
the court that the defendants by virtue of their contracts Exhibits 'A' and 'G', the defendants can be compelled
to fulfill the condition agreed thereon.
In due time, the private respondents filed a motion for reconsideration stating, among others, that the decision of the lower court
failed to consider the other contracts executed by the parties. Among them was the agreement marked as Exhibit "5" which
would clearly show that there was a limited period within which the petitioner was given time to secure a loan from the SSS and
pay P14,000.00, the real consideration for the property agreed upon by the parties.
The petitioner filed his opposition to the respondents' motion for reconsideration. The respondents in turn asked the lower court
for five (5) days within which to submit a rejoinder. The extension was granted in open court. However, even before the end of
the five-day period, the court already issued an order denying the respondents' motion for reconsideration. Another motion to
reconsider was, therefore, filed by the respondents praying that their rejoinder be taken into account since the same was filed
within the five-day period granted by the court.
Realizing its error, another decision was consequently rendered by the trial court, this time, in favor of the private respondents,
stating the following:
This Court observes that Exhibit '5' is an implementation or confirmation of the provisions of both Exhibits '1'
and '2' which are supplementary contracts providing for a definite period of payment of the agreed purchase
price of the property involved herein. This period of payment is not provided for in Exhibits 'A' and 'G' thereby
modifying the later contracts in this regard. Article 1374 of the new Civil Code of the Philippines, the Court
believes, is also applicable to the instant case wherein it is provided that the various stipulations of a contract
shall be interpreted together, attributing to the doubtful ones that sense which may result from all of them taken
together. Exhibits 'A', 'G', '1', '2' and '5' being complementary contracts, they should be construed to correctly
arrive at the true intention of the parties.
The wordings of Exhibit '5' when it states that the defendants-spouses agreed to receive the partial amount of
P12,000.00 only show that when Exhibit '5' was executed, defendants did not yet receive said amount. It is still
to be received, and evidence of the plaintiff is wanting to show that he paid this amount of P12,000.00. Neither
is there any showing that the balance of P4,763.00 agreed upon in Exhibit '5' had been paid by the plaintiff
within forty-five days from July 9, 1963. This clearly constitutes a breach of their last agreement Exhibit '5'.
Article 1191 of the New Civil Code provides that the power to rescind obligations is implied in reciprocal ones
in case one of the obligors should not comply with what is incumbent upon him. The injured party may choose
between the fulfillment and the rescission of the obligation, with the payment of damages in either case. There
is no dispute that all the contracts entered into by the parties herein are reciprocal ones. There is, likewise, no
question that the plaintiff is guilty of delay and the defendants- spouses are entitled to damages occasioned by
it in the light of the provisions of Article 1170 of the New Civil Code providing that those who, in the
performance of their obligations, are guilty of delay and those who, in any manner, contravene the tenor
thereof, are liable for damages. The defendants-spouses elected rescission of their agreement of purchase and
sale with damages.
The petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration which the trial court denied. On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed the
decision in toto. Hence, this petition.
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN RULING THAT THE FIRST DECISION OF
THE TRIAL COURT WAS NOT FINAL WHEN THE SAME WAS SET ASIDE AND SUPERSEDED BY
THE SECOND DECISION AND THUS, THE TRIAL COURT HAD NO MORE JURISDICTION TO
RENDER SAID SECOND DECISION, AND
II
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN SUSTAINING THE TRIAL COURT IN
ORDERING THE RESCISSION OF THE AGREEMENT (EXHIBIT 5) AND THE PAYMENT OF
DAMAGES AND ATTORNEY'S FEES.
The petitioner maintains that the motions for reconsideration filed by the respondents are both pro forma because they presented
issues which the trial court had already considered and ruled upon and that the second motion for reconsideration merely asked
the court to consider two documents which were already submitted by respondents in evidence. The petitioner argues that the
said motion did not interrupt the running of the period to appeal and thus, when the second decision was rendered the trial court
had already lost its jurisdiction over the case, making such decision null and void.
In the first place, the very purpose of a motion for reconsideration is to point out the findings and conclusions of the decision
which in the movant's view, are not supported by law or the evidence. The movant is, therefore, very often confined to the
amplification or further discussion of the same issues already passed upon by the court. Otherwise, his remedy would not be a
reconsideration of the decision but a new trial or some other remedy. In the case of Vina v. Court of Appeals (126 SCRA 381-
382), we emphasized the nature of a motion for reconsideration. We ruled:
Contrary to petitioner's contention, REPUBLIC's Motion for Reconsideration dated January 10, 1973 was
not pro forma, even if we were to concede that it was a reiteration of its previous Motion for suspension of the
proceedings.
... Among the ends to which a motion for reconsideration is addressed, one is precisely to convince the court
that its ruling is erroneous and improper, contrary to the law or the evidence (Rule 37, Section 1, subsection
[c]; and in doing so, the movant has to dwell of necessity upon the issues passed upon by the court. If a motion
for reconsideration may not discuss these issues, the consequence would be that after a decision is rendered,
the losing party would be confined to filing only motions for reopening and new trial. We find in the Rules of
Court no warrant for ruling to that effect, a ruling that would, in effect eliminate subsection (c) of Section I of
Rule 37. (Guerra Enterprises Co., Inc. v. Court of First Instance of Lanao del Sur, 32 SCRA 317 [1970]).
Secondly, as far as the second motion of respondents is concerned, the same should not be strictly construed as a motion for
reconsideration although captioned as such because in reality, it is merely a supplementary pleading aimed to call the court's
attention to the fact that it had given the respondents five days to file their rejoinder, with which they complied and, therefore,
said rejoinder should have been considered before the court acted upon the respondents' first motion for reconsideration.
Supplemental pleadings are meant to supply deficiencies in aid of original pleadings, not to entirely substitute the latter (See
Pasay City Government v. CFI of Manila, 132 SCRA 169), and neither should they be considered independently nor separately
from such original pleadings.
We, therefore, hold that the appellate court did not commit grave abuse of discretion in upholding the trial court's jurisdiction
when it rendered the second decision.
In the second assignment of error, the petitioner contends that the Court of Appeals committed a reversible error in affirming
the rescission of the contract when the respondents did not pray for rescission and in ordering the payment of damages and
attorney's fees notwithstanding the fact that the complaint for specific performance was not instituted in bad faith.
It is noteworthy to mention that in their answer to the petitioner's complaint, the respondents prayed for the annulment of both
the Deed of Conditional Sale (Exh. 'A') and the Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage (Exh. 'G') which are the very bases
of the supplemental agreements (Exhs. '1', '2' and '5') executed between the petitioner and the respondent. The technical
argument that the respondents never prayed for the rescission of the contracts and that the trial court and the appellate court
should never have rescinded the same has no merit. Furthermore, by failing to pay the amount of P12,000.00 and the balance of
P4,376.00 as stipulated in the contract within the forty-five (45) days period, the petitioner clearly committed a breach of
contract which sufficiently and justly entitled the respondents to ask for the rescission of the contracts. In the case of Nagarmull
v. Binalbagan-Isabel Sugar Co., Inc.(33 SCRA 52), we ruled that " ... The Breach of contract committed by appellee gave
appellant, under the law and even under general principles of fairness, the right to rescind the contract or to ask for its specific
performance, in either case with right to demand damages ... It is evident, in the case at bar, that the respondents chose to
rescind the contracts after the petitioner repeatedly failed to pay not only the balance but the initial amount as downpayment in
consideration of which the contracts or agreements were executed. As a matter of fact, the petitioner later asked the SSS to
cancel his loan application. He thereby abandoned his own claim for specific performance. Therefore, the appellate court
correctly affirmed the rescission of the above-mentioned contracts. It also correctly affirmed the payment of attorney's fees.
While the petitioner may not have acted in bad faith in filing his complaint, still the payment of attorney's fees is warranted in
this case because of the environmental circumstances which compelled the respondents to litigate for the protection of their
interests. (See Bert Osmena & Associates v. Court of Appeals, 120 SCRA 401 and Article 2208 (2) New Civil Code).
We, however, find the award of damages in the amount of P4,376.00 unwarranted. In their motion for reconsideration, the
respondents explained how they arrived at this amount—
Plaintiff obliged himself to pay P30.00 for everyday of delay after the lapse of thirty days from the execution
of the document of March 17, 1963 (Exh. 1-Defendants). Thirty days from March 17, 1963 would be April 18,
which will mark the beginning of the counting of the days of delays. From April 18, 1963 to July 9, 1963, the
number of days of delay was 82 days. Plaintiff requested that this be reduced to 70 days and defendants agreed.
At P30.00 per day of delay the amount in 70 days will be P2,100.00. The rental as provided for in the same
exhibit 1 for defendants was P50.00 per month. From March 1, 1963 to June 20, 1963, 4 months elapsed. At
P50.00 per month the rental would be P200.00. Plaintiff got or utilized adobe stones belonging to defendant
which he found in the premises when he and his parents transferred to the lot in question in March 1963 the
value of which was P76.00. Adding this to the P2,100.00 which is the amount to be paid for the delay in
making payments and the P200.00 for 4 months rental, the total will be P2,376.00. The agreed purchase price
was Pl4,000.00 but Pl2,000.00 was the amount of loan the Social Security System was then willing to give to
plaintiff so that there will be a shortage of P2,000.00 more to complete the payment of the purchase price. This
shortage of P2,000.00 was added to the P2,376.00 and the sum will be P4,376.00. Hence, in the agreement of
July 9, 1963, this amount of P4,376.00 was to be paid within 45 days from the date thereof and the P12,000.00
which was the loan then approved by the Social Security System was to be paid to defendants on the day of the
execution of the said agreement.
It is evident from the motion that the amount of P4,376.00 awarded by the appellate court as damages is mainly based on
"P30.00 per day of delay" penalty clause embodied in the agreement marked Exhibit "1". Enforcement of the clause on daily
penalties now would result in excessive damages considering that the agreement was entered into way back in 1963. Moreover,
the P2,000.00 represents part of the purchase price of the sale which was already rescinded.
Under Article 1191 of the Civil Code, "the injured party may choose between the fulfillment and rescission of the obligation,
with the payment of damages in either case. He may also seek rescission, even after he has chosen fulfillment, if the latter
should become impossible ... ." The law, however, does not authorize the injured party to rescind the obligation and at the same
time seek its partial fulfillment under the guise of recovering damages.
The appellate court, therefore, erred in including both the penalty clause and the part of the purchase price in the computation of
damages. There is no question that the petitioner must pay damages for the use of the house and lot until he vacates the
premises. The petitioner and his family have lived in the respondents' house all these years without paying either the price he
obligated himself to pay or the monthly rentals he agreed to pay as early as 1963. At the very least, the petitioner should pay
P50.00 monthly rentals with legal interest from March, 1963.
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is MODIFIED in that the award of damages in the amount of P4,376.00 is set aside.
The petitioner is ordered to vacate the disputed property and to pay FIFTY PESOS (P50.00) as monthly rentals with interest at
the legal rate from March, 1963 up to the time he and his successors-in-interest vacate the property in question. In all other
respects, the decision is AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.