Bulatao vs. Estonactoc, 927 SCRA 535, December 10, 2019
Bulatao vs. Estonactoc, 927 SCRA 535, December 10, 2019
Bulatao vs. Estonactoc, 927 SCRA 535, December 10, 2019
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* FIRST DIVISION.
536
537
538
CAGUIOA, J.:
Before the Court is the Appeal1 under Rule 45 of the
Rules of Court filed by petitioner Atty. Leonard Florent O.
Bulatao (Atty. Bulatao) assailing the Decision2 dated
October 19, 2017 (Decision) of the Court of Appeals3 (CA) in
C.A.-G.R. CV No. 105581. CA’s Decision partly granted the
appeal of respondent Zenaida Estonactoc (Zenaida)
resulting in the reversal and setting aside of the Decision4
dated May 4, 2015 rendered by the Regional Trial Court,
Branch 31, Agoo, La Union (RTC) in Civil Case No. A-2715.
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539
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5 Id., at p. 33.
540
541
542
543
Ruling of the CA
The CA in its Decision7 dated October 19, 2017 found
Zenaida’s appeal partly meritorious.8
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544
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9 Id., at p. 25.
10 Id., at pp. 26, 27.
11 Id., at pp. 27-28. The date of execution of the DMRP is reflected as
June 4, 2008 on pages 27, 29 and 30 of the Rollo, but on page 16, the date
is June 3, 2008. Based on the RTC’s Decision, Exh. “D,” which is the Deed
of Mortgage of Real Property, is dated June 3, 2008; id., at p. 36.
12 Id., at p. 28.
545
SO ORDERED.16
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13 Id., at pp. 28-29.
14 Id., at p. 29.
15 Id., at p. 30.
16 Id., at pp. 30-31.
546
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547
VOL. 927, DECEMBER 10, 2019 547
Bulatao vs. Estonactoc
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24 Id., at p. 10.
25 Id., at pp. 112-113.
26 Id., at p. 113.
27 763 Phil. 372; 762 SCRA 221 (2015).
28 620 Phil. 239; 605 SCRA 231 (2009).
548
549
In the consolidated cases of Rivera v. Sps. Chua30 and
Sps. Chua v. Rivera,31 the Court affirmed the finding of the
CA that 5% per month or 60% per annum interest rate is
highly iniquitous and unreasonable; and since the interest
rate agreed upon is void, the rate of interest should be 12%
per annum (the then prevailing interest rate prescribed by
the Central Bank of the Philippines for loans or
forbearances of money) from the date of judicial or
extrajudicial demand.
Given that the agreement on the 5% monthly interest is
void for being unconscionable, the interest rate prescribed
by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) for loans or
forbearances of money, credits or goods will be the surrogate
or substitute rate not only for the one-year interest period
agreed upon but for the entire period that the loan of
Zenaida remains unpaid.
The distinction that Atty. Bulatao makes between “open-
ended contracts” or contracts with indefinite period and
“term contracts” or contracts for a specific period32 is
misguided as the distinction has no legal basis as far as a
loan, whether commodatum or mutuum, is concerned. As
provided in Article 1933 of the Civil Code, “[b]y the contract
of loan, one of the parties delivers to another, either
something not consumable so that the latter may use the
same for a certain time and return it, in which case the
contract is called a commodatum; or money or other
consumable thing, upon the condition that the same amount
of the same kind and quality shall be paid, in which case the
contract is simply called a loan or mutuum.”33 Thus, a period
is contemplated in a contract of loan
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550
As to the validity of the foreclosure, jurisprudence on the
effect of the nullity of the loan’s interest rate on the
foreclosure of the mortgage securing the loan abounds. In
the consolidated cases of Vasquez v. Philippine National
Bank37 and Philippine National Bank v. Vasquez,38 the Court
has reiterated that:
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551
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39 549 Phil. 180, 193-195; 520 SCRA 383 (2007).
552
In Menchavez v. Bermudez,44 Arthur Menchavez and
Marlyn Bermudez entered on November 17, 1993 into a
loan
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553
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554
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49 See Caguioa, Eduardo P., Comments and Cases on Civil Law, Civil
Code of the Philippines, Vol. IV, p. 303, Rev. Second Ed. (1983).
50 Id., at p. 304.
51 Civil Code, Art. 1169 partly provides: “Those obliged to deliver or to
do something incur in delay from the time the obligee judicially or
extrajudicially demands from them the fulfillment of their obligation.”
555
As to the DMRP, the CA recognized Zenaida as a co-
owner of the mortgaged property and as such, she could
validly convey through sale or mortgage the portion
belonging to her.53 Thus, the CA ruled that “the Real Estate
Mortgage in favor of [Atty. Bulatao] is not entirely rendered
void as its validity is limited only to the portion belonging to
[Zenaida].”54
In Bailon-Casilao v. Court of Appeals,55 the Court
observed:
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52 Rollo, pp. 28-29.
53 Id., at p. 25.
54 Id.
55 243 Phil. 888; 160 SCRA 738 (1988).
556
557
This ruling was reiterated in Paulmitan v. Court of
Appeals,57 where the Court therein ruled that the sale of the
property owned in common by one co-owner without the
consent of the others did not give to the buyer ownership
over the entire land but merely transferred to the buyer the
undivided share of the seller, making the buyer the co-
owner of the land in question.58
The Court’s reliance on Article 493 of the Civil Code to
justify the validity of the sale of the property owned in
common by a co-owner without the consent of the other co-
owners insofar as the undivided share of the co-owner seller
is concerned has to be reconciled with the ruling of the
Court En Banc through Justice J.B.L. Reyes the case of
Estoque v. Pajimula59 (Estoque) which has not been
overturned. In Estoque, the Court pronounced:
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558
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61 Concurring Opinion of J. Caguioa in Magsano v. Pangasinan
Savings and Loan Bank, Inc., 797 Phil. 392, 409; 806 SCRA 197, 215
(2016).
62 Id., at p. 410; p. 215.
63 Id.
559
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64 Id.
65 Rollo, pp. 30-31.
560
561
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