Relucio v. Brillante-Garfin, G.R. No. 76518 (Resolution), (July 13, 1990), 265 PHIL 444-451

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THIRD DIVISION

[G.R. No. 76518. July 13, 1990.]

IRENE P. RELUCIO , petitioner, vs. ZEIDA B. BRILLANTE-


GARFIN and COURT OF APPEALS, respondents.

Orlando A. Martizano for petitioner.


Silvestre V. Garfin for private respondent.

RESOLUTION

FELICIANO, J : p

On 22 October 1979, private respondent Zeida B. Brillante-Garfin


filed a complaint in the lower court for specific performance with
damages against petitioner Irene P. Relucio, to compel the latter to: (a)
execute, in compliance with the Contract to Buy and Sell in question, a
final deed of sale in favor of the former over two (2) residential
subdivision lots in the Mariano Village Subdivision, Naga City; and (b)
construct paved roads on the northern and southern sides of the lots,
as well as "necessary facilities, improvements, infrastructures and other
forms of development of the subdivision area." Private respondent
alleged that the lots, which have a total contract price of P10,800.00,
have already been paid for, as she had already paid P200.00 as down
payment, and had subsequently completed payment of 128 equal
monthly installments of P89.45 each amounting to P11,450.00; that as
the law allows the charging of interest only as monetary interest or as
compensatory interest, none of which have obtained in her case, as she
had never incurred in delay in the payment of installments due, the
stipulated interest of six percent (6%) per annum on the outstanding
balance is null and void; and that the amount of P650.00 representing
overpayment be returned to her.
Petitioner resisted the complaint, maintaining that private
respondent, contrary to the latter's allegations, is obliged to pay
interest on the installment payments of the unpaid outstanding balance
even if paid on their "due dates" per schedule of payments; that private
respondent had actually been in arrears in the amount of P4,269.40,
representing such interest as of June 1979, which therefore entitled
petitioner to cancel the contract in question. Petitioner then prayed for
judicial affirmance of her Notarial Notice of Cancellation over the said
contract in question. prcd

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The lower court ordered petitioner:
"1. To execute a deed of absolute sale of the two lots described in the
complaint in favor of the plaintiff to enable the latter to secure the
corresponding certificate of title in her name within thirty (30) days
from the finality of this Decision;
2. To construct or cause the construction of roads on the Northern and
Southern sides of the said two lots in accordance with the contract, if
any, and in conformity with the City of Naga planning ordinance
relative to this case;
3. The return to the plaintiff the excess payment of P650.00, plus 6%
interest per annum from the date of the filing of the complaint; and

To pay to the plaintiff attorney's fees in the sum of P1,000.00 and the
costs of suit." 1

The Court of Appeals affirmed in A.C.-G.R. CV No. 03184 by a


Decision 2 dated 17 July 1986.
Petitioner now comes to this Court, arguing that she has the right
to rescind the contract for private respondent's continued refusal to pay
the monthly installments on the contract price. cdll

Two issues are presented for resolution in this petition: (1)


whether or not private respondent has fully paid the stipulated price in
the contract so as to be entitled lawfully to demand the execution of a
deed of absolute sale in her favor. This issue in turn will depend on the
question of whether or not petitioner may validly charge interest on
installment payments, notwithstanding that private respondent had
been prompt in her monthly payments; and (2) whether or not
petitioner's notice of cancellation was valid and effective.
Examination of the record shows that the questioned Contract to
Buy and Sell the subdivision lots provided for payment by private
respondent of the sum of P200.00 as downpayment, and that "the
balance [of P10,600.00] shall be paid in 180 monthly installments at
P89.45 per month, including interest rate at six percent (6%) per
annum, until the purchase price is fully paid." 3 This stipulation clearly
specified that an interest charge of six percent (6%) per annum was
included in the monthly installment price: private respondent could not
have helped noticing that P89.45 multiplied by 180 monthly
installments equals P16,101.00, and not P10,600.00. The contract price
of P10,800.00 may thus be seen to be the cash price of the subdivision
lots, that is, the amount payable if the price of the lots were to be paid
in cash and in full at the execution of the contract; it is not the amount
that the vendor will have received in the aggregate after fifteen (15)
years if the vendee shall have religiously paid the monthly installments.
The installment price, upon the other hand, of the subdivision lots —
the sum total of the monthly installments (i.e., P16,101.00) — typically,
as in the instant case, has an interest component which compensates
the vendor for waiting fifteen (15) years before receiving the total
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principal amount of P10,600.00. Economically or financially, P10,600.00
delivered in full today is simply worth much more than a long series of
small payments totalling, after fifteen (15) years, P10,600.00. For the
vendor, upon receiving the full cash price, could have deposited that
amount in a bank, for instance, and earned interest income which at six
percent (6%) per year and for fifteen (15) years, would precisely total
P5,501.00 (the difference between the installment price of P16,101.00
— and the cash price of P10,600.00 — ) To suppose, as private
respondent argues, that mere prompt payment of the monthly
installments as they fell due would obviate application of the interest
charge of six percent (6%) per annum, is to ignore that simple
economic fact. That economic fact is, of course, recognized by law,
which authorizes the payment of interest when contractually stipulated
for by the parties 4 or when implied in recognized commercial custom
or usage.
Vendor and vendee are legally free to stipulate for the payment of
either the cash price of a subdivision lot or its installment price. Should
the vendee opt to purchase a subdivision lot via the installment
payment system, he is in effect paying interest on the cash price,
whether the fact and rate of such interest payment is disclosed in the
contract or not. The contract for the purchase and sale of a piece of
land on the installment payment system in the case at bar is not only
quite lawful; it also reflects a very wide spread usage or custom in our
present day commercial life. LexLib

Applying the foregoing analysis to the case at bar: when private


respondent started paying monthly installments in September 1968,
the initial P89.45 was apportioned between the principal and the
interest, with P53.00 5 being allocated to service the interest charge
and P36.46 6 being credited to the principal. During the succeeding
monthly payments, however, as the outstanding balance on the
principal gradually declined, the interest component (in absolute terms)
correspondingly fell while the component credited to the principal
increased proportionately, thus amortizing the balance of the principal
purchase prize as that balance gradually declined. 7 This explains
petitioner's theory of declining balance, which unfortunately was not
appreciated by both the trial and appellate courts.
Despite private respondent's failure to fully pay the stipulated
price of the two lots in question, petitioner, however, could not validly
rescind the contract not being lawfully entitled to do so. Petitioner
failed to rebut private respondents' allegations that the former had
failed to introduce required improvements in the subdivision; the
former's bare allegation that the improvements have already been
donated to the city government was not accepted by the trial court.
Section 23 of Presidential Decree No. 957, otherwise known as The
Subdivision and Condominium Buyers' Protective Decree, provides:
"Section 23. Non-forfeiture of Payments . — No installment payment
made by the buyer in a subdivision or condominium project for the lot
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or unit he contracted to buy shall be forfeited in favor of the owner or
developer when the buyer, after due notice to the owner or developer
desists from further payment due to the failure of the owner or
developer to develop the subdivision or condominium project according
to the approved plans and within the time limit for complying with the
same. Such buyer may, at his option, be reimbursed the total amount
paid . . ." (Emphasis supplied).

In this respect, the trial court was correct in holding that petitioner
could not rescind the contract. As the law vests upon the buyer the
option to demand reimbursement of the total amount paid, or to wait
for further development of the subdivision, private respondent who
opted for the latter alternative by waiting for the proper development of
the site, may not be ousted from the subdivision. 8
ACCORDINGLY, the Court Resolved to GRANT the Petition due
course and to SET ASIDE and NULLIFY the Decision of the Court of
Appeals. In lieu thereof, a new Decision is hereby RENDERED requiring

1. the petitioner to complete the necessary improvements and
developments in the subdivision area in accordance with the approved
subdivision plans and applicable provisions of P.D. No. 957 as well as
applicable implementing administrative regulations and City of Naga
zoning ordinances, if any;

2. private respondent immediately to resume paying installment


payments under her Contract to Buy and Sell with petitioner, subject to
her right to proceed against petitioner should petitioner fail again to
comply with her obligations under P.D. No. 957; and
3. petitioner to execute the Deed of Absolute Sale when private
respondent shall have fully paid the purchase price in accordance with
the mentioned Contract to Buy and Sell.

No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
Fernan, C.J., Gutierrez, Jr. and Cortes, JJ., concur.

Bidin, J., took no part.

Footnotes

1. Rollo, pp. 26-27.

2. Ponente, Sison, PV, J.


3. Rollo, p. 24.
4. Article 1956 of the Civil Code authorizes payment of interest in a contract
of loan when expressly stipulated in writing. In the case at bar, the
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financial situation is no different from that obtaining had private
respondent buyer borrowed P10,600.00 from a bank, and used that
amount to pay the cash price of the two (2) lots to petitioner, and
repaying the loan from the bank by installments over fifteen (15)
years with six percent (6%) interest per annum. Petitioner vendor has
in effect herself financed the purchase of the two (2) lots on the
installment plan.

5. P10,600.00 x 0.06 x 1/12 = P53.00.


6. P89.45 — P53.00 = P36.45.
7. In partial illustration:

Month Outstanding Installment Amount Amount

Balance Payment Credited Credited to

to Interest Outstanding Bal.


1968

Sept. P10,600.00 P89.45 P53.00 P36.45

Oct. 10,563.55 89.45 52.82 36.63

Nov. 10,526.92 89.45 52.63 36.82

Dec. 10,490.10 89.45 52.45 37.00.

1969

Jan. 10,453.10 89.45 52.26 37.19

Feb. 10,415.91 89.45 52.08 37.37

Mar. 10,378.54 89.45 51.89 37.56

Apr. 10,340.98 89.45 51.70 37.75

xxx xxx xxx

1983

Jan. 699.74 89.45 3.50 85.95

Feb. 613.79 89.45 3.07 86.38

Mar. 527.41 89.45 2.64 86.81

Apr. 440.60 89.45 2.21 87.24

May 353.36 89.45 1.77 87.68

June 265.68 89.45 1.38 88.12

July 177.56 89.45 0.89 88.56

Aug. 89.00 89.45 0.45 89.00

Sept. — 0 — (payment completed upon 180th monthly installment in August


1983).
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8. Antipolo Realty Corporation v. National Housing Authority, 153 SCRA 399
(1987).

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