G.R. No. 108346
G.R. No. 108346
G.R. No. 108346
SUPREME COURT
Manila
THIRD DIVISION
G.R. No. 108346
sale of said property, which was, however, under lease (Exh. '6', p.
232, Record of Civil Case No. 15952).
"On August 8, 1986, a Deed of Sale with Assumption of Mortgage (Exh.
'A'; Exh. '1', pp. 11-12, Record) was executed by defendant David
Raymundo, as vendor, in favor of plaintiff Avelina Velarde, as vendee,
with the following terms and conditions:
'x x x
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
continue to pay the said loan in accordance with the terms and
conditions of the Deed of Real Estate Mortgage in the name of
Mr. David A. Raymundo, the original Mortgagor.
'2. That, in the event I violate any of the terms and conditions of
the said Deed of Real Estate Mortgage, I hereby agree that my
downpayment of P800,000.00, plus all payments made with the
Bank of the Philippine Islands on the mortgage loan, shall be
forfeited in favor of Mr. David A. Raymundo, as and by way of
liquidated damages, without necessity of notice or any judicial
declaration to that effect, and Mr. David A. Raymundo shall
resume total and complete ownership and possession of the
property sold by way of Deed of Sale with Assumption of
Mortgage, and the same shall be deemed automatically
cancelled and be of no further force or effect, in the same
manner as it (the) same had never been executed or entered
into.
'3. That I am executing the Undertaking for purposes of binding
myself, my heirs, successors and assigns, to strictly and faithfully
comply with the terms and conditions of the mortgage
obligations with the Bank of the Philippine Islands, and the
covenants, stipulations and provisions of this Undertaking.
'That, David A. Raymundo, the vendor of the property mentioned
and identified above, [does] hereby confirm and agree to the
undertakings of the Vendee pertinent to the assumption of the
mortgage obligations by the Vendee with the Bank of the
Philippine Islands. (Exh. 'C', pp. 13-14, Record).'
"This undertaking was signed by Avelina and Mariano Velarde and
David Raymundo.
"It appears that the negotiated terms for the payment of the balance of
P1.8 million was from the proceeds of a loan that plaintiffs were to
secure from a bank with defendant's help. Defendants had a standing
approved credit line with the Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI). The
parties agreed to avail of this, subject to BPI's approval of an
application for assumption of mortgage by plaintiffs. Pending BPI's
approval o[f] the application, plaintiffs were to continue paying the
monthly interests of the loan secured by a real estate mortgage.
"Pursuant to said agreements, plaintiffs paid BPI the monthly interest
on the loan secured by the aforementioned mortgage for three (3)
months as follows: September 19, 1986 at P27,225.00; October 20,
11
The Issues
Petitioners, in their Memorandum,12 interpose the following assignment of
errors:
"I.
The Court of Appeals erred in holding that the non-payment of the
mortgage obligation resulted in a breach of the contract.
"II
The Court of Appeals erred in holding that the rescission (resolution) of
the contract by private respondents was justified.
"III
The Court of Appeals erred in holding that petitioners' January 7, 1987
letter gave three 'new conditions' constituting mere offers or an
attempt to novate necessitating a new agreement between the
parties."
The Court's Ruling
The Petition is partially meritorious.
First Issue:
Breach of Contract
Petitioner aver that their nonpayment of private respondents' mortgage
obligation did not constitute a breach of contract, considering that their
request to assume the obligation had been disapproved by the mortgagee
bank. Accordingly, payment of the monthly amortizations ceased to be their
obligation and, instead, it devolved upon private respondents again.
However, petitioners did not merely stop paying the mortgage obligations;
they also failed to pay the balance of the purchase price. As admitted by
both parties, their agreement mandated that petitioners should pay the
sale. Private respondents' right to rescind the contract finds basis in Article
1191 of the Civil Code, which explicitly provides as follows:
"Art. 1191. -- 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 fulfillment and the 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 right of rescission of a party to an obligation under Article 1191 of the
Civil Code is predicated on a breach of faith by the other party who violates
the reciprocity between them.16 The breach contemplated in the said
provision is the obligor's failure to comply with an existing obligation.17 When
the obligor cannot comply with what is incumbent upon it, the obligee may
seek rescission and, in the absence of any just cause for the court to
determine the period of compliance, the court shall decree the rescission.18
In the present case, private respondents validly exercised their right to
rescind the contract, because of the failure of petitioners to comply with their
obligation to pay the balance of the purchase price. Indubitably, the latter
violated the very essence of reciprocity in the contract of sale, a violation
that consequently gave rise to private respondent's right to rescind the same
in accordance with law.
True, petitioners expressed their willingness to pay the balance of the
purchase price one month after it became due; however, this was not
equivalent to actual payment as would constitute a faithful compliance of
their reciprocal obligation. Moreover, the offer to pay was conditioned on the
performance by private respondents of additional burdens that had not been
agreed upon in the original contract. Thus, it cannot be said that the breach
committed by petitioners was merely slight or casual as would preclude the
exercise of the right to rescind.
Misplaced is petitioners' reliance on the cases19 they cited, because the
factual circumstances in those cases are not analogous to those in the
present one. In Song Fo there was, on the part of the buyer, only a delay of
twenty (20) days to pay for the goods delivered. Moreover, the buyer's offer
to pay was unconditional and was accepted by the seller.
In Zepeda, the breach involved a mere one-week delay in paying the balance
of 1,000 which was actually paid.
In Tan, the alleged breach was private respondent's delay of only a few days,
which was for the purpose of clearing the title to the property; there was no
reference whatsoever to the nonpayment of the contract price.
In the instant case, the breach committed did not merely consist of a slight
delay in payment or an irregularity; such breach would not normally defeat
the intention of the parties to the contract. Here, petitioners not only failed
to pay the P1.8 million balance, but they also imposed upon private
respondents new obligations as preconditions to the performance of their
own obligation. In effect, the qualified offer to pay was a repudiation of an
existing obligation, which was legally due and demandable under the
contract of sale. Hence, private respondents were left with the legal option of
seeking rescission to protect their own interest.
Mutual Restitution
Required in Rescission
As discussed earlier, the breach committed by petitioners was the
nonperformance of a reciprocal obligation, not a violation of the terms and
conditions of the mortgage contract. Therefore, the automatic rescission and
forfeiture of payment clauses stipulated in the contract does not apply.
Instead, Civil Code provisions shall govern and regulate the resolution of this
controversy.
Considering that the rescission of the contract is based on Article 1191 of the
Civil Code, mutual restitution is required to bring back the parties to their
original situation prior to the inception of the contract. Accordingly, the initial
payment of P800,000 and the corresponding mortgage payments in the
amounts of P27,225, P23,000 and P23,925 (totaling P874,150.00) advanced
by petitioners should be returned by private respondents, lest the latter
unjustly enrich themselves at the expense of the former.
Rescission creates the obligation to return the object of the contract. It can
be carried out only when the one who demands rescission can return
whatever he may be obliged to restore.20 To rescind is to declare a contract
void at its inception and to put an end to it as though it never was. It is not
merely to terminate it and release the parties from further obligations to
each other, but to abrogate it from the beginning and restore the parties to
their relative positions as if no contract has been made.21
Third Issue
Attempt to Novate