Spouses Juan Nuguid and Erlinda T
Spouses Juan Nuguid and Erlinda T
Spouses Juan Nuguid and Erlinda T
of the lot. When the Nuguids became the uncontested owner of the lot, by virtue of
entry of judgment of the Courts decision, the apartment building was already in
existence and occupied by tenants.
Under Article 448, the landowner is given the option, either to appropriate the
improvement as his own upon payment of the proper amount of indemnity or to sell
the land to the possessor in good faith. Relatedly, Article 546 provides that a builder
in good faith is entitled to full reimbursement for all the necessary and useful
expenses incurred; it also gives him right of retention until full reimbursement is
made. As we earlier held, since petitioners opted to appropriate the improvement
for themselves as early as June 1993, when they applied for a writ of execution
despite knowledge that the auction sale did not include the apartment building,
they could not benefit from the lots improvement, until they reimbursed the
improver in full, based on the current market value of the property.
Despite the Courts recognition of Pecsons right of ownership over the apartment
building, the petitioners still insisted on dispossessing Pecson by filing for a Writ of
Possession to cover both the lot and the building. Clearly, this resulted in a violation
of respondents right of retention. Worse, petitioners took advantage of the situation
to benefit from the highly valued, income-yielding, four-unit apartment building by
collecting rentals thereon, before they paid for the cost of the apartment building. It
was only 4 years later that they finally paid its full value to the respondent.
Given the circumstances of the instant case where the builder in good faith has
been clearly denied his right of retention for almost half a decade, we find that the
increased award of rentals by the RTC was reasonable and equitable. The petitioners
had reaped all the benefits from the improvement introduced by the respondent
during said period, without paying any amount to the latter as reimbursement for
his construction costs and expenses. They should account and pay for such
benefits.
We need not belabor now the appellate courts recognition of herein respondents
entitlement to rentals from the date of the determination of the current market
value until its full payment. Respondent is clearly entitled to payment by virtue of
his right of retention over the said improvement.