Lopez Vs Constantino (Property)
Lopez Vs Constantino (Property)
Lopez Vs Constantino (Property)
SYLLABUS
DECISION
OZAETA, J.:
After the destruction of the building appellee sought by motion in the land
registration case to cancel the annotation on the certificate of title of the
condition of the sale above mentioned, on the theory that her obligation to
pay appellant a life pension had terminated upon the destruction of the
building out of the rents from which said pension was payable. The Fourth
Branch of the Court of First Instance of Manila granted the motion over the
opposition of the appellant and ordered the cancellation of the annotation
and the issuance of a new certificate of title in favor of the appellee without
such annotation.
Appellant contends (a) that her right to receive a life pension as a condition
of the sale affected not only the building but also the lot on which it was
erected and, hence, such right was not extinguished upon the loss of the
building; and (b) that the proceeds of the fire insurance policy which
appellee collected should be ordered invested in the construction of another
building.
The trial court believed that the life pension was an incumbrance on the
building alone, and held that said building having been destroyed without
appellees fault, and there remaining nothing but the lot, "which in Manila
constitutes a liability when it has no building," the life pension could no
longer subsist.
It may indeed seem at first blush that the rents out of which the pension
was payable were earned by or paid for the building only, independently of
the lot on which it was erected; but further reflection will show that such
impression is wrong. When both land and building belong to the same
owner, as in this case, the rents on the building constitute an earning of the
capital invested in the acquisition of both land and building. There can be a
land without a building, but there can be no building without land. The land,
being an indispensable part of the rented premises, cannot be considered as
having no rental value whatsoever.
But even granting that the obligation of the appellee to pay to the appellant
during the latters lifetime one half of the rents of the building in question or
of certain portions thereof is an incumbrance on the building alone, such
obligation may properly be considered as constituting the appellant a co-
usufructuary of said building. Article 469 of the Civil Code provides that
usufruct may be created on the whole or a part of the fruits of a thing, in
favor of one or more persons, simultaneously or successively, and in any
case from or to a certain day, conditionally or unconditionally.
It is clear, therefore, that from whatever aspect the case is viewed, the
conclusion is inescapable that appellees obligation towards appellant under
the contract above mentioned has not been extinguished.