Taghoy Vs Tigol

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(137) Taghoy vs Tigol

Facts:

Spouses Filomeno Taghoy and Margarita Amit owned an 11,067 square meter
parcel of land, known as Lot 3635-B of subdivision plan (LRC) Psd-212881
(subject property), located in Barrio Agus, Lapu-Lapu City, Cebu under
Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 6466 of the Lapu-Lapu City Registry of
Deeds.

On August 6, 1975, Filomeno and Margarita executed a special power of


attorney, appointing Felixberto Tigol, Jr. as their attorney-in-fact. On August
21, 1975, Felixberto, as attorney-in-fact, executed a real estate mortgage over
the subject property to secure a loan of P22,000.00 with the Philippine National
Bank (PNB). Filomeno and Margarita obtained the loan to finance the shellcraft
business of their children.

Filomeno died intestate on February 12, 1976. On July 27, 1979, his widow,
Margarita, and their seven children, namely, Vicenta, Felisa, Pantaleon,
Gaudencio, Anselmo, Anastacia and Rosita, as heirs of the deceased, executed
a Deed of Extrajudicial Settlement and Sale, adjudicating to themselves the
subject property and selling the same to Rosita and her husband Felixberto
(respondents) for P1,000.00.

Subsequently, on September 7, 1981 and August 10, 1982, Filomeno's heirs


executed two (2) Deeds of Confirmation of Sale, confirming the supposed sale
of the subject property by Filomeno and Margarita in favor of the respondents
for P1,000.00. Simultaneous with the execution of the deeds, however, the
respondents executed explanatory Joint Affidavits attesting that the sale was
without any consideration, and was only executed to secure a loan.

On March 9, 1983, TCT No. 13250 was issued in the respondents' names. On
July 1, 1983, the respondents obtained a P70,000.00 loan with the Philippine
Banking Corporation, secured by a real estate mortgage on the subject
property.

Seven (7) years later, on April 17, 1990, Anselmo and Vicenta, together with
Margarita, Felisa, Gaudencio, and Pantaleon's surviving heir, Annabel, filed a
complaint against the respondents and Anastacia for declaration of nullity of
the respondents' TCT and for judicial partition. They alleged that the deeds of
confirmation of sale became the bases for the transfer of the title in the
respondents' names, but the sale was fictitious or simulated, as evidenced by
the respondents' own explanatory joint affidavits attesting that the transfer
was for the purpose only of convenience in securing a loan, not for absolute
conveyance or sale.

The respondents admitted that they executed the joint affidavits but countered
that they acquired a valid title to the subject property through the Extrajudicial
Settlement of Heirs and Sale. They claimed that when Filomeno died without
the PNB loan being paid, the heirs agreed that the respondents will advance
payment of the loan, subject to reimbursement, to save the foreclosure of the
subject property; the heirs then executed the Extrajudicial Settlement and Sale
in the respondents' favor as their way of reimbursing the amount the latter
paid; the respondents executed the joint affidavits out of generosity,
expressing their willingness to be reimbursed, but when the heirs failed to
reimburse the amounts advanced by them, then they caused the registration of
the title in their names.

Margarita, Felisa, Gaudencio and Annabel failed to appear at the initial hearing,
prompting the petitioners' counsel to manifest that, except for Anselmo and
Vicenta, they were abandoning the complaint. The petitioners
subsequently amended the complaint to implead Margarita, Felisa,
Gaudencio and Annabel as party defendants or unwilling plaintiffs.

THE RTC RULING

RTC found that the sale of the subject property was absolutely simulated since
the deeds of confirmation of sale were executed only to accommodate the
respondents' loan application using the subject property as collateral. The
lower court thus ordered the nullification of the respondents' title. It likewise
ordered the partition of the subject property after reimbursement of the
amount the respondents paid for the loan.

Subsequently, the respondents filed a motion for new trial, anchored on newly
discovered evidence allegedly proving that the subject property is Margarita's
paraphernal property.When the RTC denied the motion for new trial, the
respondents filed an appeal with the CA, under Rule 41 of the Rules of Court.

THE CA RULING

The CA decided the appeal on August 26, 2002, reversing the RTC decision.
Relying upon Margarita's testimony that the respondents paid the loan, the CA
found that the contract between the parties was relatively simulated; the
respondents' payment of the PNB loan was the real consideration for the
transfer of title.

After the CA denied the motion for reconsideration that followed, the
petitioners filed the present petition.

THE PETITION

The petitioners argue that the heirs, in executing the extrajudicial settlement,
did not intend to divest themselves of their respective rightful shares, interests
and participation in the subject property because it lacked a consideration, as
affirmed by the respondents' own joint affidavits; the payment of the PNB loan
could not be a valid consideration for the transfer since the loan was still unpaid
and outstanding at the time of the execution of the extrajudicial settlement.

ISSUE:

Whether or not the sale of the subject property between the parties was
absolutely or relatively simulated.

RULING:

The Supreme Court find the petition with merit , Supreme Court said they are
not a trier of facts. However, if the inference drawn by the appellate court from
the facts is manifestly mistaken, as in the present case, we can review the
evidence to allow us to arrive at the correct factual conclusions based on the
record.

In the interpretation of contracts, the intention of the parties is accorded


primordial consideration; such intention is determined from the express terms
of their agreement, as well as their contemporaneous and subsequent acts.
When the parties do not intend to be bound at all, the contract is absolutely
simulated; if the parties conceal their true agreement, then the contract is
relatively simulated. An absolutely simulated contract is void, and the parties
may recover from each other what they may have given under the simulated
contract, while a relatively simulated contract is valid and enforceable as the
parties' real agreement binds them. Characteristic of simulation is that the
apparent contract is not really desired or intended to produce legal effects, or in
any way, alter the juridical situation of the parties.

In the present case, the parties never intended to be bound by their agreement
as revealed by the two (2) joint affidavits executed by the respondents
simultaneous with the execution of the deeds of confirmation of sale.

The joint affidavits are very solid pieces of evidence in the petitioners'
favor. They constitute admissions against interest made by the respondents
under oath. An admission against interest is the best evidence that affords the
greatest certainty of the facts in dispute, based on the presumption that no
man would declare anything against himself unless such declaration is true. It
is fair to presume that the declaration corresponds with the truth, and it is his
fault if it does not.

Thus, by the respondents' own admissions, they never intended to be bound by


the sale; they merely executed the documents for convenience in securing a
bank loan, and they agreed to reconvey the subject property upon payment of
the loan. The sale was absolutely simulated and, therefore, void.

We find that the CA misappreciated Margarita's testimony that the respondents


are entitled to the entire property because they redeemed or paid the bank
loan. The failure of the other heirs to reimburse the amounts advanced by the
respondents in payment of the loan did not entitle the latter to claim full
ownership of the co-owned property. It only gave them the right to claim
reimbursement for the amounts they advanced in behalf of the co-ownership.
The respondents' advance payments are in the nature of necessary expenses
for the preservation of the co-ownership. Article 488 of the Civil Code provides
that necessary expenses may be incurred by one co-owner, subject to his right
to collect reimbursement from the remaining co-owners. Until reimbursed, the
respondents hold a lien upon the subject property for the amount they
advanced.

Based on the foregoing, we find that the CA erred in setting aside the decision
of the RTC and in dismissing the petitioners' complaint against the
respondents.

CA’s decision dated August 26, 2002 REVERSE and SET ASIDE . The
decision dated February 23, 1994 of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 27,
Lapu-Lapu City in Civil Case No. 2247 is REINSTATED. No pronouncement
as to costs.

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