Villanueva V Spouses Branoco
Villanueva V Spouses Branoco
Villanueva V Spouses Branoco
Facts:
The trial court rejected respondents' claim of ownership after treating the
Deed as a donation
mortis causa which Rodrigo effectively cancelled by selling the Property to Vere in
1970.Thus, by the
time Rodriguez sold the Property to respondents in 1983, she had no title to
transfer.
Respondents appealed to the Court of Appeals, where the CA found that the
Deed as a
testamentary disposition was instead a donation inter vivos. Accordingly, the CA
upheld the sale between
Rodriguez and respondents, and, conversely found the sale between Rodrigo and
petitioner's predecessor-
in-interest, Vere, void for Rodrigo's lack of title.
Issue:
Whether or not the contract between Rodrigo and Rodriguez was a donation
or a devise
Held:
Second. What Rodrigo reserved for herself was only the beneficial title to
the Property, evident
from Rodriguez's undertaking to "give one half x xx of the produce of the land to
Apoy Alve during her
lifetime." Thus, the Deed's stipulation that "the ownership shall be vested on
Rodriguez upon my demise,"
taking into account the non-reversion clause, could only refer to Rodrigo's
beneficial title.
Third. The existence of consideration other than the donor's death, such as
the donor's love and
affection to the donee and the services the latter rendered, while also true of
devises, nevertheless
"corroborates the express irrevocability of x xx inter vivos transfers."Thus, the
CA committed no error in
giving weight to Rodrigo's statement of "love and affection" for Rodriguez, her
niece, as consideration for
the gift, to underscore its finding