Atilano vs. Atilano
Atilano vs. Atilano
Atilano vs. Atilano
232
Same; Same; Same; Same; Reason.—The reason is that when one sells
or buys real property—a piece of land, for example—one sells or buys the
property as he sees it, in its actual setting and by its physical metes and
bounds, and not by the mere lot number assigned to it in the certif icate of
title.
Same; Same; When reconveyance, not reformation of instrument, is
proper.—In this case, the deed of sale need not be reformed. The parties
have retained possession of their respective properties conformably to the
real intention of the parties to that sale, and all they should do is to execute
mutual deeds of conveyance.
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MAKALINTAL, J.:
233
and his children obtained transfer certificate of title No. 4889 over
lot No. 535-E in their names as co-owners. Then, on July 16, 1959,
desiring to put an end to the co-ownership, they had the land
resurveyed so that it could properly be subdivided; and it was then
discovered that the land they were actually occupying on the
strength of the deed of sale executed in 1920 was lot No. 535-A and
not lot 535-E, as referred to in the deed, while the land which
remained in the possession of the vendor, Eulogio Atilano I, and
which passed to his successor, defendant Ladislao Atilano, was lot
No. 535-E and not lot No. 535-A.
On January 25, 1960, the heirs of Eulogio Atilano II, who was by
then also deceased, f iled the present action in the Court of First
Instance of Zamboanga, alleging, inter alia, that they had offered to
surrender to the defendants the possession of lot No. 535-A and
demanded in return the possession of lot No. 535-E, but that the
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234
der the Land Registration Act the defendants could not acquire it
through prescription. There can be, of course, no dispute as to the
correctness of this legal proposition; but the defendants, aside from
alleging adverse possession in their answer and counterclaim, also
alleged error in the deed of sale of May 18, 1920, thus: "Eulogio
Atilano 1.o, por equivocación o error involuntario, cedió y traspasó
a su hermano Eulogio Atilano 2.do el lote No. 535-E en vez del Lote
No. 535-A."
The logic and common sense of the situation lean heavily in
favor of the defendants' contention. When one sells or buys real
property—a piece of land, for example—one sells or buys the
property as he sees it, in its actual setting and by its physical metes
and bounds, and not by the mere lot number assigned to it in the
certif icate of title. In the particular case before us, the portion
correctly referred to as lot No. 535-A was already in the possession
of the vendee, Eulogio Atilano II, who had constructed his residence
therein, even before the sale in his favor; indeed, even before the
subdivision of the entire lot No. 535 at the instance of its owner,
Eulogio Atilano I. In like manner the latter had his house on the
portion correctly identified, after the subdivision, as lot No. 535-E,
even adding to the area thereof by purchasing a portion of an
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the validity and binding effect of the contract between them. The
new Civil Code provides a remedy for such a situation by means of
reformation of the instrument. This remedy is available when, there
having been a meeting of the minds of the parties to a contract, their
true intention is not expressed in the instrument purporting to
embody the agreement by reason of mistake, fraud, inequitable
conduct or accident (Art. 1359, et seq.) In this case, the deed of sale
executed in 1920 need no longer be reformed. The parties have
retained possession of their respective properties conformably to the
real intention of the parties to that sale, and all they should do is to
execute mutual deeds of conveyance.
WHEREFORE, the judgment appealed from is reversed. The
plaintiffs are ordered to execute a deed of conveyance of lot No.
535-E in favor of the defendants, and the latter, in turn, are ordered
to execute a similar document, covering lot No. 535-A, in favor of
the plaintiffs. Costs against the latter.
Judgment reversed.
___________
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