37 Caluzor Vs Llanillo

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37 Caluzor vs Llanillo

G.R. No. 155580 Juy 1, 2015

Bersamin, J.

Facts:

Lorenzo Llanillo (Lorenzo) owned the parcel of land (land) with an area of 90,101 square
meters, more or less, known as Lot 4196 and situated in Lorna de Gato, Marilao, Bulacan.

The petitioner averred that Lorenzo took him into the land as a tenant in 1970, giving to him a
sketch that indicated the boundaries of the portion he would be cultivating. To effectively till the
land, the petitioner and his family were allowed to build a makeshift shanty thereon.

Even after the death of Lorenzo, the petitioner continued giving a share of his produce to the
family of Lorenzo through Ricardo Martin (Ricardo), Lorenzo’s overseer. In 1990, respondent
Deogracias Lanillo (Deogracias), the son of Lorenzo, offered to pay the petitioner
P17,000.00/hectare of the cultivated land in exchange for turning his tillage over to Deogracias.

In the end, Deogracias did not pay the petitioner. Instead, on August 5, 1994, Deogracias and
persons acting under his orders forcibly ejected the petitioner and his family by levelling their
shanty and plantation with the use of a bulldozer. The efforts of the Barangay Agrarian Reform
Council to conciliate failed; hence, the authority to file a case was issued to the petitioner. On
September 9, 1994, the petitioner instituted this case against Deogracias in the Office of the
Provincial Agrarian Reform Adjudicator (PARAD) in Malolos, Bulacan, demanding the payment
of disturbance compensation.

Meanwhile, on April 12, 1995, the Secretary of the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR)
granted the application for the conversion of the land from agricultural to residential and
commercial uses filed by Deogarcias, through Moldex as his attorney-in-fact.

PARAD ruled in favor of Llanillo, stating that Petitioner Caluzor was not a tenant in the subject
land. The sketch that was given to petitioner by the late Lorenzo is not enough proof of the
latter’s consent to a tenancy relationship.

DARAB reversed, ruling in favor of the Petitioner. The CA the reversed DARAB, reinstating
PARAD’s ruling. Thus, the petition.

Issue: Whether or not petitioner, who was given a sketch of the subject land and was allowed to
bring his family with him to live in an agricultural land, is deemed a tenant

Held: NO.

For tenancy relationship to exist, therefore, the following elements must be shown to concur, to
wit: (1) the parties are the landowner and thetenant; (2) the subject matter is agricultural land;
(3) there is consent between the parties to the relationship; (4) the purpose is of the
relationship is to bring about agricultural production; (5) there is personal cultivation on the part
of the tenant or agricultural lessee; and (6) the harvest is shared between landowner and
tenant or agricultural lessee.

The presence of all these elements must be proved by substantial evidence; this means that the
absence of one will not make an alleged tenant a de jure tenant. Unless a person has
established his status as a de jure tenant, he is not entitled to security of tenure or to be covered
by the Land Reform Program of the Government under existing tenancy laws.

Being the party alleging the existence of the tenancy relationship, the petitioner carried the
burden of proving the allegation of his tenancy.

In establishing the tenancy relationship, therefore, independent evidence, not self-serving


statements, should prove, among others, the consent of the landowner to the relationship, and
the sharing of harvests.

The third and sixth elements of agricultural tenancy were not shown to be presented in
this case. To prove the element of consent between the parties, the petitioner testified that
Lorenzo had allowed him to cultivate the land by giving to him the sketch of the lot in order to
delineate the portion for his tillage. Yet, the sketch did not establish that Lorenzo had
categorically taken the petitioner in as his agricultural tenant. This element demanded that the
landowner and the tenant should have agreed to the relationship freely and voluntarily, with
neither of them unduly imposing his will on the other. The petitioner did not make such a
showing of consent.

The sixth element was not also established. Even assuming that Lorenzo had verbally permitted
the petitioner to cultivate his land, no tenancy relationship between them thereby set in because
they had not admittedly discussed any fruit sharing scheme, with Lorenzo simply telling him
simply that he would just ask his share from him. The petitioner disclosed that he did not see
Lorenzo again from the time he had received the sketch until Lorenzo’s death. Although the
petitioner asserted that he had continued sharing the fruits of his cultivation through Ricardo,
Lorenzo’s caretaker, even after Lorenzo’s death, producing the list of produce to support his
claim, the list did not indicate Ricardo’s receiving the fruits listed therein. The petitioner did not
also contain Ricardo’s authority to receive Leonardo’s share.

We underscore that harvest sharing is a vital element of every tenancy. Common sense
dictated, indeed, that the petitioner, if he were the de jure tenant that he represented
himself to be, should fully know his arrangement with the landowner. But he did not
sufficiently and persuasively show such arrangement. His inability to specify the sharing
arrangement was inconceivable inasmuch as he had depended on the arrangement for
his own sustenance and that of his own family. The absence of the clear-cut sharing
agreement between him and Lorenzo could only signify that the latter had merely
tolerated his having tilled the land sans tenancy.

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