Pactum Commisorium

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1. What is pledge?

Pledge may be defined as an accessory, real and unilateral contract by virtue of


which the debtor or a third person delivers to the creditor or to a third
person movable property as security for the performance of the principal
obligation, upon the fulfillment if which the thing pledged with all
its accession abd accessories, shall be returned to the debtor or to third person.
2. Define pactum commissorium. What is the rule with regard to pactum
commissorium? Is there any exception?
It is a pact or agreement in a contract of pledge, mortgage, or antichresis by
virtue of which if the debtor cannot fulfill his obligation, the creditor can
appropriate or dispose of the thing given by way of pledge, mortgage, or
antichresis. It is prohibited by law.
The only exception is in the case of contract of pledge, but even then, certain
conditions should be complied with. In pledge, if the debtor is unable to pay his
obligation, the creditor has a right to have the thing pledged sold at public
auction for the payment of his credit. If the thing is not sold, a second public
auction should be held. If still it is not sold, then he may appropriate the thing.
3. What are the effects of the sale of the thing pledged?
The sale of the thing pledged shall extinguish the principal obligation, whether or
not the proceeds of the sale are equal to the amount of the principal obligation,
interest and expenses in a proper case. If the price of sale is more than said
amount, the debto shall not be entitled to excess, unless it is otherwise agreed. If
the price of the sale is less, neither shall the creditor be entitled to recover the
deficiency, notwithstanding any stipulation to the contract.

FIRST DIVISION

DEVELOPMENT BANK
G.R. No. 167238
OF THE PHILIPPINES,
Petitioner,
Present:
PUNO, C.J., Chairperson,
YNARES-SANTIAGO,*
- versus CARPIO,
CORONA and
LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, JJ.
SPOUSES JESUS and
ANACORITA DOYON,
Respondents.
Promulgated:
March 25, 2009
x---------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
CORONA, J.:

This petition[1] seeks to the set aside the November 23, 2004 decision [2] and February 18, 2005
resolution[3] of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 74660.
In the early 1990s, respondent spouses Jesus and Anacorita Doyon obtained several loans
amounting to P10 million[4] from petitioner Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP). As security
for the loans, respondents mortgaged their real estate properties as well as the motor vehicles of JD
Bus Lines.
Due to their inability to fully pay their obligations upon maturity,[5] respondents requested
petitioner to restructure their past due loans. [6] Petitioner agreed. Hence, respondents signed three
promissory notes on June 29, 1994.[7]
Nonetheless, respondents still failed to pay the quarterly installments on the promissory notes.
Thus, petitioner demanded the payment of the total value of their loans from respondents. [8] Respondents,
however, ignored petitioner and adamantly refused to pay their loans.
Consequently, petitioner filed an application for extrajudicial foreclosure of real estate
mortgages in the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Ormoc City in 1995. To forestall the foreclosure
proceedings, respondents immediately filed an action for their nullification in the RTC of Ormoc City,

Branch 35 claiming that they had already paid the principal amount of their loans (or P10 million) to
petitioner. This was docketed as Civil Case No. 3314-O.
For three years, Civil Case No. 3314-O was not acted upon by the RTC.
In 1998, petitioner withdrew the application for extrajudicial foreclosure and thereafter moved for
the dismissal of Civil Case No. 3314-O. The RTC granted the motion in an order dated March 2, 1998.
[9]

It held:
In todays hearing, which is for the reception of evidence for [petitioner], [it]
informed the Court about its withdrawal of the [application] for extrajudicial foreclosure
of real estate made subject of the present case. In view of the withdrawal, [petitioner]
moved for the dismissal of the case considering that the action would be rendered moot
and academic.
When [respondents were] made to comment, they interposed no objection to the
motion to dismiss.
By agreement therefore between the parties, this case is considered DISMISSED
with prejudice.

Weeks later, petitioner demanded from respondents the payment of their outstanding
obligations which had by then ballooned to more than P20 million. Again, respondents ignored
petitioner.
Petitioner filed an application for extrajudicial foreclosure of respondents real and chattel
mortgages with the DBP special sheriff in Makati[10] and subsequently took constructive possession of
the foreclosed properties.[11] It posted guards at the perimeter of respondents property in Barangay
Cabulihan, Ormoc City (Cabulihan property) where the foreclosed motor vehicles of JD Bus Lines were
parked.[12] Subsequently, the DBP special sheriff issued notices of sale at public auction of the foreclosed
properties.[13]
Meanwhile, respondents filed a complaint for damages [14] against petitioner and the DBP special
sheriff in the RTC of Ormoc City, Branch 35. According to respondents, by withdrawing the application
for extrajudicial foreclosure and moving for the dismissal of Civil Case No. 3314-O, petitioner led them
to believe that it would no longer seek the satisfaction of its claims. Petitioner therefore acted contrary
to Article 19 of the Civil Code[15] when it foreclosed on the real and chattel mortgages anew.

Furthermore, respondents claimed that the provision in the mortgage


contracts[16] allowing petitioner as mortgagee to take constructive possession of
the mortgaged properties upon respondents default was void. The provision
allegedly constituted a pactum commissorium[17] since it permitted petitioner to
appropriate the mortgaged properties.
Lastly, respondents assailed the validity of the public auctions conducted by the DBP special
sheriff. The September 9, 1998 notices of sale stated that the foreclosed real properties would be sold at
public auction on September 16, 1998 at 10:00 a.m. or soon thereafter [18] while the foreclosed motor
vehicles would be sold on September 16, 1998 at 2:00 p.m. or soon thereafter. [19] Section 4 of Act 3135,
[20]

however, requires that public auctions must take place from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. or, allegedly, for seven

continuous hours.
Petitioner, in its answer, pointed out that despite the restructuring, respondents refused to pay the
amortizations on the June 29, 2004 promissory notes. Moreover, the filing of Civil Case No. 3314-O and
the delay in its resolution prevented petitioner from collecting on the said notes from respondents. It
withdrew the application in the RTC and moved for the dismissal of Civil Case No. 3314-O only for the
purpose of availing of a more efficient legal remedy, that is, foreclosure through a special sheriff, as
authorized by its charter.[21]
In a decision dated January 25, 2002,[22] the RTC found that, by withdrawing its application
for extrajudicial foreclosure and moving for the dismissal of Civil Case No. 3314-O, petitioner led
respondents to believe that their loans had been extinguished. Thus, petitioner acted in bad faith
when it foreclosed on the real and chattel mortgages anew. The dispositive portion of the decision
read:
WHEREFORE, after due consideration of all the foregoing, judgment is hereby
rendered in favor of [respondents] and against [petitioner], ordering as follows:
1.

[petitioner] to immediately stop the presence of its security guards in the


compound or premises of the plaintiffs at Barangay Cabulihan, Ormoc City, and
to vacate them from said premises;

2.

[petitioner] to pay actual damages to [respondents] in the total amount


of P16,000 per day for the four buses, or a total of P480,000 per month for these

buses starting from April 27, 1998 until the time the buses shall have been
allowed to leave the compound of [respondents] or until [petitioner] shall vacate
the said premises, and P200,000 as compensatory damages for the injury to
[respondents'] business standing;
3.
4.

[petitioner] to pay P1,000,000 as exemplary damages;


[petitioner and the DBP special sheriff] jointly and severally to pay the
plaintiffs the sum of P2,000,000 as moral damages, the sum of P50,000 as
attorney's fees, the sum of P10,000 as litigation expenses and costs of the suit.

Aggrieved, petitioner appealed to the CA. [23]


In a decision dated November 23, 2004, the CA affirmed the RTC decision with modification of
the liability for damages. Because the DBP special sheriff merely performed his ministerial duty (when he
foreclosed on the real and chattel mortgages and issued notices of sale in public auction of the foreclosed
properties), petitioner alone was liable.
Petitioner moved for reconsideration but it was denied. Hence, this petition.
Petitioner basically asserts that it did not act in bad faith when it foreclosed on respondents real
and chattel mortgages anew. Because respondents loans were past due, it had the right to satisfy its credit
by foreclosing on the mortgages.
Ruling:
We grant the petition.
This Court is not a trier of facts and, as a rule, it only entertains questions of law in a petition for
review on certiorari. This rule, however, admits of exceptions such as when the assailed decision is based
on a misapprehension of facts.[24]
In this instance, the RTC and the CA both found that petitioner acted with bad faith when it
foreclosed on the real and chattel mortgages. We disagree.
What is due to a person is determined by the circumstances of each particular case. [25] Article 19
of the Civil Code provides:
Article 19. Every person must, in the exercise of his rights and in the performance of his
duties, act with justice, give everyone his due and observe honesty and good faith.

For an action for damages under this provision to prosper, the complainant must prove that:
(a)

defendant has a legal right or duty;

(b)

he exercised his right or performed his duty with bad faith and

(c)

complainant was prejudiced or injured as a result of the said exercise or performance


by defendant.

On the first requisite, we find that petitioner had the legal right to foreclose on the real and
chattel mortgages.
Since respondents neither assailed the due execution of the June 29, 1994 promissory notes nor
presented proof of payment thereof, their obligation remained outstanding. Upon default, by prior mutual
agreement, petitioner had the right to foreclose on the real and chattel mortgages securing their
loans.
The June 29, 1994 promissory notes uniformly stated that failure to pay an installment (or
interest) on the due date was an event of default. [26] Respondents were therefore in default when they
failed to pay the quarterly amortizations on the designated due dates.
When the principal obligation becomes due and the debtor fails to perform his obligation, the
creditor may foreclose on the mortgage [27] for the purpose of alienating the (mortgaged) property to satisfy
his credit.[28]
Regarding the second requisite, bad faith imports a dishonest purpose or some moral obliquity or
conscious doing of a wrong that partakes of the nature of fraud. [29]
We note that the RTC of Ormoc City (Judge Fortunito L. Madrona) sat on Civil Case No. 3314O for three long years. This inordinate delay prejudiced petitioner. Inasmuch as petitioner was in the
business of lending out money it borrowed from the public, sound banking practice called for the exercise
of a more efficient legal remedy against a defaulting debtor like respondent. [30] Thus, petitioner could not
be faulted for resorting to foreclosure through a special sheriff. Such procedure was, after all, the more
efficient method of enforcing petitioners rights as mortgagee under its charter.[31]

Moreover, the March 2, 1998 order of the RTC (quoted above) merely stated that the withdrawal
of the application for extrajudicial foreclosure in the RTC rendered Civil Case No. 3314-O moot and
academic. Nothing in the said order stated, or even hinted, that respondents obligation to petitioner had in
fact been extinguished. Thus, there was nothing on the part of petitioner even remotely showing that it led
respondents to believe that it had waived its claims.
Lastly, inasmuch as petitioner demanded payment from them right after the dismissal of Civil
Case No. 3314-O, respondents could not have reasonably presumed that the bank had waived its claims
against them. Furthermore, the fact that a demand for payment was made negated bad faith on the part of
petitioner. Despite giving respondents the opportunity to pay their long overdue obligations and avoid
foreclosure, respondents still refused to pay. Since respondents did not have a cause of action against
petitioner, the RTC and CA erred in granting damages to them.
A stipulation allowing the mortgagee to take actual or constructive possession of a mortgaged
property upon foreclosure is valid. In Agricultural and Industrial Bank v. Tambunting,[32] we explained:
A stipulation authorizing the mortgagee, for the purpose stated therein specified, to
take possession of the mortgaged premises upon the foreclosure of a mortgage is not
repugnant [to either Article 2088 or Article 2137]. On the contrary, such a stipulation is in
consonance or analogous to the provisions of Article [2132], et seq. of the Civil Code
regarding antichresis and the provision of the Rules of Court regarding the appointment
of a receiver as a convenient and feasible means of preserving and administering the
property in litigation.[33]

The real estate and chattel mortgage contracts [34] uniformly provided that petitioner could take
possession of the foreclosed properties upon the failure of respondents to pay even one amortization.
Thus, respondents refusal to pay their obligations gave rise to petitioners right to take constructive
possession of the foreclosed motor vehicles.
In Philippine National Bank v. Cabatingan,[35] we held that a sale at public auction held at any
time between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. of a particular day, regardless of duration, was valid. Since the sale
at public auction of the foreclosed real properties and chattels was conducted between 10:00 a.m. and
11:00 a.m. and between 2:00 p.m. and 3:30 p.m., respectively, the auctions were valid.

WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby GRANTED. The November 23, 2004 decision and
February 18, 2005 resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV 74660 affirming the January 25,
2002 decision of the Regional Trial Court of Ormoc City, Branch 35 in Civil Case No. 3592-0 are SET
ASIDE. New judgment is hereby entered dismissing Civil Case No. 3592-0 for lack of cause of action.
No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.

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