Marquez v. Espejo
Marquez v. Espejo
Marquez v. Espejo
DECISION
DEL CASTILLO , J : p
When the parties admit the contents of written documents but put in issue
whether these documents adequately and correctly express the true intention of the
parties, the deciding body is authorized to look beyond these instruments and into the
contemporaneous and subsequent actions of the parties in order to determine such
intent.
Well-settled is the rule that in case of doubt, it is the intention of the contracting
parties that prevails, for the intention is the soul of a contract, not its wording which is
prone to mistakes, inadequacies, or ambiguities. To hold otherwise would give life,
validity, and precedence to mere typographical errors and defeat the very purpose of
agreements.
This Petition for Review on Certiorari 1 assails the October 7, 2003 Decision, 2 as
well as the May 11, 2005 Resolution 3 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA G.R. SP No.
69981. The dispositive portion of the appellate court's Decision reads:
WHEREFORE, nding reversible error committed by the Department of
Agrarian Reform Adjudication Board, the instant petition for review is GRANTED.
The assailed Decision, dated 17 January 2001, rendered by the Department of
Agrarian Reform Adjudication Board is hereby ANNULLED and SET ASIDE. The
Decision of the Department of Agrarian Reform Adjudication Board of
Bayombong[,] Nueva Vizcaya, dated 17 March 1998, is REINSTATED. Costs
against respondents.
SO ORDERED. 4
4. Ordering RBBI to return the amount paid to it by Nestor and Salun-at; and
ordering the latter to pay 20 cavans of palay per hectare at 46 kilos per
cavan unto [respondents] plus such accrued and unpaid rentals for the
past years as may be duly accounted for with the assistance of the
Municipal Agrarian Reform O cer of Bagabag, Nueva Vizcaya who is also
hereby instructed to assist the parties execute their leasehold contracts
and;
5. The order to supervise harvest dated March 11, 1998 shall be observed
until otherwise modified or dissolved by the appellate body.
SO ORDERED. 5
Factual Antecedents
Respondents Espejos were the original registered owners of two parcels of
agricultural land, with an area of two hectares each. One is located at Barangay Lantap,
Bagabag, Nueva Vizcaya (the Lantap property) while the other is located in Barangay
Murong, Bagabag, Nueva Vizcaya (the Murong property). There is no dispute among the
parties that the Lantap property is tenanted by respondent Nemi Fernandez (Nemi) 6
who is the husband 7 of respondent Elenita Espejo (Elenita), while the Murong property
is tenanted by petitioners Salun-at Marquez (Marquez) and Nestor Dela Cruz (Dela
Cruz). 8
The respondents mortgaged both parcels of land to Rural Bank of Bayombong,
Inc. (RBBI) to secure certain loans. Upon their failure to pay the loans, the mortgaged
properties were foreclosed and sold to RBBI. RBBI eventually consolidated title to the
properties and transfer certificates of title (TCTs) were issued in the name of RBBI. TCT
No. T-62096 dated January 14, 1985 was issued for the Murong property. It contained
the following description:
Beginning at a point marked I on plan H-176292, S. 44034, W. 1656.31 m.
more or less from B.L.L.M. No. 1, Bagabag Townsite, K-27,
Subsequently, TCT No. T-62836 dated June 4, 1985 was issued for the Lantap property
and contained the following description:
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Beginning at a point marked "1" on plan H-105520, N. 80 deg. 32 'W.,
1150.21 m. from BLLM No. 122, Irrigation project,
thence N. 61 deg. 40'E., 200.00 m. to point 2; HCSEcI
Both TCTs describe their respective subjects as located in "Bagabag Townsite, K-27,"
without any reference to either Barangay Lantap or Barangay Murong.
On February 26, 1985, respondents Espejos bought back one of their lots from
RBBI. The Deed of Sale 1 1 described the property sold as follows:
. . . do hereby SELL, TRANSFER, and CONVEY, absolutely and
unconditionally . . . that certain parcel of land, situated in the Municipality of
Bagabag, Province of Nueva Vizcaya, and more particularly bounded and
described as follows, to wit:
As may be seen from the foregoing, the Deed of Sale did not mention the barangay
where the property was located but mentioned the title of the property (TCT No. T-
62096), which title corresponds to the Murong property. There is no evidence, however,
that respondents took possession of the Murong property, or demanded lease rentals
from the petitioners (who continued to be the tenants of the Murong property), or
otherwise exercised acts of ownership over the Murong property. On the other hand,
respondent Nemi (husband of respondent Elenita and brother-in-law of the other
respondents), continued working on the other property — the Lantap property —
without any evidence that he ever paid rentals to RBBI or to any landowner. The Deed of
Sale was annotated on TCT No. T-62096 almost a decade later, on July 1, 1994. 1 2 DAaEIc
Further, since the VLTs covered the Lantap property and petitioners are not the
actual tillers thereof, the OIC-RARAD declared that they were disquali ed to become
tenants of the Lantap property and ordered the cancellation of their CLOAs. It then
ordered RBBI to execute a leasehold contract with the real tenant of the Lantap
property, Nemi.
The OIC-RARAD recognized that petitioners' only right as the actual tillers of the
Murong property is to remain as the tenants thereof after the execution of leasehold
contracts with and payment of rentals in arrears to respondents.
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DARAB Decision 2 4
Upon appeal led by petitioners, the DARAB reversed the OIC-RARAD Decision. It
ruled that in assailing the validity of the CLOAs issued to petitioners as bona de
tenant-farmers, the burden of proof rests on the respondents. There being no evidence
that the DAR eld personnel were remiss in the performance of their o cial duties
when they issued the corresponding CLOAs in favor of petitioners, the presumption of
regular performance of duty prevails. This conclusion is made more imperative by the
respondents' admission that petitioners are the actual tillers of the Murong property,
hence qualified beneficiaries thereof.
As for respondents' allegation that they bought back the Murong property from
RBBI, the DARAB ruled that they failed to support their allegation with substantial
evidence. It gave more credence to RBBI's claim that respondents repurchased the
Lantap property, not the Murong property. Respondents, as owners of the Lantap
property, were ordered to enter into an agricultural leasehold contract with their
brother-in-law Nemi, who is the actual tenant of the Lantap property.
The DARAB ended its January 17, 2001 Decision in this wise:
We nd no basis or justi cation to question the authenticity and validity of
the CLOAs issued to appellants as they are by operation of law quali ed
bene ciaries over the landholdings; there is nothing to quiet as these titles were
awarded in conformity with the CARP program implementation; and nally, the
Board declares that all controverted claims to or against the subject landholding
must be completely and finally laid to rest.
WHEREFORE, premises considered and nding reversible errors[,] the
assailed decision is ANNULLED and a new judgment is hereby rendered,
declaring:
2. Declaring Transfer Certi cate of Title (TCT) Nos. 395 and 396
issued in the name of [farmer-bene ciaries] Salun-at Marquez and Nestor Dela
Cruz respectively, covered formerly by TCT No. 62096 (TCT No. 43258) of the
Murong property as valid and legal;
SO ORDERED. 2 5
Their Motion for Reconsideration was likewise denied with nality. 31 Entry of judgment
was made in that case on December 15, 2004. 3 2
On July 27, 2005, 3 3 petitioners filed the instant petition.
Issues
Rephrased and consolidated, the parties present the following issues for the Court's
determination:
I
What is the effect of the final judgment dismissing RBBI's Petition for Review on
Certiorari, which assailed the same CA Decision
II
Whether the CA erred in utilizing the Best Evidence Rule to determine the subject
of the contracts
III
What are the subject properties of the parties' respective contracts with RBBI SDTcAH
These arguments were ineffectual in convincing the Court to review the appellate
court's Decision. It is the appellant's responsibility to point out the perceived errors in
the appealed decision. When a party merely raises equitable considerations such as the
"clean hands" doctrine without a clear-cut legal basis and cogent arguments to support
his claim, there should be no surprise if the Court is not swayed to exercise its appellate
jurisdiction and the appeal is dismissed outright. The dismissal of an appeal does not
always and necessarily mean that the appealed decision is correct, for it could simply
be the result of the appellant's inadequate discussion, ineffectual arguments, or even
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procedural lapses.
RBBI's failure to convince the Court of the merits of its appeal should not
prejudice petitioners who were not parties to RBBI's appeal, especially because
petitioners duly led a separate appeal and were able to articulately and effectively
present their arguments. A party cannot be deprived of his right to appeal an adverse
decision just because another party had already appealed ahead of him, 3 8 or just
because the other party's separate appeal had already been dismissed. 3 9
There is another reason not to bind the petitioners to the nal judgment against
RBBI. RBBI executed the transfer (VLTs) in favor of petitioners prior to the
commencement of the action. Thus, when the action for cancellation of CLOA was led,
RBBI had already divested itself of its title to the two properties involved. Under the rule
on res judicata, a judgment (in personam) is conclusive only between the parties and
their successors-in-interest by title subsequent to the commencement of the action. 4 0
Thus, when the vendor (in this case RBBI) has already transferred his title to third
persons (petitioners), the said transferees are not bound by any judgment which may
be rendered against the vendor. 4 1
Second Issue
Is it correct to apply the Best Evidence Rule?
Citing the Best Evidence Rule in Rule 130, Section 3, the CA held that the Deed of
Sale between respondents and RBBI is the best evidence as to the property that was
sold by RBBI to the respondents. Since the Deed of Sale stated that its subject is the
land covered by TCT No. T-62096 — the title for the Murong property — then the
property repurchased by the respondents was the Murong property. Likewise, the CA
held that since the VLTs between petitioners and RBBI refer to TCT No. T-62836 — the
title for the Lantap property — then the property transferred to petitioners was the
Lantap property.
Petitioners argue that the appellate court erred in using the best evidence rule to
determine the subject of the Deed of Sale and the Deeds of Voluntary Land Transfer.
They maintain that the issue in the case is not the contents of the contracts but the
intention of the parties that was not adequately expressed in their contracts.
Petitioners then argue that it is the Parol Evidence Rule that should be applied in order
to adequately resolve the dispute.
Indeed, the appellate court erred in its application of the Best Evidence Rule. The
Best Evidence Rule states that when the subject of inquiry is the contents of a
document, the best evidence is the original document itself and no other evidence
(such as a reproduction, photocopy or oral evidence) is admissible as a general rule.
The original is preferred because it reduces the chance of undetected tampering with
the document. 4 2
In the instant case, there is no room for the application of the Best Evidence Rule
because there is no dispute regarding the contents of the documents. It is admitted by
the parties that the respondents' Deed of Sale referred to TCT No. T-62096 as its
subject; while the petitioners' Deeds of Voluntary Land Transfer referred to TCT No. T-
62836 as its subject, which is further described as located in Barangay Murong. DSAICa
The real issue is whether the admitted contents of these documents adequately
and correctly express the true intention of the parties. As to the Deed of Sale,
petitioners (and RBBI) maintain that while it refers to TCT No. T-62096 , the parties
actually intended the sale of the Lantap property (covered by TCT No. T-62836).
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As to the VLTs, respondents contend that the reference to TCT No. T-62836
(corresponding to the Lantap property) re ects the true intention of RBBI and the
petitioners, and the reference to "Barangay Murong" was a typographical error. On the
other hand, petitioners claim that the reference to "Barangay Murong" re ects their true
intention, while the reference to TCT No. T-62836 was a mere error. This dispute
re ects an intrinsic ambiguity in the contracts, arising from an apparent failure of the
instruments to adequately express the true intention of the parties. To resolve the
ambiguity, resort must be had to evidence outside of the instruments.
The CA, however, refused to look beyond the literal wording of the documents
and rejected any other evidence that could shed light on the actual intention of the
contracting parties. Though the CA cited the Best Evidence Rule, it appears that what it
actually applied was the Parol Evidence Rule instead, which provides:
When the terms of an agreement have been reduced to writing, it is
considered as containing all the terms agreed upon and there can be, between the
parties and their successors in interest, no evidence of such terms other than the
contents of the written agreement. 4 3
The Parol Evidence Rule excludes parol or extrinsic evidence by which a party seeks to
contradict, vary, add to or subtract from the terms of a valid agreement or instrument.
Thus, it appears that what the CA actually applied in its assailed Decision when it
refused to look beyond the words of the contracts was the Parol Evidence Rule, not the
Best Evidence Rule. The appellate court gave primacy to the literal terms of the two
contracts and refused to admit any other evidence that would contradict such terms.
However, even the application of the Parol Evidence Rule is improper in the case
at bar. In the rst place, respondents are not parties to the VLTs executed between
RBBI and petitioners; they are strangers to the written contracts. Rule 130, Section 9
speci cally provides that parol evidence rule is exclusive only as "between the parties
and their successors-in-interest." The parol evidence rule may not be invoked where at
least one of the parties to the suit is not a party or a privy of a party to the written
document in question, and does not base his claim on the instrument or assert a right
originating in the instrument. 4 4
Moreover, the instant case falls under the exceptions to the Parol Evidence Rule,
as provided in the second paragraph of Rule 130, Section 9: TcSAaH
Here, the petitioners' VLTs suffer from intrinsic ambiguity. The VLTs described
the subject property as covered by TCT No. T-62836 (Lantap property), but they also
describe the subject property as being located in "Barangay Murong." Even the
respondents' Deed of Sale falls under the exception to the Parol Evidence Rule. It refers
to "TCT No. T-62096" (Murong property), but RBBI contended that the true intent was to
sell the Lantap property. In short, it was squarely put in issue that the written agreement
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failed to express the true intent of the parties.
Based on the foregoing, the resolution of the instant case necessitates an
examination of the parties' respective parol evidence, in order to determine the true
intent of the parties. Well-settled is the rule that in case of doubt, it is the intention of
the contracting parties that prevails, for the intention is the soul of a contract, 4 5 not its
wording which is prone to mistakes, inadequacies, or ambiguities. To hold otherwise
would give life, validity, and precedence to mere typographical errors and defeat the
very purpose of agreements.
In this regard, guidance is provided by the following articles of the Civil Code
involving the interpretation of contracts:
Article 1370. If the terms of a contract are clear and leave no doubt
upon the intention of the contracting parties, the literal meaning of its stipulations
shall control.
If the words appear to be contrary to the evident intention of the parties, the
latter shall prevail over the former.
Article 1371. In order to judge the intention of the contracting parties,
their contemporaneous and subsequent acts shall be principally considered.
Rule 130, Section 13 which provides for the rules on the interpretation of documents is
likewise enlightening:
Section 13. Interpretation according to circumstances. — For the proper
construction of an instrument, the circumstances under which it was made,
including the situation of the subject thereof and of the parties to it, may be
shown, so that the judge may be placed in the position of those whose language
he is to interpret.
Applying the foregoing guiding rules, it is clear that the Deed of Sale was
intended to transfer the Lantap property to the respondents, while the VLTs were
intended to convey the Murong property to the petitioners. This may be seen from the
contemporaneous and subsequent acts of the parties. aHcACT
Third issue
Determining the intention of the parties
regarding the subjects of their contracts
We are convinced that the subject of the Deed of Sale between RBBI and the
respondents was the Lantap property, and not the Murong property. After the execution
in 1985 of the Deed of Sale, the respondents did not exercise acts of ownership that
could show that they indeed knew and believed that they repurchased the Murong
property. They did not take possession of the Murong property. As admitted by the
parties, the Murong property was in the possession of the petitioners, who occupied
and tilled the same without any objection from the respondents. Moreover, petitioners
paid leasehold rentals for using the Murong property to RBBI, not to the respondents.
Aside from respondents' neglect of their alleged ownership rights over the
Murong property, there is one other circumstance that convinces us that what
respondents really repurchased was the Lantap property. Respondent Nemi (husband
of respondent Elenita) is the farmer actually tilling the Lantap property, without turning
over the supposed landowner's share to RBBI. This strongly indicates that the
respondents considered themselves (and not RBBI) as the owners of the Lantap
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property. For if respondents (particularly spouses Elenita and Nemi) truly believed that
RBBI retained ownership of the Lantap property, how come they never complied with
their obligations as supposed tenants of RBBI's land? The factual circumstances of the
case simply do not support the theory propounded by the respondents.
We are likewise convinced that the subject of the Deeds of Voluntary Land
Transfer (VLTs) in favor of petitioners was the Murong property, and not the Lantap
property. When the VLTs were executed in 1990, petitioners were already the tenant-
farmers of the Murong property, and had been paying rentals to RBBI accordingly. It is
therefore natural that the Murong property and no other was the one that they had
intended to acquire from RBBI with the execution of the VLTs. Moreover, after the
execution of the VLTs, petitioners remained in possession of the Murong property,
enjoying and tilling it without any opposition from anybody. Subsequently, after the
petitioners completed their payment of the total purchase price of P90,000.00 to RBBI,
the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) o cials conducted their investigation of the
Murong property which, with the presumption of regularity in the performance of
o cial duty, did not reveal any anomaly. Petitioners were found to be in actual
possession of the Murong property and were the quali ed bene ciaries thereof. Thus,
the DAR o cials issued CLOAs in petitioners' favor; and these CLOAs explicitly refer to
the land in Barangay Murong. All this time, petitioners were in possession of the
Murong property, undisturbed by anyone for several long years, until respondents
started the controversy in 1997. CDHSac
Footnotes
3.Id. at 36-37.
4.Id. at 34.
5.Regional Agrarian Reform Adjudicator's (RARAD's) Decision dated March 17, 1998, pp. 4-5;
DARAB records, pp. 101-102.
6.CA Decision, pp. 5-6; rollo of G.R. No. 168387, pp. 32-33. Respondents' Memorandum, p. 7; id.
at 125.
11.Id. at 71-72.
12.Entry No. 229242 — DEED OF ABSOLUTE SALE executed by the Rural Bank of Bayombong,
NV, Inc., represented by Manager, Romeo F. Ramos, Jr., in favor of ELOISA ESPEJO,
ELENITA ESPEJO, EMERITA ESPEJO, OPHIRO ESPEJO, OTHANIEL ESPEJO, ODELEJO
ESPEJO, ORLANDO ESPEJO, OSMONDO ESPEJO, for the sum of P9,562 notarized by
Miguel M. Guevara, Notary Public; under Doc. No. 51; Page No. 11; Book XIV; Series of
1985 dated February 26, 1985 and inscribed July 1, 1994 at 10:45 A.M. (Id. at 74).
16."That the LANDOWNER voluntarily transfer his ownership over a parcel of agricultural land
and covered by R.A. 6657 and opted to be paid directly by the FARMER-BENEFICIARY.
The said agricultural land is situated at Murong, Reservation Bagabag, Nueva Vizcaya
and particularly described as follows:
OCT/TCT No. T-62836
17.TCT No. CLOA-395 (DARAB records, p. 84). Registered with the Land Registration Authority
on September 5, 1991.
18.TCT No. CLOA-396 (Id. at 85). Registered with the Land Registration Authority on September
5, 1991.
19.TO ALL WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME, GREETINGS:
WHEREAS, pursuant to the provisions of Republic Act No. 6657, dated June 10, 1988,
INSTITUTING A COMPREHENSIVE AGRARIAN REFORM PROGRAM TO PROMOTE
SOCIAL JUSTICE AND INDUSTRIALIZATION AND PROVIDING THE MECHANISM FOR ITS
IMPLEMENTATION, there is hereby awarded unto SALUN-AT MARQUEZ [and NESTOR
DELA CRUZ], a parcel of agricultural land situated in Barangay Murong , Municipality
of Bagabag, Province of Nueva Vizcaya, Island of Luzon, Philippines, containing an area
of TEN THOUSAND (10,000 sq. m.) square meters, more or less, which is now more
particularly bounded and described at the back hereof.
22.Id. at 11-13.
23.Id. at 79-83.
24.Id. at 145-132. Docketed as DARAB Case No. 7554.
27.Id. at 247-254.
28.Resolution dated March 19, 2004 (Id. at 153) denying RBBI's Motion for Reconsideration;
Resolution dated May 11, 2005 (Id. at 257-258) denying herein petitioners' Motion for
Reconsideration.
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29.Id. at 178-190. Entitled Rural Bank of Bayombong, Inc. represented by its President/General
Manager Romeo F. Ramos, Jr. vs. Eloisa Espejo, et al.
30.Rollo of G.R. No. 163320, p. 91.
31.Id. at 107.
32.Id. at 108.
33.Upon petitioners' motion, the Court issued a Resolution on July 20, 2005 granting petitioners
a thirty-(30) day extension to file the Petition for Review on Certiorari. (Rollo of G.R. No.
168387, p. 8)
42.The Best Evidence Rule comes into play when a reproduction of the original or oral evidence
is offered to prove the contents of a document. "The purpose of the rule requiring the
production of the best evidence is the prevention of fraud, because if a party is in
possession of [the best] evidence and withholds it, and seeks to substitute inferior
evidence in its place, the presumption naturally arises that the better evidence is withheld
for fraudulent purposes which its production would expose and defeat." Asuncion v.
National Labor Relations Commission, 414 Phil. 329, 339 (2001).
43.RULES OF COURT, RULE 130, Section 9, first paragraph.
44.Lechugas v. Court of Appeals, 227 Phil. 310, 319 (1986).
45.Kilosbayan, Inc. v. Guingona, Jr., G.R. No. 113375, May 5, 1994, 232 SCRA 110, 143.