BETH
CAMPOMANES
Nemo dat quod non habet
PURITA PAHUD VS. CA
[ G.R. No. 160346, August 25, 2009 ]
FACTS:
Spouses Pedro San Agustin and
Agatona Genil were able to acquire a 246-square meter parcel of land situated
in Barangay Anos, Los BaƱos, Laguna and covered by Original Certificate
of Title . Agatona Genil and Pedro San Agustin died ,( both died
intestate) survived by their eight (8) children: respondents, Eufemia, Raul, Ferdinand, Zenaida, Milagros,
Minerva, Isabelita and Virgilio.
Eufemia, Ferdinand and Raul executed a
Deed of Absolute Sale of Undivided Shares conveying in favor of petitioners
(the Pahuds, for brevity) their respective shares . Eufemia also signed the
deed on behalf of her four (4) other co-heirs, namely: Isabelita on the basis
of a special power of attorney , and also for Milagros, Minerva, and Zenaida
but without their apparent written authority. The deed of sale was also not
notarized.
The Pahuds paid the accounts into the
Los BaƱos Rural Bank where the subject property was mortgaged. The bank
issued a release of mortgage and turned over the owner's copy of the OCT to the
Pahuds, the Pahuds made more payments to Eufemia and her siblings. When Eufemia and her co-heirs drafted an
extra-judicial settlement of estate to facilitate the transfer of the title to
the Pahuds, Virgilio refused to sign it.
Virgilio's co-heirs filed a complaint for judicial partition of the subject property
before the RTC of Calamba, Laguna.In the course of the proceedings for judicial
partition, a Compromise Agreement was signed with seven (7) of the co-heirs
agreeing to sell their undivided shares to Virgilio .. The compromise agreement
was, however, not approved by the trial court because Atty. Dimetrio Hilbero,
lawyer for Eufemia and her six (6) co-heirs, refused to sign the agreement
because he knew of the previous sale made to the Pahuds.
Eufemia acknowledged having received the
payments from Virgilio. Virgilio then sold the entire property to spouses
Isagani Belarmino and Leticia Ocampo (Belarminos) . The Belarminos immediately
constructed a building on the subject property.
Alarmed and bewildered by the ongoing construction on the lot they purchased,
the Pahuds immediately confronted Eufemia who confirmed to them that Virgilio
had sold the property to the Belarminos.Then the Pahuds filed a complaint in intervention
in the pending case for judicial partition.
1.
Whether or not the sale of the subject property by Eufemia
and her co-heirs to the Pahuds is valid and enforceable.
2.
Whether or not the sale by co-heirs to Virgilio
is void.
3.
Whether or not the sale of Virgilio to
Belarminos is valid.
Ruling:
1.
The transaction needs for qualification:
First: the sale
made by Eufemia, Isabelita and her two brothers to the Pahuds should be valid only with respect to the 4/8
portion of the subject property. Second;
the sale with respect to the 3/8
portion, representing the shares of Zenaida, Milagros, and Minerva, is void
because Eufemia could not dispose of the interest of her co-heirs in the said
lot absent any written authority from the latter, as explicitly required by law. It is true also
there is no special power, they can file an annulment of the sale, but the true
facts of which the seven admitted that they sold their shares to pahuds, they
cannot assail the validity of the transaction. Instead, they just remain silent
, because by allowing them to do so would be tantamount to giving premium to their three (3) sisters”
dishonest and fraudulent deed. Thus
their silence of the issue bars from a making for a contrary claim and they are
stopped from impugning the validity of
the sale.
While the sale with
respect to the 3/8 portion is void by express provision of law and not
susceptible to ratification. The validity of the said transaction cannot be
corrected on the basis of common law principle of estoppel.
The law provides:
When a sale of a piece of land or any interest therein is
through an agent, the authority of the latter shall be in writing; otherwise,
the sale shall be void.
a special power of
attorney is necessary for an agent to enter into a contract by which the
ownership of an immovable property is transmitted or acquired, either
gratuitously or for a valuable consideration.
The authority of an agent to execute a contract of sale of
real estate must be conferred in writing and must give him specific authority, either to conduct
the general business of the principal or to execute a binding contract
containing terms and conditions which are in the contract he did execute. A
special power of attorney is necessary to enter into any contract by which the
ownership of an immovable is transmitted or acquired either gratuitously or for
a valuable consideration. The express
mandate required by law to enable an appointee of an agency in general terms to sell must be one that expressly mentions a sale or
that includes a sale as a necessary ingredient of the act mentioned. For
the principal to confer the right upon an agent to sell real estate, a power of
attorney must so express the powers
of the agent in clear and unmistakable language. When there is any reasonable
doubt that the language so used conveys such power, no such construction shall
be given the document.
In the absence of a written authority to sell a
piece of land is, ipso jure, void, precisely to protect the interest of
an unsuspecting owner from being prejudiced by the unwarranted act of another.
2.
the subsequent sale made by the seven co-heirs
to Virgilio was void because they no longer had any interest over the subject
property which they could alienate at the time of the second transaction. Nemo
dat quod
non habet.
Virgilio, however, could still alienate his 1/8 undivided share to the
Belarminos.
3.
The sale to Bilarminos is not valid, they did
not purchased the property from Virgilio in good faith. the Belarminos were fully aware that the property was
registered not in the name of the immediate transferor, Virgilio, but remained
in the name of the mother title. This fact alone is sufficient impetus to
make further inquiry and, thus, negate their claim that they are purchasers for
value in good faith.
They knew
that the property was still subject of partition proceedings before the trial
court, and that the compromise agreement signed by the heirs was not approved
by the RTC following the opposition of the counsel for Eufemia and her six
other co-heirs.
As
a general rule, a purchaser of a real property is not required to make any
further inquiry beyond what the certificate of title indicates on its face. But
the rule excludes those who purchase with knowledge of the defect in the title
of the vendor or of facts sufficient to induce a reasonable and prudent person
to inquire into the status of the property. Such purchaser cannot close
his eyes to facts which should put a reasonable man on guard, and later claim
that he acted in good faith on the belief that there was no defect in the title
of the vendor. His mere refusal to believe that such defect exists, or
his obvious neglect by closing his eyes to the possibility of the existence of
a defect in the vendor's title, will not make him an innocent purchaser for value,
if afterwards it turns out that the title was, in fact, defective. In
such a case, he is deemed to have bought the property at his own risk, and any
injury or prejudice occasioned by such transaction must be borne by him.
The Belarminos, being transferees pendente
lite, are deemed buyers in mala fide, and they stand exactly in the
shoes of the transferor and are bound by any judgment or decree which may be
rendered for or against the transferor. Furthermore, had they verified the
status of the property by asking the neighboring residents, they would have
been able to talk to the Pahuds who occupy an adjoining business establishment
and would have known that a portion of the property had already been sold.
The supreme court reversed and
set aside the ruling of the CA and reinstated of the RTC with modification.
Nemo dat quod non habet
[ G.R. No. 187056, September 20,
2010 ]
JARABINI G. DEL ROSARIO, VS. ASUNCION G. FERRER
Facts:
Leopoldo and Guadalupe Gonzales executed
a document entitled "Donation Mortis Causa" in favor of their
two children, Asuncion and Emiliano, and their granddaughter, Jarabini
(daughter of their predeceased son, Zoilo)126 sq.metter lot and house in Manila
in equal shares,the deed of donation Stated:
“ It is
our will that this Donation Mortis Causa shall be irrevocable and shall
be respected by the surviving spouse .It is our will that Jarabini Gonzales-del
Rosario and Emiliano Gonzales will continue to occupy the portions now occupied
by them.
It is further our will that this DONATION MORTIS CAUSA shall not in
any way affect any other distribution of other properties belonging to any of
us donors whether testate or intestate and where ever situated.
It is our further will that any one surviving spouse reserves the right,
ownership, possession and administration of this property herein donated and
accepted and this Disposition and Donation shall be operative and effective
upon the death of the DONORS.”
The deed had no attestation clause and
was witnessed by only two persons. The named donees, however, signified their acceptance of the donation on the
face of the document.
Guadalupe, the donor wife died ; later , Leopoldo, the donor husband, executed a deed of assignment of his
rights and interests in subject property to their daughter Asuncion. Leopoldo then also died .
Jarabini filed a "petition for the probate of the deed of donation mortis causa"
before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Manila. Asuncion opposed the
petition, invoking his father Leopoldo's assignment of his rights and interests
in the property .
Issue:
1. Whether or not the assignment of rights and
interest of the property is valid.
2. Whether
or not the donation is mortis causa or intervivos.
Ruling:
1. Leopoldo's subsequent assignment of his rights
and interests in the property to Asuncion should be regarded as void for, by
then, he had no more rights to assign. He could not give what he no
longer had. Nemo dat quod
non habet.
, because Leopoldo is no longer the owner of the property by way of donation to
his heirs (as donation inter vivos).
a
donation inter vivos made effective upon its execution by the donors and
acceptance thereof by the donees, and immediately transmitting ownership of the
donated property to the latter, thus
precluding a subsequent assignment thereof by one of the donors.
2. the
validity of the document as a donation inter vivos. Since the donation
is irrevocable made the document as donation inter vivos, it was immediately
operative and final. , such kind of donation is deemed perfected from the
moment the donor learned of the donee's acceptance of the donation. The
acceptance makes the donee the absolute owner of the property donated. Even it
was stated donation mortis causa refers only to the donor s style but the intention
of the donor shall be respected as to the face of the donation is irrevocable.
However the donors
reserved the "right, ownership, possession, and administration of the
property" and made the donation operative upon their death.,by such reservation (reddendum) even it is irrevocable donation simply means that
the donors parted with their naked title, maintaining only beneficial
ownership of the donated property while they lived.