Civ Quamto 1990-2006 PDF
Civ Quamto 1990-2006 PDF
Civ Quamto 1990-2006 PDF
QuAMTO (1990-2006)
Civil Law
ACADEMICS COMMITTEE
ALJON D. DE GUZMAN
MARK KEVIN U. DELLOSA
SHARMAGNE JOY A. BINAY
ANTHONY M. ROBLES
CLARABEL ANNE R. LACSINA
RAFAEL LORENZ SANTOS
JAMES BRYAN V. ESTELEYDES
CHAIRPERSON
VICE-CHAIR FOR ACADEMICS
VICE-CHAIR FOR ADMINISTRATION AND FINANCE
VICE-CHAIR FOR LAYOUT AND DESIGN
MEMBER, LAYOUT AND DESIGN TEAM
MEMBER, LAYOUT AND DESIGN TEAM
VICE-CHAIR FOR RESEARCH
RESEARCH COMMITTEE
JAMES BRYAN V. ESTELEYDES
MARIA JAMYKA S. FAMA
PAULINE BREISSEE GAYLE D. ALCARAZ
ROBBIE BAAGA
MONICA S. CAJUCOM
DOMINIC VICTOR C. DE ALBAN
ANNABELLA HERNANDEZ
MA. CRISTINA MANZO-DAGUDAG
WILLIAM RUSSELL MALANG
CHARMAINE PANLAQUE
OMAR DELOSO
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DISCLAIMER
THE RISK OF USE, MISUSE OR NONUSE OF THIS BAR REVIEW MATERIAL
SHALL BE BORNE BY THE USER/
NON-USER.
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PERSONS
2.
2.
2.
A:
1. No, Wilma cannot successfully claim that Willy
had a hereditary share in his fathers estate.
A:
1.
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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her estate consisting of her 0.5 Million half share in
the absolute community from her husband or a total
of 0.750 million pesos.
In sum, the parents of Mr. Cruz will inherit 250,000
pesos while the parents of Mrs. Cruz will inherit
750,000 pesos.
2.
3.
4.
A:
1.
2.
3.
4.
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divorce is not recognized in the Philippines. For this
reason, she claims that the properties left by Felipe
are their conjugal properties and that Segundina
has no successional rights.
A. Is the divorce secured by Felipe in
California recognizable and valid in the
Philippines? How does it affect Felipes
marriage to Felisa? Explain
B. What law governs the formalities of the
will?
C. Will Philippine law govern the intrinsic
validity of the will? Explain. (2002)
1.
2.
A:
A:
A. The divorce secured by Felipe in California is
recognizable and valid in the Philippines
because he was no longer a Filipino at the
time he secured it. Aliens may obtain
divorces abroad which may be recognized
in the Philippines provided that they are
valid according to their national law (Van
Dorn v. Romillo, Jr., 138 SCRA 139 [1985];
Quita v. Court of Appeals, 300 SCRA 406
[1998]; Llorente v. Court of Appeals, 345
SCRA 592 [2000]). Article 26 of the Family
Code will apply with respect to Felisa. If
Felipe was able to secure an absolute
divorce allowing him to remarry, then Felisa
should be capacitated to remarry.
B.
C.
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person whose succession
consideration governs.
b.
is
under
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A. Labor Legislations are generally intended as
expressions of public policy on employeremployee relations. The contract therefore,
between Japan Air Lines (JAL) and Maritess
may apply only to the extent that its
provisions are not inconsistent with
Philippine labor laws intended particularly
to protect employees. Under the
circumstances, the dismissal of Maritess
without complying with the Philippine
Labor law would be invalid and the issues
should be resolved in accordance with
Philippine law.
B.
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of Kuwait and valid there as such, the will is valid and
may be probated in the Philippines.
FAMILY CODE
Q: What is the status of the following marriages
and why?
a) A marriage between two 19-year olds
without parental consent
b) A marriage between two 21-year olds
without parental advice
c) A marriage between two Filipino first
cousins in Spain where such marriage is
valid
d) A marriage between two Filipinos in Hong
Kong before a notary public
e) A marriage solemnized by a town mayor
three towns away from his jurisdiction
(1999)
A:
a)
2.
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3)
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Q: In 1985, Sonny and Lulu, both Filipino citizens,
were married in the Philippines. In 1987, they
separated and Sonny went to Canada where he
obtained a divorce in the same year. He then
married another Filipina Auring in Canada on
January 1, 1988. They had two sons, James and
John. In 1990, after failing to hear from Sonny, Lulu
married Tirso, by whom she had a daughter Verna.
In 1991, Sonny visited the Philippines where he
succumbed to heart attack.
1) Discuss the effect of the divorce obtained
by Sonny in Canada.
2) Explain the status of the marriage between
Sonny and Auring.
3) Explain the status of the marriage between
Lulu and Tirso
4) Explain the respective filiation of James,
John and Verna
5) Who are the heirs of Sonny? Explain (2005)
A:
1) The divorce is valid. In the case of Republic v.
Orbecido III, 472 SCRA 114, the Supreme Court
held that taking into consideration the
legislative intent and applying the rule of
reason, par. 2 of Article 26 should be
interpreted to include cases involving parties
who are at the time of the celebration of the
marriage were Filipino Citizens, but later on, one
of them becomes naturalized as a foreign citizen
and obtains a divorce decree. In such case, the
Filipino spouse should likewise be allowed to
remarry as if the other party were a foreigner at
the time of the solemnization of the marriage,
for the rule otherwise would be sanction to
absurdity and injustice.
The reckoning point is not the citizenship of the
parties at the time of the celebration of the
marriage, but their citizenship at the time a valid
divorce is obtained abroad by the alien spouse
capacitating the latter to remarry.
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1) What is the status of the marriage
between Gigi and Ric valid, voidable or
void? Explain.
2) What is the status of the marriage
between Ric and Juliet valid, voidable,
void?
3) Suppose Ric himself procured the falsified
birth certificate to persuade Juliet to marry
him despite her minority and assured her
that everything is in order. He did not
divulge to her his prior marriage with Gigi.
What action, if any can Juliet take against
him? Explain.
4) If you were the counsel for Gigi, what
action/s will you take to enforce and
protect her interests? Explain. (2006)
A:
1) The marriage between Gigi and Ric is void
because a minister has no authority to
solemnize a marriage between contracting
parties who were both not members of the
ministers religious sect. Under the Family
Code, a minister or a priest has authority to
solemnize a marriage, but only if one or
both contracting parties are members of
the religious sect of the priest or minister.
Since neither Ric nor Gigi was a member of
the Baptist Church because both of them
were Catholic, the Baptist Minister did not
have authority to solemnize their marriage.
Ric and Gigi cannot claim that they believed in good
faith and that the Baptist Minister had the authority
to solemnize the marriage and invoke Article 35 (2)
of the Family Code to make the marriage valid. The
provision of the Family Code applies only to mistake
of fact, and not to a mistake of law. Hence, the fact
that the Ministers license was expired will not affect
the validity of the marriage if Ric and Gigi believed in
good faith that the Minister had a valid license. That
would be a mistake of fact. However, believing that
the Minister had authority to solemnize the
marriage even if none of the contracting parties was
a member of the Ministers religious sect is a
mistake of law. This is because the law expressly
provides that the Ministers religious sect. a mistake
of law does not excuse from non-compliance
therewith.
2) The marriage between Ric and Juliet is void
because Juliet was below 18 years of age.
Under the Family Code, the requisite age
for legal capacity to contract marriage is 18
years old and a marriage by a party who is
below 18 years old is void under all
circumstances. Hence, even though Juliets
parents have given their consent to the
marriage and even though Ric believed in
good faith that she was 18 years old, the
marriage is void.
3)
4)
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for concluding that she was suffering from
psychological incapacity to discharge the essential
marital obligations.
Mere intention to live apart does not fall under
Article 36 of the Family Code. Furthermore, there is
no proof that the alleged psychological incapacity
existed at the time of the marriage.
Q:
A. Give a brief definition or explanation of
the term psychological incapacity as a
ground for the declaration of nullity of
marriage
B. If existing at the inception of marriage,
would the state of being of unsound mind
or the concealment of drug addiction,
habitual alcoholism, homosexuality or
lesbianism be considered indicia of
psychological incapacity? Explain.
C. If drug addiction, habitual alcoholism,
lesbianism or homosexuality should occur
only during the marriage, would these
constitute grounds for a declaration of
nullity, or for legal separation, or would
they render the marriage voidable? (2002)
VOIDABLE MARRIAGES
Q: The marriage of H and W was annulled by the
competent court. Upon finality of the judgment of
nullity, H began looking for his prospective second
mate. He fell in love with a sexy woman S who
wanted to be married as soon as possible, i.e. after
a few months of courtship. As a young lawyer, you
were consulted by H.
1) How soon can H be joined in lawful
wedlock to his girlfriend S? Under existing
laws, are there certain requisites that must
be complied with before he can remarry?
What advice would you give H?
2) Suppose that children were born from the
union of H and W, what would be the
status of said children? Explain your
answer.
3) If the subsequent marriage of H to S was
contracted before compliance with the
statutory condition for its validity, what
are the rights of the children of the first
marriage (i.e., of H and W) and of the
children of the subsequent marriage (of H
and S)? (1990)
A:
A:
1)
2)
C.
3)
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As legitimate children, they have the following
rights:
(a) To bear the surnames of the father and the
mother in conformity with the provisions of
the Civil Code on surnames.
(b) To receive support from their parents, their
ascendants, and in proper cases, their
brothers and sisters, in conformity with the
provisions of this Code on Support.
(c) To be entitled to the legitime and other
successional rights granted to them by the
Civil Code (Article 174 of the Family Code)
Q: One of the grounds for annulment of marriage is
that either party, at the time of their marriage was
afflicted with a sexually transmissible disease found
to be serious and appears incurable. Two (2) years
after their marriage which took place on 10 October
1988, Bethel discovered that her husband James
has a sexually transmissible disease which he
contracted even prior to their marriage although
James did not know it himself until he was
examined two (2) years later when a child was
already born to them. Bethel sues James for
annulment of their marriage. James opposes the
annulment on the grounds that he did not even
know that he had such disease, hence there was no
fraud or bad faith on his part.
1) Decide.
2) Suppose that both parties at the time of
their marriage were similarly afflicted with
sexually transmitted diseases, serious and
incurable and both knew of their
respective infirmities, can Bethel or James
sue
for
annulment
of
their
marriage?(1991)
A:
1) The marriage can be annulled, because
good faith is not a defense when the
ground is based upon sexually transmissible
disease on the part of either party.
2) Yes, the marriage can still be annulled
because the fact that both of them are
afflicted
with
sexually-transmissible
diseases does not efface or annul the
ground.
Q: Bert and Baby were married to each other on
December 23, 1988. Six years later, she discovered
that he was a drug addict. Efforts to have him
rehabilitated were unsuccessful. Can baby ask for
annulment of marriage, or legal separation?
Explain. (1996)
A: No, Baby cannot ask for annulment of her
marriage or for legal separation because both these
actions had already expired. While concealment of
drug addiction existing at the time of marriage
constitutes fraud under Article 46 of the FC which
makes the marriage voidable under Article 45 of FC,
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3) If the husband discovers after the marriage
that his wife has been a prostitute before
they got married
4) If the husband has a serious affair with his
secretary
and
refuses
to
stop
notwithstanding advice from relatives and
friends
5) If the husband beats up his wife every time
he comes home drunk (2003)
LEGAL SEPARATION
Q: Saul, a married man had an adulterous relation
with Tessie. In one of the trysts, Sauls wife Cecile
caught them in flagrante. Armed with a gun, Cecile
shot Saul in a fit of extreme jealousy, nearly killing
him. Four (4) years after the incident, Saul filed an
action for legal separation against Cecile on the
ground that she attempted to kill him.
1) If you were Sauls counsel, how will you
argue his case?
2) If you were the lawyer of Cecile, what will
be your defense?
3) If you were the judge, how will you decide
the case? (2006)
A:
1) If I were the counsel for Saul, I would argue that
the attempt by one spouse against the life of
the other is a valid ground for legal separation
and there is no need for conviction in a criminal
case. (Article 55 (9) of the Family Code)
2) If I were the counsel of Cecil, I will interpose the
defense that the attempt on Sauls life was
without criminal intent but was impelled solely
by passion and obfuscation. This is the reason
why under the Revised Penal Code even killing
him when caught in the act would be justified.
To be a ground for legal separation, the attempt
must be intentional and wrongful of Saul.
3) If I were the judge, I will deny the petition. A
petition for legal separation may be filed only by
the aggrieved spouse. Since Saul was unfaithful
and was in fact caught in flagrante by his wife,
he is not an aggrieved spouse entitled to the
relief. He who comes to court must come with
clean hands. And even assuming that the
attempt on his life by the wife is a ground for
legal separation, he is still not entitled to the
relief because of his infidelity. Both of them
therefore has given ground for legal separation,
and under the law, legal separation will not be
allowed in case of recrimination or mutual guilt
between the parties (Article 56 (4) of the Family
Code).
Q: Which of the following remedies i.e.,
(a) declaration of nullity of marriage,
(b) annulment of marriage,
(c) legal separation and/or
(d) separation of property,
can an aggrieved spouse avail himself/herself of:
1) If the wife discovers after the marriage
that her husband has AIDS
2) If the wife goes to abroad to work as a
nurse and refuses to come home after the
expiration of her three-year contract there
A:
1)
2)
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PROPERTY RELATIONS
Q: Bar Candidates Patricio Mahigugmaon and
Rowena Amor decided to marry each other before
2.
3.
A:
1.
2.
3.
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land upon the latter's request, accidentally found
the treasure not in the new river bed but on the
property of Tessie. To whom shall the treasure
belong? Explain. (1995)
A: Since Tirso and Tessie were married before the
effectivity of the Family Code, their property relation
is governed by conjugal partnership of gains. Under
Art. 54 of the Civil Code, the share of the hidden
treasure which the law awards to the finder or the
proprietor belongs to the conjugal partnership of
gains. The one-half share pertaining to Tessie as
owner of the land, and the one-half share pertaining
to Tirso as finder of the treasure, belongs to the
conjugal partnership of gains.
Q: Gabby and Mila got married at Lourdes Church in
Quezon City on July 10, 1990. Prior thereto, they
executed a marriage settlement whereby they
agreed on the regime of conjugal partnership of
gains. The marriage settlement was registered in
the Register of Deeds of Manila, where Mila is a
resident. In 1992, they jointly acquired a residential
house and lot, as well as a condominium unit in
Makati. In 1995, they decided to change their
property relations to the regime of complete
separation of property. Mila consented, as she was
then engaged in a lucrative business. The spouses
then signed a private document dissolving their
conjugal partnership and agreeing on a complete
separation of property. Thereafter, Gabby acquired
a mansion in Baguio City, and a 5-hectare
agricultural land in Oriental Mindoro, which he
registered exclusively in his name.
In the year 2000, Mila's business venture failed, and
her creditors sued her for P10,000,000.00. After
obtaining a favorable judgment, the creditors
sought to execute on the spouses' house and lot
and condominium unit, as well as Gabby's mansion
and agricultural land.
1.
2.
3.
A:
1.
2.
3.
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being void, the property relations governing
the marriage is, therefore, absolute
community of property, under Art. 75 of the
FC.
2.
3.
4.
2.
3.
A:
1.
2.
Q: As finance officer of K and Co., Victorino
arranged a loan of P5 Million from PNB for the
corporation. However, he was required by the bank
to sign a Continuing Surety Agreement to secure
the repayment of the loan. The corporation failed
to pay the loan, and the bank obtained a judgment
against it and Victorino, jointly and severally. To
enforce the judgment, the sheriff levied on a farm
owned by the conjugal partnership of Victorino and
his wife Elsa. Is the levy proper or not? (2000)
A: The levy is not proper there being no showing
that the surety agreement executed by the husband
redounded to the benefit of the family. An obligation
contracted by the husband alone is chargeable
against the conjugal partnership only when it was
contracted for the benefit of the family. When the
obligation was contracted on behalf of the family
business the law presumes that such obligation will
redound to the benefit of the family. However, when
the obligation was to guarantee the debt of a third
party, as in the problem, the obligation is presumed
for the benefit of the third party, not the family.
Hence, the obligation is not chargeable to the
conjugal partnership (Ayala Investment v. Ching, 286
SCRA 272).
Q: In 1989, Rico, then a widower forty (40) years of
age, cohabited with Cora, a widow thirty (30) years
of age. While living together, they acquired from
their combined earnings a parcel of riceland. After
Rico and Cora separated, Rico lived together with
Mabel, a maiden sixteen (16) years of age. While
living together, Rico was a salaried employee and
Mabel kept house for Rico and did full-time
household chores for him. During their
3.
Q: For five years since 1989, Tony, a bank Vicepresident, and Susan, an entertainer, lived together
as husband and wife without the benefit of
marriage although they were capacitated to marry
each other. Since Tony's salary was more than
enough for their needs, Susan stopped working and
merely "kept house". During that period, Tony was
able to buy a lot and house in a plush subdivision.
However, after five years, Tony and Susan decided
to separate.
1. Who will be entitled to the house and lot?
2. Would it make any difference if Tony could
not marry Susan because he was
previously married to Alice from whom he
is legally separated? (2000)
A:
1.
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merely in his or her care and maintenance
of the family and of the household.
2.
3.
A:
1.
3.
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status does the law give to the said child? Explain.
(1999)
A: The child is a legitimate child of the second
marriage under Article 168 (2) of the Family Code
which provides that a child born after 180 days
following the celebration of the subsequent
marriage is considered to have been conceived
during such marriage, even though it be born within
300 days after the termination of the former
marriage.
Q: Ed and Beth have been married for 20 years
without children. Desirous to have a baby, they
consulted Dr. Jun Canlas, a prominent medical
specialist on human fertility. He advised Beth to
undergo artificial insemination. It was found that
Eds sperm count was inadequate to induce
pregnancy. Hence, the couple looked for a willing
donor. Andy the brother of Ed readily considered to
donate his sperm. After series of test, Andys sperm
was medically introduced into Beths ovary. She
became pregnant and 9 months later, gave birth to
a baby boy named Alvin.
1) Who is the father of Alvin? Explain
2) What are the requirements, if any, in order
for Ed to establish his paternity over Alvin?
(2006)
A:
1) Ed is the father of Alvin if he gave his
written
consent
to
the
artificial
insemination of his wife. Otherwise, the
child is the illegitimate child of Andy. Under
the Family Code, children conceived as a
result of artificial insemination of the wife
with the sperm of the husband or that of a
donor or both are legitimate children of the
husband and the wife, provided that both
of them authorized or ratified such
insemination in a written instrument
executed and signed by both of them
before the birth of the child.
2) To establish Eds paternity over Alvin, two
requirements must obtain:
a. Both spouses authorized or ratified the
insemination in a written document
executed and signed by them before
the birth of the child; and
b. The instrument is recorded in the civil
registry together with the birth
certificate of the child.
Q: RN and DM without any impediment to marry
each other had been living together without benefit
of church blessings. Their common-law union
resulted in the birth of ZMN. Two years later, they
got married in a civil ceremony. Could ZMN be
legitimated? Reason. (2004)
A: ZMN was legitimated by the subsequent
marriage of RN and DM because at the time he was
3.
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992 of the New Civil Code from inheriting
from his illegitimate grandfather Abraham.
2)
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k)
2.
1.
2.
A:
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complaint to annul the amended Deed of Sale,
should be the place where the property is located, or
the RTC of Bulacan.
ACCRETION
Q: For many years, the Rio Grande river deposited
soil along its bank, beside the titled land of Jose. In
time, such deposit reached an area of one thousand
square meters. With the permission of Jose,
Vicente cultivated the said area. Ten years later, a
big flood occurred in the river and transferred the
1000 square meters to the opposite bank, beside
the land of Agustin. The land transferred is now
contested by Jose and Agustin as riparian owners
and by Vicente who claims ownership by
prescription. Who should prevail? Why? (2001)
A: Jose should prevail. The disputed area, which is an
alluvion, belongs by right of accretion to Jose, the
riparian owner (Art. 457 CC). When, as given in the
problem, the very same area" was "transferred" by
flood waters to the opposite bank, it became an
avulsion and ownership thereof is retained by Jose
who has two years to remove it (Art. 459, CC).
Vicente's claim based on prescription is baseless
since his possession was by mere tolerance of Jose
and, therefore, did not adversely affect Jose's
possession and ownership (Art. 537, CC). Inasmuch
as his possession is merely that of a holder, he
cannot acquire the disputed area by prescription.
Q: Andres is a riparian owner of a parcel of
registered land. His land, however, has gradually
diminished in area due to the current of the river,
while the registered land of Mario on the opposite
bank has gradually increased in area by 200-square
meters.
(1) Who has the better right over the 200square meter area that has been added to
Marios registered land, Mario or Andres?
(2) May a third person acquire said 200square meter land by prescription? (2003)
A:
1. Mario has a better right over the 200 square
meters increase in area by reason of accretion,
applying Article 457 of the New Civil Code,
which provides that to the owners of lands
adjoining the banks of rivers belong the
accretion which they gradually received from
the effects of the current of the waters.
Andres cannot claim that the increase in Marios
land is his own, because such is an accretion and
not result of the sudden detachment of a known
portion of his land and its attachment to Marios
land, a process called avulsion. He can no
longer claim ownership of the portion of his
registered land which was gradually and
naturally eroded due to the current of the river,
because he had lost it by operation of law. That
2.
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3.
4.
5.
Q:
1.
2.
A:
1.
A:
1.
2.
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Ernesto returned, he demanded the return of the
land. Demetrio agreed to do so after he has
removed the nipa sheds. Ernesto refused to let
Demetrio remove the nipa sheds on the ground
that these already belonged to him by right of
accession. Who is correct? (2000)
A: Ernesto is correct. Since Demetrio knew that the
said piece of land belongs to Ernesto, Demetrio here
is now considered as the builder in bad faith. As a
consequence of being the builder in bad faith,
Ernesto as one of his remedies is to right to
appropriate whatever has been built, planted or
sown in bad faith without the need of paying any
indemnity.
A:
1.
2.
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discontinuous
easements,
whether
apparent or not, may only be acquired by
virtue of a title. The Supreme Court, in
Abellana, Sr. v. Court of Appeals (G.R. No.
97039, April 24, 1992), ruled that an
easement of right of way being
discontinuous in nature cannot be acquired
by prescription.
Q: Distinguish between:
1.
2.
3.
A:
1.
2.
3.
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nuisance does not preclude recovery of damages by
Lauro even for the past existence of a nuisance. The
claim for damages may also be premised in Art. 2191
(4) NCC.
Q:Tomas Encarnacion's 3,000 square meter parcel
of land, where he has a plant nursery, is located
just behind Aniceta Magsino's two hectare parcel
land. To enable Tomas to have access to the
highway, Aniceta agreed to grant him a road right
of way a meter wide through which he could pass.
Through the years Tomas' business flourished
which enabled him to buy another portion which
enlarged the area of his plant nursery. But he was
still landlocked. He could not bring in and out of his
plant nursery a jeep or delivery panel much less a
truck that he needed to transport his seedlings. He
now asked Aniceta to grant him a wider portion of
her property, the price of which he was willing to
pay, to enable him to construct a road to have
access to his plant nursery. Aniceta refused
claiming that she had already allowed him a
previous road right of way. Is Tomas entitled to the
easement he now demands from Aniceta? (1993)
A: Art. 651 of the Civil Code provides that the width
of the easement must be sufficient to meet the
needs of the dominant estate, and may accordingly
change from time to time. It is the need of the
dominant estate which determines the width of the
passage. These needs may vary from time to time.
As Tomas' business grows, the need for use of
modern conveyances requires widening of the
easement.
Q: The coconut farm of Federico is surrounded by
the lands of Romulo. Federico seeks a right of way
through a portion of the land of Romulo to bring his
coconut products to the market. He has chosen a
point where he will pass through a housing project
of Romulo. The latter wants him to pass another
way which is one kilometer longer. Who should
prevail? (2000)
A: Romulo will prevail. Under Article 650 of the New
Civil Code, the easement of right of way shall be
established at the point least prejudicial to the
servient estate and where the distance from the
dominant estate to a public highway is the shortest.
In case of conflict, the criterion of least prejudice
prevails over the criterion of shortest distance. Since
the route chosen by Federico will prejudice the
housing project of Romulo, Romulo has the right to
demand that Federico pass another way even
though it will be longer.
Q:Emma bought a parcel of land from Equitable-PCI
Bank, which acquired the same from Felisa, the
original owner. Thereafter, Emma discovered that
Felisa had granted a right of way over the land in
favor of the land of Georgina, which had no outlet
to a public highway, but the easement was not
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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representation when he applied for a license to
establish the subdivision (Floro us. Llenado, 244
SCRA713).
HIDDEN TREASURE
Q: Tim came into possession of an old map showing
where a purported cache of gold bullion was
hidden. Without any authority from the
government Tim conducted a relentless search and
finally found the treasure buried in a new river bed
formerly part of a parcel of land owned by spouses
Tirso and Tessie. The old river which used to cut
through the land of spouses Ursula and Urbito
changed its course through natural causes.
1.
2.
A:
1.
2.
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a)
b)
c)
d)
A squatters hut
A swimming pool
A house of prostitution
A noisy or dangerous factory in a private
land
e) Uncollected garbage (2005)
a)
A:
a) If constructed on public streets or riverbeds, it is
a public nuisance because it obstructs the free
use by the public of said places. (City of Manila
v. Garcia, G.R. No. L-26053, February 21, 1967) If
constructed on private land, it is a private
nuisance because it hinders or impairs the use
of the property by the owner.
b) This is not a nuisance in the absence of any
unusual condition or artificial feature other than
the mere water. In Hidalgo Enterprises v.
Balandan G.R. No. L-3422, June 13, 1952, the
Supreme Court ruled that a swimming pool is
but a duplication of naturethus, could not be
considered as a nuisance.
c)
A:
a)
b)
c)
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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Rosario was gainfully employed in Manila, she left
Ramon alone to possess and cultivate the land.
However, Ramon never shared the harvest with
Rosario and was even able to sell one-half of the
land in 1985 by claiming to be the sole heir of his
parents. Having reached retirement age in 1990
Rosario returned to the province and upon learning
what had transpired, demanded that the remaining
half of the land be given to her as her share. Ramon
opposed, asserting that he has already acquired
ownership of the land by prescription, and that
Rosario is barred by laches from demanding
partition and reconveyance. Decide the conflicting
claims. (2000)
A: Ramon is wrong on both counts: prescription and
laches. His possession as co-owner did not give rise
to acquisitive prescription. Possession by a co-owner
is deemed not adverse to the other co-owners but is,
on the contrary, deemed beneficial to them (Pongon
v. GA, 166 SCRA 375). Ramons possession will
become adverse only when he has repudiated the
co-ownership and such repudiation was made
known to Rosario. Assuming that the sale in 1985
where Ramon claimed he was the sole heir of his
parents amounted to a repudiation of the coownership; the prescriptive period began to run only
from that time. Not more than 30 years having
lapsed since then, the claim of Rosario has not yet
prescribed.
The claim of laches is also not meritorious. Until the
repudiation of the co-ownership was made known to
the other co-owners, no right has been violated for
the said co-owners to vindicate. Mere delay in
vindicating the right, standing alone, does not
constitute laches.
Q: Ambrosio died, leaving his three daughters,
Belen, Rosario and Sylvia a hacienda which was
mortgaged to the Philippine National Bank due to
the failure of the daughters to pay the bank, the
latter foreclosed the mortgage and the hacienda
was sold to it as the highest bidder. Six months
later, Sylvia won the grand prize at the lotto and
used part of it to redeem the hacienda from the
bank. Thereafter, she took possession of the
hacienda and refused to share its fruits with her
sisters, contending that it was owned excusively by
her, having bought it from the bank with her own
money. Is she correct or not? (2000)
A: Sylvia is not correct. The 3 daughters are the coowners of the hacienda being the only heirs of
Ambrosio. When the property was foreclosed, the
right of redemption belongs also to the 3 daughters.
When Sylvia redeemed the entire property before
the lapse of the redemption period, she also
exercised the right of redemption of her co-owners
on their behalf. As such she is holding the shares of
her two sisters in the property, and all the fruits
corresponding thereto, in trust for them.
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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as co-owners. Antonio, in his behalf and in behalf of
his buyer, contends that they are no longer coowners, although the title covering the property
has remained in their names as such. May Bart and
Carlos still redeem the lot sold by Antonio? Explain.
(2002)
A: No, they may not redeem because there was no
co-ownership among Antonio, Bart and Carlos to
start with. Their parents already partitioned the land
in selling separate portions to them. The situation is
the same as in the case Si v. Court of Appeals, 342
SCRA 653.
LAND TITLES AND DEEDS
Q: Rod, the owner of FX taxi, found in his vehicle an
envelope containing TCT No. 65432 over a lot
registered in Cesars name. Posing as Cesar, Rod
forged Cesars signature on a Deed of Sale in Rods
favor. Rod registered the said document with the
Register of Deeds, and obtained a new title in his
name. After a year, he sold the lot to Don, a buyer
in good faith and for value, who also registered the
lot in his name.
a.) Did Rod acquire title to the land?
b.) Discuss the rights of Don, if any, over the
property? (2005)
A:
a.) Rod did not acquire title to the land. This is
because he used a forged deed of sale in
effecting the transfer of title and a
subsequent registration affecting registered
land procured either by means of a forged
deed or through the use of forged duplicate
certificate of title, will not operate to
convey the land or affect title thereto
inasmuch as the law will not permit its
provisions to be used as a shield for the
commission of fraud.
b.) As a general rule, a forged deed of sale is a
nullity and it will not convey any title to any
subsequent registration thereof. However,
where the certificate of title was already
transferred from the name of the true
owner to the forger, and while it remained
that way the land was subsequently sold to
an innocent purchaser, the vendee had the
right to rely upon what appeared in the
certificate and, in the absence of anything
to excite suspicion, was under no obligation
to look beyond the certificate and
investigate the title of the vendor appearing
on the face of said certificate. As applied to
this case, since Don relied in good faith in
Rods title, he falls squarely on the
exception that a forged deed of sale may be
a source of a valid title to the said land. He
therefore, owns the said land covered by
the transfer certificate of title.
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parcel of land, five hectares in area. After
completion of the resurvey and subdivision, F
applied to buy the land in accordance with the
guidelines of the implementing agency. Upon full
payment of the price in 1957, the corresponding
deed of absolute sale was executed in his favor and
was registered, and in 1961, a new title was issued
in his name. In 1963, F sold the said land to X; and
in 1965 X sold it to Y, new title were successively
issued in the names of the said purchasers.
In 1977, C filed an action to annul the deeds of sale
to F, X and Y and their titles, on the ground that he,
C, had been in actual physical possession of the
land, and that the sale to F and the subsequent
sales should be set aside on the ground of fraud.
Upon motion of defendants, the trial court
dismissed the complaint, upholding their defenses
of their being innocent purchasers for value,
prescription and laches. Plaintiff appealed.
a.) Is the said appeal meritorious? Explain
your answer
b.) Suppose
the
government
agency
concerned joined C in filing the said action
against the defendants, would that change
the results of the litigation? Explain. (1990)
A:
a.) The appeal is not meritorious. The Trial
Court correctly ruled in granting
defendants motion to dismiss for the
following reasons:
i.
While there is the possibility that F, a
former lessee of the land was aware of the
fact that C was the bona fide occupant
thereof and for this reason his transfer
certificate of title may be vulnerable, the
transfer of the same land and the issuance
of new TCTs to X and Y who are innocent
purchasers for value, render the latters
titles indefeasible. A person dealing with
registered land may safely rely on the
correctness of the certificate of title and the
law will not in any way oblige him to go
behind the certificate to determine the
condition of the property in search for any
hidden defect or inchoate right which may
be later invalidate or diminish his right to
the land. This is the mirror principle of
Torrens System of land registration.
ii.
The action to annul the sale was instituted
in 1977 or more than ten (10) years from
the date of execution thereof in 1957,
hence, it has long prescribed,
iii.
Under Section 45 of Act 496, the entry of a
certificate of title shall be regarded as an
agreement running with the land, and
binding upon the applicant and all his
successors in title that the land shall be and
always remain registered land. A title under
Act 496 is indefeasible and to preserve that
character, the title is cleansed anew with
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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An application for land registration is a proceeding in
rem. Its main objective is to establish the status
of the res whether it is still part of our public
domain as presumed under the Regalian doctrine or
has acquired the character of a private property. It
is the duty of the applicant to overcome that
presumption with sufficient evidence
Q: In 1989, the heirs of Gavino, who died in August
10, 1987, filed a petition for reconstitution of his
lost or destroyed Torrens Title to a parcel of land in
Ermita, Manila. This was opposed by Marilou who
claimed ownership of the said land by a series of
sales. She claimed that Gavino had sold the
property to Bernardo way back in 1941 and as
evidence thereof, she presented a tax declaration
in 1948 in the name of Bernardo, which cancelled
the previous tax declaration in the name of Gavino.
Then she presented 2 deed of sale duly registered
with the Register of Deeds, the first one executed
by Bernardo in 1954 selling the same property to
Carlos, and the second one executed by Carlos in
1963, selling the same property to her. She also
claimed that she and her predecessors in interest
have been in possession of the property since 1948.
If you were the judge, how will you decide the
petition? Explain. (1996)
A: If I were the judge, I will give due course to the
petition of the heirs of Gavino despite the opposition
of Marilou for the following reasons: a) Judicial
reconstitution of a certificate of title under RA. No.
26 partakes of a land registration proceeding and is
perforce a proceeding in rem. It denotes restoration
of an existing instrument which has been lost or
destroyed in its original form and condition. The
purpose of reconstitution of title or any document is
to have the same reproduced, after proceedings. In
the same form they were when the loss or
destruction occurred. b) If the Court goes beyond
that purpose, it acts without or in excess of
jurisdiction. Thus, where the Torrens Title sought to
be reconstituted is in the name of Gavino, the court
cannot receive evidence proving that Marilou is the
owner of the land. Marilou's dominical claim to the
land should be ventilated in a separate civil action
before the Regional Trial Court in its capacity as a
court of general jurisdiction. (Heirs of Pedro Pinate
vs. Dulay. 187 SCRA 12-20 (1990); Bunagan vs. CF1
Cebu Branch VI. 97 SCRA 72 (1980); Republic vs. IAC.
157 SCRA 62,66 (1988); Margolles vs. CA, 230 SCRA
709; Republic us, Feliciano, 148 SCRA 924)
Q: What is the procedure of consulta when an
instrument is denied registration? (1994)
A:
1) The Register of Deeds shall notify the interested
party in writing, setting forth the defects of the
instrument or the legal ground relied upon for
denying the registration, and advising that if he is
not agreeable to such ruling, he may, without
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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(b) Yes, the remedy will prosper because the action
prescribes in ten (10) years, not within one (1) year
when a petition for the reopening of the registration
decree may be filed. The action for reconveyance is
distinct from the petition to reopen the decree of
registration (Grey Alba v. De la Cruz, 17 Phil. 49
[1910}). There is no need to reopen the registration
proceedings, but the property should just be
reconveyed to the real owner.
The action for reconveyance is based on implied or
constructive trust, which prescribes in ten (10) years
from the date of issuance of the original certificate
of title. This rule assumes that the defendant is in
possession of the land. Where it is the plaintiff who
is in possession of the land, the action for
reconveyance would be in the nature of a suit for
quieting for the title which action is imprescriptible
(David v. Malay, 318 SCRA 711).
Q: Rommel was issued a certificate of title over a
parcel of land in Quezon City. One year later,
Rachelle, the legitimate owner of the land,
discovered the fraudulent registration obtained by
Rommel. She filed a complaint against Rommel for
reconveyance and caused the annotation of a
notice of lis pendens on the certificate of title
issued to Rommel. Rommel now invokes the
indefeasibility of his title considering that one year
has already elapsed from its issuance. He also seeks
the cancellation of the notice of lis pendens. Will
Rachelles suit for reconveyance prosper? Explain.
(1995)
A: Yes, Rachelle's suit will prosper because all
elements for an action for reconveyance are present,
namely:
a) Rachelle is claiming dominical rights over the
same land.
b) Rommel procured his title to the land by fraud.
c) The action was brought within the statutory
period of four (4) years from discovery of the fraud
and not later than ten (10) years from the date of
registration of Rommel's title.
d) Title to the land has not passed into the hands of
an innocent purchaser for value.
Rommel can invoke the indefeasibility of his title if
Rachelle had filed a petition to reopen or review the
decree of registration. But Rachelle instead filed an
ordinary action in personam for reconveyance. In the
latter action, indefeasibility is not a valid defense
because, in filing such action, Rachelle is not seeking
to nullify or to impugn the indefeasibility of
Rommel's title. She is only asking the court to
compel Rommel to reconvey the title to her as the
legitimate owner of the land.
Q: On September 10, 1965, Melvin applied for free
patent covering 2 lotsLots A and Bsituated in
Santiago, Isabela. Upon certification by the Public
Land Inspector, that Melvin had been in actual,
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because Melvin knew that a part of the land covered
by his title actually belonged to Percival. So, instead
of nullifying in toto the title of Melvin, the court, in
the exercise of equity and jurisdiction, may grant
prayer for the reconveyance of Lot B to Percival who
has actually possessed the land under a claim of
ownership since 1947. After all, if Melvin's title is
declared void ab initio and the land is reverted to the
public domain, Percival would just the same be
entitled to preference right to acquire the land from
the government. Besides, well settled is the rule that
once public land has been in open, continuous,
exclusive and notorious possession under a bonafide
claim of acquisition of ownership for the period
prescribed by Section 48 of the Public Land Act, the
same ipso jure ceases to be public and in
contemplation of law acquired the character of
private land. Thus, reconveyance of the land from
Melvin to Percival would be the better procedure.
(Vitale vs. Anore, 90 Phil. 855; Pena, Land Titles and
Deeds, 1982, Page 427)
Q: What are essential requisites or elements for the
allowance of the reopening or review of a decree of
registration? (1992)
A: Petition for review of the Decree of Registration.
A remedy expressly provided in Section 32 of P. D.
No. 1529 (formerly Section 38. Act 496), this remedy
has the following elements:
a) The petition must be filed by a person claiming
dominical or other real rights to the land registered
in the name of respondent.
b) The registration of the land in the name of
respondent was procured by means of actual, (not
just constructive) fraud, which must be extrinsic.
Fraud is actual if the registration was made through
deceit or any other intentional act of downright
dishonesty to enrich oneself at the expense of
another. It is extrinsic when it is something that was
not raised, litigated and passed upon in the main
proceedings.
c) The petition must be filed within one (1) year from
the date of the issuance of the decree.
d) Title to the land has not passed to an Innocent
purchaser for value (Libudan vs. Gil, 45_ SCRA 27,
1972; Rublico vs. Orrelana. 30 SCRA 511, 1969; RP vs.
CA, 57 G. R No. 40402, March 16, 1987).
NOTICE OF LIS PENDENS
Q: Rommel was issued a certificate of title over a
parcel of land in Quezon City. One year later
Rachelle, the legitimate owner of the land,
discovered the fraudulent registration obtained by
Rommel. She filed a complaint against Rommel for
reconveyance and caused the annotation of a
notice of lis pendens on the certificate of title
issued to Rommel. Rommel now invokes the
indefeasibility of his title considering that one year
has already elapsed from its issuance. He also seeks
the cancellation of the notice of lis pendens. May
P a g e | 35
QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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annotation of the lis pendens on the title of Carlos;
and by invoking his right of redemption of Barts
share under Article 1620 of the New Civil Code.
PRESCRIPTION
Q: In an action brought to collect a sum of money
based on a surety agreement, the defense of laches
was raised as the claim was filed more than seven
years from the maturity of the obligation. However,
the action was brought within the ten-year
prescriptive period provided by law wherein
actions based on written contracts can be
instituted.
a.) Will the defense prosper? Reason.
b.) What are the essential elements of laches?
(2000)
A:
a.) No, the defense will not prosper. The
problem did not give facts from which
laches may be inferred. Mere delay in filing
an action, standing alone, does not
constitute laches. (Agra vs. PNB, 309 SCRA
09)
b.) The four basic elements of laches are: (1)
conduct on the part of the defendant or of
one under whom he claims, giving rise to
the situation of which complainant seeks a
remedy; (2) delay in asserting the
complainants rights, the complainant
having had knowledge or notice of the
defendants conduct and having been
afforded an opportunity to institute suit; (3)
lack of knowledge on the part of the
defendant that the complaint would assert
the right on which he bases his suit; and (4)
injury or prejudice to the defendant in the
event relief is accorded to the complainant,
or the suit is not held to be barred. (UPLC,
2008 edition)
Q: A owned a parcel of unregistered land located
on the Tarlac side of the boundary between Tarlac
and Pangasinan. His brother B owned the adjoining
parcel of unregistered land on the Pangasinan side.
A sold the Tarlac parcel to X in a deed of sale
executed as a public instrument by A and X. After X
paid in full the price of sale, X took possession of
the Pangasinan parcel in the belief that it was the
Tarlac parcel covered by the deed of sale executed
by A and X. After twelve (12) years, a controversy
arose between B and X on the issue of the
ownership of the Pangasinan parcel, B claims a
vested right of ownership over the Pangasinan
parcel because B never sold that parcel to X or to
anyone else.
On the other hand, X claims a vested right of
ownership over the Pangasinan parcel by
acquisitive prescription because X possessed this
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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legal capacity to sue. If you were the judge, how
will you rule on this motion to dismiss? Explain.
(1996)
A: As judge, I will grant the motion to dismiss.
Armando has no personality to bring the action for
annulment of the sale to Conrado. Only an aggrieved
party to the contract many bring the action for
annulment thereof (Art. 1397, NCC). While Armando
is heir and successor-in-interest of his mother, he
(standing in place of his mother) has no personality
to annul the contract. Both are not aggrieved parties
on account of their own violation of the condition of,
or restriction on, their ownership imposed by the
donation. Only the donor or his heirs would have the
personality to bring an action to revoke a donation
for violation of a condition thereof or a restriction
thereon (Garrido v. CA, 236 SCRA 450).
Consequently, while the donor or his heirs were not
heirs were not parties to the sale, they have the
right to annul the contract of sale because their
rights are prejudiced by one of the contracting
parties thereof (DBP v. CA, 96 SCRA 342; Teves v.
PHHC, 23 SCRA 1141). Since Armando is neither the
donor nor heir of the donor, he has no personality to
bring the action for annulment.
Q: Spouses Michael and Linda donated a 3-hectare
residential land to the City of Baguio on the
condition that the city government would build
thereon a public park with a boxing arena, the
construction of which shall commence within 6
months from the date the parties ratify the
donation. The donee accepted the donation and
the title to the property was transferred in its
name. Five years elapsed but the public park with
the boxing arena was never started. Considering
the failure of the donee to comply with the
condition of the donation, the donor-spouses sold
the property to Ferdinand who then sued to
recover the land from the city government. Will the
suit prosper? (1991)
A: Ferdinand has no right to recover the land. It is
true that the donation was revocable because of
breach of the conditions. But until and unless the
donation was revoked, it remained valid. Hence,
Spouses Michael and Linda had no right to sell the
land to Ferdinand. One cannot give what he does not
have. What the donors should have done first was to
have the donation annulled or revoked. And after
that was done, they could validly have disposed of
the land in favor of Ferdinand.
Q: Are the effects of illegal and immoral conditions
on simple donations the same as those effects that
would follow when such conditions are imposed on
donations con causa onerosa? (1997)
A: No, they dont have the same effect. Illegal or
impossible conditions in simple and remuneratory
donations shall be considered as not imposed.
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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NCC). In this case, B executed the deed of
acceptance before a notary public after the donor
had already died.
Q: On July 27, 1997, Pedro mailed in Manila a letter
to his brother, Jose, a resident of IloIlo City, offering
to donate a vintage sports car which the latter had
been long wanting to buy from the former. On
August 5, 1997, Jose called Pedro by cellular phone
to thank him for his generosity and to inform him
that he was sending by mail his letter of
acceptance. Pedro never received that letter
because it was never mailed. On August 14, 1997,
Pedro received a telegram from IloIlo informing him
that Jose had been killed in a road accident the day
before (August 13, 1997).
a) Is there a perfected donation?
b) Will your answer be the same if Jose did
mail his acceptance letter but it was
received by Pedro in Manila days after
Joses death? (1998)
A:
a)
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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A: As counsel for the counsel, I may file an action for
reconveyance of the property on the ground that the
donation was not perfected. It was not perfected
because although it was made in a public document
and was accepted by the donee in a separate public
document, the donee failed to notify the donor of
such acceptance in an authentic form before the
donation was revoked under Art. 749 of the Civil
Code. Such notification was necessary for the
donation to become valid and binding.
Q: Elated that her sister who had been married for
five years was pregnant for the first time, Alma
donated P100,000 to the unborn child.
Unfortunately, the baby died one hour after
delivery. May Alma recover the P100,000 that she
had donated to said baby before it was born
considering that the baby died? Stated otherwise, is
the donation valid and binding? Explain. (1999)
A: The donation is valid and binding, being an act
favorable to the unborn child, but only if the baby
had an intra-uterine life of at least seven months and
provided there was due acceptance of the donation
by the proper person representing said child. If the
child had less than seven months of intra-uterine
life, it is not deemed born since it died less than 24
hours following its delivery, in which case the
donation never became effective since the donee
never became a person, birth being determinative of
personality.
Q: In 1950, Dr. Alba donated a parcel of land to
Central University on condition that the latter must
establish a medical college on the land to be named
after him. In the year 2000, the heirs of Dr. Alba
filed an action to annul the donation and for the
reconveyance of the property donated to them for
the failure, after 50 years, of the University to
establish on the property a medical school named
after their father. The University opposed the
action on the ground of prescription and also
because it had not used the property for some
purpose other than stated in the donation. Should
the opposition of the University to the action of Dr.
Albas heirs be sustained? Explain. (2003)
A: The donation may be revoked. The nonestablishment of the medical college on the donated
property was a resolutory condition imposed on the
donation by the donor. Although the Deed of
Donation did not fix the time for the establishment
of the medical college, the failure of the donee to
establish the medical college after 50 years from
making of the donation should be considered as
occurrence of the resolutory condition, and the
condition may now be revoked. While the general
rule is that in case the period is not fixed in the
agreement of the parties, the period must be fixed
first by the court before the obligation may be
demanded, the period of 50 years was more than
enough time for the donee to comply with the
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
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d) The obligation is valid. The death of the son
of cancer within one year is made a
negative suspensive condition to his making
the payment. The obligation is demandable
if the son does not die within one year
(Article 1185, NCC).
Q: In two separate documents signed by him, Juan
Valentino obligated himself each to Maria and to
perla, thus
To Maria, my true love, I obligated myself to give
you my one and only horse when I feel like it.
And
To Perla, my true sweetheart, I obligate myself to
pay you the P500.00 I owe you when I feel like it.
Months passed but Juan never bothered to make
good his promises. Maria and Perla came to consult
you on whether or not they could recover on the
basis of the foregoing settings. What would be your
legal advice be? (1997)
A: For Maria, the promise is not an actionable
wrong which allows the party to recover especially
when she has not suffered damages resulting from
such promise. Juans promise does not create an
obligation because it is not something which arises
from a contract, law, quasi-contracts or quasi-delicts
(Article 1157, NCC).
As regards to Perla, the document is an express
acknowledgement of a debt, and the promise to pay
to what he owes her when he feels like it is
equivalent to a promise to pay when his means
permits him to do so, and is deemed to be one with
an indefinite period under Article 1180. Hence, the
amount is recoverable after Perla asks the court to
set the period as provided by Article 1197, par 2.
Q: In 1997, Manuel bound himself to sell Eva a
house and lot which is being rented by another
person, if Eva passes the 1998 bar examinations.
And luckily, she passed.
(a) Suppose Manuel had sold the same house
and lot to another before Eva passed the
1998 bar examinations, is such sale valid?
Why?
(b) Assuming that it is Eva who is entitled to
buy said house and lot, is she entitled to
the rentals collected by Manuel before she
passed the 1998 bar examinations? Why?
(1999)
A:
(a) Yes, the sale to the other person is valid as
a sale with a resolutory condition because
what operates as a suspensive condition for
Eva operates as a resolutory condition for
the buyer. Hence, upon Evas passing the
Bar, the rights of the other buyer
terminates and Eva acquires ownership of
the property.
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a)
A:
c)
a)
2)
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1999). In such case, the notation was not the act of
his father from which condonation may be inferred.
There being no condonation at all, the defense of full
payment will not be valid.
Q: On July 1, 1998, Brian leased an office space in a
building for a period of five years at a rental rate of
P1, 000.00 a month. The contract of lease contained
the proviso that in case of inflation or devaluation
of the Philippine peso, the monthly rental will
automatically be increased or decreased depending
on the devaluation or inflation of the peso to the
dollar. Starting March 1, 200, the lessor increased
the rental to P2, 000 a month, on the ground of
inflation proven by the fact that the exchange rate
of the Philippine peso to the dollar had increased
from P25.00=$1.00 to P50.00=$1.00. Brian refused
to pay the increased rate and an action for unlawful
detainer was filed against him. Will the action
prosper? Why? (2001)
A: The unlawful detainer action will not prosper.
Extraordinary inflation or deflation is defined as the
sharp decrease in the purchasing power of the peso.
It does not necessarily refer to the exchange rate of
the peso to the dollar. Whether or not there exists
an extraordinary inflation or deflation is for the
courts to decide. There being no showing that the
purchasing power of the peso had been reduced
tremendously, there could be no inflation that would
justify the increase in the amount of rental to be
paid. Hence, Brian could refuse to pay the increased
rate.
Q: Dino sued Ben for damages because the latter
had failed to deliver the antique Mercedes Benz car
Dino had purchased from Ben, which was by
agreement due for delivery on December 31,
1993. Ben, in his answer to Dinos complaint, said
Dinos claim has no basis for the suit, because as
the car was being driven to be delivered to Dino on
January 1, 1994, a reckless truck driver had rammed
into the Mercedes Benz. Tri trial court dismissed
Dinos complaint, saying Bens obligation had
indeed, been extinguished by force majeure. Is the
trial court correct? (1994)
A: No, the judgment of the trial court is incorrect.
Loss of the thing due by fortuitous events or force
majeure is a valid defense for a debtor only when
the debtor has not incurred delay. Article 1262 of
the new Civil Code provides that an obligation
which consists in the delivery of a determinate thing
shall be extinguished if it should be lost or destroyed
without the fault of the debtor, and before he has
incurred in delay. In the present case, the debtor
was in delay when the car was destroyed on January
1, 1993, since it was for delivery on December 31,
1993.
Q: In 1971, Able Construction, Inc. entered into a
contract with Tropical Home Developers, Inc.
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cannot stand together, hence, the period of
prescription of ten (10) years has not yet lapsed.
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the same time Publico sues Printado for damages
for breach of contract with respect to their own
printing agreement. In the suit filed by Suplico,
Printado counters that: (a) Suplico cannot demand
payment for deliveries made under their order
agreement
until
Suplico
has
completed
performance under said contract; (b) Suplico should
pay damages for breach of contract; and (c) with
Publico should be liable for Printados breach of his
contract with Publico because the order agreement
between Suplico and Printado was for the benefit
of Publico. Are the contentions of Printado
tenable? Explain your answers as to each
contention. (2002)
A: No, the contentions of Printado are untenable.
Printado having failed to pay for the printing paper
covered by the delivery invoices on time, Suplico has
the right to cease making further delivery. And the
latter did not violate the order agreement
(Integrated Packaging Corporation v. Court of
Appeals, 333 SCRA 170). Suplico cannot be held
liable for damages, for breach of contract, as it was
not he who violated the order agreement, but
Printado. Suplico cannot be held liable for Printados
breach of contract with Publico. He is not a party to
the agreement entered into by and between
Printado and Publico. Theirs is not a stipulation pour
atrui. Such contracts do could not affect third
persons like Suplico because of the basic civil law
principle of relativity of contracts which provides
that contracts can only bind the parties who entered
into it, and it cannot favor or prejudice a third
person, even if he is aware of such contract and has
acted with knowledge thereof. (Integrated
Packaging Corporation v. CA, supra.)
SUCCESSION
Q: In his lifetime, a Pakistani citizen, ADIL married
three times under Pakistani law. When he died an
old widower, he left behind six children, two
sisters, three homes and an estate worth 30 million
pesos in the Philippines. He was born in Lahore but
last resided in Cebu City, where he had a mansion
and where two of his youngest children now live
and work. Two of his oldest children are farmers in
Sulu, while the two middle-aged children are
employees in Zamboanga City. Finding that the
deceased left no will, the youngest son wanted to
file intestate proceedings before the Regional Trial
Court. The two other siblings objected, arguing that
it should be in Jolo before a Sharia court since his
lands are in Sulu. But Adils sisters in Pakistan want
the proceedings held in Lahore before a Pakistani
court. Which court has jurisdiction and the proper
venue for the intestate proceedings? The law of
which country shall govern succession to his estate?
(2004)
A: In so far as the properties of the decedent located
in the Philippines are concerned, they are governed
Q:
a)
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b) Under Article 84 of the Family Code
amending Article 130 of the Civil Code,
contractual succession is no longer possible
since the law now requires that donations
of future property be governed by the
provisions on the testamentary succession
and formalities of wills.
c)
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five legitimate children of Joaquin, another
predeceased brother. Shortly after Eugenios death,
Antonio also died, leaving three legitimate children.
Subsequently, Martina, the children of Joaquin and
the children of Antonio executed an extrajudicial
settlement of the estate of Eugenio, dividing it
among themselves. The succeeding year, a petition
to annul the extrajudicial settlement was filed by
Antero, an illegitimate son of Antonio, who claims
he is entitled to share in the estate of Eugenio. The
defendants filed a motion to dismiss on the ground
that Antero is barred by Article 992 of the Civil
Code from inheriting from the legitimate brother of
his father. How will you resolve the motion? (2000)
A: The motion to dismiss should be granted. Article
992 of the Civil Code does not apply. Antero is not
claiming any inheritance from Eugenio. He is
claiming his share in the inheritance of his father
consisting of his fathers share in the inheritance of
Eugenio. (Dela Merced v. Dela Merced, G.R. No.
126707, 25 February 1999).
Q: Alfonso, a bachelor without any descendant or
ascendant, wrote a last will and testament in which
he devised." all the properties of which I may be
possessed at the time of my death" to his favorite
brother Manuel. At the time he wrote the will, he
owned only one parcel of land. But by the time he
died, he owned twenty parcels of land. His other
brothers and sisters insist that his will should pass
only the parcel of land he owned at the time it was
written, and did not cover his properties acquired,
which should be by intestate succession. Manuel
claims otherwise. Who is correct? Explain. (1996)
A: Manuel is correct because under Art. 793, NCC,
property acquired after the making of a will shall
only pass thereby, as if the testator had possessed it
at the time of making the will, should it expressly
appear by the will that such was his intention. Since
Alfonso's intention to devise all properties he owned
at the time of his death expressly appears on the
will, then all the 20 parcels of land are included in
the devise.
TESTAMENTARY SUCCESSION
Q: On his deathbed, Vicente was executing a will. In
the room were Carissa, Carmela Cornelio and Atty.
Cimpo, a notary public. Suddenly, there was a
street brawl which caught Cornelios attention to
look out the window. Cornelio did not see Vicente
sign a will. Is the will valid? (1994)
A: Yes, the will is valid. The law does not require a
witness to actually see the testator sign. It is
sufficient if the witness could have seen the act of
signing had he chosen to do so by casting his eyes to
the proper direction.
A:
a)
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heir or heirs should die before him or
should not wish or should be incapacitated
to
accept
the
inheritance.
In
fideicommissary substitution, the testator
institutes a first heir and charges him to
preserve and transmit the whole or part of
the inheritance to a second heir. In a simple
substitution, only one heir inherits. In a
fideicommissary substitution, both the first
and second heirs inherit.
c)
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lost or destroyed will unless its provisions are clearly
and distinctly proved by at least two (2) credible
witnesses. Hence, if we abide strictly by the twowitness rule to prove a lost or destroyed will, the
holographic will which Johnny allegedly mistakenly
burned, cannot be probated, since there is only one
witness, Eduardo, who can be called to testify as to
the existence of the will. If the holographic will,
which purportedly, revoked the earlier notarial will
cannot be proved because of the absence of the
required witness, then the petition for the probate
of the notarial will should prosper.
Note: In the case of Gan vs. Yap (104 Phil 509), the
execution and the contents of a lost or destroyed
holographic will may not be proved by the bare testimony
of witnesses who have seen or read such will. The will
itself must be presented otherwise it shall produce no
effect. The law regards the document itself as material
proof of authenticity. Moreover, in order that a will may
be revoked by a subsequent will, it is necessary that the
latter will be valid and executed with the formalities
required for the making of a will. The latter should possess
all the requisites of a valid will whether it be ordinary or a
holographic will, and should be probated in order that the
revocatory clause thereof may produce effect. In the case
at bar, since the holographic will itself cannot be
presented, it cannot therefore be probated. Since it
cannot be probated, it cannot revoke the notarial will
previously written by the decedent.
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1) Who are the compulsory heirs of Luis,
how much is the legitime of each, and
how much is the free portion of his
estate, if any?
2) Suppose Luis, in the preceding
question (a) died intestate. Who are
his intestate heirs, and how much is
the share of each in his estate?
(2003)
A:
1) The compulsory heirs are the two legitimate
children and the two illegitimate children. The
parents are excluded by the legitimate children,
while the brothers are not compulsory heirs at
all.
Their respective legitimes are:
a) The legitime of the two (2)
legitimate children is one-half (1/2)
of the estate (P500, 000. 00) to be
divided between them equally, or
P250, 000. 00 each.
b) The legitime of each illegitimate
child is one-half (1/2) the legitime
of each legitimate child or P125,
000. 00 Since the total legitimes of
the compulsory heirs is P750, 000.
00, the balance of P250, 000. 00 is
the free portion.
2) The intestate heirs are the two (2)
legitimate children and the two (2)
illegitimate children. In intestacy, the
estate of the decedent is divided
among the legitimate and illegitimate
children such that the share of each
illegitimate child is one-half the share
of each legitimate child.
For each legitimate child P333, 333. 33
For each illegitimate child P166, 666.66
(Article 983, New Civil Code; Article 176, Family
Code)
Q: X, the decedent, was survived by W (his
widow). A (his son), B (a granddaughter, being the
daughter of A) and C and D (the two acknowledged
illegitimate children of the decedent). X died this
year (1997) leaving a net estate of P180, 000.00. All
were willing to succeed, except A who repudiated
the inheritance from his father, and they seek your
legal advice on how much each can expect to
receive as their respective shares in the distribution
of the estate. Give your answer (1997)
A: The heirs are B, W, C and D. A inherits nothing
because of his renunciation. B inherits a legitime of
P90,000.00 as the nearest and only legitimate
descendant, inheriting in his own right not by
representation because of As renunciation. W gets a
legitime equivalent to one-half (1/2) that of B
amounting to P45, 000. C and D each gets a legitime
equivalent to one-half (1/2) that of B amounting to
P45, 000 each. But since the total exceeds the entire
estate, their legitimes would have to be reduced
correspondingly to P22, 500 each (Article 895 of the
Civil Code). The total of all of these amounts to P180,
000.00
Q: Emil, the testator, has three legitimate children,
Tom, Henry and Warlito; a wife named Adette;
parents named Pepe and Pilar; and illegitimate
child, Ramon; brother, Mark; and a sister Nanette.
Since his wife Adette is well-off, he wants to leave
his illegitimate child as much of his estate as he can
legally do. His estate has an aggregate net amount
of P1,200,000. 00 and all the above-named relatives
are still living. Emil now comes to you for advice in
making a will. How will you distribute his estate
according to his wishes without violating the law on
testamentary succession? (2005)
A: In his will, Emil should give his compulsory heirs
just their respective legitimes and the entire free
portion to his illegitimate child. In addition to the
said childs legitime, he should divide his estate in his
will as follows:
Tom
P200, 000. 00 (legitime)
(Article 888 of the Civil Code)
Henry
P200, 000. 00 (legitime)
(Article 888 of the Civil Code)
Warlito
P200, 000. 00 (legitime)
(Article 888 of the Civil Code)
Adette
P200, 000. 00 (legitime)
(Article 892 par 2 of the Civil Code)
Ramon
P400, 000. 00
(P100, 000 as legitime ([Article 176 of
theFamily Code] and 300, 000 as free portion [Article
914 of the Civil Code])
Pepe and Pilar who are the parents of Emil
are only secondary compulsory heirs who can only
inherit in the absence of the primary compulsory
heirs (legitimate children)(Article 887 par 2 of the
Civil Code) while brother Mark and sister Nanette
are not compulsory heirs since they are not included
in the enumeration under Article 887 of the Civil
Code and are excluded by the heirs in the direct line.
Q: Luis was survived by two legitimate children,
two illegitimate children, his parents and two
brothers. He left an estate of P1 million.
a) Who are the compulsory heirs of Luis, how
much is the legitime of each, and how
much is the free portion of his estate, if
any?
b) Suppose Luis, in the preceding question,
(a) died intestate. Who are his intestate
heirs, and how much is the share of each in
his estate? (2003)
A:
a)
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children, while the brothers are not
compulsory heirs at all.
Their respective legitimes are:
(1) The legitime of the two (2) legitimate children is
one-half () of the estate (P50, 000. 00) to be
divided between them equally, or P250, 000. 00
each.
(2) The legitime of the two illegitimate children is
one-half (1/2) of the estate (P500, 000.00) to be
divided between them equally or P250, 000. 00
each.
2)
3)
4)
Since the total legitimes of the compulsory heirs is
P750, 000. 00, the balance of P250, 000. 00 is the
free portion.
b) The intestate heirs are the two (2)
legitimate children and the two (2)
illegitimate children. In intestacy the estate
of the decedent is divided among the
legitimate and illegitimate children such
that the share of each illegitimate child is
one-half the share of each legitimate child.
Their shares are:
For each legitimate child
-P333, 333.33
For each illegitimate child
-P166, 666. 66
(Article 983, New Civil Code; Article 176, Family
Code)
5)
INTESTATE SUCCESSION
Q: T died intestate on 1 September 1997. He was
survived by M (his mother), W his widow, A and B
(his legitimate children), C (his grandson, being the
legitimate son of B), D (his other grandson being
the son of E who was a legitimate son of and who
predeceased, T), and F (his grandson being the
son of G, a legitimate son who repudiated the
inheritance from T). His distributable net estate is
P120, 000. 00. How should this amount be shared in
intestacy among the surviving heirs? (1997)
A: Shares in intestacy:
T is decedent
Estate is P120, 000
Survived by:
M- Mother ------------------------------------------- None
W- Widow ---------------------------------------- P 30, 000
A- Son
------------------------------------------P 30, 000
B- Son
------------------------------------------P 30, 000
C- Grandson (son of B) ------------------------None
D- Grandson (son of E who
Predeceased T) ------------------------------------ P 30, 000
E- Grandson (son of G who
repudiated the inheritance from) ------------- None
EXPLANATION:
1) The mother (M) cannot inherit from T
because under Article 985 of the NCC,
ascendants shall inherit in default of
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A: If the child had an intra-uterine life of not less
than 7 months, it inherited from the father. Half of
the estate of Mr. Luna will go to the parents of Mrs.
Luna as their inheritance from Mrs. Luna, while the
other half will be inherited by the parents of Mr.
Luna as the reservatarios of the reserved property
inherited by Mrs. Luna from her child.
When Mr. Luna died, his heirs were his wife and the
unborn child. The unborn child inherited because the
inheritance was favorable to it and it was born alive
later though it lived only for five hours. Mrs. Luna
inherited half of the 10 Million estate while the
unborn child inherited the other half. When the child
died, it was survived by its mother, Mrs. Luna. As the
only heir, Mrs. Luna inherited by operation of law,
the estate of the child consisting of its 5 Million
inheritance from Mr. Luna. In the hands of Mrs.
Luna, what she inherited from the child was subject
to reserva troncal for the benefit of the relatives of
the child within the third degree of consanguinity
and who belong to the family of Mr. Luna, the line
where the property came from.
When Mrs. Luna died, she was survived by her
parents as her only heirs. Her parents will inherit her
estate consisting of the 5Million she inherited from
Mr. Luna. The other 5Million she inherited from her
child will be delivered to the parents of Mr. Luna as
beneficiaries of the reserved property. In sum, 5
Million Pesos of Mr. Lunas estate will go to the
parents of Mrs. Luna, while the other 5 Million will
go to the parents of Mr. Luna as reservatarios.
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less consent, and that it deprived him of his
legitime. After all, he had given her no cause for
disinheritance, added Jorge in his opposition. If you
were the judge, how will you rule on Jorges
opposition to the probate of Marias will? (1993)
A: As Judge, I shall rule as follows: Jorges opposition
should be sustained in part and denied in part. This
is a case of ineffective disinheritance under Article
918 of the Civil Code because the omission of the
compulsory heir Jorge by Maria was intentional.
Consequently, the institution of Miguela as heir is
void only insofar as the legitime of Jorge prejudiced.
Accordingly, Jorge is entitled to his legitime of onehalf of the estate, and Miguela gets the other half.
Q: Mr. Palma, widower, has 3 daughters D, D-1 and
D-2. He executed a Will disinheriting D because she
married a man he did not like, and instituting
daughters D-1 and D-2 as his heirs to his entire
estate of P1, 000,000.00. Upon Mr. Palmas death,
how should his estate be divided? Explain. (1999)
A: This is a case of ineffective disinheritance because
marrying a man that the father did not approve of is
not a ground for disinheriting D. Therefore, the
institution of D-1 and D-2 shall be annulled insofar as
it prejudices the legitime of D, and the institution of
D-1 and D-2 shall only apply on the free portion in
the amount of P500, 000.00. Therefore, D, D-1 and
D-2 will get their legitimes of P500, 000.00 divided
into 3 equal parts and D-1 and D-2 will get a reduced
testamentary disposition of P250, 000. 00 each.
Hence, the shares will be:
D
-P166,666. 66
D-1
-P166,666.66+P250,000. 00
D-2
-P166, 666.66+P250, 000. 00
SALES
Q: Pablo sold his car to Alfonso who issued a
postdated check in full payment therefor. Before
the maturity of the check, Alfonso sold the car to
Gregorio who later sold it to Gabriel. When
presented for payment, the check issued by Alfonso
was dishonoured by the drawee bank for the
reason that he, Alfonso, had already closed hi
account even before he issued his check.
Pablo sued to recover the car from Gabriel alleging
that he (Pablo) had been unlawfully deprived of it
by reason of Alfonsos deception. Will the suit
prosper? (1991)
A: No. The suit will not prosper because Pablo was
not unlawfully deprived of the car although he was
unlawfully deprived of the price. The perfection of
the sale and the delivery of the car was enough to
allow Alfonso to have a right of ownership over the
car, which can be lawfully transferred to Gregorio.
Art. 559 applies only to a person who is on
possession in good faith of the property, and not to
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the document saying she changed her mind. Linda
filed suit for nullification of the deed of sale and for
moral and exemplary damages against Ray.
a) Will the suit prosper? Explain.
b) Does Ray have any cause of action against
Biong and Linda? Can he also recover
damages from the spouses? Explain. (2006)
A:
a)
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first buyer knew of the second sale. The fact
that he knew of the second sale at the time
of his registration does not make him as
acting in bad faith because the sale to him
was ahead in time, hence, has priority in
right. What creates bad faith in the case of
double sale of land is knowledge of a
previous sale.
b) The first buyer is still to be preferred, where
the second sale is registered ahead of the
first sale but with knowledge of the latter.
This is because the second buyer, who at
the time he registered his sale knew that
the property had already been sold to
someone else, acted in bad faith. (Art. 1544,
NCC)
Q: JV, owner of a parcel of land, sold it to PP. But
the deed of sale was not registered. One year later,
JV sold the parcel again to RR, who succeeded to
register the deed and to obtain a transfer
certificate of title over the property in his own
name. Who has a better right over the parcel of
land, RR or PP? Why? Explain the legal basis of your
answer. (2004)
A: It depends on whether or not RR is an innocent
purchaser for value. Under the Torrens System, a
deed or instrument operated only as a contract
between the parties and as evidence of authority to
the Register of Deeds to make the registration. It is
the registration of the deed or the instrument that is
the operative act that conveys or affects the land.
(Sec. 51, PD No. 1529)
In cases of double sale of titled land, it is a wellsettled rule that the buyer who first registers the
sale in good faith acquires a better right to the land.
(Art. 1544, NCC)
Persons dealing with property covered by Torrens
title are not required to go beyond what appears on
its face. (Orquiola v. CA, 386 SCRA 301 [2001];
Domingo v. Roces 401 SCRA 197 [2003]). Thus,
absent any showing that RR knew about, or ought to
have known the prior sale of the land to PP or that
he acted in bad faith, and being first to register the
sale, RR acquired a good and a clean title to the
property as against PP.
EQUITABLE MORTGAGE
Q: On December 20, 1970, Juliet, a widow,
borrowed from Romeo P4,000 and, as security
therefore, she executed a deed of mortgage over
one of her two registered lots which has a market
value of P15,000. The document and the certificate
of title of the property were delivered to Romeo.
On June 2, 1971, Juliet obtained an additional sum
of P3,000 from Romeo. On this date, however,
Romeo caused the preparation of a deed of
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as a contract of sale with the right to
repurchase, Art. 1602 of the Civil Code on
equitable mortgage will not apply. The rule
could have been different if both deeds
were executed on the same occasion or
date, in which case, under the ruling in
spouses Claravall v. CA (190 SCRA 439), the
contract may still be sustained as an
equitable
mortgage,
given
the
circumstances expressed in Art. 1602. The
reserved right to repurchase is then
deemed an original intention.
b) If I were to decide in favor of Romeo and Y,
I would not uphold the validity of the
promise to sell, so as to enforce it by an
action for specific performance. The
promise to sell would only amount to a
mere offer and, therefore, it is not
enforceable unless it was sought to be
exercised before a withdrawal or denial
thereof.
Q: On July 14, 2004, Pedro executed in favour of
Juan a Deed of Absolute Sale over a parcel of land
covered by TCT No. 6245. It appears in the Deed of
Sale that Pedro received from Juan P120,000 as
purchase price. However, Pedro retained the
owners duplicate of said title. Thereafter, Juan, as
lessor, and Pedro, as lessee, was also obligated to
pay the realty taxes on the property during the
period of lease.
Subsequently, Pedro filed a complaint against Juan
for the reformation of the Deed of Absolute Sale,
alleging that the transaction covered by the deed
was an equitable mortgage. In his verified answer
to the complaint, Juan alleged that the property
was sold to him under the Deed of Absolute Sale,
and interposed counterclaims to recover possession
of the property and to compel Pedro to turn over to
him the owners duplicate of title. Resolve the case
with reasons. (2005)
A: An equitable mortgage arises from a transaction,
regardless of its form, which results into a security,
or an offer or attempt to pledge land as security for
a debt or liability. Its essence is the intent of the
parties to create mortgage, lien or charge on the
property sufficiently described or identified to
secure an obligation, which intent must be clearly
established in order that such a mortgage may exist.
Defendants defense that he acquired the land
through an Absolute Deed of Sale and not through
pacto de recto is untenable. The presumption of
equitable mortgage under Art. 1620 of the Civil
Code, equally applies to a contract purporting to be
an absolute sale (Art. 1604, NCC). The facts and
circumstances that Pedro retained possession of the
Owners Duplicate Copy of the Certificate of Title;
that he remained in possession of the land as lessee;
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b) No, the vendor cannot rescind the contract
under the circumstances. Under the
Maceda Law, which is the law applicable,
the seller on instalment may not rescind the
contract till after the lapse of the
mandatory grace period for 30 days for
every one year of instalment payments, and
only rescission by a notarial act. In this case,
the refusal of the seller to accept payment
from the buyer was entitled to 60 days
grace period and the payment was
tendered within that period. Moreover, the
notice of rescission served by the seller on
the buyer was not effective because the
notice was not by a notarial act. Besides,
the seller may still pay within 30 days from
such notarial notice before rescission may
be effected. All these requirements for a
valid rescission were not complied with by
the seller. Hence, the rescission is invalid.
Q: What are the so-called Maceda and Recto
laws in connection with sales on instalments? Give
the most important features of each law. (1999)
A: The Maceda Law (RA 655) is applicable to sales of
immovable property on instalments. The most
important features are (Rillo v. CA, 247 SCRA 461):
a)
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the property can fetch three times the agreed
purchase price. Bert seeks specific performance but
Simeon contends that he has merely given Bert an
option to buy and nothing more, and offers to
return the option money which Bert refuses to
accept.
a) Will Berts action for specific
performance prosper? Explain.
b) May Simeon justify his refusal to
proceed with the sale by the fact that
the deal is financially disadvantageous
to him? Explain. (2002)
A:
a)
LEGAL REDEMPTION
Q: Betty and Lydia were co-owners of a parcel of
land. Last January 31, 2001, when she paid her real
estate tax, Betty discovered that Lydia has sold her
share to Emma on November 10, 2000. The
following day, Betty offered to redeem her share
from Emma, but the latter replied that Bettys right
to redeem has already prescribed. Is Emma correct
or not? Why? (2001)
A: Emma, the buyer, is not correct. Betty can still
enforce her right of legal redemption as a co-owner.
Article 1623 of the Civil Code gives a co-owner 30
days from written notice of the sale by the vendor to
exercise his right of legal redemption. In the present
problem, the 30-day period for the exercise by Betty
of her right of redemption had not even begun to
run because no notice in writing of the sale appears
to have been given to her by Lydia.
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According to Ang Yu v. Court of Appeals
(238 SCRA 602), the right of first refusal is
not based on contract but is predicated on
the provisions of human relations and,
therefore, its violation is predicated on
quasi-delict. Secondly, the right of first
refusal implies that the offer of the person
in whose favour that right was given must
conform with the same terms and
conditions as those given to the offeree. In
this case, however, Remigio was offering
only P4.5 million instead P5 million.
b) Yes, the answer will be the same. The
answer will not prosper because an option
must be supported by a consideration
separate and distinct from the purchase
price. In this case there is no separate
consideration. Therefore, the option may
be withdrawn by Ubaldo at any time. (Art.
1324, NCC)
Q: In a 20-year lease contract over a building, the
lessee is expressly granted a right of first refusal
should the lessor decide to sell both the land and
building. However, the seller sold the property to a
third person who knew about the lease and in fact
agreed to respect it. Consequently, the lessee
brings an action against both the lessor-seller and
the buyer (a) to rescind the sale and (b) to compel
specific performance of his right of first refusal in
the sense that the lessor should be ordered to
execute a deed of absolute sale in favour of the
lessee at the same price. The defendants contend
that the plaintiff can neither seek rescission of the
sale nor compel specific performance of a mere
right of first refusal. Decide the case. (1998)
A: The action filed by the lessee, for both rescission
of the offending sale and specific performance of the
right of first refusal which was violated, should
prosper. The ruling in Equatorial Realty
Development, Inc. v. Mayfair Theater, Inc. (264 SCRA
483), a case with similar facts, sustains both rights of
action because the buyer in the subsequent sale
knew the existence of right of first refusal. Hence, in
bad faith.
RIGHT OF REPURCHASE
Q: On January 2, 1980, A and B entered into a
contract whereby A sold to B a parcel of land for
and in consideration of P10,000. A reserving to
himself the right to repurchase the same. Because
they were friends, no period was agreed upon for
the repurchase of the property.
a) Until when must A exercise his right of
repurchase?
b) If A fails to redeem the property within the
allowable period, what would you advise B
to do for his better protection? (1993)
A:
a)
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regularity. And neither could the parties have
foreseen its occurrence. The event should be
foreseeable by the parties so that the lessee can
change the time for his planting, or refrain from
planting, or take steps to avoid the loss. To be
foreseeable, the time and place of the occurrence,
as well as the magnitude of the adverse effects of
the fortuitous events must be capable of being
predicted. Since the exact place, the exact time, and
the exact magnitude of the adverse effects of the El
Nino phenomenon are still unpredictable despite
the advances in science, the phenomenon is
considered unforeseen.
Q: A vacant lot several blocks from the center of
the town was leased by its owner to a young
businessman B for a term of 15 years renewal upon
agreement of the parties. After taking possession of
the lot, the lessee built thereon a building of mixed
material and a store. As the years passed, he
expanded his business, earning more profits. By the
th
10 year of his possession, he was able to build a 3storey building worth at least P300,000. Before the
end of the term of the lease, B negotiated with the
landowner for its renewal, but despite their
attempts to do so, they could not agree on the new
conditions for the renewal. Upon the expiration of
the term of the lease, the landowner asked B to
vacate the premises and remove his building and
other improvements. B refused unless he was
reimbursed for necessary and useful expenses. B
claimed that he was a possessor and builder in
good faith, with right of retention. The issue is now
before the court for resolution in a pending
litigation.
a) What are the rights of B?
b) What are the rights of the landowner?
(1990)
A:
a)
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of violation of law and of contract. The sub-lease to
Conrad remained valid for 2 years from January 1,
1991, and had not yet lapsed when the action was
filed on May 15, 1992.
b) In case of rescission, the rights and
obligations of the parties should be as
follows: At the time that Victor filed suit on
May 15, 1992, the assignment had not yet
lapsed. It would lapse on December 1,
1994, the very same date that the 5-year
basic lease would expire. Since the
assignment is void, Victor can get the
property back because of the violation of
the lease. Both Joel and Ernie have to
surrender possession and are liable for
damages. But Conrad has not yet incurred
any liability on the sublease which still
subsisted at the time of the filing of the
action on May 15, 1992.
Q: In January 1993, Four-Gives Corporation leased
the entire twelve floors of the GQS Towers
Complex, for a period of ten years at a monthly
rental of P3 million. There is a provision in the
contract that the monthly rentals should be paid
within the first five days of the month. For the
month of March, May June, October and December
1993, the rentals were not paid on time with some
rentals being delayed up to 10 days. The delay was
due to the heavy paper work involved in the
processing the checks.
Four-Gives Corporation also subleased five of the
twelve floors to wholly-owned subsidiaries. The
lease contract expressly prohibits the assignment of
the lease contract or any portion thereof. The
rental value of the building has increased by 50%
since its lease to Four-Gives Corporation.
a) Can the building owner eject Four-Gives on
grounds of the repeated delays in the
payment of rent?
b) Can the building owner ask for the
cancellation of the contract for violation of
the provision against the assignment?
(1994)
A:
a) The repeated delays in the payment of rentals
would, at best, be a slight or casual breach which
does not furnish a ground for ejectment especially
because the delays were only due to heavy paper
work. Note that there was not even a demand for
payment obviously because the delay last for only a
few days (10 days being the longest), at the end of
which time payments were presumably made and
were accepted. There was, therefore, no default.
Note also that there was no demand made upon the
lessee to vacate the premised for non-payment of
the monthly rent. There is, therefore, no cause of
action for ejectment from the repeated delays.
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b) Cs assignment of the sublease to D?
(1990)
A:
a)
2)
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2) No, Philip has no right to petition for
dissolution because he does not have the
standing of a partner (Article 1813 of the
NCC).
Q: A, B and C formed a partnership for the purpose
of contracting with the Government in the
construction of one of its bridges. On June 30, 1992,
after completion of the project, the bridge was
turned over by the partners to the Government. On
August 30, 1992, D, a supplier of materials used in
the project sued A for collection of the
indebtedness to him. A moved to dismiss the
complaint against him on the ground tis liable that
it was the ABC partnership that is liable for the
debt. D replied that ABC partnership was dissolved
upon completion of the project for which purpose
the partnership was formed. Will you dismiss the
complaint against A if you were the Judge? (1993)
A: As Judge, I would not dismiss the complaint
against A, because A is still liable as a general partner
for his pro rata share of 1/3 (Article 1816 of the New
Civil Code). Dissolution of a partnership caused by
the termination of the particular undertaking
specified in the agreement does not extinguish
obligations, which must be liquidated during the
winding up of the partnership affairs (Articles 1829
and 1830, par 1-aof the Civil Code).
Q: W, X, Y and Z organized a general partnership
with W and X as industrial partners and Y and Z as
capitalist partners. Y contributed P50, 000.00 and Z
contributed P20, 000.00 to the common fund. By a
unanimous vote of the partners, W and X were
appointed managing partners, without any
specification of their respective powers and duties.
A applied for the position of Secretary and B
applied for the position of Accountant of the
partnership.
The hiring of A was decided upon by W and X, but
was opposed by Y and Z.
The hiring of B was decided upon by W and Z, but
was opposed by X and Y.
Who of the applicants should be hired by the
partnership? Explain and give your reasons. (1992)
A: A should be hired as Secretary. The decision for
the hiring of A prevails because it is an act of
administration which can be performed by the duty
appointed managing partners, W and X.
B cannot be hired, because in case of a tie in the
decision of the managing partners, the deadlock
must be decided by the partners owning the
controlling interest. In this case, the opposition of X
and Y prevails because Y owns the controlling
interest (Article 1801 of the Civil Code).
Q: Joe and Rudy formed a partnership to operate a
car repair shop in Quezon City. Joe provided the
capital while Rudy contributed his labor and
industry. On one side of their shop, Joe opened and
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land, sell the individual lots, and deliver the
proceeds to Richard, to be applied to the purchase
price. Five years later, Richard revoked the power
of attorney and took over the sale of the
subdivision lots himself. Is the revocation valid or
not? Why? (2001)
A: The revocation is not valid. The power of
attorney given to the buyer is irrevocable because it
is coupled with an interest: the agency is the means
of fulfilling the obligation of the buyer to pay the
price of the land (Article 1927 of the New Civil Code).
In other words, a bilateral contract (contract to buy
and sell the land) is dependent on the agency.
Q: As an agent, AL was given a guarantee
commission, in addition to his regular commission,
after he sold 20 units of refrigerators to a customer,
HT Hotel. The customer however failed to pay for
the units sold. ALs principal, DRBI demanded from
AL payment for customers accountability. AL
objected, on the ground that his job was only to sell
and not to collect payment for units bought by the
customer. Is ALs objection valid? Can DRBI collect
from him or nor? Reason. (2004)
A: No, ALs objection is not valid and DRBI can collect
from AL. Since AL accepted a guarantee commission,
in addition to his regular commission, he agreed to
bear the risk of collection and to pay the principal
the proceeds of the sale on the same terms agreed
upon with the purchaser (Article 1907, Civil Code).
Q: CX executed a special power of attorney
authorizing DY to secure a loan from any bank and
to mortgage his property covered by the owners
certificate of title. In securing a loan from M Bank,
DY did not specify that he was acting for CX in the
transaction with said bank. Is CX liable for the bank
loan? Why or why not? Justify your answer. (2004)
A: While as a general rule the principal is not liable
for the contract entered into by his agent in case he
acted in his own name without disclosing his
principal, such rule does not apply if the contract
involves a thing belonging to the principal. In such
case, the principal is liable under article 1883 of the
Civil Code. The contract is deemed made on his
behalf (Sy-Juco v. Sy-Juco 40 Phil 634).
Q: X appoints Y as his agent to sell his products in
Cebu City. Can Y appoint a sub-agent and if he does,
what are the effects of such appointment? (1999)
A: Yes, the agent may appoint a substitute or subagent if the principal has not prohibited him from
doing so, but he shall responsible for the acts of the
substitute:
(1) When he was not given the power
to appoint one;
(2) When he was given such power,
but without designating the
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Article 1900 of the Civil Code provides that so far as
third persons are concerned, an act is deemed to
have been performed within the scope of the
agents authority, is such act is within the terms of
the power of attorney, as written, even if the agent
has in fact exceeded the limits of his authority
according to an understanding between the principal
and the agent.
3)
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ordinary for the use and preservation of the
van.
b) The costs for the fuel and other materials
are considered ordinary expenses, and
consequently Tito the bailee, shall shoulder
them (Article 1941 of the Civil Code).
c) No, Pedro cannot demand the return of the
van until after the expiration of the oneyear period stipulated. However, if in the
meantime he should have urgent need of
the van, he may demand its return or
temporary use.
d) Both Tito and Pedro shall bear equally the
costs of extraordinary expenses, having
been incurred on the occasion of actual use
of the van by Tito, the bailee, even though
he acted without fault (Article 1949 (2) of
the Civil Code).
Q: Distinguish usufruct from commodatum and
state whether these may be constituted over
consumable goods. (1998)
A: Usufruct is a right given to a person
(usufructuary) to enjoy the property of another with
the obligation of preserving its form and substance
(Article 562 of the Civil Code). On the other hand,
commodatum is a contract by which one of the
parties (bailor) delivers to another (bailee)
something not consumable so that the latter may
use it for a certain time and return it.
In usufruct, the usufructuary gets the right
to the use and to the fruits of the same, while in
commodatum; the bailee only acquires the use of
the thing loaned but not its fruits.
Usufruct may be constituted on the whole
or a part of the fruits of the thing (Article 564 of the
Civil Code). It may even be constituted over
consumable like money (Alunan v. Veloso 52 Phil
545). On the other hand, in commodatum,
consumable goods may be subject thereof only
when the purpose of the contract is not the
consumption of the object as when it is merely fopr
exhibition (Article 1936 of the Civil Code).
Q: Samuel borrowed P300, 000.00 housing loan
from the bank at 18% per annum interest.
However, the promissory note contained a proviso
that the bank reserves the right to increase
interest within the limits allowed by law. By virtue
of such proviso, over the objections of Samuel, the
bank increased the interest rate periodically until it
reached 48% per annum. Finally, Samuel filed an
action questioning the right of the bank to increase
the interest rate up to 48%. The bank raised the
defense that the Central Bank of the Philippines
had already suspended the Usury Law. Will the
action prosper or not? Why? (2001)
A: The action will prosper. While it is true that the
interest ceilings set by the Usury law are no longer in
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b.
c.
d.
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of A and his family, closed the doors and windows
of his house to prevent it from being burglarized.
Years passed without B hearing from A and his
family, B continued taking care of A's house, even
causing minor repairs to be done at his house to
preserve it. In 1976, when business began to perk
up in the area, an enterprising man. C, approached
B and proposed that they build stores at the ground
floor of the house and convert its second floor into
a pension house. B agreed to Cs proposal and
together they spent for the construction of stores
at the ground floor and the conversion of the
second floor into a pension house. While
construction was going on, fire occurred at a nearby
house. The houses at the entire block, including A's
were burned. After the EDSA revolution in February
1986, A and his family returned from the United
States where they took refuge in 1972. Upon
learning of what happened to his house. A sued
B for damages, B pleaded as a defense that he
merely took charge of his house under the
principle of negotiorum gestio. He was not liable as
the burning of the house is a fortuitous event. Is B
liable to A for damages under the foregoing
circumstance? (1993)
A: No, B is not liable for damages because he is a
gestor in a negotiorum gestio (Art. 2144, Civil Code)
Furthermore, B is not liable to A because Article
2147 of the Civil Code is not applicable. B did not
undertake risky operations which the owner was not
accustomed to embark upon:
a. he has not preferred his own interest to
that of the owner;
b. he has not failed to return the property or
business after demand by the owner; and
c. he has not assumed management in bad
faith
TORTS & DAMAGES
Q: Mr and Mrs R own a burned-out building, the
firewall ofwhich collapsed and destroyed the shop
occupied by the family of Mr and Mrs S, which
resulted in injuries to said couple and the death of
their daughter. Mr and Mrs S had been warned by
Mr & Mrs R to vacate the shop in view of its
proximity to the weakened wall but the former
failed to do so.
Mr & Mrs S filed against Mr and Mrs R an
action for recovery of damages the former suffered
as a result of the collapse of the firewall. In
defense, Mr and Mrs R rely on the doctrine of last
clear chance alleging that Mr and Mrs S had the last
clear chance to avoid the accident if only they
heeded the formers warning to vacate the shop,
and therefore Mr and Mrs Rs prior negligence
should be disregarded. If you were the judge, how
would you decide the case? State your reasons.
(1990)
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from FXs management as well as indemnity
payment. When none was forthcoming, they sued
the airline for a million pesos in damages. Is the
airline liable for actual and moral damages? Why
or why not? Explain briefly. (2004)
A: FX Airlines committed breach of contract when it
upgraded DT and MT, over their objections, to First
Class because they had contracted for Business Class
passage. However, although there is a breach of
contract, DT and MT are entitled to actual damages
only for such pecuniary losses suffered by them as a
result of such breach. There seems to be no showing
that they incurred such pecuniary loss. There is no
showing that the pain in DT's arm and wrist resulted
directly from the carrier's acts complained of.
Hence, they are not entitled to actual damages.
Moreover, DT could have avoided the alleged injury
by requesting the airline staff to do the luggage
transfer as a matter of duty on their part. There is
also no basis to award moral damages for such
breach of contract because the facts of the problem
do not show bad faith or fraud on the part of the
airline. (Cathay Pacific v. Vazquez, 399 SCRA 207
[2003]).
However, they may recover moral
damages if the cause of action is based on Article
21 of the Civil Code for the humiliation and
embarrassment they felt when the stewardess
threatened to offload them if they did not avail of
the upgrade.
Q: Explain the concept of vicarious liability in quasidelicts. (2002)
A: The doctrine of VICARIOUS LIABILITY is that which
renders a person liable for the negligence of others
for whose acts or omission the law makes him
responsible on the theory that they are under his
control and supervision.
Q: OJ was employed as professional driver of MM
Transit bus owned by Mr. BT. In the course of his
work, OJ hit a pedestrian who was seriously injured
and later died in the hospital as a result of the
accident. The victims heirs sued the driver and the
owner of the bus for damages. Is there a
presumption in this case that Mr. BT, the owner
had been negligent? If so, is the presumption
absolute or not? Explain. (2004)
A: Yes, there is a presumption of negligence on the
part of the employer. However, such presumption is
rebuttable. The liability of the employer shall cease
when they prove that they observed the diligence of
a good father of a family to prevent damage (Article
2180, Civil Code).
When the employee causes damage due to his own
negligence while performing his own duties, there
arises the juris tantum presumption that the
employer is negligent, rebuttable only by proof of
observance of the diligence of a good father of a
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(d) A 15-year old high school student stabs his
classmate who is his rival for a girl while
they were going out of the classroom after
their last class.
(e) What defense, if any, is available to them?
(2005)
A:
(a) The parents of the 7-year old boy who
caused injury to his playmate are liable
under Article 219 of the Family Code, in
relation to Article 2180 of the Civil Code
since they exercise parental authority over
the person of the boy. (Tamargo v. Court of
Appeals, G.R. No. 85044, June 3, 1992;
Elcano v. Hill, G.R. No. L-24803, May 26,
1977)
(b) Employer of the domestic helper who
slapped a fish vendor. Under Article 2180,
par. 5 of the Civil Code, "employers shall be
liable for the damages caused by their
employees and household helpers acting
within the scope of their assigned tasks,
even though the former are not engaged in
any business or industry."
(c) The owner of the construction company.
Article 2180, paragraph 4 states that "the
owners and managers of an establishment
or enterprise are likewise responsible for
damages caused by their employees in the
service of the branches in which the latter
are employed or on the occasion of their
functions."
(d) The school, teacher and administrator as
they exercise special parental authority.
(Art. 2180, par. 7 in relation to Art. 218 and
Art. 219 of the Family Code)
(e) The defense that might be available to
them is the observance of a good father of
the family to prevent the damage. (Last
par., Art. 2180, Civil Code)
Q: Tony bought a Ford Expedition from a car dealer
in Muntinlupa City. As payment, Tony issued a
check drawn against his current account with
Premium Bank. Since he has a good reputation, the
car dealer allowed him to immediately drive home
the vehicle merely on his assurance that his check is
sufficiently funded. When the car dealer deposited
the check, it was dishonored on the ground of
"Account Closed." After an investigation, it was
found that an employee of the bank misplaced
Tony's account ledger. Thus, the bank erroneously
assumed that his account no longer exists. Later it
turned out that Tony's account has more than
sufficient funds to cover the check. The dealer
however, immediately filed an action for recovery
of possession of the vehicle against Tony for which
he was terribly humiliated and embarrassed. Does
Tony have a cause of action against Premium Bank?
Explain. (2006)
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c)
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suddenly stepped on the gas to cross the
intersection before the traffic light could turn red.
But, too late. Midway in the intersection, the traffic
light changed, and a Jeepney full of passengers
suddenly crossed the car's path. A collision
between the two vehicles was inevitable. As a
result, several jeepney passengers were seriously
injured. A suit for damages based on culpa
aquiliana was filed against Marcial and Ben, seeking
to hold them jointly and severally liable for such
injuries. May Marcial be held liable? Explain. (1996)
A: Marcial may not be liable because under Art.
2184, NCC, the owner who is in the vehicle is not
liable with the driver if by the exercise of due
diligence he could have prevented the injury. The
law does not require the owner to supervise the
driver every minute that he was driving. Only when
through his negligence, the owner has lost an
opportunity to prevent the accident would he be
liable (Caedo v. Ytt Khe Thai, 26 SCRA 410 citing
Chapman v. Underwood and Manlangit v. Mauler,
250 SCRA 560). In this case, the fact that the owner
was absorbed in reading a book does not
conclusively show that he lost the opportunity to
prevent the accident through his negligence.
Q: A Gallant driven by John and owned by Art, and
a Corolla driven by its owner, Gina, collided
somewhere along Adriatico Street. As a result of
the accident, Gina had a concussion. Subsequently.
Gina brought an action for damages against John
and Art. There is no doubt that the collision is due
to John's negligence. Can Art, who was in the
vehicle at the time of the accident, be held
solidarily liable with his driver, John? (1998)
A: Yes. Art may be held solidary liable with John, if it
was proven that the former could have prevented
the misfortune with the use of due diligence. Article
2184 of the Civil Code states: "In motor mishaps, the
owner is solidary liable with his driver, if the former,
who was in the vehicle, could have, by the use of
due diligence, prevented the misfortune, x x x"
Q: On January 5, 1992, Nonoy obtained a
loan of Pl,000,000.00 from his friend Raffy. The
promissory note did not stipulate any payment
for Interest. The note was due on January 5, 1993
but before this date the two became political
enemies. Nonoy, out of spite, deliberately
defaulted in paying the note, thus forcing Raffy to
sue him.
1) What actual damages can Raffy recover?
2) Can Raffy ask for moral damages from
Nonoy?
3) Can Raffy ask for nominal damages?
4) Can Raffy ask for temperate damages?
5) Can Raffy ask for attorney's fees? (1994)
A:
1)
3)
4)
5)
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QUESTIONS ASKED MORE THAN ONCE IN THE BAR
QuAMTO (1990-2006)
parents may also recover damages for injuries that
are inflicted directly upon them, e.g., moral
damages for mental anguish that attended the
loss of the unborn child. Since there is gross
negligence, exemplary damages can also be
recovered. (Gelus v. CA, 2SCRA 801 [1961])
Q: Dr. and Mrs. Almeda are prominent citizens of
the country and are frequent travelers abroad.
In 1996, they booked round-trip business class
tickets for the Manila-Hong Kong- Manila route of
the Pinoy Airlines, where they are holders of Gold
Mabalos Class Frequent Flier cards. On their return
flight, Pinoy Airlines upgraded their tickets to first
class without their consent and, inspite of their
protestations to be allowed to remain in the
business class so that they could be with their
friends, they were told that the business class was
already fully booked, and that they were given
priority in upgrading because they are elite
members/holders of Gold Mabalos Class cards.
Since they were embarrassed at the discussions
with the flight attendants, they were forced to
take the flight at the first class section apart from
their friends who were in the business class. Upon
their return to Manila, they demanded a written
apology from Pinoy Airlines. When it went
unheeded, the couple sued Pinoy Airlines
for
breach of contract claiming moral and
exemplary damages, as well as attorney's fees. Will
the action prosper? Give reasons. (2005)
A: Yes, the action will prosper. Article 2201 of the
Civil Code entitles the person to recover damages
which may be attributed to non-performance of an
obligation. In Alitalia Airways v. Court of Appeals
(G.R. No. 77011, July 24, 1990), when an airline
issues ticket to a passenger confirmed on a
particular flight, a contract of carriage arises
and the passenger expects that he would fly on
that day. When the airline deliberately overbooked,
it took the risk of having to deprive some
passengers of their seat in case all of them would
show up. For the indignity and inconvenience of
being refused the confirmed seat, said passenger is
entitled to moral damages.
In the given problem, spouses Almeda had a booked
roundtrip business class ticket with Pinoy Airlines.
When their tickets were upgraded to first class
without their consent, Pinoy Airlines breached the
contract. As ruled in Zulueta v. Pan American (G.R. No.
L-28589, January 8, 1973), in case of overbooking,
airline is in bad faith. Therefore, spouses Almeda
are entitled to damages.