Philippine National Bank v. Amores, G.R. No. L-54551
Philippine National Bank v. Amores, G.R. No. L-54551
Philippine National Bank v. Amores, G.R. No. L-54551
SYLLABUS
DECISION
SARMIENTO, J : p
The undisputed facts are stated in the assailed decision of the courta
quo, thus:
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The plaintiff Maximo Kalaw Investment Corporation, hereinafter
referred to as Kalaw Investment, is the registered owner of Lot 1 of the
consolidation-subdivision plan LRC, Psd-13492, covered by Transfer
Certificate of Title No. RT-96 (53532) of the Register of Deeds for
Oriental Mindoro, with the area of 3,132,122 square meters more or
less.
The plaintiffs Kalaw Investment and Augusto Kalaw obtained a
loan from defendant Philippine National Bank, hereinafter referred to
as PNB, in the amount of 150,000.00, and in order to secure the said
loan the aforesaid property was mortgaged to defendant PNB.
A portion of said property, with an area of 45.186 hectares, was
subjected to Operations Land Transfer in favor of tenants-beneficiaries
in accordance with Presidential Decree No. 27 and the provisions of
Republic Act No. 3844 (otherwise known as the Code of Agrarian
Reform of the Philippines), as amended more particularly by
Presidential Decree No. 251.
As of the date of July 28, 1977 defendant Land Bank of the
Philippines, hereinafter referred to as LBP, paid defendant PNB for the
account of the plaintiffs P14,588.50 in cash and Land Bank Bonds with
a total face value of P130,000.00.
Pursuant to PNB Board Resolution No. 627 (Exhibit "1-PNB"),
defendant PNB, after crediting the sum of P14,588.50 to the account of
plaintiff Augusto Kalaw, applied the Land Bank bonds to the payment of
the account on a one to-one basis to the extent of P31,000.00 and on a
discounted basis to the extent of P59,400.00, or a total of P90,400.00.
Contesting the manner of application of Land Bank bonds to the
payment of loan obligations pursuant to Board Resolution No. 627,
plaintiffs herein wrote the PNB requesting the reconsideration or
revision of its policy.
Defendant PNB, however, did not find merit in the request of
plaintiffs but agreed that the latter seek judicial ruling in which it would
abide.
Defendant LBP has directly taken issue with the co-defendant
PNB on the aforementioned policy.
As a consequence, plaintiffs brought the present action for
declaratory relief. 4
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The petitioner Philippine National Bank (PNB) appealed from the
decision of the lower court and assigned several errors. However, there is, in
fact, only one question to be resolved here, i.e., whether or not a
government lending institution (like PNB, the petitioner herein) may be
compelled to accept Land Bank notes at face value in payment of pre-
existing obligations secured by land partially taken by the Land Bank under
Operation Land Transfer pursuant to the Agrarian Reform Code (RA No. 3844
as amended particularly by PD No. 251).
The petitioner PNB, relating PD 27 with Section 80 of the Agrarian
Reform Code, as amended particularly by PD 251, affirms that lands not
subject to PD 27 are also not subject to Section 80. Necessarily, therefore,
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when land mortgaged to PNB is partly subjected to PD 27, only that part also
of the corresponding lien is subjected to Section 80, the unaffected portion
being governed by the PNB charter. LLjur
b) Bonds Taken at
Face Value 31,000.00
c) Bonds Taken at
Market Value
(Discounted) 59,400.00 9
The total amount paid by the Land Bank in cash and notes amounted to
P144,588.50, P130,000.00 of which was the total face value of the bonds.
The petitioner's method evidently contravenes the principle of
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indivisibility of mortgage for it applied the Land Bank bonds as payment on a
one-to-one basis pro tanto of the mortgage debt secured by the particular
portion acquired by the Land Bank which had an area of 45.186 hectares,
but on a discounted basis with respect to the other portions of the debt
secured by the same mortgage.
Furthermore, and as correctly noted by the trial court, Section 80 of the
Agrarian Reform Code does not distinguish between land wholly subjected to
agrarian reform and land only partially affected thereby. Applying the rule on
statutory construction, "Ubi lex non distinguit, nec nos distinguere
debemos," 10 this Court must perforce follow the meaning expressed by the
words of the law.
The pertinent legal provision states.
SEC. 80. Modes of Payment . — The Bank shall finance the
acquisition of farm lots under any of the following modes of settlement:
1. Cash payment of 10% and balance in 25-year tax-free 6%
Land Bank bonds:
xxx xxx xxx
In the event there is an existing lien or encumbrance on the land
in favor of any Government lending institution at the time of acquisition
by the Bank, the landowner shall be paid the net value of the land (i.e.,
the value of the land determined under Proclamation No. 27 minus the
outstanding balance/s of the obligation/s secured by the lien/s or
encumbrance/s), and the outstanding balance/s of the obligations to
the lending institution/s shall be paid by the Land Bank in Land Bank
bonds or other securities, existing charters of those institutions to the
contrary notwithstanding. A similar settlement may be negotiated by
the Land Bank in the case of obligations secured by liens or
encumbrances in favor of private parties or institutions.
There is nothing in the above quoted provision of law which authorizes
a government lending institution to make a distinction in its acceptance of
land bank bonds as payment. There is also nothing in the said law which can
be construed to mean that when the area actually "land reformed" is just a
portion of the property encumbranced, only that portion of the loan value
corresponding to the area actually taken will be paid with Land Bank bonds
at their face value.
The law, in fact, is clear, i.e., that the debt secured by a mortgage
constituted on the land taken under the Agrarian Reform Code shall be paid
in Land Bank bonds even if the charters of government lending institutions
contain provisions contrary to Section 80. The last sentence of the law in
question which provides that "a similar settlement may be negotiated,"
applies only to obligations contracted with private parties or institutions but
not those contracted with government lending institutions like the petitioner
herein.
From the foregoing, there is no doubt that the petitioner PNB, as a
government lending institution, is obliged to accept payments made to it by
the private respondents, through the Land Bank, in the form of Land Bank
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bonds at their par or face value. The petitioner may not discount said
payments but must apply the full face value of the bonds on the outstanding
balance. cdll
Footnotes
1. Penned by then Judge Augusto M. Amores, now Justice of the
Sandiganbayan.
9. Id., 13.
10. Where the law does not distinguish, we should not distinguish, Colgate v.
Jimenez, No. L-14787, January 28, 1961, 1 SCRA 267; Robles v. Zambales
Chromite, No. L-16182, August 29, 1961, 2 SCRA 1051.