G. R. No. 34646

MARTIN BAGUINGUITO ET AL., PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLANTS, VS. NICOLAS RIVERA, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT. FELIPE PILARES ET AL., INTERVENORS AND APPELLEES, AND MANUEL DE GUIA, INTERVENOR AND APPELLANT. [G.R. No. 34647] RAYMUNDO ANDRES ET AL., PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLANTS, VS. NICOLAS RIVERA, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT. FELIPE PILARES ET AL., INTERVENORS AND APPELLEES, AND MANUEL DE GUIA, INTERVENOR AND APPELLANT. D E C I S I O N

[ G. R. No. 34646. December 31, 1931 ] 56 Phil. 423

[ G. R. No. 34646. December 31, 1931 ]

MARTIN BAGUINGUITO ET AL., PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLANTS, VS. NICOLAS RIVERA, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT. FELIPE PILARES ET AL., INTERVENORS AND APPELLEES, AND MANUEL DE GUIA, INTERVENOR AND APPELLANT. [G.R. No. 34647] RAYMUNDO ANDRES ET AL., PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLANTS, VS. NICOLAS RIVERA, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT. FELIPE PILARES ET AL., INTERVENORS AND APPELLEES, AND MANUEL DE GUIA, INTERVENOR AND APPELLANT. D E C I S I O N

STREET, J.:

An intelligent conception of these cases  can  be reached only  through a knowledge of prior litigation to  which they are related and from which they are in part derived. Many years ago proceedings were  instituted by the Tuasons as owners  of the Maysilo Estate in the municipality of Malabon,  Province of Rizal, to register the estate under the Torrens system.  Trouble arose with the occupants of various lots in the estate, and a compromise was effected  by which opposition to the  registration of the estate in the name of the Tuasons was  withdrawn, with the understanding that one Nicolas Rivera should take an option on lots Nos. 27, 28 and  29.  The  first payment on this option, in the amount of P1,879,  was made out of funds collected by Rivera as representative  from the numerous intending, purchasers. By the terms of this option, extended in the name of Rivera as purchaser, full payment was required  within four years from January, 1918.   As between Rivera and the Tuason estate, this contract was personal, his representative character not being  recognized.  Time passed  and the  rights of the tenants lapsed because  of their failure to make further payments.   Rivera, however, managed to transfer the option  before it died to Remigia Sanchez.  The latter in turn transferred it to Vicente Singson Encarnacion who,  by paying the contract price for the property involved, secured a deed to the property and in the end obtained the certificate of transfer in his own name.  Singson thereafter sold lot No.  28 to Vicente Arias and lots Nos. 27 and 29  to Baldomero Roxas, after  which the occupants  of parts of these lots for whom Rivera had originally undertaken to  act instituted an action (Dizon vs. Rivera, 48 Phil.,  996), seeking to recover lots Nos. 27, 28 and 29 and to  secure the  cancellation of the successive transfers of the property from Rivera to Sanchez and,  through Singson, to the  ultimate vendees.   The effect of the decision of this court in that case was to deny the right of the plaintiffs to recover the land, with reservation to them of the right to obtain an accounting from Rivera for alleged breach of trust. The following excerpt from  the decision of this court in that case exhibits our conclusion in so far as affected the claim of the plaintiffs to the land:

“*   *   *   The plaintiffs  acknowledged that the  ownership of these lots was in the owners of the Maysilo Estate and they only obtained the option to buy these lots upon the conditions specified in the contract entered into with them. All that they did, through their representative Nicolas Rivera,  in regard to  this  option was to  pay the amount of P1,879, equivalent to 10 per cent of the purchase price of the lots; but this was not all that was necessary in order for them to acquire the ownership of these lots.   In addition, they had  to  complete the payment of the purchase price within four years  from January, 1918,  failing in which their  option would  expire and the estate  would be free to sell the lots  to other persons.  The plaintiffs, neither by themselves nor  through their representative Nicolas  Rivera,  have paid the balance of the purchase price of these lots wherefore  they have not acquired their ownership.”

Going back now to the deed of  December, 1919, from Rivera to Sanchez,  we observe that in that conveyance Rivera reserved to himself the right to repurchase 40 hectares to be  carved out of lots Nos. 27, 28 and 29.   This right to repurchase was also noted in the conveyance from Sanchez to Singson, as well as  in the later conveyances  from Singson to Arias and Roxas.  The result was that the last named owners were obligated to respect Rivera’s option to repurchase an area of 40 hectares.  This obligation was not fixed upon any defined tract containing 40 hectares, but was in the nature of a personal obligation on the part of the vendees to allow Rivera to repurchase 40 hectares somewhere or anywhere within the confines of the three lots mentioned. The existence of this reservation did not escape the attention of the litigants or of the court in Dizon vs. Rivera, supra; and while testifying as  a witness in that case, Rivera explained that the purpose of the reservation was to protect those of the occupants who had bought and had paid, or were paying, for specified amounts of land in the three lots. Attention is thus roughly drawn to the fact that there were two classes of occupants  on the land, namely, those who had never  done anything more than to make the first payment on the original option through  Rivera, and those who continued their payments and ultimately completed the same.  These two classes of persons will appear  as opposing parties in the litigation now before  us, the first class comprising the  plaintiffs (hereinafter to be referred to as Baguinguito and associates); and the second class comprising the intervenors-appellees (to be  referred to as Pilares and associates).   In testifying as a witness in the litigation above  referred  to, Rivera gave the names of the individuals who had continued their payments and in whose favor consequently the reservation of right of repurchase was principally  made.  These  individuals were subsequently introduced to Singson by Rivera, and to Singson the final payments were made through M. P. Leuterio, agent of Singson.  It  is pretended by the appellants  in  this  case that the payments above-mentioned were never in fact  made. But everybody who had any interest in receiving the money admits its payment and the receipts, though involved in a little confusion,  sufficiently prove that those payments in fact were made, as the trial court found. We have said that the reservation  of 40 hectares  was made in the interest of those occupants who had completed or were completing their payments, a statement which is not exactly true, for the land to be allocated to them was only part of the area reserved.  The other portion was intended for other  individuals who were outsiders, namely, Julio Gregorio,  Jose B. Sanchez, M. P.  Leuterio, and Judge Fermin Mariano, whose rights are in the main undisputed. During the litigation which terminated in Dizon vs. Rivera (48 Phil.,  996), transfers of the property involved in that dispute were held in abeyance,  but after that case had been terminated and the title of Singson and his successors to lots  Nos. 27, 28 and 29 had been declared indefeasible, the  problem  presented  itself as to the  most convenient method of conveying to Pilares and associates the amount of land to which they were severally entitled; and as the. demon of confusion would have it, it was decided that the land in- tended  for Pilares and associates should be reconveyed to Rivera, and that he, in turn, should thereupon transfer the several smaller  lots to the individuals respectively entitled thereto. A transfer to him was accordingly effected, and a certificate of title was issued to him covering the land intended  for the prospective owners. With all due respect to the aforesaid  demon of confusion, we further note that Pilares and associates were already occupants in fact of discrete parcels, and the owners of the larger mass found that if they conveyed to Pilares and associates the particular parcels already occupied by  them, the larger mass would be ruined by the irregular division. It was therefore decided, with the  consent of the persons entitled, to convey to the intending owners the appropriate amount of land in a mass, their separate lots being in juxtaposition with one another.   It was also agreed that the land so to be allotted should be carved out  of the precise area then occupied by Baguinguito and associates, who had been unsuccessful plaintiffs in the litigation lately concluded but who were still in possession of the lots originally held by them.  The necessary separate conveyances were therefore made to Pilares and associates, but these transfers have not as yet been followed by the issuance of the Torrens certificates, on account of the pendency of the litigation now before us. At this point we must interrupt what appears to be the natural sequence of things to call attention to another case, wherein  Manuel  de Guia, one  of  the losing plaintiffs  in Dizon vs. Rivera, supra, sued Rivera,  Singson and  Arias for the purpose of recovering some 3 hectares out of the 40 reserved for  Rivera in his deed  to  Sanchez.  The trial court decided  against De Guia, and upon appeal to the Supreme Court the decision was affirmed  (De Guia vs. Rivera, G.  R.  No.  29677)1  The vital  point  in the decision was that the case  was merely an attempt to  get what had been sought in  Dizon vs. Rivera,  and  it was  held  that  the last-named case constituted a  conclusive decision against the alleged right of the plaintiff. But, to resume the main narrative, it  will be  remembered that Baguinguito and associates, one of the two elements comprising the parties plaintiff in Dizon vs. Rivera supra, had a grievance against Rivera arising from his alleged breach  of trust towards them.   These  individuals, therefore, now finding Rivera  in  possession of the legal title to the land held by  him for the benefit of Pilares and associates,  descended  upon him in the two actions now before us, instituted on March 10 and October 28,  1926, in the Court of First Instance of Rizal.  In the first of these actions (civil  case No.  3262), Martin Baguinguito and others are plaintiffs, while Nicolas Rivera is the defendant. In the second  action (civil case  No. 3478), Raymundo Andres and others are  plaintiffs and Nicolas Rivera defendant. The purpose of each of the two actions is primarily to obtain an accounting for various sums of  money received by Rivera from them, as  well as to recover the profits  received by him from selling  the option to Sanchez.   But the plaintiffs further seek in these actions to recover severally various parcels of  land out of the 40 hectares reserved for Rivera in the conveyance to Sanchez and in part already conveyed to him as  above stated. In these actions Pilares and associates, altogether ten in number,  intervened, asserting their rights  to  the parcels conveyed to them in the deeds previously executed in their favor  by  Rivera.  Also,  Manuel de  Guia,  undaunted by his previous ill-success as a litigant, intervened, claiming the same property that had been denied to him in the prior litigation.   Other individuals also intervened, with whom we are not so extensively concerned, namely,  M. P. Leuterio and persons claiming under him.  The two actions, identical in their principal features, were consolidated for the purpose of trial and were disposed of  by the trial  court in a single opinion.   Meanwhile Rivera had died and his estate was,  at the time of the decision,  represented  by Emilio Rivera as his administrator. The appealed decision has a  number of dispositive  provisions, but the only  parts of it that are brought into discussion in this appeal are those relating to the title of  the land which had been  conveyed back to  Rivera and which  has been deeded by him  to the appellees in these cases  or their predecessors in interest.  The basic point in the  decision is that all these  individuals are the lawful  owners of the parcels thus conveyed and that, on the contrary, the plaintiffs in the two actions,  including the intervenor De Guia, have no enforceable legal claim to any part of it.  In order to carry  this  fundamental  finding into effect, the trial judge  ordered  that the  certificate of title  in  the name of Rivera covering this land should be cancelled and that other  certificates for various  portions thereof  should be issued to the following individuals  in the amounts stated, to wit:

sq. m.

To Felipe Pilares

25,000

To Luciano Espiritu

28,000

To Marcos Gajudo

31,000

To Mariano Pilares

22,000

To Crispulo Baetiong

2,731

To Maximo Pangyarihan

8,736

To Eugenio Espiritu

25,000

To Martin Alcantara

14,000

To Francisco Esguerra

15,000

To Quintin Gutierrez.

11,000

The total thus allotted  to the claimants above-mentioned is 182,467 square meters.  In addition  to  this the court awarded to the  estate of Carlos Cuyugan, as successor in interest of M. P.  Leuterio, a parcel containing 53,824.40 square  meters, also recognizing that a further  portion of 79,013.60 square meters that  had  belonged to Leuterio had passed  under execution to Salas and others.  Finally, the court found that there still remained in the same mass a lot  containing 500  square meters that had not been conveyed away by  Rivera to any one,  and  that consequently this amount of land still pertained to Rivera’s estate.  The court thus accounted  for a mass containing 315,805 square meters, or about 31 1/2  hectares.  This constitutes the major portion of the 40 hectares which had been reserved for Rivera,  the remainder  being the part which went to Judge Fermin Mariano and others  as already  indicated. From the decision  disposing of the principal  contention as above stated, an appeal was taken (1) by Baguinguito and associates, (2)  by the administrator of Nicolas Rivera, and (3)  by Manuel de Guia. An assignment of  error common  to the briefs of all of the appellants is directed  towards the supposed lack of authority, or jurisdiction, on the  part of the trial judge to sign the judgment in this case  on the date signed to the opinion.  In this connection  it appears that the trial judge. Francisco Zandueta, was specially assigned by the Secretary of Justice for duty in the Court of First Instance of Rizal during the vacation period of April and May, 1930; and this case was heard and finally submitted on May 23.   Upon this occasion  all the parties concerned were  present  in person or by attorney in the court; and after the submission of proof had been completed, the  court declared the trial terminated.   The attorney for the plaintiffs then requested that a period of twenty-five days be allowed for the presentation of his written  argument, and a like period was asked by  the  attorney  for the  appellees.   The court, however, conceded a period of fifteen  days only  to all.  This announcement met the approval of all concerned,  except De Guia who was present in person and objected. Upon these facts the point is now made that the  hearing of the cause on the date mentioned was incomplete and that, inasmuch as the memorandums of the litigants were permitted to  be filed after the assignment of the trial judge to the Court of First Instance of Rizal  had  lapsed, the  court  had  no jurisdiction to prepare the  judgment later.  The  point, in our opinion, is not well taken.   Section 13 of Act No. 867  of the Philippine Commission authorizes the judge to prepare his  judgment after  leaving  the province  where the case is tried, “if the case was heard  and duly  argued or an  opportunity given  for  argument to the parties  or their counsel  in  the proper province.”   Under the  facts above stated  it must be considered that the parties  waived the opportunity to present an oral argument at the time the cause was submitted;  and the fact that they were permitted to file written memorandums later did not render the hearing incomplete.  The  submission  of the memorandums was not, properly speaking, a part of the hearing or trial as understood in the provision cited.  It has been held that memorandums  of this sort form no necessary part of the bill  of exceptions (Alino  vs.  Villamor, 2 Phil., 234).  It results that the trial judge had authority to sign the judgment in this case. When the facts contained in the preceding narrative relative to the merits of the case  are clearly understood, it is at once seen that the decision of the trial court was correct and that the appeal is untenable.   There are two reasons for this.  The first is that  the decision in Dizon vs. Rivera  (48 Phil., 996), was a conclusive adjudication that the plaintiffs have  no right to any of the land with which we  are here concerned.   With respect to the intervenor De Guia there is the additional conclusive  adjudication in the action  brought by him  alone against  Rivera (G. R. No. 29677).  The second reason is that, even  supposing that the plaintiffs herein have a right of action  against Rivera, they have no right to take  from him land the title to which is held by him in trust for others (Pilares  and  associates) and in which he has no beneficial interest whatever. Upon the first  point  attention is directed to the fact that the land  which the plaintiffs seek to  recover in this case is a part of the land which the present  plaintiffs  (with others)  sought to recover from Rivera in Dizon  vs. Rivera, and the action is brought against the same individual who was primary defendant in that action.  Our decision  in that case declared that the  plaintiffs had no right to recover any part of the land there sued  for.  That determination is necessarily decisive of this.  Moreover, the 40 hectares which were reserved for repurchase by Rivera  in the sale made by him to Sanchez, and in  the later sales  to her successors, were not 40 hectares with any  defined boundaries. On  the contrary, the obligation imposed by said reservation was personal to the contracting parties and was  not fixed upon any definite parcel.   It results that our decision that Dizon.and his fellow-plaintiffs had no right  to the property necessarily covered every  square meter  of the three lots which were the subject of action  in that case.  In addition to this the fact should not be forgotten that although the reservation contemplating  repurchase by  Rivera of 40 hectares was the subject matter of discussion and  proof  in Dizon vs. Rivera, yet the plaintiffs did not procure, or even seek to procure, in that case a pronouncement that they were entitled to share in the 40  hectares thus to be reserved. Testifying as a witness in that case, Rivera made it clear that the reservation was made for the purpose of protecting Pilares and others who had completed the payments necessary to entitle  them to a conveyance.   To recognize the claim of the  plaintiffs in this case to any part of the land sued for in this action would be a direct reversal of the decision of this court in that case. Furthermore, as  the trial  judge pointed out in his decision in this  case, the point here in controversy was determined adversely to the contention of the present plaintiffs in the case of De Guia vs. Rivera,  G. R. No. 29677; and  the sole difference between the two cases is  that in the last named case De Guia exhibited a deed executed  by Rivera actually transferring  to De Guia the land which De Guia sought  to  recover in that case.  In finally disposing of De Guia vs. Rivera upon appeal, this court observed that the subject matter  of the action had been involved in the earlier case (Dizon vs. Rivera), although the theories upon which the two actions had been brought were different, and it was said that a party could not be permitted to  split  up a single cause of action and make it the basis of several suits.  “To hold otherwise,” said the  court, “would  lead to the encouragement of endless litigation.”  We see  no reason to doubt the correctness of that decision; and in the case before us it is  necessary to apply the same rule. Upon the second point, even supposing the present plaintiffs to have  a right of action against Rivera, the plaintiffs have no  right to take from him land which he holds  in trust for others and in which he has no beneficial interest. The  fact that the reservation in Rivera’s favor, recognizing his right  to buy back 40 hectares of land was made with a view to the protection of Pilares and associates who had paid the value of the land intended for them, and for  no one else, is clearly established;  and the fact that this is proved by oral testimony does not impair the rights of the persons to be benefited.  It is well settled that a trust can be  raised by parol proof, without the assistance of  any writing. There is a rule of equity to the effect that if a person who is under an equitable obligation  to convey land,  which obligation is defeated by his conveyance of the same  to an innocent purchaser, yet,  if such person after-wards takes a reconveyance to himself, all the equities that had formerly existed against him will revive and  become attached to the  land  in his  hands.   (2 Pom. Eq. Jur.  4th ed.,  sec. 754.)  This  rule might supposedly supply a  clue for here evading the effect of our  decision in Dizon vs. Rivera, but the difficulty is that the rule above stated cannot  be applied where the person who is subject  to the  equitable  obligation has  no beneficial interest in the property when the title comes back  to himself, and where on  the contrary such reconveyance is taken in trust  for third persons.  In the case before us Rivera was a mere conduit for conducting the title of the property from Encamacion and others to the actual purchasers of the  property. In whatever way the rights of the litigants in this case be viewed, whether  as depending upon the conclusiveness of the former judgments, or as depending upon equitable rights to the land, the result is inevitably reached that  the actual purchasers,  Pilares and associates, have the better  right, and that the plaintiffs have no just claim  upon the property in question. The foregoing  considerations  are decisive of  the case, although in the briefs of  the three different classes of appellants a number of other questions are raised which have been the subject  of extensive discussion.  For instance, it is asserted in behalf of the appellants that if the plaintiffs and Manuel  de Guia were plaintiffs in Dizon vs. Rivera, and bound by that decision, so also were the intervenors-appellees (PHares and associates); and  it is contended that the latter are precluded by said  judgment from asserting any right to the property  which was" the subject of contention in that case.   The answer is that  while  the appellees were nominal party plaintiffs in that case, they now claim by a title consistent with the decision therein reached, namely, a title derived by purchase from the successful litigant. In fact their arrangement for such purchase supplies the explanation of the fact that they were not  active litigants in the effort to defeat the title of the then defendants.  The appellants of course are not in any position effectually to object to that arrangement; and even  if the entire purchase price had not been paid by the appellees, yet the  successful parties  litigant in that case have a perfect right to convey it to whom they please, whether for  a valuable consideration or not.   Under that  judgment  Encarnacion and his successors had a complete jus disponendi and had full power to transfer a perfect title even to a volunteer. What has  been said  effectively disposes  of the controversy, and we deem it unnecessary to extend this opinion by entering into certain questions relative to the admissibility of certain proof and the efficacy of the transfer from Leuterio to Carlos Cuyugan. The judgment  appealed from will be affirmed, and it is so ordered, with costs against the appellants. Avanceña,  C. J., Ostrand, and Romualdez, JJ., concur.