THIRD DIVISION
[ G.R. No. 139884, February 15, 2001 ]SPS. OCTAVIO v. CA +
SPOUSES OCTAVIO AND EPIFANIA LORBES, PETITIONERS, VS. COURT OF APPEALS, RICARDO DELOS REYES AND JOSEFINA CRUZ, RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
SPS. OCTAVIO v. CA +
SPOUSES OCTAVIO AND EPIFANIA LORBES, PETITIONERS, VS. COURT OF APPEALS, RICARDO DELOS REYES AND JOSEFINA CRUZ, RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
GONZAGA-REYES, J.:
This petition for review on certiorari arose from an action for reformation of instrument and damages originally filed with the Regional Trial Court of Antipolo, Rizal, Branch 74, the decision on which was reviewed and reversed by the Third Division of the
Court of Appeals.
Petitioners were the registered owners of a 225-square meter parcel of land located in Antipolo, Rizal covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 165009. Sometime in August 1991, petitioners mortgaged this property to Florencio and Nestor Carlos in the amount of P150,000.00.
About a year later, the mortgage obligation had increased to P500,000.00 and fearing foreclosure of the property, petitioners asked their son-in-law, herein private respondent Ricardo delos Reyes, for help in redeeming their property. Private respondent delos Reyes agreed to redeem the property but because he allegedly had no money then for the purpose he solicited the assistance of private respondent Josefina Cruz, a family friend of the delos Reyeses and an employee of the Land Bank of the Philippines.
It was agreed that petitioners will sign a deed of sale conveying the mortgaged property in favor of private respondent Cruz and thereafter, Cruz will apply for a housing loan with Land Bank, using the subject property as collateral. It was further agreed that out of the proceeds of the loan, P500,000.00 will be paid to the Carloses as mortgagees, and any such balance will be applied by petitioners for capital gains tax, expenses for the cancellation of the mortgage to the Carloses, transfer of title to Josefina Cruz, and registration of a mortgage in favor of Land Bank.[1] Moreover, the monthly amortization on the housing loan which was supposed to be deducted from the salary of private respondent Cruz will be reimbursed by private respondent delos Reyes.
On September 29, 1992, the Land Bank issued a letter of guarantee in favor of the Carloses, informing them that Cruz's loan had been approved. On October 22, 1992, Transfer Certificate of Title No. 165009 was cancelled and Transfer Certificate of Title No. 229891 in the name of Josefina Cruz was issued in lieu thereof.[2] On November 25, 1992, the mortgage was discharged.
Sometime in 1993, petitioners notified private respondent delos Reyes that they were ready to redeem the property but the offer was refused. Aggrieved, petitioners filed on July 22, 1994 a complaint for reformation of instrument and damages with the RTC of Antipolo, Rizal, docketed as Civil Case No. 94-3296.
In the complaint, petitioners claimed that the deed was merely a formality to meet the requirements of the bank for the housing loan, and that the real intention of the parties in securing the loan was to apply the proceeds thereof for the payment of the mortgage obligation.[3] They alleged that the deed of sale did not reflect the true intention of the parties, and that the transaction was not an absolute sale but an equitable mortgage, considering that the price of the sale was inadequate considering the market value of the subject property and because they continued paying the real estate taxes thereto even after the execution of the said deed of sale. Petitioners averred that they did not see any reason why private respondents would retract from their original agreement other than that they (petitioners) and the members of their family resigned en masse from the Mahal Namin Organization, of which private respondent delos Reyes was the president and chairman of the board of directors, and private respondent Cruz was the treasurer. In the same complaint, they demanded moral damages, exemplary damages, and attorney's fees.
On July 29, 1996, the trial court issued a temporary restraining order enjoining private respondents from ejecting petitioners from the premises of the disputed property; this was soon replaced by a writ of preliminary injunction.
Summons and a copy of the complaint were served upon private respondents on August 1, 1994. Private respondents filed their answer beyond the reglamentary period, or only on September 1, 1994. Thus, on September 5, 1994, petitioners filed a motion to declare private respondents in default, which the trial court granted in an order dated September 16, 1994. On September 30 of the same year, petitioners presented their evidence ex parte before the trial court. The principal witness presented was petitioner Octavio Lorbes, whose testimony was corroborated by his son, Atty. Salvador Lorbes.
On October 12, 1994, private respondents filed a motion to lift order of default and to strike out evidence presented ex parte, which the court denied in an order dated October 26, 1994.
On June 20, 1995, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of petitioners, upon finding that: (1) the Deed of Absolute Sale dated October 21, 1992 did not reflect the true intention of the parties, and (2) the transaction entered into between petitioners and Cruz was not an absolute sale but an equitable mortgage, considering that the price stated in the Deed of Absolute Sale was insufficient compared to the value of the property, petitioners are still in possession of the property, and petitioners had continued to pay the real estate taxes thereon after the execution of the said deed of sale. As explained by the trial court in its decision:
The Court of Appeals held that the reformation of the Deed of Absolute Sale in the instant case is improper because there is no showing that such instrument failed to express the true intention of the parties by reason of mistake, fraud, inequitable conduct, or accident in the execution thereof.[6] To the Court of Appeals, the transaction was unmistakably a contract of sale, as evidenced by the numerous supporting documents thereto, such as the Contract to Sell dated June 1992, Affidavit of Waiver/Assignment dated August 14, 1992, Receipt of Partial Advance Payment dated September 9, 1992, and Transfer Certificate of Title No. 229891 issued in the name of private respondent Cruz. Going over the indicators giving rise to a presumption of equitable mortgage cited in the decision of the RTC, the Court of Appeals held: (1) inadequacy of price is material only in a sale with right to repurchase, which is not the case with herein petitioners and Cruz; moreover, the estimate of the market value of the property came only from the bare testimony of petitioner Octavio Lorbes, (2) petitioners' remaining in possession of the property resulted only from their refusal to vacate the same despite the lawful demands of private respondent Cruz, and (3) there was no documentary evidence that petitioners continued paying the taxes on the disputed property after the execution of the Deed of Absolute Sale.
In its decision, the Court of Appeals also pointed out that under the usual arrangement of pacto de retro the vendor of the property is a debtor of the vendee, and the property is used as security for his obligation. In the instant case, the mortgage creditors (the Carloses) are third persons to the Deed of Absolute Sale.
This petition raises three issues before the Court: (1) whether respondent court erred in ruling that the Deed of Absolute Sale dated October 21, 1992 was an equitable mortgage, (2) whether respondent court erred in ruling that by declaring private respondents in default they were denied due process of law, and (3) whether respondent court erred in ruling that the trial court's decision violates the constitutional requirement that it should clearly and distinctly state the facts and the law on which it is based.[7]
We shall first deal with the second and third issues, these being preliminary matters.
Well-settled is the rule that courts should be liberal in setting aside orders of default for judgments of default are frowned upon, unless in cases where it clearly appears that the reopening of the case is intended for delay.[8] The issuance of orders of default should be the exception rather than the rule, to be allowed only in clear cases of obstinate refusal by the defendant to comply with the orders of the trial court.[9]
Under the factual milieu of this case, the RTC was indeed remiss in denying private respondents' motion to lift the order of default and to strike out the evidence presented by petitioners ex parte, especially considering that an answer was filed, though out of time. We thus sustain the holding of the Court of Appeals that the default order of the RTC was immoderate and in violation of private respondents' due process rights. However, we do not think that the violation was of a degree as to justify a remand of the proceedings to the trial court, first, because such relief was not prayed for by private respondents, and second, because the affirmative defenses and evidence that private respondents would have presented before the RTC were capably ventilated before respondent court, and were taken into account by the latter in reviewing the correctness of the evaluation of petitioners' evidence by the RTC and ultimately, in reversing the decision of the RTC. This is evident from the discussions in the decision of the Court of Appeals, which cited with approval a number of private respondents' arguments and evidence, including the documents annexed to their opposition to the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction filed with the RTC.[10] To emphasize, the reversal of respondent court was not simply on due process grounds but on the merits, going into the issue of whether the transaction was one of equitable mortgage or of sale, and so we find that we can properly take cognizance of the substantive issue in this case, while of course bearing in mind the inordinate manner by which the RTC issued its default order.
As regards the third issue, we reverse for being unfounded the holding of the Court of Appeals since the RTC decision, some parts of which we even reproduced in our earlier discussions, clearly complied with the constitutional requirement to state clearly and distinctly the facts and the law on which it was based.
Thus, the one issue essential to the resolution of this case is the nature of the transaction between petitioners and private respondent Cruz concerning the subject parcel of land. Did the parties intend for the contested Deed of Absolute Sale to be a bona fide and absolute conveyance of the property, or merely an equitable mortgage?
On the outset, it must be emphasized that there is no conclusive test to determine whether a deed absolute on its face is really a simple loan accommodation secured by a mortgage.[11] "The decisive factor in evaluating such agreement is the intention of the parties, as shown not necessarily by the terminology used in the contract but by all the surrounding circumstances, such as the relative situation of the parties at that time, the attitude, acts, conduct, declarations of the parties, the negotiations between them leading to the deed, and generally, all pertinent facts having a tendency to fix and determine the real nature of their design and understanding. As such, documentary and parol evidence may be submitted and admitted to prove the intention of the parties."[12]
The conditions which give way to a presumption of equitable mortgage, as set out in Article 1602 of the Civil Code, apply with equal force to a contract purporting to be one of absolute sale.[13] Moreover, the presence of even one of the circumstances laid out in Article 1602, and not a concurrence of the circumstances therein enumerated, suffices to construe a contract of sale to be one of equitable mortgage.[14] This is simply in consonance with the rule that the law favors the least transmission of property rights.[15]
Thus, under Article 1602 of the Civil Code, a contract shall be presumed to be an equitable mortgage when --- (a) the price of a sale with right to repurchase is unusually inadequate; (b) the vendor remains in possession as lessee or otherwise; (c) upon or after the expiration of the right of repurchase another instrument extending the period of redemption or granting a new period is executed; (d) the purchaser retains for himself a part of the purchase price; (e) the vendor binds himself to pay the taxes on the thing sold; and, (f) in any other case where it may be fairly inferred that the real intention of the parties is that the transaction shall secure the payment of a debt or the performance of any other obligation.
Applying the foregoing considerations to the instant case, the Court finds that the true intention between the parties for executing the Deed of Absolute Sale was not to convey ownership of the property in question but merely to secure the housing loan of Cruz, in which petitioners had a direct interest since the proceeds thereof were to be immediately applied to their outstanding mortgage obligation to the Carloses.
It is not disputed that before the execution of the Deed of Absolute Sale petitioners' mortgage obligation to the Carloses was nearing maturity and they were in dire need of money to meet the same. Hence, they asked for the help of their son-in-law delos Reyes who in turn requested Cruz to take out a housing loan with Land Bank. Since collateral is a standard requirement of banks in giving out loans, it was made to appear that the subject property was sold to Cruz so she can declare the same as collateral for the housing loan. This was simply in line with the basic requirement in our laws that the mortgagor be the absolute owner of the property sought to be mortgaged.[16] Consistent with their agreement, as soon as the housing loan was approved, the full amount of the proceeds were immediately turned over to petitioners, who promptly paid P500,000.00 therefrom to the Carloses in full satisfaction of their mortgage obligation. The balance was spent by petitioners in transferring title to the property to Cruz and registering the new mortgage with Land Bank.
Understandably, the Deed of Absolute Sale and its supporting documents do not reflect the true arrangement between the parties as to how the loan proceeds are to be actually applied because it was not the intention of the parties for these documents to do so. The sole purpose for preparing these documents was to satisfy Land Bank that the requirement of collateral relative to Cruz's application for a housing loan was met.
Were we to accept, as respondent court had, that the loan that Cruz took out with Land Bank was indeed a housing loan, then it is rather curious that Cruz kept none of the loan proceeds but allowed for the bulk thereof to be immediately applied to the payment of petitioners' outstanding mortgage obligation. It also strains credulity that petitioners, who were exhausting all means to save their sole conjugal real property from being foreclosed by the Carloses, would concurrently part with the same in favor of Cruz.
Such urgent prospect of foreclosure helps to explain why petitioners would subscribe to an agreement like the Deed of Absolute Sale in the herein case, which on its face represents their unconditional relinquishment of ownership over their property. Passing upon previous similar situations the Court has declared that "while it was true that plaintiffs were aware of the contents of the contracts, the preponderance of the evidence showed however that they signed knowing that said contracts did not express their real intention, and if they did so notwithstanding this, it was due to the urgent necessity of obtaining funds. "Necessitous men are not, truly speaking, free men; but to answer a present emergency, will submit to any terms that the crafty may impose upon them.'"[17]
The facts further bear out that petitioners remained in possession of the disputed property after the execution of the Deed of Absolute Sale and the transfer of registered title to Cruz in October 1992. Cruz made no demand on petitioners to vacate the subject premises until March 19, 1994;[18] interestingly, this was two days after petitioners signified their intention to redeem the property by paying the full amount of P600,000.00.[19] On this basis, the finding of respondent court that petitioners remained in possession of the property only because they refused to vacate on Cruz's demand is not accurate because the records reflect that no such demand was made until more than a year since the purported sale of the property.
Copies of realty tax receipts attached to the record also show that petitioners continued paying for the taxes on the property for the period 1992 to 1994,[20] or after the property was supposed to have been sold to Cruz.
From the above, the Court is satisfied that enough of the circumstances set out in Article 1602 of the Civil Code are attendant in the instant case, as to show that the true arrangement between petitioners and private respondent Cruz was an equitable mortgage.
That a transfer certificate of title was issued in favor of private respondent Cruz also does not import conclusive evidence of ownership or that the agreement between the parties was one of sale. As was stated in Oronce vs. Court of Appeals,[21] citing Macapinlac vs. Gutierrez Repide[22]
Finally, on the award of damages. Considering the due process flaws that attended the default judgment of the RTC, and applying the rule adopted by this Court that in instances where no actual damages are adjudicated the awards for moral and exemplary damages may be reduced,[25] we reduce the award for moral damages in the instant case from P50,000.00 to P30,000.00. At the same time, we sustain the award of attorney's fees in the amount of P50,000.00, it being clear that petitioners were compelled to incur expenses and undergo the rigors of litigation to recover their property.
WHEREFORE, the decision of the Court of Appeals is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The decision of the Regional Trial Court of Antipolo, Rizal is REINSTATED, with the MODIFICATION that the award of moral damages is reduced to P30,000.00, and in all other respects AFFIRMED. Costs against private respondents.
SO ORDERED.
Melo (Chairman), Vitug, Panganiban, and Sandoval-Gutierrez, JJ., concur.
[1] CA Decision; Rollo, 46. Complaint; Records of the Case, 4.
[2] Annex "4"; Records of the Case, 34.
[3] Petition; Rollo, 15.
[4] RTC Decision; Rollo, 38-39.
[5] Ibid., 39-40.
[6] Citing NIA vs. Gamit, 215 SCRA 436.
[7] Petition; Rollo, 20-21.
[8] Tanchan vs. Court of Appeals, 305 SCRA 491; Gerales vs. Court of Appeals, 218 SCRA 638.
[9] Leyte vs. Cusi, 152 SCRA 496.
[10] See CA Decision; Rollo, 52-53.
[11] Spouses Reyes vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 134166, August 25, 2000.
[12] Id.
[13] Art. 1604, Civil Code; Aguirre vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 131520, January 28, 2000; Misena vs. Rongavilla, 303 SCRA 749.
[14] Aguirre vs. Court of Appeals, supra.
[15] Aguirre vs. Court of Appeals, supra; Oronce vs. Court of Appeals, 298 SCRA 133.
[16] Art. 2085, Civil Code.
[17] Lao vs. Court of Appeals, 275 SCRA 237; Zamora vs. Court of Appeals, 260 SCRA 10; Labasan vs. Lacuesta, 86 SCRA 16.
[18] Annex "G" to Plaintiffs-Petitioners' Joint Affidavit (in support of the prayer for the issuance of preliminary injunction); Records of the Case, 50.
[19] See Annex "F" to Plaintiffs-Petitioners' Joint Affidavit (in support of the prayer for the issuance of preliminary injunction); Records of the Case, 49.
[20] Annex "I" to Plaintiffs-Petitioners' Joint Affidavit (in support of the prayer for the issuance of preliminary injunction); Records of the Case, 52.
[21] Supra, at note 13.
[22] 43 Phil. 770. Reiterated in Lao vs. Court of Appeals, supra; Olea vs. Court of Appeals, 317 Phil. 328.
[23] CA Decision; Rollo, 51-52. See Art. 1359, Civil Code.
[24] Solid Homes, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals, 271 SCRA 157.
[25] Tiongco vs. Deguma, 317 SCRA 527, citing Del Rosario vs. Court of Appeals, 267 SCRA 158.
Petitioners were the registered owners of a 225-square meter parcel of land located in Antipolo, Rizal covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 165009. Sometime in August 1991, petitioners mortgaged this property to Florencio and Nestor Carlos in the amount of P150,000.00.
About a year later, the mortgage obligation had increased to P500,000.00 and fearing foreclosure of the property, petitioners asked their son-in-law, herein private respondent Ricardo delos Reyes, for help in redeeming their property. Private respondent delos Reyes agreed to redeem the property but because he allegedly had no money then for the purpose he solicited the assistance of private respondent Josefina Cruz, a family friend of the delos Reyeses and an employee of the Land Bank of the Philippines.
It was agreed that petitioners will sign a deed of sale conveying the mortgaged property in favor of private respondent Cruz and thereafter, Cruz will apply for a housing loan with Land Bank, using the subject property as collateral. It was further agreed that out of the proceeds of the loan, P500,000.00 will be paid to the Carloses as mortgagees, and any such balance will be applied by petitioners for capital gains tax, expenses for the cancellation of the mortgage to the Carloses, transfer of title to Josefina Cruz, and registration of a mortgage in favor of Land Bank.[1] Moreover, the monthly amortization on the housing loan which was supposed to be deducted from the salary of private respondent Cruz will be reimbursed by private respondent delos Reyes.
On September 29, 1992, the Land Bank issued a letter of guarantee in favor of the Carloses, informing them that Cruz's loan had been approved. On October 22, 1992, Transfer Certificate of Title No. 165009 was cancelled and Transfer Certificate of Title No. 229891 in the name of Josefina Cruz was issued in lieu thereof.[2] On November 25, 1992, the mortgage was discharged.
Sometime in 1993, petitioners notified private respondent delos Reyes that they were ready to redeem the property but the offer was refused. Aggrieved, petitioners filed on July 22, 1994 a complaint for reformation of instrument and damages with the RTC of Antipolo, Rizal, docketed as Civil Case No. 94-3296.
In the complaint, petitioners claimed that the deed was merely a formality to meet the requirements of the bank for the housing loan, and that the real intention of the parties in securing the loan was to apply the proceeds thereof for the payment of the mortgage obligation.[3] They alleged that the deed of sale did not reflect the true intention of the parties, and that the transaction was not an absolute sale but an equitable mortgage, considering that the price of the sale was inadequate considering the market value of the subject property and because they continued paying the real estate taxes thereto even after the execution of the said deed of sale. Petitioners averred that they did not see any reason why private respondents would retract from their original agreement other than that they (petitioners) and the members of their family resigned en masse from the Mahal Namin Organization, of which private respondent delos Reyes was the president and chairman of the board of directors, and private respondent Cruz was the treasurer. In the same complaint, they demanded moral damages, exemplary damages, and attorney's fees.
On July 29, 1996, the trial court issued a temporary restraining order enjoining private respondents from ejecting petitioners from the premises of the disputed property; this was soon replaced by a writ of preliminary injunction.
Summons and a copy of the complaint were served upon private respondents on August 1, 1994. Private respondents filed their answer beyond the reglamentary period, or only on September 1, 1994. Thus, on September 5, 1994, petitioners filed a motion to declare private respondents in default, which the trial court granted in an order dated September 16, 1994. On September 30 of the same year, petitioners presented their evidence ex parte before the trial court. The principal witness presented was petitioner Octavio Lorbes, whose testimony was corroborated by his son, Atty. Salvador Lorbes.
On October 12, 1994, private respondents filed a motion to lift order of default and to strike out evidence presented ex parte, which the court denied in an order dated October 26, 1994.
On June 20, 1995, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of petitioners, upon finding that: (1) the Deed of Absolute Sale dated October 21, 1992 did not reflect the true intention of the parties, and (2) the transaction entered into between petitioners and Cruz was not an absolute sale but an equitable mortgage, considering that the price stated in the Deed of Absolute Sale was insufficient compared to the value of the property, petitioners are still in possession of the property, and petitioners had continued to pay the real estate taxes thereon after the execution of the said deed of sale. As explained by the trial court in its decision:
The foregoing uncontroverted facts clearly show that the transaction entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendants is not an absolute sale but merely an equitable mortgage as the sale was executed in order to secure a loan from a certain bank to save the property from the danger of foreclosure and to use it as collateral thereof for bank loan purposes and that the same does not reflect the real intention of the parties in executing the said Deed of Sale. The court notes that at the time the transaction and the Deed of Absolute Sale was executed by the plaintiffs sometime in 1992, the prevailing market value of the lot alone was P400,000.00 per square meter such that the lot alone consisting of 255 square meters, excluding the house and improvements thereon would already cost more than a million pesos already hence, the consideration of P600,000.00 in the said Deed of Sale is considerably insufficient compared to the value of the property. Further, the plaintiffs are still in possession of the subject property and had been paying the realty taxes thereon even after the execution of the sale and the transfer of the title from the plaintiffs to defendant Josephine Cruz which clearly evinces the true badge of the transaction which occurred between the plaintiffs and defendants as that of an equitable mortgage and not an absolute sale and that the plaintiffs were only compelled to enter into the said transaction of sale with the defendants as the former were in extreme need of money in order to redeem their only conjugal property and to save it from being foreclosed for non-payment of the mortgage obligation and that it was never the intention of the plaintiffs to sell the property to the defendants, as it was their agreement that plaintiffs can redeem the property or any member of the family thereof, when they become financially stable.[4]The dispositive portion of the trial court's decision thus provides:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants, ordering the latter jointly and severally, as follows:The Court of Appeals reversed the above decision, finding that private respondents were denied due process by the refusal of the trial court to lift the order of default against them, and that the transaction between petitioners and Cruz was one of absolute sale, not of equitable mortgage. It also held the RTC decision to be constitutionally infirm for its failure to clearly and distinctly state the facts and the law on which it is based.
SO ORDERED.[5]
- To reconvey the subject property to the plaintiffs upon payment of the price stipulated in the contract of sale;
- To pay plaintiffs the sum of P50,000.00 as moral damages;
- To pay plaintiffs the sum of P50,000.00 as and by way of attorney's fees plus P1,000.00 per court appearance;
- To pay the costs of suit.
The Court of Appeals held that the reformation of the Deed of Absolute Sale in the instant case is improper because there is no showing that such instrument failed to express the true intention of the parties by reason of mistake, fraud, inequitable conduct, or accident in the execution thereof.[6] To the Court of Appeals, the transaction was unmistakably a contract of sale, as evidenced by the numerous supporting documents thereto, such as the Contract to Sell dated June 1992, Affidavit of Waiver/Assignment dated August 14, 1992, Receipt of Partial Advance Payment dated September 9, 1992, and Transfer Certificate of Title No. 229891 issued in the name of private respondent Cruz. Going over the indicators giving rise to a presumption of equitable mortgage cited in the decision of the RTC, the Court of Appeals held: (1) inadequacy of price is material only in a sale with right to repurchase, which is not the case with herein petitioners and Cruz; moreover, the estimate of the market value of the property came only from the bare testimony of petitioner Octavio Lorbes, (2) petitioners' remaining in possession of the property resulted only from their refusal to vacate the same despite the lawful demands of private respondent Cruz, and (3) there was no documentary evidence that petitioners continued paying the taxes on the disputed property after the execution of the Deed of Absolute Sale.
In its decision, the Court of Appeals also pointed out that under the usual arrangement of pacto de retro the vendor of the property is a debtor of the vendee, and the property is used as security for his obligation. In the instant case, the mortgage creditors (the Carloses) are third persons to the Deed of Absolute Sale.
This petition raises three issues before the Court: (1) whether respondent court erred in ruling that the Deed of Absolute Sale dated October 21, 1992 was an equitable mortgage, (2) whether respondent court erred in ruling that by declaring private respondents in default they were denied due process of law, and (3) whether respondent court erred in ruling that the trial court's decision violates the constitutional requirement that it should clearly and distinctly state the facts and the law on which it is based.[7]
We shall first deal with the second and third issues, these being preliminary matters.
Well-settled is the rule that courts should be liberal in setting aside orders of default for judgments of default are frowned upon, unless in cases where it clearly appears that the reopening of the case is intended for delay.[8] The issuance of orders of default should be the exception rather than the rule, to be allowed only in clear cases of obstinate refusal by the defendant to comply with the orders of the trial court.[9]
Under the factual milieu of this case, the RTC was indeed remiss in denying private respondents' motion to lift the order of default and to strike out the evidence presented by petitioners ex parte, especially considering that an answer was filed, though out of time. We thus sustain the holding of the Court of Appeals that the default order of the RTC was immoderate and in violation of private respondents' due process rights. However, we do not think that the violation was of a degree as to justify a remand of the proceedings to the trial court, first, because such relief was not prayed for by private respondents, and second, because the affirmative defenses and evidence that private respondents would have presented before the RTC were capably ventilated before respondent court, and were taken into account by the latter in reviewing the correctness of the evaluation of petitioners' evidence by the RTC and ultimately, in reversing the decision of the RTC. This is evident from the discussions in the decision of the Court of Appeals, which cited with approval a number of private respondents' arguments and evidence, including the documents annexed to their opposition to the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction filed with the RTC.[10] To emphasize, the reversal of respondent court was not simply on due process grounds but on the merits, going into the issue of whether the transaction was one of equitable mortgage or of sale, and so we find that we can properly take cognizance of the substantive issue in this case, while of course bearing in mind the inordinate manner by which the RTC issued its default order.
As regards the third issue, we reverse for being unfounded the holding of the Court of Appeals since the RTC decision, some parts of which we even reproduced in our earlier discussions, clearly complied with the constitutional requirement to state clearly and distinctly the facts and the law on which it was based.
Thus, the one issue essential to the resolution of this case is the nature of the transaction between petitioners and private respondent Cruz concerning the subject parcel of land. Did the parties intend for the contested Deed of Absolute Sale to be a bona fide and absolute conveyance of the property, or merely an equitable mortgage?
On the outset, it must be emphasized that there is no conclusive test to determine whether a deed absolute on its face is really a simple loan accommodation secured by a mortgage.[11] "The decisive factor in evaluating such agreement is the intention of the parties, as shown not necessarily by the terminology used in the contract but by all the surrounding circumstances, such as the relative situation of the parties at that time, the attitude, acts, conduct, declarations of the parties, the negotiations between them leading to the deed, and generally, all pertinent facts having a tendency to fix and determine the real nature of their design and understanding. As such, documentary and parol evidence may be submitted and admitted to prove the intention of the parties."[12]
The conditions which give way to a presumption of equitable mortgage, as set out in Article 1602 of the Civil Code, apply with equal force to a contract purporting to be one of absolute sale.[13] Moreover, the presence of even one of the circumstances laid out in Article 1602, and not a concurrence of the circumstances therein enumerated, suffices to construe a contract of sale to be one of equitable mortgage.[14] This is simply in consonance with the rule that the law favors the least transmission of property rights.[15]
Thus, under Article 1602 of the Civil Code, a contract shall be presumed to be an equitable mortgage when --- (a) the price of a sale with right to repurchase is unusually inadequate; (b) the vendor remains in possession as lessee or otherwise; (c) upon or after the expiration of the right of repurchase another instrument extending the period of redemption or granting a new period is executed; (d) the purchaser retains for himself a part of the purchase price; (e) the vendor binds himself to pay the taxes on the thing sold; and, (f) in any other case where it may be fairly inferred that the real intention of the parties is that the transaction shall secure the payment of a debt or the performance of any other obligation.
Applying the foregoing considerations to the instant case, the Court finds that the true intention between the parties for executing the Deed of Absolute Sale was not to convey ownership of the property in question but merely to secure the housing loan of Cruz, in which petitioners had a direct interest since the proceeds thereof were to be immediately applied to their outstanding mortgage obligation to the Carloses.
It is not disputed that before the execution of the Deed of Absolute Sale petitioners' mortgage obligation to the Carloses was nearing maturity and they were in dire need of money to meet the same. Hence, they asked for the help of their son-in-law delos Reyes who in turn requested Cruz to take out a housing loan with Land Bank. Since collateral is a standard requirement of banks in giving out loans, it was made to appear that the subject property was sold to Cruz so she can declare the same as collateral for the housing loan. This was simply in line with the basic requirement in our laws that the mortgagor be the absolute owner of the property sought to be mortgaged.[16] Consistent with their agreement, as soon as the housing loan was approved, the full amount of the proceeds were immediately turned over to petitioners, who promptly paid P500,000.00 therefrom to the Carloses in full satisfaction of their mortgage obligation. The balance was spent by petitioners in transferring title to the property to Cruz and registering the new mortgage with Land Bank.
Understandably, the Deed of Absolute Sale and its supporting documents do not reflect the true arrangement between the parties as to how the loan proceeds are to be actually applied because it was not the intention of the parties for these documents to do so. The sole purpose for preparing these documents was to satisfy Land Bank that the requirement of collateral relative to Cruz's application for a housing loan was met.
Were we to accept, as respondent court had, that the loan that Cruz took out with Land Bank was indeed a housing loan, then it is rather curious that Cruz kept none of the loan proceeds but allowed for the bulk thereof to be immediately applied to the payment of petitioners' outstanding mortgage obligation. It also strains credulity that petitioners, who were exhausting all means to save their sole conjugal real property from being foreclosed by the Carloses, would concurrently part with the same in favor of Cruz.
Such urgent prospect of foreclosure helps to explain why petitioners would subscribe to an agreement like the Deed of Absolute Sale in the herein case, which on its face represents their unconditional relinquishment of ownership over their property. Passing upon previous similar situations the Court has declared that "while it was true that plaintiffs were aware of the contents of the contracts, the preponderance of the evidence showed however that they signed knowing that said contracts did not express their real intention, and if they did so notwithstanding this, it was due to the urgent necessity of obtaining funds. "Necessitous men are not, truly speaking, free men; but to answer a present emergency, will submit to any terms that the crafty may impose upon them.'"[17]
The facts further bear out that petitioners remained in possession of the disputed property after the execution of the Deed of Absolute Sale and the transfer of registered title to Cruz in October 1992. Cruz made no demand on petitioners to vacate the subject premises until March 19, 1994;[18] interestingly, this was two days after petitioners signified their intention to redeem the property by paying the full amount of P600,000.00.[19] On this basis, the finding of respondent court that petitioners remained in possession of the property only because they refused to vacate on Cruz's demand is not accurate because the records reflect that no such demand was made until more than a year since the purported sale of the property.
Copies of realty tax receipts attached to the record also show that petitioners continued paying for the taxes on the property for the period 1992 to 1994,[20] or after the property was supposed to have been sold to Cruz.
From the above, the Court is satisfied that enough of the circumstances set out in Article 1602 of the Civil Code are attendant in the instant case, as to show that the true arrangement between petitioners and private respondent Cruz was an equitable mortgage.
That a transfer certificate of title was issued in favor of private respondent Cruz also does not import conclusive evidence of ownership or that the agreement between the parties was one of sale. As was stated in Oronce vs. Court of Appeals,[21] citing Macapinlac vs. Gutierrez Repide[22]
xxx it must be borne in mind that the equitable doctrine xxx to the effect that any conveyance intended as security for a debt will be held in effect to be a mortgage, whether so actually expressed in the instrument or not, operates regardless of the form of the agreement chosen by the contracting parties as the repository of their will. Equity looks through the form and considers the substance; and no kind of engagement can be adopted which will enable the parties to escape from the equitable doctrine to which reference is made. In other words, a conveyance of land, accompanied by registration in the name of the transferee and the issuance of a new certificate, is no more secured from the operation of the equitable doctrine than the most informal conveyance that could be devised.Before we fully set aside this issue, it will be recalled that the instant petition originated as a complaint for reformation filed before the RTC of Antipolo, Rizal. The Court of Appeals found petitioners' action for reformation unmeritorious because there was no showing that the failure of the deed of sale to express the parties' true intention was because of mistake, fraud, inequitable conduct, or accident.[23] Indeed, under the facts of the present case, reformation may not be proper for failure to fully meet the requisites in Article 1359 of the Civil Code, and because as the evidence eventually bore out the contested Deed of Absolute Sale was not intended to reflect the true agreement between the parties but was merely to comply with the collateral requirements of Land Bank. However, the fact that the complaint filed by petitioners before the trial court was categorized to be one for reformation of instrument should not preclude the Court from passing upon the issue of whether the transaction was in fact an equitable mortgage as the same has been squarely raised in the complaint and had been the subject of arguments and evidence of the parties. Thus we have held that it is not the caption of the pleading but the allegations therein that determine the nature of the action, and the Court shall grant relief warranted by the allegations and the proof even if no such relief is prayed for.[24]
Finally, on the award of damages. Considering the due process flaws that attended the default judgment of the RTC, and applying the rule adopted by this Court that in instances where no actual damages are adjudicated the awards for moral and exemplary damages may be reduced,[25] we reduce the award for moral damages in the instant case from P50,000.00 to P30,000.00. At the same time, we sustain the award of attorney's fees in the amount of P50,000.00, it being clear that petitioners were compelled to incur expenses and undergo the rigors of litigation to recover their property.
WHEREFORE, the decision of the Court of Appeals is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The decision of the Regional Trial Court of Antipolo, Rizal is REINSTATED, with the MODIFICATION that the award of moral damages is reduced to P30,000.00, and in all other respects AFFIRMED. Costs against private respondents.
SO ORDERED.
Melo (Chairman), Vitug, Panganiban, and Sandoval-Gutierrez, JJ., concur.
[1] CA Decision; Rollo, 46. Complaint; Records of the Case, 4.
[2] Annex "4"; Records of the Case, 34.
[3] Petition; Rollo, 15.
[4] RTC Decision; Rollo, 38-39.
[5] Ibid., 39-40.
[6] Citing NIA vs. Gamit, 215 SCRA 436.
[7] Petition; Rollo, 20-21.
[8] Tanchan vs. Court of Appeals, 305 SCRA 491; Gerales vs. Court of Appeals, 218 SCRA 638.
[9] Leyte vs. Cusi, 152 SCRA 496.
[10] See CA Decision; Rollo, 52-53.
[11] Spouses Reyes vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 134166, August 25, 2000.
[12] Id.
[13] Art. 1604, Civil Code; Aguirre vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 131520, January 28, 2000; Misena vs. Rongavilla, 303 SCRA 749.
[14] Aguirre vs. Court of Appeals, supra.
[15] Aguirre vs. Court of Appeals, supra; Oronce vs. Court of Appeals, 298 SCRA 133.
[16] Art. 2085, Civil Code.
[17] Lao vs. Court of Appeals, 275 SCRA 237; Zamora vs. Court of Appeals, 260 SCRA 10; Labasan vs. Lacuesta, 86 SCRA 16.
[18] Annex "G" to Plaintiffs-Petitioners' Joint Affidavit (in support of the prayer for the issuance of preliminary injunction); Records of the Case, 50.
[19] See Annex "F" to Plaintiffs-Petitioners' Joint Affidavit (in support of the prayer for the issuance of preliminary injunction); Records of the Case, 49.
[20] Annex "I" to Plaintiffs-Petitioners' Joint Affidavit (in support of the prayer for the issuance of preliminary injunction); Records of the Case, 52.
[21] Supra, at note 13.
[22] 43 Phil. 770. Reiterated in Lao vs. Court of Appeals, supra; Olea vs. Court of Appeals, 317 Phil. 328.
[23] CA Decision; Rollo, 51-52. See Art. 1359, Civil Code.
[24] Solid Homes, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals, 271 SCRA 157.
[25] Tiongco vs. Deguma, 317 SCRA 527, citing Del Rosario vs. Court of Appeals, 267 SCRA 158.