FIRST DIVISION
[ G.R. No. 131726, May 07, 2002 ]YOLANDA PALATTAO v. CA +
YOLANDA PALATTAO, PETITIONER, VS. THE COURT OF APPEALS, HON. ANTONIO J. FINEZA, AS PRESIDING JUDGE OF THE REGIONAL TRIAL COURT OF CALOOCAN CITY, BRANCH 131 AND MARCELO CO, RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
YOLANDA PALATTAO v. CA +
YOLANDA PALATTAO, PETITIONER, VS. THE COURT OF APPEALS, HON. ANTONIO J. FINEZA, AS PRESIDING JUDGE OF THE REGIONAL TRIAL COURT OF CALOOCAN CITY, BRANCH 131 AND MARCELO CO, RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
This is a petition for review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court seeking to set aside the August 29, 1997 decision[1] and the November 28, 1997 resolution[2] of the Court of Appeals[3] in
CA-G.R. SP No. 40031, affirming the decision[4] of the Regional Trial Court of Caloocan City, Branch 131, in Civil Case No. C-17033 which reversed the Decision[5] of the Metropolitan Trial Court of Caloocan, Branch 53, in an ejectment
suit docketed as Civil Case No. 21755.
The antecedent facts are as follows: Petitioner Yolanda Palattao entered into a lease contract whereby she leased to private respondent a house and a 490-square-meter lot located in 101 Caimito Road, Caloocan City, covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 247536 and registered in the name of petitioner. The duration of the lease contract was for three years, commencing from January 1, 1991, to December 31, 1993, renewable at the option of the parties. The agreed monthly rental was P7,500.00 for the first year; P8,000.00 for the second year; and P8,500.00 for the third year. The contract gave respondent lessee the first option to purchase the leased property.[6]
During the last year of the contract, the parties began negotiations for the sale of the leased premises to private respondent. In a letter dated April 2, 1993, petitioner offered to sell to private respondent 413.28 square meters of the leased lot at P7,800.00 per square meter, or for the total amount of P3,223,548.00.[7] Private respondent replied on April 15, 1993 wherein he informed petitioner that he "shall definitely exercise [his] option [to buy]" the leased property.[8] Private respondent, however, manifested his desire to buy the whole 490-square-meter leased premises and inquired from petitioner the reason why only 413.28 square meters of the leased lot were being offered for sale. In a letter dated November 6, 1993, petitioner made a final offer to sell the lot at P7,500.00 per square meter with a downpayment of 50% upon the signing of the contract of conditional sale, the balance payable in one year with a monthly lease/interest payment of P14,000.00 which must be paid on or before the fifth day of every month that the balance is still outstanding.[9] On November 7, 1993, private respondent accepted petitioner's offer and reiterated his request for clarification as to the size of the lot for sale.[10] Petitioner acknowledged private respondent's acceptance of the offer in his letter dated November 10, 1993.
Petitioner gave private respondent on or before November 24, 1993, within which to pay the 50% downpayment in cash or manager's check. Petitioner stressed that failure to pay the downpayment on the stipulated period will enable petitioner to freely sell her property to others. Petitioner likewise notified private respondent that she is no longer renewing the lease agreement upon its expiration on December 31, 1993.[11]
Private respondent did not accept the terms proposed by petitioner. Neither was there any documents of sale nor payment by private respondent of the required downpayment. Private respondent wrote a letter to petitioner on November 29, 1993 manifesting his intention to exercise his option to renew their lease contract for another three years, starting January 1, 1994 to December 31, 1996.[12] This was rejected by petitioner, reiterating that she was no longer renewing the lease. Petitioner demanded that private respondent vacate the premises, but the latter refused.
Hence, private respondent filed with the Regional Trial Court of Caloocan, Branch 127, a case for specific performance, docketed as Civil Case No. 16287,[13] seeking to compel petitioner to sell to him the leased property. Private respondent further prayed for the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction to prevent petitioner from filing an ejectment case upon the expiration of the lease contract on December 31, 1993.
During the proceedings in the specific performance case, the parties agreed to maintain the status quo. After they failed to reach an amicable settlement, petitioner filed the instant ejectment case before the Metropolitan Trial Court of Caloocan City, Branch 53.[14] In his answer,[15] private respondent alleged that he refused to vacate the leased premises because there was a perfected contract of sale of the leased property between him and petitioner. Private respondent argued that he did not abandon his option to buy the leased property and that his proposal to renew the lease was but an alternative proposal to the sale. He further contended that the filing of the ejectment case violated their agreement to maintain the status quo.
On July 28, 1995, the Metropolitan Trial Court rendered a decision in favor of petitioner. The dispositive portion thereof states:
The Court of Appeals ruled that petitioner was estopped from filing the instant ejectment suit against private respondent by the alleged status quo agreement reached in the specific performance case filed by private respondent against petitioner. A reading, however, of the transcript of stenographic notes taken during the January 21, 1994 hearing discloses that the agreement to maintain the status quo pertained only to the duration of the negotiation for an amicable settlement and was not intended to be operative until the final disposition of the specific performance case. Thus:
In Wilmon Auto Supply Corporation, et al., v. Court of Appeals, et al.,[23] the issue of whether or not an ejectment case based on expiration of lease contract should be abated by an action to enforce the right of preemption or prior purchase of the leased premises was resolved in the negative. The Court outlined the following precedents:
Contracts that are consensual in nature, like a contract of sale, are perfected upon mere meeting of the minds. Once there is concurrence between the offer and the acceptance upon the subject matter, consideration, and terms of payment, a contract is produced. The offer must be certain. To convert the offer into a contract, the acceptance must be absolute and must not qualify the terms of the offer; it must be plain, unequivocal, unconditional, and without variance of any sort from the proposal. A qualified acceptance, or one that involves a new proposal, constitutes a counter-offer and is a rejection of the original offer. Consequently, when something is desired which is not exactly what is proposed in the offer, such acceptance is not sufficient to generate consent because any modification or variation from the terms of the offer annuls the offer.[27]
In the case at bar, while it is true that private respondent informed petitioner that he is accepting the latter's offer to sell the leased property, it appears that they did not reach an agreement as to the extent of the lot subject of the proposed sale. This is evident from the April 15, 1993 reply-letter of private respondent to petitioner, to wit:
Even assuming that the parties reached an agreement as to the size of the lot subject of the sale, the records show that there was subsequently a mutual withdrawal from the contract.[30] This is so because in the November 10, 1993 letter of petitioner, she gave private respondent until November 24, 1993 to pay 50% of the purchase price, with the caveat that failure to do so would authorize her to sell to others the leased premises. The period within which to pay the downpayment is a new term or a counter-offer in the contract which needs acceptance by private respondent. The latter, however, failed to pay said downpayment, or to at least manifest his conformity to the period given by petitioner. Neither did private respondent ask for an extension nor insist on the sale of the subject lot. What appears in the record is private respondent's November 29, 1993 letter informing petitioner that he shall exercise or avail of the option to renew their lease contract for another three years, starting January 1, 1994 to December 31, 1996. Evidently, there was a subsequent mutual backing out from the contract of sale. Hence, private respondent cannot compel petitioner to sell the leased property to him.
Considering that the lease contract was not renewed after its expiration on December 31, 1991, private respondent has no more right to continue occupying the leased premises. Consequently, his ejectment therefrom must be sustained.
As to the monthly rental to be paid by private respondent from the expiration of their contract of lease until the premises is vacated, we find that the P12,000.00 awarded by the Metropolitan Trial Court must be reduced to P8,500.00, it being the highest amount of monthly rental stated in the lease contract.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The August 29, 1997 decision and the November 28, 1997 resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 40031 are SET ASIDE. The Decision of the Metropolitan Trial Court of Caloocan, Branch 53, in Civil Case No. 21755 is REINSTATED subject to the modification that the monthly rental to be paid by private respondent from the date of the termination of the lease contract until the leased premises is vacated is reduced to P8,500.00.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., (Chairman), Puno, Kapunan, and Austria-Martinez, JJ., concur.
[1] Rollo, p. 51.
[2] Rollo, p. 64.
[3] Fifteenth Division, composed of Associate Justices Ruben T. Reyes (Ponente), Artemio G. Tuquero (Member) and Fermin A. Martin, Jr., (Chairman).
[4] Penned by Judge Antonio J. Fineza (Rollo, p. 68).
[5] Penned by Judge Romanito A. Amatong (Rollo, p. 145).
[6] (F) FIRST OPTION. The Lessor warrants that the Lessee shall have first option in purchasing the said property if circumstances should necessitate the sale of the said property by the Lessor. Provided, however, that the price should not exceed the fair market value at the time of the proposed sale.
[7] Rollo, p. 78.
[8] Ibid., p. 79.
[9] Id., p. 80.
[10] Id., p. 81.
[11] Id., p. 82.
[12] Id., p. 83.
[13] Rollo, p. 85.
[14] Rollo, p. 116.
[15] Rollo, p. 121.
[16] Rollo, p. 147.
[17] Rollo, p. 71.
[18] Rollo, p. 28.
[19] Rollo, pp. 111-112.
[20] Rollo, p. 114.
[21] Rollo, p. 321.
[22] Amagan, et al. v. Marayag, 326 SCRA 581, 589 [2000], citing Vda. de Legaspi v. Avendaño, 79 SCRA 135 [1977].
[23] 208 SCRA 108, 115-116 [1992].
[24] Supra.
[25] Go, et al. v. Court of Appeals, et al., 297 SCRA 574, 585 [1998].
[26] Rosales, et al. v. Court of First Instance of Lanao Del Norte, Branch III, et al., 154 SCRA 153, 159 [1987].
[27] ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation v. Court of Appeals, et al., 301 SCRA 572, 592-593 [1999], citing IV Arturo M. Tolentino, Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the Civil Code of the Philippines 450 (6th ed., 1996).
[28] Rollo, p. 79.
[29] Rollo, p. 81.
[30] Pagco, et al. v. Court of Appeals, et al., 231 SCRA 354, 360 [1994], citing Paras, Civil Code, Vol. IV, p. 569, 1989 Ed.
The antecedent facts are as follows: Petitioner Yolanda Palattao entered into a lease contract whereby she leased to private respondent a house and a 490-square-meter lot located in 101 Caimito Road, Caloocan City, covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 247536 and registered in the name of petitioner. The duration of the lease contract was for three years, commencing from January 1, 1991, to December 31, 1993, renewable at the option of the parties. The agreed monthly rental was P7,500.00 for the first year; P8,000.00 for the second year; and P8,500.00 for the third year. The contract gave respondent lessee the first option to purchase the leased property.[6]
During the last year of the contract, the parties began negotiations for the sale of the leased premises to private respondent. In a letter dated April 2, 1993, petitioner offered to sell to private respondent 413.28 square meters of the leased lot at P7,800.00 per square meter, or for the total amount of P3,223,548.00.[7] Private respondent replied on April 15, 1993 wherein he informed petitioner that he "shall definitely exercise [his] option [to buy]" the leased property.[8] Private respondent, however, manifested his desire to buy the whole 490-square-meter leased premises and inquired from petitioner the reason why only 413.28 square meters of the leased lot were being offered for sale. In a letter dated November 6, 1993, petitioner made a final offer to sell the lot at P7,500.00 per square meter with a downpayment of 50% upon the signing of the contract of conditional sale, the balance payable in one year with a monthly lease/interest payment of P14,000.00 which must be paid on or before the fifth day of every month that the balance is still outstanding.[9] On November 7, 1993, private respondent accepted petitioner's offer and reiterated his request for clarification as to the size of the lot for sale.[10] Petitioner acknowledged private respondent's acceptance of the offer in his letter dated November 10, 1993.
Petitioner gave private respondent on or before November 24, 1993, within which to pay the 50% downpayment in cash or manager's check. Petitioner stressed that failure to pay the downpayment on the stipulated period will enable petitioner to freely sell her property to others. Petitioner likewise notified private respondent that she is no longer renewing the lease agreement upon its expiration on December 31, 1993.[11]
Private respondent did not accept the terms proposed by petitioner. Neither was there any documents of sale nor payment by private respondent of the required downpayment. Private respondent wrote a letter to petitioner on November 29, 1993 manifesting his intention to exercise his option to renew their lease contract for another three years, starting January 1, 1994 to December 31, 1996.[12] This was rejected by petitioner, reiterating that she was no longer renewing the lease. Petitioner demanded that private respondent vacate the premises, but the latter refused.
Hence, private respondent filed with the Regional Trial Court of Caloocan, Branch 127, a case for specific performance, docketed as Civil Case No. 16287,[13] seeking to compel petitioner to sell to him the leased property. Private respondent further prayed for the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction to prevent petitioner from filing an ejectment case upon the expiration of the lease contract on December 31, 1993.
During the proceedings in the specific performance case, the parties agreed to maintain the status quo. After they failed to reach an amicable settlement, petitioner filed the instant ejectment case before the Metropolitan Trial Court of Caloocan City, Branch 53.[14] In his answer,[15] private respondent alleged that he refused to vacate the leased premises because there was a perfected contract of sale of the leased property between him and petitioner. Private respondent argued that he did not abandon his option to buy the leased property and that his proposal to renew the lease was but an alternative proposal to the sale. He further contended that the filing of the ejectment case violated their agreement to maintain the status quo.
On July 28, 1995, the Metropolitan Trial Court rendered a decision in favor of petitioner. The dispositive portion thereof states:
WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, ordering the defendant and all persons claiming right under him to pay the plaintiff as follows:On appeal, the Regional Trial Court reversed the assailed decision, disposing as follows:
SO ORDERED.[16]
- P12,000.00 per month representing reasonable monthly rental from January 1, 1994 and months thereafter until defendants shall vacate the subject premises;
- P10,000.00 representing attorney's fee;
- To pay the cost of suit.
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, the assailed decision of the Metropolitan Trial Court, Branch 53, this City, rendered on July 28, 1995, is hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE, with costs de officio.Aggrieved, petitioner filed a petition for review with the Court of Appeals, which dismissed the petition. Likewise, the motion for reconsideration was denied on August 29, 1997. Hence, the instant petition anchored upon the following grounds:
SO ORDERED.[17]
The petition is impressed with merit.ITHE COURT OF APPEALS AND RTC, CALOOCAN CITY, BRANCH 131, ERRED IN DECLARING THAT PETITIONER IS GUILTY OF ESTOPPEL IN FILING AN EJECTMENT CASE AGAINST RESPONDENT CO.
IITHE COURT OF APPEALS AND RTC, CALOOCAN CITY, BRANCH 131, ERRED IN FINDING THAT AN INJUNCTIVE SUIT WILL BAR THE FILING OF EJECTMENT CASE AGAINST RESPONDENT CO.
IIITHE RTC, CALOOCAN CITY, BRANCH 131, ERRED IN DECLARING THAT THERE WAS A PERFECTED CONTRACT OF SALE BETWEEN THE PARTIES OVER THE LEASED PROPERTY.[18]
The Court of Appeals ruled that petitioner was estopped from filing the instant ejectment suit against private respondent by the alleged status quo agreement reached in the specific performance case filed by private respondent against petitioner. A reading, however, of the transcript of stenographic notes taken during the January 21, 1994 hearing discloses that the agreement to maintain the status quo pertained only to the duration of the negotiation for an amicable settlement and was not intended to be operative until the final disposition of the specific performance case. Thus:
The foregoing agreement to maintain the status quo pending negotiations was noted by the trial court in its January 21, 1994 Order postponing the hearing to enable the parties to arrive at an amicable settlement, to wit:x x x x x x x x x
Court
Before we go into the prayer for preliminary injunction and of the merit of the case I want to see if I can make the parties settle their differences.
Atty. Siapan
We will in the meantime maintain the status quo on the matter pending further negotiation.
Court
As a matter of injunction, are you willing to maintain a status quo muna [?]
Atty. Mendez
Yes, your Honor.
Court
How about Atty. Uy are you willing?
Atty. Uy
Yes, your Honor.
Court
I will not issue any injunction but there will be a status quo and we will concentrate our efforts on letting the parties to (sic) negotiate and enter into an agreement.[19]
x x x x x x x x x
I will give you the same facts of the case. I want to settle this and not go into trial because in due time I will not finish the case, my stay here is only Acting Presiding Judge and there are other judges nominated for this sala and once the judge will be (sic) appointed then I go, let us get advantage of settling the matter. I will have your gentleman's agreement that there will be no adversarial attitude among you will (sic) never arrive at any agreement.
Atty. Siapan
In the meantime, we will move for a resetting of this case your Honor.
Court
Anyway, this is a gentleman's agreement that there will be no new movement but the status quo will be maintained.
Atty. Siapan, Atty. Mendez & Atty. Uy.
Yes, your Honor. (simultaneously (sic) in saying)[20]
Upon agreement of the parties herein for postponement of today's schedule as there might be some possibility of settling the claims herein, let the hearing today be cancelled.It is beyond cavil therefore that the preservation of the status quo agreed upon by the parties applied only during the period of negotiations for an amicable settlement and cannot be construed to be effective for the duration of the pendency of the specific performance case. It is a settled rule that injunction suits and specific performance cases, inter alia, will not preclude the filing of, or abate, an ejectment case. Unlawful detainer and forcible entry suits under Rule 70 are designed to summarily restore physical possession of a piece of land or building to one who has been illegally or forcibly deprived thereof, without prejudice to the settlement of the parties' opposing claims of juridical possession in appropriate proceedings. It has been held that these actions "are intended to avoid disruption of public order by those who would take the law in their hands purportedly to enforce their claimed right of possession." In these cases, the issue is pure physical or de facto possession, and pronouncements made on questions of ownership are provisional in nature.[22]
In the meantime this case is set for hearing on February 28, 1994 at 8:30 a.m., should the parties not arrive at any amicable settlement.[21]
In Wilmon Auto Supply Corporation, et al., v. Court of Appeals, et al.,[23] the issue of whether or not an ejectment case based on expiration of lease contract should be abated by an action to enforce the right of preemption or prior purchase of the leased premises was resolved in the negative. The Court outlined the following precedents:
Only in rare instances is suspension allowed to await the outcome of the pending civil action. In Wilmon, the Court recognized that Vda. De Legaspi v. Avendaño[24] was an exception to the general rule against suspension of an ejectment proceeding.[25] Thus:The underlying reasons for the above ruling were that the actions in the Regional Trial Court did not involve physical or de facto possession, and, on not a few occasions, that the case in the Regional Trial Court was merely a ploy to delay disposition of the ejectment proceeding, or that the issues presented in the former could quite as easily be set up as defenses in the ejectment action and there resolved.
- Injunction suits instituted in the RTC by defendants in ejectment actions in the municipal trial courts or other courts of the first level (Nacorda v. Yatco, 17 SCRA 920 [1966]) do not abate the latter; and neither do proceedings on consignation of rentals (Lim Si v. Lim, 98 Phil. 868 [1956], citing Pue, et al. v. Gonzales, 87 Phil. 81 [1950]).
- An "accion publiciana" does not suspend an ejectment suit against the plaintiff in the former (Ramirez v. Bleza, 106 SCRA 187 [1981]).
- A "writ of possession case" where ownership is concededly the principal issue before the Regional Trial Court does not preclude nor bar the execution of the judgment in an unlawful detainer suit where the only issue involved is the material possession or possession de facto of the premises (Heirs of F. Guballa, Sr. v. C.A., et al.; etc., 168 SCRA 518 [1988]).
- An action for quieting of title to property is not a bar to an ejectment suit involving the same property (Quimpo v. de la Victoria, 46 SCRA 139 [1972]).
- Suits for specific performance with damages do not affect ejectment actions (e.g., to compel renewal of a lease contract) (Desamito v. Cuyegkeng, 18 SCRA 1184 [1966]; Rosales v. CFI, 154 SCRA 153 [1987]; Commander Realty, Inc. v. C.A., 161 SCRA 264 [1988]).
- An action for reformation of instrument (e.g., from deed of absolute sale to one of sale with pacto de retro) does not suspend an ejectment suit between the same parties (Judith v. Abragan, 66 SCRA 600 [1975]).
- An action for reconveyance of property or "accion reivindicatoria" also has no effect on ejectment suits regarding the same property (Del Rosario v. Jimenez, 8 SCRA 549 [1963]; Salinas v. Navarro, 126 SCRA 167; De la Cruz v. C.A., 133 SCRA 520 [1984]); Drilon v. Gaurana, 149 SCRA 352 [1987]; Ching v. Malaya, 153 SCRA 412 [1987]; Philippine Feeds Milling Co., Inc. v. C.A., 174 SCRA 108; Dante v. Sison, 174 SCRA 517 [1989]; Guzman v. C.A. [annulment of sale and reconveyance], 177 SCRA 604 [1989]; Demamay v. C.A., 186 SCRA 608 [1990]; Leopoldo Sy v. C.A., et al., [annulment of sale and reconveyance], G.R. No. 95818, Aug. 2, 1991).
- Neither do suits for annulment of sale, or title, or document affecting property operate to abate ejectment actions respecting the same property (Salinas v. Navarro [annulment of deed of sale with assumption of mortgage and/or to declare the same an equitable mortgage], 126 SCRA 167 [1983]; Ang Ping v. RTC [annulment of sale and title], 154 SCRA 153 [1987]; Caparros v. C.A. [annulment of title], 170 SCRA 758 [1989]; Dante v. Sison [annulment of sale with damages], 174 SCRA 517; Galgala v. Benguet Consolidated, Inc. [annulment of document], 177 SCRA 288 [1989]).
x x x [A]s regards the seemingly contrary ruling in Vda. de Legaspi v. Avendano, 89 SCRA 135 (1977), this Court observed in Salinas v. Navarro, 126 SCRA 167, 172-173 (1983), that 'the exception to the rule in this case of Vda. de Legaspi is based on strong reasons of equity not found in the present petition. The right of the petitioner is not so seriously placed in issue in the annulment case as to warrant a deviation, on equitable grounds, from the imperative nature of the rule. In the Vda. de Legaspi case, execution of the decision in the ejectment case would also have meant demolition of the premises, a factor not present in this petition.In the case at bar, the continued occupation by private respondent of the leased premises is conditioned upon his right to acquire ownership over said property. The factual milieu obtaining here, however, hardly falls within the aforecited exception as the resolution of the ejectment suit will not result in the demolition of the leased premises, as in the case of Vda. De Legaspi v. Avendaño. Verily, private respondent failed to show "strong reasons of equity" to sustain the suspension or dismissal of the ejectment case. Argumentum a simili valet in lege. Precedents are helpful in deciding cases when they are on all fours or at least substantially identical with previous litigations.[26] Faced with the same scenario on which the general rule is founded, and finding no reason to deviate therefrom, the Court adheres to the settled jurisprudence that suits involving ownership may not be successfully pleaded in abatement of an action for ejectment.
Contracts that are consensual in nature, like a contract of sale, are perfected upon mere meeting of the minds. Once there is concurrence between the offer and the acceptance upon the subject matter, consideration, and terms of payment, a contract is produced. The offer must be certain. To convert the offer into a contract, the acceptance must be absolute and must not qualify the terms of the offer; it must be plain, unequivocal, unconditional, and without variance of any sort from the proposal. A qualified acceptance, or one that involves a new proposal, constitutes a counter-offer and is a rejection of the original offer. Consequently, when something is desired which is not exactly what is proposed in the offer, such acceptance is not sufficient to generate consent because any modification or variation from the terms of the offer annuls the offer.[27]
In the case at bar, while it is true that private respondent informed petitioner that he is accepting the latter's offer to sell the leased property, it appears that they did not reach an agreement as to the extent of the lot subject of the proposed sale. This is evident from the April 15, 1993 reply-letter of private respondent to petitioner, to wit:
I would like to inform you that I shall definitely exercise my option as embodied in Provision "F" (First Option) of our Contract of Lease dated December 21, 1990. As per agreement, my first option covers the 490 square meters site which I am currently leasing from you at 101 Caimito Road, Caloocan City. Specifically, your Transfer Certificate of Title #247536 delineates the property sizes as 492 square meters.Likewise, in his November 7, 1993 reply-letter, private respondent stated that:
Your offer, however, states only 413.28 square meters are for sale to me. I trust that this is merely an oversight on your part. Notwithstanding the rumors to the effect that part of the property have already been sold to other parties, I would like to believe that you still retain absolute ownership over the entire property covered by my Contract of Lease. Kindly enlighten me on this matter so that we can proceed with the negotiations for the sale of your property to me.[28]
While it is true that you first offered your property for sale to me last April 14, 1993, it is also equally true that you only correspond with me on this matter again on October 27, 1993. I answered your April 14 offer with a registered mail on April 15, 1993. In it, I stated that I am definitely exercising my first option to purchase your property in accordance with Provisions "F" of our Contract of Lease dated December 21, 1990. Likewise, I requested you to explain the discrepancy between the size of the property being offered for sale (413.28 square meters) as against the size stated in my option which is 492 square meters. However, I did not get any reply from you on this matter. Hence the negotiations got stalled. If anybody should be blamed for the prolonged negotiation, then surely it is not all mine alone.[29]The foregoing letters reveal that private respondent did not give his consent to buy only 413.28 square meters of the leased lot, as he desired to purchase the whole 490 square-meter-leased premises which, however, was not what was exactly proposed in petitioner's offer. Clearly, therefore, private respondent's acceptance of petitioner's offer was not absolute, and will consequently not generate consent that would perfect a contract.
Even assuming that the parties reached an agreement as to the size of the lot subject of the sale, the records show that there was subsequently a mutual withdrawal from the contract.[30] This is so because in the November 10, 1993 letter of petitioner, she gave private respondent until November 24, 1993 to pay 50% of the purchase price, with the caveat that failure to do so would authorize her to sell to others the leased premises. The period within which to pay the downpayment is a new term or a counter-offer in the contract which needs acceptance by private respondent. The latter, however, failed to pay said downpayment, or to at least manifest his conformity to the period given by petitioner. Neither did private respondent ask for an extension nor insist on the sale of the subject lot. What appears in the record is private respondent's November 29, 1993 letter informing petitioner that he shall exercise or avail of the option to renew their lease contract for another three years, starting January 1, 1994 to December 31, 1996. Evidently, there was a subsequent mutual backing out from the contract of sale. Hence, private respondent cannot compel petitioner to sell the leased property to him.
Considering that the lease contract was not renewed after its expiration on December 31, 1991, private respondent has no more right to continue occupying the leased premises. Consequently, his ejectment therefrom must be sustained.
As to the monthly rental to be paid by private respondent from the expiration of their contract of lease until the premises is vacated, we find that the P12,000.00 awarded by the Metropolitan Trial Court must be reduced to P8,500.00, it being the highest amount of monthly rental stated in the lease contract.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The August 29, 1997 decision and the November 28, 1997 resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 40031 are SET ASIDE. The Decision of the Metropolitan Trial Court of Caloocan, Branch 53, in Civil Case No. 21755 is REINSTATED subject to the modification that the monthly rental to be paid by private respondent from the date of the termination of the lease contract until the leased premises is vacated is reduced to P8,500.00.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., (Chairman), Puno, Kapunan, and Austria-Martinez, JJ., concur.
[1] Rollo, p. 51.
[2] Rollo, p. 64.
[3] Fifteenth Division, composed of Associate Justices Ruben T. Reyes (Ponente), Artemio G. Tuquero (Member) and Fermin A. Martin, Jr., (Chairman).
[4] Penned by Judge Antonio J. Fineza (Rollo, p. 68).
[5] Penned by Judge Romanito A. Amatong (Rollo, p. 145).
[6] (F) FIRST OPTION. The Lessor warrants that the Lessee shall have first option in purchasing the said property if circumstances should necessitate the sale of the said property by the Lessor. Provided, however, that the price should not exceed the fair market value at the time of the proposed sale.
[7] Rollo, p. 78.
[8] Ibid., p. 79.
[9] Id., p. 80.
[10] Id., p. 81.
[11] Id., p. 82.
[12] Id., p. 83.
[13] Rollo, p. 85.
[14] Rollo, p. 116.
[15] Rollo, p. 121.
[16] Rollo, p. 147.
[17] Rollo, p. 71.
[18] Rollo, p. 28.
[19] Rollo, pp. 111-112.
[20] Rollo, p. 114.
[21] Rollo, p. 321.
[22] Amagan, et al. v. Marayag, 326 SCRA 581, 589 [2000], citing Vda. de Legaspi v. Avendaño, 79 SCRA 135 [1977].
[23] 208 SCRA 108, 115-116 [1992].
[24] Supra.
[25] Go, et al. v. Court of Appeals, et al., 297 SCRA 574, 585 [1998].
[26] Rosales, et al. v. Court of First Instance of Lanao Del Norte, Branch III, et al., 154 SCRA 153, 159 [1987].
[27] ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation v. Court of Appeals, et al., 301 SCRA 572, 592-593 [1999], citing IV Arturo M. Tolentino, Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the Civil Code of the Philippines 450 (6th ed., 1996).
[28] Rollo, p. 79.
[29] Rollo, p. 81.
[30] Pagco, et al. v. Court of Appeals, et al., 231 SCRA 354, 360 [1994], citing Paras, Civil Code, Vol. IV, p. 569, 1989 Ed.