Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
G.R. No. L-9336 December 23, 1915
TRANQUILINA ALCALA and SEGUNDO ALVIEDO, plaintiffs-appellants,
vs.
PEDRO HERNANDEZ and POTENCIANA PACLEB, defendants-appellees.
Pedro Abad Santos, Valentin Manglapus and Jose I. Pinzon for appellants.
William A. Kincaid and Thomas L. Hartigan for appellees.
ARELLANO, C.J.:
Tranquilina Alcala, assisted by her husband Segundo Alviedo, states in her complaint that a piece of land (called Nalbo and specified in no other manner) situated in the municipality of Luna, Province of La Union, capable of producing a crop of ten uyones of rice, had been in the possession of Pedro Hernandez and Potenciana Pacleb since 1894, and that subsequently, in March 29, 1909, she sold it to them for the sum of P700. On August 11, 1911, the plaintiff brought proceedings to recover the value of the fruits collected from the land during the fifteen years which elapsed between 1894 and 1909.
Defendants acknowledged that they knew what land the complaint referred to and they also called it the Nalbo land; but they asked that its sale to them by the plaintiff be avoided for the reason that the land did not belong to the latter, as defendants had mistakenly believed it did; and they prayed that plaintiff be ordered to return to them the P700 they had paid for the land.
Plaintiff, by her complaint, seeks to obtain as the fruits of said land during the fifteen years that defendants had been in its possession, 120 uyones of rice, or, in default thereof, P3,600, besides P1,000 for losses and damages.1awphil.net
The Court of First Instance of La Union, which tried the case, dismissed it, with the costs against the plaintiff Alcala. The latter appealed.
On appeal the appellant set up as an assignment of error that the lower court held that she had waived all claim against the defendants, not only with respect to the land but also with respect to its products.
We find the grounds of the judgment appealed from to be entirely in accord with the law.itc-a1f
Tranquilina Alcala executed two instruments in behalf of Potenciana Pacleb, in accordance with which the purchase price was paid in two installment (Exhibits B and C). In the first instrument the vendor's husband stated: "... and by reason of all the foregoing, my said wife waives absolutely all the right she may have to the ownership of the same." In the second instrument the same vendor, Tranquilina Alcala, says: "Finally, I hereby record that, as I have already received the total sum of P700, to my entire satisfaction, I absolutely will not raise any question whatsoever with reference to the property referred to in this instrument."
And from this last instrument, which is the final deed of sale, the following statement made by the plaintiff Alcala should be here transcribed: "I sell and convey it for the sum of P700 to Potenciana Pacleb ... as we had previously agreed to do between ourselves and Leoncio Pacleb, now deceased, who, since the year 1872, was in possession of that part of the land, after the execution of a formal contract before a notary public on March 19, 1907 (Exhibit B), in behalf of the aforementioned purchaser and her said husband Pedro Hernandez, who also, since the year 1894, were in possession of the part referred to; this part of said property is included in the plan which said purchaser has in her possession — that is, of the eastern and southern part shown on this same plan." (Exhibit C.)
Besides the preponderance of proof found by the trial judge in his examination of the testimony presented by both parties, there is the tenor of the two deeds of sale executed by the plaintiff Alcala in which she recognizes the possession of Leoncio Pacleb since the year 1872 and that of Potenciana Pacleb since 1894; this possession in the best of good faith is superior to even the legal presumption that exists in favor of these possessors Leoncio and Potenciana.
The fruits collected in good faith by a possessor during the time the possession is not legally interrupted become his own. (Civ. Code, art. 451.)
In the present case, the possession was at no time legally interrupted since 1872, as recognized by the plaintiff Alcala.
The complaint is absolutely unfounded.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed, in the sense that the defendants are absolved from the complaint, with the costs of both instances against the plaintiff. So ordered.
Torres, Johnson, Carson, Moreland, Trent, and Araullo, JJ., concur.
The Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation