Petitioners Vs Vs Respondents: Second Division
Petitioners Vs Vs Respondents: Second Division
Petitioners Vs Vs Respondents: Second Division
DECISION
PEREZ , J : p
Before the Court is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules
of Civil Procedure assailing the Decision 1 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No.
100450 which a rmed the Decision of the O ce of the President in O.P. Case No. 06-F-
216.
As culled from the records, the facts are as follow:
Petitioner Fil-Estate Properties, Inc. is the owner and developer of the Central Park
Place Tower while co-petitioner Fil-Estate Network, Inc. is its authorized marketing agent.
Respondent Spouses Conrado and Maria Victoria Ronquillo purchased from petitioners an
82-square meter condominium unit at Central Park Place Tower in Mandaluyong City for a
pre-selling contract price of FIVE MILLION ONE HUNDRED SEVENTY-FOUR THOUSAND
ONLY (P5,174,000.00). On 29 August 1997, respondents executed and signed a
Reservation Application Agreement wherein they deposited P200,000.00 as reservation
fee. As agreed upon, respondents paid the full downpayment of P1,552,200.00 and had
been paying the P63,363.33 monthly amortizations until September 1998. HCTEDa
Upon learning that construction works had stopped, respondents likewise stopped
paying their monthly amortization. Claiming to have paid a total of P2,198,949.96 to
petitioners, respondents through two (2) successive letters, demanded a full refund of
their payment with interest. When their demands went unheeded, respondents were
constrained to le a Complaint for Refund and Damages before the Housing and Land Use
Regulatory Board (HLURB). Respondents prayed for reimbursement/refund of
P2,198,949.96 representing the total amortization payments, P200,000.00 as and by way
of moral damages, attorney's fees and other litigation expenses.
On 21 October 2000, the HLURB issued an Order of Default against petitioners for
failing to file their Answer within the reglementary period despite service of summons. 2
Petitioners led a motion to lift order of default and attached their position paper
attributing the delay in construction to the 1997 Asian nancial crisis. Petitioners denied
committing fraud or misrepresentation which could entitle respondents to an award of
moral damages.
On 13 June 2002, the HLURB, through Arbiter Atty. Joselito F. Melchor, rendered
judgment ordering petitioners to jointly and severally pay respondents the following
amount:
a) The amount of TWO MILLION ONE HUNDRED NINETY-EIGHT THOUSAND NINE
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HUNDRED FORTY NINE PESOS & 96/100 (P2,198,949.96) with interest
thereon at twelve percent (12%) per annum to be computed from the time
of the complainants' demand for refund on October 08, 1998 until fully
paid,
II.
III.
On 30 July 2008, the Court of Appeals denied the petition for review for lack of
merit. The appellate court echoed the HLURB Arbiter's ruling that "a buyer for a
condominium/subdivision unit/lot unit which has not been developed in accordance with
the approved condominium/subdivision plan within the time limit for complying with said
developmental requirement may opt for reimbursement under Section 20 in relation to
Section 23 of Presidential Decree (P.D.) 957 . . . ." 9 The appellate court supported the
HLURB Arbiter's conclusion, which was a rmed by the HLURB Board of Commission and
the O ce of the President, that petitioners' failure to develop the condominium project is
tantamount to a substantial breach which warrants a refund of the total amount paid,
including interest. The appellate court pointed out that petitioners failed to prove that the
Asian nancial crisis constitutes a fortuitous event which could excuse them from the
performance of their contractual and statutory obligations. The appellate court also
a rmed the award of moral damages in light of petitioners' unjusti ed refusal to satisfy
respondents' claim and the legality of the administrative ne, as provided in Section 20 of
Presidential Decree No. 957.
Petitioners sought reconsideration but it was denied in a Resolution 1 0 dated 11
December 2008 by the Court of Appeals.
Aggrieved, petitioners led the instant petition advancing substantially the same
grounds for review:
A.
B.
Petitioners insist that the complaint states no cause of action because they
allegedly have not committed any act of misrepresentation amounting to bad faith which
could entitle respondents to a refund. Petitioners claim that there was a mere delay in the
completion of the project and that they only resorted to "suspension and reformatting as a
testament to their commitment to their buyers." Petitioners attribute the delay to the 1997
Asian nancial crisis that befell the real estate industry. Invoking Article 1174 of the New
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Civil Code, petitioners maintain that they cannot be held liable for a fortuitous event.
Petitioners contest the payment of a huge amount of interest on account of
suspension of development on a project. They liken their situation to a bank which this
Court, in Overseas Bank v. Court of Appeals , 1 2 adjudged as not liable to pay interest on
deposits during the period that its operations are ordered suspended by the Monetary
Board of the Central Bank.
Lastly, petitioners aver that they should not be ordered to pay moral damages
because they never intended to cause delay, and again blamed the Asian economic crisis
as the direct, proximate and only cause of their failure to complete the project. Petitioners
submit that moral damages should not be awarded unless so stipulated except under the
instances enumerated in Article 2208 of the New Civil Code. Lastly, petitioners refuse to
pay the administrative ne because the delay in the project was caused not by their own
deceptive intent to defraud their buyers, but due to unforeseen circumstances beyond their
control.
Three issues are presented for our resolution: 1) whether or not the Asian nancial
crisis constitute a fortuitous event which would justify delay by petitioners in the
performance of their contractual obligation; 2) assuming that petitioners are liable,
whether or not 12% interest was correctly imposed on the judgment award, and 3) whether
the award of moral damages, attorney's fees and administrative fine was proper. ASIETa
It is apparent that these issues were repeatedly raised by petitioners in all the legal
fora. The rulings were consistent that rst, the Asian nancial crisis is not a fortuitous
event that would excuse petitioners from performing their contractual obligation; second,
as a result of the breach committed by petitioners, respondents are entitled to rescind the
contract and to be refunded the amount of amortizations paid including interest and
damages; and third, petitioners are likewise obligated to pay attorney's fees and the
administrative fine.
This petition did not present any justi cation for us to deviate from the rulings of the
HLURB, the Office of the President and the Court of Appeals.
Indeed, the non-performance of petitioners' obligation entitles respondents to
rescission under Article 1191 of the New Civil Code which states:
Article 1191. The power to rescind obligations is implied in reciprocal ones,
in case one of the obligors should not comply with what is incumbent upon him.
The injured party may choose between the ful llment and the rescission of
the obligation, with payment of damages in either case. He may also seek
rescission, even after he has chosen ful llment, if the latter should become
impossible.
More in point is Section 23 of Presidential Decree No. 957, the rule governing the
sale of condominiums, which provides:
Section 23. Non-Forfeiture of Payments. — No installment payment made
by a buyer in a subdivision or condominium project for the lot or unit he
contracted to buy shall be forfeited in favor of the owner or developer when the
buyer, after due notice to the owner or developer, desists from further payment
due to the failure of the owner or developer to develop the subdivision or
condominium project according to the approved plans and within the time limit
for complying with the same. Such buyer may, at his option, be reimbursed
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the total amount paid including amortization interests but excluding
delinquency interests, with interest thereon at the legal rate . (Emphasis
supplied).
Conformably with these provisions of law, respondents are entitled to rescind the
contract and demand reimbursement for the payments they had made to petitioners.
Notably, the issues had already been settled by the Court in the case of Fil-Estate
Properties, Inc. v. Spouses Go 1 3 promulgated on 17 August 2007, where the Court stated
that the Asian nancial crisis is not an instance of caso fortuito. Bearing the same factual
milieu as the instant case, G.R. No. 165164 involves the same company, Fil-Estate, albeit
about a different condominium property. The company likewise reneged on its obligation
to respondents therein by failing to develop the condominium project despite substantial
payment of the contract price. Fil-Estate advanced the same argument that the 1997 Asian
nancial crisis is a fortuitous event which justi es the delay of the construction project.
First off, the Court classi ed the issue as a question of fact which may not be raised in a
petition for review considering that there was no variance in the factual ndings of the
HLURB, the O ce of the President and the Court of Appeals. Second, the Court cited the
previous rulings of Asian Construction and Development Corporation v. Philippine
Commercial International Bank 1 4 and Mondragon Leisure and Resorts Corporation v.
Court of Appeals 1 5 holding that the 1997 Asian nancial crisis did not constitute a valid
justification to renege on obligations. The Court expounded:
Also, we cannot generalize that the Asian nancial crisis in 1997 was
unforeseeable and beyond the control of a business corporation. It is unfortunate
that petitioner apparently met with considerable di culty e.g., increase cost of
materials and labor, even before the scheduled commencement of its real estate
project as early as 1995. However, a real estate enterprise engaged in the pre-
selling of condominium units is concededly a master in projections on
commodities and currency movements and business risks. The uctuating
movement of the Philippine peso in the foreign exchange market is an everyday
occurrence, and uctuations in currency exchange rates happen everyday, thus,
not an instance of caso fortuito. 1 6
Finally, we sustain the award of moral damages. In order that moral damages may
be awarded in breach of contract cases, the defendant must have acted in bad faith, must
be found guilty of gross negligence amounting to bad faith, or must have acted in wanton
disregard of contractual obligations. 1 9 The Arbiter found petitioners to have acted in bad
faith when they breached their contract, when they failed to address respondents'
grievances and when they adamantly refused to refund respondents' payment.
In ne, we nd no reversible error on the merits in the impugned Court of Appeals'
Decision and Resolution.
WHEREFORE , the petition is PARTLY GRANTED . The appealed Decision is
AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATION that the legal interest to be paid is SIX PERCENT
(6%) on the amount due computed from the time of respondents' demand for refund on 8
October 1998.
SO ORDERED.
Carpio, Brion, Del Castillo and Perlas-Bernabe, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1.Penned by Associate Justice Arturo G. Tayag with Associate Justices Martin S. Villarama, Jr.
(now Supreme Court Associate Justice) and Noel G. Tijam, concurring. Rollo, pp. 34-46.
2.Id. at 68.
3.Id. at 92.
4.Id. at 113-115.
5.Id. at 129-130.
6.Id. at 178-180.
7.Id. at 191.
8.See Petition for Review filed with the Court of Appeals. Id. at 198-199.
9.Id. at 42.
10.Id. at 48-49.
11.Id. at 16-17.
12.192 Phil. 355 (1981).
18.Maglasang v. Northwestern University, Inc., G.R. No. 188986, 20 March 2013, 694 SCRA 128,
140.
19.Almeda Development and Equipment Corp. v. Metro Motor Sales, Inc. , 534 Phil. 672, 675
(2006).