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TEODULO
GARCIA,
G. R. No. 88632 March 22, 1993 -versus-HONORABLE
COURT OF APPEALS
CAMPOS, JR., J.: Petitioner, Teodulo Garcia, bought a parcel of land situated at No. 2372 Granate St., San Andres Bukid, Manila. The same land which is the subject matter of the instant petition was registered under petitioner's name on September 25, 1979, with the Register of Deeds of Manila. Before the said lot was purchased by herein petitioner, it was covered by a lease agreement, executed sometime in February 1964, by and between the former owner, Elvira Diguangco and herein private respondent, Santos Gutierrez. The Lease Contract[1] contained the following provisions:
On August 7, 1982, petitioner once more demanded that private respondent vacate the premises. Again, private respondent did not heed said request. Petitioner then filed his complaint with the Barangay Chairman who subsequently issued a summons on September 19, 1982, which was again ignored by private respondent. Having no other recourse petitioner then filed a civil case for ejectment before the Metropolitan Trial Court [MTC] of Manila on December 7, 1982, the cause of action of which was petitioner's need to repossess the property for his own use.cralaw:red Private
respondent, then defendant, opposed the
action based onnon-compliance with Section 5(c) of Batas Pambansa Blg.
25[3]
[B. P. Blg. 25, for brevity], allegedly due to the failure of
petitioner
to give private respondent three [3] months' notice in advance of such
intent to repossess.
Dissatisfied with the decision, private respondent appealed to the Regional Trial Court of Manila, Branch 36 [RTC, for brevity] on the ground that the MTC committed a grave error amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction in finding that there is no need for compliance with B. P. Blg. 25, relying upon the lease agreement and the purported undertaking. Moreover, he challenged said decision, maintaining the view that the lessor or his successor-in-interest is not entitled to eject the lessee upon the ground that the leased premises had been sold and transferred to a third person.cralaw:red The RTC, finding no reversible error committed by the court a quo, affirmed the challenged decision, with costs against private respondent.[5] After a motion for reconsideration was denied, private respondent, on January 9, 1989, filed with the respondent Court of Appeals a petition for review, docketed as CA-G. R. SP No. 16530, anchored on the same errors raised with the RTC. Petitioner then filed his comment on March 9, 1989 arguing that said petition for review was interposed manifestly to unduly delay the termination of the case.cralaw:red The respondent Court of Appeals ruled that there was no three-month advance notice given to private respondent herein as required by Section 5(c) of B. P. Blg. 25.[6] Said Court in effect ruled that since the new owner of subject lot [petitioner herein] was not the one who entered into the lease agreement with private respondent, said petitioner should himself have given the required notice. It further declared that the RTC is more competent to resolve questions concerning the effects of the sale on the leased premises and on the house and improvements made thereon by the lessee, occupying the same prior to the sale to a third person. Thus, on May 30, 1989, respondent court rendered a decision, the dispositive portion of which reads:
At the time this case was originally filed, the statute which governed the right of a lessor to eject his lessee was B. P. Blg. 25.[8]Section 5 thereof specified the grounds for judicial ejectment. The pertinent parts thereof provide as follows:
The lease contract in this case was written and, although no definite period is specified, there was just the same a term for the lease only until such time when the lessor should need the premises for his own use. This Court has previously held that where the agreement is that the lessee would vacate the premises when the lessor should need the same for his own use, the period of the lease is fixed, as the parties are fully aware that when that time comes, the lease is terminated.[9] When the lessor [the former owner] informed private respondent herein on November 19, 1978 to vacate the lot leased because he needed it, private respondent signed a written promise to vacate the premises within three months from said date, i.e., on or before February 19, 1979. On this date, however, private respondent failed to leave despite the demands of the lessor. In Our opinion, even assuming that the lease fixed no term, the aforesaid written promise had the effect of amending the original lease contract by stipulating for a definite period when the lease would terminate, i.e., three months from November 19, 1978. Thus, upon the expiration of said period, the written contract of lease would expire, giving rise to the lessor's right to file an action for ejectment against private respondent. From another angle, said written promise can also be considered as an admission that a three-month notice to vacate had been given by the lessor to the lessee. In either case, a legal ground for ejectment would exist, the first under paragraph [f] of Section 5, and the second under paragraph [c] of the same section.cralaw:red Although private respondent claims that the written promise was secured through misrepresentation, this allegation was not given credence by the trial court, which based its decision mainly on said written promise. Obviously also, the trial court did not find it necessary to discuss the other requirements of paragraph [c] because private respondent merely questioned the lack of due notice. Nevertheless, We note that the evidence shows that petitioner was merely renting an apartment at that time, which means that he owns no property on which a residential house can be built other than the lot occupied by private respondent and which he has adamantly refused to vacate despite the fact that his lease had already expired. In any case, petitioner's case need not rest on paragraph [c], and is meritorious under paragraph [f] alone. Whatever rights the former owner-lessor had under Section 5 devolved upon petitioner herein when he bought the property. Therefore, the right of the former owner to eject private respondent due to expiration of the lease passed on to petitioner. And the last paragraph of said Section 5 to the effect that in no case can the lessor or his successor-in-interest be entitled to eject the lessee on the ground that the leased premises has been sold, cannot help private respondent because the lease had already expired before the sale. This last provision applies only when the attempted ejectment is made while the lease period has not yet expired. In other words, the owner's successor-in-interest must respect an existing contract of lease. Where the lease period is still running any attempt to eject the lessee would constitute a breach of contract. But where the lease has expired, there is no more contract to breach.cralaw:red We do not agree with the Court of Appeals' decision that a three-month notice should have been sent by petitioner on his own behalf because he was not a party to the lease contract. As We stated earlier, petitioner was subrogated to all the rights of his predecessor-in-interest. The latter gave the three-month notice which was accepted by private respondent, and who in fact signed a written promise to vacate within three months. When the latter period expired and the lessee failed to move out, the lessor's right to judicial ejectment arose. This right was transferred to petitioner when he bought the property and therefore there was no need for him to give another notice. The mere fact that private respondent continued in the premises despite repeated demands on him to vacate, does not change the fact that the lease had ended. Private respondent's continued possession was merely tolerated by petitioner and his predecessor-in-interest.cralaw:red However, even assuming arguendo that the appellate court's premise is correct, petitioner did give notice on his own behalf. The trial court found that soon after the sale of the property to petitioner, or on October 10, 1979, the latter wrote to private respondent that he vacate the premises. After this and other subsequent demands were ignored, he again made a demand on August 7, 1982 informing private respondent that he wished to build his house on the property. After this last demand was again ignored, he brought the matter before the Barangay Chairman who, on September 19, 1982, sent a summons to private respondent, who, not only ignored it but in addition, refused to accept it when served upon him.[10] Petitioner finally filed an ejectment suit before the MTC on December 7, 1982, or four months after his verbal demand on August 7, 1982. Thus, even disregarding the previous demands soon after the sale, petitioner had complied with the requirement of three-month notice.cralaw:red It is clear, therefore, that whichever basis We use in this case, whether Section 5[c] or Section 5[f] of B. P. Blg. 25, petitioner has a legal right to eject private respondent.cralaw:red A final point to consider is the Court of Appeals' conclusion that the MTC had no "jurisdiction nor competence to pass upon the controversy at bar" and that the RTC is "more competent to resolve questions concerning the effects of the sale on the leased premises." We agree with petitioner that this is an erroneous opinion. The complaint filed with the MTC clearly shows that this is a simple ejectment case, where no issue nor allegation is made involving any other question but the right of petitioner to oust private respondent from the premises based on the expiration of the contract and on the repeated demands made on the latter to vacate the property. This Court has held that what determine the nature of an action and the Court which has jurisdiction over it, are the allegations made in the complaint.[11] Petitioner bought the property because he needed a lot on which to build his house. Private respondent, despite repeated demands, refused to vacate the premises. In the meantime, petitioner was renting an apartment while private respondent was making use of his property.cralaw:red There is no doubt that B. P. Blg. 25, better known as the Rent Control Law, was enacted primarily to protect tenants, especially those belonging to the low income group. However, this same law, as is clearly manifested by Section 5[c], did not ignore the interests of small landowners or lessors. The policy of the law is not to be interpreted or implemented in such a way as to oppress the lessor when he needs the leased premises for his own use because he has no other property, or when the tenant fails to pay the rentals for an unreasonable length of time. In such cases, fairness and justice demand that the lessor be given the right to resort to the courts to aid him in asserting his constitutional right to abode.[12] IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the petition is granted. The decision of the Court of Appeals dated May 30, 1989 is reversed and set aside and that of the Regional Trial Court dated May 16, 1988 is hereby reinstated.cralaw:red SO ORDERED.cralaw:red Narvasa, C.J., Padilla, Regalado and Nocon, JJ., concur.cralaw:red ___________________________________
[1]
Records, pp. 54-55.
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