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[LIM SR v. ISABELO P. LIM](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c303c?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-8496, Apr 25, 1956 ]

LIM SR v. ISABELO P. LIM +

DECISION

98 Phil. 868

[ G.R. No. L-8496, April 25, 1956 ]

LIM SR, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT VS. ISABELO P. LIM, DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

LABRADOR, J.:

This is  an  appeal  from a judgment of the Court of First Instance of Manila,  dismissing plaintiff's complaint.   The facts alleged in the  complaint are:

Plaintiff occupies  two doors of an accessorial situated on Misericordia Street  belonging to the  defendant.  Plaintiff was  an old  lessee,  and upon  the reconstruction  of the building defendant  allowed him to occupy two doors beginning July 15, 1953, without fixing any definite amount of rent, except that it was to be the same as what other lessees have been paying.  In the month of January, 1954, plaintiff proposed to pay P300 for each door, or P600 for both, which is the rent paid by another lessee occupying better quarters, but as defendant could not make up his mind  as  to the  amount of rent,  it  was agreed"  upon between them that plaintiff should deposit the sum of P1,000, which shall be applied for the payment of the rents from the month of January, 1954.  From that time on, plaintiff had been  offering a monthly rental of P600 for both doors, but defendant refused . to  accept this offer. On April 2, 1954, defendant demanded the payment of P700 as monthly rental  from January 1,  1954.  As  the plaintiff is not willing to pay his rent and he fears  that defendant would bring an action  of unlawful detainer to eject him and  to recover said rents  for the  premises plaintiff had been  depositing the monthly sum of P600 a month as rentals, first with the defendant, later with the court.  On  the  basis  of the above facts,  plaintiff prays that the court fix a monthly rent  of the premises at  P600 beginning January 1, 1954, and that he be authorized to continue occupying said premises.

 The complaint is dated August 23, 1954, but was  filed on August 27, 1954.  The defendant promptly presented a  motion to dismiss,  alleging that plaintiff's action is one of consignation, which is not the proper remedy, because the  question involved should be decided in an action of forcible entry and  unlawful detainer under  Rule 72 of the Rules of Court,  citing in support  of his  contention  the case  of Pue,  et al. vs.  GonzaJes, *  G.  R. No. L-2554-56 promulgated July 21,  1950.   Before the court could  pass upon this motion to dimiss, counsel  for defendant notified the court that on August 28, 1954,  he had filed civil  case No. 22492 against plaintiff herein  for ejectment in  the Municipal Court of Manila.  The plaintiff filed an opposition to the motion to dismiss,  alleging that his action was for the determination of the rental to be paid by him. After hearing  the arguments  the court  dismissed  the action on the ground that the question of the  rentals will  necessarily be  involved in  the pending  action  for ejectment:

It is  apparent from the facts  alleged in the complaint that plaintiff instituted the present  action in anticipation of the  action  of  unlawful detainer the  defendant was about to institute, and which was actually filed one  day after the present  action  was begun.   It  is also evident that plaintiff  has  no cause of action against defendant, because  there  neither has been  a  violation of ft right belonging to the plaintiff nor a breach of  duty or  obligation on the part of the defendant.  According to express, statements  made in the  complaint, defendant fixed  the rental at P700  a month and demanded the  payment of the same from the plaintiff.  This he did by virtue of the insistent demands of the plaintiff that the defendant fix the rents.   There  never was any  agreement  or meeting of the minds  between the plaintiff  and the defendant as to the amount of the rents.  The  plaintiff fixed it at P700 a month, and when he did so,  he was absolutely  within his rights.  As the  defendant disagreed  with, the rents fixed by the lessor and owner, his duty is, to get  out of the  premises;  he  has  absolutely no  right .'to, have  the court fix the rents and continue occupying the premises pending judicial determination   of  the said  rents.   But as he continues occupying the premises and at the same time  refuses to pay the rents fixed by the owner, it is the defendant-lessor who has a  cause of action against him for his illegal occupancy.   Only  the  owner has  the right to fix the rents.  The court can not determine  the rents and compel the lessor or owner  to conform thereto and  allow the lessee to occupy the premises on the basis of the rents fixed by  it.   A lease is  not  a contract  imposed by law,  with the terms thereof  also fixed by Jaw. It is a  consensual,  bilateral,. onerous and  commutative contract by which the owner  temporarily  grants the  use of his property to another who undertakes to pay rent therefor.   (4  Sanchez  Roman, 736.)   Without the agreement  of  both parties, no contract of lease  can be said to have been created' or established.  Nobody  can force another to.let the latter lease his property if the owner refuses.  So the owner may not be compelled by  action  to give, his  property for lease to another.

Hence,  plaintiff herein can not  bring an' action  or has ho cause  of action against defendant.  In procedural terms, there has been no violation of any light or  breach of any duty  by  the  defendant.  As a  matter of  fact, plaintiff alleges that he  had  asked  defendant to fix the  rent and the  latter.fixed it at P700. If there has been a violation. of any right at all? it is the plaintiff who  has committed  it in insisting to continue in the premises when he is not willing to pay  the rents fixed by  the owner.

The case of Pue,  et  al. vs. Gonzales, supra,  has  been cited by  the defendant-appellee to sustain his theory  that the  proper action in which the dispute  between the  plaintiff  and  the  defendant  should be threshed  out is  in the ejectment case  which  the  defendant instituted.   In  that case, we  held thru Mr.  Justice Montemayor:
"Consignation in court under Art.  1176, is not  the proper proceedings to determine the  relation  between  landlord and tenant, the  period of life of the lease or. tenancy,  the reasonableness  of the.  amount of  rental, the  right of  tenant  to keep the premises against the will of the  landlord, etc.  These questions should  be decided in a case of ejectment  or  detainer *   *  *  under the provisions of Rule  72 of the Rules of Court. In  a  case of ejectment, the  landlord  claims either that the lease has ended  or been terminated or that the lessee has forfeited his right as such because of his failure to pay the rents as agreed   upon or because he failed or refused to pay the new rentals fixed and demanded by the  lessor. The lessee in his turn may  put up  the defense that according  to law, the rental  fixed and demanded of  him  is unreasonable, exhorbitant  and illegal.  *  *  *.  We repeat that all these questions should be submitted and decided in a case of ejectment and  cannot  be decided  in  a  case  of  consignation,"
The principle above  quoted  exactly covers the point at issue, i.e., that  the disagreement between a lessor and a lessee as to  the amount of rent to be paid  by a  lessee cannot be decided in an  action of consignation but in  that of forcible entry  and unlawful  detainer that  the  lessor institutes when the lessee refuges to pay the  lessor the rents that he has  fixed for the property.  It may also be added that consignation is proper when there) is a debt to be paid, which the, debtor desires to pay and  which the creditor refuses to receive, or neglects to receive, or cannot receive by reason of his absence.   The purpose of consignation  is to  have the obligation or indebtedness extinguished.   In the case at bar, plaintiff seeks to have the obligation determined and fixed, hence his  action should not be one of consignation.

For the foregoing considerations,  we  hold that  plaintiff has  no cause  of action against  defendant  under the facts  alleged in his  complaint;  that  consignation is not the proper remedy;  that  it is the defendant  who has the right or cause  of  action against the  plaintiff because the latter refuses to pay the rents fixed but does not leave the property; and that  if the  plaintiff  claims that the amount of rents demanded by the defendant is unreasonable and he desires to have it fixed judicially, he may set forth the above facts as defenses in the action of ejectment filed  by the  defendant against  him.  The  judgment of dismissal is hereby affirmed, with costs against the plaintiff-appellant.

Paras, C,  J., Bengzon, Montemayor,  Reyes,  A.,  Jugo, Bautista, Angelo, Concepcion, Reyes, J. B. L., and Endencia JJ., concur.



* 8T phil., 81.

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