You're currently signed in as:
User
Add TAGS to your cases to easily locate them or to build your SYLLABUS.
Please SIGN IN to use this feature.
https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ccb6?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09
[CAYETANO DE LA CRUZ v. EL SEMINARIO DE LA ARCHIDIOCESIS DE MANILA ET AL.](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ccb6?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
{case:ccb6}
Highlight text as FACTS, ISSUES, RULING, PRINCIPLES to generate case DIGESTS and REVIEWERS.
Please LOGIN use this feature.
Show printable version with highlights
18 Phil. 330

[ G. R. No. 5402, January 28, 1911 ]

CAYETANO DE LA CRUZ, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. EL SEMINARIO DE LA ARCHIDIOCESIS DE MANILA ET AL., DEFENDANTS AND APPELLANTS.

D E C I S I O N

TRENT, J.:

The appellee, Cayetano de la Cruz, was a member and the president of a Methodist Episcopal religious association at  Dinalupijan,  Province of Bataan,  Philippine  Islands. The members  of this  association,  including Cayetano  de la Cruz, having decided to lease a building site and erect thereon  a chapel,  made  voluntary contributions for that  purpose,  Cayetano  de  la Cruz  being among  those who contributed.  Cayetano de  la Cruz, as such  member and president, was then authorized by the association  to lease a  certain building site and  to use the funds contributed for the purpose of constructing a chapel.   So on the  17th of May, 1907,  he leased from one J.  C. Miller,  the agent of the appellant, His Grace Jeremiah J. Harty, Archbishop of Manila and  administrator  of the  hacienda of  Dinalupijan, for a period of two years, a certain lot or parcel of land, being a part of that hacienda and which is fully described in the  written  contract oi lease, agreeing to pay as rental P2 per  year,  the first year's rent to be  paid in advance.  On the execution  of this lease Cayetano de la Cruz, as member and president of the Methodist  Episcopal association,  was placed in possession  of this lot or building site and proceeded to construct thereon a chapel for the use of the  said  religious association.  About the time this  chapel was completed an action of forcible entry and detainer was commenced  by  one Raymundo  Sinsuangco in the justice of  the peace court of  Dinalupijan,  in which Cayetano de  la  Cruz, as  lessee of  the  lot  upon which the chapel was  constructed,  and J. C. Miller,  as agent  and representative  of the appellants,  who, in  such capacity executed said lease, as lessor, were made defendants.  Judgment was rendered  against the defendants in that action. The  appellants in the case at bar were duly notified of the judgment of the justice of the peace and were  requested to appeal to  the Court of First Instance.  No appeal  Was taken  and the  judgment becoming final  was executed  in such a manner that the  above-mentioned chapel  was completely destroyed.  Subsequently thereto, and on the  21st of October, 1907, Cayetano  de la  Cruz commenced  this action in the Court of First Instance of the city of Manila against the appellants to recover  the sum  of 2,000  as damages for a breach  of the rental contract.   To  this complaint the appellants, through their attorneys,  presented a demurrer, based upon  the  following grounds:  (1)  That the Court  of First Instance of the city  of Manila  was without jurisdiction to try and determine this action for the reason that damages for injuries caused to real property situated  in  the  Province of  Bataan is sought to be recovered; and (2) the complaint fails to allege facts sufficient to constitute a cause  of action.   This demurrer was overruled,  the appellants duly noting their exception.

After all the evidence had  been submitted by both parties, the appellee, after  due  notice to the appellants, presented an amended complaint,  to conform, as he alleged,  with the agreed statement of facts and the admissions  made by the appellants  in their  answer.   This amended  complaint was admitted by the court without objection on the part of the appellants.  The  amended complaint is the same as the original complaint,  with the following exceptions: (1) A number of unnamed  person were made parties  plaintiff; (2) in paragraph 2 of the amended  complaint it is alleged that Cayetano de la  Cruz was the  president, agent,  and member of the Methodist Episcopal religious association; and (3) a  judgment for only P402 was asked.

The court below  on the 29th of March, 1909,  rendered judgment  in favor of the appellees and against the appellants for the sum of  P402, P2 being the  rent for the first year paid in advance, and the P400 being the agreed value  of the chapel which was destroyed by the sheriff in executing  the judgment rendered  by  the justice of the peace.

The appellants after noting their exception to this judgment  and making a motion  for a new trial, which motion was  overruled  and exception thereto noted,  appealed to this court,  and now insist:
  1. That  as this action is one for damages to real estate situated in the Province of Bataan, under the provisions of section 377 of  the Code of Civil Procedure the Court of First Instance of  the city of  Manila had no jurisdiction;

  2. The court below  erred in admitting the amended  complaint by which the  other members of the religious association, jointly  interested  with  Cayetano de la Cruz,  were made  parties plaintiff; and,

  3. That  the  appellants are not  liable for  the consequences of  the judgment of the justice of the peace.
The demurrer was properly overruled.  This is not an action to recover damages to real estate; it is an action for breach of covenant in a lease.  The fact that the damages to real estate are involved, as an incident to the breach of the contract,  does not change the character of the action. Such an  action is personal and transitory.  The rule is well stated in the case of Neill vs. Owen (3 Tex., 145), wherein the court said (p. 146):
"If the action is founded on privity of contract between the parties, then the action whether  debt  or covenant, is transitory.  But if there is no privity of contract and the action is founded on privity of estate only, such a covenant that runs with the land in the hands of the remote grantees, then the action is local and must be brought in the county wherein  the land lies.

"In an action on a covenant contained in a lease, whether begun by the lessor against the lessee, or by  the  lessee against the lessor, the action is transitory  because  it is founded  on a mere privity of contract.   (Thursby vs. Plant, cited  in vol. 5, Ency. Plead. & Prac, p. 362.)

"In genera], also, actions  which  are founded  upon contracts are transitory.  In  an  action upon a lease for non-payment of rent or other breach of  covenants, when the action is founded on the  privity of contract it is  transitory and the venue may be laid in any county.  (22 Ency. Plead. &  Prac,  pp. 782-783.)"
Therefore,  section  377 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides, among other things, that actions  to recover damages for  injuries to real estate  shall  be brought in the province where the land, or a part thereof, is situated, is  not applicable.   (Molina vs. De la Riva,  6 Phil. Rep., 12.)   The amended complaint clearly  states facts sufficient to constitute  a cause  of  action.  (Sec. 90, Code of  Civil Procedure.)

The defendants in the second assignment of error assert that the  plaintiff ought not to have been allowed to amend his complaint so  as to make him the  representative of all the persons interested in the subject matter of this action. We are of the opinion  that such amendment was properly allowed.  Section 110  of the  Code  of  Civil Procedure is exceedingly broad in its terms and there is no disposition in this court to narrow its terms or meaning.  We are also of the opinion that this is  particularly  the  class of action to which section  118 of the Code of Civil Procedure refers. It would be exceedingly difficult and expensive  to require that all persons  interested  be made parties plaintiff.  To avoid this was the  very  purpose in enacting section 118. The plaintiff,  as appears  from  the  record, is the person chosen by  the members of the association  in question  to look after and represent their interest and it is correspondingly appropriate that he should represent and act for them in this action. In permitting this the court is not thwarting their will or endangering  their interest, but, rather, is carrying out their desires  and purposes as  they have already expressed them.

In the third assignment  of error  it is  insisted that the appellants  are not liable for the consequences of the  judgment of the justice of  the peace, for  the  reason  that according to that judgment the plaintiff, in violation of the rights of Raymundo Sinsuangco, entered upon  the lot  in question.   It  is argued that the plaintiff should not have entered into possession  of this lot in  violation of the rights of Sinsuangco, but that he should have acquired  possession by due judicial process, and that having entered into possession in this manner  he must suffer the consequences  of his illegal  acts.  In this we can  not  agree.  When this rental contract was executed the lot in question was vacant. The agent, Miller, led the plaintiff to believe that he  could place him in legal possession of the lot.  It was  upon this theory that  the  plaintiff entered  into  this contract and paid the rent for the first year.  The record does not  affirmatively show  that Miller placed  the  plaintiff in possession of this lot, but in the absence of proof to the contrary we  think it  fair to presume  that  this occurred. Miller then placed the plaintiff in possession of this lot,  but not  in the legal possession of same.  He himself did not have the legal possession as was shown by the proof  before  the justice of the peace.   Sinsuangco was the person who was in the actual possession and Miller should have known this and he should  have known at the time he entered into the contract with  the plaintiff  that he could not place  the plaintiff in legal,  peaceful,  and quiet possession  of this lot.  The plaintiff took possession under these  circumstances and proceeded to construct the chapel,  which was afterwards destroyed  in the  execution of the judgment of the  justice of  the peace.   In the  contract  entered into between Miller and the plaintiff,  it was Miller's  duty to place the  plaintiff legally in possession of  this  lot and maintain him in the peaceful and quiet possession of  the same during the entire period of the contract.

The rights and obligations of lessor and lessee are treated in articles  1554 to 1574, inclusive, of the Civil Code.  Article 1554 provides:
"The lessor is obligated:

*     *    *    *    *    *    *

"3. To maintain the lessee in  the peaceful enjoyment of the premises for the entire period of the contract."
Article 1568  is as follows:
"If the thing leased  is lost or  any of  the contracting parties do  not  comply  with what has  been stipulated, the provisions  of article  1182  and 1183 shall be respectively observed."
Article 1101  provides:
"Those who  in  fulfilling their obligations are guilty  of fraud, negligence,  or delay, and  those  who in any manner whatsoever act  in contravention  of the stipulations of the same,  shall be  subject to  indemnify  for  the losses and damages caused thereby."
Under this contract of lease it was  the duty  of  the  defendants to give the plaintiff the legal  possession of the premises.  This they did not do.

The defendants  failed in the performance of their contract, and, as we have seen  by article 1101  of the Civil Code, the person who fails in the performance of his obligations shall be  subject  to indemnify for the  losses and damages  caused thereby.   "The true measure of damages for the breach of such a contract is what the plaintiff has lost by the breach."   (Lock vs. Furze, L. R. 1, C. P., 441; Dexter vs. Manley, 4 Cush. (Mass.), 14.)

The sum of P402,  in our opinion, not being excessive damages for the injuries caused by the breach of contract on the part of the defendants, the judgment  should  be and the  same  is hereby  affirmed, with  costs against the appellants.  So ordered.

Arellano, C. J.,  Mapa, Carson, and Moreland, JJ., concur.

tags