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[FELIX ANGAO v. NICOLAS CLAVANO](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/cf07?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 5853, Oct 04, 1910 ]

FELIX ANGAO v. NICOLAS CLAVANO +

DECISION

17 Phil. 152

[ G. R. No. 5853, October 04, 1910 ]

FELIX ANGAO, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. NICOLAS CLAVANO, DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

TORRES, J.:

On March 10, 1909, Felix Angao filed a written complaint with the Court of First Instance of Misamis, in which it was alleged that in 1899 the plaintiff made a contract  of the kind known in the locality as a pledge contract and sanctioned by local custom - with Ambrosio Bugahud, whereby Angao granted the use of his land, planted with 120 coconut trees, to the said Bugahud in exchange for 43 pesos which he had received from the latter as a loan, under the condition that the plaintiff should  be bound after his  marriage to repay the said sum to the creditor who in turn should  return the  land, situated  in  the place called Ynamucan  of the pueblo of Langaran, Misamis, and bounded on the north and east by land of Gervasio  Poriran and  Mariano Bugahud, and on the south and west by a  mangrove swamp.  The complaint  further  alleged  that the  plaintiff married in October, 1906, and that in  the same year, after his marriage, he  offered  to pay his said debt in order that his creditor might return to him his  coconut land,  but that Ambrosio Bugahud then told him that the property was in the possession of Nicolas Clavano, to whom he had deeded his rights in the said land; that, although the debtor, in company with Bugahud, made a demand upon Clavano for the restitution of the land and offered to pay him the said sum, Clavano refused to accept the said 43 pesos and persisted in refusing to return to him the coconut plantation  and to accept the 43 pesos on the several occasions when he was requested to do so by the plaintiff.  It was therefore prayed that judgment be entered  against the defendant by ordering him to  accept the said 43 pesos and to deliver the coconut plantation to its  owner, the plaintiff.

The defendant,  Nicolas  Clavano, in his answer  denied each and all the facts alleged in the complaint in each  and all  the paragraphs thereof, and asked that he be absolved from the complaint with the costs against the plaintiff.

The case having come to trial the attorneys of the litigating parties presented, during the taking of the evidence, the written agreement,  consisting of ten pages, in which it appears that  the  Exhibit A, thereto attached as a part thereof, is the contract entered into between Felix Angao and Nicolas Clavano with respect to this land in question, and that this land  is the same that is described in the complaint and mentioned in the document Exhibit A.

In view of the evidence adduced the trial court, on July 27,  1909,  rendered judgment by absolving the defendant from the complaint with the costs against the plaintiff who, oh being notified  thereof, took an exception thereto and filed  an appeal before this court, for which purpose the proper bill of exceptions  was presented, certified to and forwarded to the clerk of  this court.

The  plaintiff demands  the fulfillment of the obligation contracted by the defendant by virtue of an agreement, with right of repurchase stipulated in the sale of a parcel of land, as specified in the  instrument written in the dialect of the province, a translation of which is inserted in the judgment appealed from.  The said obligation  consists in that the defendant  shall accept  the amount of  the  repurchase and deliver  the land sold, to the plaintiff, the owner thereof.

But before entering  into a consideration  of the issues raised and  the errors  attributed to the judgment of the trial court in the appeal raised by  the plaintiff, it must  be borne in mind that  this court  is obliged to accept the statement of facts  and the  findings as to the weight of the evidence, such as they appear in  the  judgment appealed from, and  has  no  authority  to examine the former nor review the latter, inasmuch as the appellant did not petition for an annulment of the said judgment and the granting of a new trial.  This  court  must, therefore, restrict its action in the present litigation to  a determination of the issues of law.   (Sec. 497, Code of Civil Procedure,  and Act No. 1596, which modified  that section.)

Under the foregoing premises, and in consideration  of the fact that the plaintiff Felix Angao allowed the year following that of his marriage, celebrated on September  8, 1903, to lapse without having availed himself of his right to repurchase the land  sold under pacto de retro to Nicolas Clavano., it is unquestionable that he has lost his right to repurchase or recover the property sold, and that the purchaser's right therein has, by operation of the law, become perfected.

The contract set forth in the instrument above mentioned contains a condition, which is the marriage and a certain period of time after which  the right of repurchase shall lapse.   It was covenanted that if, after one year from the time  of the marriage  of the plaintiff Angao, the latter should not redeem the land sold, the vendee, the defendant Clavano, would be  the  true owner of the coconut land  in question, and the vendor Angao should only be entitled  to claim from the former the sum of 20 pesos as an additional pries of the said land.

Angao married on  September 8, 1903, from which  date he was entitled to redeem the land sold by  him, inasmuch as the condition stipulated between the contracting parties had  been  complied with, to  wit, the marriage of one of them.  On September 9, 1904, the year  immediately following the date of defendant's marriage had already fully elapsed and, up to the 8th of September of the said  year, that being the last day of the year following his marriage, he had not yet repurchased the property, therefore, from the said date, September 9, defendant's right had  already lapsed, for the year had passed and  this last date arrived without his having repurchased the land.

The  trial court found, in  its judgment, that when the plaintiff wished to  redeem the land and offered to  repay the P43 in August, 1906, more than one year had elapsed since his marriage.   This judicial finding can not be set aside, inasmuch as it is impossible to review the evidence in the case, and even were it possible to do so, the record does not show that the plaintiff demanded  of the defendant the redemption of the land by offering him, in the act of making the demand, the payment of its price, nor that the latter was deposited with  some  authority  or with  a commissioned notary within the  period  of  one year counting from the date of the defendant's  marriage, since on the arrival of the 9th of September, 1904, he had already lost his right, according to the agreement.  (Arts. 1508, 1509, Civil Code.) Article 1518 provides:
"The vendor can not exercise the  right of  redemption without returning to the vendee the price of the  sale."
So that it is not  sufficient for the vendor to  intimate or to state  to the vendee that the  former desires to  redeem the thing sold, but he must  immediately  thereupon  offer to repay the price,  and, should the vendee refuse to accept the amount of the  price thus offered,  it must be placed on deposit, for if these conditions are not complied with,  as in the present case,  the provisions of article 1509 of the Civil Code become applicable,  wherein it is provided that "if the vendor should not comply with the provisions of article  1518, the vendee shall  irrevocably acquire  the  ownership of the thing sold."

For  the foregoing reasons, whereby the errors  alleged have been disposed of,  and the  judgment appealed  from being in  accordance  with the law, it is  hereby affirmed, with the costs against the appellant.

Arellano, C. J., Johnson, Moreland, and Trent, JJ., concur.

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