LL and Company Development and Agro Industrial Corporation vs. Huang Chao Chun G.R. No. 142378 March 07 2002
LL and Company Development and Agro Industrial Corporation vs. Huang Chao Chun G.R. No. 142378 March 07 2002
THIRD DIVISION
DECISION
PANGANIBAN, J.:
A stipulation in a lease contract stating that its five-year term is subject to “an option to
renew” shall be interpreted to be reciprocal in character. Unless the language shows an
intent to allow the lessee to exercise it unilaterally, such option shall be deemed to benefit
both the lessor and the lessee who must both consent to the extension or renewal, as well as
to its specific terms and conditions.
Before us is a Petition for Review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, assailing the October
29, 1999 Decision[1] and the March 9, 2000 Resolution[2] of the Court of Appeals[3] (CA) in
CA-GR SP No. 50618. The decretal portion of the Decision reads as follows:
“WHEREFORE, the petition for review is hereby DISMISSED for lack of merit.”[4]
The CA sustained the Decision of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Quezon City (Branch 217),
which had disposed as follows:
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The Facts
The factual antecedents of the case are summarized by the Court of Appeals as follows:
“[The present case] originated from an unlawful detainer case filed by petitioner
before the Metropolitan Trial Court of Quezon City on October 9, 1996 which was
docketed as Civil Case No. 16349.
“In its Complaint, petitioner alleged that respondents Huang Chao Chun and Yang
Tung Fa violated their amended lease contract over a 1,112 square meter lot it
owns, designated as Lot No. 1-A-1, when they did not pay the monthly rentals
thereon in the total amount of P4,322,900.00. It also alleged that the amended
lease contract already expired on September 16, 1996 but respondents refused
to surrender possession thereof plus the improvements made thereon, and pay
the rental arrearages despite repeated demands.
“The amended lease contract was entered into by the parties sometime in
August, 1991. [Exact day is not mentioned in amended contract]. The same
amended the lease contract previously entered into by the parties on August 8,
1991. The amended contract contains the following provisions:
‘2. The monthly rental shall be the same at P100.00 per square
meters and/or P111,200.00 per month, Philippine Currency. All other
terms and conditions are the same for strict compliance thereof’.
“The terms and conditions referred to in paragraph 2 above are the following:
‘2. The term of this lease is FIVE (5) YEARS from the effectivity of said
lease, and with the option to renew, specifically shall commence from
September 15, 1991 and shall expire on September 16, 1996, and
maybe adjusted depending upon the ejectment of tenants.
‘3. The LESSEES shall have the option to reconstruct and/or renovate
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‘4. Upon signing of this Contract of Lease, the LESSEES shall make a
one (1) year deposit to be paid unto the LESSOR as follows:
“x x x xxx xxx
“Respondent were joined by the Tsai Chun International Resources Inc. in their
answer to the Complaint, wherein they alleged that the actual lessee over Lot No.
1-A-1 is the corporation.
“1. The amended lease contract did not reflect the true intention of the parties
because it did not contemplate an obsolete building that can no longer be
renovated, such that petitioner did not become the owner of the new
P24,000,000.00 two-storey building they introduced on Lot No. 1-A-1 when their
contract expired.
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“2. Their failure to pay the monthly rentals on the property was due to
petitioner’s fault when it attempted to increase the amount of rent in violation of
their contract; and
“3. They are entitled to a renewal of their contract in view of the provision
therein providing for automatic renewal, and also in view of the P24,000,000.00
worth of improvements they introduced on the leased premises.
“After the parties were accorded their respective rights to due process of law,
Branch 32 of the MTC rendered decision on June 23, 1998, the decretal portion of
which reads:
‘SO ORDERED.’
‘(a) ‘Whether or not the Contract of Lease dated August 8, 1991 had
expired;’ and
“The MTC ruled that the contract entered into by the parties may be extended by
the lessees for reasons of justice and equity, citing as its legal bases the case of
‘Legarda Koh v. Ongsi[a]co’ (36 Phil. [185]) and ‘Cruz v. Alberto’ (39 Phil. 991).
It also ruled that the corporation’s failure to pay the monthly rentals as they fell
due was justified by the fact that petitioner ‘refused to honor the basis of the
rental increase as stated in their Lease Agreement.”[6] (Citations omitted)
The RTC affirmed the Decision of the Metropolitan Trial Court (MeTC) dismissing the unlawful
detainer case. The RTC likewise agreed that the Contract of Lease entered into by the
parties could be extended unilaterally by the lessees for another five years or until
September 16, 2001, on the basis of justice and equity.
It also held that the parties had a reciprocal obligation: unless and until petitioner presented
“the increased realty tax,” private respondents were not under any obligation to pay the
increased monthly rental.[7]
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In addition, the RTC ruled that petitioner was not entitled to legal interest, and that the 25
percent increase provided in the Contract of Lease should be based on the imposed real
estate tax, not on the monthly rental.
The Court of Appeals affirmed in toto the RTC’s dismissal of the unlawful detainer case and
extension of the lease period for another five years, holding that the errors raised had
already been fully taken into account by the two courts below.
It also reasoned that “[t]he elliptical construction of paragraph 5 of the Lease Contract
made it awkward to the point of being ambiguous.” There being no agreement on the
“proven rent,” an ejectment suit based on “the non-payment of rents that were not agreed
upon x x x will not lie.”
Issues
In its Memorandum, petitioner raises the following issues for the Court’s consideration:
“Whether the court could still extend the term of the lease, after its expiration. Is
expiration of the lease a proper ground in [a] case of unlawful detainer[?]
II
III
“May the court allow the introduction of issues other than the elements of a case
for ejectment[?]”[9]
First Issue:
Extension of Lease Period
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Petitioner contends that because the Contract, as amended, had already expired, the MTC
had no power to extend the lease period. We are convinced.
In general, the power of the courts to fix a longer term for a lease is discretionary. Such
power is to be exercised only in accordance with the particular circumstances of a case: a
longer term to be granted where equities demanding extension come into play; to be denied
where none appear -- always with due deference to the parties’ freedom to contract.[10]
Thus, courts are not bound to extend the lease.[11]
Article 1675 of the Civil Code excludes cases falling under Article 1673 from those under
Article 1687. Article 1673 provides among others, that the lessor may judicially eject the
lessee upon the expiration of “the period agreed upon or that which is fixed for the duration
of the leases.” Where no period has been fixed by the parties,[12] the courts, pursuant to
Article 1687, have the potestative authority to set a longer period of lease.[13]
In the case before us, the Contract of Lease provided for a fixed period of five (5) years --
“specifically” from September 16, 1991 to September 15, 1996. Because the lease period
was for a determinate time, it ceased, by express provision of Article 1669 of the Civil Code,
“on the day fixed, without need of a demand.”[14] Here, the five-year period expired on
September 15, 1996, whereas the Complaint for ejectment was filed on October 6, 1996.
Because there was no longer any lease that could be extended, the MeTC, in effect, made a
new contract for the parties, a power it did not have.[15] Early on, in Bacolod-Murcia Milling
v. Banco Nacional Filipino,[16] we said that a court could not supply material stipulations to a
contract, as follows:
“It is not the province of the court to alter a contract by construction or to make
a new contract for the parties; its duty is confined to the interpretation of the one
which they have made for themselves, without regard to its wisdom or folly, as
the court cannot supply material stipulations or read into contract words which it
does not contain.”
Furthermore, the extension of a lease contract must be made before the term of the
agreement expires, not after.[17] Upon the lapse of the stipulated period, courts cannot
belatedly extend or make a new lease for the parties,[18] even on the basis of equity.[19]
Because the Lease Contract ended on September 15, 1996, without the parties reaching any
agreement for renewal, respondents can be ejected from the premises.[20]
On the other hand, respondents and the lower courts argue that the Contract of Lease
provided for an automatic renewal of the lease period. We are not persuaded.
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Citing Koh v. Ongsiaco[21] and Cruz v. Alberto,[22] the MeTC -- upheld by the RTC and the
CA -- ruled that the stipulation in the Contract of Lease providing an option to renew should
be construed in favor of and for the benefit of the lessee.[23] This ruling has however, been
expressly reversed in Fernandez v. CA, from which we quote:[24]
“It is also important to bear in mind that in a reciprocal contract like a lease, the
period of the lease must be deemed to have been agreed upon for the benefit of
both parties, absent language showing that the term was deliberately set for the
benefit of the lessee or lessor alone. We are not aware of any presumption in law
that the term of a lease is designed for the benefit of the lessee alone. Koh and
Cruz in effect rested upon such a presumption. But that presumption cannot
reasonably be indulged in casually in an era of rapid economic change, marked
by, among other things, volatile costs of living and fluctuations in the value of the
domestic currency. The longer the period the more clearly unreasonable such a
presumption would be. In an age like that we live in, very specific language is
necessary to show an intent to grant a unilateral faculty to extend or renew a
contract of lease to the lessee alone, or to the lessor alone for that matter. We
hold that the above-quoted rulings in Koh v. Ongsiaco and Cruz v. Alberto should
be and are overruled.”[25]
The foregoing doctrine was recently reiterated in Heirs of Amando Dalisay v. Court of
Appeals.[26] Thus, pursuant to Fernandez, Dalisay and Article 1196[27] of the Civil Code, the
period of the lease contract is deemed to have been set for the benefit of both parties. Its
renewal may be authorized only upon their mutual agreement or at their joint will.[28] Its
continuance, effectivity or fulfillment cannot be made to depend exclusively upon the free
and uncontrolled choice of just one party. While the lessee has the option to continue or to
stop paying the rentals, the lessor cannot be completely deprived of any say on the matter.
[29] Absent any contrary stipulation in a reciprocal contract, the period of lease is deemed to
In the instant case, there was nothing in the aforesaid stipulation or in the actuation of the
parties that showed that they intended an automatic renewal or extension of the term of the
contract.[31] First, demonstrating petitioner’s disinterest in renewing the contract was its
letter[32] dated August 23, 1996, demanding that respondents vacate the premises for
failure to pay rentals since 1993. As a rule, the owner-lessor has the prerogative to
terminate the lease upon its expiration.[33] Second, in the present case, the disagreement of
the parties over the increased rental rate and private respondents’ failure to pay it precluded
the possibility of a mutual renewal. Third, the fact that the lessor allowed the lessee to
introduce improvements on the property was indicative, not of the former’s intention to
extend the contract automatically,[34] but merely of its obedience to its express terms
allowing the improvements. After all, at the expiration of the lease, those improvements
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As to the contention that it is not fair to eject respondents from the premises after only five
years, considering the value of the improvements they introduced therein, suffice it to say
that they did so with the knowledge of the risk -- the contract had plainly provided for a five-
year lease period.
Parties are free to enter into any contractual stipulation, provided it is not illegal or contrary
to public morals. When such agreement, freely and voluntarily entered into, turns out to be
disadvantageous to a party, the courts cannot rescue it without crossing the constitutional
right to contract. They are not authorized to extricate parties from the necessary
consequences of their acts, and the fact that the contractual stipulations may turn out to be
financially disadvantageous will not relieve the latter of their obligations.[35]
Second Issue:
Non-Payment of Rentals
Petitioner further argues that respondents should be ejected for nonpayment of the new
rental rates. On the other hand, the latter counter that they did not agree to these new
rates. True, mere failure to pay rentals does not make possession unlawful, but when a valid
demand to vacate the premises is made by the lessor, the lessee’s continued withholding of
possession becomes unlawful.[36] Well-settled is the rule that the failure of the
owners/lessors to collect or their refusal to accept the rentals is not a valid defense.[37]
Respondents justify their nonpayment of rentals on the ground that petitioners refused to
accept their payments. Article 1256 of the Civil Code, however, provides that “if the creditor
to whom tender of payment has been made refuses without just cause to accept it, the
debtor shall be released from responsibility by the consignation of the thing or sum.” This
provision is more explicit under the Rent Control Law,[38] the pertinent portions of which are
similar to the prevailing law -- the Rental Reform Act of 2002[39] -- which we reproduce
hereunder:
“(b) Arrears in payment of rent for a total of three (3) months: Provided, That
in the case of refusal by the lessor to accept payment of the rental agreed upon,
the lessee may either deposit, by way of consignation, the amount in court, or
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with the city or municipal treasurer, as the case may be, or in a bank in the name
of and with notice to the lessor, within one month after the refusal of the lessor to
accept payment.
“The lessee shall thereafter deposit the rental within ten days of every current
month. Failure to deposit the rentals for three (3) months shall constitute a
ground for ejectment. If an ejectment case is already pending, the court upon
proper motion may order the lessee or any person or persons claiming under him
to immediately vacate the leased premises without prejudice to the continuation
of the ejectment proceedings. At any time, the lessor may, upon authority of the
court, withdraw the rentals deposited.
“The lessor, upon authority of the court in case of consignation or upon joint
affidavit by him and the lessee to be submitted to the city or municipal treasurer
and to the bank where deposit was made, shall be allowed to withdraw the
deposits.
“Art. 1673. The lessor may judicially eject the lessee for any of the following
causes:
“(1) When the period agreed upon, or that which is fixed for the duration of
lease under Articles 1682 and 1687, has expired;
“(4) When the lessee devotes the thing leased to any use or service not
stipulated which causes the deterioration thereof; or if he does not observe the
requirement in No. 2 of Article 1657, as regards the use thereof.
Based on the foregoing, respondents should have deposited in a bank or with judicial
authorities the rent based on the previous rate.[41] In the instant case, respondents failed to
pay the rent from October 1993 to March 1998 or for four (4) years and three (3) months.
They should remember that Article 1658 of the Civil Code provides only two instances in
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which the lessee may suspend payment of rent; namely, in case the lessor fails to make the
necessary repairs or to maintain the lessee in peaceful and adequate enjoyment of the
property leased.[42] None of these is present in the case at bar.
Moreover, the mere subsequent payment of rentals by the lessee and the receipt thereof by
the lessor does not, absent any other circumstance that may dictate a contrary conclusion,
legitimize the unlawful character of the possession. The lessor may still pursue the demand
for ejectment.[43]
Having said that, we cannot, on the other hand, authorize a unilateral increase in the rental
rate, considering that (1) the option to renew is reciprocal and, thus, the terms and
conditions thereof -- including the rental rate -- must likewise be reciprocal; and (2) the
contracted clause authorizing an increase -- “upon presentation of the increased real estate
tax to lessees” -- has not been complied with by petitioner.
Third Issue:
Issues on Ejectment
Petitioner proceeds to argue that the MeTC should not have allowed the intervention of the
Tsai Chun International Resources, Inc., allegedly the real lessor of the leased premises. In
view of our foregoing discussion, there is no more need to rule on this issue.
WHEREFORE, the Petition is GRANTED and the assailed Decision SET ASIDE. Respondents
and all persons claiming rights under them are hereby ORDERED TO VACATE the subject
premises and to restore peaceful possession thereof to petitioner. They are also DIRECTED
TO PAY the accrued rentals (based on the stipulated rent) from October 1993 until such
time that they vacate the subject property, with interest thereon at the legal rate. No
pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
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[8] The case was deemed submitted for decision on January 15, 2001, upon the Court’s
receipt of respondent’s Opposition and Motion dated January 12, 2001. Petitioner’s
Memorandum, filed on November 27, 2000, was signed by Atty. K. V. Faylona while
respondents’ Memorandum, filed on December 12, 2000, was signed by Atty. Eduardo E.
Francisco.
[10] La Jolla, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, GR No. 115851, June 20, 2001; Ferrer v. Court of
Appeals, 274 SCRA 219, June 19, 1997; Roman Catholic Archbishop of Manila v. Court of
Appeals, 269 SCRA 145, March 3, 1997; Divino v. Marcos, 4 SCRA 186, January 31, 1962.
[11] Heirs of Manuel T. Suico v. Court of Appeals, 266 SCRA 444, January 21, 1997.
[13] Chua v. Court of Appeals, 301 SCRA 356, January 21, 1999.
“If the lease was made for a determinate time, it ceases upon the day fixed,
without the need of a demand.”
[15] Henson v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 148 SCRA 11, February 19, 1987.
[17] Martinez Leyba, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, GR No. 140363, March 6, 2001, citing Prieto v.
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[28] Buce v. Court of Appeals, 332 SCRA 151, May 12, 2000.
[29] Lao Lim v. Court of Appeals, 191 SCRA 150, October 31, 1990.
[33] Vda. de. Roxas v. Court of Appeals, 63 SCRA 302, March 25, 1975.
[36] Vitug, Compendium of Law and Jurisprudence (1993 rev. ed.), p. 663.
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[38] Batas Pambansa Blg. 877, “An Act Providing for the Stabilization and Regulation of
Rentals of Certain Residential Units and for Other Purposes.” June12, 1985. This was
amended by Republic Act Nos. 6643, 6628, 7644 and 8437, extending its effectivity until
December 31, 2001.
[39] Republic Act No. 9161, “An Act Establishing Reforms in the Regulation of Rentals of
Certain Residential Units, Providing the Mechanisms Therefor and for Other Purposes.”
January 1, 2002.
[42] Guzman v. Court of Appeals, 177 SCRA 604, September 15, 1989.
[43] Vitug, Compendium of Law and Jurisprudence (1993 rev. ed.), p. 663.
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