Title
Abalos vs. Macatangay, Jr.
Case
G.R. No. 155043
Decision Date
Sep 30, 2004
Spouses Abalos disputed a property sale to Macatangay due to a void SPA and dishonored earnest money. SC ruled the RMOA invalid, lacking spousal consent and valid consideration, reinstating trial court's dismissal.
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Case Summary (G.R. No. 155043)

Due Process Claim and Standard Applied

Petitioner asserted he was denied due process in the appellate proceedings because he was not personally served with appellate process and was unable to submit an appellee’s brief due to alleged absence of his counsel. Under the 1987 Constitution and settled jurisprudence, the essence of due process is the opportunity to be heard. The Court held that petitioner’s failure to participate in the appeal resulted from his and his counsel’s neglect, not from procedural lapses attributable to the appellate court; parties are generally bound by the acts and omissions of their counsel. Consequently, the petitioner's due process claim was rejected.

Legal Framework on Contracts, Options, and Perfection

The Court reiterated essential elements of contracts: consent of the contracting parties, a determinate object, and a lawful cause (Art. 1318). A contract of sale is consensual and is perfected upon meeting of the minds as to the thing and the price, but ownership transfers only upon delivery (actual or constructive). A unilateral promise accepted and supported by a consideration distinct from the price constitutes an option: it grants a privilege to buy within a specified time but does not itself effect a sale until exercised and supported by separate consideration. A perfected contract of option does not of itself consummate a sale; exercise and proper performance (including valid tender) are required.

Characterization of the RMOA — Option, Not Sale

The Court analyzed the RMOA executed by Arturo and found it to be, in substance, an offer or option: it granted respondent thirty days within which to purchase, did not bind respondent to buy, and lacked Arturo’s agreement to transfer ownership immediately. The RMOA bore no respondent signature and contained no consideration distinct from the purchase price to render it a binding option. Accordingly, it did not constitute a perfected contract of sale. Even were the RMOA treated as a sale, the Court emphasized that respondent would still have been obliged to effect payment or valid tender to demand specific performance.

Tender and Payment: Checks as Not Constituting Legal Tender

Respondent had set aside a Citibank check for the balance of the purchase price and had tendered a P5,000 amount characterized as earnest money. The Court held that a check is not legal tender and cannot constitute a valid tender of payment for purposes of enforcing specific performance; therefore the check did not satisfy the requirement of payment or valid tender. The P5,000 was likewise not treated as “earnest money” in the sense of proving perfection of a sale (Article 1482) but merely as a guarantee of respondent’s interest. Because respondent did not make a valid tender of payment, his action for specific performance could not succeed.

Effect of Forged SPA and Absence of Wife’s Consent

The RMOA lacked Esther’s signature; under Article 166 of the Civil Code a husband cannot validly alienate conjugal real property without the wife’s consent. The Court found that, because the SPA purportedly authorizing Arturo to act for Esther was void (forgery), Arturo could not have validly pledged or sold the conjugal property. The absence of Esther’s consent in the RMOA therefore constituted a fatal defect separate from the other contractual infirmities identified.

Contract to Sell Executed by Esther’s Attorney-in-Fact and Ratification Doctrine

The Court addressed the Court of Appeals’ view that Esther’s later Contract to Sell (executed by her attorney‑in‑fact) cured the earlier defects. The Supreme Court held that a void contract cannot be ratified (Article 1409) and that nullity is not obliterated by subsequent acts. The RMOA and the Contract to Sell were distinct documents with differing terms, and Esther’s separate execution of a Contract to Sell containing different conditions could not validate or ratify the allegedly void RMOA or supply consent retroactively to a different instrument. Therefore, the subsequent contract did not retroactively validate the RMOA or effect a binding sale as to the conjugal property.

Conjugal Partnership Principles and Their Application

The Court summarized relevant rules governing conjugal partnership of gains (the spouses’ regime here): property acquired during marriage is conjugal; the husband is the statutory administrator but may not alienate conjugal real property without the wife’s consent; the spouses’ individual rights to a conjugal share do not vest into a divisible title until liquidation of the conjugal partnership. The Court reiterated nemo dat quod non habet: a spouse cannot convey what he does not have. Hence, absent liquidation or judicial decree permitting partition or

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