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Francisco v. Herrera Case Summary

This case involves the sale of two parcels of land by Eligio Herrera, Sr. to petitioner Francisco. Herrera's children later asserted the contracts of sale were void because their father was suffering from senile dementia at the time of sale. Francisco argued the contracts were voidable, not void. The court ruled the contracts were voidable since Herrera's capacity to consent was impaired, but not non-existent. The contracts became valid through implied ratification by Herrera's children, as they accepted installment payments and only challenged the sale after failing to negotiate a higher price. The court also found Herrera was the declared owner of the lands and thus had the right to transfer ownership.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
317 views2 pages

Francisco v. Herrera Case Summary

This case involves the sale of two parcels of land by Eligio Herrera, Sr. to petitioner Francisco. Herrera's children later asserted the contracts of sale were void because their father was suffering from senile dementia at the time of sale. Francisco argued the contracts were voidable, not void. The court ruled the contracts were voidable since Herrera's capacity to consent was impaired, but not non-existent. The contracts became valid through implied ratification by Herrera's children, as they accepted installment payments and only challenged the sale after failing to negotiate a higher price. The court also found Herrera was the declared owner of the lands and thus had the right to transfer ownership.

Uploaded by

Paolo Brillantes
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
  • Francisco vs Herrera Case Details: Discusses the legal case between Francisco and Herrera, detailing the facts, issues, judicial proceedings, and outcomes involved.

FRANCISCO VS HERRERA

G.R. No. 139982. November 21, 2002


Facts: Eligio Herrera, Sr., the father of respondent, was the owner of two parcels of
land, one consisting of 500sq. m. and another consisting of 451 sq. m., covered by
Tax Declaration (TD) Nos. 01-00495 and 01-00497,respectively. Both were located at
Barangay San Andres, Cainta, Rizal.

On January 3, 1991, petitioner bought from said landowner the first parcel, covered
by TD No. 01-00495, for the price of P1,000,000, paid in installments from
November 30, 1990 to August 10, 1991.
On March 12, 1991, petitioner bought the second parcel covered by TD No. 0100497, for P750,000.
At first, the children of Eligio thought that the consideration paid for the lands were
not sufficient, thus, they asked Francisco for an increase but Francisco refused.
Then, they asserted that the contract of sale was void since their father was already
suffering senile dementia when he sold the land to Francisco.
Francisco contended that the contract was not void but rather voidable, susceptible
of prescription.
Issue: Won the sale is void or voidable.
Held: Petition granted. The contract was voidable and thus susceptible of
ratification.
It was established that the vendor Eligio, Sr. entered into an agreement with
petitioner, but that the formers capacity to consent was vitiated by senile
dementia. Hence, we must rule that the assailed contracts are not void or inexistent
per se; rather, these are contracts that are valid and binding unless annulled
through a proper action filed in court seasonably.
An annullable contract may be rendered perfectly valid by ratification, which can be
express or implied. Implied ratification may take the form of accepting and retaining
the benefits of a contract. This is what happened in this case. Respondents
contention that he merely received payments on behalf of his father merely to avoid
their misuse and that he did not intend to concur with the contracts is unconvincing.
If he was not agreeable with the contracts, he could have prevented petitioner from
delivering the payments, or if this was impossible, he could have immediately
instituted the action for reconveyance and have the payments consigned with the
court. None of these happened. As found by the trial court and the Court of Appeals,
upon learning of the sale, respondent negotiated for the increase of the purchase
price while receiving the installment payments. It was only when respondent failed
to convince petitioner to increase the price that the former instituted the complaint
for reconveyance of the properties. Clearly, respondent was agreeable to the
contracts, only he wanted to get more. Further, there is no showing that respondent

returned the payments or made an offer to do so. This bolsters the view that indeed
there was ratification. One cannot negotiate for an increase in the price in one
breath and in the same breath contend that the contract of sale is void.
Nor can we find for respondents argument that the contracts were void as Eligio,
Sr., could not sell the lots in question as one of the properties had already been sold
to him, while the other was the subject of a co-ownership among the heirs of the
deceased wife of Eligio, Sr. Note that it was found by both the trial court and the
Court of Appeals that Eligio, Sr., was the "declared owner" of said lots. This finding is
conclusive on us. As declared owner of said parcels of land, it follows that Eligio, Sr.,
had the right to transfer the ownership thereof under the principle of jus disponendi.

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