Home of ChanRobles Virtual Law Library

PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

EN BANC

[G.R. No. L-27667. March 25, 1970.]

IGNACIA N. DE TANEDO, Petitioner-Appellant, v. EMETERIO DE LA CRUZ, Respondent-Appellee.

Jose B. Flaminiano and Alfonso G. Espinosa for Petitioner-Appellant.

Alberto A. Reyes for Respondent-Appellee.


SYLLABUS


1. AGRICULTURAL TENANCY ACT; EJECTMENT OF TENANT VIOLATION BY TENANT OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF TENANCY CONTRACT; DELAYED PAYMENT OF RENTAL, NOT GROUND FOR EJECTMENT; INSTANT CASE.— Delay in payment of rentals does not justify the drastic remedy of ejectment under Section 50(b) of Republic Act 1199, which states that while violation by the tenant of any of the terms and conditions of tenancy contract shall be a ground to eject him, yet this provision does not apply where there is substantial compliance such as when the rentals for the agricultural year 1958-1961 in question had all been fully satisfied although not in advance as agreed upon.

2. REMEDIAL LAW; APPEALS; ISSUE NOT ALLEGED IN COMPLAINT MAY NOT BE CONSIDERED ON APPEAL.— With reference to the rental for the crop year 1962-1963, failure to pay the same was not alleged in the original or amended complaints below and hence may not be considered for the first time on appeal.

3. AGRICULTURAL TENANCY ACT; EJECTMENT OF TENANT; CONVICTION OF TENANT OF MINOR OFFENSE AGAINST LANDHOLDER, NOT GROUND FOR EJECTMENT.— Where the conviction of the tenant is for a minor offense involving only the taking of a few bamboo shoots from the landholder, for which only a small fine was imposed and duly paid, the tenant may not be ejected.

4. ID.; ID.; DISCRETION OF COURT TO DETERMINE WHETHER CAUSES WARRANT EJECTMENT.— Under Section 49 of the Agricultural Tenancy Act, the tenant shall be dispossessed for his holding for any of the causes enumerated in Section 50 "only after the same has been proved before, and the dispossession is authorized by the court." It would seem from this that the court is given some discretion to determine whether or not the cause, although among those enumerated, is of such gravity as to warrant the drastic remedy contemplated, or whether or not there exist circumstances under which its application may be stayed.

5. ID.; RETROACTIVE EFFECT IF FAVORABLE TO TENANT; INSTANT CASE.— Under the Agricultural Land Reform Code (R.A. No. 3844, approved August 8, 1963), an agricultural lessee’s conviction of a crime committed against his lessor is no longer a cause for the former’s dispossession. While the principle of retroactivity generally applied to posterior legislation favorable to an accused refers to the penal aspects of the case, yet, for reasons of equity, the benefits of that principle may be extended to the case at bar insofar as his ejectment is predicated on his conviction of a minor offense alone.

6. ID.; INTERPRETATION AND ENFORCEMENT; DOUBT SHOULD BE RESOLVED IN FAVOR OF THE TENANT.— Section 56 of the Agricultural Tenancy Act lays down the guideline that "in the interpretation and enforcement of this Act and other laws as well as of the stipulations between landholder and the tenant, the court and administrative officials shall solve all grave doubts in favor of the tenant."


D E C I S I O N


MAKALINTAL, J.:


This case, filed under the provisions of the Agricultural Tenancy Act (R. A. No. 1199) is one for ejectment of the leasehold tenant from the parcel of land under cultivation by him, owner by the petitioners-appellants. Judgment by the Court of Agrarian Relations was for the respondent-appellee, and appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals, which certified the same to us on the ground that only a question of law is involved.

Several reasons were alleged in the complaint below to justify the ejectment prayed for, but in this appeal only two of said reasons are insisted upon, namely, failure on the part of the tenant to pay the yearly rentals in advance pursuant to his agreement with the landholders; and conviction of said tenant of a crime committed against them.

In the decision appealed from as well as in the resolution of the Court of Appeals forwarding this case to us, it has been found that the rentals for the agricultural years 1958 to 1961, inclusive, had all been fully satisfied, although not in advance as agreed upon. This is admitted by the petitioners-appellants. We agree with the Court a quo that the delay in payment does not justify the drastic remedy of ejectment, considering Section 50(b) of Republic Act 1199, which states that while violation by the tenant of any of the terms and conditions of the tenancy contract shall be a ground to eject him, yet this provision shall not apply where there has been substantial compliance. With reference to the rental for the crop-year 1962-63, failure to pay the same was not alleged in the original or amended complaints below, and hence may not be considered for the first time on appeal.

The second ground invoked by the petitioners-appellants deserves more serious consideration. It is an admitted fact that the respondent-appellee was charged with and convicted of the crime of theft by the Municipal Court of Tarlac for having stolen eight (8) bamboo shoots belonging to the petitioners-appellants. The judgment of conviction was promulgated on April 27, 1962, and the penalty imposed was a fine of P50.00.

The Agricultural Tenancy Act (R.A. No. 1199), which was then in force, provided as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"SEC. 50. Causes for the Dispossession of Tenant. — Any of the following, and no other, shall be sufficient cause for the dispossession of a tenant from-his landholdings:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

x       x       x


(g) Conviction by a competent court of a tenant or any member of his immediate family or farm household of a crime against the landholder or a member of his immediate family."cralaw virtua1aw library

Several considerations deter this Court from applying the aforequoted provision to the letter in this case and ordering the ejectment of the respondent-appellee as a result. First, the conviction was for a minor offense, involving as it did the taking of a few bamboo shoots from the land under cultivation without the prior consent of the petitioners-appellants, for which only a small fine was imposed and duly paid. Second, under Section 49 of the Agricultural Tenancy Act, the tenant shall be dispossessed of his holding for any of the causes enumerated in Section 50 "only after the same has been proved before, and the dispossession is authorized by the court." It would seem from this that the court is given some discretion to determine whether or not the cause, although among those enumerated, is of such gravity as to warrant the drastic remedy contemplated, or whether or not there exist circumstances under which its application may be stayed. Third, it should be noted that under the Agricultural Land Reform Code (R.A. No. 3844, approved August 8, 1963) an agricultural lessee’s conviction of a crime committed against his lessor is no longer a cause for the former’s dispossession. While the principle of retroactivity generally applied to posterior legislation favorable to an accused refers to the penal aspects of the case, yet for reasons of equity, we believe that the benefits of that principle may be extended to the respondent-appellee here, insofar as his ejectment is predicated on his conviction alone. Finally, Section 56 of the Agricultural Tenancy Act lays down the guideline that "in the interpretation and enforcement of this Act and other laws as well as of the stipulations between the landholder and the tenant, the court and administrative officials shall solve all grave doubts in favor of the tenant." This Court has had occasions to observe this guideline, among them in Santos v. Garcia. G.R. No. L-16894, May 31, 1963, where we reversed the decree of ejectment issued by the lower court on a finding that the tenant had reaped two cavans of palay from the land cultivated by him without the consent of the landholder.

WHEREFORE, the judgment appealed from is affirmed, without costs.

Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, J.B.L., Dizon, Zaldivar, Castro, Fernando, Teehankee, Barredo and Villamor, JJ., concur.

Top of Page