FACTS: |
Unknown
to the other children of Margarita, the mother transferred the tax
declarations of her three (3) lands to her son, Roberto, to support his
application for travel to the US. Upon returning, Roberto married Estella and
adopted her two children, Pedro and Marilou. Sometime later, Roberto sold one
of the lands to the spouses Campos, and separately sold the two remaining
lands to his two adopted children. Margarita came to know of the sale during
the wake of Roberto. Hence, Roberto’s siblings filed a complaint for
annulment of the said sales and for the recovery of ownership and possession
of the land.
The
trial court ruled against the plaintiffs on the basis that there was no
express trust between Roberto and his mother. The Court of Appeals affirmed
the decision of the trial court.
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Issue: |
Whether
the trial and appellate court’s ruling were correct.
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Ruling: |
Yes.
The Court held that “A trust is the legal relationship between one person
having an equitable ownership of property and another person owning the legal
title to such property, the equitable ownership of the former entitling him
to the performance of certain duties and the exercise of certain powers by
the latter. Trusts are either express or implied.”
The
Court also held that “Express or direct trusts are created by the direct and
positive acts of the parties, by some writing or deed, or will, or by oral
declaration in words evincing an intention to create a trust.”
The
Court, moreover, held that “Implied trusts—also called “trusts by operation
of law,” “indirect trusts” and “involuntary trusts”—arise by legal
implication based on the presumed intention of the parties or on equitable
principles independent of the particular intention of the parties. They are
those which, without being expressed, are deducible from the nature of the transaction
as matters of intent or, independently of the particular intention of the
parties, as being inferred from the transaction by operation of law basically
by reason of equity.”
In
addition, the Court held that “Implied trusts are further classified into
constructive trusts and resulting trusts. Constructive trusts, on the one
hand, come about in the main by operation of law and not by agreement or
intention. They arise not by any word or phrase, either expressly or
impliedly, evincing a direct intention to create a trust, but one which
arises in order to satisfy the demands of justice.”
The
Court further held that “Resulting trusts arise from the nature or
circumstances of the consideration involved in a transaction whereby one
person becomes invested with legal title but is obligated in equity to hold
his title for the benefit of another. This is based on the equitable doctrine
that valuable consideration and not legal title is determinative of equitable
title or interest and is always presumed to have been contemplated by the
parties.”
Finally,
the Court held that “A trust will follow the property—through all changes in
its state and form as long as such property, its products or its proceeds,
are capable of identification, even into the hands of a transferee other than
a bona fide purchaser for value, or restitution will be enforced at the
election of the beneficiary through recourse against the trustee or the
transferee personally. This is grounded on the principle in property law that
ownership continues and can be asserted by the true owner against any
withholding of the object to which the ownership pertains, whether such
object of the ownership is found in the hands of an original owner or a
transferee, or in a different form, as long as it can be identified.”
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