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small portion which was planted with palay. A demolished house was also found in the periphery of the donated lot. TC and CA rendered its decision in favor of respondents: The donation was subject to a resolutory condition, namely, that the land donated shall be used for school purposes. The CA further ruled that the donation was onerous considering that the donee was burdened with the obligation to utilize the land for school purposes; therefore, the fouryear prescriptive period under Article 764 of the New Civil Code did not apply. A donation is considered a written contract and is governed by Article 1144 of the New Civil Code, which provides for a 10year prescriptive period from the time the cause of action accrues. According to the CA, the respondents cause of action for the revocation of the donation should be reckoned from the expiration of a reasonable opportunity for the DECS to comply with what was incumbent upon it.
issue
WON petitioners had complied with the condition imposed in the donation NO If the action of revocation had prescribed NO
ratio
The donee failed to comply with the condition imposed in the deed of donation Quoting the CA, the SC said that: It is not amiss to state that other than the bare allegation of the defendantappellants, there is nothing in the records that could concretely prove that the condition of donation has been complied with by the defendantappellants. The planting of palay on the land donated can hardly be considered and could not have been the "school purposes" referred to and intended by the donors when they had donated the land in question. Also, the posture of the defendantappellants that the land donated is being used as technology and home economics laboratory of the Rizal National High School is far from being the truth considering that not only is the said school located two kilometers away from the land donated but also there was not even a single classroom built on the land donated that would reasonably indicate that, indeed, classes have been conducted therein. Based from the RTC during the ocular inspection of the property conducted in the presence of the litigants and their counsel, it observed that " the land was barren; there were no improvements on the donated property though a portion thereof was planted with palay. Petiotioners failed to adduce a shred of evidence to prove that the palay found in the property was planted by DECS personnel or at its instance or even by students of the Rizal National High School. No evidence was adduced to prove that there were existing plans to use the property for school purposes. The right to seek the revocation of donation had not yet prescribed when respondents filed their complaint 764 CC cannot be used: Since such failure to comply with the condition of utilizing the property for school purposes became manifest sometime in 1988 when the DECS utilized another property for the construction of the school building, the fouryear prescriptive period did not commence on such date. They were given more than enough time to comply with the condition , and it cannot be allowed to use this fact to its advantage. It must be stressed that the donation is onerous because the DECS, as donee, was burdened with the obligation to utilize the land donated for school purposes. Under Article 733 of the New Civil Code, a donation with an onerous cause is essentially a contract and is thus governed by the rules on contract Corollarily, since a deed of donation is considered a written contract, it is governed by Article
2
1144 CC The provision provides that the prescriptive period for an action arising from a written contract is ten (10) years from the time the cause of action accrues. HOWEVER it must be noted that the subject donation fixed no period within which the donee can comply with the condition of donation, so art 1197 CC applies Said article provides that if the obligation does not fix a period, but from its nature and the circumstances it can be inferred that a period was intended, the courts may fix the duration thereof. Central Philippine University v. Court of Appeals established that the legal possibility of bringing the action begins with the expiration of a reasonable opportunity for the donee to fulfill what has been charged upon it by the donor. Likewise, we held that even if Article 1197 of the New Civil Code provides that the courts may fix the duration when the obligation does not determine the period but from its nature and circumstances it can be inferred that a period was intended, the general rule cannot be applied because to do so would be a mere technicality and would serve no other purpose than to delay or lead to an unnecessary and expensive multiplication of suits. In fine, petitioner DECS has no use for the property; hence, the same shall be reverted to the respondents.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The Decision of the Court of Appeals in CAG.R. CV No. 78314 dated July 30, 2004 is AFFIRMED.