G.R. No. 124290 January 16, 1998
ALLIED BANKING CORPORATION, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS, HON. JOSE C. DE GUZMAN, OSCAR D. TAN-QUECO, LUCIA D. TANQUECO-MATIAS, RUBEN D. TANQUECO and NESTOR D. TANQUECO, respondents.
Besides, if we were to adopt the contrary theory that the terms and conditions to be embodied in the renewed contract were still subject to mutual agreement by and between the parties, then the option — which is an integral part of the consideration for the contract — would be rendered worthless. For then, the lessor could easily defeat the lessee's right of renewal by simply imposing unreasonable and onerous conditions to prevent the parties from reaching an agreement, as in the case at bar. As in a statute no word, clause, sentence, provision or part of a contract shall be considered surplusage or superfluous, meaningless, void, insignificant or nugatory, if that can be reasonably avoided. To this end, a construction which will render every word operative is to be preferred over that which would make some words idle and nugatory.
ALLIED BANKING CORPORATION, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS, HON. JOSE C. DE GUZMAN, OSCAR D. TAN-QUECO, LUCIA D. TANQUECO-MATIAS, RUBEN D. TANQUECO and NESTOR D. TANQUECO, respondents.
Article 1308 of the
Civil Code expresses what is known in law as the principle of mutuality of contracts.
It provides that "the contract must bind both the contracting parties; its
validity or compliance cannot be left to the will of one of them." This
binding effect of a contract on both parties is based on the principle that the
obligations arising from the contracts have the force of law between the
contracting parties, and there must be mutuality between them based essentially
on their equality under which it is repugnant to have one party bound by the
contract while leaving the other free therefrom. The ultimate purpose is to render
void a contract containing a condition which makes its fulfillment dependent
solely upon the uncontrolled will of one of the contracting parties.
An
express agreement which gives the lessee the sole option to renew the lease is
frequent and subject to statutory restrictions, valid and binding on the
parties. This option, which is provided in the same lease agreement, is
fundamentally part of the consideration in the contract and is no different
from any other provision of the lease carrying an undertaking on the part of
the lessor to act conditioned on the performance by the lessee. It is a purely
executory contract and at most confers a right to obtain a renewal if there is
compliance with the conditions on which the rights is made to depend. The right
of renewal constitutes a part of the lessee's interest in the land and forms a
substantial and integral part of the agreement.
The
fact that such option is binding only on the lessor and can be exercised only
by the lessee does not render it void for lack of mutuality. After all, the
lessor is free to give or not to give the option to the lessee. And while the
lessee has a right to elect whether to continue with the lease or not, once he
exercises his option to continue and the lessor accepts, both parties are
thereafter bound by the new lease agreement. Their rights and obligations
become mutually fixed, and the lessee is entitled to retain possession of the
property for the duration of the new lease, and the lessor may hold him liable
for the rent therefor. The lessee cannot thereafter escape liability even if he
should subsequently decide to abandon the premises. Mutuality obtains in such a
contract and equality exists between the lessor and the lessee since they
remain with the same faculties in respect to fulfillment.
With
respect to the meaning of the clause "may be renewed for a like term at
the option of the lessee," we sustain petitioner's contention that its
exercise of the option resulted in the automatic extension of the contract of
lease under the same terms and conditions. The subject contract simply provides
that "the term of this lease shall be fourteen (14) years and may be
renewed for a like term at the option of the lessee." As we see it, the
only term on which there has been a clear agreement is the period of the new
contract, i.e.,
fourteen (14) years, which is evident from the clause "may be renewed for
a like term at the option of the lessee," the phrase "for a like term" referring to the period. It is
silent as to what the specific terms and conditions of the renewed lease shall
be. Shall it be the same terms and conditions as in the original contract, or
shall it be under the terms and conditions as may be mutually agreed upon by
the parties after the expiration of the existing lease?
In Ledesma v. Javellana this
Court was confronted with a similar problem. In the case the lessee was given
the sole option to renew the lease, but the contract failed to specify the
terms and conditions that would govern the new contract. When the lease
expired, the lessee demanded an extension under the same terms and conditions.
The lessor expressed conformity to the renewal of the contract but refused to
accede to the claim of the lessee that the renewal should be under the same
terms and conditions as the original contract. In sustaining the lessee, this
Court made the following pronouncement:
. . . in the case of Hicks v. Manila Hotel Company, a similar
issue was resolved by this Court. It was held that "such a clause relates
to the very contract in which it is placed, and does not permit the defendant
upon the renewal of the contract in which the clause is found, to insist upon
different terms and those embraced in the contract to be renewed;" and
that "a stipulation to renew always relates to the contract in which it is
found and the rights granted thereunder, unless it expressly provides for
variations in the terms of the contract to be renewed."
The same principle is upheld in American Law
regarding the renewal of lease contracts. we find the following citations:
"The rule is well-established that a general covenant to renew or extend a
lease which makes no provision as to the terms of a renewal or extension
implies a renewal or extension upon the same terms as provided in the original
lease."
In the lease contract under consideration,
there is no provision to indicate that the renewal will be subject to new terms
and conditions that the parties may yet agree upon. It is to renewal provisions
of lease contracts of the kind presently considered that the principles stated
above squarely apply. We do not agree with the contention of the appellants
that if it was intended by the parties to renew the contract under the same
terms and conditions stipulated in the contract of lease, such should have
expressly so stated in the contract itself. The same argument could easily be
interposed by the appellee who could likewise contend that if the intention was
to renew the contract of lease under such new terms and conditions that the
parties may agree upon, the contract should have so specified. Between the two
assertions, there is more logic in the latter.
The settled rule is that in case of uncertainty
as to the meaning of a provision granting extension to a contract of lease, the
tenant is the one favored and not the landlord. "As a general rule, in
construing provisions relating to renewals or extensions, where there is any
uncertainty, the tenants is favored, and not the landlord, because the latter,
having the power of stipulating in his own favor, has neglected to do so; and
also upon the principle that every man's grant is to be taken most strongly
against himself
Besides, if we were to adopt the contrary theory that the terms and conditions to be embodied in the renewed contract were still subject to mutual agreement by and between the parties, then the option — which is an integral part of the consideration for the contract — would be rendered worthless. For then, the lessor could easily defeat the lessee's right of renewal by simply imposing unreasonable and onerous conditions to prevent the parties from reaching an agreement, as in the case at bar. As in a statute no word, clause, sentence, provision or part of a contract shall be considered surplusage or superfluous, meaningless, void, insignificant or nugatory, if that can be reasonably avoided. To this end, a construction which will render every word operative is to be preferred over that which would make some words idle and nugatory.
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