EN BANC
[G.R. No. 12579. July 27, 1918.]
GREGORIO JIMENEZ, plaintiff-appellee, vs. PEDRO RABOT, NICOLASA
JIMENEZ and her husband, EMILIO RODRIGUEZ, defendants. PEDRO RABOT,
appellant.
Antonio Bengson, for appellant.
Jose Rivera, for appellee.
SYLLABUS
1. SALE OF LAND; POWER OF ATTORNEY; SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION OF
PROPERTY UNNECESSARY. — Where the owner of real property desires to confer upon an
attorney in fact authority to sell the same, it is necessary that the authority should be expressed in
writing; but it is not necessary that the property to be sold should be precisely described. It is
sufficient if the authority is so expressed as to determine without doubt the limits of the agent's
authority.
2. ID.; ID.; ID.; CASE AT BAR. — The plaintiff, being the owner of three parcels of
land, left the same in the care of his sister as his agent and went to live in another province. While so
absent, he wrote her to sell one of his parcels and to send him the money. The sister found a
purchaser and sold one of the parcels but failed to forward the proceeds to her brother. Afterwards
the plaintiff returned and instituted an action to recover the parcel which had been sold. Held: That
the authority to sell was sufficient and that the plaintiff could not recover.
DECISION
STREET, J : p
This action was instituted by the plaintiff, Gregorio Jimenez, to recover from the defendant,
Pedro Rabot, a parcel of land situated in the municipality of Alaminos, in the Province of
Pangasinan, and described in the complaint as follows:
"Approximate area of three hectares; bounded on the north and west with land of Pedro
Reynoso; on the south with land of Nicolasa Jimenez; and on the east with land of Calixta
Apostol before, at present with that of Juan Montemayor and Simon del Barrio. It is situated in
Dinmayat Tancaran, barrio of Alos of this same municipality of Alaminos, Pangasinan."
From a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, Pedro Rabot has appealed; but his
codefendants, Nicolasa Jimenez and her husband, who were cited by the defendant for the purpose
of holding her liable upon her warranty in case of his eviction, have not appealed.
It is admitted that the parcel of land in question, together with two other parcels in the same
locality originally belonged to the plaintiff, having been assigned to him as one of the heirs in the
division of the estate of his father. It further appears that while Gregorio was staying at Vigan, in the
Province of Ilocos Sur, during the year 1911, his property in Alaminos was confided by him to the
care of his elder sister Nicolasa Jimenez. On February 7 of that year he wrote this sister a letter from
Vigan in which he informed her that he was pressed for money and requested her to sell one of his
parcels of land and send him the money in order that he might pay his debts. This letter contains no
description of the land to be sold other than is indicated in the words "one of my parcels of land"
("uno de mis terrenos").
Acting upon this letter Nicolasa approached the defendant Pedro Rabot, and the latter agreed
to buy the parcel in question for the sum of P500. Two hundred and fifty pesos were paid at once,
with the understanding that a deed of conveyance would be executed when the balance should be
paid. Nicolasa admits having received this payment of P250 at the time stated; but there is no
evidence that she sent any of it to her brother.
About one year later Gregorio came down to Alaminos and demanded that his sister should
surrender this piece of land to him, it being then in her possession. She refused upon some pretext or
other to do so; and as a result Gregorio, in conjunction with others of his brothers and sisters, whose
properties were also in the hands of Nicolasa, instituted an action in the Court of First Instance for
the purpose of recovering their land from her control. This action was decided favorably to the
plaintiffs upon August 12, 1913; and no appeal was taken from the judgment.
Meanwhile, upon May 31, 1912, Nicolasa Jimenez executed and delivered to Pedro Rabot a
deed purporting to convey to him the parcel of land which is the subject of this controversy. The
deed recites that the sale was made in consideration of the sum of P500, the payment of which is
acknowledged. Pedro Rabot went into possession, and the property was found in his hands at the
time when final judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiffs in the action above mentioned. It will
thus be seen that Pedro Rabot acquired possession under the deed from Nicolasa during the
pendency of the litigation in which she was defendant; but it does not positively appear that he was
at the time cognizant of that circumstance.
In considering the questions presented by this appeal one or two preliminary observations
may be made. The first is that, as a matter of formality, a power of attorney to convey real property
ought to appear in a public document, just as any other instrument intended to transmit or convey an
interest in such property ought to appear in a public document. (Art. 1280, Civil Code.) But
inasmuch as it is an established doctrine that a private document is competent to create, transmit,
modify, or extinguish a right in real property (Thunga Chui vs. Que Bentec, 2 Phil. Rep., 561; Couto
Soriano vs. Cortes, 8 Phil. Rep., 459), it follows that a power of attorney to convey such property,
even though in the form of a private document, will operate with effect. Again, supposing that the
letter contained adequate authority for Nicolasa to sell the property in question, her action in
conveying the property in her own name, without showing the capacity in which she acted, was
doubtless irregular. Nevertheless, such deed would in any event operate to bind her brother, the
plaintiff, in its character as a contract (Lyon vs. Pollock, 99 U. S., 668; 25 L. ed.,-265), and
supposing that the authority was sufficient, he could be compelled by a proper judicial proceeding to
execute a document to carry such contract into effect. (Art. 1279, Civil Code.)
The principal question for consideration therefore in the end resolves itself into this, whether
the authority conferred on Nicolasa by the letter of February 7, 1911, was sufficient to enable her to
bind her brother. The only provisions of law bearing on this point are contained in article 1713 of the
Civil Code and in section 335 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Article 1713 of the Civil Code
requires that the authority to alienate land shall be contained in an express mandate; while subsection
5 of section 335 of the Code of Civil Procedure says that the authority of the agent must be in
writing and subscribed by the party to be charged. We are of the opinion that the authority expressed
in the letter is a sufficient compliance with both requirements.
It has been urged here that in order for the authority to be sufficient under section 335 of the
Code of Civil Procedure the authorization must contain a particular description of the property which
the agent is to be permitted to sell. There is no such requirement in subsection 5 of section 335; and
we do not believe that it would be legitimate to read such a requirement into it. The purpose in
giving a power of attorney is to substitute the mind and hand of the agent for the mind and hand of
the principal; and if the character and extent of the power is so far defined as to leave no doubt as to
the limits within which the agent is authorized to act, and he acts within those limits, the principal
cannot question the validity of his act. It is not necessary that the particular act to be accomplished
should be predestinated by the language of the power. The question to be answered always, after the
power has been exercised, is rather this: Was the act which the agent performed within the scope of
his authority? In the case before us, if the question is asked whether the act performed by Nicolasa
Jimenez was within the scope of the authority which had been conferred upon her, the answer must
be obviously in the affirmative.
It should not escape observation that the problem with which we are here concerned relates to
the sufficiency of the power of attorney under subsection 5 of section 335 of the Code of Civil
Procedure and not to the sufficiency of the note or memorandum of the contract, or agreement of
sale, required by the same subsection, in connection with the first paragraph of the same section. It is
well settled in the jurisprudence of England and the United States that when the owner, or his agent,
comes to make a contract to sell, or a conveyance to effect a transfer, there must be a description of
the property which is the subject of the sale or conveyance. This is necessary of course to define the
object of the contract. (Brockway vs. Frost, 40 Minn., 155; Carr vs. Passaic Land etc. Co., 19 N. J.
Eq., 424; Lippincott vs. Bridgewater, 55 N. J. Eq., 208; Craig vs. Zelian, 137 Cal., 105; 20 Cyc.,
271.)
The general rule here applicable is that the description must be sufficiently definite to identify
the land either from the recitals of the contract or deed or from external facts referred to in the
document, thereby enabling one to determine the identity of the land and if the description is
uncertain on its face or is shown to be applicable with equal plausibility to more than one tract, it is
insufficient. The principle embodied in these decisions is not, in our opinion, applicable to the
present case, which relates to the sufficiency of the authorization, not to the sufficiency of the
contract or conveyance. It is unquestionable that the deed which Nicolasa executed contains a proper
description of the property which she purported to convey.
There is ample authority to the effect that a person may by a general power of attorney
authorize an agent to sell "all" the land possessed by the principal, or all that he possesses in a
particular city, county, or state. (Roper vs. McFadden, 48 Cal., 346; Rownd vs. Davidson, 113 La.,
1047; Carson vs. Ray, 52 N. C., 609; 78 Am. Dec., 267; 31 Cyc., 1229.) It is also held that where a
person authorizes an agent to sell a farm ("my farm") in a certain county, this is sufficient, if it be
shown that such party has only one farm in that county. (Marriner vs. Dennison, 78 Cal., 202.) In
Linton vs. Moorhead (209 Pa. St., 646), the power authorized the agent to sell or convey "any or all
tracts, lots, or parcels" of land belonging to the plaintiff. It was held that this was adequate. In Lyon
vs. Pollock (99 U. S., 668), the owner in effect authorized an agent to sell everything he had in San
Antonio, Texas. The authority was held sufficient. In Linan vs. Puno (31 Phil. Rep., 259), the
authority granted was to the effect that the agent might administer "the interests" possessed by the
principal in the municipality of Tarlac and to that end he was authorized to purchase, sell, collect,
and pay, etc. It was held that this was a sufficient power.
In the present case the agent was given the power to sell either of the parcels of land
belonging to the plaintiff. We can see no reason why the performance of an act within the scope of
this authority should not bind the plaintiff to the same extent as if he had given the agent authority to
sell "any or all" and she had conveyed only one.
From what has been said it is evident that the lower court should have absolved the defendant
Pedro Rabot from the complaint. Judgment will accordingly be reversed, without any express
adjudication of costs of this instance. So ordered.
Torres, Johnson, Malcolm, Avanceña and Fisher, JJ., concur.