G.R. No. 105419 September 27, 1993
PIONEER SAVINGS & LOAN BANK, petitioner,
vs.
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS and MANUEL P. SANTOS, respondents.
Ynson and Associates for petitioner.
Florante Calingo for private respondent.
PADILLA, J.:
This
 petition for review seeks the reversal of the decision of the Court of 
Appeals in CA G.R. CV No. 26670, promulgated on 30 April 1992 1 which affirmed in toto
 the judgment of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 142, Makati, Metro 
Manila in Civil Case No. 10311, ordering, among other things, delivery 
to therein defendant (herein private respondent) of the motor vehicle, 
subject of the complaint for delivery of personal property filed by 
petitioner against private respondent Manuel F. Santos.
Respondent appellate court summarized the facts of the case as follows:
PLAINTIFF Pioneer Savings and Loan Bank acquired ownership over a motor vehicle by virtue of a Deed of Sale (Exhibit 'B'),
 executed by and between Finasia Investment and Finance Corporation and 
the plaintiff bank. Said motor vehicle is specifically described as 
follows: make: Toyota Corolla; type: 4-door Sedan; Motor No.: 
4K-1489878; Serial 
No. KE70-9101485; Plate No. PBZ-784; Model 1982; and color: Mint Green.
No. KE70-9101485; Plate No. PBZ-784; Model 1982; and color: Mint Green.
SUBSEQUENTLY,
 defendant Manuel Santos, in his capacity as manager of plaintiff bank's
 General Services Department, was given the privilege to use and possess
 the aforementioned vehicle coterminous with his employment. In a 
regular board meeting of plaintiff Pioneer Savings and Loan Bank held on
 June 28, 1984 at its principal office, the Board unanimously passed 
Resolution No. 26, Series of 1984, authorizing any two among the 
President, Arturo G. Eudela, and the two First Vice Presidents namely: 
Francisco Pangilinan and Antonio M. Siojo, to jointly sign any deed or 
contract involving the sale, transfer or conveyance of bank's assets or 
properties, pursuant to the recommendation of the Executive Committee (Exhibit 'C').
 Pursuant to said authority, the plaintiff bank, through its President, 
Arturo Eudela and First Vice President, Atty. Francisco S. Pangilinan, 
for a consideration of P40,000.00 in cash actually received from 
defendant Manuel Santos in the presence of Noel Pineda, a bank employee,
 sold, transferred and conveyed unto the defendant the afore-described 
motor vehicle, free from all liens and encumbrances. Said document of 
sale is duly notarized.  2
Sometime
 in August 1984, respondent Santos ceased to be employed with petitioner
 bank. He took the car with him. On 12 April 1985, petitioner filed a 
complaint against respondent Santos for recovery of the motor vehicle, 
with a prayer for the issuance of a writ of replevin. Upon posting of a 
replevin bond by petitioner, the Regional Trial Court of Makati, Branch 
142, issued an order of seizure and the subject car was thus delivered 
to petitioner.
After trial, the lower court rendered judgment in favor of respondent Santos, the dispositive part of which reads as follows:
Premises considered, the Court hereby renders judgment in favor of the defendant, ordering the plaintiff:
1. to deliver to the defendant the subject motor vehicle complete with its battery and the four tire replacement.
2. to pay the defendant P10,000.00 as moral damages and P10,000.00 as exemplary damages;
3. to pay the defendant the sum of P10,000.00 as and for attorney's fees;
4. to pay the defendant P2,000.00 as litigation expenses.
Should the motor vehicle no longer be available, or 
in defendant's estimation already in a determinated or dilapidated 
condition, the defendent has the option to refuse to accept the motor 
vehicle, in which case the plaintiff shall pay to the defendant the sum 
of P40,000.00 with interest at the rate of 12% per annum from June 14, 
1985 until fully paid.
Cost against the plaintiff.  3
As aforestated, this decision was affirmed in toto by respondent Court of Appeals. Hence, this petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules Court.
In this petition, the main contention of the 
petitioner is that there was actually no consideration in the sale of 
the motor vehicle to respondent Santos. The petitioner alleges that the 
deed of sale merely served as security for the time deposit placements 
of private respondent's relatives with the petitioner bank which was 
then undergoing financial difficulties and was under consideration for 
closure by the Central Bank of the Philippines. Petitioner avers that 
the "underlying agreement," a special arrangement between petitioner and
 respondent Santos was that in the event private respondent's relatives 
failed to recover their time deposits due to the bank's closure, then 
private respondent could keep the car as recompense.
According to petitioner, the relatives of private 
respondent were able to recover their time deposit placements, through 
the Philippine Deposit Insurance Corp. (PDIC) after petitioner bank was 
placed under receivership by the Central Bank of the Philippines so that
 there was no further reason for respondent Santos to keep the vehicle 
in question. Furthermore, petitioner assails the validity of the deed of
 sale for not having been duly notarized because the signatories thereto
 (the two [2] officers of the bank) never appeared before the notary 
public who notarized the document.
It is further contended by petitioner that respondent
 Court of Appeals and the trial court should not have discarded the 
testimonies of tho two (2) officers of petitioner bank, namely, Messrs. 
Eudela and Pangilinan, who clearly denied having received payment of 
P40,000.00 from respondent Santos, and which testimonies were supported 
by the bank's records that did not reflect any entry at all of the said 
amount of P40,000.00.
The petition is devoid of merit.
The core issue in this appeal is whether or not the 
deed of sale of the vehicle to respondent Santos may be proved or 
altered by parol evidence under the Parol Evidence Rule.
In De la Rama vs. Ledesma, 4 this Court held:
It
 is a well accepted principle of law that evidence of a prior or 
contemporaneous verbal agreement is generally not admissible to vary, 
contradict or defeat the operation of a valid instrument. (American 
Factors (Phil.) Inc. vs. Murphy Tire Corporation, et al. [C.A.] 49 O.G. 
189.)
While parol evidence is admissible in a variety of 
ways to explain the meaning of written contracts, it cannot serve the 
purpose of incorporating into the contract additional contemporaneous 
conditions which are not mentioned at all in the writing, unless there 
has been fraud or mistake. (Yu Tek and Co. v. Gonzales, 29 Phil. 384.)
We find 
merit in the private respondent's contention that petitioner failed to 
produce any instrument or written document which would prove that the 
deed of sale in question was only a security for the time deposit 
placements of respondent's relatives in the petitioner bank. The two (2)
 main witnesses for the petitioner, namely, Messrs. Eudela and 
Pangilinan, were not mere employees of the bank. They were bank 
officers; one being a lawyer (Pangilinan), and supposed to be steeped in
 legal and banking knowledge and practices. As such, they were expected 
to know the consequences of their act of signing a document which 
outrightly transferred ownership over the subject vehicle in favor of 
respondent Santos. They could have incorporated in the deed of sale (if 
such was the intention or agreement of the parties) a stipulation that 
transfer of ownership and registration of the vehicle in Santos' name 
were conditioned on the failure of his relatives to recover their time 
deposit placements in petitioner bank. No such stipulation was 
incorporated in the deed of sale which was an outright and unconditional
 transfer of ownership of the motor vehicle to respondent Santos.
Lastly, we 
see neither reason nor basis for resolving whether or not the deed of 
sale was duly notarized as this question is being raised in this appeal 
for the first time. It is settled doctrine that questions not raised in 
the lower court cannot be raised for the first time on appeal. 5
WHEREFORE, the appealed decision is hereby AFFIRMED with costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J., Regalado, Nocon and Puno, JJ., concur.
# Footnotes
2 Rollo, pp. 39-40.
3 Ibid., pp. 37-38.
4 G.R. No. L-28498, July 14, 1986, 143 SCRA 1.
5 Anchuelo vs. Intermediate Appellate Court, G.R. No. 71391, January 29, 1987, 147 SCRA 434.
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