SECOND DIVISION
[UDK-16877. January 3, 2022.]
ROGELIO MACATANE, SUBSTITUTED BY CLARITA D. MACATANE, MICHELLE D. MACATANE, ET AL., petitioners,vs. SEBASTIAN MACATANE, SUBSTITUTED BY ADELINA MACATANE-PINCA and GREGORIO MACATANE, BEING REPRESENTED BY EMMIE SARONO, ET AL., respondents.
NOTICE
Sirs/Mesdames :
Please take notice that the Court, Second Division, issued a Resolution dated03 January 2022which reads as follows:
"UDK-16877 (Rogelio Macatane, substituted by Clarita D. Macatane, Michelle D. Macatane, et al.v. Sebastian Macatane, substituted by Adelina Macatane-Pinca and Gregorio Macatane, being represented by Emmie Sarono, et al.). — After a judicious study of the case, the Court resolves to DENY the petition 1 and AFFIRM the Decision 2 dated October 30, 2020 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 04178 for failure of petitioners Rogelio Macatane, et al. (petitioners) to sufficiently show that the CA committed any reversible error in denying their appeal and affirming the Decision 3 dated November 30, 2010 of the Regional Trial Court of Laoang, Northern Samar, Branch 22 in Civil Case No. 1537, which found that the Deed of Donation dated December 12, 1990 purportedly executed by the deceased Amado Macatane (Amado), predecessor of respondents Sebastian Macatane, et al. (respondents), in favor of Rogelio Macatane (Rogelio) was void and inexistent, not having been made in a public instrument as required under Article 749 of the Civil Code for its validity. Particularly, the courts a quo found that Atty. Francisco Valila (Atty. Valila), who supposedly 'notarized' the Deed of Donation, lacked the requisite commission as a notary public at the time material to this case.
At the outset, factual findings of the trial court as affirmed by the appellate court are final, binding or conclusive on the parties and on this Court and therefore, will not be reviewed nor disturbed on appeal to this Court, 4 and while exceptions are allowed under prevailing jurisprudence, 5 none are obtaining in the present case. In any event, as correctly found by the CA, the lack of authority of Atty. Valila to notarize the Deed of Donation executed by Amado in favor of Rogelio clearly rendered the same legally infirm. Unlike ordinary contracts, which are perfected by the concurrence of the requisites of consent, object and cause, solemn contracts like donations of immovable property are valid only when they comply with legal formalities. Absent the solemnity requirements for validity, the mere intention of the parties and concurrence to the agreement will not give rise to a contract. 6 Corollary thereto, it is settled that a defective notarization will strip the document of its public character and reduce it to a private instrument. 7 Thus, a defective notarization renders the donation of an immovable property invalid since the requirement that such contract must appear in a public instrument is absent, more so in this case where Atty. Valila, who supposedly notarized the Deed of Donation, did not possess a notarial commission. In Tigno v. Sps. Aquino, 8 the Court held that '[i]f the notary public does not have the capacity to notarize a document, but does so anyway, then the document should be treated as unnotarized. The rule may strike as rather harsh, and perhaps may prove to be prejudicial to parties in good faith relying on the preferred authority of the notary public or the person pretending to be one. Still, to admit otherwise would render merely officious the elaborate process devised by this Court in order that a lawyer may receive a notarial commission. Without such a rule, the notarization of a document by a duly appointed notary public will have the same legal effect as one accomplished by a non-lawyer engaged in pretense.' Accordingly, the donation in favor of Rogelio being void, the courts a quo did not err in ruling that respondents had a better right over the subject property.
SO ORDERED."
By authority of the Court:
(SGD.) TERESITA AQUINO TUAZONDivision Clerk of Court
Footnotes
1.Rollo, pp. 9-16.
2.Id. at 27-37.
3. Not attached to the rollo.
4.Pascual v. Burgos, 776 Phil. 167, 182 (2016).
5. See Medina v. Mayor Asistio, Jr., 269 Phil. 225 (1990), cited in Pascual v. Burgos, supra.
6.Rowena Patenia-Kinatac-An, et al. v. Enriqueta Patenia-Decena, et al., G.R. No. 238325, June 15, 2020.
7.Rowena Patenia-Kinatac-An, et al. v. Enriqueta Patenia-Decena, et al., supra.
8. 486 Phil. 254, 267 (2004).