Land Titles and Deeds Complete Compilation of Cases
Land Titles and Deeds Complete Compilation of Cases
Land Titles and Deeds Complete Compilation of Cases
History
Concept of the term Land Title
Kinds of Estates
Types of Estates
Title versus Deed
Mode of acquisition
SPS DALION V. CA (1990)
or
That "acts and contracts which have for their object the
creation, transmission, modification or extinction of real
rights over immovable property must appear in a public
instrument." (NCC 1358 par. 1)
A contract of sale is a consensual contract, which means that the
sale is perfected by mere consent.
Lot No. 915 was later subdivided into seven lots, Lots Nos. 915A to 915-G. The Acting Commissioner of Land Registration
approved the subdivision plan. The register of deeds cancelled
TCT No. (N.A.) 3-(R) and issued on October 15, 1968 seven
titles to Laborada.
On May 25 and 26, 1970, the State filed two petitions for the
cancellation and annulment of the reconstituted titles and the
titles issued subsequent thereto. Judge Salvador, who had
ordered the reconstitution of the titles and to whom the two cases
for cancellation were assigned, issued restraining orders
enjoining the register of deeds, city engineer and Commissioner
of Land Registration from accepting or recording any transaction
regarding Lots Nos. 915 and 918.
She could not specify the number of the title. She alleged that
the title was "N.A" or not available. She claimed to be the owner
of the lot and that the title covering it was destroyed during the
war. Like the first petition, the second petition was sworn to on
the same date, November 16, 1967, before Manila notary
Domingo P. Aquino. Why it was not filed simultaneously with
Laborada's petition was not explained.
The lower court set the second petition for hearing on January
31, 1969. As in Laborada's petition, the notice of hearing for
Bombast's petition was published in the Official Gazette. It was
posted in three conspicuous places in Caloocan City and copies
thereof were sent to the supposed adjoining owners. But no
copies of the petition and notice of hearing were served upon the
registers of deeds of Caloocan City and Rizal, the officials who
would be interested in the reconstitution of the supposed lost title
and who could certify whether the original of the title was really
missing.
Bombast's petition was assigned also to Judge Salvador. It was
not opposed by the government lawyers, Enrique A. Cube and
Conrado de Leon; Judge Salvador in his order of April 3, 1969
granted the petition.
The court found from the evidence that the allegedly missing or
"not available" title was issued to Regino Gollez who sold the
land to petitioner Bombast. The owner's duplicate of Gollez's title
was supposedly destroyed during the war. Taxes were paid for
that land by Gollez and Bombast. The technical description of the
land the plan were approved by the Commissioner of Land
Registration who submitted a report recommending the
reconstitution of the title.
The lower court ordered the register of deeds to reconstitute the
On June 22, 1972, Judge Salvador (who did not bother to inhibit
himself) rendered a decision in the two cases holding that the
State's evidence was insufficient to establish its ownership and
possession of Lots Nos. 915 and 918 and that Laborada and A &
A Torrijos Engineering Corporation were purchasers in good faith
and for value and, consequently, their titles are not cancellable
and annullable.
Judge Salvador further held that the titles, whose reconstitution
he had ordered allegedly in conformity with law, could not be
attacked collaterally and, therefore, "the reconstituted titles and
their derivatives have the same validity, force and effect as the
originals before the reconstitution". The State appealed.
CA affirmed RTC and held that the reconstitution can no longer
be set aside and that if there were irregularities in the
reconstitution, then, as between two innocent parties, the State,
as the party that made possible the reconstitution, should suffer
the loss. The Court of Appeals cited section 101 of Act 496 to
support its view that a registered owner may lose his land "by the
registration of any other person as owner of such land".
ISSUE: W/N the reconstituted titles were valid
HELD: NO. We hold that the appeal is justified. The Appellate
Court and the trial court grievously erred in sustaining the validity
of the reconstituted titles which, although issued with judicial
sanction, are no better than spurious and forged titles.
In all candor, it should be stated that the reconstitution
2)
LU VS MANIPON
FACTS: On 5/9/81 Juan Peralta executed a deed of sale by
installment in favor of Spouses Manipon which he agreed to sell
by installment to said spouses 350 sq. meters of the 2078 sq.
meter lot he owned. This said DOS was not registered with the
RD.
On 6/10/81, Juan Peralta mortgaged the lot to Thrift Savings and
Loan Association (TSLAI) but he failed to pay the loan he
obtained for which the mortgage was constituted so it was
judicially foreclosed and sold to TSLAIN for P62, 789.18 who
if there had been no registration, and the vendee who first took
possession of the real property in good faith shall be preferred.
Petitioner is evidently not a subsequent purchaser in good faith
so respondents have a better right to the property.
It seems that the main reason why petitioner bought the entire lot
from TSLAI was his fear of losing the 350 sq.m. lot he bought
sometime in 1981 which also forms part of Lot 5582 B-7, having
been aware of the defects in the title of TSLAI is concerned he
cannot now claim to be a purchaser in good faith even if he
traces his ownership to TSLAI who was a purchaser in good
faith- the latter not being aware of the sale that transpired
between respondents and Juan Peralta before subject lot was
sold in a public auction. Even assuming that petitioner was not
aware of the sale between Peralta and respondents, he cannot
be considered a buyer in good faith as he has personal
knowledge of respondents occupation of lot, this should have put
him on guard. The purchaser may not be required to go beyond
the title to determine the condition of property but a purchaser
cannot also ignore facts which would put a reasonable man on
his guard and claim he acted in good faith under the belief that
there was no defect in the title of the vendor.
On bad faith: Petitioner denies being a purchaser in bad faith.
He alleges that the only reason he spoke to the respondents
before he bought the foreclosed land was to invite them to share
in the purchase price, but they turned him down.
Petitioners contention is untenable. He might have had good
intentions at heart, but it is not the intention that makes one an
innocent buyer. A purchaser in good faith or an innocent
purchaser for value is one who buys property and pays a full and
fair price for it, at the time of the purchase or before any notice of
some other persons claim on or interest in it.
Petitioners contention is untenable. He might have had good
intentions at heart, but it is not the intention that makes one an
innocent buyer. A purchaser in good faith or an innocent
purchaser for value is one who buys property and pays a full and
fair price for it, at the time of the purchase or before any notice of
some other persons claim on or interest in it.
Purchase Price: The CA modification exempting respondents
from paying petitioner is flawed, because the RTC had ordered
Juan Peralta to refund the P18,000 paid to him by petitioner as
the purchase price of the disputed lot. Thus, the trial court
correctly ordered (1) respondents to pay petitioner P13,051.50
plus legal interest for Lot 5582-B-7-D and (2) the third-party
defendant Peralta to refund to respondents the P18,000 they had
paid for the lot. The CA ruling would unjustly enrich respondents,
who would receive double compensation
LEGARDA VS SALEEBY
LAKBAYAN VS SAMOYE
Other topic:
Whether respondent is estopped from repudiating co-ownership
over the subject realties.
YES. Petitioner herself admitted that she did not assent to the
Partition Agreement after seeing the need to amend the same to
include other matters. Petitioner does not have any right to insist
on the contents of an agreement she intentionally refused to
sign.
Moreover, to follow petitioners argument would be to allow
respondent not only to admit against his own interest but that of
his legal spouse as well, who may also be lawfully entitled coownership over the said properties.
B. Advantages of the Torrens System
Rem
ISSUES:
1. WON an action for partition precludes a settlement on the
issue of ownership.
2. Would a resolution on the issue of ownership subject the
Torrens title issued over the disputed realties to a collateral
attack?
D. Modes of Registering
E. Procedure
PD 1529
HELD:
1. No. While it is true that the complaint involved here is one for
partition, the same is premised on the existence or non-existence
of co-ownership between the parties. Until and unless this issue
of co-ownership is definitely and finally resolved, it would be
premature to effect a partition of the disputed properties. More
importantly, the complaint will not even lie if the claimant, or
petitioner in this case, does not even have any rightful interest
over the subject properties.
A careful perusal of the contents of the so-called Partition
Agreement indicates that the document involves matters which
necessitate prior settlement of questions of law, basic of which is
a determination as to whether the parties have the right to freely
divide among themselves the subject properties.
2. No. There is no dispute that a Torrens certificate of title cannot
be collaterally attacked, but that rule is not material to the case at
bar. What cannot be collaterally attacked is the certificate of title
and not the title itself. The certificate referred to is that document
issued by the Register of Deeds known as the TCT. In contrast,
the title referred to by law means ownership which is, more often
than not, represented by that document.
Moreover, placing a parcel of land under the mantle of the
Torrens system does not mean that ownership thereof can no
longer be disputed. Mere issuance of the certificate of title in the
name of any person does not foreclose the possibility that the
real property may be under co-ownership with persons not
named in the certificate, or that the registrant may only be a
trustee, or that other parties may have acquired interest over the
property subsequent to the issuance of the certificate of title.
Needless to say, registration does not vest ownership over a
property, but may be the best evidence thereof.
A. Land Registration
RICARDO CHENG vs RAMON GENATO and SPS. DA JOSE
G.R. NO. 129760, December 29, 1998
FACTS:
10
ISSUES:
1. W/N the contact to sell between Genato and Spouses Da
Jose was validly rescinded.
2. W/N Chengs own contract with Genato was not just a
contract to sell but of a conditional contract of sale.
HELD:
1. NO. In a Contract to Sell, the payment of the purchase price is
a positive suspensive condition, the failure of which is not a
breach, casual or serious, but a situation that prevents the
obligation of the vendor to convey title from acquiring an
obligatory force. Article 1191 of the New Civil Code cannot be
made to apply to the situation in the instant case because no
default can be ascribed to the Da Jose spouses since the 30-day
extension period has not yet expired.
The contention of the Da Jose spouses that no further condition
was agreed when they were granted the 30-day extension period
from October 7, 1989 in connection with clause 3 of their contract
to sell should be upheld. Also, Genato could have sent at least a
notice of such fact, and there being no stipulation authorizing him
for automatic rescission, so as to finally clear the encumbrance
on his titles and make it available to other would be buyers, it
bolstered that there was no default on the part of the Da Jose
Spouses. Genato is not relieved from the giving of a notice,
verbal or written, to the Da Jose spouses for his decision to
rescind their contract.
2. IT WAS A CONTRACT TO SELL. The Court ruled that if it was
assumed that the receipt is to be treated as a conditional
contract of sale, it did not acquire any obligatory force since it
was subject to suspensive condition that the earlier contract to
sell between Genato and the Da Jose spouses should first be
cancelled or rescinded a condition never met, as Genato, to
his credit, upon realizing his error, redeemed himself by
respecting and maintaining his earlier contract with the Da Jose
spouses.
Art.1544 should apply because for not only was the contract
between herein respondents first in time, it was also registered
long before petitioner's intrusion as a second buyer (PRIMUS
TEMPORE, PORTIOR JURE). (Spouses made annotation on the
title of Genato). Since Cheng was fully aware, or could have
been if he had chosen to inquire, of the rights of the Da Jose
spouses under the Contract to Sell duly annotated on the
transfer certificates of titles of Genato, it now becomes
unnecessary to further elaborate in detail the fact that he is
indeed in bad faith in entering into such agreement.
NB: "Registration", as defined by Soler and Castillo, means any
entry made in the books of the registry, including both
registration in its ordinary and strict sense, and cancellation,
annotation, and even marginal notes. In its strict acceptation, it is
the entry made in the registry which records solemnly and
permanently the right of ownership and other real rights.
11
ISSUES:
1. W/N the Republic has proven by clear and
convincing evidence that Guerrero procured
Miscellaneous Sales Patent and OCT through fraud
and misrepresentation.
2. W/N Guerreros title acquired the characteristic of
indefeasibility.
HELD:
1. NO. The property in question, while once part of the lands of
the public domain and disposed of via a miscellaneous sales
arrangement, is now covered by a Torrens certificate. Grants of
public land were brought under the operation of the Torrens
system by Act No. 496, or the Land Registration Act of 1903.
Under the Torrens system of registration, the government is
required to issue an official certificate of title to attest to the fact
that the person named is the owner of the property described
therein, subject to such liens and encumbrances as thereon
noted or what the law warrants or reserves.
Upon its registration, the land falls under the operation of Act No.
496 and becomes registered land. Time and again, we have said
that a Torrens certificate is evidence of an indefeasible title to
property in favor of the person whose name appears thereon.
However, Section 38 of Act No. 496 recognizes the right of a
person deprived of land to institute an action to reopen or revise
a decree of registration obtained by actual fraud. However, the
Republic in this case failed to prove that there is actual and
extrinsic fraud to justify a review of the decree. It has not
adduced adequate evidence that would show that respondent
employed actual and extrinsic fraud in procuring the patent and
the corresponding certificate of title. Petitioner miserably failed to
prove that it was prevented from asserting its right over the lot in
question and from properly presenting its case by reason of such
fraud.
2. YES. Guerreros title, having been registered under the
Torrens system, was vested with the garment of indefeasibility.
NB: The Torrens system was adopted in this country because it
was believed to be the most effective measure to guarantee the
integrity of land titles and to protect their indefeasibility once the
claim of ownership is established and recognized. If a person
purchases a piece of land on the assurance that the sellers title
thereto is valid, he should not run the risk of being told later that
his acquisition was ineffectual after all. This would not only be
unfair to him. What is worse is that if this were permitted, public
confidence in the system would be eroded and land transactions
would have to be attended by complicated and not necessarily
conclusive investigations and proof of ownership. The further
consequence would be that land conflicts could be even more
abrasive, if not even violent. The government, recognizing the
worthy purposes of the Torrens system, should be the first to
accept the validity of titles issued thereunder once the conditions
laid down by the law are satisfied.
While the Torrens system is not a mode of acquiring titles to
lands but merely a system of registration of titles to lands, justice
and equity demand that the titleholder should not be made to
bear the unfavorable effect of the mistake or negligence of the
States agents, in the absence of proof of his complicity in a fraud
or of manifest damage to third persons. The real purpose of the
Torrens system is to quiet title to land and put a stop forever to
any question as to the legality of the title, except claims that were
noted in the certificate at the time of the registration or that may
arise subsequent thereto. Otherwise, the integrity of the Torrens
12
In 1906, the said wall and the land where it stands was
registered in the Torrens system under the name of Legarda.
owner any better title than he had. If he does not already have a
perfect title, he can not have it registered. Fee simple titles only
may be registered. The certificate of registration accumulates in
open document a precise and correct statement of the exact
status of the fee held by its owner. The certificate, in the absence
of fraud, is the evidence of title and shows exactly the real
interest of its owner. The title once registered, with very few
exceptions, should not thereafter be impugned, altered, changed,
modified, enlarged, or diminished, except in some direct
proceeding permitted by law. Otherwise all security in registered
titles would be lost. A registered title can not be altered, modified,
enlarged, or diminished in a collateral proceeding and not even
by a direct proceeding, after the lapse of the period prescribed by
law.
BARANDA VS GUSTILO
GR 81163, SEPTEMBER 26, 1988
FACTS: A petition for reconstitution of title was filed with the CFI
(now RTC) of Iloilo involving a parcel of land known as Lot No.
4517 of the Sta. Barbara Cadastre covered by OCT No. 6406 in
the name of Romana Hitalia.
The OCT was cancelled and TCT No. 106098 was issued in the
names of petitioners Baranda and Hitalia.
The Court issued a writ of possession which Gregorio Perez,
Maria P. Gotera and Susana Silao refused to honor on the
ground that they also have TCT No. 25772 over the same Lot
No. 4517.
The Court found out that TCT No. 257772 was fraudulently
acquired by Perez, Gotera and Susana.
Thereafter, the court issued a writ of demolition which was
questioned by Perez and others so a motion for reconsideration
was filed.
Another case was filed by Baranda and Hitalia (GR. NO. 62042)
for the execution of judgement in the resolutions issued by the
courts.
In the meantime, the CA dismissed a civil case (GR. NO. 00827)
involving the same properties. (NOTE: This time three cases na
ang involve excluding the case at bar.)
The petitioners prayed that an order be released to cancel No.T25772. Likewise to cancel No.T-106098 and once cancelled to
issue new certificates of title to each of Eduardo S. Baranda and
Alfonso Hitalia To cancel No.T-25772. Likewise to cancel No.T106098 and once cancelled to issue new certificates of title to
each of Eduardo S. Baranda and Alfonso Hitalia.
In compliance with the order or the RTC, the Acting Register of
Deeds Avito Saclauso annotated the order declaring TCT T25772 null and void, cancelled the same and issued new
certificate of titles in the name of petitioners.
13
14
15
16
17
A.
1.
NARVASA, J.:
The case dragged on for about twenty (20) years until March 3,
1981 when a compromise agreement was entered into by and
among all the parties, assisted by their respective counsel,
namely: the Heirs of Casiano Sandoval (who had since died), the
Bureau of Lands, the Bureau of Forest Development, the Heirs of
Liberato Bayaua, and the Philippine Cacao and Farm Products,
Inc. Under the compromise agreement, the Heirs of Casiano
Sandoval (as applicants) renounced their claims and ceded
2) the fact that Lot 7454 was never claimed to be public land by
the Director of Lands in the proper cadastral proceedings;
18
But, as this Court has already had occasion to rule, that Spanish
document, the (Estadistica de Propiedades,) cannot be
considered a title to property, it not being one of the grants made
during the Spanish regime, and obviously not constituting
primary evidence of ownership. It is an inefficacious document
on which to base any finding of the private character of the land
in question.
The assent of the Directors of Lands and Forest Development to
the compromise agreement did not and could not supply the
absence of evidence of title required of the private respondents.
19
HELD: The Supreme Court held that the fact remains that the
subject land has not yet been released from its classification as
part of the military reservation zone and still has to be
reclassified as alienable public land with the approval of the
President of the Philippines as required by the Public Land Act
(Commonwealth Act No. 141) and Republic Act No. 1275.
Therefore, the SC cannot sustain the appellate court's ruling that
the land in dispute is no longer part of the military reservation on
the basis of a mere proposal to classify the same as alienable
and disposable land of the public domain. A proposal cannot take
the place of a formal act declaring forest land released for
disposition as public agricultural land. To sustain the appellate
ruling would be to pre-empt the executive branch of the
government from exercising its prerogative in classifying lands of
the public domain.
December 6, 1906
JUSTICE HOLMES
HOW IT REACHED THE COURT:
Plaintiff applied for registration of a certain land. Initially it was
the government of the United States appealed to the Court of
first instance of Benguet (they were taking the property for public
and military purposes. The CFI dismissed the application (for
registration) and this was affirmed by the Philippine Supreme
Court. This was brought to the US Supreme court by writ of error.
FACTS: Plaintiff, an Igorot, possessed the land for more than 30
years before the treaty of Paris. He and his ancestors had held
the land for years. The local community recognizes them as the
owners of the said land. His grandfather lived upon it and
maintained fences around the property. His father raised cattle
on the property and he had inherited the land according to Igorot
custom. There was no document of title issued for the land when
he applied for registration. The government contends that the
land in question belonged to the state. Under the Spanish Law,
all lands belonged to the Spanish Crown except those with
permit private titles. Moreover, there is no prescription against
the Crown. He tried twice to have it registered during the Spanish
occupation but to no avail. In 1901 he filed a petition alleging
ownership of the land but he was only granted a possessory title.
PREMILINARY ISSUES: That even if Carino was able to have a
title over the land, he could not have it registered because
Benguet was one of the excluded provinces in the Philippine
Commissions act no. 926 (AN ACT PRESCRIBING RULES AND
REGULATIONS
GOVERNING
THE
HOMESTEADING,
SELLING, AND LEASING OF PORTIONS OF THE PUBLIC
DOMAIN OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS...). But that law dealt
with acquisition of new titles and perfecting of titles begun under
the Spanish law. Carino argued that he could register the land
under Philippine Commissions Act no. 496 which covered the
entire Philippine archipelago. Holmes held that he could register
the land if ownership can be maintained.
MAIN ISSUE: WON the land in question belonged to the
Spanish Crown under the Regalian Doctrine.
Governments argument: Spain had title to all the land in the
Philippines except those it saw fit to permit private titles to be
acquired. That there was a decree issued by Spain that required
registration within a limited time. Carinos land wasnt registered
and so in effect it became public land.
HELD: No. Law and justice require that the applicant should be
granted title to his land.
USSC: Whatever the position of Spain was on the issue, it does
not follow that the US would view plaintiff to have lost all his
rights to the land this would amount to a denial of native titles
throughout Benguet just because Spain would not have granted
to anyone in the province the registration of their lands.
Organic act of July 1, 1902 provides that all the property and
rights acquired there by the US would be for the benefit of the
inhabitants thereof. This same statute made a bill of rights
embodying the safeguards of the constitution, it provides that
'no law shall be enacted in said islands which shall deprive any
person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, or
deny to any person therein the equal protection of the laws. It
would be hard to believe that that any person didnt include the
20
ISSUES:
W/N Lee Hong Kok can question the grant. - NO
X W/N David has original acquisition of title. - YES
HELD: Court of Appeals Affirmed. (no legal justification for
nullifying the right of David to the disputed lot arising from the
grant made in his favor by respondent officials)
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
21
22
23
Types of Prescription
24
Prescription vs Laches
Periods for Acquisitve Prescription
Prescription, Co-ownership and Trusts
Effect of Fraud
C. Title by Accretion
1.
Concept of Accretion
NEW REGENT SERVICES V. TANJUATCO
April 16, 2009
ISSUES:
1)
2)
W/n NRSI has claim over the subject property base on the
right of accretion
3)
RULINGS:
1. No. An action for reconveyance is one that seeks to transfer
property, wrongfully registered by another, to its rightful and legal
owner.22 In an action for reconveyance, the certificate of title is
respected as incontrovertible. What is sought instead is the
transfer of the property, specifically the title thereof, which has
been wrongfully or erroneously registered in another persons
name, to its rightful and legal owner, or to one with a better right.
25
2.
D. Title by Reclamation
1.
2.
RA 1899
Ownership of Reclaimed Land
3.
Patent
Transferability
26
2.
HELD:
1. YES
27
Order No. 40 into the "Tiwi Hot Spring National Park," under the
control, management, protection and administration of a division
of the Bureau of Forest Development. The area was never
released as alienable and disposable portion of the public
domain and, therefore, is neither susceptible to disposition under
the provisions of the Public Land Law (CA 141) nor registrable
under the Land Registration Act (Act No. 496).
There is no question that the lands in the case at bar were not
alienable lands of the public domain. As testified by the District
Forester, records in the Bureau of Forestry show that the subject
lands were never declared as alienable and disposable and
subject to private alienation prior to 1913 up to the
present. Moreover, as part of the reservation for provincial park
purposes, they form part of the forest zone.
On July 6, 1965, Lot 622 was segregated from the forest zone
28
29
ISSUE: W/N the respondents had a valid claim over the two
parcels of land (NO)
HELD: The following are the requisites required by law for the
registration of land.
Applicants for registration of title under Section 14(1) of P.D. No.
1529 in relation to Section 48(b) of Commonwealth Act 141, as
amended by Section 4 of P.D. No. 1073 must sufficiently
establish: (1) that the subject land forms part of the disposable
and alienable lands of the public domain; (2) that the applicant
and his predecessors-in-interest have been in open, continuous,
exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of the same;
and (3) that it is under a bona fide claim of ownership since June
12, 1945, or earlier. These the respondents must prove by no
less than clear, positive and convincing evidence.
OCENPO
Well settled is the rule that declarations and receipts are not
conclusive evidence of ownership or of the right to possess land
when not supported by any other evidence. The fact that the
disputed property may have been declared for taxation purposes
in the names of the applicants for registration or of their
predecessors-in-interest does not necessarily prove ownership.
They are merely indicia of a claim of ownership.
30
that the property has been converted into patrimonial. There was
no such declaration in this case.
THE DIRECTOR OF LANDS VS HON. SALVADOR REYES
AND PIDC AND TAMAYO
(GR No L-27594 November 28, 1975)
FACTS: Applicant Alipio Alinsunurin sought the registration of
title under Act 496 a vast tract of land, containing an area of
16,800 hectares, more or less, situated at the municipality of
Laur, province of Nueva Ecija.
On May 5, 1966, the Director of Lands, Director of Forestry, and
the Armed Forces of the Philippines opposed the application,
claiming that the applicant was without sufficient title and was not
in open, exclusive, continuous and notorious possession and
occupation of the land in question for at least thirty (30) years
immediately preceding the filing of the application; that
approximately 13,957 hectares of said land consist of the military
reservation of Fort Magsaysay established under Proclamation
No. 237.
In 1966, the applicant Alipio Alinsunurin filed a motion for
substitution of parties, requesting that the Paraaque Investment
and Development Corporation be considered as the applicant in
his place, it having acquired all his rights, interests, ownership
and dominion over the property
It is claimed by the applicant that Melecio Padilla acquired the
land by virtue of a possessory information title issued during the
Spanish regime and upon his death in 1900, he transmitted the
ownership and possession thereof to his daughter and sole heir,
Maria Padilla. The latter in turn continued to cultivate the land
thru tenants and utilized portions for pasture, until her death
sometime in 1944.
The lower court rendered decision holding that the parcel of land
applied for is adjudicated to and ordered to be registered in favor
of Paraaque Investment and Development Corporation (2/3 of
the land was adjudicated to PIDC), and the remaining 1/3 portion
to Tamayo.
ISSUE: W/N PIDC or its predecessors-in-interest have been in
OCENPO of the subject property (NO)
HELD: The applicant relies on a purported titulo de informacion
posesoria issued in the name of Melecio Padilla. However,
neither the original of the said titulo de informacion posesoria,
nor a duly authenticated copy thereof, was submitted in
evidence, and there are serious flaws on the faces of the alleged
copies of the document.
Moreover, according to the official records of the Register of
Deeds, on the basis of the "List of Possessory Information Titles
(Spanish Titles) of Nueva Ecija", the corresponding supporting
documents of which are kept in the vault of said office, the name
of Melecio Padilla does not appear among those listed as
holders of informacion posesoria titles. There is another factor
which weighs heavily against the claim of the applicant. The
alleged informacion posesoria covers an area of "seis mil
quiiones, poco mas e menos" or an equivalent of 16,800
hectares. Under the Royal Decrees in force at the time of the
supposed acquisition, no one could acquire public land in excess
of 1,000 hectares. Thus, the Royal Decrees of November 25,
31
possessory information title dated May 20, 1896 under the Royal
Decree of February 13, 1894.
The CA ruled that lots 1-5 should be registered under the names
of Tesalonas siblings.
32
VICTORIA V REPUBLIC
FACTS: On November 2, 2004 petitioner Natividad Sta. Ana
Victoria applied for registration under the law of a 1,729-square
meter lot in Bambang, City of Taguig, before the Metropolitan
Trial Court (MeTC) of that city. The Office of the Solicitor General
(OSG), representing the respondent Republic of the Philippines,
opposed the application in the usual form.
The Conversion/Subdivision Plan Victoria presented in evidence
showed that the land is inside the alienable and disposable area
under Project 27-B as per L.C. Map 2623, as certified by the
Bureau of Forest Development on January 3, 1968.
Victoria testified that she and her predecessors-in-interest have
been in possession of the property continuously, uninterruptedly,
openly, publicly, adversely and in the concept of owners since the
early 1940s or for more than 30 years and have been declared
as owners for taxation purposes for the last 30 years.
On January 25, 2006 the MeTC rendered a decision granting the
application for registration and finding that Victoria.
33
one, had disappeared after it had been filled with silt and dirt.
The result was the segregation of a third and separate lot, now
known as Lot No. 5005. Notably, the area of that dried-up canal
is not negligible as to come under what the petitioner calls the
allowable margin of error in the original survey.
As we have already rejected the contention that the third lot was
part of the other two lots, the petitioner must fall back on its claim
of acquisitive prescription over it as a separate lot. Its submission
is that its possession of the lot dates back to "time immemorial,"
by which tired phrase it is intended to convey the idea that the
start of such possession can no longer be recollected. Indeed, it
can be. The petitioner's possession does not in fact go back to
"time immemorial," but only to the recent remembered past.
It should also be noted that, according to Article 1135 of the Civil
Code:
In case the adverse claimant possesses by mistake an area
greater, or less, than that expressed in his title, prescription shall
be based on the possession.
This possession, following the above quoted rulings, should be
limited only to that of the successor-in-interest; and in the case of
the herein petitioner, it should begin from 1981 when it acquired
the two adjacent lots and occupied as well the lot in question
thinking it to be part of the other two.
It follows that when the application for registration of the lot in the
name of the petitioner was filed in 1983, the applicant had been
in possession of the property for less than three years. This was
far too short of the prescriptive period required for acquisition of
immovable property, which is ten years if the possession is in
good faith and thirty years if in bad faith, or if the land is public.
The weakness of the petitioner's position prevents this Court
from affirming the claim to the lot in question either as part of the
two other lots or by virtue of acquisitive prescription. And having
made this ruling, we find it unnecessary to determine whether the
land is patrimonial in nature or part of the public domain.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED, with costs against the
petitioner.
SEC 22
CHING V CA
FACTS: By virtue of a sale to Ching Leng with postal address at
No. 44 Libertad Street, Pasay City, Transfer Certificate of Title
No. 91137 was issued on September 18, 1961 and T.C.T. No.
78633 was deemed cancelled.
On October 19, 1965, Ching Leng died in Boston,
Massachusetts, United States of America. His legitimate son
Alfredo Ching filed with the Court of First Instance of Rizal (now
RTC) Branch III, Pasay City a petition for administration of the
estate of deceased Ching Leng docketed as Sp. Proc. No. 1956P. Notice of hearing on the petition was duly published in the
"Daily Mirror", a newspaper of general circulation on November
23 and 30 and December 7, 1965. No oppositors appeared at
34
Thirteen (13) years after Ching Leng's death, a suit against him
was commenced on December 27, 1978 by private respondent
Pedro Asedillo with the Court of First Instance of Rizal (now
RTC), Branch XXVII, Pasay City docketed as Civil Case No.
6888-P for reconveyance of the abovesaid property and
cancellation of T.C.T. No. 91137 in his favor based on possession
(p. 33, Ibid.). Ching Leng's last known address is No. 44 Libertad
Street, Pasay City which appears on the face of T.C.T. No. 91137
(not No. 441 Libertad Street, Pasay City, as alleged in private
respondent's complaint). (Order dated May 29, 1980, p.
55, Ibid.).
Failure to take steps to assert any rights over a disputed land for
19 years from the date of registration of title is fatal to the private
respondent's cause of action on the ground of laches. Laches is
the failure or neglect, for an unreasonable length of time to do
that which by exercising due diligence could or should have been
done, earlier; it is negligence or omission to assert a right within
a reasonable time warranting a presumption that the party
entitled to assert it either has abandoned it or declined to assert
it (Bailon-Casilao v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 78178, April 15,
1988; Villamor v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 41508, June 27,
1988).
The real purpose of the Torrens system is to quiet title to land
and to stop forever any question as to its legality. Once a title is
registered, the owner may rest secure, without the necessity of
waiting in the portals of the court, or sitting on the "mirador su
casa," to avoid the possibility of losing his land (National Grains
Authority v. IAC, 157 SCRA 388 [1988]).
A Torrens title is generally a conclusive evidence of the
ownership of the land referred to therein (Section 49, Act 496). A
strong presumption exists that Torrens titles are regularly issued
and that they are valid. A Torrens title is incontrovertible against
any "information possessoria" or title existing prior to the
issuance thereof not annotated on the title.
CITIZENSHIP REQUIREMENT
A. For Individuals
RAMIREZ V. VDA. DE RAMIREZ
35
The lower court upheld the usufruct thinking that the Constitution
covers not only succession by operation of law but also
testamentary succession BUT SC is of the opinion that this
provision does not apply to testamentary succession for
otherwise the prohibition will be for naught and meaningless.
36
37
the Philippines.
RULING: The sale of the land in question was consummated
sometime in March 1936, during the effectivity of the 1935
Constitution. Under the 1935 Constitution, aliens could not
acquire private agricultural lands, save in cases of hereditary
succession. Thus, Lee Liong, a Chinese citizen, was disqualified
to acquire the land in question.
The constitutional proscription on alien ownership of lands of the
public or private domain was intended to protect lands from
falling in the hands of non-Filipinos. In this case, however, there
would be no more public policy violated since the land is in the
hands of Filipinos qualified to acquire and own such land. If land
is invalidly transferred to an alien who subsequently becomes a
citizen or transfers it to a citizen, the flaw in the original
transaction is considered cured and the title of the transferee is
rendered valid.
SC sets aside the order of reconstitution of title.
RA 9225
REPUBLIC V CA AND SPS LAPINA
FACTS: On June 17, 1978, respondent spouses bought Lots 347
and 348, Cad. s38-D, as their residence with a total area of
91.77 sq. m. situated in San Pablo City, from one Cristeta Dazo
Belen (Rollo, p. 41). At the time of the purchase, respondent
spouses where then natural-born Filipino citizens.
On February 5, 1987, the spouses filed an application for
registration of title of the two (2) parcels of land before the
Regional Trial Court of San Pablo City, Branch XXXI. This time,
however, they were no longer Filipino citizens and have opted to
embrace Canadian citizenship through naturalization.
An opposition was filed by the Republic and after the parties
have presented their respective evidence, the court a
quo rendered a decision confirming private respondents' title to
the lots.
However, in 1948, the former owners filed with the Court of First
Instance, Capiz an action against the heirs of Lee Liong for
annulment of sale and recovery of land. The plaintiffs assailed
the validity of the sale because of the constitutional prohibition
against aliens acquiring ownership of private agricultural land,
including residential, commercial or industrial land.
Rebuffed in the trial court and the Court of Appeals, plaintiffs
appealed to the Supreme Court.
ISSUE: Whether Lee Liong has the qualification to own land in
38
MATHEWS VS TAYLOR
Pursuant thereto, Batas Pambansa Blg. 185 was passed into
law, the relevant provision of which provides:
Sec. 2. Any natural-born citizen of the Philippines who
has lost his Philippine citizenship and who has the legal
capacity to enter into a contract under Philippine laws
may be a transferee of a private land up to a maximum
area of one thousand square meters, in the case of
urban land, or one hectare in the case of rural land, to
be used by him as his residence. In the case of married
couples, one of them may avail of the privilege herein
granted; Provided, That if both shall avail of the same,
the total area acquired shall not exceed the maximum
herein fixed.
In case the transferee already owns urban or rural lands
for residential purposes, he shall still be entitled to be a
transferee of an additional urban or rural lands for
residential purposes which, when added to those
already owned by him, shall not exceed the maximum
areas herein authorized.
39
40
41
42
43
With regard to the Antipolo property, the court held that it was
acquired using paraphernal funds of the respondent. However, it
ruled that respondent cannot recover his funds because the
property was purchased in violation of Section 7, Article XII of the
Constitution.
44
Invoking the principle that a court is not only a court of law but
also a court of equity, is likewise misplaced. It has been held that
equity as a rule will follow the law and will not permit that to be
done indirectly which, because of public policy, cannot be done
directly. He who seeks equity must do equity, and he who comes
into equity must come with clean hands. Thus, in the instant
case, respondent cannot seek reimbursement on the ground of
equity where it is clear that he willingly and knowingly bought the
property despite the constitutional prohibition.
Navata was aware of and with full knowledge that Fong Pak
Luen is a Chinese citizen as well as Kwan Pun Ming, who under
the law are prohibited and disqualified to acquire real property;
that Fong Pak Luen has not acquired any title or interest in said
parcel of land as purported contract of sale executed by Jose
Godinez alone was contrary to law and considered non-existent.
The defendant filed her answer that the complaint does not state
a cause of action since it appears from the allegation that the
property is registered in the name of Jose Godinez so that as his
sole property he may dispose of the same; that the cause of
45
ISSUE: WON the sale was null and void ab initio since it violates
applicable provisions of the Constitution and the Civil Code.
46
November 25, 1986 - NIDC transferred all its rights, title and
interest in PHILSECO to the Philippine National Bank (PNB).
In this vein, the right of first refusal over shares pertains to the
shareholders whereas the capacity to own land pertains to the
47
48
49
50
51
PANGANIBAN, J:
52
REMEDIES
HEIRS OF MANUEL ROXAS VS CA
53
54
It was only when the caretaker of the property was being asked
to vacate the land that petitioner Trinidad de Leon Vda. de Roxas
learned of its sale and the registration of the lots in Maguesun
Corporation's name.
the date of entry of said decree, that the petitioner has a real and
dominical right and the property has not yet been transferred to
an innocent purchaser.
The truth is that the Roxas family had been in possession of the
property uninterruptedly through their caretaker, Jose
Ramirez. Respondent Maguesun Corporation also declared in
number 5 of the same application that the subject land was
55
ESCONDE vs.DELFIN
G.R. No. L-67583, July 31, 1987
56
that since they are also children of Rafael Marquez, Sr., they are
entitled to their respective shares over the land in question.
Unfortunately, efforts to settle the dispute proved unavailing since
private respondents ignored petitioners' demands.
57
LINZAG VS CA
FACTS: Jose Linzag and the heirs of Cristobal A. Linzag are
members of the non-Christian tribe known as the Kalagan tribe of
Mati, Davao Oriental.
Jose and Cristobal claim to have inherited from their deceased
parents, a parcel of land, otherwise known as Waniban Island,
part of the Mati Cadastre
At the cadastral azproceeding Cristobal filed his claim over said
Lot. Another claimant, one Patricio Cunanan, likewise filed a
claim. Salvador filed a motion to award the Lot as an
uncontested lot, in his favor and alleged that he had acquirepd
the rights of Cunanan and that Cristobal had withdrawn his
answer/claim in favor of Cunanan (said to be acquired through
fraud)
The cadastral court, declared that Salvador and his
predecessors-in-interests had been in peaceful, OCEA
possession of the Lot in concept of an owner for a period of at
least 30 years; that Salvador was the successor-in-interest of
original claimant Cunanan; and that the lot was a non-contested
lot.
4 February 1977- filed an action for annulment of title and
reconveyance with damages (dismissed) (Civil Case No. 571)
The Linzags filed an amended complaint wherein they alleged
that they and their predecessors-in-interests had been in actual,
lawful, peaceful, public, adverse and uninterrupted possession
and occupation of the land since the Spanish regime up to the
present; the lot was ancestral land of the Linzags; the lot had
been included in a prior land registration case filed by Cunanan
which was decided against him, with the land registration court
holding that the land was part of the public domain,
The Linzags filed with the CA, a petition for the annulment of
judgment (bar CA-G.R. SP No. 35877)
CA dismissed the petition for being barred by the previous
judgment on ground of res judicata.
The petition for review with the SC was not filed within the
extension period granted to the petitioners. the SC issued a
Resolution stating that no appeal was taken on time by the
petitioners and the judgment had already become final and
executory
ISSUES: 1. WON the CA erred when it dismissed the petition for
the annulment of judgment. NO.
2. WON the an action for annulment of judgment was the proper
remedy against the challenged decision of the CA. NO.
HELD:
1. Reason why the annulment of judgment should be
dismissed
The claim of petitioners that the judgment in Civil Case No. 571
does not bar CA-G.R. SP No. 35877 because the former was for
annulment of title only, while the latter was for annulment of the
judgment, is palpably unmeritorious
the first three requirements for the application of the doctrine
of res judicata are present in this case.
A. Res Judicata
58
PEOPLE VS CAINGLET
Zamboanga del Sur declared Lots Nos. 8479 and 8492 with
improvements thereon to be the private properties of Wilfredo G.
Cainglet. Such judicial pronouncement which has become final,
as can be inferred from the information, allegedly runs counter to
the charge that accused falsely claimed said real estate to be his
own private properties.
ISSUE: WON the final judgment in Cadastral Case No. 19, LRC
Cadastral Record No. N-184 declaring Wilfredo G. Cainglet
owner of Lots Nos. 8479 and 8492 bars his subsequent
prosecution for falsely stating in his answers in said Cadastral
Case that he possessed and owned Lots Nos. 8479 and 8492?
NO
HELD: It is fundamental and well-settled that a final judgment in
a cadastral proceeding a proceeding in rem is binding and
conclusive upon the whole world, reason is that public policy and
public order demand not only that litigations must terminate at
some definite point but also that titles over lands under the
Torrens system should be given stability for on it greatly depends
the stability of the countrys economy. Interest reipublicae ut sit
finis litium.
However, this conclusiveness of judgment in the registration of
lands is not absolute. It admits of exceptions. Public policy also
dictates that those unjustly deprived of their rights over real
property by reason of the operation of our registration laws be
afforded remedies. Thus, the aggrieved party may file a suit for
reconveyance of property2 or a personal action for recovery of
damages against the party who registered his property through
fraud,3 or in case of insolvency of the party who procured the
registration through fraud, an action against the Treasurer of the
Philippines for recovery of damages from the Assurance Fund.4
Through these remedial proceedings, the law, while holding
registered titles indefeasible, allows redress calculated to prevent
one from enriching himself at the expense of others. Necessarily,
without setting aside the decree of title, the issues raised in the
previous registration case are relitigated, for purposes of
reconveyance of said title or recovery of damages.
In the same way, therefore, the State may criminally prosecute
for perjury the party who obtains registration through fraud, such
as by stating false assertions in the sworn answer required of
applicants in cadastral proceedings. For Section 116 of the Land
Registration Act states:
59
owner may pursue all his legal and equitable remedies against
the parties to such fraud, without prejudice, however, to the rights
of any innocent holder for value of a certificate of title. This
remedy is distinct from that authorized by Section 38, which has
for its purpose the reopening of the decree of title, on the ground
of fraud, within 1 year from its issuance. Judgment appealed
from affirmed.
SUBSEQUENT REGISTRATION
Upon knowing the issuance of the TCT, Arguelles filed the instant
case for reconveyance (April 30, 1965). Timbancaya, for his part,
alleges that Arguelles has no right to the property in question
because she is not an heir of the estate of the late Jose
Arguelles despite the decision in the special proceedings.
Arguelles does not question the validity of the OCT but instead
seeks the annulment of the TCT, which was issued to
Timbancaya after the judgment by compromise and based on his
misrepresentation in the Register of Deeds. Timbancaya had
claimed that he and his brother are the exclusive owners of the
property as the only legitimate children and surviving heirs of
(their) parents Jose Arguelles and Rufina de los Reyesa
representation contrary to his previous admissions that they are
not the legitimate children of the deceased Spouses Jose
Arguelles and Rufina de los Reyes, but the sons of Rufina de los
Reyes with her first husband, Joaquin Timbancaya.
A.
Voluntary dealings
B.
Involuntary Dealings
MAMUYAC VS ABENA
60
61
62
The sale of the subject parcel of land from the Bureau of Lands
in favor of the heirs of Batallones and Quimio was also
evidenced by a Deed of Conveyance duly issued by the Bureau
of Lands.
The lower court decided for the defendant spouses Mathay and
against the plaintiffs in the three consolidated cases. On appeal,
the Court of Appeals decided in favor of the plaintiff-appellants.
Thus, the appeal.
ISSUES:
WON Spouses Mathay can be considered buyers in good faith.
WON Spouses-private respondents own the individual properties
in question.
63
no longer had title over these two lots and had already conveyed
the same to two other persons. Hence, the RD claimed that the
writ of execution must first be modified to include the cancellation
of derivative titles of the GSIS title.
ISSUES:
I. Whether the GSIS can still raise the issue of exemption
II. Whether a final and executory judgment against GSIS and
Manlongat can be enforced against their successors-in-interest
or holders of derivative titles
III. Whether an order to cancel title to a particular property
includes an order to provide technical descriptions and segregate
it from its mother title
HELD:
(1) The issue of GSISs alleged exemption under RA 8291 had
been finally decided against when this Court denied GSISs
petition for review. GSISs attempt to resurrect the same issue by
interjecting the same in this proceeding is barred by the principle
of "law of the case," which states that "determinations of
questions of law will generally be held to govern a case
throughout all its subsequent stages where such determination
has already been made on a prior appeal to a court of last
resort."
(2) A notice of lis pendens is an announcement to the whole
world that a particular real property is in litigation, serving as a
warning that one who acquires an interest over said property
does so at his own risk, or that he gambles on the result of the
litigation over the said property. It is not disputed that petitioners
caused the annotation of lis pendens on TCT No. 23554 of the
lots in question. The current holders of the derivative titles to
these lots were aware of such annotation when the individual
titles were issued to them. Ineluctably, both were bound by the
outcome of the litigation.
(3) The order contained in the Decision in G.R. No. 140398 is for
the RD to cancel GSISs titles over Lot 10, Block 2 and Lot 8,
Block 8, inter alia. Whether these titles are individual or
contained in a mother title is of no consequence. The RD has to
cause their cancellation. If the cancellation can only be carried
out by requiring GSIS or the Bureau of Lands to provide the
necessary information, then they can be compelled to do so.
Otherwise, the Courts decision would be rendered inefficacious,
and GSIS would retain ostensible ownership over the lots by the
simple expedience that they are included in a mother title,
instead of individual titles. That result is manifestly contrary to the
Courts ruling and would subvert the very purpose of bringing this
case for a complete resolution.
64
65
66
67
On January 27, 1976, while the above case was still pending,
private respondent Marron caused the annotation of a notice of
lis pendens at the back of T.C.T. No. 100612.
68
approval of the application for a term of five years from and after
the date of issuance of the patent or grant nor shall they become
liable to the satisfaction of any debt contracted prior to the
expiration of said period.
Encumbrance has been defined as anything that impairs the use
or transfer of property; anything which constitutes a burden on
the title; a burden or charge upon property; a claim or lien upon
property.
Respondent Morato, although the land mortgaged/leased does
not significantly affect his possession and ownership, cannot fully
use or enjoy the land during the duration of lease contract. The
prohibition against any alienation or encumbrance of the land
grant is a proviso attached to the approval of every application.
Prior to the fulfillment of the requirements of law, Morato had only
an inchoate right to the property; such property remained a
public domain and therefore not susceptible to alienation or
encumbrance.
SUMAIL VS JUDGE OF CFI OF COTABATO
FACTS: On June 3, 1952, Gepuliano filed Civil Case No. 413 in
the Court of First Instance of Cotabato against petitioner
Dawaling Sumail, alleging among other things that he was the
owner of the lot in question by virtue of a Free Patent and an
Original Certificate of Title; that he had been in possession of the
land since 1939 continuously, publicly, and adversely up to June,
1949, when Sumail by means of force, threats and intimidation
entered the parcel and divested him of possession; that several
demands had been made for the surrender of the possession of
the land which demands defendant had rejected.
On July 27, 2952, and said to be intended as counter-complaint
to Civil Case No. 413, Sumail, defendant in said case, filed Civil
Case No. 420 in the same court against Gepuliano and the
Director of Lands for the purpose of cancelling Certificate of Title
V-23 covering lot 3633, alleging that Gepuliano thru fraud and
misrepresentation had filed with the Bureau of Lands a falsified
application for free patent for the lot, stating in his application that
the parcel was not occupied or claimed by any other person and
that he had entered upon it and introduced improvements
thereon
The Director of Lands contended that the complaint of Sumail
called for the cancellation of a free patent issued by the Director
of Lands over a parcel of public land and that the court had no
jurisdiction over the subject matter because under the Public
Land Act, the Director of Lands had executive control over the
concession or disposition of the lands of the public domain, and
that his findings as to questions of fact shall be conclusive when
approved by the Secretary of the Department
TC dismissed the case
ISSUE: WON TC still has jurisdiction
HELD: No
RATIO: We agree with the Director of Lands and the trial court
that the latter had no jurisdiction to entertain Civil Case No. 420
which was filed for the purpose of cancelling the Patent issued
by the Director of Lands on lot No. 3633 and also for the
cancellation of the Original Certificate of Title V-23 issued to
69
ISSUE: Whether or not the Torrens Title can be declared null and
void despite its indefeasibility?
HELD: No. A Free Patent may be issued where the applicant is a
natural-born citizen of the Philippines; is not the owner of more
than twelve (12) hectares of land; has continuously occupied and
cultivated, either by himself or through his predecessors-ininterest, a tract or tracts of agricultural public land subject to
disposition, for at least 30 years prior to the effectivity of Republic
Act No. 6940; and has paid the real taxes thereon while the
same has not been occupied by any person.
Once a patent is registered and the corresponding certificate of
title is issued, the land covered thereby ceases to be part of
public domain and becomes private property, and the Torrens
Title issued pursuant to the patent becomes indefeasible upon
the expiration of one year from the date of such issuance.
However, a title emanating from a free patent which was secured
through fraud does not become indefeasible, precisely because
the patent from whence the title sprung is itself void and of no
effect whatsoever.
True, once a patent is registered and the corresponding
certificate of title [is] issued, the land covered by them ceases to
be part of the public domain and becomes private property.
Further, the Torrens Title issued pursuant to the patent becomes
indefeasible a year after the issuance of the latter. However, this
indefeasibility of a title does not attach to titles secured by fraud
and misrepresentation. Well-settled is the doctrine that the
registration of a patent under the Torrens System does not by
itself vest title; it merely confirms the registrants already existing
one. Verily, registration under the Torrens System is not a mode
of acquiring ownership.
REMEDIES
70
Although a period of one year has already expired from the time
a certificate of title was issued pursuant to a public grant, said
title does not become incontrovertible but is null and void if the
property covered thereby is originally of private ownership, and
an action to annul the same does not prescribe. Moreover, since
herein petitioners are in possession of the land in dispute, an
action to quiet title is imprescriptible. 20 Their action for
reconveyance, which, in effect, seeks to quiet title to property in
ones possession, is imprescriptible. Their undisturbed
possession for a number of years gave them a continuing right to
seek the aid of a court of equity to determine the nature of the
adverse claims of a third party and the effect on her title.
71
72
RECONSTITUTION
HEIRS OF THE LATE PEDRO PINOTE vs. HON. JUDGE
CEFERINO E. DULAY
The heirs of Pedro Pinote claimed that they "learned of the error"
only on September 27, 1979 through their counsel, who made
the inquiry and obtained a copy of the court order.
GRIO-AQUINO, J.:
FACTS: On September 30, 1978, Francisco P. Otto, representing
his mother Petra Pinote, filed in the Court of First Instance (now
Regional Trial Court) of Cebu, at Lapu-Lapu City, a verified
petition for reconstitution of the original certificate of title to Lot
2381 of the Opon Cadastre, which was supposedly adjudicated
to Saturnino, Juana, Irineo, Pedro, and Petronilo, all surnamed
Pinote. The petition alleged that the original, as well as owner's
duplicate certificate of title, were burned in the Opon municipal
building during World War II, and the same could not be located
despite diligent search; that there were no annotations or liens
and encumbrances on the title affecting the same; that no deed
or instrument affecting the property had been presented for
registration; and that, based on the plans and technical
description, the area, location, and boundaries of Lot 2381 were
described therein.
A copy of the notice of hearing was ordered to be published in
the Official Gazette, furnished to all the adjoining owners, and
posted by the Sheriff at the main entrances of the Provincial
Capitol Building, the City Hall, and the Public Market of LapuLapu City, at least 30 days prior to the date of hearing. The court
also ordered copies of the notice and order to be sent to the
Registers of Deeds of Lapu-Lapu City and Cebu, the Director of
Lands, and the Commissioner of Land Registration, directing
them to show cause, if any, why the petition may not be granted.
It does not appear, however, that notices were sent to each of
the registered co-owners Saturnino, Juana, Irineo, Pedro and
Petronilo, all surnamed Pinote, or their heirs, so that they could
have been heard on the petition.
As there was no opposition to the petition when it was called for
hearing, the lower court commissioned its Clerk of Court to
receive the evidence.
Based on the Commissioner's Report, as well as the oral and
documentary evidence submitted by Francisco Otto in support of
his petition, including a supposed abstract of the decision of the
cadastral court, the Court issued an order directing the Register
73
74
STRAIT TIMES VS CA
G.R. No. 126673, August 28, 1998
FACTS: Private Respondent Regino Pealosa allegedly lost his
owners duplicate of two land titles (TCT No. T-3767 and T28301). He filed a verified petition before the RTC-Tacloban for
the issuance of new owners duplicates. Thereafter, the RTC
granted the petition and declared the lost titles (T-3767 and T28301) as null and void and ordering the ROD-Tacloban City to
issue to Strait times, new owners duplicates of said titles.
Said judgment became final and executory on June 7, 1994.
Subsequently, on October 10, 1994, Strait Times caused a
Notice of Adverse Claim to be annotated on T-28301.
Strait Times claims that it bought the Lot covered by T-28301
from Conrado Callera who, purchased it from Regino Penalosa
in whose name T-28301 was registered. Its duly authorized
representative, Atty. Rafael Iriarte, had been in possession of the
said lot with the owners duplicate of T-28301 since August 14,
1984. Strait Times thus seeks to annul and set aside the Order of
the RTC with respect to the issuance of a new owners duplicate
of T-28301 on the ground of extrinsic fraud.
Strait Times argues that the allegedly lost duplicate certificate of
title has been in the possession of Atty. Iriarte all the while. They
claim that the RTC had no jurisdiction to issue a new title
because the original title was not lost.
Regino Penalosa on the other hand counters that jurisdiction
over judicial reconstitution of lost or destroyed title is vested in
the RTC under Sec. 110, BP Blg. 1529, in relation to RA 26.
ISSUE: W/N the RTC has no jurisdiction to issue a new title
since the original title was not lost. YES. RTC HAS NO
JURISDICTION. (W/N the RTC had jurisdiction to issue the
aforementioned Order. NO.)
HELD: It has been established in the case of Serra Serra vs CA
that if a certificate of title has not been lost, but is in fact in the
possession of another person, then the reconstituted title is void
and the court that rendered the decision had no jurisdiction. In
the present case, it is undisputed that the allegedly lost owners
duplicate certificate of title was all the while in the possession of
Atty. Iriarte, who even submitted it as evidence. Indeed, Regino
Penalosa has not controverted the genuineness and authenticity
of the said certificate of title. These unmistakably show that the
trial court did not have jurisdiction to order the issuance of a new
duplicate, and the certificate issued is itself void.
Indeed, Respondent Court, private respondent and the solicitor
general invoke the suspicious nature of petitioner's claim of title
over the land in dispute in order to bar the application of the said
cases. The matter of title, however, will have to be determined in
a more appropriate action, not in an action for the issuance of the
lost owner's duplicate certificate of title, or in a proceeding to
annul the certificate issued in consequence of such proceeding.
The reconstitution of a title is simply the reissuance of a new
duplicate certificate of title allegedly lost or destroyed in its
original form and condition. It does not pass upon the ownership
of the land covered by the lost or destroyed title. Possession of a
lost certificate is not necessarily equivalent to ownership of the
land covered by it. The certificate of title, by itself, does not vest
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Clearly therefore the land is public land and there is no need for
the Director of Forestry to submit convincing proofs that the land
is more valuable for forest purposes than for agriculture.
As provided for under Sec. 6 of Commonwealth Act No. 141, the
classification or reclassification of public lands into alienable or
disposable, mineral or forest lands is now a prerogative of the
Executive Department and not of the courts. With these rules,
there should be no more room for doubt that it is not the court
which determines the classification of lands of the public domain
but the Executive Branch, through the Office of the President.
Furthermore, respondents cannot claim to have obtained their
title by prescription since the application filed by them
necessarily implied an admission that the portions applied for
are part of the public domain and cannot be acquired by
prescription, unless the law expressly permits it. It is a rule of law
that possession of forest lands, however long, cannot ripen into
private ownership.
REPUBLIC vs VERA
1983
FACTS: G.R. No. L-35778: In 1972, respondent Luisito Martinez
filed with the lower court an application for registration of title
under Act 496 of one (1) parcel of land, situated in the
Municipality of Mariveles, Bataan, containing an area of 323,093
square meters, more or less.
The Republic of the Philippines filed an opposition to the
application stating that the parcel of land applied for is a portion
of the public domain belonging to the Republic, not subject to
private appropriation.
The Commissioner of Land Registration submitted a report that
the lot is entirely inside Lot No. 626 of the Cadastral Survey of
Mariveles, Province of Bataan.
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1979, the patent was also ordered to be issued and the patent
was forwarded to defendant Register of Deeds, City of Roxas, for
registration and issuance of the corresponding Certificate of Title.
Thereafter, an Original Certificate of was issued to [respondent]
by defendant Register of Deeds.
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In the case at bar, the Free Patent was approved and issued on
March 14, 1979. Corresponding Original Certificate of Title was
issued on the same date. On August 18, 1981, or two (2) years
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To comply with the condition for the grant of the free patent,
within five years from its issuance, Felipe Alejaga Sr. should not
have encumbered the parcel land granted to him. The mortgage
he made over the land violated that condition. Hence, the
property must necessarily revert to the public domain, pursuant
to Section 124 of the Public Land Act.
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