Republic v. Agunoy (2005)
Republic v. Agunoy (2005)
Republic v. Agunoy (2005)
492 Phil. 118
THIRD DIVISION
[ G.R. NO. 155394, February 17, 2005 ]
REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, PETITIONER, VS. GREGORIO
AGUNOY, SR., ET AL., SPOUSES EDUARDO AND ARCELITA MARQUEZ
AND RURAL BANK OF GAPAN, NUEVA ECIJA, RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
GARCIA, J.:
Interplaying in this case are two (2) counterbalancing doctrines in the law of land
titles: one, the doctrine of fraus et jus nunquam cohabitant, which basically means
that no one may enjoy the fruits of fraud,[1] and the other, the doctrine that a
fraudulent title may be the root of valid title in the name of an innocent buyer for value
and in good faith.[2]
Invoking the first, petitioner Republic of the Philippines in this petition for review on
certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, seeks to nullify and set aside the
decision dated September 26, 2002[3] of the Court of Appeals in CAG.R. CV No.
55732, which reversed an earlier decision of the Regional Trial Court at Cabanatuan
City, Branch 25, in its Civil Case No. 831AF, an action for cancellation of free patent,
original certificate of title and derivative transfer certificates of title, thereat filed by the
petitioner against, among others, the herein respondents.
The facts are well laid out in the decision under review:
On May 26, 1958, Gregorio Agunoy, Sr. filed his application for Free Patent
No. 51414 covering two parcels of land identified as Lot Nos. 1341 and
1342, Cad 269, Sta. Rosa Cadastre, Nueva Ecija, containing an aggregate
area of 18.6486 hectares with the Bureau of Lands. On January 18, 1967, he
was issued Free Patent No. 314450 by the Director of Lands.
On February 6, 1967, the Register of Deeds of Nueva Ecija registered Free
Patent No. 314450 and issued the corresponding Original Certificate of Title
(OCT) No. P4522 in the name of Gregorio Agunoy, Sr.
On March 10, 1967, the heirs of Eusebio Perez, represented by Francisca
Perez, caused the annotation on the said OCT of an adverse claim in their
favor over a portion of 15.1593 hectares of the property.
On July 30, 1975, the said heirs of Eusebio Perez filed a formal protest
docketed as B.L. Claim No. 760 (n) with the Bureau of Lands alleging that
Lot 1341 of the Sta. Rosa Cadastre, Nueva Ecija, covered by Original
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Certificate of Title NoP4522 is identical to Lots 1 and 2 of Plan Psu47200
which had been adjudicated as private property of said protestant pursuant
to a decision promulgated on October 24, 1960 by the Court of First
Instance of Nueva Ecija in Land Registration Case No. 430, LRC Records No.
14876.
On May 3, 1976, the chief of the Legal Division, Bureau of Lands, conducted
a formal investigation and ocular inspection of the premises and it was
ascertained that Free Patent No. 314450 and its corresponding OCT No. P
4522 were improperly and fraudulently issued (Records, p.78)
On July 31, 1979, upon the death of the wife of Gregorio Agunoy, Sr., the
heirs, namely Gregorio Sr., Tomas, Lilian, Angelito and Gregorio, Jr.,
executed a Deed of Extrajudicial Partition with Sale in favor of Joaquin
Sangabol for and in consideration of the sum of Twenty Thousand Pesos
(P20,000.00).
The Original Certificate of Title No. P4522 was cancelled by the Register of
Deeds of Nueva Ecija and Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 166270 was
issued in favor of the aforenamed heirs. Said TCT No. 166270 was again
cancelled by reason of the concurrent sale to Joaquin Sangabol in whose
favor TCT No. NT 166271 was issued.
On August 1, 1979, Joaquin Sangabol sold an undivided portion of three (3)
hectares of the property described as Lot 1341 in TCT No. NT166271 to
Fortunato Para for and in consideration of the sum of Three Thousand Five
Hundred Pesos (3,500.00)
The following day, he sold the property described as Lot 1342 in TCT No. NT
166271 to Virginia P. Jimenez for and in consideration of the sum of One
Thousand Five Hundred Pesos (P1,500.00) in whose favor TCT No. N166287
was issued.
On May 12, 1980, the adverse claim of Francisca Perez, et al. annotated at
the back of the OCT was cancelled by the Register of Deeds of Nueva Ecija
(Exhibit G).
On January 16, 1981, Joaquin Sangabol subdivided the property described
as Lot 1341 in TCT No. NT166271 into three lots designated as Lot Nos.
1341A, 1341B, and 1341C of plan Psd299875 duly approved by the Land
Registration Commission.
TCT No. NT166271 was cancelled and TCT No. NT168972 covering Lot No.
1341A was issued to spouses Fortunato Para and Araceli Sena. TCT Nos.
NT168973 and NT168974 covering Lot Nos. 1341B and 1341C were
issued in favor of Joaquin Sangabol.
On June 15, 1982, Virginia P. Jimenez sold the property covered by TCT No.
NT166287 in favor of spouses Blandino and Josefina A. Salva Cruz for
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Eleven Thousand Five Hundred Pesos (P11,500.00) where TCT No. 174634
was issued in favor of said spouses. On June 17, 1982, Josefina A. Salva
Cruz effected the subdivision of the property into thirteen (13) lots
designated as Lot Nos. 1342A t0 1342M as per subdivision plan Psd03
004756 thereby canceling TCT No. NT174634 and TCT Nos. NT 174635 to
174647 were issued in lieu thereof.
On November 2, 1982, Fortunato Para, through his attorneyinfact Gloria
Bergonia, mortgaged the property covered by TCT No. NT168972 in favor
of the Perpetual Finance and Investment, Inc. in the amount of One
Hundred Twenty Five Thousand Pesos (P125,000.00). The mortgage was
foreclosed and the property was sold at public auction. Thereafter, the
corresponding certificate of sale was executed in favor of Perpetual Finance
and Credit, Inc.
On March 3, 1983, the properties covered by TCT Nos. NT174643 and NT
174644 were mortgaged with the Rural Bank of Gapan for Forty Thousand
Pesos (P40,000.00). On February 25, 1985, the mortgage was likewise
foreclosed and the properties were sold at public auction in favor of the said
bank.
On December 16, 1986, Joaquin Sangabol sold the property covered by TCT
No. NT168974 to Eduardo R. Dee for and in consideration of the sum of One
Hundred Twenty [Thousand] Pesos (P120,000.00). Subsequently, TCT No.
NT168974 was cancelled and TCT No. 196579 was issued in the name of
Eduardo R. Dee.
On January 5, 1988, the heirs of Ruperto Perez (oldest son of Eusebio), now
represented by Sabina P. Hernandez, filed a supplemental protest alleging
that:
a) Lot Nos. 1341 and 1342, Cad 269 of the Sta. Rosa Cadatre
have been exclusively occupied and cultivated by them and their
immediate predecessorsininterest who have introduced
permanent improvements thereon consisting of irrigated
ricelands, mango trees, bamboo groves and other crops;
c) Said parcels of land are identical to Lots 1, 3 and a portion of
87,674 square meters of Lot 4 of the amended plan47200 Amd.
as shown by the relocation survey conducted by Geodetic
Engineer Deogracias L. Javier on July 29, 1977;
d) The patent and title issued to Gregorio Agunoy, Sr. were
obtained through fraud and misrepresentation. (Records pp. 9
10)
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The Bureau of Lands conducted anew an investigation and ocular inspection
of Lot 1342, Cad. 269 of Sta. Rosa Cadastre, Nueva Ecija, and came out with
the following findings, to wit:
a) Lot 1342, Cad. 269 of Sta Rosa Cadastre, Nueva Ecija is
located at Barangay Imbunia (formerly Marawa), Municipality of
Jaen, Nueva Ecija;
b) Said lot was originally registered in the Office of the Register of
Deeds of Cabanatuan City on May 23, 1914 under OCT No. 125
issued in the name of Valeriano Espiritu, pursuant to Decree No.
15733 issued on May 20, 1914 in Land Registration Case No.
9552;
c) On May 13, 1952, said property was conveyed in favor of
Isaias Carlos under TCT No. 11554 and the latter conveyed the
same in favor of the spouses Santiago Mateo and Leogarda
Juliano;
d) TCT No. 11554 was cancelled and in lieu thereof, TCT No.
17471 was issued in the name of Santiago Mateo. (Records, pp.
13;78)
On May 10, 1988, the Chief of the Legal Division recommended to the
Director of Lands that court action be instituted for the cancellation of Free
Patent No. 314450 and its corresponding Original Certificate of Title No. P
4522 in the name Gregorio Agunoy, Sr., as well as other subsequent transfer
certificates of title issued therefrom based on the foregoing findings
(Underscoring supplied).
It was against the foregoing backdrop of events when, on May 24, 1990, in the
Regional Trial Court at Gapan, Nueva Ecija petitioner Republic of the Philippines, thru
the Office of the Solicitor General, filed the complaint[4] in this case against several
defendants, among whom are the herein respondents Gregorio Agunoy, Sr., his
children, the spouses Eduardo Dee and Arcelita MarquezDee and the Rural Bank of
Gapan, Nueva Ecija. In its complaint, docketed as Civil Case No. 831AF, petitioner
Republic alleged, inter alia, as follows:
“30. Free Patent No. 314450 and its corresponding Original Certificate of
Title No. P4522 were procured by defendant Gregorio Agunoy, Sr., through
fraud, deceit and misrepresentation since the property in question (Lots
1341 and 1342) at the time the patent and the title were issued was already
adjudicated as private property of the heirs of Eusebio Perez and Valeriano
Espiritu, respectively. Consequently, the then Bureau of Lands, now Lands
Management Bureau, no longer had any jurisdiction and control over the
same. xxx xxx.
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Since the property in question was no longer a disposable public land, Free
Patent No. 314450 and its corresponding Original Certificate of Title No. P
4522 issued to defendant Gregorio Agunoy, Sr. are null and void and should
be cancelled. Moreover, Gregorio Agunoy, Sr. has not occupied and
cultivated the land in the manner and for the length of time required by law
(C.A. 141 as amended; see also RA 782) (Emphasis supplied),
and accordingly prayed for a judgment
1. Declaring Free Patent No. 314450 and the corresponding Original Certificate of
Title No. P4522 in the name of Gregorio Agunoy, as well as all other subsequent
transfer certificates of title emanating therefrom, i.e., Transfer Certificates of Title
Nos. NT168972, NT168973, NT196579, NT174635 to NT174647 (inclusive),
including all liens and encumbrances annotated thereon, null and void;
2. Ordering defendants to surrender their owner’s duplicate copies of all subsequent
transfer certificates of title emanating from Original Certificate of Title No. P4522
to the Register of Deeds of Nueva Ecija;
3. Directing the Register of Deeds of Nueva Ecija to cancel the aforesaid certificates
of title;
4. Ordering defendants and all those claiming under them to desist from exercising
or representing acts of ownership and/or possession in the premises
(Underscoring supplied).
xxx xxx xxx
Eventually, in a decision dated September 9, 1996,[5] the trial court rendered judgment
for the Republic, thus:
PREMISES CONSIDERED, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the
plaintiff and against the defendants as follows:
1. Declaring as null and void Free Patent No. 314450 and the
corresponding Original Certificate of Title No. P4522 in the name of
Gregorio Agunoy, as well as all other subsequent transfer certificates of
titles emanating therefrom (TCT Nos. NT166270, NT166271, NT
168972, NT168973, NT168974, NT166287 and NT174634 to NT
174647, inclusive, of the Registry of Deeds of Nueva Ecija) including all
liens and encumbrances annotated thereon;
2. Ordering defendants to surrender their owner's duplicate copies of all
the said subsequent transfer certificates of titles emanating from
Original Certificate of Title No. P4522 to the Register of Deeds of
Nueva Ecija, and ordering the Register of Deeds to cancel the aforesaid
certificates of titles;
3. Ordering reversion of the pieces of land embraced in Free Patent No.
314450 and OCT No. P4522 of the Registry of Deeds of Nueva Ecija,
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to the mass of public domain except the pieces of land which were
already the subject of land registration proceedings;
4. Ordering that henceforth the defendants and all those claiming under
them to desist from disturbing the ownership of the government over
the said pieces of land, and
5. To pay costs of suits.
For lack of evidence, the thirdparty complaint filed by the Rural Bank of
Gapan, Inc. against defendantsSpouses Blandino Salva Cruz and Josefina
Salva Cruz is hereby dismissed without pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED (Underscoring supplied).
Therefrom, the spouses Eduardo Dee and Arcelita MarquezDee and the Rural Bank of
Gapan, Nueva Ecija went to the Court of Appeals, whereat their recourse was docketed
as CAG.R. CV No. 55732.
As earlier stated herein, the appellate court, in a decision dated September 26, 2002,[6]
reversed and set aside the appealed decision of the trial court, to wit:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the appeal is GRANTED and the decision
of the trial court is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. A new judgment is hereby
rendered to read as follows:
1. Defendant Gregorio Agunoy, Sr. is declared to have validly and
properly acquired Free Patent No. 314450 and the corresponding
Original Certificate of Title No. P4522 over Lot Nos. 1341 and 1342,
Cad 269, Sta. Rosa Cadastre, Nueva Ecija; and
2. The title over the portion of Lot No. 1342, now covered by TCT No.
196579 in the name of defendantsappellants Spouses Dee is likewise
declared valid for having acquired in good faith and for value.
SO ORDERED.
Hence, this recourse by the petitioner, submitting for our resolution the following
issues[7]:
“I.
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN DECLARING THAT
PETITIONER IS NOT THE REAL PARTYININTEREST IN THIS CASE AND
THAT GREGORIO AGUNOY, SR. HAD VALIDLY ACQUIRED FREE PATENT NO.
314450 AND ORIGINAL CERTIFICATE OF TITLE NO. P4522 OVER LOT NOS.
1341 AND 1342, CAD. 269, STA. ROSA CADASTRE, NUEVA ECIJA.
II.
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WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN DECLARING THAT
THE TITLE OVER THE PORTION OF LOT NO. 1342, NOW COVERED BY TCT
NO. 196579 IN THE NAMES OF RESPONDENTS SPOUSES EDUARDO DEE
AND ARCELITA MARQUEZ IS VALID FOR HAVING BEEN ACQUIRED IN GOOD
FAITH AND FOR VALUE”.
We DENY.
To begin with, we agree with the Court of Appeals that petitioner Republic is not the
real partyininterest in this case.
Basic it is in the law of procedure that every action must be prosecuted or defended in
the name of the real partyininterest, meaning “the party who stands to be benefited
or injured by the judgment in the suit, or the party entitled to the avails of the suit”,[8]
a procedural rule reechoed in a long line of cases decided by this Court. For sure, not
too long ago, in Shipside, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals,[9] citing earlier cases, we wrote:
xxx. Consequently, the Republic is not a real party in interest and it may not
institute the instant action. Nor may it raise the defense of imprescriptibility,
the same being applicable only in cases where the government is a party in
interest. Under Section 2 of Rule 3 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure,
"every action must be prosecuted or defended in the name of the real party
in interest." To qualify a person to be a real party in interest in whose name
an action must be prosecuted, he must appear to be the present real owner
of the right sought to enforced (Pioneer Insurance v. CA, 175 SCRA 668
[1989]). A real party in interest is the party who stands to be benefited or
injured by the judgment in the suit, or the party entitled to the avails of the
suit. And by real interest is meant a present substantial interest, as
distinguished from a mere expectancy, or a future, contingent, subordinate
or consequential interest.
The very complaint in this case, supra, filed by petitioner Republic before the trial court
unmistakably alleges that at the time Free Patent No. 31445 and its corresponding
Original Certificate of Title No. P45222 were issued to Gregorio Agunoy, Sr., “the
property in question (Lots 1341 and 1342) xxx was already adjudicated as private
property of the heirs of Eusebio Perez and Valeriano Espiritu”, and that at that time,
“the property in question was no longer a disposable public land”. In fact, in
paragraph 27(f) of the same complaint, petitioner further alleged:
f) Furthermore, it was found that prior to the issuance of Free Patent No.
314450 on January 18, 1967, Lot 1341 of Sta. Rosa Cadastre, Nueva Ecija,
which was one of the two (2) parcels of land applied for by Gregorio Agunoy,
Sr., was already the subject of an application for registration filed by the
heirs of Eusebio Perez in 1958 before the Court of First Instance of Nueva
Ecija, docketed as LRC Case No. 430, LRC Record No. 14876, and wherein a
Decision was promulgated on October 24, 1960 adjudicating Lots 1 and 2 of
Plan Psu47200 as private properties of said heirsclaimants. The aforesaid
Decision was already final and executory at the time the patent was issued
to defendant Gregorio Agunoy, Sr”. (Except for the underscoring on “as
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private properties”, the rest are of the petitioner itself).
With the very admissions by the petitioner itself in its basic pleading that Lots No. 1341
and 1342 are already private properties of the heirs of Eusebio Perez and Valeriano
Espiritu, and are, therefore, “no longer disposable public land” over which the then
Bureau of Lands, now Lands Management Bureau, “no longer had any jurisdiction
and control”, we are simply at a loss to understand how petitioner Republic can still
profess to be the real partyininterest in this case, and insists that the disputed
properties are still part of the public domain. If ever, the real partyininterest could be
none other than the heirs of Eusebio Perez and Valeriano Espiritu, but certainly not the
petitioner.
Then, too, it is striking to note that even as the complaint is basically one for reversion
of private property to the mass of public domain, petitioner did not implead either the
heirs of Eusebio Perez or that of Valeriano Espiritu. Without doubt, if our decision
hereon were to be in favor of petitioner, the real beneficiary thereof is not the State.
And because, as no less admitted by the petitioner, the lands subject of this case are no
longer part of the public domain, the nullification of Agunoy’s Free Patent P314450 and
OCT No. P4522 would not result in the reversion of the lands subject thereof to the
mass of public land. And the government, not being the real partyininterest, is
without personality to institute reversion proceedings. So it is that in an earlier case,
[10] we had an occasion to say:
There is no merit in petitioners' contention that only the State may bring an
action for reconveyance of the lots in dispute. To reiterate, Lot 2344 is a
private property in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession of
the Santiago family. The nullification of its free patent and title would not
therefore result in its reversion to the public domain. Hence, the State,
represented by the Solicitor General, is not the real party in interest.
We could have, at this point, already written finis to this decision. Nonetheless, for the
peace of mind of those concerned, we have opted to address the second issue raised in
the petition: whether the appellate court erred in declaring as valid for having been
acquired for value and in good faith the title over the portion of Lot No. 1342, covered
by TCT No. 196579 in the name of the respondent spouses Eduardo Dee and Arcelita
MarquezDee.
After sleeping for an unreasonably long period of time lasting for decades, the heirs of
Eusebio Perez can longer defeat the better right arising from the Torrens titles in the
names of the present transferees of the properties, unless and until anyone succeeds in
overcoming the presumption of good faith in securing their respective titles.
For one, even granting as true the petitioner’s allegation of a prior cadastral case LRC
Case No. 430, LRC Rec. No. 148 involving a portion of the lots subject of Agunoy’s
Free Patent, wherein a decision was allegedly promulgated on October 24, 1960 in
favor of the heirs of Eusebio Perez, which decision, according to petitioner, was already
final and executory, we are greatly bothered by the fact that none of the heirs of
Eusebio Perez could show having exerted due diligence towards at least attempting to
accomplish the registration of the properties involved in the said cadastral case, which
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properties, according to petitioner and the Perezes, are identical to Lot Nos. 1341 and
1342. Verily, were we to believe the allegations of the heirs of Eusebio Perez in their
own protest with the Bureau of Lands dated July 30, 1975,[11] there is an express order
for registration in LRC Case No. 430, as follows:
“WHEREFORE, decision is hereby rendered affirming the order of general
default heretofore entered and ordering the registration of Lots Nos. 1 and 2
of Plan Psu47200, situated in the Barrio of Marawa, Municipality of Jaen,
Nueva Ecija, containing a total area of 21.9284 hectares in the following
manner:
xxx xxx xxx
From as early as October 24, 1960, when the aforequoted decision in LRC Case No. 430
was promulgated, to as late as February 6, 1967, when OCT No. P4522 of Gregorio
Agunoy, Sr. was issued, or a slumber lasting for more than six (6) years, the heirs of
Eusebio Perez had numerous opportunities to cause the implementation of the said
registration order. Inexplicably, they let this chance passed by. Vigilantibus, sed non
dormientibus, jura subveniunt, the law aids the vigilant, not those who sleep on their
rights.[12] And speaking of rights, one may not sleep on a right while expecting to
preserve it in its pristine purity.[13]
For another, Jose Mendigoria, Public Lands Inspector and Investigator of the Bureau of
Lands, made the following remarks in his certification dated February 28, 1966:[14]
10. Remarks: Attached hereto is the certification of the Clerk of Court
and the Register of Deeds, Cabanatuan City for ready references in
connection with the speedy issuance of patent in favor of the
applicant.
It is informed in this connection that the survey claimants of these
Lots, 1341 for Eusebio Perez and 1342 for Valenciano Espiritu could
not be located in the locality. The lots were already abandoned by
them so that in the year 1941, the present applicant took possession
of the land thru his tenants.
Countering the foregoing certification, petitioner Republic claims that a more recent
verification survey conducted on February 15, 1988 by Geodetic Engineer Melencio
Mangahas, also of the Bureau of Lands, reveals an anomaly in the issuance of Agunoy,
Sr.’s Free Patent No. 314450. Again, we quote from petitioner’s complaint, particularly
paragraph 27 (c) thereof, to wit:
c) The results of the verification survey conducted by Geodetic Engineer
Melencio Mangahas of the Bureau of Lands on February 15, 1988 on the
premises confirmed the earlier findings of said Office that Lot 1341 Cad. 269
of Sta. Rosa Cadastre, Nueva Ecija, covered by Free Patent No. 314450 and
OCT No. P4522 in the name of Gregorio Agunoy, Sr., is identical to Lots 1, 3
and a portion of 87,674 square meters of Lot 4 of the amended Plan Psu
47200 which was surveyed and approved on January 21, 1966 in the name
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of Eusebio Perez. It was verified likewise that Lot 1341 is within Barrio
Marawa, Jaen, Nueva Ecija.
As between the February 28, 1966 certification of Jose Mendigoria, supra, which led
to the issuance of Agunoy’s OCT No. P4522 and numerous derivative titles descending
therefrom, and the February 15, 1988 verification survey of Geodetic Engineer
Melencio Mangahas, cited in the aforequoted paragraph of petitioner’s complaint, which
led to nothing, suffice it to quote herein what this Court has said in PEZA vs.
Fernandez:[15]
xxx. Indeed, the inevitable consequences of the Torrens system of land
registration must be upheld in order to give stability to it and provide finality
to land disputes,
and in Heirs of Brusas vs. Court of Appeals:[16]
The real purpose of the Torrens System of land registration is to quiet title to
land and 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 de su casa, to avoid the possibility of
losing his land. Indeed, titles over lands under the Torrens system should be
given stability for on it greatly depends the stability of the country's
economy. Interest reipublicae ut sit finis litium.
If at all, the discrepancy in the two (2) separate survey reports of Mendigoria and
Mangahas can only be imputable to either the past or more recent officials of the
Bureau of Lands.
Of course, we are well aware of the rule reiterated in Republic vs. Court of Appeals and
Santos,[17] that, generally, the State cannot be put in estoppel by the mistakes or
errors of its officials or agents. In that very case, however, citing 31 CJS 675676, we
went further by saying
“xxx. Nevertheless, the government must not be allowed to deal
dishonorably or capriciously with its citizens, and must not play an ignoble
part or do a shabby thing; and subject to limitations xxx, the doctrine of
equitable estoppel may be invoked against public authorities as well as
against private individuals”
In any event, the verification survey conducted by Geodetic Engineer Melencio
Mangahas on February 15, 1988 came almost twentytwo (22) years after the February
28, 1966 certification of Jose Mendigoria; more than twentyone (21) years after the
issuance of Agunoy Sr.’s Free Patent No. 314450 on January 18, 1967 and its
registration as Original Certificate of Title No. P4522 on February 6, 1967; and more
than eight (8) years reckoned from July 31, 1979 when, upon the death of the wife of
Gregorio Agunoy, Sr., the heirs executed a Deed of Extrajudicial Partition with Sale in
favor of Joaquin Sangabol. In the meanwhile, for about half a decade thereafter,
ownership over the properties transferred from one buyer to another, with each and
every transferee enjoying the presumption of good faith. If only on this score alone that
the present petition must fall.
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There can be no debate at all on petitioner’s submission that no amount of legal
technicality may serve as a solid foundation for the enjoyment of the fruits of fraud. It
is thus understandable why petitioner chants the dogma of fraus et jus nunquam
cohabitant.
Significantly, however, in the cases cited by petitioner Republic,[18] as well as in those
other cases[19] where the doctrine of fraus et jus nunquam cohabitant was applied
against a patent and title procured thru fraud or misrepresentation, we note that the
land covered thereby is either a part of the forest zone which is definitely non
disposable, as in Animas, or that said patent and title are still in the name of the person
who committed the fraud or misrepresentation, as in Acot, Animas, Republic vs. CA and
Del Mundo and Director of Lands vs. Abanilla, et al. and, in either instance, there were
yet no innocent third parties standing in the way.
Here, it bears stressing that, by petitioner’s own judicial admission, the lots in dispute
are no longer part of the public domain, and there are numerous third, fourth, fifth and
more parties holding Torrens titles in their favor and enjoying the presumption of good
faith. This brings to mind what we have reechoed in Pino vs. Court of Appeals[20] and
the cases[21] therein cited:
[E]ven on the supposition that the sale was void, the general rule that the
direct result of a previous illegal contract cannot be valid (on the theory that
the spring cannot rise higher than its source) cannot apply here for We are
confronted with the functionings of the Torrens System of Registration. The
doctrine to follow is simple enough: a fraudulent or forged document of sale
may become the ROOT of a valid title if the certificate of title has already
been transferred from the name of the true owner to the name of the forger
or the name indicated by the forger.
It is even worse in this case because here, there is no forger to speak of. The remark of
Land Inspector Jose Mendigoria about the abandonment by Eusebio Perez and
Valenciano Espiritu cannot, by itself, be fraudulent. And, for all we know, that remark
may even turn out to be the truth. What petitioner perceives as fraud may be nothing
more than the differences of professional opinions between Land Inspector Jose
Mendigoria and Geodetic Engineer Melencio Mangahas. But regardless of who between
the two is correct, the hard reality is that the properties in question are no longer
floating objects on a spring that cannot rise higher than its source, as they are now
very much ashore and firmly standing on the high solid ground of the Torrens system of
land registration.
WHEREFORE, the assailed decision of the Court of Appeals is hereby AFFIRMED and
this petition DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Panganiban, (Chairman), SandovalGutierrez, Corona, and CarpioMorales, JJ., concur.
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[1] Acot, et al. v. Kempis, et al., 55 OG No. 16, p. 2907 [1959]; Director of Lands v.
[2] Cruz v. Court of Appeals, 281 SCRA 491 [1997]; Republic v. Court of Appeals, 306
SCRA 81 [1999].
[3] Penned by Associate Justice Eliezer R. de los Santos and concurred in by Associate
Justices Roberto A. Barrios and Danilo B. Pine of the 15th Division.
[4] Rollo, pp. 6579.
[5] Rollo, pp. 81101.
[6] Rollo, pp. 3948.
[7] Petitioner’s Memorandum, p. 14; Rollo, pp. 171197.
[8] Section 2, Rule 3, 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.
[9] 352 SCRA 334 [2001].
[10] Heirs of Simplicio Santiago v. Heirs of Mariano Santiago, 404 SCRA 193 [2003].
[11] Rollo, pp. 5657.
[12] Soliva v. Villaba, 417 SCRA 277 [2003].
[13] Alonso v. Cebu Country Club, 417 SCRA 115 [2003].
[14] Exh. “D”; Annex “C”, Petition; Rollo, pp. 51.52.
[15] 358 SCRA 489, 500 [2001].
[16] 313 SCRA 176, 183 [1999].
[17] 301 SCRA 366 [1999].
[18] Acot, et al. v. Kempis, et al., supra, note 1; Republic v. Animas, 56 SCRA 499
[1974].
[19] Republic v. CA and Del Mundo, supra, note, 1; Director of Lands v. Abanilla, et al.,
supra, note 1.
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[20] 198 SCRA 434, 445 [1991].
[21] Duran v. IAC, 138 SCRA 489, 494 [1985] reiterated in Philippine National Bank v.
Court of Appeals, 187 SCRA 735, 741 [1990].
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