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G.R. No.

76265 April 22, 1992 This Supreme Court decision spawned the two (2) petitions now before us assailing the validity of Lucia
dela Cruz's title over Lot 671 which in turn was sold to INK.
VIRGINIA CALALANG, petitioner,
vs. In G.R. No. 76265, petitioner Virginia Calalang alleged that she is the registered owner of a portion of Lot
REGISTER OF DEEDS OF QUEZON CITY, ADMINISTRATOR OF NATIONAL LAND TITLES AND DEEDS 671-A (subdivision plan –– PSD 32221) as evidenced by TCT Nos. 17556, 17564 and 17562. She allegedly
REGISTRATION ADMINISTRATION, LUCIA DE LA CRUZ, CONSTANCIO SIMANGAN and IGLESIA NI came to know of INK'S claim only when a prospective buyer inspected the land on August 1986 and saw
KRISTO, respondents. the "no trespassing" sign.

G.R. No. 83280 April 22, 1992 Petitioner Calalang lost no time in inquiring into the status of the land and learned about the
pending consulta case (LRC 1978) filed before the Administrator of the National Land Titles and Deeds
Registration Administration (NLTDRA). This consulta came about when the Register of Deeds doubted
AUGUSTO M. DE LEON, JOSE M. DE CASTRO, JOSE A. PANLILEO, FELICIDAD VERGARA VDA. DE PINEDA,
the registrability of the documents presented before it in the light of his findings that the land affected
FERNANDO L. VITUG I, FERNANDO M. VITUG II, FERNANDO M. VITUG III, FAUSTINO TOBIA, ELENA M.
was covered by two (2) sets of titles issued in the names of different owners.
OSTREA and FELISA C. CRISTOBAL-GENEROSO, petitioners,
vs.
THE HON. COURT OF APPEALS and BISHOP ERAÑO MANALO, respondents. On September 9, 1986, the petitioner filed a Motion to Intervene requesting the Administrator to
conduct an investigation of the supposed anomaly committed in connection with the reconstitution of
TCT No. RT-58 in the name of Lucia dela Cruz. This was denied by the Administrator invoking our ruling
in dela Cruz v. dela Cruz to the effect that TCT RT-58 in the name of respondent Lucia dela Cruz is the
valid title. (Rollo, pp. 44-47)
GUTIERREZ, JR., J.:
Consequently, a Motion for Reconsideration was filed by herein petitioner but this was likewise denied
The subject of controversy in these two consolidated petitions is a parcel of land — Lot 671-A of the by the Administrator on October 20, 1986 on the ground that the issues raised therein have already been
Piedad Estate located in Barrio Culiat, Diliman. passed upon and that the issues being litigious in nature cannot be decided in a consulta case "where the
only question to be determined is the registrability of the document presented for registration."
The petitioners are individual lot owners who claim to have bought their respective portions from
Amando Clemente in the 1950's. Hence, on October 27, 1986, the petitioner file the instant Special Civil Action for Certiorari and
Prohibition in G.R. No. 76265 against the Administrator of the NLTDRA, the Register of Deeds of Quezon
Amando Clemente is alleged to be the registered owner of said land evidenced by Transfer of Certificate City and private respondents Lucia dela Cruz, Constancio Simangan and Iglesia ni Kristo. Lucia dela Cruz
Title No. 16212 covering about 81,160 square meters who converted it into a subdivision known as and Constancio Simangan were impleaded as they were predecessors-in-interest of INK.
Clemville Subdivision.
INK and the Administrator filed their comments on January 5, 1987 and June 29, 1987 respectively. For
Lot 671-A is actually part of a bigger parcel known as Lot 671 which is claimed by respondent Iglesia ni failure to locate Constancio Simangan's whereabouts despite diligent efforts and considering further that
Kristo (INK), which bought said property from Lucia dela Cruz in 1975. Dela Cruz was adjudged the INK is the indispensable party and the one interested in upholding the validity of the reconstituted title
rightful owner of Lot 671 in the case of dela Cruz v. dela Cruz (130 SCRA 666 [1984]). INK began fencing of respondent Lucia dela Cruz, the petitioner moved to drop him as respondent. This was granted by the
the whole area and placed the following sign "NO TRESPASSING — IGLESIA NI KRISTO PROPERTY Court in a resolution dated April 13, 1988. (Rollo, p. 189)
SUPREME COURT CASE NO. 61969, July 25, 1984."
Taking the cue from the Administrator that present certificates of title must be cancelled to avoid
Briefly, the dela Cruz v. dela Cruz case is an action for reconveyance founded on breach of trust filed by duplication, the Register of Deeds, instead of filing its comment initiated cancellation proceedings of
Augustina dela Cruz, et al. against Lucia dela Cruz and INK. Augustina and her co-plaintiffs charged that more than 100 titles, against 81 defendants which included herein petitioner on the basis of this Court's
the parcel of land purchased by the INK from Lucia dela Cruz was actually a part of their inheritance declaration in the case of dela Cruz that the reconstituted title of respondent Lucia dela Cruz is the valid
share in the estate of their late grandfather, Policarpio dela Cruz but which, in breach of trust known to title. This petition was filed by the Office of the Solicitor-General (OSG) on January 5, 1987 with the
the INK, Lucia sold to the latter. Regional Trial Court of Quezon City docketed as Civil Case No. Q-49900.

Augustina's suit was originally decided in her favor by the trial court. On appeal to the Court of Appeals, Consequently, the petitioner moved to dismiss on the ground that the complaint was premature and
the judgment was reversed and the questioned sale by Lucia dela Cruz to the INK was upheld. maliciously filed with knowledge of the instant petition with this Court. INK, on the other hand, filed a
Consequently, Augustina went to the Supreme Court on a petition for review on certiorari, docketed as Motion to Intervene in said case. Claiming ownership over Lot 671, it prayed for damages against some
G. R. No. 61969. of the defendants namely Augusto de Leon, Jose M. Panlilio and Felicidad Vda. de Pineda who filed an
injunction suit against it (Civil Case No. Q-45767) with the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Quezon City on
September 12, 1985.
On July 25, 1984, the Court rendered a decision in affirming the decision of the Court of Appeals. The
validity of the sale of Lucia to the INK was thereby upheld and the title of INK to the subject realty (Lot
671) was validated as well.
Despite opposition of the petitioner to respondent INK's Motion to Intervene, presiding Judge Benigno T. The September 5 hearing was however, reset to September 19, 1985 with respondent Eraño Manalo
Dayaw granted the motion of INK and denied petitioner's Motion to Dismiss on the ground that the volunteering to maintain the status quo until then or until the matter had been resolved by the trial
issues raised in the instant petition (G. R. No. 76265) will not substantially affect said civil case. The court.
subsequent motion for reconsideration filed by the petitioner was likewise denied considering that no
restraining order has been issued (Rollo, pp. 198-216).
On September 19, by agreement of the parties and in open court, the Judge issued an order, granting the
parties' motion to enter into a stipulation of facts instead of going on with the hearing and to maintain
However, instead of filing an answer to the complaint in Civil Case No. Q-49900, the petitioners filed on the status quo.
July 15, 1988 a supplemental petition before this Court to include as additional respondent, the
Honorable Judge Benigno T. Dayaw and petitioner's children who were named as defendants in said Civil
In the course of the exchange of pleadings between the parties, the trial judge issued an Order on
Case, as additional petitioners. At the same time the petitioner prayed for a restraining order (Rollo,
December 6, 1985 denying the petitioners' prayer for the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction on
p.197).
the grounds that:

To this supplemental petition, the OSG in behalf of the Republic filed its comment pursuant to the
From the exchange of written arguments and the authorities cited, it appears that
Court's resolution granting the petitioner's motion for leave to include additional parties and to admit
the petitioners' titles which were issued some ten years earlier than that of
supplemental petition (Rollo, p. 228).
respondent's emanated from a reconstituted TCT No. RT-52, which covered
portion of Lot 671 of the Piedad Estate of Quezon City. Petitioner's parcels of land
In the meantime, fire gutted the records of the Register of Deeds in Quezon City, so respondent Judge are within that estate. This reconstituted TCT No. RT-52 was the subject of a case,
required the parties to agree to a stipulation of facts instead of trial. "De la Cruz v. De la Cruz", 130 SCRA 66 [1984], wherein the Honorable Supreme
Court declared the said reconstituted title null and void.
In G.R. No. 83280, the petitioners alleged that they and/or their predecessors in interest were issued
their corresponding titles to the lots purchased from Amando Clemente in the 1950's yet. The principal argument of petitioners that they were not parties thereto can not be
given serious extended discussion as they could acquire no more rights than the
source of their titles. For brevity, at this initial stage, suffice it to say that under the
They alleged that they took physical possession of their lots in Clemville Subdivision by actually
foregoing discussed circumstances, the petitioners have not shown a clear and
occupying the same, declaring them in their names for tax purposes, fencing or marking them off and
positive right to a temporary relief. (Emphasis supplied) (Rollo, p. 35)
entrusting their care to "katiwalas". From the time they acquired their Torrens Title they and they alone
to the exclusion of INK exercised all acts of undisturbed, peaceful and uninterrupted ownership and
possession including the payment of their realty taxes. Assailing this order, the petitioners by way of certiorari elevated the matter to the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. SP No. 08146.
On or about the second week of August, 1985, INK started to enclose the entire Clemville Subdivision
with "sawali" fences with billboards randomly posted which read: On April 9, 1986, the Court of Appeals promulgated a Decision with the following dispositive portion:

NO TRESPASSING WHEREFORE, the petition is given due course and is hereby RESOLVED by setting
I.N.C. PROPERTY aside the Order dated December 6, 1985 in Civil Case No. Q-45767 and directing
SC DECISION that the application for preliminary injunctive relief therein be properly heard and
2ND DIVISION evidence for or against the same be adduced in due course. (Rollo, p. 39)
G. R. NO. L 61969
JULY 25, 1984
On February 12, 1987, respondent INK filed with the lower court a motion to dismiss the petitioners'
complaint for injunction on the ground that it does not state a cause of action.
INK also destroyed the concrete/hollow block fence surrounding the lot of petitioner de Castro and
started the construction of housing structures therein. At the same time, it commenced the delivery of
On August 7, 1987, the lower court issued an Order with the following dispositive portion:
construction materials to the former premises of petitioner Panlilio to erect a permanent structures of
strong materials on it.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, finding respondent's Motion to Dismiss
justified, the instant petition is hereby DISMISSED, with costs against petitioners.
Thus, on August 22, 1985, the petitioners filed with the RTC-Branch 101 a petition for injunction with
(Rollo, p. 48)
damages. This case was docketed an Civil Case No. 45767. Later, this petition was amended to include
Elena Ostrea and Feliza C. Cristobal-Generoso as additional petitioners.
Seeking relief from the dismissal, the petitioners filed the two pleadings, to wit:
August 25, 1985, presiding Judge Santiago issued a restraining order and set the case for hearing the writ
for preliminary injunction on September 5, 1985. 1) "Motion for Reconsideration Ad Cautelam" dated September 18, 1987 filed with
the RTC, NCR, Branch 101 Quezon City; and
2) "Omnibus Motion Incident to Execution of the Decision dated April 9, 1986" Inevitably, the dela Cruz ruling should be applied to the present petitions since the facts on which such
dated September 29, 1987 filed with the Court of Appeals. decision was predicated continue to be the facts of the case before us now (See Rivas v. SEC, 190 SCRA
295 [1990]). Even the petitioners substantially adopt the same findings of facts in their pleadings. The
factual inquiry with regards to the history of Lot 671 has already been laid to rest and may no longer be
On December 10, 1987, the Court of Appeals denied petitioners' Omnibus Motion. The petitioners'
disturbed. We quote:
motion for reconsideration was likewise denied in a resolution by the RTC dated May 4, 1988.

The undisputed facts indicate that the parcel of land in question is Lot 671 of the
Hence, the instant petition with the following assignment of errors.
Piedad Estate, GLRO Rec. No. 5975, with an area of 184, 268 square meters, more
or less, situated in Barrio Culiat, Quezon City; that the totality of the Piedad Estate
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS, IN ITS DECEMBER 10, 1987 RESOLUTION, consists of a vast tract of land, registered on March 12, 1912, in the name of the
ERRED IN HOLDING THAT THE ORDERS OF DECEMBER 12, 1986 AND AUGUST 7, Philippine Government, under Original Certificate of Title (OCT) No. 614 of the
1986 RELATE TO INCIDENTS IN CIVIL CASE NO. 45767 TOTALLY ALIEN TO THE Register of Deeds of the Province of Rizal; that when the Piedad Estate was
SUBJECT MATTER OF CA-G.R. SP NO. 08146. subdivided (with Lot No. 671 as one of the resulting parcels) whoever was in
possession of a particular lot was given priority and/or preference in the
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN VALIDATING THE ORDER OF acquisition thereof provided that the price and the cost of titling would be paid;
AUGUST 7, 1986. (Rollo, p. 16) that upon such payment, the government would issue the corresponding
certificate of title; that Policarpio dela Cruz and his wife Luciana Rafael were
originally in possession of the land; that they had three children, namely
In a resolution dated August 30, 1989, G.R. No. 83280 was consolidated with G.R. No. 76265.

(1) Maximo de la Cruz (married to Feliza Yabut);


Although other minor issues are involved in these consolidated cases, the principal and crucial issue that
alone needs to be resolved is the applicability of this Court's decision in the dela Cruz case to these cases
now before us. (2) Filomeno de la Cruz (married to Narcisa Santiago); and

The petitioners argue that the dela Cruz case could not be applied to them since they were not parties in (3) defendant-appellant Lucia de la Cruz (a widow);
that case nor were they ever notified of such case pending between the parties. The petitioners
explained that the de la Cruz case was a case among the heirs of Policarpio de la Cruz. Since they that the plaintiffs-appellees herein are the descendants of the two sons (Maximo
acquired their properties from an entirely different person, Amando Clemente and not from any of the and Filomeno) of Policarpio; that on April 25, 1940, Lot No. 671 was segregated
heirs of Policarpio de la Cruz, they could not be considered privies to any of them. from the totality of the Piedad Estate, covered by OCT No. 614 and a separate title
was issued in the name of
In denying applicability, however, the petitioners assail the Court's ruling that "the reconstituted title of
Lucia dela Cruz over Lot 671 (TCT No. RT 58) was valid. As the registered and rightful owner, Lucia dela "Eugenia de la Paz, soltera" and "Dorotea de la Cruz, viuda"
Cruz had the perfect and legal right to sell, assign, and convert the property to respondent INK who as
purchaser for value in good faith holds the same free from all encumbrances except those noted in said
(this was Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 40355 of the Register of Deeds for
certificate."
the Province of Rizal); that on November 29, 1941, a deed of sale over Lot No. 671
was executed by Eugenia de la Paz and Dorotea de la Cruz (the registered owners)
With this Court's ruling promulgated in 1984, it is our considered view that the petitioner can not raise in favor of defendant-appellant Lucia de la Cruz; that said deed of sale
anew the question of ownership of Lucia dela Cruz over Lot 671 which had been determined by the Court was registered with the office of the Register of Deeds on July 17, 1943 and the
of Appeals and affirmed by the Supreme Court in the dela Cruz case. Well-settled is the rule enunciated corresponding certificate of title was issued to Lucia de la Cruz; that in 1971, Lucia
in Church Assistance Program, Inc. v. Sibulo, 171 SCRA 408 [1989] that: de la Cruz obtained from the land registration court a reconstituted title (TCT No.
RT-59 over Lot No. 671), the transfer certificate of title previously issued to her in
When a right or fact has been judicially tried and determined by a court of 1943 having been lost; that subsequently, Lot No. 671 (this time, already covered
competent jurisdiction, so long as it remains unreversed, it should be conclusive by TCT No. RT-58) was subdivided into three (3) lots, each of which was issued a
upon the parties and those in privity with them in law or estate. separate title, as follows:

The Court's ruling has long been final and the issue on ownership of Lot 671 finally disposed of several (a) Lot No. 671-A containing an area of 30,000 square meters and covered by TCT
years ago. This declaration must be respected and followed in the instant case applying the principle No. 168320;
of res judicata or, otherwise, the rule on conclusiveness of judgment. The less familiar concept or less
terminological usage of res judicata as a rule on conclusiveness of judgment refers to the situation where (b) Lot No. 671-B, containing an area of 4,268 square meters and covered by TCT
the judgment in the prior action operates as an estoppel only as to the matters actually determined No. 168321; and
therein or which were necessarily included therein (De la Cruz v. Court of Appeals, 187 SCRA 165 [1990]).
(c) Lot No. 671-C, containing an area of 150,000 square meters and covered by TCT (1) Lucia dela Cruz's reconstituted title (RT-58) which was divided into 3 Lots, Lot 671-A, Lot 671-B and
No. 168322; Lot 671-C and was subsequently sold to INK;

that meanwhile TCT No. 40355 (already previously issued to and in the names of (2) Eugenia dela Paz and Dorotea dela Cruz's reconstituted title (RT-52) which was divided into 2 lots, Lot
Eugenia de la Paz and Dorotea de la Cruz) continued to exist; that when the title 671-A and Lot 671-B.
was transferred from the Rizal Registry to the Quezon City Registry, from the latter
Registry assigned to this TCT a new number, RT-52; that this same Lot (No. 671)
Notwithstanding, it is undisputed that Lot 671 was sold to Lucia dela Cruz by Eugenia dela Paz and
was later subdivided into two lots, each with a title:
Dorotea dela Cruz as evidenced by Entry No. 258, page 7, Vol. 7, Primary Entry Book of the Registry of
Deeds of Manila. (de la Cruz v. de la Cruz, supra, pp. 697-698) This is a finding which can not be
(a) Lot No. 671-A (TCT No. 16212) disturbed.

(b) Lot No. 671-B (TCT No. 16213) We need not emphasize the fact that the Supreme Court by tradition and in our
system of judicial administration, has the last word on what the law is. It is the
final arbiter of any justiciable controversy. There is only one Supreme Court from
both in the names of Eugenia de la Paz and Dorotea de la Cruz; that the second
whose decisions all other courts should take their bearings. Consequently, we
lot (lot No. 671-B, with an area of 103,108 square meters) was sold on December
cannot and should not review a case already passed upon by the Highest Tribunal.
17, 1952 to one Narcisa Vda. de Leon (to whom TCT No. 2009 was later issued);
It is only proper to allow the case to take its rest. (Church assistance Program, Inc.
that on May 6, 1964, Narcisa Vda. de Leon transferred the same Lot 671-B to
v. Sibulo, supra.).
Nieves Paz Eraña (who was later issued in her own name TCT No. 79971).

The sale of the land to Lucia dela Cruz and the subsequent registration thereof in the Primary Book of the
The undisputed facts further show that in 1971, Nieves Paz Eraña filed before the
Registry of Deeds, Manila constitutes constructive notice to the whole world. (Heirs of Maria Marasigan
Court of First instance of Quezon City Civil Case No. 16125 for 'quieting of title'
v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 152 SCRA 253 [1987]; People v. Reyes, 175 SCRA 597 [1988])
against Lucia de la Cruz, et al., praying that TCT No. RT-58, (the reconstituted title
of Lucia de la Cruz), as well as all titles derived therefrom, be declared null and
void; that the case ended with the parties submitting a compromise agreement Since it is the act of registration which transfers ownership of the land sold (Government Service
with Lucia de la Cruz, among other things, paying plaintiff Eraña the amount of Insurance System v. Court of Appeals, 169 SCRA 244 [1989]). Lot 671 was already owned by Lucia dela
P250,000.00 to cover the acquisitive cost of the 103,108 square meters of land Cruz as early as 1943. Amando Clemente's alleged title meanwhile which was issued on August 9, 1951
included in the certificate of title of defendant Lucia de la Cruz; that on July 17, was very much later. Thus, the petitioners, who merely stepped into the shoes of Amando Clemente
1975, Lucia de la Cruz sold a portion of Lot No. 671-C (one of the three portions to cannot claim a better right over said land. "Prior est temporae, prior est in jura" (he who is first in time is
which the lot included in RT-58 had been subdivided, and which portion was preferred in right) (Garcia v. Court of Appeals, 95 SCRA 380 [1980]). The fact that Amando Clemente
covered by TCT No. 168322), consisting of 103,108 square meters to defendant- possessed a certificate of title does not necessarily make him the true owner. And not being the owner,
appellant Iglesia Ni Cristo, for the amount of P2,108,850.00; that this sale was later he cannot transmit any right to nor transfer any title or interest over the land conveyed (Beaterio del
registered in the Registry of Deeds of Quezon City, with a new title, TCT No. Santisimo Rosario de Molo v. Court of Appeals, 137 SCRA 459 [1985]; Treasurer of the Phil. v. Court of
209554 being issued in the name of the Iglesia Ni Cristo; that another deed of Appeals, 153 SCRA 359 [1987]).
absolute sale was executed for the remaining 84,356 square meters in favor also of
the Iglesia and said sale was annotated on TCT No. 168322. In view of said sales
Moreover, the petition for reconstitution of title by Lucia dela Cruz which the court held to be valid was a
and the fact that registration of the involved parcels is now in the name
proceeding in rem. It is well established that in rem proceedings such as land registration constitute
(separately) of Lucia de la Cruz and the Iglesia Ni Cristo, the present action for
constructive notice to the whole world. The petitioners cannot now claim that they were not notified of
reconveyance with damages was instituted. (Emphasis supplied)
the reconstitution proceedings over said lot. Under the facts of the case, the title in the name of Lucia
dela Cruz (TCT No. RT 58) has become indefeasible and incontrovertible.
Apparently, there is no mention of Amando Clemente in the above recital of facts. A closer perusal of the
records in G. R. 76265 would, however, reveal that TCT No. 16212 was issued for Lot 671-A in the name
Likewise, the INK was also issued a Torrens Title over Lot 671 as a result of the sale made to it by the
of Amando Clemente on August 9, 1951 per report of the Acting Administrator of the NLTDRA (Rollo, p.
rightful owner, Lucia dela Cruz in 1975. Under the Torrens System of registration, the Torrens Title
92). Amando Clemente's TCT No. 16212 emanated from TCT No. 40355 in the name of Eugenia de la Paz
became indefeasible and incontrovertible one year from its final decree (Tirado v. Sevilla, 188 SCRA 321
and Dorotea dela Cruz. Thus, Amando Clemente's predecessors-in-interest are Eugenia dela Paz and
[1990]). A Torrens Title is generally a conclusive evidence of the ownership of the land referred to
Dorotea dela Cruz whom the Court found to have lost their rights over Lot 671 by virtue of the sale made
therein. (Ching v. Court of Appeals, 181 SCRA 9 [1990]) It is, therefore, too late in the day for the
to Lucia dela Cruz.
petitioners to reopen or question the legality of INK's title over Lot 671 at this time.

The Register of Deeds correctly observed that this is a clear case where there is a duplication or
The petitioners also contend that what INK purchased from Lucia dela Cruz in 1975 was Lot 671-C-4 LRC
overlapping of titles issued to different names over the same land which thereby compelled him to file
322534 which corresponds roughly to Lot 671-B (Psd-32221) and did not affect Lot 671-A of Amando
the consulta case with the NLTDRA:
Clemente at all. This is, however, belied by the fact that the sale made by Dorotea dela Cruz to Lucia dela
Cruz (as indicated in Entry No. 258) was Lot 671 which was later on conveyed to INK.
In challenging the validity of the reconstitution of Lucia dela Cruz's title, the petitioners are not alleging MATEO H. REYES and JUAN H. REYES, petitioners and appellants,
fraud, collusion and illegality in the procurement of the certificate of title of Lucia dela Cruz. It must be vs.
recalled that G.R. No. 76265 stemmed merely from a consulta case with the National Land Titles and MATEO RAVAL REYES, respondent and appellee.
Deeds Administration. Undeniably, the arguments and issues raised by the petitioner require
adjudication of facts which, under the circumstances of this case, we are not prepared to do as this Court
Harold M. Hernando for petitioners and appellants.
is not a trier of facts. Moreover, the present petition is not the proper remedy in challenging the validity
Rafael Ruiz for respondent and appellee.
of certificates of titles since the judicial action required is a direct and not a collateral attack. (Natalia
Realty Corp. v. Vallez, 173 SCRA 534 [1989]).
REYES, J.B.L., J.:
The Court had this to say:
Direct appeal on pure question of law from an order of the Court of First Instance of Ilocos Norte, in its
Cadastral Cases Nos. 31, L. R. C. Rec. No. 1188, and 42, L. R. C. Rec. No. 1994, denying petitioners' motion
We note with approval the lower court's patient explanation that, inter alia the
to compel respondent to surrender their owners' duplicates of Original Certificates of Title Nos. 22161
certificate of title issued in the name of the plaintiff in accordance with the Land
and 8066, as well as from a subsequent order of the same court, refusing, upon petitioners' motion, to
Registration Act (Act No. 496) is indefeasible after the expiration of one year from
reconsider the first order of denial.
the entry of the decree of registration. Under Section 38 thereof, a petition for
review of the decree must be presented within one year after its entry as
described and defined in Section 40 of the same. After the lapse of one year, the The undisputed facts are: three brothers, Mateo H., Juan H., and Francisco H., all surnamed Reyes, are
decree of registration becomes incontrovertible and is binding upon and the registered owners of several parcels of land, to wit; Lots Nos. 15891, 15896, 15902 and 15912, of the
conclusive against all persons whether or not they were notified of or participated Laoag (Ilocos Norte) Cadastre, embraced in and covered by Original Certificate of Title No. 22161, and
in the registration proceedings. . . . also Lots Nos. 20481 and 20484, of the same cadastral survey, embraced in and covered by Original
Certificate of Title No. 8066, both of the Registry of Deeds of Ilocos Norte. These titles were issued
pursuant to a decree of registration, dated 31 May 1940.
Even assuming arguendo that said titles may still be challenged, the present case
does not provide the vehicle for that remedy since the judicial action required is a
direct, and not a collateral attack. In fact, under the existing law, Section 48 of the On 17 July 1962, petitioners Mateo H. Reyes and Juan H. Reyes filed, in the above stated cadastral cases,
Property Registration Decree expressly provides that a certificate of title cannot be a motion for issuance of writs of possession over all the lots covered by both Certificates of Title above
subject to collateral attack and can be altered, modified or cancelled only in a referred to.
direct proceeding in accordance with law. (at p. 542)
Respondent Mateo Raval Reyes opposed the motion, admitting that he is only in possession of the lots
In our capacity as the court of last resort, the petitioners try to convince us to look or inquire into the covered by Original Certificate of Title No. 22161, but denying that he possesses the lots covered by
validity of the reconstitution proceedings initiated by Lucia dela Cruz, contending that the Original Certificate of Title No. 8066; however, he claimed that he has been in, and is entitled to, the
implementation of de la Cruz ruling would deprive them of their properties without due process of law. possession thereof (i.e., Lots Nos. 20481 and 20484), having acquired by way of absolute sale (not
We have looked long and hard into the records of the case but the facts and circumstances plus law and recorded) from petitioners' brother, Francisco H. Reyes, the latter's undivided one-third (1/3) share,
jurisprudence on the matter do not warrant such action from the Court. INK's title over Lot 671 which interest and participation to these disputed lots.
necessarily included Lot 671-A had already become incontrovertible and indefeasible. To reopen or to
question the legality of INK's title would defeat the purpose of our Torrens system which seeks to insure After due hearing of this appellant, the court a quo issued, on 20 December 1962, the writ of possession
stability by quieting titled lands and putting to a stop forever any question of the legality of the with respect to Lot Nos. 15891 and 15896, which writ was, upon petitioners' motion for reconsideration,
registration in the certificate or questions which may arise therefrom. (de la Cruz v. de la Cruz, supra.) In amended, on 7 January 1963, to include all the other lots covered by both titles.
fairness to INK, as registered owner it is entitled to rest secure in its land title.

Respondent did not appeal from this order amending the writ of possession.
In view of all the foregoing, it would be for the public interest and the maintenance of the integrity and
stability of the Torrens system of land registration that all transfer certificates of title derived from the
reconstituted title of Eugenia dela Paz and Dorotea dela Cruz be annulled in order to prevent the Subsequently, petitioners in the above cadastral cases, as plaintiffs, commenced, on 15 January 1963,
proliferation of derivative titles which are null and void. The legality or validity of INK's title over Lot 671 before the same court of first instance, an ordinary civil action seeking to recover the products of the
has been settled. The Court has spoken and it has done so with finality, logically and rightly so as to disputed lots, or their value, and moral damages against respondent Mateo Raval Reyes, as defendant.
assure stability in legal relations and avoid confusion. (see Ver v. Quetulio, 163 SCRA 80 [1988]) This case was docketed as its Civil Case No. 3659.

WHEREFORE, the petitions in G. R. Nos. 76265 and 83280 are hereby DISMISSED for lack of merit. Defendant therein (now respondent M. Raval Reyes) answered the complaint and pleaded a
counterclaim for partition of all the disputed lots, alleging the same ground he had heretofore raised in
his answer and/or opposition to the motion for issuance of writ of possession, i.e., he is their (plaintiffs')
SO ORDERED. co-owner, he having bought from plaintiffs' brother, Francisco H. Reyes, the latter's undivided one-third
(1/3) share, interest and participation to these disputed lots.
G.R. Nos. L-21703-04 August 31, 1966
Pending trial on this ordinary civil case (No. 3659), petitioners presented, on 25 February 1963, in the Titulos a favor de la misma es obvious que quien tiene derecho a poseer el certificado de
cadastral cases aforementioned, a motion to compel respondent Mateo Raval Reyes to surrender and titulo es ella y no la apelante (art. 41 de la Ley No. 496, tal como ha sido reformado).
deliver to them the owners' duplicates of Original Certificates of Title Nos. 22161 and 8066. Respondent
opposed this motion.
Alega la apelante que ella tiene tanto derecho como la apelada a poseer el titulo porque el
terreno a que se refiere es de la propiedad de las tres hermanas. La pretension no es
The court a quo denied petitioners' motion, on the ground that the parcels of land covered by both titles meritoria Segun el articulo 41 de la Ley No. 496, conforme ha sido enmendado, el duplicado
are subjects of litigation in Civil Case No. 3659 and the same has not yet been decided on the merits by para el dueno debe expedirse por el Registrador a nombre de la persona a cuyo favor se ha
it. Petitioners subjected the foregoing order to a motion for reconsideration, but without success; hence, decretado el terreno y dispone, ademas, que dicho duplicado debe entregarsele al dueño
the present appeal. inscrito. Si la apelante cree que tiene derecho a participar en el lote No. 778, como
coheredera, debe ejercitar una accion independiente, encaminada a obtener su participacion.
(El Director de Terrenos contra Abacahin 72 Phil. 326).
Petitioners-appellants dispute the above ruling of the trial court contending that, since the subject
matter of Civil Case No. 3659 are not the lots covered by the titles in question but their products or
value, and moral damages, these lots are not in litigation in this ordinary civil case; and that since It being undisputed that respondent had already availed of an independent civil action to recover his
respondent had already raised the issue of ownership and possession of these lots in his opposition to alleged co-owner's share in the disputed lots by filing a counterclaim for partition in said Civil Case No.
the (petitioners') motion for issuance of writ of possession and, despite this opposition, the court a 3659, his rights appear to be amply protected; and considering that he may also avail of, to better
quo granted the writ, without any appeal being taken, respondent is barred and estopped from raising protect his rights thereto, the provision on notice of lis pendens under Section 24, Rule 14, of the Revised
the same issue in the ordinary civil case, under the principle of res judicata.1äwphï1.ñët Rules of Court, for the purpose of recording the fact that the lots covered by the titles in question are
litigated in said Civil Case No. 3659, we again see no justifiable reason for respondent to retain the
custody of the owners' duplicates of certificates of titles.
On the other hand, respondent-appellee maintains that, having pleaded a counterclaim for partition of
the lots in question in said Civil Case No. 3659, the trial court correctly held that these lots are subjects of
litigation in this ordinary civil case. He also maintains that petitioners not having impleaded their brother, In view of the above considerations, we deem it unnecessary to pass on the merits of the second
Francisco H. Reyes, or his heirs, as parties in their motion for issuance of writ of execution, and because contention of petitioners-appellants.
these heirs have not intervened in this particular incident, the writ of possession issued by the trial court
is, at most, valid only with respect to their (petitioners) undivided two-thirds (2/3) share and
Wherefore, the orders appealed from should be, as they are hereby, reversed; and, in accordance with
participation in these disputed lots; hence, he concludes that he is not barred and estopped from raising
this opinion, respondent Mateo Raval Reyes is hereby ordered to deliver to petitioners the owners'
the issue of ownership and possession of the undivided one-third (1/3) share and participation of
duplicates of Original Certificates of Title No. 22161 and 8066. With costs against respondent-appellee,
petitioners' brother, Francisco H. Reyes, which share respondent allegedly bought from the latter.
Mateo Raval Reyes.

In their reply brief, petitioners-appellants refute the latter argument of respondent-appellee by showing
that they had previously obtained special authority from the heirs of their deceased brother to represent
them in the proceedings had in the court below.

The sole issue to be resolved in the instant appeal is: who between petitioners-appellants or respondent-
appellee has a better right to the possession or custody of the disputed owners' duplicates of certificates
of title. G.R. No. 154409 June 21, 2004

While we agree with the court a quo that the disputed lots are subjects of litigation in Civil Case No. Spouses NOEL and JULIE ABRIGO, petitioners,
3659, it appearing that respondent, as defendant therein, had presented a counterclaim for partition of vs.
the lots covered by the titles, we see no valid and plausible reason to justify, on this ground, the ROMANA DE VERA, respondent.
withholding from the registered owners, such as the petitioners-appellants herein, the custody and
possession of the owners' duplicates of certificates of title. In a decided case, this Court has already held
that the owner of the land in whose favor and in whose name said land is registered and inscribed in the DECISION
certificate of title has a more preferential right to the possession of the owners' duplicate than one
whose name does not appear in the certificate and has yet to establish his right to the possession PANGANIBAN, J.:
thereto. Thus, this Court said:
Between two buyers of the same immovable property registered under the Torrens system, the law gives
Como acertadamente dijo el Juzgado, lo unico que se suscita es si Ana Umbao de Carpio tiene ownership priority to (1) the first registrant in good faith; (2) then, the first possessor in good faith; and
derecho a la possession del duplicado para el dueno del Certificado de Titulo Original No. 698, (3) finally, the buyer who in good faith presents the oldest title. This provision, however, does not apply
con preferencia a la opositora-apelante. A nuestro juicio, la solucion es clara e ineludible. if the property is not registered under the Torrens system.
Hallandose admitido que el decreto final que se dicto en el expediente catastral en 28 de
mayo de 1936, en relacion con el lote No. 778, fue a favor de Ana Umbao y que el duplicado
para el dueño del Certificado de Titulo Original No. 698 se expidio por el Registrador de The Case
Before us is a Petition for Review1 under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, seeking to set aside the March 21, ‘On May 27, 1993, Gloria Villafania sold a house and lot located at Banaoang, Mangaldan, Pangasinan
2002 Amended Decision2 and the July 22, 2002 Resolution3 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-GR CV No. and covered by Tax Declaration No. 1406 to Rosenda Tigno-Salazar and Rosita Cave-Go. The said sale
62391. The Amended Decision disposed as follows: became a subject of a suit for annulment of documents between the vendor and the vendees.

"WHEREFORE, the dispositive part of the original D E C I S I O N of this case, promulgated on ‘On December 7, 1993, the Regional Trial Court, Branch 40 of Dagupan City rendered judgment
November 19, 2001, is SET ASIDE and another one is entered AFFIRMING in part approving the Compromise Agreement submitted by the parties. In the said Decision, Gloria Villafania
and REVERSING in part the judgment appealed from, as follows: was given one year from the date of the Compromise Agreement to buy back the house and lot, and
failure to do so would mean that the previous sale in favor of Rosenda Tigno-Salazar and Rosita Cave-Go
shall remain valid and binding and the plaintiff shall voluntarily vacate the premises without need of any
"1. Declaring [Respondent] Romana de Vera the rightful owner and with better
demand. Gloria Villafania failed to buy back the house and lot, so the [vendees] declared the lot in their
right to possess the property in question, being an innocent purchaser for value
name.
therefor;

‘Unknown, however to Rosenda Tigno-Salazar and Rosita Cave-Go, Gloria Villafania obtained a free
"2. Declaring Gloria Villafania [liable] to pay the following to [Respondent] Romana
patent over the parcel of land involved [on March 15, 1988 as evidenced by OCT No. P-30522]. The said
de Vera and to [Petitioner-]Spouses [Noel and Julie] Abrigo, to wit:
free patent was later on cancelled by TCT No. 212598 on April 11, 1996.

As to [Respondent] Romana de Vera:


‘On October 16, 1997, Rosenda Tigno-Salazar and Rosita Cave-Go, sold the house and lot to the herein
[Petitioner-Spouses Noel and Julie Abrigo].
1. ₱300,000.00 plus 6% per annum as actual damages;
‘On October 23, 1997, Gloria Villafania sold the same house and lot to Romana de Vera x x x. Romana de
2. ₱50,000.00 as moral damages; Vera registered the sale and as a consequence, TCT No. 22515 was issued in her name.

3. ₱50,000.00 as exemplary damages; ‘On November 12, 1997, Romana de Vera filed an action for Forcible Entry and Damages against
[Spouses Noel and Julie Abrigo] before the Municipal Trial Court of Mangaldan, Pangasinan docketed as
4. ₱30,000.00 as attorney’s fees; and Civil Case No. 1452. On February 25, 1998, the parties therein submitted a Motion for Dismissal in view
of their agreement in the instant case that neither of them can physically take possession of the property
in question until the instant case is terminated. Hence the ejectment case was dismissed.’5
5. Cost of suit.

"Thus, on November 21, 1997, [petitioners] filed the instant case [with the Regional Trial Court of
As to [Petitioner-]Spouses [Noel and Julie] Abrigo: Dagupan City] for the annulment of documents, injunction, preliminary injunction, restraining order and
damages [against respondent and Gloria Villafania].
1. ₱50,000.00 as moral damages;
"After the trial on the merits, the lower court rendered the assailed Decision dated January 4, 1999,
2. ₱50,000.00 as exemplary damages; awarding the properties to [petitioners] as well as damages. Moreover, x x x Gloria Villafania was
ordered to pay [petitioners and private respondent] damages and attorney’s fees.
3. ₱30,000.00 as attorney’s fees;
"Not contented with the assailed Decision, both parties [appealed to the CA]."6
4. Cost of suit."4
Ruling of the Court of Appeals
The assailed Resolution denied reconsideration.
In its original Decision promulgated on November 19, 2001, the CA held that a void title could not give
rise to a valid one and hence dismissed the appeal of Private Respondent Romana de Vera.7 Since Gloria
The Facts Villafania had already transferred ownership to Rosenda Tigno-Salazar and Rosita Cave-Go, the
subsequent sale to De Vera was deemed void.
Quoting the trial court, the CA narrated the facts as follows:
The CA also dismissed the appeal of Petitioner-Spouses Abrigo and found no sufficient basis to award
"As culled from the records, the following are the pertinent antecedents amply summarized by the trial them moral and exemplary damages and attorney’s fees.
court:
On reconsideration, the CA issued its March 21, 2002 Amended Decision, finding Respondent De Vera to "Should it be immovable property, the ownership shall belong to the person acquiring it who
be a purchaser in good faith and for value. The appellate court ruled that she had relied in good faith on in good faith first recorded it in the Registry of Property.
the Torrens title of her vendor and must thus be protected.8
"Should there be no inscription, the ownership shall pertain to the person who in good faith
Hence, this Petition.9 was first in the possession; and, in the absence thereof, to the person who presents the oldest
title, provided there is good faith."
Issues
Otherwise stated, the law provides that a double sale of immovables transfers ownership to (1) the first
registrant in good faith; (2) then, the first possessor in good faith; and (3) finally, the buyer who in good
Petitioners raise for our consideration the issues below:
faith presents the oldest title.13 There is no ambiguity in the application of this law with respect to lands
registered under the Torrens system.
"1. Whether or not the deed of sale executed by Gloria Villafania in favor of [R]espondent
Romana de Vera is valid.
This principle is in full accord with Section 51 of PD 152914 which provides that no deed, mortgage, lease
or other voluntary instrument -- except a will -- purporting to convey or affect registered land shall take
"2. Whether or not the [R]espondent Romana de Vera is a purchaser for value in good faith. effect as a conveyance or bind the land until its registration.15 Thus, if the sale is not registered, it is
binding only between the seller and the buyer but it does not affect innocent third persons.16
"3. Who between the petitioners and respondent has a better title over the property in
question."10 In the instant case, both Petitioners Abrigo and respondent registered the sale of the property. Since
neither petitioners nor their predecessors (Tigno-Salazar and Cave-Go) knew that the property was
In the main, the issues boil down to who between petitioner-spouses and respondent has a better right covered by the Torrens system, they registered their respective sales under Act 3344.17 For her part,
to the property. respondent registered the transaction under the Torrens system18 because, during the sale, Villafania
had presented the transfer certificate of title (TCT) covering the property.19

The Court’s Ruling


Respondent De Vera contends that her registration under the Torrens system should prevail over that of
petitioners who recorded theirs under Act 3344. De Vera relies on the following insight of Justice
The Petition is bereft of merit. Edgardo L. Paras:

Main Issue: "x x x If the land is registered under the Land Registration Act (and has therefore a Torrens
Title), and it is sold but the subsequent sale is registered not under the Land Registration Act
Better Right over the Property but under Act 3344, as amended, such sale is not considered REGISTERED, as the term is used
under Art. 1544 x x x."20
Petitioners contend that Gloria Villafania could not have transferred the property to Respondent De Vera
because it no longer belonged to her.11 They further claim that the sale could not be validated, since We agree with respondent. It is undisputed that Villafania had been issued a free patent registered as
respondent was not a purchaser in good faith and for value.12 Original Certificate of Title (OCT) No. P-30522.21 The OCT was later cancelled by Transfer Certificate of
Title (TCT) No. 212598, also in Villafania’s name.22 As a consequence of the sale, TCT No. 212598 was
subsequently cancelled and TCT No. 22515 thereafter issued to respondent.
Law on Double Sale

Soriano v. Heirs of Magali23 held that registration must be done in the proper registry in order to bind the
The present case involves what in legal contemplation was a double sale. On May 27, 1993, Gloria land. Since the property in dispute in the present case was already registered under the Torrens system,
Villafania first sold the disputed property to Rosenda Tigno-Salazar and Rosita Cave-Go, from whom petitioners’ registration of the sale under Act 3344 was not effective for purposes of Article 1544 of the
petitioners, in turn, derived their right. Subsequently, on October 23, 1997, a second sale was executed Civil Code.
by Villafania with Respondent Romana de Vera.

More recently, in Naawan Community Rural Bank v. Court of Appeals,24 the Court upheld the right of a
Article 1544 of the Civil Code states the law on double sale thus: party who had registered the sale of land under the Property Registration Decree, as opposed to another
who had registered a deed of final conveyance under Act 3344. In that case, the "priority in time"
"Art. 1544. If the same thing should have been sold to different vendees, the ownership shall principle was not applied, because the land was already covered by the Torrens system at the time the
be transferred to the person who may have first taken possession thereof in good faith, if it conveyance was registered under Act 3344. For the same reason, inasmuch as the registration of the sale
should be movable property. to Respondent De Vera under the Torrens system was done in good faith, this sale must be upheld over
the sale registered under Act 3344 to Petitioner-Spouses Abrigo.
Radiowealth Finance Co. v. Palileo25 explained the difference in the rules of registration under Act 3344 Equally important, under Section 44 of PD 1529, every registered owner receiving a certificate of title
and those under the Torrens system in this wise: pursuant to a decree of registration, and every subsequent purchaser of registered land taking such
certificate for value and in good faith shall hold the same free from all encumbrances, except those
noted and enumerated in the certificate.35 Thus, a person dealing with registered land is not required to
"Under Act No. 3344, registration of instruments affecting unregistered lands is ‘without
go behind the registry to determine the condition of the property, since such condition is noted on the
prejudice to a third party with a better right.’ The aforequoted phrase has been held by this
face of the register or certificate of title.36 Following this principle, this Court has consistently held as
Court to mean that the mere registration of a sale in one’s favor does not give him any right
regards registered land that a purchaser in good faith acquires a good title as against all the transferees
over the land if the vendor was not anymore the owner of the land having previously sold the
thereof whose rights are not recorded in the Registry of Deeds at the time of the sale.37
same to somebody else even if the earlier sale was unrecorded.

Citing Santiago v. Court of Appeals,38 petitioners contend that their prior registration under Act 3344 is
"The case of Carumba vs. Court of Appeals26 is a case in point. It was held therein that Article
constructive notice to respondent and negates her good faith at the time she registered the
1544 of the Civil Code has no application to land not registered under Act No. 496. Like in the
sale. Santiago affirmed the following commentary of Justice Jose C. Vitug:
case at bar, Carumba dealt with a double sale of the same unregistered land. The first sale
was made by the original owners and was unrecorded while the second was an execution sale
that resulted from a complaint for a sum of money filed against the said original owners. "The governing principle is prius tempore, potior jure (first in time, stronger in right).
Applying [Section 33], Rule 39 of the Revised Rules of Court,27 this Court held that Article 1544 Knowledge by the first buyer of the second sale cannot defeat the first buyer's rights except
of the Civil Code cannot be invoked to benefit the purchaser at the execution sale though the when the second buyer first registers in good faith the second sale (Olivares vs. Gonzales, 159
latter was a buyer in good faith and even if this second sale was registered. It was explained SCRA 33). Conversely, knowledge gained by the second buyer of the first sale defeats his
that this is because the purchaser of unregistered land at a sheriff’s execution sale only steps rights even if he is first to register, since such knowledge taints his registration with bad faith
into the shoes of the judgment debtor, and merely acquires the latter’s interest in the (see also Astorga vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No 58530, 26 December 1984) In Cruz vs.
property sold as of the time the property was levied upon. Cabana (G.R. No. 56232, 22 June 1984; 129 SCRA 656), it was held that it is essential, to merit
the protection of Art. 1544, second paragraph, that the second realty buyer must act in good
faith in registering his deed of sale (citing Carbonell vs. Court of Appeals, 69 SCRA
"Applying this principle, x x x the execution sale of unregistered land in favor of petitioner is of
99, Crisostomo vs. CA, G.R. 95843, 02 September 1992).
no effect because the land no longer belonged to the judgment debtor as of the time of the
said execution sale."28
xxx xxx xxx
Petitioners cannot validly argue that they were fraudulently misled into believing that the property was
unregistered. A Torrens title, once registered, serves as a notice to the whole world.29 All persons must "Registration of the second buyer under Act 3344, providing for the registration of all
take notice, and no one can plead ignorance of the registration.30 instruments on land neither covered by the Spanish Mortgage Law nor the Torrens System
(Act 496), cannot improve his standing since Act 3344 itself expresses that registration
thereunder would not prejudice prior rights in good faith (see Carumba vs. Court of Appeals,
Good-Faith Requirement
31 SCRA 558). Registration, however, by the first buyer under Act 3344 can have the effect
of constructive notice to the second buyer that can defeat his right as such buyer in good
We have consistently held that Article 1544 requires the second buyer to acquire the immovable in good faith (see Arts. 708-709, Civil Code; see also Revilla vs. Galindez, 107 Phil. 480; Taguba vs.
faith and to register it in good faith.31 Mere registration of title is not enough; good faith must concur Peralta, 132 SCRA 700). Art. 1544 has been held to be inapplicable to execution sales of
with the registration.32 We explained the rationale in Uraca v. Court of Appeals,33 which we quote: unregistered land, since the purchaser merely steps into the shoes of the debtor and acquires
the latter's interest as of the time the property is sold (Carumba vs. Court of Appeals, 31 SCRA
"Under the foregoing, the prior registration of the disputed property by the second buyer 558; see also Fabian vs. Smith, Bell & Co., 8 Phil. 496) or when there is only one sale
does not by itself confer ownership or a better right over the property. Article 1544 requires (Remalante vs. Tibe, 158 SCRA 138)."39 (Emphasis supplied)
that such registration must be coupled with good faith. Jurisprudence teaches us that ‘(t)he
governing principle is primus tempore, potior jure (first in time, stronger in right). Knowledge Santiago was subsequently applied in Bayoca v. Nogales,40 which held:
gained by the first buyer of the second sale cannot defeat the first buyer’s rights except
where the second buyer registers in good faith the second sale ahead of the first, as provided
"Verily, there is absence of prior registration in good faith by petitioners of the second sale in
by the Civil Code. Such knowledge of the first buyer does not bar her from availing of her
their favor. As stated in the Santiago case, registration by the first buyer under Act No. 3344
rights under the law, among them, to register first her purchase as against the second buyer.
can have the effect of constructive notice to the second buyer that can defeat his right as
But in converso, knowledge gained by the second buyer of the first sale defeats his rights even
such buyer. On account of the undisputed fact of registration under Act No. 3344 by [the first
if he is first to register the second sale, since such knowledge taints his prior registration with
buyers], necessarily, there is absent good faith in the registration of the sale by the [second
bad faith. This is the price exacted by Article 1544 of the Civil Code for the second buyer being
buyers] for which they had been issued certificates of title in their names. x x x."41
able to displace the first buyer; that before the second buyer can obtain priority over the
first, he must show that he acted in good faith throughout (i.e. in ignorance of the first sale
and of the first buyer’s rights) ---- from the time of acquisition until the title is transferred to Santiago and Bayoca are not in point. In Santiago, the first buyers registered the sale under the Torrens
him by registration, or failing registration, by delivery of possession.’"34 (Italics supplied) system, as can be inferred from the issuance of the TCT in their names.42 There was no registration under
Act 3344. In Bayoca, when the first buyer registered the sale under Act 3344, the property was still
unregistered land.43 Such registration was therefore considered effectual.
Furthermore, Revilla and Taguba, which are cited in Santiago, are not on all fours with the present case. property.50 The family members may reasonably be assumed to be Villafania’s agents, who had not been
In Revilla, the first buyer did not register the sale.44 In Taguba, registration was not an issue.45 shown to have notified respondent of the first sale when she conducted an ocular inspection. Thus, good
faith on respondent’s part stands.
As can be gathered from the foregoing, constructive notice to the second buyer through registration
under Act 3344 does not apply if the property is registered under the Torrens system, as in this case. WHEREFORE, the Petition is DENIED and the assailed Decision AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioners.

We quote below the additional commentary of Justice Vitug, which was omitted in Santiago. This SO ORDERED.
omission was evidently the reason why petitioner misunderstood the context of the citation therein:

"The registration contemplated under Art. 1544 has been held to refer to registration under
Act 496 Land Registration Act (now PD 1529) which considers the act of registration as the
operative act that binds the land (see Mediante vs. Rosabal, 1 O.G. [12] 900, Garcia vs.
Rosabal, 73 Phil 694). On lands covered by the Torrens System, the purchaser acquires such [G.R. No. 185091 : August 08, 2010]
rights and interest as they appear in the certificate of title, unaffected by any prior lien or
encumbrance not noted therein. The purchaser is not required to explore farther than what REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, REPRESENTED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION DIVISION OF LIPA
the Torrens title, upon its face, indicates. The only exception is where the purchaser has CITY (FOR PANINSINGIN PRIMARY SCHOOL), PETITIONER, VS. PRIMO MENDOZA AND MARIA LUCERO,
actual knowledge of a flaw or defect in the title of the seller or of such liens or encumbrances RESPONDENTS.
which, as to him, is equivalent to registration (see Sec. 39, Act 496; Bernales vs. IAC, G.R.
75336, 18 October 1988; Hernandez vs. Sales, 69 Phil 744; Tajonera vs. Court of Appeals, L- DECISION
26677, 27 March 1981),"46
ABAD, J.:
Respondent in Good Faith This case is about the propriety of filing an ejectment suit against the Government for its failure to
acquire ownership of a privately owned property that it had long used as a school site and to pay just
The Court of Appeals examined the facts to determine whether respondent was an innocent purchaser compensation for it.
for value.47 After its factual findings revealed that Respondent De Vera was in good faith, it explained
thus: The Facts and the Case

"x x x. Gloria Villafania, [Respondent] De Vera’s vendor, appears to be the registered owner. The subject
land was, and still is, registered in the name of Gloria Villafania. There is nothing in her certificate of title Paninsingin Primary School (PPS) is a public school operated by petitioner Republic of the Philippines (the
and in the circumstances of the transaction or sale which warrant [Respondent] De Vera in supposing Republic) through the Department of Education. PPS has been using 1,149 square meters of land in Lipa
that she need[ed] to look beyond the title. She had no notice of the earlier sale of the land to City, Batangas since 1957 for its school. But the property, a portion of Lots 1923 and 1925, were
[petitioners]. She ascertained and verified that her vendor was the sole owner and in possession of the registered in the name of respondents Primo and Maria Mendoza (the Mendozas) under Transfer
subject property by examining her vendor’s title in the Registry of Deeds and actually going to the Certificate of Title (TCT) T-11410.[1]
premises. There is no evidence in the record showing that when she bought the land on October 23,
1997, she knew or had the slightest notice that the same was under litigation in Civil Case No. D-10638 of On March 27, 1962 the Mendozas caused Lots 1923 and 1925 to be consolidated and subdivided into
the Regional Trial Court of Dagupan City, Branch 40, between Gloria Villafania and [Petitioners] Abrigo. four lots, as follows:
She was not even a party to said case. In sum, she testified clearly and positively, without any contrary
evidence presented by the [petitioners], that she did not know anything about the earlier sale and claim Lot 1 - 292 square meters in favor of Claudia Dimayuga
of the spouses Abrigo, until after she had bought the same, and only then when she bought the same, Lot 2 - 292 square meters in favor of the Mendozas
and only then when she brought an ejectment case with the x x x Municipal Court of Mangaldan, known Lot 3 - 543 square meters in favor of Gervacio Ronquillo; and
as Civil Case No. 1452. To the [Respondent] De Vera, the only legal truth upon which she had to rely was Lot 4 - 1,149 square meters in favor of the City Government of Lipa[2]
that the land is registered in the name of Gloria Villafania, her vendor, and that her title under the law, is
absolute and indefeasible. x x x."48
As a result of subdivision, the Register of Deeds partially cancelled TCT T-11410 and issued new titles for
Lots 1 and 3 in favor of Dimayuga and Ronquillo, respectively. Lot 2 remained in the name of the
We find no reason to disturb these findings, which petitioners have not rebutted. Spouses Abrigo base Mendozas but no new title was issued in the name of the City Government of Lipa for Lot
their position only on the general averment that respondent should have been more vigilant prior to 4.[3] Meantime, PPS remained in possession of the property.
consummating the sale. They argue that had she inspected the property, she would have found
petitioners to be in possession.49 The Republic claimed that, while no title was issued in the name of the City Government of Lipa, the
Mendozas had relinquished to it their right over the school lot as evidenced by the consolidation and
This argument is contradicted, however, by the spouses’ own admission that the parents and the sister subdivision plan. Further, the property had long been tax-declared in the name of the City Government
of Villafania were still the actual occupants in October 1997, when Respondent De Vera purchased the and PPS built significant, permanent improvements on the same. These improvements had also been
tax-declared.[4]
The Court's Ruling
The Mendozas claim, on the other hand, that although PPS sought permission from them to use the
property as a school site, they never relinquished their right to it. They allowed PPS to occupy the A decree of registration is conclusive upon all persons, including the Government of the Republic and all
property since they had no need for it at that time. Thus, it has remained registered in their name under its branches, whether or not mentioned by name in the application for registration or its
the original title, TCT T-11410, which had only been partially cancelled. notice.[16] Indeed, title to the land, once registered, is imprescriptible.[17] No one may acquire it from the
registered owner by adverse, open, and notorious possession.[18] Thus, to a registered owner under the
On November 6, 1998 the Mendozas wrote PPS, demanding that it vacate the disputed Torrens system, the right to recover possession of the registered property is equally imprescriptible since
property.[5] When PPS declined to do so, on January 12, 1999 the Mendozas filed a complaint with the possession is a mere consequence of ownership.
Municipal Trial Court in Cities (MTCC) of Lipa City in Civil Case 0002-99 against PPS for unlawful detainer
with application for temporary restraining order and writ of preliminary injunction.[6] Here, the existence and genuineness of the Mendozas' title over the property has not been disputed.
While the consolidation and subdivision plan of Lots 1923 and 1925 shows that a 1,149 square meter lot
On July 13, 1999 the MTCC rendered a decision, dismissing the complaint on ground of the Republic's had been designated to the City Government, the Republic itself admits that no new title was issued to it
immunity from suit.[7] The Mendozas appealed to the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Lipa City which ruled or to any of its subdivisions for the portion that PPS had been occupying since 1957.[19]
that the Republic's consent was not necessary since the action before the MTCC was not against it.[8]
That the City Government of Lipa tax-declared the property and its improvements in its name cannot
In light of the RTC's decision, the Mendozas filed with the MTCC a motion to render judgment in the case defeat the Mendozas' title. This Court has allowed tax declarations to stand as proof of ownership only
before it.[9] The MTCC denied the motion, however, saying that jurisdiction over the case had passed to in the absence of a certificate of title.[20] Otherwise, they have little evidentiary weight as proof of
the RTC upon appeal.[10] Later, the RTC remanded the case back to the MTCC,[11] which then dismissed ownership.[21]
the case for insufficiency of evidence.[12] Consequently, the Mendozas once again appealed to the RTC
in Civil Case 2001-0236. The CA erred, however, in ordering the eviction of PPS from the property that it had held as government
school site for more than 50 years. The evidence on record shows that the Mendozas intended to cede
On June 27, 2006 the RTC found in favor of the Mendozas and ordered PPS to vacate the property. It the property to the City Government of Lipa permanently. In fact, they allowed the city to declare the
held that the Mendozas had the better right of possession since they were its registered owners. PPS, on property in its name for tax purposes. And when they sought in 1962 to have the bigger lot subdivided
the other hand, could not produce any document to prove the transfer of ownership of the land in its into four, the Mendozas earmarked Lot 4, containing 1,149 square meters, for the City Government of
favor.[13] PPS moved for reconsideration, but the RTC denied it. Lipa. Under the circumstances, it may be assumed that the Mendozas agreed to transfer ownership of
the land to the government, whether to the City Government of Lipa or to the Republic, way back but
The Republic, through the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), appealed the RTC decision to the Court never got around to do so and the Republic itself altogether forgot about it. Consequently, the Republic
of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP 96604 on the grounds that: (1) the Mendozas were barred by laches from should be deemed entitled to possession pending the Mendozas' formal transfer of ownership to it upon
recovering possession of the school lot; (2) sufficient evidence showed that the Mendozas relinquished payment of just compensation.
ownership of the subject lot to the City Government of Lipa City for use as school; and (3) Lot 4, Pcs-5019
has long been declared in the name of the City Government since 1957 for taxation purposes.[14] The Court holds that, where the owner agrees voluntarily to the taking of his property by the
government for public use, he thereby waives his right to the institution of a formal expropriation
In a decision dated February 26, 2008, the CA affirmed the RTC decision.[15] Upholding the Torrens proceeding covering such property. Further, as the Court also held in Eusebio v. Luis,[22] the failure for a
system, it emphasized the indefeasibility of the Mendozas' registered title and the imprescriptible nature long time of the owner to question the lack of expropriation proceedings covering a property that the
of their right to eject any person occupying the property. The CA held that, this being the case, the government had taken constitutes a waiver of his right to gain back possession. The Mendozas' remedy is
Republic's possession of the property through PPS should be deemed merely a tolerated one that could an action for the payment of just compensation, not ejectment.
not ripen into ownership.
In Republic of the Philippines v. Court of Appeals,[23] the Court affirmed the RTC's power to award just
The CA also rejected the Republic's claim of ownership since it presented no documentary evidence to compensation even in the absence of a proper expropriation proceeding. It held that the RTC can
prove the transfer of the property in favor of the government. Moreover, even assuming that the determine just compensation based on the evidence presented before it in an ordinary civil action for
Mendozas relinquished their right to the property in 1957 in the government's favor, the latter never recovery of possession of property or its value and damages. As to the time when just compensation
took steps to have the title to the property issued in its name or have its right as owner annotated on the should be fixed, it is settled that where property was taken without the benefit of expropriation
Mendozas' title. The CA held that, by its omissions, the Republic may be held in estoppel to claim that proceedings and its owner filed an action for recovery of possession before the commencement of
the Mendozas were barred by laches from bringing its action. expropriation proceedings, it is the value of the property at the time of taking that is controlling.[24]

With the denial of its motion for reconsideration, the Republic has taken recourse to this Since the MTCC did not have jurisdiction either to evict the Republic from the land it had taken for public
Court via petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45. use or to hear and adjudicate the Mendozas' right to just compensation for it, the CA should have
ordered the complaint for unlawful detainer dismissed without prejudice to their filing a proper action
The Issue Presented for recovery of such compensation.

WHEREFORE, the Court partially GRANTS the petition, REVERSES the February 26, 2008 decision and the
The issue in this case is whether or not the CA erred in holding that the Mendozas were entitled to evict October 20, 2008 resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. 96604, and ORDERS the dismissal of
the Republic from the subject property that it had used for a public school. respondents Primo and Maria Mendoza's action for eviction before the Municipal Trial Court in Cities of
Lipa City in Civil Case 0002-99 without prejudice to their filing an action for payment of just
compensation against the Republic of the Philippines or, when appropriate, against the City of Lipa.
and that the decedent had left neither a will nor debt. Petitioner prayed, therefore, that, after appropriate
SO ORDERED. proceedings, letters of administration be issued to Marcosa Rivera, “the surviving spouse of the decedent”.
Soon thereafter, Marcosa Rivera filed a counter- petition:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary (1) substantially
denying the alleged marriage of the decedent to Sia Khin, as well as the alleged filiation of the persons
named in the petition; chan roblesvirtualawlibrary(2) asserting that the properties described herein are
her paraphernal properties, and that the decedent had left unpaid debts, and certain properties in Bulan
[G.R. No. L-7644. November 27, 1956.] and Casiguran, Sorsogon, and in Virac, Catanduanes, apart from shares of stock in a private corporation
HENRY LITAM, ETC., ET AL., Plaintiffs-Appellants, vs. REMEDIOS R. ESPIRITU, as guardian of the known by the name of Litam Co., Inc.; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand (3) praying that her nephew, Arminio
Rivera, be appointed administrator of the intestate estate of the deceased.
incompetent MARCOSA RIVERA, and ARMINIO RIVERA, Defendants-Appellees.
In due course, the court granted this petition and letters of administration were issued to Arminio Rivera,
[G.R. No. L-7645. November 27, 1956]
who assumed his duties as such, and, later, submitted an inventory of the alleged estate of Rafael Litam.
IN THE MATTER OF THE INTESTATE OF THE DECEASED RAFAEL LITAM. GREGORIO DY TAM, Petitioner- Inasmuch as said inventory did not include the properties mentioned in the petition, dated April 24, 1952,
Appellant, vs. REMEDIOS R. ESPIRITU, in her capacity as judicial guardian of the incompetent of Gregorio Dy Tam, the latter filed, on November 29, 1952, a motion for the removal of Rivera as
MARCOSA RIVERA, counter-Petitioner, ARMINIO RIVERA, administrator-Appellee. administrator of the aforementioned estate. This led to a number of incidents hinging on the question
whether said properties belong in common to the decedent and Marcosa Rivera or to the latter exclusively.
Meanwhile, Remedios R. Espiritu was appointed, in Special Proceeding No. 1709 of the Court of First
DECISION Instance of Rizal, guardian of Marcosa Rivera, who had been declared incompetent. Thereafter, or on April
CONCEPCION, J.: 20, 1953, Gregorio Dy Tam and his alleged brothers and sisters aforementioned, filed the complaint in Civil
Case No. 2071 of the same court, against Remedios R. Espiritu, as guardian of Marcosa Rivera, and Arminio
This is an appeal from a decision of the Court of First Instance of Rizal in the above entitled case, which Rivera. In said complaint, Plaintiffs therein reproduced substantially the allegations made in the
were jointly tried. aforementioned petition of Gregorio Dy Tam dated April 24. 1952, except that the properties acquired
“during the existence of marriage” between Rafael Litam and Marcosa Rivera “and/or with their joint
On May 21, 1952, Gregorio Dy Tam instituted Special Proceeding No. 1537 of said court, entitled “In the
efforts during the time that they lived as husband and wife” were said to be more than those specified in
matter of the Intestate Estate of the Deceased Rafael Litam”. The petition therein filed, dated April 24,
said petition, namely:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
1952, states that Petitioner is the son of Rafael Litam, who died in Manila on January 10, 1951; chan
roblesvirtualawlibrarythat the deceased was survived by:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary “(1) 3 parcels of land situated in the Municipality of Macabebe, Province of Pampanga, covered by
Transfer Certificate of Title No. 1228 of the Registry of Deeds for the Province of Pampanga, issued on July
Li Hong Hap 40 years
29, 1947;
Li Ho 37 years
“(2) 2 Parcels of land, together with all buildings and improvements thereon except those expressly noted
Gregorio Dy Tam 33 years in the title as belonging to other persons, situated in the Municipality of Navotas, Province of Rizal, covered
by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 35836 of the Registry of Deeds for the Province of Rizal, issued on
Henry Litam alias Dy Bun Pho 29 years October 4, 1938;
Beatriz Lee Tam alias Lee Giak Ian 27 years “(3) 1 parcel of land situated in the Municipality of Malabon, Province of Rizal, covered by Transfer
Elisa Lee Tam alias Lee Giok Bee 25 years Certificate of Title No. 23248 of the Registry of Deeds for the Province of Rizal, issued on June 12, 1933;

William Litam alias Li Bun Hua 23 years “(4) 1 parcel of land situated in Barrio of Kay-Badia, Municipality of Obando, Province of Bulacan, covered
by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 21809 of the Registry of Deeds for the Province of Bulacan, issued on
Luis Litam alias Li Bun Lin 22 years May 25, 1939;
that the foregoing children of the decedent “by a marriage celebrated in China in 1911 with Sia Khin, now “(5) 1 parcel of land (plan psu-93067, swo-16049) situated in Barrio of Quibadia, Municipality of Obando,
deceased”; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythat “after the death of Rafael Litam, Petitioner and his co-heirs Province of Bulacan, covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 26011 of the Registry of Deeds for the
came to know” that the decedent had, during the subsistence of said marriage with Sia Khin, “contracted Province of Bulacan, issued on April 9, 1943;
in 1922 in the Philippines cralaw another marriage with Marcosa Rivera, Filipino citizen”; chan
roblesvirtualawlibrarythat “the decedent left as his property among others, his one-half (1/2) share valued “Other properties are located in Bataan province.
at P65,000 in the purported conjugal properties between him and Marcosa Rivera, “All properties total an assessed value of approximately P150,000.00.”
which cralaw partnership consisted of the following real property acquired during the marriage between
him and Marcosa Rivera, to wit:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary In said complaint, Plaintiffs prayed that the judgment be rendered:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

(1) “Three (3) parcels of land covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 1228 of the Registry of Deeds of “(1) declaring the aforesaid properties as belonging to the conjugal partnership or tenancy in common
the province of Pampanga:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary which existed between the deceased Rafael Litam and the incompetent Marcosa Rivera;

(2) “One (1) parcel of land covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 26011 of the Registry of Deeds of “(2) ordering the Defendants to deliver the aforesaid properties to the administration of the estate of the
the province of Bulacan.” deceased Rafael Litam (Rule 75, section 2, Rules of Court);
“(3) ordering the said Defendants further to render an accounting of the fruits they collected from the 1950 (Exhibit 1), Rafael Litam unequivocably declared under oath that he had no child. In the several other
aforesaid properties and to deliver the same to the administration of the estate of the deceased Rafael documents executed by him and presented in evidence, (Exhibits 19, 21, 22, 23, 46 and 46-A) Rafael Litam
Litam; had consistently referred to Marcosa Rivera alone as his wife; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryhe had never
mentioned of Sia Khin as his wife, or of his alleged children.
“(4) ordering the said Defendants to pay the administration of the estate of the deceased Rafael Litam
damages in double the value of the fruits mentioned in the preceding paragraph which they The witnesses presented by the Defendants in Civil Case No. 2071 and the administrator and
embezzled; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand counter Petitioner in Sp. Proc. No. 1537 positively testified to the effect that they know that Rafael Litam
did not have any child, nor was he married with Sia Khin. An impartial and disinterested witness, Felipe
“(5) ordering the Defendants to pay the costs. “The Plaintiffs further pray for such other remedy as the Cruz, likewise testified that he has known Rafael Litam even before his marriage with Marcosa Rivera and
Court may deem just and equitable in the premises.” that said Rafael Litam did not have any child.
In her answer to the complaint, Marcosa Rivera reiterated, in effect, the allegations in her counter-petition, “On the other hand, the Plaintiffs in Civil Case No. 2071 and the Petitioner in Sp. Proc. No. 1537 presented
dated July 12, 1952, in Special Proceeding No. 1537, and set up some affirmative and special defenses, as in support of their theory the testimony of their lone witness, Luis Litam, and certain documentary
well as a counter-claim for attorney’s fees and damages in the aggregate sum of P110,000.00. evidence. It is noteworthy that the said Plaintiffs and said Petitioner did not present in evidence the
Owning to the identity of the issue raised in said Civil Case No. 2071 and in the aforementioned incidents marriage certificate of Rafael Litam and Sia Khin, which in the opinion of the Court, is the competent and
in Special Proceeding No. 1537, both were jointly heard. Later on, the court rendered a decision. best evidence of the alleged marriage between them. No explanation has been given for the non-
presentation of said marriage certificate, nor has there been any showing of its loss. Neither have
“(1) Dismissing Civil Case No. 2071, with costs against the Plaintiffs; said Plaintiffs and said Petitioner presented any competent secondary evidence of the supposed marriage.
“(2) Sentencing the Plaintiff in Civil Case No. 2071, under the Defendants’ counterclaim, to pay jointly and “The testimony of the lone witness, Luis Litam, cannot be given any credence and value at all. His testimony
severally each of the Defendants the sum of P5,000.00 as actual damages and P25,000.00 as moral is mostly hearsay, as according to him, he was merely informed by Rafael Litam of the latter’s supposed
damages; marriage with Sia Khin. His testimony is uncorroborated. The court noticed that the said witness was only
22 years old when he testified, and it appears in the petition filed by the Petitioner in Sp. Proc. No. 1537
“(3) Declaring that the properties in question, namely:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary the fishponds,
that said witness is the youngest of all the alleged eight children of Rafael Litam. The Court is at a loss to
consisting of three parcels, situated in Macabebe, Pampanga, with Transfer certificate of Title No. 1228 of
understand why one or some of the older alleged children of Rafael Litam were not presented as witnesses
the land records of Pampanga, one-half undivided portion of the fishponds, consisting of two parcels,
in view of the unreliable testimony of Luis Litam, and considering that older persons are better qualified
situated in Navotas, Rizal, covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 35836, the parcel of land with the
to testify on the matters sought to be proved which allegedly happened a long time ago.
improvements thereon situated in Malabon, Rizal, covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 23248, both
of the land records of Rizal, and the fishponds, consisting of two parcels, situated in Obando, Bulacan, “The birth certificate presented by the Plaintiff in Civil Case No. 2071 and Petitioner in Sp. Proc. No. 1537
covered by Transfer Certificates of Title Nos. 21809 and 26011, both of the land records of Bulacan, are cannot be given even little consideration, because the name of the father of the children appearing therein
the exclusive, separate and paraphernal properties of Marcosa Rivera; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand is not Rafael Litam, but different persons. It is very significant to note that the names of the father of the
persons appearing in said birth certificates are Dy Tham, Li Tam, Lee Tham, Rafael Dy Tam, and that said
“(4) Declaring that the Plaintiffs in Civil Case No. 2071 (who are the same persons alleged to be children
persons were born in different places, some in Amoy, China, another Fukien, China, and the other in Limtao,
of Rafael Litam in the petition, dated April 24, 1952, filed by the Petitioner in Sp. Proc. No. 1537) are not
China. It also appears in said birth certificates that the children’s mothers named therein are different,
the children of the deceased Rafael Litam, and that his only heir is his surviving wife, Marcosa Rivera.”
some being Sia Khim, others Sia Quien, the other Sia Khun, and still another Sia Kian. These documents do
The two (2) Cases are now before us on appeal taken by the Petitioner in Special Proceeding No. 1537 and not establish the identity of the deceased Rafael Litam and the persons named therein as father. Besides,
the Plaintiffs in Civil Case No. 2071. The issues for determination are:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary (1) it does not appear in the said certificates of birth that Rafael Litam had in any manner intervened in the
Are Appellants the legitimate children of Rafael Litam? (2) Is Marcosa Rivera the exclusive owner of the preparation and filing thereof.
properties in question, or do the same constitute a common property of her and the decedent?
“The other documentary evidence presented by the said Plaintiffs and Petitioner are entirely immaterial
The first issue hinges on whether Rafael Litam and Sia Khin were married in 1911, and whether Rafael and highly insufficient to prove the alleged marriage between the deceased Rafael Litam and Sia Khin and
Litam is the father of Appellants herein. In this connection, the lower court had the following to the alleged statue of the Plaintiffs as children of said decedent.
say:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
“It is, therefore, the finding of this Court that the Plaintiffs named in Civil Case No. 2071 are not heirs of
“ cralaw the evidence weikhs very heavily in favor of the theory of the Defendants in Civil Case No. 2071 the said decedent, his only heir being his surviving wife, Marcosa Rivera.” (Emphasis ours.)
to the effect that the said deceased Rafael Litam was not married to Sia Khin and that Plaintiffs, are not
The findings of fact thus made in the decision appealed from are borne out by the records and the
the children of the said decedent. The Plaintiffs in Civil Case No. 2071 and the Petitioner in Sp. Proc. No.
conclusion drawn from said facts is, to our mind, substantially correct.
1537 have utterly failed to prove their alleged status as children of Rafael Litam by a marriage with Sia
Khin. Appellants’ evidence on this point consists of the testimony of Appellant Li Bun Lin, who said that he is,
also known as Luis Litam; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythat his co-Appellants are his brothers and
“It appears from the evidence presented by the Defendants in civil Case No. 2071 and the administrator
sisters; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythat their parents are the decedent and Sia Khin, who were married in
and the counter-Petitioner in Sp. Proc. No. 1537 that there was no such marriage between the deceased
China in 1911; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand that Sia Khin died in Manila during the Japanese occupation.
Rafael Litam and Sia Khin and that the Plaintiffs named in Civil Case No. 2071 are not children of said
He likewise, identified several pictures, marked Exhibits I to S, which were claimed to be family portraits,
deceased. The various official and public documents executed by Rafael Litam himself convincingly show
but the lower court rejected their admission in evidence. Although we agree with herein Appellants that
that he had not contracted any marriage with any person other than Marcosa Rivera, and that he had no
this was an error, it is clear to us that said pictures and the testimony of Luis Litam, as well as the other
child. In the marriage certificate, (Exhibit 55) it was clearly stated that he was single when he married
evidence adverted to in the above-quoted portion of the decision appealed from, are far from sufficient
Marcosa Rivera on June 10, 1922. In the sworn application for alien certificate of registration dated July 7,
to outweigh, or even offset, the evidence in favor of the Appellees.
It should be noted that the decedent had admittedly married Marcosa Rivera in 1922. In the very petition Rivera the sum of P135,000.00 which belongs exclusively to the latter, and that after the liberation, or
of Appellant Gregorio Dy Tam, in Special Proceeding No. 1537, dated April 24, 1952, he alleged that more specifically, on January 4, 1946, he stole from Marcosa Rivera the further sum of P62,000.00, also
Marcosa Rivera is “the surviving spouse of the decedent”. In their complaint in Civil Case No. belonging exclusively to the latter, which amounts, totalling P197,000.00, exclusive of interests, have not,
2071, Appellants specifically admitted and averred “the existence of the marriage between said Rafael according to the evidence, been paid to her up to the present. In Exhibits 46 and 46-A, it was acknowledged
Litam and Marcosa Rivera” — which would have been void ab initio, and, hence, inexistent legally, by Rafael Litam that he had not given any money to his wife, Marcosa Rivera, and that they have actually
if Appellants’ pretense were true or they believed it to be so — and that they had “lived as husband and adopted a system of separation of property, each of them not having any interest or participation
wife”. Again, although Gregorio Dy Tam, asserted, in his aforementioned petition, that he and his co-heirs whatsoever in the property of the other. These declarations and admission of fact made by Rafael Litam
“came to know” about the marriage of the decedent and Marcosa Rivera “after the death of Rafael Litam”, against his interest are binding upon him, his heirs and successors in interests and third persons as well.
the very testimony of Li Bun Lin, as witness for the Appellants, show, beyond doubt, that (Secs. 7 & 29, Rule 123, Rules of Court).
said Appellants knew, during the lifetime of Rafael Litam that he and Marcosa Rivera were living in
Malabon, Rizal, openly and publicly, as husband and wife, and regarded her as his lawful wife. Indeed, in “The finding of this Court that the properties in question are paraphernal properties of Marcosa Rivera,
the course of his testimony, said Li Bun Lin alluded to her as his “mother”. In other words, aside from the having been bought by her with her separate and exclusive money, is further strengthened by the fact that,
circumstance that the wedding and marital life of Marcosa Rivera and Rafael Litam is undisputed, it is, also, as it is clearly disclosed by the evidence when Marcosa Rivera married Rafael Litam in 1922, she was
an established fact that they had the general reputation of being legally married and were so regarded by already rich, she having already earned and saved money as ‘consignataria’ while she was still single. It
the community and by Appellants herein, during the lifetime of Rafael Litam. also appears that she was born of a rich family, her father, Eduardo Rivera, being the owner of fishponds,
commercial and residential lands and buildings, (Exhibits 5 to 18, inclusive), with an assessed value of
Upon the other hand, Appellants maintain, in effect, that Rafael Litam was guilty of the crime of around P150,000.00 (Exhibits 25 and 42, inclusive), now worth approximately a million pesos, and most of
bigamy; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythat he had, likewise, willfully and maliciously falsified public and which properties as may be seen from the certificates of title were acquired by him way back in the years
official documents; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand that, although Appellants and Sia Khin were living in 1916 and 1919. When Eduardo Rivera died on February 5, 1942, his cash and jewelry were inherited by his
Manila and Marcosa Rivera — whom Appellants knew — resided only a few kilometers away, in Malabon, eldest daughter, Rafaela Rivera, and when the latter died single on July 2, 1943, Marcosa Rivera inherited
Rizal where Rafael Litam returned daily, after attending to his business in Manila, the decedent had her cash amounting to P150,000.00, Philippine currency, and and her pieces of jewelry. It is with this
succeeded, for about thirty (30) years, in keeping each party in complete ignorance of the nature of his amount and with the proceeds of the sale of some of said pieces of jewelry that Marcosa Rivera purchased
alleged relations with the other. Apart from the highly improbable nature of the last part of Appellants’ the fishponds in question, situated in Macabebe, Pampanga.
pretense, it is obvious that the same cannot be sustained unless the evidence in support thereof is of the
strongest possible kind, not only because it entails the commission by Rafael Litam of grave criminal “On the other hand, it appears from the evidence that when Rafael Litam was on June 10, 1922, married
offenses which are derogatory to his honor, but, also, because death has sealed his lips, thus depriving him to Marcosa Rivera, he was poor. He had to borrow from Marcosa Rivera, the sum of P135,000.00 belonging
of the most effective means of defense. The proof for Appellants herein does not satisfy such requirement. exclusively to her before the outbreak of the war, and to steal from her further sum of P62,000.00 after
the liberation (Exhibit 10). The said amounts totalling P197,000.00, exclusive of the stipulated interests,
As regards the title to the properties in dispute, the evidence thereon was analyzed by the lower court in according to the evidence, have not been paid to Marcosa Rivera up to the present. Rafael Litam did not
the following language:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary contribute any amount of money or labor to the properties in question, as he and Marcosa Rivera
maintained an absolute separation of property (Exhibits 46 and 46-A). Besides, during his lifetime he used
“It has been established by the evidence that the properties in question were bought by Marcosa Rivera to go his office in Manila everyday.
with her separate and exclusive money. The fishponds situated in Obando, Bulacan, covered by Transfer
Certificate of Title Nos. 21809 and 26011, the one-half (1/2) undivided portion of the fishponds situated in “Another circumstance which clearly proves that the properties in question belong exclusively to Marcosa
Navotas, Rizal with Transfer Certificate of Title No. 35836, and the property situated in Hulong-Duhat, Rivera is the established fact that before she became incompetent sometime in the early part of the year,
Malabon, Rizal, with Transfer Certificate of Title No. 23248 were all purchased by Marcosa Rivera with the 1953, she had been administering said properties, to the exclusion of Rafael Litam. In fact, as may be seen
money she earned and accumulated while she was still single; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarywhile the from the very documentary evidence (Exhibit ‘EE’, same as Nxh. 50) presented by the Plaintiffs in Civil Case
fishponds situated in Macabebe, Pampanga with Transfer Certificate of Title No. 1228 were purchased by No. 2071 themselves and Petitioner in Sp. Proc. No. 1537, she alone leased the properties in question,
her with the money she inherited from her late sister, Rafaela Rivera and with the money she received situated in Macabebe, Pampanga, and the corresponding lease contract, dated July 13, 1948 was signed
from the proceeds of the sale of the pieces of jewelry she inherited from her father Eduardo Rivera and by her as lessor and by Rafael Suarez, Jr. as lessees. Furthermore, the properties in question have been
her sister Rafaela Rivera. The properties in question, having been bought by Marcosa Rivera, although declared in the name of Marcosa Rivera alone, and she alone pays the real estate taxes due thereon.
during her marriage with Rafael Litam, with her exclusive and separate money, said properties are (Exhibits 43, 44 & 45.)
undeniably her paraphernal properties. (Art. 1396, Spanish Civil Code, which is the same as Art. 148 of the
Civil Code of the Phil.) “Further strong proofs that the properties in question are the paraphernal properties of Marcosa Rivera,
are the very Torrens Titles covering said properties. All the said properties are registered in the name of
“Great importance should be given to the documentary evidence, vis:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary Exhibits ‘Marcosa Rivera, married to Rafael Litam.’ This circumstance indicates that the properties in question
21, 22, 23, 19, 46 and 46-A, presented by the Defendants, in Civil Case No. 2071 and the administrator and belong to the registered owner, Marcosa Rivera, as her paraphernal properties, for if they were conjugal,
counter- Petitioner in Sp. Proc. No. 1537, which prove beyond peradventure of any doubt that the the titles covering the same should have been issued in the names of Rafael Litam and Marcosa Rivera.
properties in question are the paraphernal properties of Marcosa Rivera. In Exhibit 21, Rafael Litam The words ‘married to Rafael Litam’ written after the name of Marcosa Rivera, in each of the above
unequivocably declared under his oath that the money paid by Marcosa Rivera for the fishponds in Obando, mentioned titles are merely descriptive of the civil status of Marcosa Rivera, the registered owner of the
Bulacan was her exclusive and separate money which was earned by her while she was still single. In properties covered by said titles.
Exhibits 22 and 23, both dated June 16, 1947, same Rafael Litam, also under oath, acknowledge the fact
that the sums of P13,000.00 and P10,000.00 loaned by Marcosa Rivera to the spouses Catalino Pascual “On the other hand, the evidence presented by the Plaintiffs in Civil Case No. 2071 and Petitioner in Sp.
and Juliana Pascual, and to Juliana Pascual, respectively, are the separate and exclusive money of Marcosa Proc. No. 1537 in support of their contention that the properties in question are conjugal is, in the mind
Rivera, in which money Rafael Litam had no interest whatsoever. In Exhibit 19, same Rafael Litam of the Court, very weak, unreliable, and mostly incompetent, and cannot overcome the clear, convincing
acknowledged the fact that he had obtained, before the outbreak of the second world war, from Marcosa and almost conclusive proofs presented by the opposite party. Scant or no consideration at all could be
given by the Court to the immaterial, incompetent and unbelievable testimonies of the witnesses
presented by the said Plaintiffs and Petitioners. The disputable presumption of law that the properties NORA B. CALALANG-PARULAN and ELVIRA B. CALALANG, Petitioners,
acquired during the marriage are conjugal properties, upon which legal presumption vs.
said Plaintiffs and Petitioner mainly rely has been decisively overcome by the overwhelming ROSARIO CALALANG-GARCIA, LEONORA CALALANG-SABILE, and CARLITO S. CALALANG, Respondents.
preponderance of evidence adduced in these cases that the properties in question are the paraphernal
properties of Marcosa Rivera.” (Emphasis ours.)
DECISION
Appellants’ counsel assail the decision appealed from upon the ground that the lower court had been
partial to the Appellees and had not accorded to the Appellants a fair and just hearing. VILLARAMA, JR., J.:
As above pointed out, His Honor the trial Judge could have been, and should have been, more liberal in
the reception of evidence. Appellants’ witnesses (Li Bun Lin, Dominador Gadi, Benigno Musni and Rafael Before us is a petition for review on certiorari assailing the Decision1 dated December 21, 2007 and
B. Suarez) should have been allowed to testify on the alleged title of Rafael Litam to certain properties and Resolution2 dated July 25, 2008 of the Thirteenth Division of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No.
on his alleged reasons for the language used in the public and official documents relied upon by 72531. The CA modified the Decision3 dated July 10, 2001 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 21, of
the Appellees. However, it is apparent to us that said evidence cannot affect the decision in these cases. Malolos, Bulacan, in Civil Case No. 370-M-91.
The evidenciary value of the testimony of said witnesses would have depended mainly upon their
individual appraisal of certain facts, upon their respective inferences therefrom and their biases or view The facts, as culled from the records, follow:
points, and upon a number of other factors affecting their credibility. At best, said testimony could not
possibly prevail over the repeated admissions made by the decedent against his own interest in Exhibits In a Complaint4 for Annulment of Sale and Reconveyance of Property filed with the RTC of Malolos,
19, 21, 22, 23, 46 and 46-A (adverted to in the abovequoted portion of the decision appealed from), which Bulacan on June 10, 1991, the respondents Rosario Calalang-Garcia, Leonora Calalang-Sabile, and Carlito
admissions are corroborated by the fact that the deceased father of Marcosa Rivera was well to do; chan S. Calalang asserted their ownership over a certain parcel of land against the petitioners Nora B.
roblesvirtualawlibrarythat aside from her share in his estate, she had, likewise, inherited from a sister who Calalang-Parulan and Elvira B. Calalang. The said lot with an area of 1,266 square meters and specifically
died single and without issue; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythat the lands in dispute were registered, and identified as Lot 1132, Cad. 333, Bigaa Cadastre situated in Brgy. Burol 2nd, Municipality of Balagtas,
some were, also, leased, in her name, instead of hers and that of the decedent; chan Province of Bulacan, was allegedly acquired by the respondents from their mother Encarnacion Silverio,
roblesvirtualawlibraryand that the latter lived in her house in Malabon, Rizal. through succession as the latter’s compulsory heirs.
Appellants contend that the transactions covered by said Exhibits 19, 21 to 23 and 46 and 46-A, as well as
by the other deeds referred to in the decision appealed from, were caused to be made in the name of According to the respondents, their father, Pedro Calalang contracted two marriages during his lifetime.
Marcosa Rivera, to the exclusion of her husband, in order to evade the constitutional provision The first marriage was with their mother Encarnacion Silverio. During the subsistence of this marriage,
disqualifying foreigners from the acquisition of private agricultural lands, except by succession. Apart from their parents acquired the above-mentioned parcel of land from their maternal grandmother Francisca
being based, solely, upon a surmise, without any evidentiary support, this pretense is refuted by the fact Silverio. Despite enjoying continuous possession of the land, however, their parents failed to register the
that said residential property in Hulong-Duhat, Malabon, Rizal, was acquired on April 12, 1933, or prior to same. On June 7, 1942, the first marriage was dissolved with the death of Encarnacion Silverio.
the adoption of our Constitution (see Exhibits Z and AA). Her transactions subsequently thereto, merely
followed, therefore, the pattern of her activities before the drafting of said fundamental law.
On November 6, 1967, Pedro Calalang entered into a second marriage with Elvira B. Calalang who then
This notwithstanding, we do not believe that Appellants should be sentenced to pay damages. The petition gave birth to Nora B. Calalang-Parulan and Rolando Calalang. According to the respondents, it was only
of Gregorio Dy Tam in Special Proceeding No. 1537 and the complaint in Civil Case No. 2071 contain during this time that Pedro Calalang filed an application for free patent over the parcel of land with the
nothing derogatory to the good name or reputation of the herein Appellees. On the contrary, it may be Bureau of Lands. Pedro Calalang committed fraud in such application by claiming sole and exclusive
surmised from said pleadings that Marcosa Rivera had no knowledge of the alleged previous marriage of ownership over the land since 1935 and concealing the fact that he had three children with his first
the decedent to Sia Khin. Moreover, the records do not show that Appellants have acted in bad faith. spouse. As a result, on September 22, 1974, the Register of Deeds of Bulacan issued Original Certificate
of Title (OCT) No. P-28715 in favor of Pedro Calalang only.
Likewise, we are of the opinion that the lower court should not have declared, in the decision appealed
from, that Marcosa Rivera is the only heir of the decedent, for such declaration is improper in Civil Case
No. 2071, it being within the exclusive competence of the court in Special Proceeding No. 1537, in which On February 17, 1984, Pedro Calalang sold the said parcel of land to Nora B. Calalang-Parulan as
it is not as yet, in issue, and, will not be, ordinarily, in issue until the presentation of the project of partition. evidenced by a Deed of Sale6 executed by both Pedro Calalang and Elvira B. Calalang. Accordingly, the
Register of Deeds of Bulacan cancelled OCT No. P-2871 and issued Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No.
Wherefore, with the elimination of the award for damages in favor of the herein Appellees, and of said 283321 in the name of Nora B. Calalang-Parulan. On December 27, 1989,7 Pedro Calalang died.
declaration of heirship, the decision appealed from is hereby affirmed in all other respects, with costs
against the Appellants. It is SO ORDERED.
The respondents assailed the validity of TCT No. 283321 on two grounds. First, the respondents argued
that the sale of the land was void because Pedro Calalang failed to obtain the consent of the respondents
who were co-owners of the same. As compulsory heirs upon the death of Encarnacion Silverio, the
respondents claimed that they acquired successional rights over the land. Thus, in alienating the land
without their consent, Pedro Calalang allegedly deprived them of their pro indiviso share in the property.
Second, the respondents claimed that the sale was absolutely simulated as Nora B. Calalang-Parulan did
G.R. No. 184148 June 9, 2014
not have the capacity to pay for the consideration stated in the Deed of Sale.
In their Answer,8 the petitioners argued that the parcel of land was acquired during the second marriage 1. Ordering the defendants to reconvey in favor of the plaintiffs, their rightful share to the
of Pedro Calalang with Elvira B. Calalang. They stressed that OCT No. P-2871 itself stated that it was property owned by their common father Pedro Calalang, equivalent to one half(1/2) portion
issued in the name of "Pedro Calalang, married to Elvira Berba [Calalang]." Thus, the property belonged of the whole area or 633 square meters to be divided equally by the three plaintiffs, namely:
to the conjugal partnership of the spouses Pedro Calalang and Elvira B. Calalang. The petitioners likewise
denied the allegation that the sale of the land was absolutely simulated as Nora B. Calalang-Parulan was
Rosario, Leonora and Carlito, all surnamed Calalang, each getting an area of 211
gainfully employed in Spain at the time of the sale. Moreover, they alleged that the respondents did not
square meters of the property covered by TCT No. 2883321 of the Registry of
have a valid cause of action against them and that their cause of action, if any, was already barred by
Deeds of Bulacan corresponding to their shares in the property of their late father
laches, estoppel and prescription. By way of counterclaim, the petitioners also sought the payment to
Pedro Calalang;
them of moral and exemplary damages plus costs of suit for the filing of the clearly unfounded suit.

2. Ordering defendants to pay plaintiffs the amount of ₱50,000.00 for moral damages;
On July 10, 2001, the trial court rendered decision in favor of the respondents. The dispositive portion of
₱50,000.00 for attorney’s fees and another ₱50,000.00 for litigation expenses.
the RTC decision reads as follows:

3. Dismissing the defendants’ counterclaims.


WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants in the
following manner:
With costs against the defendants.
1. Ordering the defendants to reconvey in favor of the plaintiffs, their rightful share to three-
fourth (3/4) of one-half (1/2) or a total of 474.75 square meters at 158.25 square meters for SO ORDERED.
each of the three plaintiffs, namely: Rosario, Leonora, and Juanito all surname[d] Calalang, of
the real property covered by TCT No. 283321 of the Registry of Deeds of Bulacan SO ORDERED.10
corresponding to their shares in the conjugal estate of the late Encarnacion S. Calalang [sic];

The CA reversed the factual findings of the trial court and held that Pedro Calalang was the sole and
2. Ordering defendants to pay plaintiffs the amount of ₱50,000.00 for moral damages; exclusive owner of the subject parcel of land. Firstly, it held that there was insufficient evidence to prove
₱50,000.00 for attorney’s fees and another ₱50,000.00 for litigation expenses. that the disputed property was indeed jointly acquired from the parents of Encarnacion Silverio during
the first marriage. Secondly, the CA upheld the indefeasibility of OCT No. P-2871. It held that although
3. Dismissing the defendants’ counterclaims. the free patent was issued in the name of "Pedro Calalang, married to Elvira Berba [Calalang]" this
phrase was merely descriptive of the civil status of Pedro Calalang at the time of the registration of the
disputed property. Thus, contrary to the ruling of the trial court, upon the death of Encarnacion Silverio
With costs against the defendants.
on June 7, 1942, the respondents did not acquire any successional rights to the parcel of land which was
exclusively owned by Pedro Calalang. However, applying the rules of succession, Pedro’s heirs namely,
SO ORDERED.9 Rosario Calalang-Garcia, Leonora Calalang-Sabile, Carlito Calalang, Nora B. Calalang-Parulan, Elvira B.
Calalang, and Rolando Calalang, succeeded Pedro to the land in equal shares upon his death. Thus, the
CA ordered the petitioners to reconvey in favor of the respondents their rightful shares to the land. The
The trial court declared that the parcel of land was jointly acquired by the spouses Pedro Calalang and
CA ruled that the sale by Pedro Calalang to Nora B. Calalang-Parulan was fraudulent and fictitious as the
Encarnacion Silverio from the parents of the latter. Thus, it was part of the conjugal property of the first
vendee was in bad faith and the respondents were unlawfully deprived of their pro indiviso shares over
marriage of Pedro Calalang. When this marriage was dissolved upon the death of Encarnacion Silverio on
the disputed property. As regards the issue of prescription, the CA ruled that the prescriptive period for
June 7, 1942,the corresponding shares to the disputed property were acquired by the heirs of the
reconveyance of fraudulently registered real property is ten years. Since the property was registered in
decedent according to the laws of succession. In particular, the trial court allocated half of the disputed
the name of Nora in1984 and the action for reconveyance was filed in 1991, the action has not yet
property to Pedro Calalang as his share in the conjugal partnership and allocated the other half to the
prescribed.
three respondents and Pedro Calalang to be divided equally among them. The trial court then ordered all
of Pedro’s share to be given to Nora B. Calalang-Parulan on account of the sale. The trial court also ruled
that because the application for free patent filed by Pedro Calalang was attended by fraud and On January 23, 2008, petitioners filed their Motion for Reconsideration. The CA, however, denied their
misrepresentation, Pedro Calalang should be considered as a trustee of an implied trust. motion in its Resolution dated July 25, 2008.

Aggrieved by the adverse ruling, the petitioners appealed the case to the CA which rendered the assailed Hence, this petition raising the sole issue:
Decision on December 21, 2007. The dispositive portion of the CA decision reads,
Whether or not the court a quo gravely erred in rendering its December 21, 2007 Decision modifying the
WHEREFORE, in light of the foregoing premises, the Decision dated July 10, 2001of the Regional Trial July 10, 2001 Decision of the trial court, and in issuing its July 25, 2008 Resolution denying petitioners’
Court of Malolos, Bulacan is hereby MODIFIED to read as follows: Motion for Reconsideration dated January 23, 2008.11

"WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, and against the defendants in the Essentially, the only issue in this case is whether Pedro Calalang was the exclusive owner of the disputed
following manner: property prior to its transfer to his daughter Nora B. Calalang-Parulan.
The petitioners argue that the disputed property belonged to the conjugal partnership of the second their civil status, and the names of their respective spouses, if married, as well as their citizenship,
marriage of Pedro Calalang with Elvira B. Calalang as evidenced by OCT No. P-2871 which was issued to residence and postal address. If the property covered belongs to the conjugal partnership, it shall be
Pedro Calalang during the subsistence of his marriage to Elvira B. Calalang. On the other hand, the issued in the names of both spouses.1âwphi1
respondents claim that the disputed property was transferred by their maternal grandmother, Francisca
Silverio, to their parents, Pedro Calalang and Encarnacion Silverio, during the latter’s marriage. Thus, the
A plain reading of the above provision would clearly reveal that the phrase "Pedro Calalang, married to
respondents argue that it belonged to the conjugal partnership of the first marriage of Pedro Calalang
Elvira Berba [Calalang]" merely describes the civil status and identifies the spouse of the registered
with Encarnacion Silverio.
owner Pedro Calalang. Evidently, this does not mean that the property is conjugal. In Litam v.
Rivera,15 we declared:
The petition is meritorious.
Further strong proofs that the properties in question are the paraphernal properties of Marcosa Rivera,
Preliminarily, we note that the resolution of the issue in this case requires a reevaluation of the are the very Torrens Titles covering said properties. All the said properties are registered in the name of
probative value of the evidence presented by the parties in order to trace the title of the disputed "Marcosa Rivera, married to Rafael Litam." This circumstance indicates that the properties in question
property. What is involved is indeed a question of fact which is generally beyond the jurisdiction of this belong to the registered owner, Marcosa Rivera, as her paraphernal properties, for if they were conjugal,
Court to resolve in a petition for review on certiorari.12 However, a recognized exception to the rule is the titles covering the same should have been issued in the names of Rafael Litam and Marcosa Rivera.
when the RTC and CA have conflicting findings of fact as in this case.13 Here, while the trial court ruled The words "married to Rafael Litam" written after the name of Marcosa Rivera, in each of the above
that the disputed property belonged to the conjugal partnership of the first marriage of Pedro Calalang mentioned titles are merely descriptive of the civil status of Marcosa Rivera, the registered owner of the
with Encarnacion Silverio, the court a quo declared that the evidence proved the sole and exclusive properties covered by said titles.
ownership of the disputed property of Pedro Calalang.
It must likewise be noted that in his application for free patent,16 applicant Pedro Calalang averred that
We have carefully reviewed the records of this case and sustain the finding of the CA that Pedro Calalang the land was first occupied and cultivated by him since 1935 and that he had planted mango trees,
is the sole and exclusive owner of the disputed property. coconut plants, caimito trees, banana plants and seasonal crops and built his house on the subject lot.
But he applied for free patent only in 1974 and was issued a free patent while already married to Elvira
B. Calalang. Thus, having possessed the subject land in the manner and for the period required by law
The trial court ruled that the respondents were able to establish that Lot 1132, Cad. 333 originated from
after the dissolution of the first marriage and before the second marriage, the subject property ipso jure
the parents of Encarnacion, and therefore said property "either became property of Encarnacion in her
became private property and formed part of Pedro Calalang’s exclusive property.17 It was therefore
own right or jointly with her husband Pedro Calalang in 1936." In so ruling, the trial court relied on the
excluded from the conjugal partnership of gains of the second marriage.18
testimony of Rosario Calalang-Garcia that her parents built a nipa house on the subject lot and lived
there before and after World War II. The trial court further noted that Rosario’s testimony was
corroborated by her cousin and adjacent neighbor Manolo Calalang.14 As the sole and exclusive owner, Pedro Calalang had the right to convey his property in favor of Nora B.
Calalang-Parulan by executing a Deed of Sale on February 17, 1984. The CA therefore erred in ruling that
Pedro Calalang deprived his heirs of their respective shares over the disputed property when he
However, as correctly pointed out by the CA, a close perusal of the records of this case would show that
alienated the same.
the records are bereft of any concrete proof to show that the subject property indeed belonged to
respondents’ maternal grandparents. The evidence respondents adduced merely consisted of
testimonial evidence such as the declaration of Rosario Calalang-Garcia that they have been staying on It is hornbook doctrine that successional rights are vested only at the time of death. Article 777 of the
the property as far as she can remember and that the property was acquired by her parents through New Civil Code provides that "[t]he rights to the succession are transmitted from the moment of the
purchase from her maternal grandparents. However, she was unable to produce any document to death of the decedent." In Butte v. Manuel Uy and Sons, Inc.,19 we proclaimed the fundamental tenets of
evidence the said sale, nor was she able to present any documentary evidence such as the tax succession:
declaration issued in the name of either of her parents. Moreover, we note that the free patent was
issued solely in the name of Pedro Calalang and that it was issued more than 30 years after the death of
The principle of transmission as of the time of the predecessor's death is basic in our Civil Code, and is
Encarnacion and the dissolution of the conjugal partnership of gains of the first marriage. Thus, we
supported by other related articles. Thus, the capacity of the heir is determined as of the time the
cannot subscribe to respondents’ submission that the subject property originally belonged to the parents
decedent died (Art. 1034); the legitime is to be computed as of the same moment (Art. 908), and so is
of Encarnacion and was acquired by Pedro Calalang and Encarnacion.
the in officiousness of the donation inter vivas (Art. 771). Similarly, the legacies of credit and remission
are valid only in the amount due and outstanding at the death of the testator (Art. 935), and the fruits
We likewise cannot sustain the argument of the petitioners that the disputed property belongs to the accruing after that instant are deemed to pertain to the legatee (Art. 948).
conjugal partnership of the second marriage of Pedro Calalang with Elvira B. Calalang on the ground that
the title was issued in the name of "Pedro Calalang, married to Elvira Berba [Calalang]."
Thus, it is only upon the death of Pedro Calalang on December 27, 1989 that his heirs acquired their
respective inheritances, entitling them to their pro indiviso shares to his whole estate. At the time of the
The contents of a certificate of title are enumerated by Section 45 of Presidential Decree No. 1529, sale of the disputed property, the rights to the succession were not yet bestowed upon the heirs of
otherwise known as the Property Registration Decree: Pedro Calalang. And absent clear and convincing evidence that the sale was fraudulent or not duly
supported by valuable consideration (in effect an in officious donation inter vivas), the respondents have
no right to question the sale of the disputed property on the ground that their father deprived them of
SEC. 45. Statement of personal circumstances in the certificate. – Every certificate of title shall set forth
their respective shares. Well to remember, fraud must be established by clear and convincing evidence.
the full names of all persons whose interests make up the full ownership in the whole land, including
Mere preponderance of evidence is not even adequate to prove fraud.20 The Complaint for Annulment of the bottom of page 4 which is the last page. Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) Nos. 24790, 24791 and
Sale and Reconveyance of Property must therefore be dismissed. 24792 over the properties were issued in respondent’s name alone.

WHEREFORE, the petition for review on certiorari is GRANTED. The Decision dated December 21, 2007 Jambrich also formally adopted respondent’s two sons in Sp. Proc. No. 39-MAN,4 and per Decision of the
and Resolution dated July 25, 2008 of the Thirteenth Division of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. Regional Trial Court of Mandaue City dated May 5, 1988.5
72531 are REVERSED and SET ASIDE. Civil Case No. 370-M-91, or the Complaint for Annulment of Sale
and Reconveyance of Property filed by the respondents with the Regional Trial Court, Branch 21 of
However, the idyll lasted only until April 1991. By then, respondent found a new boyfriend while
Malolos, Bulacan, on June 10, 1991, is hereby DISMISSED for lack of merit.
Jambrich began to live with another woman in Danao City. Jambrich supported respondent’s sons for
only two months after the break up.
No pronouncement as to costs.
Jambrich met petitioner Camilo F. Borromeo sometime in 1986. Petitioner was engaged in the real estate
SO ORDERED. business. He also built and repaired speedboats as a hobby. In 1989, Jambrich purchased an engine and
some accessories for his boat from petitioner, for which he became indebted to the latter for about
₱150,000.00. To pay for his debt, he sold his rights and interests in the Agro-Macro properties to
petitioner for ₱250,000, as evidenced by a "Deed of Absolute Sale/Assignment."6 On July 26, 1991, when
petitioner sought to register the deed of assignment, he discovered that titles to the three lots have
been transferred in the name of respondent, and that the subject property has already been mortgaged.

G.R. No. 159310 February 24, 2009


On August 2, 1991, petitioner filed a complaint against respondent for recovery of real property before
the Regional Trial Court of Mandaue City. Petitioner alleged that the Contracts to Sell dated November
CAMILO F. BORROMEO, Petitioner, 18, 1985 and March 10, 1986 and the Deed of Absolute Sale dated November 16, 1987 over the
vs. properties which identified both Jambrich and respondent as buyers do not reflect the true agreement of
ANTONIETTA O. DESCALLAR, Respondent. the parties since respondent did not pay a single centavo of the purchase price and was not in fact a
buyer; that it was Jambrich alone who paid for the properties using his exclusive funds; that Jambrich
DECISION was the real and absolute owner of the properties; and, that petitioner acquired absolute ownership by
virtue of the Deed of Absolute Sale/Assignment dated July 11, 1991 which Jambrich executed in his
favor.
PUNO, C.J.:

In her Answer, respondent belied the allegation that she did not pay a single centavo of the purchase
What are the rights of an alien (and his successor-in-interest) who acquired real properties in the country price. On the contrary, she claimed that she "solely and exclusively used her own personal funds to
as against his former Filipina girlfriend in whose sole name the properties were registered under the defray and pay for the purchase price of the subject lots in question," and that Jambrich, being an alien,
Torrens system? was prohibited to acquire or own real property in the Philippines.

The facts are as follows: At the trial, respondent presented evidence showing her alleged financial capacity to buy the disputed
property with money from a supposed copra business. Petitioner, in turn, presented Jambrich as his
Wilhelm Jambrich, an Austrian, arrived in the Philippines in 1983 after he was assigned by his employer, witness and documentary evidence showing the substantial salaries which Jambrich received while still
Simmering-Graz Panker A.G., an Austrian company, to work at a project in Mindoro. In 1984, he employed by the Austrian company, Simmering-Graz Panker A.G.
transferred to Cebu and worked at the Naga II Project of the National Power Corporation. There, he met
respondent Antonietta Opalla-Descallar, a separated mother of two boys who was working as a waitress In its decision, the court a quo found—
at St. Moritz Hotel. Jambrich befriended respondent and asked her to tutor him in English. In dire need of
additional income to support her children, respondent agreed. The tutorials were held in Antonietta’s
residence at a squatters’ area in Gorordo Avenue. Evidence on hand clearly show that at the time of the purchase and acquisition of [the] properties under
litigation that Wilhelm Jambrich was still working and earning much. This fact of Jambrich earning much
is not only supported by documentary evidence but also by the admission made by the defendant
Jambrich and respondent fell in love and decided to live together in a rented house in Hernan Cortes, Antoniet[t]a Opalla. So that, Jambrich’s financial capacity to acquire and purchase the properties . . . is
Mandaue City. Later, they transferred to their own house and lots at Agro-Macro Subdivision, not disputed.7
Cabancalan, Mandaue City. In the Contracts to Sell dated November 18, 19851 and March 10,
19862 covering the properties, Jambrich and respondent were referred to as the buyers. A Deed of
Absolute Sale dated November 16, 19873 was likewise issued in their favor. However, when the Deed of xxx
Absolute Sale was presented for registration before the Register of Deeds, registration was refused on
the ground that Jambrich was an alien and could not acquire alienable lands of the public domain. On the other hand, evidence . . . clearly show that before defendant met Jambrich sometime in the latter
Consequently, Jambrich’s name was erased from the document. But it could be noted that his signature part of 1984, she was only working as a waitress at the St. Moritz Hotel with an income of ₱1,000.00 a
remained on the left hand margin of page 1, beside respondent’s signature as buyer on page 3, and at
month and was . . . renting and living only in . . . [a] room at . . . [a] squatter area at Gorordo Ave., Cebu 4) Declaring the contracts now marked as Exhibits "I," "K" and "L" as avoided insofar as they
City; that Jambrich took pity of her and the situation of her children that he offered her a better life appear to convey rights and interests over the properties in question to the defendant
which she readily accepted. In fact, this miserable financial situation of hers and her two children . . . are Antoniet[t]a Descallar;
all stated and reflected in the Child Study Report dated April 20, 1983 (Exhs. "G" and "G-1") which facts
she supplied to the Social Worker who prepared the same when she was personally interviewed by her
5) Ordering the defendant to pay plaintiff attorney’s fees in the amount of ₱25,000.00 and
in connection with the adoption of her two children by Wilhelm Jambrich. So that, if such facts were not
litigation expenses in the amount of ₱10,000.00; and,
true because these are now denied by her . . . and if it was also true that during this time she was already
earning as much as ₱8,000.00 to ₱9,000.00 as profit per month from her copra business, it would be
highly unbelievable and impossible for her to be living only in such a miserable condition since it is the 6) To pay the costs.11
observation of this Court that she is not only an extravagant but also an expensive person and not thrifty
as she wanted to impress this Court in order to have a big saving as clearly shown by her actuation when Respondent appealed to the Court of Appeals. In a Decision dated April 10, 2002,12 the appellate court
she was already cohabiting and living with Jambrich that according to her . . . the allowance given . . . by reversed the decision of the trial court. In ruling for the respondent, the Court of Appeals held:
him in the amount of $500.00 a month is not enough to maintain the education and maintenance of her
children.8
We disagree with the lower court’s conclusion. The circumstances involved in the case cited by the lower
court and similar cases decided on by the Supreme Court which upheld the validity of the title of the
This being the case, it is highly improbable and impossible that she could acquire the properties under subsequent Filipino purchasers are absent in the case at bar. It should be noted that in said cases, the
litigation or could contribute any amount for their acquisition which according to her is worth more than title to the subject property has been issued in the name of the alien transferee (Godinez et al., vs. Fong
₱700,000.00 when while she was working as [a] waitress at St. Moritz Hotel earning ₱1,000.00 a month Pak Luen et al., 120 SCRA 223 citing Krivenko vs. Register of Deeds of Manila, 79 Phils. 461; United
as salary and tips of more or less ₱2,000.00 she could not even provide [for] the daily needs of her family Church Board for World Ministries vs. Sebastian, 159 SCRA 446, citing the case of Sarsosa Vda. De
so much so that it is safe to conclude that she was really in financial distress when she met and accepted Barsobia vs. Cuenco, 113 SCRA 547; Tejido vs. Zamacoma, 138 SCRA 78). In the case at bar, the title of
the offer of Jambrich to come and live with him because that was a big financial opportunity for her and the subject property is not in the name of Jambrich but in the name of defendant-appellant. Thus,
her children who were already abandoned by her husband.9 Jambrich could not have transferred a property he has no title thereto.13

xxx Petitioner’s motion for reconsideration was denied.

The only probable and possible reason why her name appeared and was included in [the contracts to sell Hence, this petition for review.
dated November 18, 1985 and March 10, 1986 and finally, the deed of absolute sale dated November 16,
1987] as buyer is because as observed by the Court, she being a scheming and exploitive woman, she has
taken advantage of the goodness of Jambrich who at that time was still bewitched by her beauty, Petitioner assigns the following errors:
sweetness, and good attitude shown by her to him since he could still very well provide for everything
she needs, he being earning (sic) much yet at that time. In fact, as observed by this Court, the acquisition I. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS SERIOUSLY ERRED IN DISREGARDING RESPONDENT’S JUDICIAL
of these properties under litigation was at the time when their relationship was still going smoothly and ADMISSION AND OTHER OVERWHELMING EVIDENCE ESTABLISHING JAMBRICH’S PARTICIPATION,
harmoniously.10 [Emphasis supplied.] INTEREST AND OWNERSHIP OF THE PROPERTIES IN QUESTION AS FOUND BY THE HONORABLE TRIAL
COURT.
The dispositive portion of the Decision states:
II. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS SERIOUSLY ERRED IN HOLDING THAT JAMBRICH HAS NO TITLE
WHEREFORE, . . . Decision is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant TO THE PROPERTIES IN QUESTION AND MAY NOT THEREFORE TRANSFER AND ASSIGN ANY RIGHTS AND
Antoniet[t]a Opalla by: INTERESTS IN FAVOR OF PETITIONER.

1) Declaring plaintiff as the owner in fee simple over the residential house of strong materials III. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS SERIOUSLY ERRED IN REVERSING THE WELL-REASONED
and three parcels of land designated as Lot Nos. 1, 3 and 5 which are covered by TCT Nos. DECISION OF THE TRIAL COURT AND IN IMPOSING DOUBLE COSTS AGAINST HEREIN PETITIONER (THEN,
24790, 24791 and 24792 issued by the Register of Deeds of Mandaue City; PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE).14

2) Declaring as null and void TCT Nos. 24790, 24791 and 24792 issued in the name of First, who purchased the subject properties?
defendant Antoniet[t]a Descallar by the Register of Deeds of Mandaue City;
The evidence clearly shows, as pointed out by the trial court, who between respondent and Jambrich
3) Ordering the Register of Deeds of Mandaue City to cancel TCT Nos. 24790, 24791 and possesses the financial capacity to acquire the properties in dispute. At the time of the acquisition of the
24792 in the name of defendant Antoniet[t]a Descallar and to issue new ones in the name of properties in 1985 to 1986, Jambrich was gainfully employed at Simmering-Graz Panker A.G., an Austrian
plaintiff Camilo F. Borromeo; company. He was earning an estimated monthly salary of ₱50,000.00. Then, Jambrich was assigned to
Syria for almost one year where his monthly salary was approximately ₱90,000.00.
On the other hand, respondent was employed as a waitress from 1984 to 1985 with a monthly salary of Well-settled is the rule that this Court is not a trier of facts. The findings of fact of the trial court are
not more than ₱1,000.00. In 1986, when the parcels of land were acquired, she was unemployed, as accorded great weight and respect, if not finality by this Court, subject to a number of exceptions. In the
admitted by her during the pre-trial conference. Her allegations of income from a copra business were instant case, we find no reason to disturb the factual findings of the trial court. Even the appellate court
unsubstantiated. The supposed copra business was actually the business of her mother and their family, did not controvert the factual findings of the trial court. They differed only in their conclusions of law.
with ten siblings. She has no license to sell copra, and had not filed any income tax return. All the
motorized bancas of her mother were lost to fire, and the last one left standing was already scrap.
Further, the fact that the disputed properties were acquired during the couple’s cohabitation also does
Further, the Child Study Report15 submitted by the Department of Social Welfare and Development
not help respondent. The rule that co-ownership applies to a man and a woman living exclusively with
(DSWD) in the adoption proceedings of respondent’s two sons by Jambrich disclosed that:
each other as husband and wife without the benefit of marriage, but are otherwise capacitated to marry
each other, does not apply.19 In the instant case, respondent was still legally married to another when
Antonietta tried all types of job to support the children until she was accepted as a waitress at St. Moritz she and Jambrich lived together. In such an adulterous relationship, no co-ownership exists between the
Restaurant in 1984. At first she had no problem with money because most of the customers of St. Moritz parties. It is necessary for each of the partners to prove his or her actual contribution to the acquisition
are (sic) foreigners and they gave good tips but towards the end of 1984 there were no more foreigners of property in order to be able to lay claim to any portion of it. Presumptions of co-ownership and equal
coming because of the situation in the Philippines at that time. Her financial problem started then. She contribution do not apply.20
was even renting a small room in a squatters area in Gorordo Ave., Cebu City. It was during her time of
great financial distress that she met Wilhelm Jambrich who later offered her a decent place for herself
Second, we dispose of the issue of registration of the properties in the name of respondent alone. Having
and her children.16
found that the true buyer of the disputed house and lots was the Austrian Wilhelm Jambrich, what now
is the effect of registration of the properties in the name of respondent?
The DSWD Home Study Report17 further disclosed that:
It is settled that registration is not a mode of acquiring ownership.21 It is only a means of confirming the
[Jambrich] was then at the Restaurant of St. Moritz when he saw Antonietta Descallar, one of the fact of its existence with notice to the world at large.22 Certificates of title are not a source of right. The
waitresses of the said Restaurants. He made friends with the girl and asked her to tutor him in [the] mere possession of a title does not make one the true owner of the property. Thus, the mere fact that
English language. Antonietta accepted the offer because she was in need of additional income to support respondent has the titles of the disputed properties in her name does not necessarily, conclusively and
[her] 2 young children who were abandoned by their father. Their session was agreed to be scheduled absolutely make her the owner. The rule on indefeasibility of title likewise does not apply to respondent.
every afternoon at the residence of Antonietta in the squatters area in Gorordo Avenue, Cebu City. The A certificate of title implies that the title is quiet,23 and that it is perfect, absolute and
Austrian was observing the situation of the family particularly the children who were malnourished. After indefeasible.24 However, there are well-defined exceptions to this rule, as when the transferee is not a
a few months sessions, Mr. Jambrich offered to transfer the family into a decent place. He told holder in good faith and did not acquire the subject properties for a valuable consideration.25 This is the
Antonietta that the place is not good for the children. Antonietta who was miserable and financially situation in the instant case. Respondent did not contribute a single centavo in the acquisition of the
distressed at that time accepted the offer for the sake of the children.18 properties. She had no income of her own at that time, nor did she have any savings. She and her two
sons were then fully supported by Jambrich.
Further, the following additional pieces of evidence point to Jambrich as the source of fund used to
purchase the three parcels of land, and to construct the house thereon: Respondent argued that aliens are prohibited from acquiring private land. This is embodied in Section 7,
Article XII of the 1987 Constitution,26 which is basically a reproduction of Section 5, Article XIII of the
1935 Constitution,27 and Section 14, Article XIV of the 1973 Constitution.28 The capacity to acquire
(1) Respondent Descallar herself affirmed under oath, during her re-direct examination and
private land is dependent on the capacity "to acquire or hold lands of the public domain." Private land
during the proceedings for the adoption of her minor children, that Jambrich was the owner
may be transferred only to individuals or entities "qualified to acquire or hold lands of the public
of the properties in question, but that his name was deleted in the Deed of Absolute Sale
domain." Only Filipino citizens or corporations at least 60% of the capital of which is owned by Filipinos
because of legal constraints. Nonetheless, his signature remained in the deed of sale, where
are qualified to acquire or hold lands of the public domain. Thus, as the rule now stands, the
he signed as buyer.
fundamental law explicitly prohibits non-Filipinos from acquiring or holding title to private lands, except
only by way of legal succession or if the acquisition was made by a former natural-born citizen.29
(2) The money used to pay the subject parcels of land in installments was in postdated checks
issued by Jambrich. Respondent has never opened any account with any bank. Receipts of the
Therefore, in the instant case, the transfer of land from Agro-Macro Development Corporation to
installment payments were also in the name of Jambrich and respondent.
Jambrich, who is an Austrian, would have been declared invalid if challenged, had not Jambrich conveyed
the properties to petitioner who is a Filipino citizen. In United Church Board for World Ministries v.
(3) In 1986-1987, respondent lived in Syria with Jambrich and her two children for ten Sebastian,30 the Court reiterated the consistent ruling in a number of cases31 that if land is invalidly
months, where she was completely under the support of Jambrich. transferred to an alien who subsequently becomes a Filipino citizen or transfers it to a Filipino, the flaw
in the original transaction is considered cured and the title of the transferee is rendered valid. Applying
(4) Jambrich executed a Last Will and Testament, where he, as owner, bequeathed the United Church Board for World Ministries, the trial court ruled in favor of petitioner, viz.:
subject properties to respondent.
[W]hile the acquisition and the purchase of (sic) Wilhelm Jambrich of the properties under litigation
Thus, Jambrich has all authority to transfer all his rights, interests and participation over the subject [were] void ab initio since [they were] contrary to the Constitution of the Philippines, he being a
properties to petitioner by virtue of the Deed of Assignment he executed on July 11, 1991. foreigner, yet, the acquisition of these properties by plaintiff who is a Filipino citizen from him, has cured
the flaw in the original transaction and the title of the transferee is valid.
The trial court upheld the sale by Jambrich in favor of petitioner and ordered the cancellation of the TCTs Socorro Torres (Socorro) and Esteban Abletes (Esteban) were married on 9 June 1980. Although Socorro
in the name of respondent. It declared petitioner as owner in fee simple of the residential house of and Esteban never had common children, both of them had children from prior marriages: Esteban had a
strong materials and three parcels of land designated as Lot Nos. 1, 3 and 5, and ordered the Register of daughter named Evangeline Abuda (Evangeline), and Socorro had a son, who was the father of Edilberto
Deeds of Mandaue City to issue new certificates of title in his name. The trial court likewise ordered U. Ventura, Jr. (Edilberto), the petitioner in this case.
respondent to pay petitioner ₱25,000 as attorney’s fees and ₱10,000 as litigation expenses, as well as
the costs of suit.
Evidence shows that Socorro had a prior subsisting marriage to Crispin Roxas (Crispin) when she married
Esteban. Socorro married Crispin on 18 April 1952. This marriage was not annulled, and Crispin was alive
We affirm the Regional Trial Court. at the time of Socorro’s marriage to Esteban.

The rationale behind the Court’s ruling in United Church Board for World Ministries, as reiterated in Esteban’s prior marriage, on the other hand, was dissolved by virtue of his wife’s death in 1960.
subsequent cases,32 is this – since the ban on aliens is intended to preserve the nation’s land for future According to Edilberto, sometime in 1968, Esteban purchased a portion of a lot situated at 2492 State
generations of Filipinos, that aim is achieved by making lawful the acquisition of real estate by aliens who Alley, Bonifacio Street, Vitas, Tondo, Manila (Vitas property). The remaining portion was thereafter
became Filipino citizens by naturalization or those transfers made by aliens to Filipino citizens. As the purchased by Evangeline on her father’s behalf sometime in 1970.4 The Vitas property was covered by
property in dispute is already in the hands of a qualified person, a Filipino citizen, there would be no Transfer Certificate of Title No. 141782, dated 11 December 1980, issued to "Esteban Abletes, of legal
more public policy to be protected. The objective of the constitutional provision to keep our lands in age, Filipino, married to Socorro Torres."5
Filipino hands has been achieved.
Edilberto also claimed that starting 1978, Evangeline and Esteban operated small business
IN VIEW WHEREOF, the petition is GRANTED. The Decision of the Court of Appeals in C.A. G.R. CV No. establishments located at 903 and 905 Delpan Street, Tondo, Manila (Delpan property).6
42929 dated April 10, 2002 and its Resolution dated July 8, 2003 are REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The
Decision of the Regional Trial Court of Mandaue City in Civil Case No. MAN-1148 is REINSTATED.
On 6 September 1997, Esteban sold the Vitas and Delpan properties to Evangeline and her husband,
Paulino Abuda (Paulino).7 According to Edilberto:
SO ORDERED.
when Esteban was diagnosed with colon cancer sometime in 1993, he decided to sell the Delpan and
Vitas properties to Evangeline. Evangeline continued paying the amortizations on the two (2) properties
situated in Delpan Street. The amortizations, together with the amount of Two Hundred Thousand Pesos
(Php 200,000.00), which Esteban requested as advance payment, were considered part of the purchase
price of the Delpan properties. Evangeline likewise gave her father Fifty Thousand Pesos (Php 50,000.00)
G.R. No. 202932 October 23, 2013 for the purchase of the Vitas properties and she shouldered his medical expenses.8

EDILBERTO U. VENTURA JR., Petitioner, Esteban passed away on 11 September 1997, while Socorro passed away on 31 July 1999.
vs.
SPOUSES PAULINO and EVANGELINE ABUDA, Respondents. Sometime in 2000, Leonora Urquila (Leonora), the mother of Edilberto, discovered the sale. Thus,
Edilberto, represented by Leonora, filed a Petition for Annulment of Deeds of Sale before the RTC-
DECISION Manila. Edilberto alleged that the sale of the properties was fraudulent because Esteban’s signature on
the deeds of sale was forged. Respondents, on the other hand, argued that because of Socorro’s prior
marriage to Crispin, her subsequent marriage to Esteban was null and void. Thus, neither Socorro nor her
CARPIO, J.: heirs can claim any right or interest over the properties purchased by Esteban and respondents.9

The Case The Ruling of the RTC-Manila

This petition for review on certiorari seeks to annul the Decision1 dated 9 March 2012 of the Court of The RTC-Manila dismissed the petition for lack of merit.
Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 92330 and the Resolution2 dated 3 August 2012 denying the motion for
reconsideration. The Decision and Resolution dismissed the Appeal dated 23 October 2009 and affirmed
with modification the Decision3 dated 24 November 2008 of the Regional Trial Court of Manila, Branch The RTC-Manila ruled that the marriage between Socorro and Esteban was void from the
beginning.10 Article 83 of the Civil Code, which was the governing law at the time Esteban and Socorro
32 (RTC-Manila).
were married, provides:

The Facts
Art. 83. Any marriage subsequently contracted by any person during the lifetime of the first spouse of
such person shall be illegal and void from its performance unless:
The RTC-Manila and the CA found the facts to be as follows:
1. The first marriage was annulled or dissolved; or
2. The first spouse had been absent for seven consecutive years at the time of the second Anent the parcels of land and improvements thereon 903 and 905 Del Pan Street, Tondo, Manila, x x x
marriage without the spouse present having news of the absentee being alive, or if the Evangeline professed that in 1978, before her father met Socorro Torres and before the construction of
absentee, though he has been absent for less than seven years, is generally considered as the BLISS Project thereat, her father [already had] a bodega of canvas (lona) and a sewing machine to
dead and believed to be so by the spouse present at the time of contracting such subsequent sew the canvas being sold at 903 Del Pan Street, Tondo Manila. In 1978, she was also operating Vangie’s
marriage, or if the absentee is presumed dead according to articles 390 and 391. The Canvas Store at 905 Del Pan Street, Tondo, Manila, which was evidenced by Certificate of Registration of
marriage so contracted shall be valid in any of the three cases until declared null and void. Business Name issued in her favor on 09 November 1998 x x x. When the BLISS project was constructed
in 1980, the property became known as Units D-9 and D-10. At first, her father [paid] for the
amortizations for these two (2) parcels of land but when he got sick with colon cancer in 1993, he asked
During trial, Edilberto offered the testimony of Socorro’s daughter-in-law Conchita Ventura (Conchita). In
respondents to continue paying for the amortizations x x x. [Evangeline] paid a total of ₱195,259.52 for
her first affidavit, Conchita claimed that Crispin, who was a seaman, had been missing and unheard from
Unit D-9 as shown by the 37 pieces of receipts x x x and the aggregate amount of ₱188,596.09 for Unit D-
for 35 years. However, Conchita recanted her earlier testimony and executed an Affidavit of Retraction.11
10, as evidenced by 36 receipts x x x.15

The RTC-Manila ruled that the lack of a judicial decree of nullity does not affect the status of the union. It
The RTC-Manila concluded that Socorro did not contribute any funds for the acquisition of the
applied our ruling in Niñal v. Badayog:12
properties. Hence, she cannot be considered a co-owner, and her heirs cannot claim any rights over the
Vitas and Delpan properties.16
Jurisprudence under the Civil Code states that no judicial decree is necessary in order to establish the
nullity of a marriage. x x x
Aggrieved, Edilberto filed an appeal before the CA.

Under ordinary circumstances, the effect of a void marriage, so far as concerns the conferring of legal
The Ruling of the CA
rights upon the parties, is as though no marriage had ever taken place. And therefore, being good for no
legal purpose, its invalidity can be maintained in any proceeding in which [the] fact of marriage may be
material, either direct or collateral, in any civil court between any parties at any time, whether before or In its Decision17 dated 9 March 2012, the CA sustained the decision of the RTC-Manila. The dispositive
after the death of either or both the husband and the wife, and upon mere proof of the facts rendering portion of the CA Decision reads:
such marriage void, it will be disregarded or treated as non-existent by the courts.13
WHEREFORE, the Appeal is hereby DENIED and the challenged Decision of the court a quo STANDS.
According to the RTC-Manila, the Vitas and Delpan properties are not conjugal, and are governed by
Articles 144 and 485 of the Civil Code, to wit:
SO ORDERED.18

Art. 144. When a man and a woman live together as husband and wife, but they are not married, or their
The CA ruled, however, that the RTC-Manila should have applied Article 148 of the Family Code, and not
marriage is void from the beginning, the property acquired by either or both of them through their work
Articles 144 and 485 of the Civil Code. Article 148 of the Family Code states that in unions between a
or industry or their wages and salaries shall be governed by the rules on co-ownership.
man and a woman who are incapacitated to marry each other:

Art. 485. The share of the co-owners, in the benefits as well as in the charges, shall be proportional to
x x x only the properties acquired by both of the parties through their actual joint contribution of money,
their respective interests. Any stipulation in a contract to the contrary shall be void.
property, or industry shall be owned by them in common in proportion to their respective contributions.
In the absence of proof to the contrary, their contributions and corresponding shares are presumed to
The portions belonging to the co-owners in the co-ownership shall be presumed equal, unless the be equal. The same rule and presumption shall apply to joint deposits of money and evidences of credit.
contrary is proved.
If one of the parties is validly married to another, his or her share in the co-ownership shall accrue to the
The RTC-Manila then determined the respective shares of Socorro and Esteban in the properties. It found absolute community or conjugal partnership existing in such valid marriage. If the party who acted in bad
that: faith is not validly married to another, his or her share shall be forfeited in the manner provided in the
last paragraph of the preceding Article.
with respect to the property located at 2492 State Alley, Bonifacio St. Vitas, Tondo, Manila covered by
TCT No. 141782, formerly Marcos Road, Magsaysay Village, Tondo, Manila, [Evangeline] declared that The foregoing rules on forfeiture shall likewise apply even if both parties are in bad faith.
part of it was first acquired by her father Esteban Abletes sometime in 1968 when he purchased the right
of Ampiano Caballegan. Then, in 1970, she x x x bought the right to one-half of the remaining property
The CA applied our ruling in Saguid v. Court of Appeals,19 and held that the foregoing provision applies
occupied by Ampiano Caballegan. However, during the survey of the National Housing Authority, she
"even if the cohabitation or the acquisition of the property occurred before the effectivity of the Family
allowed the whole lot to be registered in her father’s name. As proof thereof, she presented Exhibits "8"
Code."20 The CA found that Edilberto failed to prove that Socorro contributed to the purchase of the
to "11" x x x. These documents prove that that she has been an occupant of the said property in Vitas,
Vitas and Delpan properties. Edilberto was unable to provide any documentation evidencing Socorro’s
Tondo even before her father and Socorro Torres got married in June, 1980.14
alleged contribution.21
On 2 April 2012, Edilberto filed a Motion for Reconsideration,22 which was denied by the CA in its Registration is not a mode of acquiring ownership. It is only a means of confirming the fact of its
Resolution dated 3 August 2012.23 existence with notice to the world at large. Certificates of title are not a source of right. The mere
possession of a title does not make one the true owner of the property. Thus, the mere fact that
respondent has the titles of the disputed properties in her name does not necessarily, conclusively and
Hence, this petition.
absolutely make her the owner. The rule on indefeasibility of title likewise does not apply to respondent.
A certificate of title implies that the title is quiet, and that it is perfect, absolute and indefeasible.
The Ruling of this Court However, there are well-defined exceptions to this rule, as when the transferee is not a holder in good
faith and did not acquire the subject properties for a valuable consideration.
We deny the petition.
Edilberto claims that Esteban s actual contribution to the purchase of the Delpan property was not
Edilberto admitted that in unions between a man and a woman who are incapacitated to marry each sufficiently proven since Evangeline shouldered some of the amortizations.28 Thus, the law presumes
other, the ownership over the properties acquired during the subsistence of that relationship shall be that Esteban and Socorro jointly contributed to the acquisition of the Del pan property.
based on the actual contribution of the parties. He even quoted our ruling in Borromeo v. Descallar24 in
his petition: We cannot sustain Edilberto s claim. Both the RTC-Manila and the CA found that the Delpan property
was acquired prior to the marriage of Esteban and Socorro.29 Furthermore, even if payment of the
It is necessary for each of the partners to prove his or her actual contribution to the acquisition of purchase price of the Delpan property was made by Evangeline, such payment was made on behalf of
property in order to be able to lay claim to any portion of it. Presumptions of co-ownership and equal her father. Article 1238 of the Civil Code provides:
contribution do not apply.25
Art. 1238. Payment made by a third person who does not intend to be reimbursed by the debtor is
This is a reiteration of Article 148 of the Family Code, which the CA applied in the assailed decision: deemed to be a donation, which requires the debtor s consent. But the payment is in any case valid as to
the creditor who has accepted it.

Art 148. In cases of cohabitation [wherein the parties are incapacitated to marry each other], only the
properties acquired by both of the parties through their actual joint contribution of money, property, or Thus, it is clear that Evangeline paid on behalf of her father, and the parties intended that the Delpan
industry shall be owned by them in common in proportion to their respective contributions. In the property would be owned by and registered under the name of Esteban.
absence of proof to the contrary, their contributions and corresponding shares are presumed to be
equal. The same rule and presumption shall apply to joint deposits of money and evidences of credit. During trial, the Abuda spouses presented receipts evidencing payments of the amortizations for the
Delpan property.1âwphi1 On the other hand, Edilberto failed to show any evidence showing Socorro s
If one of the parties is validly married to another, his or her share in the co-ownership shall accrue to the alleged monetary contributions. As correctly pointed out by the CA:
absolute community or conjugal partnership existing in such valid marriage. If the party who acted in bad
faith is not validly married to another, his or her share shall be forfeited in the manner provided in the settled is the rule that in civil cases x x x the burden of proof rests upon the party who, as determined by
last paragraph of the preceding Article. the pleadings or the nature of the case, asserts the affirmative of an issue. x x x. Here it is Appellant who
is duty bound to prove the allegations in the complaint which undoubtedly, he miserably failed to do
The foregoing rules on forfeiture shall likewise apply even if both parties are in bad faith. so.30

Applying the foregoing provision, the Vitas and Delpan properties can be considered common property WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The Decision dated 9 March 2012 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
if: (1) these were acquired during the cohabitation of Esteban and Socorro; and (2) there is evidence that CV No. 92330 is AFFIRMED.
the properties were acquired through the parties’ actual joint contribution of money, property, or
industry. SO ORDERED.

Edilberto argues that the certificate of title covering the Vitas property shows that the parcel of land is
co-owned by Esteban and Socorro because: (1) the Transfer Certificate of Title was issued on 11
December 1980, or several months after the parties were married; and (2) title to the land was issued to
"Esteban Abletes, of legal age, married to Socorro Torres."26
G.R. No. 198356, April 20, 2015
We disagree. The title itself shows that the Vitas property is owned by Esteban alone.1âwphi1 The
phrase "married to Socorro Torres" is merely descriptive of his civil status, and does not show that
ESPERANZA SUPAPO AND THE HEIRS OF ROMEO SUPAPO, NAMELY: ESPERANZA, REX EDWARD,
Socorro co-owned the property.27 The evidence on record also shows that Esteban acquired ownership
RONALD TROY, ROMEO, JR., SHEILA LORENCE, ALL SURNAMED SUPAPO, AND SHERYL FORTUNE
over the Vitas property prior to his marriage to Socorro, even if the certificate of title was issued after
SUPAPO-SANDIGAN, Petitioners, v. SPOUSES ROBERTO AND SUSAN DE JESUS, MACARIO BERNARDO,
the celebration of the marriage. Registration under the Torrens title system merely confirms, and does
AND THOSE PERSONS CLAIMING RIGHTS UNDER THEM, Respondent.
not vest title. This was admitted by Edilberto on page 9 of his petition wherein he quotes an excerpt of
our ruling in Borromeo:
DECISION quashal of the writ and the respondent's motion for reconsideration.17 The CA granted the petition and
held that with the repeal of the Anti-Squatting Law, the respondents' criminal and civil liabilities were
extinguished.18 The dispositive portion of the decision reads:
BRION, J.:

WHEREFORE, premises considered, the petition for certiorari with prayer for injunction is GRANTED. The
We resolve the petition for review on certiorari1 filed by petitioners Esperanza Supapo and Romeo orders dated June 5, 2003 and July 24, 2003 of Branch 131 of the Regional Trial Court of Caloocan City in
Supapo2 (Spouses Supapo) to assail the February 25, 2011 decision3 and August 25, 2011 resolution4 of Criminal Case No. C-45610 are REVERSED and SET ASIDE. Said court is hereby
the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 111674. permanently ENJOINED from further executing or implementing its decision dated March 18, 1996.

Factual Antecedents SO ORDERED.

The Spouses Supapo filed a complaint5 for accion publiciana against Roberto and Susan de Jesus (Spouses
de Jesus), Macario Bernardo (Macario), and persons claiming rights under them (collectively, The CA, however, underscored that the repeal of the Anti-Squatting Law does not mean that people now
the respondents), with the Metropolitan Trial Court (MeTC) of Caloocan City. have unbridled license to illegally occupy lands they do not own, and that it was not intended to
compromise the property rights of legitimate landowners.19 In cases of violation of their property rights,
The complaint sought to compel the respondents to vacate a piece of land located in Novaliches, Quezon the CA noted that recourse may be had in court by filing the proper action for recovery of possession.
City, described as Lot 40, Block 5 (subject lot). The subject lot is covered by Transfer Certificate of Title
(TCT) No. C-284416 registered and titled under the Spouses Supapo's names. The land has an assessed The Spouses Supapo thus filed the complaint for action publiciana.20
value of thirty-nine thousand nine hundred eighty pesos (39,980.00) as shown in the Declaration of Real
Property Value (tax declaration) issued by the Office of the City Assessor of Caloocan.7 After filing their Answer,21 the respondents moved to set their affirmative defenses for preliminary
hearing22 and argued that: (1) there is another action pending between the same parties; (2) the
The Spouses Supapo did not reside on the subject lot. They also did not employ an overseer but they complaint for accion publiciana is barred by statute of limitations; and (3) the Spouses Supapo's cause of
made sure to visit at least twice a year.8 During one of their visits in 1992, they saw two (2) houses built action is barred by prior judgment.
on the subject lot. The houses were built without their knowledge and permission. They later learned
that the Spouses de Jesus occupied one house while Macario occupied the other one.9 The MeTC Ruling23

The Spouses Supapo demanded from the respondents the immediate surrender of the subject lot by The MeTC denied the motion to set the affirmative defenses for preliminary hearing. It ruled that the
bringing the dispute before the appropriate Lupong Tagapamayapa. The Lupon issued a arguments advanced by the respondents are evidentiary in nature, which at best can be utilized in the
Katibayan Upang Makadulog sa Hukuman (certificate to file action) for failure of the parties to settle course of the trial. The MeTC likewise denied the respondents' motion for reconsideration.
amicably.10
From the MeTC's ruling, the respondents filed a petition for certiorari with the RTC.24
The Spouses Supapo then filed a criminal case11 against the respondents for violation of Presidential
Decree No. 772 or the Anti-Squatting Law.12 The trial court convicted the respondents. The dispositive The RTC Ruling25
portion of the decision reads:
The RTC granted the petition for certiorari on two grounds, viz.: (i) the action has prescribed; and
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, this Court finds accused ROBERTO DE JESUS, SUSAN DE JESUS (ii) accion publiciana falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the RTC.
and MACARIO BERNARDO, GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt for Violation of Presidential Decree No.
772, and each accused is hereby ordered to pay a fine of ONE THOUSAND PESOS (P1,000.00), and to It held that in cases where the only issue involved is possession, the MeTC has jurisdiction if the action
vacate the subject premises. for forcible entry or unlawful detainer is filed within one (1) year from the time to demand to vacate was
made. Otherwise, the complaint for recovery of possession should be filed before the RTC.
SO ORDERED.13 (Emphasis supplied.)
The dispositive portion of the RTC decision reads:
The respondents appealed their conviction to the CA.14
While the appeal was pending, Congress enacted
Republic Act (RA) No. 8368, otherwise known as "An Act Repealing Presidential Decree No. 772," which WHEREFORE, premises considered, the instant petition is hereby GRANTED.
resulted to the dismissal of the criminal case.15
The Orders dated October 24, 2008 and February 23, 2009 are hereby declared NULL and VOID.
16
On April 30, 1999, the CA's dismissal of the criminal case became final.
The Public Respondent is hereby directed to DISMISS Civil Case No. 08-29245 for lack of jurisdiction.
Notwithstanding the dismissal, the Spouses Supapo moved for the execution of the respondents' civil
SO ORDERED.26
liability, praying that the latter vacate the subject lot. The Regional Trial Court (RTC) granted the motion
and issued the writ of execution. The respondents moved for the quashal of the writ but the RTC denied
the same. The RTC also denied the respondents' motion for reconsideration. In their motion for reconsideration,27 the Spouses Supapo emphasized that the court's jurisdiction over
an action involving title to or possession of land is determined by its assessed value; that the RTC does
The respondents thus filed with the CA a petition for certiorari to challenge the RTC's orders denying the not have an exclusive jurisdiction on all complaints for accion publiciana; and that the assessed value of
the subject lot falls within MeTC's jurisdiction.
Our Ruling
The RTC denied the petitioners' motion for reconsideration.
The petition is meritorious.
It held that although the MeTC had jurisdiction based on the assessed value of the subject lot, the
Spouses Supapos' cause of action had already prescribed, the action having been filed beyond the ten We hold that: (1) the MeTC properly acquired jurisdiction; (2) the cause of action has not prescribed; and
(l0)-year prescriptive period under Article 555 of the Civil Code.28 As it was not proven when the actual (3) the complaint is not barred by res judicata.
demand to vacate was made, the RTC ruled that the reckoning period by which the ejectment suit should
have been filed is counted from the time the certificate to file action was issued. The certificate to file Accion Publiciana and
action was issued on November 25, 1992, while the complaint for accion publiciana was filed only on the Jurisdiction of the
March 7, 2008, or more than ten (10) years thereafter. MeTC

Dissatisfied with the RTC ruling, the Spouses Supapo appealed to the CA.29 Accion publiciana is an ordinary civil proceeding to determine the better right of possession of realty
independent of title. It refers to an ejectment suit filed after the expiration of one year from the accrual
The CA Ruling30 of the cause of action or from the unlawful withholding of possession of the realty.34

The CA dismissed the appeal and held that the complaint for accion publiciana should have been lodged In the present case, the Spouses Supapo filed an action for the recovery of possession of the subject lot
before the RTC and that the period to file the action had prescribed. but they based their better right of possession on a claim of ownership.

The dispositive portion of the CA decision reads: This Court has held that the objective of the plaintiffs in accion publiciana is to recover possession only,
not ownership. However, where the parties raise the issue of ownership, the courts may pass upon the
issue to determine who between the parties has the right to possess the property.35
WHEREFORE, the appeal is DENIED. The Decision dated June 30, 2009 and Order dated October 19, 2009
are AFFIRMED.
This adjudication is not a final determination of the issue of ownership; it is only for the purpose of
resolving the issue of possession, where the issue of ownership is inseparably linked to the issue of
SO ORDERED
possession. The adjudication of the issue of ownership, being provisional, is not a bar to an action
between the same parties involving title to the property. The adjudication, in short, is not conclusive on
The Spouses Supapo moved31 but failed32 to secure a reconsideration of the CA decision; hence, they the issue of ownership.36
came to us through the present petition.
Thus, while we will dissect the Spouses Supapo's claim of ownership over the subject property, we will
The Petition only do so to determine if they or the respondents should have the right of possession.

In seeking reversal of the CA's ruling, the Spouses Supapo essentially argue that: Having thus determined that the dispute involves possession over a real property, we now resolve which
court has the jurisdiction to hear the case.
(1) the MeTC exercises exclusive original jurisdiction over accion publiciana where the assessed
Under Batas Pambansa Bilang 129,37 the jurisdiction of the RTC over actions involving title to or
value of the property does not exceed P20,000.00, or P50,000.00 if the property is located in
possession of real property is plenary.38
Metro Manila; and that
(2) prescription had not yet set in because their cause of action is imprescriptible under the
RA No. 7691,39 however, divested the RTC of a portion of its jurisdiction and granted the Metropolitan
Torrens system.
Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts the exclusive and original
jurisdiction to hear actions where the assessed value of the property does not exceed Twenty Thousand
The Respondents' Case33
Pesos (P20,000.00), or Fifty Thousand Pesos (P50,000.00), if the property is located in Metro Manila.
The respondents argue that the complaint for accion publiciana was (1) filed in the wrong court; (2)
Section 1 of RA No. 7691 states:
barred by prescription; and (3) barred by res judicata.

Section 1. Section 19 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 129, otherwise known as the "Judiciary Reorganization Act
Issues
of 1980," is hereby amended to read as follows:
Section. 19. Jurisdiction in civil cases. - Regional Trial Courts shall exercise exclusive original jurisdiction:
The issues for resolution are:
(2) In all civil actions which involve the title to, or possession of, real property, or any interest therein,
I. Whether the MeTC properly acquired jurisdiction; where the assessed value of the property involved exceeds Twenty thousand pesos (P20,000.00) or, for
II. Whether the cause of action has prescribed; and civil actions in Metro Manila, where such value exceeds Fifty thousand pesos (P50,000.00) x x x.
III. Whether the complaint for accion publiciana is barred by res judicata. (Emphasis supplied.)
Section 3 of the same law provides: (4) By the possession of another, subject to the provisions of Article 537, if the new possession has
Section. 3. Section 33 of the same law is hereby amended to read as follows: lasted longer than one year. But the real right of possession is not lost till after the lapse of ten years.
Section. 33. Jurisdiction of Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts and Municipal Circuit Trial (Emphasis supplied.)
Courts in Civil Cases. - Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts, and Municipal Circuit Trial
Courts shall exercise:
The respondents point out that the Spouses Supapo filed the complaint for accion publiciana on March 7,
2008 or more than ten (10) years after the certificate to file action was issued on November 25, 1992.
xxxx The respondents contend that the Spouses Supapo may no longer recover possession of the subject
property, the complaint having been filed beyond the period provided by law.
(3) Exclusive original jurisdiction in all civil actions which involve title to, or possession of, real property,
or any interest therein where the assessed value of the property or interest therein does not exceed Further, while the respondents concede that the Spouses Supapo hold a TCT over the subject property,
Twenty thousand pesos (P20,000.00) or, in civil actions in Metro Manila, where such assessed value and assuming a Torrens title is imprescriptible and indefeasible, they posit that the latter have lost their
does not exceed Fifty thousand pesos (P50,000.00) exclusive of interest, damages of whatever kind, right to recover possession because of laches.
attorney's fees, litigation expenses and costs x x x. (Emphasis supplied.)
On their part, the Spouses Supapo admit that they filed the complaint for accion publiciana more than
In view of these amendments, jurisdiction over actions involving title to or possession of real property is ten (10) years after the certificate to file action was issued. Nonetheless, they argue that their cause of
now determined by its assessed value.40 The assessed value of real property is its fair market value action is imprescriptible since the subject property is registered and titled under the Torrens system.
multiplied by the assessment level. It is synonymous to taxable value.41
We rule that the Spouses Supapo's position is legally correct.
In Quinagoran v. Court of Appeals,42 we explained:
At the core of this controversy is a parcel of land registered under the Torrens system. The Spouses
Supapo acquired the TCT on the subject lot in 1979.46 Interestingly, the respondents do not challenge
[D]oes the RTC have jurisdiction over all cases of recovery of possession regardless of the value of the
the existence, authenticity and genuineness of the Supapo's TCT.47
property involved?
In defense, the respondents rest their entire case on the fact that they have allegedly been in actual,
The answer is no. The doctrine on which the RTC anchored its denial of petitioner's Motion to Dismiss, as
public, peaceful and uninterrupted possession of the subject property in the concept of an owner since
affirmed by the CA — that all cases of recovery of possession or accion publiciana lies with the regional
1992. The respondents contend that they built their houses on the subject lot in good faith. Having
trial courts regardless of the value of the property — no longer holds true. As tilings now stand, a
possessed the subject lot for more than ten (10) years, they claim that they can no longer be disturbed in
distinction must be made between those properties the assessed value of which is below P20,000.00,
their possession.48
if outside Metro Manila; and P50,000.00, if within.43 (Emphasis supplied.)
Under the undisputed facts of this case, we find that the respondents' contentions have no legal basis.
In this regard, the complaint must allege the assessed value of the real property subject of the complaint
or the interest thereon to determine which court has jurisdiction over the action. This is required In a long line of cases, we have consistently ruled that lands covered by a title cannot be acquired by
because the nature of the action and the court with original and exclusive jurisdiction over the same is prescription or adverse possession. We have also held that a claim of acquisitive prescription is baseless
determined by the material allegations of the complaint, the type of relief prayed for by the plaintiff, and when the land involved is a registered land because of Article 112649 of the Civil Code in relation to Act
the law in effect when the action is filed, irrespective of whether the plaintiffs are entitled to some or all 496 [now, Section 47 of Presidential Decree (PD) No. 152950].51
of the claims asserted therein.44
The Spouses Supapo (as holders of the TCT) enjoy a panoply of benefits under the Torrens system. The
In the present case, the Spouses Supapo alleged that the assessed value of the subject lot, located in most essential insofar as the present case is concerned is Section 47 of PD No. 1529 which states:
Metro Manila, is P39,980.00. This is proven by the tax declaration45 issued by the Office of the City
Assessor of Caloocan. The respondents do not deny the genuineness and authenticity of this tax Section 47. Registered land not subject to prescriptions. No title to registered land in derogation of the
declaration. title of the registered owner shall be acquired by prescription or adverse possession.

Given that the Spouses Supapo duly complied with the jurisdictional requirements, we hold that the
MeTC of Caloocan properly acquired jurisdiction over the complaint for accion publiciana. In addition to the imprescriptibility, the person who holds a Torrens Title over a land is also entitled to
the possession thereof.52 The right to possess and occupy the land is an attribute and a logical
The cause of action consequence of ownership.53 Corollary to this rule is the right of the holder of the Torrens Title to eject
has not prescribed any person illegally occupying their property. Again, this right is imprescriptible.54

The respondents argue that the complaint for accion publiciana is dismissible for being filed out of time. In Bishop v. CA,55 we held that even if it be supposed that the holders of the Torrens Title were aware of
the other persons' occupation of the property, regardless of the length of that possession, the lawful
owners have a right to demand the return of their property at any time as long as the possession was
They invoke Article 555 of the Civil Code, which states: Art. 555. A possessor may lose his possession:
unauthorized or merely tolerated, if at all.56

xxxx Even if the defendant attacks the Torrens Title because of a purported sale or transfer of the property,
we still rule in favor of the holder of the Torrens Title if the defendant cannot adduce, in addition to the the Rules of Civil Procedure; and (2) conclusiveness of judgment in Rule 39, Section 47(c).62
deed of sale, a duly-registered certificate of title proving the alleged transfer or sale.
"Bar by prior judgment" means that when a right or fact had already been judicially tried on the merits
A case in point is Umpoc v. Mercado57 in which we gave greater probative weight to the plaintiffs TCT vis- and determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, the final judgment or order shall be conclusive
a-vis the contested unregistered deed of sale of the defendants. Unlike the defendants in Umpoc, upon the parties and those in privity with them and constitutes an absolute bar to subsequent actions
however, the respondents did not adduce a single evidence to refute the Spouses Supapo's TCT. With involving the same claim, demand or cause of action.63
more reason therefore that we uphold the indefeasibility and imprescriptibility of the Spouses Supapo's
title. The requisites64 for res judicata under the concept of bar by prior judgment are:

By respecting the imprescriptibility and indefeasibility of the Spouses Supapo's TCT, this Court merely (1) The former judgment or order must be final;
recognizes the value of the Torrens System in ensuring the stability of real estate transactions and
integrity of land registration. (2) It must be a judgment on the merits;

We reiterate for the record the policy behind the Torrens System, viz.: (3) It must have been rendered by a court having jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties;
and
The Government has adopted the Torrens system due to its being the most effective measure to
guarantee the integrity of land titles and to protect their indefeasibility once the claim of ownership is (4) There must be between the first and second actions, identity of parties, subject matter, and cause
established and recognized. If a person purchases a piece of land on the assurance that the seller's title of action.
thereto is valid, he should not run the risk of being told later that his acquisition was ineffectual after all,
which will not only be unfair to him as the purchaser, but will also erode public confidence in the system
Res judicata is not present in this case.
and will force land transactions to be attended by complicated and not necessarily conclusive
investigations and proof of ownership. The further consequence will be that land conflicts can be even
While requisites one to three may be present, it is obvious that the there is no identity of subject matter,
more abrasive, if not even violent.58
parties and causes of action between the criminal case prosecuted under the Anti-Squatting Law and
the civil action for the recovery of the subject property.
With respect to the respondents' defense59 of laches, suffice it to say that the same is evidentiary in
nature and cannot be established by mere allegations in the pleadings.60 In other words, the party First, there is no identity of parties. The criminal complaint, although initiated by the Spouses Supapo,
alleging laches must adduce in court evidence proving such allegation. This Court not being a trier of was prosecuted in the name of the people of the Philippines. The accion publiciana, on the other hand,
facts cannot rule on this issue; especially so since the lower courts did not pass upon the same. was filed by and in the name of the Spouses Supapo.

Thus, without solid evidentiary basis, laches cannot be a valid ground to deny the Spouses Supapo's Second, there is no identity of subject matter. The criminal case involves the prosecution of a crime
petition.61 On the contrary, the facts as culled from the records show the clear intent of the Spouses under the Anti-Squatting Law while the accion publiciana is an action to recover possession of the
Supapo to exercise their right over and recover possession of the subject lot, viz.: (1) they brought the subject property.
dispute to the appropriate Lupon; (2) they initiated the criminal complaint for squatting; and (3) finally,
they filed the action publiciana. To our mind, these acts negate the allegation of laches. And third, there is no identity of causes of action. The people of the Philippines filed the criminal case to
protect and preserve governmental interests by prosecuting persons who violated the statute. The
With these as premises, we cannot but rule that the Spouses Supapo's right to recover possession of the Spouses Supapo filed the accion publiciana to protect their proprietary interests over the subject
subject lot is not barred by prescription. property and recover its possession.

The action is not barred Even casting aside the requirement of identity of causes of action, the defense of res judicata has still no
by prior judgment basis.

As a last-ditch effort to save their case, the respondents invoke res judicata. They contend that the The concept of "conclusiveness of judgment" does not require that there is identity of causes of action
decision of the CA in CA-G.R. SP No. 78649 barred the filing of the action publiciana. provided that there is identity of issue and identity of parties.65

To recall, CA-G.R. SP No. 78649 is the petition for certiorari filed by the respondents to challenge the Under this particular concept of res judicata, any right, fact, or matter in issue directly adjudicated or
RTC's issuance of the writ enforcing their civil liability (i.e., to vacate the subject property) arising from necessarily involved in the determination of an action before a competent court in which judgment is
their conviction under the Anti-Squatting Law. The CA granted the petition and permanently enjoined rendered on the merits is conclusively settled by the judgment therein and cannot again be litigated
the execution of the respondents' conviction because their criminal liability had been extinguished by between the parties and their privies, whether or not the claim, demand, purpose, or subject matter of
the repeal of the law under which they were tried and convicted. It follows that their civil liability arising the two actions is the same.66
from the crime had also been erased.
As already explained, there is no identity of parties between the criminal complaint under the Anti-
The respondents' reliance on the principle of res judicata is misplaced. Squatting law and the civil action for accion publiciana. For this reason alone, "collusiveness of
judgment" does not apply.
Res judicata embraces two concepts: (1) bar by prior judgment as enunciated in Rule 39, Section 47(b) of
Even if we assume, for the sake of argument, that there is identity of parties, "conclusiveness of (a) to execute a reconveyance within thirty (30) days after this decision shall have
judgment" still does not apply because there is no identity of issues. The issue in the criminal case is become final and executory in favor of defendant Felicidad Vda. De Cabrera
whether the respondents (accused therein) committed the crime alleged in the information, while the corresponding only to that portion of Lot No. 2239 actually and physically
only issue in accion publiciana is whether the Spouses Supapo have a better right than the respondents possessed and occupied by the defendant as seen from the sketch plan of Engr.
to possess and occupy the subject property. Enecio Magno (Exh. "2") and pinpointed and identified during the ocular
investigation as to its extent and boundaries of the said portion bought by
For all these reasons, the defense of res judicata is baseless. defendants Felicidad Vda. De Cabrera from Felicidad Teokemian;

Final Note
(b) To reimburse defendants for litigation expenses and attorney's fees in the
amount of P7,000.00; and
As a final note, we stress that our ruling in this case is limited only to the issue of determining who
between the parties has a better right to possession. This adjudication is not a final and binding
determination of the issue of ownership. As such, this is not a bar for the parties or even third persons to (c) To pay the cost.
file an action for the determination of the issue of ownership.
SO ORDERED.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, we GRANT the petition, and consequently REVERSE and SET
ASIDE the February 25, 2011 decision and August 25, 2011 resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
SP No. 111674. We are restating the facts as determined by the appellate court, viz:

SO ORDERED. On January 16, 1950, a Deed of Sale (Exh. B) was executed by Daniel Teokemian
and Albertana Teokemian in favor of Andres Orais over a parcel of unregistered
land situated at Abejod, Cateel, Davao Oriental with an area described as 7.3720
hectares. The property was owned in common by Daniel and Albertana and their
sister Felicidad Teokemian, having inherited the same from their late father,
G.R. No. 108547 February 3, 1997 Domingo Teokemian. However, the Deed of Sale was not signed by Felicidad,
although her name was printed therein as one of the vendors. On January 26,
1950, the parcel of land was surveyed in the name of Virgilia Orais, daughter of the
FELICIDAD VDA. DE CABRERA, MARYJANE CABRERA and FELICIDAD TEOKEMIAN, petitioners, vendee Andres Orais, and denominated as Lot No. 2239, PLS-287, Cateel Cadastre.
vs. As surveyed, the property had an area of 11.1000 hectares.
COURT OF APPEALS and VIRGILIA ORAIS DE FELICIO, represented by her Attorney-in-Fact, ERNESTO M.
ORAIS, respondents.
On June 24, 1957, Virgilia Orais was issued Free Patent No. V-79089. Original
Certificate of Title No. P-10908 was issued in her name (Exh. A).

On July 27, 1972, Alberto (sic Albertana) Teokemian executed a Deed of Absolute
TORRES, JR., J.: Sale conveying to Elano Cabrera, husband of Felicidad Cabrera, "ONE HALF
PORTION OF LOT NO. 2239. Cad-287, eastern portion, containing an area of FIFTY
Assailed in this Petition for Review on Certiorari is the Decision 1 of the respondent Court of Appeals FIVE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED TEN (55,510) SQUARE METERS, more or less"
dated January 7, 1993 in CA-G.R. No. 22407-CV, the dispositive portion of which reads: (Exh. 3), which portion supposedly corresponded to the one-third share in Lot
2239 of Felicidad Teokemian who was not a party to the Deed of Sale earlier
executed by her brother and sister in favor of Andres Orais, Virgilia Orais'
WHEREFORE, the decision of the lower court is hereby REVERSED and judgment is
predecessor-in-interest. It was explained by Felicidad Cabrera that the Deed of
hereby entered ordering defendants Felicidad Vda. de Cabrera and Marykane
Sale was signed by Albertana Teokemian, not by Felicidad Teokemian, because the
Cabrera to vacate the portion of Lot 2238 occupied by them and surrender
whole of Lot 2239 was adjudicated to Albertana in a decision of a cadastral court
possession thereof to plaintiff.
dated June 8, 1965 as evidenced by a Certification of an officer-in-charge of the
Office of the Clerk of Court, RTC, Br. 7, Baganga, Davao Oriental (Exh. 4). Felicidad
SO ORDERED. Cabrera and her husband immediately took possession of the western portion of
Lot 2239.
Reversed by the foregoing pronouncements was the decision 2 of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 7,
Baganga, Davao Oriental in Civil Case No. 379, an action for "Quieting of Title to Real Property, Damages In 1974 and 1978, Virgilia Orais' brothers, Rodolfo and Jimmy Orais went to Cateel,
with Preliminary Injunction." The trial court's disposition reads: Davao Oriental and confronted the Cabreras of the latter's alleged encroachment
and illegal occupation of their sister's land, but no concrete action on the matter
WHEREFORE, the plaintiff is hereby ordered: was pursued by Virgilia Orais until February 11, 1988 when she filed Civil Case No.
379 against Felicidad Cabrera, now a widow, and her daughter Marykane Cabrera
for "Quieting of Title to Real Property, Damages with Preliminary Mandatory In their answer with counterclaim (pp. 10-18, Records), defendants alleged that
Injunction." they acquired a portion of Lot 2239 in good faith and for value; that said portion
was owned by Felicidad Teokemian who was not a party to the Deed of Sale
executed by Daniel and Albertana Teokemian on January 16, 1950 in favor of
The complaint, which was amended on June 22, 1988 by including Felicidad
Andres Orais over Lot 2239; that not having signed the Deed of Sale, Felicidad
Teokemian as party defendant (pp. 42-47, Records), alleged that sometime in 1972
Teokemian's one-third share in Lot 2239 could not have been legally conveyed to
and 1973 the late Elano Cabrera and defendant Felicidad Cabrera, knowing that
Andres Orais; that Virgilia Orais (successor-in-interest of Andres Orais) committed
Lot 2239 was already registered in the name of the plaintiff, prepared a document
fraud in including the portion owned by Felicidad Teokemian in her applying for
of sale and had Felicidad Teokemian sign it conveying a portion of said lot to them
free patent over Lot 2239 is concerned pursuant to Art. 1456 of the Civil Code; and
as described in the Sketch Map (Annex D of the Complaint), after which they
that plaintiff is guilty of laches for not initiating an action against defendants to
entered and possessed said portion and enjoyed the fruits thereon. Plaintiff
recover the western portion of Lot 2239 despite plaintiff's knowledge of
further averred that by reason of the document of sale and the declaration of the
defendant's acquisition thereof in 1972, as in fact it was only in 1988 when the
property involved in the name of defendant Felicidad Vda. De Cabrera, there
complaint for quieting of title was filed in court.
created a cloud of doubt on the former's title on said property.

Defendants prayed, thus:


Plaintiff prayed as follows:

"WHEREFORE, this Honorable Court, after due notice and


WHEREFORE premises considered, plaintiff through the
hearing on the merits of this case; to issue order or orders;
undersigned counsel respectfully prays this Honorable Court
that:
1. Finding the defendants as the rightful, lawful, and legal
owner of that portion which was sold to them by Felicidad
a) After due notice and hearing, a Writ of Preliminary
Teokemian and which was included in the title of plaintiff;
Mandatory Injunction be issued restraining the defendants
from further dispossessing the plaintiff of the land in
question; 2. To find that the plaintiff did not own the said portion and
that they have personal knowledge of the same when the
plaintiff filed and secured the title under the Administrative
b) Ordering the defendants to pay jointly the plaintiff the
Proceeding;
amount of not less than Sixteen Thousand Two Hundred
(P16,200) as total value of the rice produced from the
riceland in question, and the amount of Twenty One 3. Finding that the plaintiff is only holding the title to that
Thousand Six Hundred (P21,600.00) Pesos as the total portion only in an implied trust in favor of the real owner;
proceeds of the nuts of the coconut land in question;
4. Finding the plaintiff legally obligated to cause the
c) The Defendants be ordered to pay the plaintiff the segregation of the portion at their expense and deliver
amount of Twenty Thousand (P20,000.00) Pesos and Ten formally the said portion to the real owners, the defendants.
Thousand (P10,000.00) Pesos as litigation expenses;
5. To order the plaintiff to execute, prepare and or make any
d) The defendants be ordered to pay Six Thousand instrument or document to finally vest in the Defendants
(P6,000.00) Pesos for attorney's fees; Four Hundred absolute, clear and flawless title or ownership over the
(P400.00) Pesos as expenses for every appearance in Court; portion which the plaintiff holds title in trust in defendant's
favor.
e) The document of sale executed by Felicidad Teokemian
and the Tax Declarations issued to the late Elano Cabrera 6. To Order the Plaintiff to pay actual damages in the sum of
and Felicidad Vda. De Cabrera and the subsequent Tax P2,000.00 as litigation expense and Attorney's fees in the
Declaration creating a cloud of doubt on the title, sum of P5,000.00 in favor of defendants;
possession, rights and interest be declared null and void for
being fraudulent and without any legal basis and inexistent;
7. To direct the plaintiff to account for the share of the real
and
owner of the portion of land illegally cultivated and planted
by plaintiff to rice in favor of FELICIDAD TEOKEMIAN to be
f) Such other reliefs and remedies which this Honorable paid thru the Defendants who are the owners, which
Court may deem just, proper, and equitable in the premises.' consisted in ONE THIRD OF THE RICE HARVEST every year
since the year 1950 to 1972 when the portion was sold and
cultivated by defendant based on the computation of Second. There was no allegation, much less proof, that Lot 2239 had been
income by the plaintiff in Paragraph 16, a paragraph in the partitioned among the co-owners Daniel, Albertana, and Felicidad, all surnamed
Second Cause of Action of the complaint; Teokemian, before the land was sold to Andres Orais in 1950 when the same was
still unregistered. This being the case, and assuming that Felicidad Teokemian had
retained ownership over an undivided one-third portion of Lot 2239 despite its
and to grant the defendants such other reliefs and remedies
being titled in plaintiffs name in 1958, Felicidad Teokemian could only dispose her
proper and equitable in the premises. 3
undivided interest, not a definite portion described in the Deed of Sale executed
on July 27, 1972 (Exh. 3) as "eastern part". Worse, the supposed vendee, Elcano
On April 27, 1989, the lower court rendered judgment in favor of defendants and against the plaintiff, Cabrera, and her successors-in-interest, defendants Felicidad vda. de Cabrera and
ruling that the latter can no longer recover the western portion of Lot 2239 conveyed in 1972 by Marykane Cabrera, occupied the western portion of Lot 2239, not the eastern
Felicidad Teokemian in favor of the late Elano Cabrera and Felicidad Cabrera due to laches. In support of portion which was the subject of the sale. Their occupation of a definite portion of
its findings, the trial court referred to the Court's pronouncements in Lola vs. Court of Appeals 4 , where it an undivided property, without any color of title, could not have ripened into
was held that although the defense of prescription is unavailing to the petitioners, because, admittedly, ownership on the principle of laches.
the title to the subject lot was still registered in the name of the respondent, still the petitioners have
acquired title to it by virtue of the equitable principle of laches due to the respondent's failure to assert
Third. As testified to by Jimmy Orais, plaintiff's brother, it was only in 1974 when
her claim and ownership for thirty-two years; and in Republic vs. Court of Appeals 5 that, while it is true
plaintiff came to know that her property was occupied by Elcano Cabrera.
that by themselves tax receipts and declaration of ownership for taxation purposes are not
According to Jimmy, he and his elder brother Dr. Rodolfo Orais went to the house
incontrovertible evidence of ownership, they become strong evidence of ownership acquired by
of Elcano Cabrera three times in 1974 and in 1979 complaining of the latter's
prescription when accompanied by proof of actual possession of the property; and in Miguel
occupancy of their sister's property. Jimmy further declared that after Elcano
vs. Catalino, 6 that even granting appellant's proposition that no prescription lies against their fathers'
Cabrera was shown plaintiffs title to the property, Elcano Cabrera proposed a
recorded title, their passivity and inaction for more than thirty four years justifies the defendant appellee
relocation survey of the area to determine whether the premises occupied by him
in setting up the equitable defense of laches in his own behalf.
were included in the plaintiff's title (T.S.N. pp. 39-44, January 3, 1989). It appears,
however, that nothing came out of the proposal to conduct a relocation survey.
The respondent Court of Appeals reversed such findings upon appeal. From the time plaintiff became aware of Cabrera's possession of the western
portion of Lot 2239, which was in 1974, up to the time she instituted the action for
Even as the appellate court observed that the registration made by the plaintiff was fraudulent insofar as quieting of title in 1988, only fourteen (14) years had elapsed. This case, therefore,
it involved the one-third interest of Felicidad Teokemian, which was not included in the sale executed by has no congruency with those cases where the Supreme Court ruled that the
Albertana and Daniel Teokemian, it nevertheless upheld its effects, on the justification that the registered owner is barred by laches from recovering his property. Thus, in Lola
defendants' action for reconveyance based on an implied trust had already been barred by prescription. vs. Court of Appeals (145 SCRA 439), the petitioners acquired title to the land
Furthermore, the action of the plaintiff is not barred by laches as was held by the lower court. owned by respondent by virtue of the equitable principles of laches due, according
to the Supreme Court, to respondent's failure to assert her claims and ownership
for thirty-two (32) years.' In Miguel vs. Catalino (26 SCRA 234), the Supreme Court
Said the appellate court: said that appellants 'passivity and inaction for more than 34 years (1928-1962)
justifies the defendant-appellee in setting up the equitable defense of laches in his
We disagree with the lower court's ruling that plaintiff is barred from bringing an behalf.' In Mejia vs. Gampomana (100 Phil 277), it was held that "the original
action for recovery of ownership. Parenthetically, while the complaint filed by owner's right to recover back the possession of the property and title thereto from
plaintiff is designated as one for quieting of title, the allegations therein show that the defendant has by the long period of 37 years and by the patentee's inaction
it is actually for recovery of ownership/possession. and neglect been converted into a stale demand."

First. The Deed of Absolute Sale dated May 27, 1972 (Exh. 3) executed by Laches, in a general sense, is failure or neglect, for an unreasonable and
Albertana Teokemian in favor of Elcano Cabrera over the portion of 55,510 square unexplained length of time, to do that which, by the exercise of due diligence,
meters of Lot 2238 which allegedly pertained to the one-third interest of Felicidad could or should have been done earlier; it is negligence or omission to assert a
Teokemian did not convey any title to Elcano Cabrera, assuming that Felicidad right within a reasonable time, warranting a presumption that the party entitled to
Teokemian still owned a one-third portion of Lot 2238 which was already assert it (Tijam vs. Sibonghanoy, 32 SCRA 29). Since imprescriptibility is one of the
registered in plaintiffs name, considering that Albertana did not have any authority basic features of a Torrens title, it is not an ordinary delay in asserting one's right
from Felicidad Teokemian to effect such conveyance. Consequently, defendants that will give rise to the application of the principle of laches, otherwise, registered
Felicidad vda. De Cabrera and Marykane Cabrera had acquired no title upon which title can easily be defeated by prescription. This is precisely the reason why, in the
to anchor their claim of ownership over the one-third portion. Such being the case, cases cited, the delay or inaction by the registered owners in asserting their rights
plaintiffs cannot be barred by laches from instituting the action to quiet title was considered unreasonable and unexplained because it took them from 32 to 37
against defendants years to do so. In contrast, the delay in the case at bar was only fourteen years.

xxx xxx xxx While possession of defendants Felicidad vda. De Cabrera and Marykane Cabrera
could not have ripened into ownership as already discussed, they are possessors in
good faith of the portion occupied by them and, therefore, entitled to the benefits It was the respondent appellate court which observed that "the registration of the plaintiff's title over
accorded by the Civil Code as such. 7 the subject property was fraudulent insofar as it involved the one-third interest of Felicidad Teokemian
who did not sign the Deed of Sale in favor of plaintiff's predecessor-in-interest and, therefore, the latter
held that portion as a trustee of an implied trust for the benefit of Felicidad, pursuant to Art. 1456 of the
Sisters Felicidad Vda. de Cabrera and Marykane Cabrera, together with Felicidad Teokemian are now
Civil Code." 9 Needless to state, these conclusions, being matters of fact, are entitled to our full
before the Court as Petitioners in this Petition for Review on Certiorari, seeking relief from the
affirmation, since they are congruent with the findings of trial court, thus:
respondent court's decision, assigning as errors the following:

It would seem from the facts of the case that the basis of the right of plaintiff over
RESPONDENT COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN RULING THAT PRIVATE RESPONDENT'S
the land in litigation specifically Lot No. 2239 now titled in the name of the
COMPLAINT FILED IN 1988 FOR QUIETING OF TITLE WHICH ACTUALLY IS ONE FOR
plaintiff, located at Buayahon, Abejod, Cateel, Davao Oriental, proceeded from the
RECOVERY OF OWNERSHIP AND POSSESSION AS FOUND BY RESPONDENT COURT
Deed of Sale executed by Daniel Teokemian and Albertana Teokemian on January
IS NOT BARRED BY LACHES BECAUSE:
16, 1950 acknowledged before Judge Proserador Danao as Notary Ex Oficio. Taking
a hard look over the aforesaid deed of sale (Exh. "B") the said document
1. A PERIOD OF 30 YEARS HAD ELAPSED FROM 1958 WHEN apparently included the third heir of Domingo Teokemian Felicidad Teokemian
TORRENS TITLE WAS ISSUED TO PRIVATE RESPONDENT TO because her name was typewritten together with her sister Albertana and brother
1988 WHEN HER COMPLAINT BELOW WAS FILED DURING Daniel all surnamed Teokemian in the said document. Again this fact will come to
WHICH PERIOD OF TIME THE PROPERTY HAS BEEN IN OPEN, mind that the vendee Andres Orais was anticipating at the time Felicidad
CONTINUOUS AND ADVERSE POSSESSION OF THE ORIGINAL Teokemian will also sell her share in this portion of land (Lot No. 2239) which at
OWNER, FELICIDAD TEOKEMIAN, FROM 1958, OR EVEN the time of the sale it was still unregistered land. The non-signing of Felicidad
EARLIER IN 1941 WHEN SHE INHERITED THE PROPERTY, TO Teokemian over her typewritten name in this deed of sale (Exh. "B") will attest to
1972 WHEN SHE SOLD IT TO THE CABRERAS WHO the fact that she did not sell her share in the lot in question. Alter this sale the
CONTINUED THE PRIOR POSSESSION UNTIL 1988 WHEN vendee Andres Orais through his encargado Melecio Capilitan and later Servillano
PRIVATE RESPONDENT'S COMPLAINT WAS FILED. Abarca immediately took possession of the two third portion of said parcel of land
respecting the third portion owned by Felicidad Teokemian." 10
2. ASSUMING ARGUENDO RESPONDENT COURT'S HOLDING
THAT ONLY 14 YEARS HAD ELAPSED COUNTED FROM 1974 However, the appellate court stated further that nonetheless, the plaintiff's attempt to recover the
WHEN CABRERAS' POSSESSION WAS QUESTIONED BY property is justified because defendant Felicidad Teokemian's own action for reconveyance has already
PRIVATE RESPONDENT'S BROTHERS, STILL THAT PERIOD been barred by prescription, 11 which is the same as stating that the very tardiness of the plaintiff in
CONSTITUTES LACHES. pursuing the present action for reconveyance of the subject property has rendered the defendants'
defense nugatory, and has made the fortress of the plaintiff's case impregnable.
B
This conclusion is incorrect. As can be discerned from the established facts, the Certificates of Title of the
RESPONDENT COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDlNG THAT LACHES DOES NOT vendees Orais are, to say the least, irregular, and were issued in a calculated move to deprive Felicidad
APPLY BECAUSE WHAT WAS SOLD TO THE CABRERAS WAS A DEFINITE PORTION OF Teokemian of her dominical rights over the property reserved to her by descent. Plaintiff could not have
THE COMMUNITY PROPERTY BEFORE PARTITION, HENCE, VOID AND THAT registered the part reserved to Felicidad Teokemian, as this was not among those ceded in the Deed of
ALBERTANA TEOKEMIAN WHO SIGNED THE DOCUMENT OF SALE IN FAVOR OF THE Sale between Daniel/Albertana Teokemian and Andres Orais. It must be remembered that registration
CABRERAS HAD NO AUTHORITY FROM HER SISTER-CO-OWNER FELICIDAD does not vest title, it is merely evidence of such title over a particular property. (Embrado vs. Court of
TEOKEMIAN TO EXECUTE THE DEED OF CONVEYANCE. 8 Appeals) 12

The bone of the petitioners' contention rests on the alleged waiver of the plaintiff to recover any interest The defense of indefeasibility of the Torrens Title does not extend to a transferee who takes the
she had in the one-third portion of the property inherited by Daniel, Albertana and Felicidad Teokemian certificate of title with notice of a flaw in his title.
from their late father, Domingo, due to the long period of time which lapsed from the time the plaintiff's
title was registered until the action for quieting of title was instituted. (Anonuevo vs. Court of Appeals) 13 The principle of indefeasibility of title is unavailing where
there was fraud that attended the issuance of the free patents and titles.(Meneses vs. Court
We find merit in the petition. of Appeals) 14

At the outset, it must be observed that the Certificate of Title of the plaintiff, which was derived from Be that as it may, that the right of the defendants for reconveyance of the subject property arising from
Free Patent No. V-79089, issued in the name of Virgilia Orais, leaves much to be desired in propriety, an implied trust under Article 1456 of the Civil Code is material to the instant case, such remedy has not
considering that the Deed of Sale executed by Daniel and Albertana Teokemian, on one hand and Andres yet lapsed, as erroneously submitted by the plaintiff, and, is thus, a bar to the plaintiff's action. In the
Orais on the other, did not bear the signature of Felicidad Teokemian and therefore did not cover the case of Heirs of Jose Olviga vs. Court of Appeals, 15 we observed that an action for reconveyance of a
latter's share. parcel of land based on implied or constructive trust prescribes in ten years, the point of reference being
the date of registration of the deed or the date of the issuance of the certificate of title over the
property, but this rule applies only when the plaintiff or the person enforcing the trust is not in acquired by prescription or adverse possession. The same is not true with regard to Laches. 20 As we have
possession of the property, since if a person claiming to be the owner thereof is in actual possession of stated earlier in Mejia de Lucas vs. Gamponia, while the defendant may not be considered as having
the property, as the defendants are in the instant case, the right to seek reconveyance, which in effect acquired title by virtue of his and his predecessor's long continued possession (37 years) the original
seeks to quiet title to the property, does not prescribe. The reason for this is that one who is in actual owner's right to recover back the possession of the property and the title thereto from the defendant
possession of a piece of land claiming to be the owner thereof may wait until his possession is disturbed has, by the latter's long period of possession and by patentee's inaction and neglect, been converted into
or his title is attacked before taking steps to vindicate his right, the reason for the rule being, that his a stale demand.
undisturbed possession gives him a continuing right to seek the aid of a court of equity to ascertain and
determine the nature of the adverse claim of a third party and its effect on his own title, which right can
The argument that laches does not apply because what was sold to the Cabreras was a definite portion
be claimed only by one who is in possession.
of the community property, and, therefore, void, is likewise untenable.

As it is, before the period of prescription may start, it must be shown that (a) the trustee has performed
Under Article 493 of the Civil Code:
unequivocal acts of repudiation amounting to an ouster of the cestui que trust, (b) such positive acts of
repudiation have been made known to the cestui que trust, and, (c) the evidence thereon is clear and
positive. 16 Each co-owner shall have the full ownership of his part and of the fruits and
benefits pertaining thereto, and even he may therefore alienate, assign or
mortgage it, and even substitute another person in its enjoyment, except when
In the case at bar, the defendant Felicidad Teokemian, and thereafter, the Cabreras, were in actual
personal rights are involved. But the effect of the alienation or the mortgage, with
possession of the property since it was left to Felicidad Teokemian by her father in 1941, which
respect to the co-owners, shall be limited to the portion which may be allotted to
possession had not been interrupted, despite the sale of the two-third portion thereof to the plaintiff in
him in the division upon the termination of the co-ownership.
1950, and the latter's procurement of a Certificate of Title over the subject property in 1957. Until the
institution of the present action in 1988, plaintiff, likewise, had not displayed any unequivocal act of
repudiation, which could be considered as an assertion of adverse interest from the defendants, which In Go Ong vs. Court of Appeals, 21 this Court ruled that the heirs, as co-owners, shall each have the full
satisfies the above-quoted requisites. Thus, it cannot be argued that the right of reconveyance on the ownership of his part and the fruits and benefits pertaining to it. An heir may, therefore, alienate, assign
part of the defendants, and its use as defense in the present suit, has been lost by prescription. or mortgage it, and even substitute another person in its enjoyment, except when the personal rights are
involved. But the effect of the alienation or mortgage, with respect to the co-owners, shall be limited to
the portion which may be allotted to him in the division upon the termination of the co-ownership.
On the other hand, the action for reconveyance (quieting of title) of the plaintiff was instituted only in
1988, that is, thirty years from the time the plaintiff's husband was able to acquire Certificate of Title
covering the properties inherited by the Teokemians, and apparently including that portion belonging to Undisputed is the fact that since the sale of the two-third portion of the subject property to the plaintiff,
Felicidad Teokemian. In the meantime, defendant Felicidad vda. De Cabrera and her late husband have the latter had allowed Felicidad Teokemian to occupy that one-third portion allotted to her. There has,
been actively in possession of the same, tilling it, and constructing an irrigation system thereon. This therefore, been a partial partition, where the transferees of an undivided portion of the land allowed a
must surely constitute such tardiness on the part of the plaintiff constituting the basis for laches. co-owner of the property to occupy a definite portion thereof and has not disturbed the same, for a
period too long to be ignored--the possessor is in a better condition or right (Potior est conditio
possidentis).
Laches has been defined as the failure or neglect, for an unreasonable and unexplained 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 Clearly, the plaintiff in this instance is barred from asserting her alleged right over the portion subject
assert it either has abandoned it or declined to assert it. 17 The defense of laches is an equitable one and matter in the instant case on the ground that their right has been lost by laches. In Bailon-Casilao
does not concern itself with the character of the defendants title, but only with whether or not by reason vs. Court of Appeals, we ruled that:
of plaintiffs long inaction or inexcusable neglect, he should be barred from asserting his claim at all,
because to allow him to do so would be inequitable and unjust to defendant. Laches is not concerned As early as 1923, this Court has ruled that even if a co-owner sells the whole
merely with lapse of time, unlike prescription. While the latter deals with the fact of delay, laches deals property as his, the sale will affect only his own share but not those of the other
with the effect of unreasonable delay. 18 co-owners who did not consent to the sale (Punzalan vs. Boon Liat, 44 Phil 320
[1923]). This is because under the aforementioned codal provision, the sale or
This Court emphasized in Mejia de Lucas vs. Gampona, 19 the reason upon which the rule is based is not other disposition affects only his undivided share and the transferee gets only
alone the lapse of time during which the neglect to enforce the right has existed, but the changes of what would correspond to his grantor in the partition of the things owned in
condition which may have arisen during the period in which there has been neglect. In other words, common (Ramirez vs. Bautista, 14 Phil 528 [1909]). . . . For Article 494 of the Civil
where a court finds that the position of the parties has to change, that equitable relief cannot be Code explicitly declares: "No prescription shall lie in favor of a co-owner or co-heir
afforded without doing injustice, or that the intervening rights of third persons may be destroyed or so long as he expressly or impliedly recognizes the co-ownership. 22
seriously impaired, it will not exert its equitable powers in order to save one from the consequences of
his own neglect. IN VIEW WHEREOF, the petition is hereby GRANTED. The decision of the Court of Appeals dated January
7, 1993 is hereby SET ASIDE. The decision of the trial court dated April 27, 1989 is hereby REINSTATED in
In our jurisdiction, it is an enshrined rule that even a registered owner of property may be barred from toto.
recovering possession of property by virtue of laches. Under the Land Registration Act (now the Property
Registration Decree), no title to registered land in derogation to that of the registered owner shall be SO ORDERED.
In 1988, when petitioner inquired at the Office of the Register of Deeds of Iloilo City, she discovered that
respondent Jose had already executed an Affidavit of Adjudication10 dated April 17, 1974, declaring that
he is the only surviving heir of the registered owners and adjudicating unto himself Lots 3244, 3246 and
G.R. No. 161360 October 19, 2011
1404. Consequently, the OCTs of the aforementioned lots were cancelled, and in place thereof, the
Register of Deeds of Iloilo City issued TCT No. T-37195 for Lot 3244, TCT No. T-4665 for Lot 3246, and TCT
ESTRELLA TIONGCO YARED (Deceased) substituted by CARMEN M. TIONGCO a.k.a. CARMEN MATILDE No. T-37193 for Lot 1404, all in the name of respondent Jose.11
B. TIONGCO, Petitioner,
vs.
Based on the records with the Register of Deeds, it also appears that on May 10, 1974, the same day
JOSE B. TIONGCO and ANTONIO G. DORONILA, JR., Respondents.
when the TCTs covering Lots 3244 and 1404 were issued, respondent Jose sold the said lots to Catalino
Torre. TCT Nos. T-37195 and T-37193 were thus cancelled and TCT Nos. T-37196 and T-37194 were
DECISION issued in the name of Catalino Torre.12

VILLARAMA, JR., J.: Similarly, the records of the Register of Deeds showed that Lot 3246 was likewise disposed of by
respondent Jose. On March 30, 1979, or barely two days after obtaining TCT No. T-4665, respondent Jose
Before us on appeal by way of a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 is the Court of Appeals sold Lot 3246 to respondent Antonio G. Doronila, Jr. who was issued TCT No. T-4666 which cancelled TCT
(CA) August 28, 2003 Decision1 which dismissed petitioner Estrella Tiongco Yared’s appeal and affirmed No. T-4665. Catalino Torre also sold Lots 3244 and 1404 on the same date to Doronila who was issued
the Decision2 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 26, of Iloilo City, dismissing petitioner’s complaint the corresponding new TCTs.13 However, just a few days later, or on April 2, 1979, Doronila sold Lot 1404
for annulment of affidavit of adjudication, deeds of sale and Transfer Certificates of Title (TCTs), back to respondent Jose. Lots 3244 and 3246 were also sold back to respondent on January 17, 1980.14
reconveyance and damages. Also assailed is the appellate court’s November 27, 2003
Resolution3 denying petitioner’s motion for reconsideration. On October 2, 1990, petitioner filed a complaint before the court a quo against her nephew respondent
Jose and respondent Antonio G. Doronila, Jr. Petitioner argued that respondent Jose knowingly and
The factual antecedents, as culled from the records, follow: wilfully made untruthful statements in the Affidavit of Adjudication because he knew that there were
still other living heirs entitled to the said properties.15 Petitioner claimed that the affidavit was null and
void ab initio and as such, it did not transmit or convey any right of the original owners of the properties.
Matilde, Jose, Vicente, and Felipe, all surnamed Tiongco, were born to Atanacio and Maria Luis Tiongco. Any transfer whatsoever is perforce likewise null and void.16 Moreover, the petitioner averred that since
Together they were known as the Heirs of Maria Luis de Tiongco. respondent Jose executed said documents through fraud, bad faith, illegal manipulation and
misrepresentation, Lots 3244 and 1404 should be reconveyed to its original registered owners and Lot
The present dispute involves three parcels of land namely, Lots 3244, 3246 and 1404, all located in Iloilo 3246 to the heirs of Maria Luis de Tiongco subject to subsequent partition among the heirs.17 Petitioner
City. Lots 3244 and 1404 used to be covered by Original Certificates of Title (OCTs) Nos. 484 and 1482, also posited that granting for the sake of argument that the affidavit of adjudication was simply voidable,
respectively, in the names of Matilde (wife of Vicente Rodriguez), Jose (married to Carmen Sonora), respondent Jose became a trustee by constructive trust of the property for the benefit of the
Vicente (married to Ursula Casador), and Felipe (married to Sabina Montelibano), each in ¼ undivided petitioner.18
share, while Lot 3246 used to be covered by OCT No. 368 in the name of "Heirs of Maria Luis de
Tiongco."4 Respondent Jose, for his part, argued that the petitioner’s father, Jose, was not an heir of Maria Luis de
Tiongco but an heir of Maria Cresencia de Loiz y Gonzalez vda. De Tiongco. Respondent Jose claimed that
While all of the Heirs of Maria Luis de Tiongco have died, they were survived by their children and he was the only legitimate son and that while it was true that he has two other siblings, he refused to
descendants. Among the legitimate children of Jose were petitioner and Carmelo Tiongco, the father of acknowledge them because they are illegitimate.19 Respondent Jose denied that the series of sales of the
respondent Jose B. Tiongco.5 properties was fraudulent. He claimed that Lot 3244 was bought by the City of Iloilo from its own auction
sale for tax delinquency and was merely resold to him. Respondent Jose averred that he has been paying
real property taxes on the said properties for more than ten (10) years and that petitioner collected
Sometime in 1965, petitioner built her house on Lot 14046 and sustained herself by collecting rentals rentals from Lots 3244 and 3246 only because he allowed her.20
from the tenants of Lots 3244 and 3246. In 1968, petitioner, as one of the heirs of Jose, filed an adverse
claim affecting all the rights, interest and participation of her deceased father on the disputed lots, but
the adverse claim was annotated only on OCT No. 484 and OCT No. 1482, respectively covering Lots 3244 After trial, the Iloilo City RTC ruled in favor of respondent Jose. The court a quo ruled that prescription
and 1404.7 has set in since the complaint was filed only on October 2, 1990 or some sixteen (16) years after
respondent Jose caused to be registered the affidavit of adjudication on May 10, 1974.21

In 1983, respondent Jose prohibited petitioner from collecting rentals from the tenants of Lots 3244 and
3246. In December 1983, respondent Jose filed a suit for recovery of possession with preliminary Aggrieved, petitioner appealed to the CA22 which, however, sustained the trial court’s ruling. The CA
injunction against several tenants of Lots 3244 and 3246 wherein he obtained a judgment in his agreed with the trial court that an action for reconveyance can indeed be barred by prescription.
favor.8 Respondent Jose also filed a case for unlawful detainer with damages against petitioner as she According to the CA, when an action for reconveyance is based on fraud, it must be filed within four
was staying on Lot 1404. While the RTC, Branch 33, of Iloilo City ruled in respondent Jose’s favor, the CA years from discovery of the fraud, and such discovery is deemed to have taken place from the issuance of
reversed the RTC’s decision and ruled in favor of petitioner.9 As such, respondent Jose never took the original certificate of title. On the other hand, an action for reconveyance based on an implied or
possession of the properties. constructive trust prescribes in ten (10) years from the date of issuance of the original certificate of title
or transfer certificate of title. For the rule is that the registration of an instrument in the Office of the
Register of Deeds constitutes constructive notice to the whole world and therefore the discovery of more than ten (10) years from the issuance of title to the land and declared that said action, when based
fraud is deemed to have taken place at the time of registration.23 on fraud, is imprescriptible as long as the land has not passed to an innocent buyer for value. But in all
those cases, the common factual backdrop was that the registered owners were never in possession of
the disputed property. The exception was based on the theory that registration proceedings could not be
Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration of the above ruling, but the CA as aforesaid, denied
used as a shield for fraud or for enriching a person at the expense of another.
petitioner’s motion. Hence, the present petition for review on certiorari.

In Alfredo v. Borras,31 the Court ruled that prescription does not run against the plaintiff in actual
Petitioner raised the following arguments in the petition, to wit:
possession of the disputed land because such plaintiff has a right to wait until his possession is disturbed
or his title is questioned before initiating an action to vindicate his right. His undisturbed possession gives
A. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN AFFIRMING THE LOWER COURT THAT THE him the continuing right to seek the aid of a court of equity to determine the nature of the adverse claim
AFFIDAVIT OF ADJUDICATION EXECUTED BY RESPONDENT JOSE B. TIONGCO, WHO IS A of a third party and its effect on his title. The Court held that where the plaintiff in an action for
LAWYER AND IS AWARE OF ITS NULLITY, IS MERELY VOIDABLE; ON THE CONTRARY, SAID reconveyance remains in possession of the subject land, the action for reconveyance becomes in effect
DOCUMENT IS A COMPLETE NULLITY BECAUSE RESPONDENT JOSE B. TIONGCO HAS an action to quiet title to property, which is not subject to prescription.
MALICIOUSLY AND IN BAD FAITH ADJUDICATED IN FAVOR OF HIMSELF THE PROPERTIES IN
QUESTION OVER WHICH HE, AS A LAWYER, KNOWS HE HAS NO RIGHTS WHATSOEVER AND HE
The Court reiterated such rule in the case of Vda. de Cabrera v. Court of Appeals,32 wherein we ruled that
ALSO KNOWS HAS BEEN IN POSSESSION OF THE PETITIONER AND HER PREDECESSORS-IN-
the imprescriptibility of an action for reconveyance based on implied or constructive trust applies only
INTEREST UNTIL THE PRESENT.
when the plaintiff or the person enforcing the trust is not in possession of the property. In effect, the
action for reconveyance is an action to quiet the property title, which does not prescribe.
B. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN AFFIRMING THE DISMISSAL OF
PETITIONER’S COMPLAINT BY THE LOWER COURT ON THE GROUND OF PRESCRIPTION
Similarly, in the case of David v. Malay33 the Court held that there was no doubt about the fact that an
BECAUSE THE RESPONDENT JOSE B. TIONGCO’S AFFIDAVIT OF ADJUDICATION, BEING A TOTAL
action for reconveyance based on an implied trust ordinarily prescribes in ten (10) years. This rule
NULLITY, THE ACTION TO DECLARE SUCH NULLITY AND OF THOSE SUBSEQUENT
assumes, however, that there is an actual need to initiate that action, for when the right of the true and
TRANSACTIONS ARISING FROM SAID ADJUDICATION DOES NOT PRESCRIBE, ESPECIALLY
real owner is recognized, expressly or implicitly such as when he remains undisturbed in his possession,
BECAUSE IN THIS CASE THE PETITIONER AND HER PREDECESSORS-IN-INTEREST HAVE ALWAYS
the statute of limitation would yet be irrelevant. An action for reconveyance, if nonetheless brought,
BEEN IN POSSESSION OF THE LOTS IN QUESTION AND RESPONDENT JOSE B. TIONGCO HAS
would be in the nature of a suit for quieting of title, or its equivalent, an action that is imprescriptible. In
NEVER BEEN IN POSSESSION THEREOF.24
that case, the Court reiterated the ruling in Faja v. Court of Appeals34 which we quote:

C. FURTHER, EVEN IF ARGUENDO, THE AFFIDAVIT OF ADJUDICATION IS VOIDABLE, THE


x x x There is settled jurisprudence that one who is in actual possession of a piece of land claiming to be
HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS STILL ERRED IN AFFIRMING THE DISMISSAL OF THE
owner thereof may wait until his possession is disturbed or his title is attacked before taking steps to
COMPLAINT BY THE LOWER COURT ON THE GROUND OF PRESCRIPTION BECAUSE THE
vindicate his right, the reason for the rule being, that his undisturbed possession gives him a continuing
RESPONDENT, JOSE B. TIONGCO, BEING A LAWYER AND BEING AWARE OF PETITIONER’S
right to seek the aid of a court of equity to ascertain and determine the nature of the adverse claim of a
OWNERSHIP OF THE LOTS IN QUESTION, THE SAID AFFIDAVIT OF ADJUDICATION MAKES THE
third party and its effect on his own title, which right can be claimed only by one who is in possession. No
RESPONDENT AN IMPLIED TRUSTEE THEREOF FOR THE PETITIONER AND THE ACTION FOR
better situation can be conceived at the moment for Us to apply this rule on equity than that of herein
RECONVEYANCE BASED ON TRUST DOES NOT PRESCRIBE SO LONG AS THE BENEFICIARY LIKE
petitioners whose mother, Felipa Faja, was in possession of the litigated property for no less than 30
THE PETITIONER HAS BEEN IN ACTUAL PHYSICAL POSSESSION OF THE PROPERTY SUBJECT
years and was suddenly confronted with a claim that the land she had been occupying and cultivating all
THEREOF, AS HELD IN THE CASE OF VDA. DE CABRERA VS. COURT OF APPEALS (267 SCRA
these years, was titled in the name of a third person. We hold that in such a situation the right to quiet
339).25
title to the property, to seek its reconveyance and annul any certificate of title covering it, accrued only
from the time the one in possession was made aware of a claim adverse to his own, and it is only then
The only issue in this case is who has a better right over the properties. that the statutory period of prescription commences to run against such possessor.1avvphi1

The petition is meritorious. In this case, petitioner’s possession was disturbed in 1983 when respondent Jose filed a case for recovery
of possession.35 The RTC of Iloilo City ruled in respondent Jose’s favor but the CA on November 28, 1991,
The Court agrees with the CA’s disquisition that an action for reconveyance can indeed be barred by during the pendency of the present controversy with the court a quo, ruled in favor of
prescription. In a long line of cases decided by this Court, we ruled that an action for reconveyance based petitioner.36 Petitioner never lost possession of the said properties, and as such, she is in a position to file
on implied or constructive trust must perforce prescribe in ten (10) years from the issuance of the the complaint with the court a quo to protect her rights and clear whatever doubts has been cast on her
Torrens title over the property.26 title by the issuance of TCTs in respondent Jose’s name.

However, there is an exception to this rule. In the case of Heirs of Pomposa Saludares v. Court of The Court further observes that the circuitous sale transactions of these properties from respondent Jose
Appeals,27 the Court reiterating the ruling in Millena v. Court of Appeals,28 held that there is but one to Catalino Torre, then to Antonio Doronila, Jr., and back again to respondent Jose were quite unusual.
instance when prescription cannot be invoked in an action for reconveyance, that is, when the plaintiff is However, this successive transfers of title from one hand to another could not cleanse the illegality of
in possession of the land to be reconveyed. In Heirs of Pomposa Saludares,29 this Court explained that respondent Jose’s act of adjudicating to himself all of the disputed properties so as to entitle him to the
the Court in a series of cases,30 has permitted the filing of an action for reconveyance despite the lapse of protection of the law as a buyer in good faith. Respondent Jose himself admitted that there exists other
heirs of the registered owners in the OCTs. Even the RTC found that "[t]hese allegations contained in the PROCOPIO TAPUROC, HEIRS OF ANTONIA EBE (Deceased) represented by her children namely: HEIRS
Affidavit of Adjudication executed by defendant Jose B. Tiongco are false because defendant Jose B. OF CELEDONIA PUTONG, namely: FORTUNATO ESCUDERO, TERESITA TABALDINA, CONCORDIO E.
Tiongco is not the only surviving heir of Jose Tiongco, Matilde Tiongco, Vicente Tiongco and Felipe NEBRIA, PEDRO ESCUDERO and LUISA PEDRERA; HEIRS OF EUFEMIO PUTONG, namely: RICARDO
Tiongco as the latters have other children and grandchildren who are also their surviving heirs."37 PUTONG and PORFERIA PUTONG; HEIRS OF GREGORIO PUTONG, namely: ROSALIO PUTONG,
PERSEVERANDA LOPEZ, BERNARDO PUTONG and ROSALINDA OMAGAC; HEIRS OF MARIANO PUTONG,
namely: SERAPIA DALHOG, TEODORA AYENG, MARCIANO PUTONG, RESTITUTA LIQUIT, SERAPIA LUAY,
In the case of Sandoval v. Court of Appeals,38 the Court defined an innocent purchaser for value as one
FAUSTINO PUTONG and SOFRONIA PATROLLA, ALL REPRESENTED BY THEIR ATTORNEY-IN- FACT,
who buys property of another, without notice that some other person has a right to, or interest in, such
AUREA P. MERCIDOR, Petitioners,
property and pays a full and fair price for the same, at the time of such purchase, or before he has notice
vs.
of the claim or interest of some other persons in the property. He is one who buys the property with the
CARMELITA LOQUELLANO VDA. DE MENDE and the HEIRS OF EVANS MENDE, namely: ERIC MITCHEL,
belief that the person from whom he receives the thing was the owner and could convey title to the
ERIC LYNDON, ERIC FERDINAND, JOSE ERIC ERVIN and JENNIFER MILDRED, ALL SURNAMED MENDE and
property. A purchaser can not close his eyes to facts which should put a reasonable man on his guard
the REGISTER OF DEEDS OF THE CITY OF TAGBILARAN, Respondents.
and still claim that he acted in good faith.

DECISION
And while it is settled that every person dealing with a property registered under the Torrens title need
not inquire further but only has to rely on the title, this rule has an exception. The exception is when the
party has actual knowledge of facts and circumstances that would impel a reasonably cautious man to GARCIA, J.:
make such inquiry or when the purchaser has some knowledge of a defect or the lack of title in his
vendor or of sufficient facts to induce a reasonably prudent man to inquire into the status of the title of
Under consideration is this petition for review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court to nullify and set aside
the property in litigation. The presence of anything which excites or arouses suspicion should then
the following issuances of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 64548, to wit:
prompt the vendee to look beyond the certificate and investigate the title of the vendor appearing on
the face of said certificate. One who falls within the exception can neither be denominated an innocent
purchaser for value nor a purchaser in good faith and hence does not merit the protection of the law.39 1. Decision1 dated September 21, 2001, affirming an earlier decision of the Regional Trial
Court (RTC) of Tagbilaran City, Branch 47, in an action for Declaration of Nullity of Deed of
Sale, Cancellation of Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. (8585) T-4767 and all Subsequent
In this case, when the subject properties were sold to Catalino Torre and subsequently to Doronila,
Documents and Damages, thereat commenced by the herein petitioners against the
respondent Jose was not in possession of the said properties. Such fact should have put the vendees on
respondents; and
guard and should have inquired on the interest of the respondent Jose regarding the subject
properties.40 But regardless of such defect on transfer to third persons, the properties again reverted
back to respondent Jose. Respondent Jose cannot claim lack of knowledge of the defects surrounding the 2. Resolution2 dated January 23, 2002, denying the petitioners’ motion for reconsideration.
cancellation of the OCTs over the properties and benefit from his fraudulent actions. The subsequent
sale of the properties to Catalino Torre and Doronila will not cure the nullity of the certificates of title The petition embodies an alternative prayer for this Court to remand the case to the trial court for the
obtained by respondent Jose on the basis of the false and fraudulent Affidavit of Adjudication. presentation of an expert witness.

WHEREFORE, the petition for review on certiorari is GRANTED. The August 28, 2003 Decision and The facts:
November 27, 2003 Resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 44794 are hereby REVERSED
and SET ASIDE. The Register of Deeds of Iloilo City is ordered to RESTORE Original Certificates of Title
Nos. 484, 1482, and 368, respectively covering Lots 3244, 1404 and 3246, under the name/s of the On September 19, 1996, in the RTC of Tagbilaran City, a Complaint for Declaration of Nullity of Deed of
registered original owners thereof. Sale, Cancellation of TCT No. (8585) T-4767 and all Subsequent Documents and Damages3 was filed by
the petitioners against respondents Carmelita Loquellano Vda. de Mende, the Heirs of Evans B. Mende,
and the Register of Deeds of the City of Tagbilaran. Thereat docketed as Civil Case No. 5970 and raffled
Furthermore, respondent Atty. Jose B. Tiongco is ORDERED to SHOW CAUSE, within ten (10) days from to Branch 47 of the court, the Complaint alleges that petitioners Procopio Tapuroc and all the successors-
notice hereof, why he should not be sanctioned as a member of the bar for executing the April 17, 1974 in-interest of deceased co-owner Antonia Ebe are the co-owners, co-heirs and/or descendants of the
Affidavit of Adjudication and registering the same with the Register of Deeds. original owners of a parcel of land with an area of 5,795 square meters, more or less, situated in the
Barrio (now District) of Booy, Tagbilaran, Bohol and previously covered by TCT No. 3444; that sometime
No pronouncement as to costs. in 1992, when the petitioners decided to partition the subject property, they discovered from the Office
of the City Assessor that the title covering the land was already in the name of a certain Evans Mende by
virtue of a Deed of Sale purportedly executed in favor of the latter by their predecessors-in-interest on
SO ORDERED.
December 30, 1967; that said Deed of Sale is a forged document because the alleged vendors therein,
who were Procopio Tapuroc and the predecessors-in-interest of the other petitioners, did not sign the
conveying deed nor receive any consideration therefor; and that one of the alleged vendors, Antonia
Ebe, had already passed away in 1960, or long before the purported Deed of Sale was said to have been
executed in 1967. Petitioners, as plaintiffs, thus pray for the nullification of the same Deed of Sale, the
G.R. No. 152007 January 22, 2007
cancellation of the title issued pursuant thereto in the name of Evans Mende and the restoration of the
previous title in their names, plus damages.
In their Answer,4 the respondent Mendes, as defendants, denied the material allegations of the WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS HAS CONTRADICTED ITSELF AND ARRIVED AT A CONCLUSION
Complaint and averred that the late Evans Mende, husband of respondent Carmelita Loquellano Vda. de CONTRARY TO THE RECORDS, LAW AND THE APPLICABLE JURISPRUDENCE.
Mende and father of the herein co-respondents, bought the subject parcel of land from its previous
owners on December 12, 1967 as evidenced by a Deed of Sale duly notarized by Atty. Rodolfo Yap. They
The recourse must fail.
further assert that they had been in open, continuous, and peaceful possession of the land in question
from the time of said sale, and had been religiously paying the realty taxes due thereon. By way of
affirmative defense, the respondents assert that petitioners’ cause of action, if any, had already As it is, the petitioners call for a review of the facts of the case. This is evident from the pleadings they
prescribed in view of the unreasonable delay in filing the suit in court, let alone the fact that their filed with this Court. In their main petition8 and Memorandum,9 the petitioners emphatically state:
(respondents’) title has become indefeasible.
The issue in the case at bar boils down to whether or not the signatures of the petitioners’ predecessors-
On June 7, 1999, after due proceedings, the trial court came out with its decision5 finding that the in-interest and Procopio Tapuroc (the only surviving vendor to the alleged deed of sale) were forged; and
evidence adduced by the plaintiffs (now petitioners) was insufficient to establish their claim that the if they were, is the declaration of nullity of the said deed of sale dated December 13, 1967 is proper (sic).
questioned Deed of Sale was a forgery. The court explained that despite the opportunity given them, the
plaintiffs failed to present a handwriting expert to determine whether the said Deed of Sale was indeed a Clearly, the foregoing statement calls for a determination of the truth or falsehood of an alleged fact, a
forged instrument, adding that laches had already set in because of plaintiffs’ inaction and neglect in matter not for this Court to resolve. Well-settled is the rule that factual questions may not be raised in a
questioning the supposed forged character of the document after the lapse of more than twenty-nine petition for review on certiorari. Section 1 of Rule 45 of the Revised Rules of Court is explicit. It reads:
(29) years from the time of its execution. Accordingly, the trial court rendered judgment dismissing the
Complaint, thus:
SECTION 1. Filing of petition with Supreme Court. – A party desiring to appeal by certiorari from a
judgment or final order or resolution of the Court of Appeals, the Sandiganbayan, the Regional Trial
WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, judgment is hereby rendered DISMISSING the complaint for lack Court or other courts whenever authorized by law, may file with the Supreme Court a verified petition
of merit. No compensation for damages, moral, exemplary and litigation expenses is awarded for failure for review on certiorari. The petition shall raise only questions of law which must be distinctly set
of plaintiffs (sic) to prove by preponderance of evidence the existence of malice or bad faith in filing the forth. (Emphasis supplied)
instant case.

Evident it is from the above that the function of the Court in petitions for review on certiorari is limited
SO ORDERED. to reviewing errors of law that may have been committed by the lower courts. And, as a matter of sound
practice and procedure, the Court defers and accords finality to the factual findings of trial courts, more
From the adverse decision of the trial court, the petitioners went on appeal to the CA in CA-G.R. CV No. so when, as here, such findings are undisturbed by the appellate court. This factual determination, as a
64548, faulting the court of origin in ruling that they failed to present convincing evidence to prove the matter of long and sound appellate practice, deserves great weight and shall not be disturbed on appeal,
fact of forgery in the execution of the assailed Deed of Sale. They likewise faulted the lower court in save only for the most compelling reasons,10 such as when that determination is clearly without
denying their motion to have the original copy of the Deed of Sale in dispute and their own Special evidentiary support or when grave abuse of discretion has been committed.11 This is as it should be since
Power of Attorney containing the genuine signatures of their predecessors-in-interest, be examined by a the Court, in petitions for review of CA decisions under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, usually limits its
handwriting expert. inquiry only to questions of law. Stated otherwise, it is not the function of the Court to analyze and
weigh all over again the evidence or premises supportive of the factual holdings of lower courts.12 The
Court refrains from further scrutiny of factual findings of trial courts, more so when those findings are
As stated at the outset hereof, the appellate court, in its Decision6 of September 21, 2001, dismissed the
affirmed by the CA, as here. To do otherwise would defeat the very essence of Rule 45 and would
petitioners’ appeal and affirmed that of the trial court. Their motion for reconsideration having been
convert the Court into a trier of facts, which it is not meant to be.13
denied by the CA in its Resolution7 of January 23, 2002, the petitioners are now with this Court via the
instant recourse on their main submission that -
What is more, it appears undisputed that the assailed Deed of Sale is a public document, having been
duly notarized by a certain Atty. Rodolfo Yap who, unfortunately, had already passed away. Being a
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR WHEN IT DISMISSED THE APPEAL
notarial instrument, the deed in question is a public document and as such enjoys the presumption of
OF THE PETITIONERS DESPITE SUFFICIENCY OF SUPPORTING EVIDENCE TO WARRANT A FAVORABLE
regularity in its execution. To overthrow that presumption, sufficient, clear and convincing evidence is
JUDGMENT ON THE PART OF THE PETITIONERS,
required, otherwise the document should be upheld.14

and presenting for our resolution the following issues:


Petitioners maintain, however, that by merely examining the signatures in the questioned Deed of Sale
and the genuine signatures of their predecessors-in-interest in their Special Power of Attorney, the
I glaring dissimilarities between the two sets of signatures are immediately evident to support their claim
of forgery.
WHETHER OR NOT THE DEED OF SALE ALLEGEDLY EXECUTED ON DECEMBER 30, 1967 BETWEEN THE
PETITIONERS’ PREDECESSORS-IN-INTEREST AND THE RESPONDENTS IS VALID. We are not convinced.

II
As a rule, forgery cannot be presumed. It must be proved by clear, positive and convincing evidence. The process of identification, therefore, must include the determination of the extent, kind, and
Mere allegation of forgery is not evidence and the burden of proof lies on the party alleging it.15 Here, significance of this resemblance as well as of the variation. It then becomes necessary to determine
the petitioners failed to discharge their burden. whether the variation is due to the operation of a different personality, or is only the expected and
inevitable variation found in the genuine writing of the same writer. It is also necessary to decide
whether the resemblance is the result of a more or less skillful imitation, or is the habitual and
As it were, the petitioners merely alleged that they filed two motions before the trial court to have the
characteristic resemblance which naturally appears in a genuine handwriting. When these two questions
original copy of the documents in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Tagbilaran City be examined by
are correctly answered the whole problem of identification is solved.
handwriting experts but their motions were ignored by the trial court. They then harp on the excuse that
they could not be expected to prove forgery if the trial court denied them the opportunity to do so.
In the present case, all that the petitioners had to offer by way of evidence on the issue of forgery was
their bare denial that their predecessors-in-interest signed the subject Deed of Sale. Such denial will not
We are not persuaded.
suffice to overcome the presumption of regularity of notarized documents, to overthrow which, the
countervailing evidence must be clear, convincing and more than merely preponderant.19
The trial court correctly ruled that the parties themselves dictate the course and flow of the presentation
of evidence, as well as the witnesses for each side. Considering that the case before it is civil, not
Moreover, and as aptly pointed out by the lower court in its decision of June 7, 1999:
criminal, the lower court certainly cannot, on its own, issue an order requiring a handwriting expert to
appear before it and compare the documents presented by the parties. It behooves upon the parties
themselves to call forth their own set of witnesses and present their own evidence to bolster their However, even if it were true that the signature of Antonia Ebe is forged, it cannot brush aside the fact
respective claims. If the petitioners failed to present an expert witness, only themselves ought to be that all the heirs of Antonia Ebe, namely: Celedonia Putong, Eufemio Putong, Gregorio Putong and
blamed. For, as the trial court itself pointed out in its decision: Mariano Putong all signed in the Deed of Absolute Sale. As earlier discussed their signatures cannot be
said to have been forged as evidence presented to prove the same is found to be insufficient.
Henceforth, all the rightful heirs who could question the subject sale are themselves signatories of the
x x x. Plaintiffs, despite the opportunity given them by this Court, failed to present a handwriting expert
supposed questionable transaction.
to determine whether there was indeed forgery in the execution of the subject Deed of Sale. In the
absence of the testimony of the handwriting expert, the allegations of forgery by the plaintiffs is merely
self-serving. Unfortunately, this Court is not in the position to assess or evaluate the differences and Meanwhile, granting that Procopio Tapuroc’s signature found on Exh. C is indeed a forgery, he testified in
similarities in the questioned signatures, much less, categorically state whether or not forgery exists. open court that he discovered the sale and the fact of Mende’s possession of the subject land in 1967 yet
Neither could this court rely on the observation of the plaintiffs as to the alleged "glaring differences and – and did not do anything about it.
dissimilarities" of the questioned signatures. (Underscoring ours)
At the other end of the spectrum, the respondents presented sufficient proof of their claim of ownership
Moreover, the technical procedure utilized by handwriting experts, while usually helpful in the over the property in dispute. The respondent Mendes maintain that they had been in continuous,
examination of forged documents, is not mandatory or indispensable to the examination or comparison peaceful and open possession of the property since 1967, the year of the alleged sale, or for more than
of handwritings.[16] thirty (30) years now. No less than the petitioners themselves acknowledged this in their
pleadings20 before this Court. And beginning the year 1968, the respondents have been religiously paying
the realty taxes due on the same property. Likewise, when TCT No. 3444 was lost, respondent Carmelita
In Jimenez v. Commission on Ecumenical Mission and Relations of the United Presbyterian Church in the
Loquellano Vda. de Mende filed a petition for judicial reconstitution to secure a second owner’s copy of
USA,[17] the Court identified and explained the factors involved in the examination and comparison of
the lost title. Said petition went through the proper procedure and thereafter Carmelita was issued a
handwritings:
second owner’s copy of TCT No. 3444 which was later changed to TCT No. (8585) T-4767.

xxx [T]he authenticity of a questioned signature cannot be determined solely upon its general
All told, we find that the petitioners, who initiated in the court of origin the basic complaint in this case,
characteristics, similarities or dissimilarities with the genuine signature. Dissimilarities as regards
have not sufficiently met the burden of proof to sustain their cause. Additionally, we agree with the CA in
spontaneity, rhythm, pressure of the pen, loops in the strokes, signs of stops, shades, etc., that may be
ruling that laches had barred the petitioners:
found between the questioned signatures and the genuine one are not decisive on the question of the
former’s authenticity. The result of examinations of questioned handwriting, even with the benefit of aid
of experts and scientific instruments, is, at best, inconclusive. There are other factors that must be taken xxx The records show that they [petitioners] did not institute any action against the order of the then
into consideration. The position of the writer, the condition of the surface on which the paper where the Court of First Instance, 14th Judiciary District. Their inaction and failure to assert any right, if any, over
questioned signature is written is placed, his state of mind, feelings and nerves, and the kind of pen the disputed lot, bars them from recovering the same as said failure clearly asserts to laches.
and/or paper used, play an important role on the general appearance of the signature. Unless, therefore,
there is, in a given case, absolute absence, or manifest dearth, of direct or circumstantial competent
Not to be overlooked is the fact that the petitioners filed their complaint of declaration of nullity only
evidence on the character of the questioned handwriting, much weight should not be given to
after twenty-nine (29) years from the execution of the alleged forged deed of sale. In the meanwhile,
characteristic similarities, or dissimilarities, between that questioned handwriting and an authentic one.
title to the property had already been in the name of respondent Mendes since 1967. The Mendes had
been in open, continuous and peaceful possession of the subject land, and had been religiously paying
And to determine forgery, the Court in Cesar v. Sandiganbayan18 (quoting Osborn, The Problem of Proof) the realty taxes due thereon. These are hard facts that ought not to be disregarded. The Court, in a long
wrote: line of cases,21 has uniformly held in favor of the registered owner who had been in possession of a
disputed property for a considerable period of time. With the Mendes’ possession in this case having
been in the concept of an owner and the land itself registered in their names for more than thirty (30) The case arose when petitioner filed on September 20, 2001 a complaint for unlawful detainer against
years now, their title thereto had become indefeasible and their possession could no longer be the respondents, alleging that she is the lawful and registered owner of the property; and that in 1984,
disturbed. The petitioners’ failure to take the necessary steps to assert their alleged right for at least she allowed respondents Evangeline, Buenaventura and Belen, out of kindness and tolerance, to
twenty-nine (29) years from date of registration of title is fatal to their cause of action on the ground of personally occupy units A, B and D, respectively. However, without her knowledge and consent,
laches. respondents separately leased the units to Montano Magpantay, Mel Navarro and Socorro Escota, who
despite repeated demands, failed and refused to vacate the premises and to pay the rentals thereof.6
As a final note, we emphasize that a Torrens title cannot be collaterally attacked. The question on the
validity of a Torrens title, whether fraudulently issued or not, can be raised only in an action expressly In their Answer, respondents claimed ownership over the subject property by succession. They alleged
instituted for that purpose. The title represented by the certificate cannot be changed, altered, modified, that while petitioner is the registered owner of the property, however, she is not the lawful owner
enlarged, diminished, or cancelled in a collateral proceeding. The action for the declaration of nullity of thereof because the June 14, 1984 Deed of Absolute Sale was simulated and void. As in Civil Case No. 01-
deed of sale commenced by the petitioners in the RTC of Tagbilaran City is not the direct proceeding 1641 now pending before the RTC of Makati City, Branch 141, which they filed to assail the validity of the
required by law to attack a Torrens certificate of title. said sale, respondents maintain that petitioner exerted undue influence over their father, who at that
time was seriously ill, to agree to the sale of the property for only ₱20,000.00 after knowing that only
two apartments were given to her in the Huling Habilin at Testamento. Further, she had no cause of
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is DENIED and the challenged decision of the CA is AFFIRMED.
action against them for being a party to the August 23, 1990 Partition Agreement wherein they
recognized each other as co-owners and partitioned the property in accordance with the provision of the
No pronouncement as to costs. last will and testament.7

SO ORDERED. On February 26, 2002, the MTC rendered a judgment in favor of the respondents and held that the deed
of sale was simulated otherwise petitioner would not have entered into the Partition Agreement, which
legally conferred upon each heir exclusive ownership over their respective shares, thus:

WHEREFORE, the Complaint is DISMISSED. Plaintiff is ordered to pay attorney’s fees of ₱10,000.00 and
the costs of suit in favor of defendants.
G.R. No. 175720 September 11, 2007
SO ORDERED.8
CRESENCIANA TUBO RODRIGUEZ (now deceased), substituted by SUSANA A. LLAGAS, Petitioner,
vs. On appeal, the RTC reversed the decision of the MTC. It held that petitioner’s certificate of title is a
EVANGELINE RODRIGUEZ, BELEN RODRIGUEZ and BUENAVENTURA RODRIGUEZ, Respondents. conclusive evidence of ownership of the land described therein; and that unless and until said title has
been annulled by a court of competent jurisdiction, such title is existing and valid. This is true also with
DECISION respect to the deed of sale. The present action, which involves only the issue of physical or material
possession, is not the proper action to challenge it. Further, the MTC erred when it relied heavily on the
"Huling Habilin at Testamento," which was not probated hence has no effect and no right can be claimed
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.: therein. The Partition Agreement which was allegedly entered into pursuant to the Huling Habilin at
Testamento should not also be considered. Thus:
This petition for review on certiorari assails the Decision1 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 91442
dated June 27, 2006, which set aside the Decision of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Makati City, Branch WHEREFORE, premises considered, the decision rendered by the Metropolitan Trial Court, Branch 63,
134, in Civil Case No. 03-517, and reinstated the Decision of the Metropolitan Trial Court (MTC) of Makati Makati City, is hereby ordered REVERSED AND SET ASIDE. Consequently, judgment is hereby rendered
City, Branch 63, in Civil Case No. 75717, dismissing the complaint for ejectment; as well as the Resolution ordering the defendants and all persons claiming rights under them to vacate the premises and
denying the motion for reconsideration. surrender the possession thereof to the plaintiff. Defendants are likewise ordered to pay jointly and
severally the plaintiff an amount of ₱5,000.00 a month per unit beginning 13 August 2001 until they
Juanito Rodriguez owned a five-door apartment located at San Jose Street, Guadalupe Nuevo, Makati finally vacate the premises and the costs of this suit.
City, and covered by TCT No. 144865.2 On October 27, 1983, Juanito executed a "Huling Habilin at
Testamento" giving petitioner Cresenciana Tubo Rodriguez, his live-in partner, apartments D and E, and SO ORDERED.9
his children Benjamin Rodriguez (the deceased husband of respondent Evangeline Rodriguez), apartment
A, respondent Buenaventura Rodriguez, apartment B, and respondent Belen Rodriguez, apartment C.3
Aggrieved, respondents filed a petition for review before the Court of Appeals which reversed and set
aside the decision of the RTC and reinstated the decision of the MTC. It held that the MTC correctly
However, on June 14, 1984, Juanito executed a Deed of Absolute Sale over the property in favor of received evidence on ownership since the question of possession could not be resolved without deciding
petitioner.4 Thus, TCT No. 144865 was cancelled and a new TCT No. 150431 was issued in the name of the issue of ownership. Further, the Huling Habilin at Testamento transmitted ownership of the specific
the petitioner.5 apartments not only to the respondents but also to the petitioner; and pursuant thereto, the parties
executed the Partition Agreement in accordance with the wishes of the testator, thus:
WHEREFORE, this Court resolves to REVERSE and SET ASIDE the Decision of the Regional Trial Court. The However, when the issue of ownership is raised the court is not ousted of its jurisdiction. Section 16 of
decision dated February 26, 2002 of the Metropolitan Trial Court, Branch 63, Makati City in Civil Case No. Rule 70 of the Rules of Court provides:
75717 dismissing the complaint for ejectment is hereby REINSTATED.
SEC 16. Resolving defense of ownership. – When the defendant raises the defense of ownership in his
SO ORDERED.10 pleadings and the question of possession cannot be resolved without deciding the issue of ownership,
the issue of ownership shall be resolved only to determine the issue of possession.
The motion for reconsideration was denied hence, petitioner filed the present petition for review raising
the following errors: Thus, all that the trial court can do is to make an initial determination of who is the owner of the
property so that it can resolve who is entitled to its possession absent other evidence to resolve
ownership.16 But this adjudication is only provisional and does not bar or prejudice an action between
I.
the same parties involving title to the property.17

THE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED A REVERSIBLE ERROR OF LAW AND GRAVE ABUSE OF
In the case at bar, petitioner’s cause of action for unlawful detainer was based on her alleged ownership
DISCRETION IN REVERSING AND SETTING ASIDE THE DECISION OF THE REGIONAL TRIAL
of land covered by TCT No. 150431 and that she merely tolerated respondents’ stay thereat. However,
COURT AND REINSTATING THE DECISION OF THE METROPOLITAN TRIAL COURT DISMISSING
when respondents leased the apartments to other persons without her consent, their possession as well
PETITIONER’S COMPLAINT FOR UNLAWFUL DETAINER.
as those persons claiming right under them became unlawful upon their refusal to vacate the premises
and to pay the rent. On the other hand, respondents assailed petitioner’s title by claiming that the deed
II. of sale upon which it was based was simulated and void. They insisted that they were co-owners thus,
they have the right to possess the said property. To prove their claim, they presented the Huling Habilin
THE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED A REVERSIBLE ERROR OF LAW AND GRAVE ABUSE OF at Testamento of Juanito Rodriguez and the Partition Agreement.
DISCRETION IN DECLARING THAT THE PROPERTY, A PARCEL OF LAND UPON WHICH A FIVE-
UNIT APARTMENT STANDS, BECAME THE SUBJECT OF JUANITO RODRIGUEZ’S HULING The lower courts considered the following documentary evidence in arriving at their respective decisions,
HABILIN AT TESTAMENTO WHEREIN THE PROPERTY WAS DISTRIBUTED TO HIS HEIRS (HEREIN albeit the RTC decision contradicts that of the MTC and Court of Appeals: 1) Huling Habilin at Testamento
RESPONDENTS) INCLUDING THE RESPONDENT (PETITIONER HEREIN).11 executed by Juanito Rodriguez on October 27, 1983; 2) Deed of Sale of the property executed by Juanito
Rodriguez and the petitioner on June 14, 1984; 3) TCT No. 150431 in the name of the petitioner; and 4)
Petitioner alleges that as the registered owner of the subject property, she enjoys the right of possession the August 23, 1990 Partition Agreement executed by both the respondents and the petitioner.
thereof and that question of ownership cannot be raised in an ejectment case unless it is intertwined
with the issue of possession. While the court may look into the evidence of title or ownership and Based on the foregoing documentary evidence, we find that there is preponderance of evidence in favor
possession de jure to determine the nature of possession, it cannot resolve the issue of ownership of the petitioner’s claim. Respondents failed to prove their right of possession, as the Huling Habilin at
because the resolution of said issue would effect an adjudication on ownership which is not proper in the Testamento and the Partition Agreement have no legal effect since the will has not been probated.
summary action for unlawful detainer. Petitioner insists that the Court of Appeals erred in ruling that the Before any will can have force or validity it must be probated. This cannot be dispensed with and is a
Huling Habilin at Testamento transmitted ownership of the specific apartments disregarding the fact that matter of public policy.18 Article 838 of the Civil Code mandates that "[n]o will shall pass either real or
the same is not probated yet and that the testator changed or revoked his will by selling the property to personal property unless it is proved and allowed in accordance with the Rules of Court." As the will was
petitioner prior to his death. not probated, the Partition Agreement which was executed pursuant thereto can not be given effect.
Thus, the fact that petitioner was a party to said agreement becomes immaterial in the determination of
Contrarily, respondents pray that the instant petition for review be dismissed since the resolution of the the issue of possession.
question of ownership by the MTC and the Court of Appeals was provisional only to resolve the issue of
possession. Petitioner can always avail of legal remedies to have the issue of ownership passed upon by Moreover, at the time the deed of sale was executed in favor of the petitioner, Juanito Rodriguez
the proper court. Aware of the provisional nature of the resolution on ownership in ejectment cases, remained the owner thereof since ownership would only pass to his heirs at the time of his death. Thus,
respondents filed Civil Case No. 01-1641 to assail the validity of the deed of sale of the property and the as owner of the property, he had the absolute right to dispose of it during his lifetime. Now, whether or
registration thereof in petitioner’s name. not the disposition was valid is an issue that can be resolved only in Civil Case No. 01-1641, an action
instituted by the respondents for that purpose.
The petition has merit.
We are, thus, left with the deed of sale and the certificate of title over the property to consider.
An action for unlawful detainer exists when a person unlawfully withholds possession of any land or
building against or from a lessor, vendor, vendee or other persons, after the expiration or termination of We agree with the RTC that a certificate of title is a conclusive evidence of ownership of the land
the right to hold possession, by virtue of any contract, express or implied.12 The sole issue to be resolved described therein; the validity of which shall not be subject to a collateral attack, especially in an
is the question as to who is entitled to the physical or material possession of the premises or possession ejectment case which is summary in nature.
de facto.13 Being a summary proceeding intended to provide an expeditious means of protecting actual
possession or right to possession of property, the question of title is not involved14 and should be raised
In Ross Rica Sales Center, Inc. v. Ong,19 the Court held that:
by the affected party in an appropriate action in the proper court.15
The long settled rule is that the issue of ownership cannot be subject of a collateral attack. DECISION

In Apostol v. Court of Appeals, this Court had the occasion to clarify this: SERENO, J.:

. . . Under Section 48 of Presidential Decree No. 1529, a certificate of title shall not be subject to This Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court assails the Decision1 dated 08
collateral attack. It cannot be altered, modified or cancelled, except in a direct proceeding for that January 2008 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 90645, which affirmed the Decision of the
purpose in accordance with law. The issue of the validity of the title of the respondents can only be Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Laoag City and its Resolution2 dated 15 July 2008 denying the Motion for
assailed in an action expressly instituted for that purpose. Whether or not the petitioners have the right Reconsideration. The RTC, in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction, affirmed the Decision of the
to claim ownership over the property is beyond the power of the court a quo to determine in an action Municipal Trial Court (MTC) of Laoag City, which had dismissed the unlawful detainer case filed by herein
for unlawful detainer. petitioner.

Further, in Co v. Militar,20 it was held that: The Factual Antecedents

[T]he Torrens System was adopted in this country because it was believed to be the most effective The Court adopts the findings of fact of the CA as follows:
measure to guarantee the integrity of land titles and to protect their indefeasibility once the claim of
ownership is established and recognized.
Ruben C. Corpuz (Ruben) filed a complaint for ejectment against Spouses Hilarion and Justa Agustin on
the allegation that he is the registered owner of two parcels of land located in Santa Joaquina, Laoag City
It is settled that a Torrens Certificate of title is indefeasible and binding upon the whole world unless and covered by TCT No. 12980 issued on October 29, 1976 by the Laoag City Register of Deeds and with
until it has been nullified by a court of competent jurisdiction. Under existing statutory and decisional technical descriptions as follows:
law, the power to pass upon the validity of such certificate of title at the first instance properly belongs
to the Regional Trial Courts in a direct proceeding for cancellation of title.1âwphi1
1) A parcel of land (Lot No. 20 of the Cadastral Survey of Laoag), with improvements thereon,
situated in the barrio of Santa Joaquina, Municipality of Laoag. Bounded x x x containing an
As the registered owner, petitioner had a right to the possession of the property, which is one of the area of five thousand seven hundred and fifty nine (5,759) square meters more or less x x x.
attributes of ownership. x x x
2) A parcel of land (Lot No. 11711 of the Cadastral Survey of Laoag), with the improvements
We emphasize, however, that our ruling on the issue of ownership is only provisional to determine who thereon, situated in the barrio of Santa Joaquina, Municipality of Laoag. Bounded x x x,
between the parties has the better right of possession. It is, therefore, not conclusive as to the issue of containing an area of twenty thousand seven hundred and forty five (20,745) square meters,
ownership, which is the subject matter of Civil Case No. 01-1641. Our ruling that petitioner has a better more or less x x x.
right of possession was arrived at on the basis of evidence without prejudice to the eventual outcome of
the annulment case, where the issue as to who has title to the property in question is fully threshed out.
Aforesaid parcels of land were formerly owned by Elias Duldulao in whose name Original Certificate of
As the law now stands, in an ejectment suit, the question of ownership may be provisionally ruled upon
Title No. O-1717 was issued. Duldulao sold said properties on August 27, 1951 to Francisco D. Corpuz,
for the sole purpose of determining who is entitled to possession de facto.
father of Ruben C. Corpuz. The elder Corpuz allowed spouses Agustin to occupy subject properties, the
latter being relatives.
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 91442
dated June 27, 2006 is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The Decision of the Regional Trial Court of Makati City,
Despite demand to vacate, the Agustins refused to leave the premises.
Branch 134, in Civil Case No. 03-517, reversing the Decision of the Metropolitan Trial Court (MTC) of
Makati City, Branch 63, in Civil Case No. 75717, is REINSTATED.
Ruben alleged further that he has the better right to possess subject property having acquired the same
from his father, Francisco, who executed a Deed of Quitclaim in his favor on March 15, 1971.
SO ORDERED.

Spouses Agustin, in their Answer, interposed the defense that on June 5, 1971 Francisco Corpuz, Ruben's
father, disposed of subject property by executing a Deed of Absolute Sale in their favor for a
consideration of Eleven Thousand One Hundred Fifty Pesos (₱11,150.00).

The Municipal Trial Court found for the spouses Agustin and dismissed the complaint.
G.R. No. 183822 January 18, 2012

In sum, considering the evidence of the defendants which shows that they entered into and occupied Lot
RUBEN C. CORPUZ, represented by Attorney-in-Fact Wenifreda C. Agullana, Petitioner,
No. 20 and the 9,657 sq. m. portion of Lot No. 11711 as buyers or owners, disproving the allegation of
vs.
the plaintiff that defendants were merely allowed by Francisco Corpuz to occupy the subject properties,
Sps. HILARION AGUSTIN and JUSTA AGUSTIN, Respondents.
being his relatives, and considering further the length of time that the defendants have been in
possession, as owners, of Lot No. 20 and the 9,657 sq. m. portion of Lot No. 11711, and have been SO ORDERED.12
continuously exercising their rights of ownership thereon, this court is of the view and holds, in so far as
this case is concerned, that the defendants are the ones entitled to the possession of Lot No. 20 and the
The Issues
9,657 sq. m. portion of Lot No. 11711.

Petitioner assigns the following errors in this Petition for Review on Certiorari:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, this case, is hereby dismissed.

I. THE HONORABLE COURT of appeals seriously erred in failing to consider the legal ownership
SO ORDERED.
of petitioner on the disputed property to claim better right to possession.

On appeal, Branch XVI, Regional Trial Court of Laoag City affirmed said dismissal, the dispositive portion
II. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS SERIOUSLY ERRED IN THE APPRECIATION OF THE
of said decision states:
ALLEGED SALE IN FAVOR OF RESPONDENTS TO RULE THAT THEY HAVE BETTER RIGHT TO
POSSESSION.
"WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Appeal is hereby DISMISSED for lack of merit and the
JUDGMENT of the Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 01, Laoag City is hereby AFFIRMED, with costs
III. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS SERIOUSLY ERRED IN FAILING TO CONSIDER THE
against the plaintiff-appellant.
CASE OF JACINTO CO VS. MILITAR, ET AL. (421 SCRA 455) WHICH IS SIMILAR TO THE INSTANT
CASE.
SO ORDERED.3
IV. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS SERIOUSLY ERRED IN DENYING THE PETITION FOR
Petitioner assailed the Decision of the RTC, affirming the earlier dismissal of the case by the MTC, by REVIEW RAISED BEFORE IT.13
instituting an appeal with the CA. On 08 January 2008, the appellate court through its Fourteenth
Division dismissed his appeal.4 It noted that his father engaged in a double sale when he conveyed the
Petitioner presents to this Court for resolution the core issue of his Petition: who between the parties
disputed properties to petitioner and respondents. The Quitclaim executed by the elder Corpuz in favor
has the right to possession of the disputed properties -- petitioner, who is the registered owner under
of petitioner was dated 15 March 1971, while the Deed of Sale with respondents was later, on 15 June
TCT No. T-12980; or respondents, who have a notarized yet unregistered Deed of Absolute Sale over the
1971; both documents were notarized shortly after their execution.5 The Quitclaim, which was
same properties?
subsequently inscribed at the back of Original Certificate of Title (OCT) No. O-1717 on 29 October
1976,6 resulted in the issuance of Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. T-12980 in the name of petitioner.
The Deed of Sale executed with respondents was, however, not annotated at the back of OCT No. O- The Court's Ruling
1717 and remained unregistered.7
We DENY the Petition.
Based on the above findings, the CA ruled that petitioner had knowledge of the sale of the disputed real
property executed between Francisco Corpuz, petitioner's father, and respondents. Due to this Although this case does not present a novel question of law, there is a need to discuss the nature of an
conveyance by the elder Corpuz to respondents, the latter's possession thereof was in the nature of ejectment case for the recovery of physical possession in relation to the Torrens system. A resolution of
ownership. Thus, in the context of an unlawful detainer case instituted by petitioner against the issue would be relevant to the determination of who has the better right to possession in this
respondents, the appellate court concluded that respondents’ possession of the property was not by unlawful detainer case.
mere tolerance of its former owner – petitioner's father – but was in the exercise of ownership.8

One of the three kinds of action for the recovery of possession of real property is "accion interdictal, or
The CA noted that petitioner had knowledge of his father’s sale of the properties to respondents as early an ejectment proceeding ... which may be either that for forcible entry (detentacion) or unlawful
as 1973. However, despite knowledge of the sale, petitioner failed to initiate any action to annul it and detainer (desahucio), which is a summary action for the recovery of physical possession where the
oust respondents from the subject properties.9 The appellate court rejected his contention that, as dispossession has not lasted for more than one year, and should be brought in the proper inferior
registered owner of the disputed properties, he had a better right to possession thereof, compared to court."14 In ejectment proceedings, the courts resolve the basic question of who is entitled to physical
the unregistered Deed of Sale relied upon by respondents in their defense of the same properties. The possession of the premises, possession referring to possession de facto, and not possession de jure.15
CA ruled that the inaction on his part despite knowledge of the sale in 1973 was equivalent to
registration of respondents’ unregistered deed.10 In dismissing his appeal, the CA concluded that
respondents’ possession was "not ... anchored on mere tolerance nor on any of the grounds for forcible Where the parties to an ejectment case raise the issue of ownership, the courts may pass upon that issue
entry or unlawful detainer"; hence "the complaint for ejectment must fail."11 The dispositive portion of to determine who between the parties has the better right to possess the property. However, where the
the assailed Decision reads: issue of ownership is inseparably linked to that of possession, adjudication of the ownership issue is not
final and binding, but only for the purpose of resolving the issue of possession. The adjudication of the
issue of ownership is only provisional, and not a bar to an action between the same parties involving title
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the instant petition is hereby DISMISSED. The decision of Branch to the property.16
XVI, Regional Trial Court of Laoag City in Civil Case No. 13293-16 is hereby AFFIRMED.
In the instant case, the position of respondents is that they are occupying the disputed properties as law, the power to pass upon the validity of such certificate of title at the first instance properly belongs
owners, having acquired these from petitioner's father through a Deed of Absolute Sale executed in to the Regional Trial Courts in a direct proceeding for cancellation of title.
1971. Respondents believe that they cannot be dispossessed of the disputed properties, since they are
the owners and are in actual possession thereof up to this date. Petitioner, however, rebuts this claim of
As the registered owner, petitioner had a right to the possession of the property, which is one of the
ownership, contending that he has registered the disputed properties in his name and has been issued a
attributes of his ownership. Respondents' argument that petitioner is not an innocent purchaser for
land title under the Torrens system. He asserts that, having registered the properties in his name, he is
value and was guilty of bad faith in having the subject land registered in his name is a collateral attack on
the recognized owner and consequently has the better right to possession.
the title of petitioner, which is not allowed. A certificate of title cannot be subject to a collateral attack
and can be altered, modified or cancelled only in a direct proceeding in accordance with law. 19
Indeed, a title issued under the Torrens system is entitled to all the attributes of property ownership,
which necessarily includes possession.17 Petitioner is correct that as a Torrens title holder over the
The pronouncement in Co v. Militar was later reiterated in Spouses Pascual v. Spouses Coronel20 and in
subject properties, he is the rightful owner and is entitled to possession thereof. However, the lower
Spouses Barias v. Heirs of Bartolome Boneo, et al.,21 wherein we consistently held the age-old rule "that
courts and the appellate court consistently found that possession of the disputed properties by
the person who has a Torrens Title over a land is entitled to possession thereof."22
respondents was in the nature of ownership, and not by mere tolerance of the elder Corpuz. In fact, they
have been in continuous, open and notorious possession of the property for more than 30 years up to
this day. However, we cannot lose sight of the fact that the present petitioner has instituted an unlawful detainer
case against respondents. It is an established fact that for more than three decades, the latter have been
in continuous possession of the subject property, which, as such, is in the concept of ownership and not
Petitioner cites Jacinto Co v. Rizal Militar, et al.,18 which has facts and legal issues identical to those of the
by mere tolerance of petitioner’s father. Under these circumstances, petitioner cannot simply oust
instant case. The petitioner therein filed an unlawful detainer case against the respondents over a
respondents from possession through the summary procedure of an ejectment proceeding.
disputed property. He had a Torrens title thereto, while the respondents as actual occupants of the
property claimed ownership thereof based on their unregistered Deeds of Sale. The principal issue was
who between the two parties had the better right to possess the subject property. Instructive on this matter is Carbonilla v. Abiera,23 which reads thus:

This Court resolved the issue by upholding the title holder as the one who had the better right to Without a doubt, the registered owner of real property is entitled to its possession. However, the owner
possession of the disputed property based on the following justification: cannot simply wrest possession thereof from whoever is in actual occupation of the property. To recover
possession, he must resort to the proper judicial remedy and, once he chooses what action to file, he is
required to satisfy the conditions necessary for such action to prosper.
We have, time and again, held that the only issue for resolution in an unlawful detainer case is physical
or material possession of the property involved, independent of any claim of ownership by any of the
party litigants. Moreover, an ejectment suit is summary in nature and is not susceptible to circumvention In the present case, petitioner opted to file an ejectment case against respondents. Ejectment cases—
by the simple expedient of asserting ownership over the property. forcible entry and unlawful detainer—are summary proceedings designed to provide expeditious means
to protect actual possession or the right to possession of the property involved. The only question that
the courts resolve in ejectment proceedings is: who is entitled to the physical possession of the premises,
In forcible entry and unlawful detainer cases, even if the defendant raises the question of ownership in
that is, to the possession de facto and not to the possession de jure. It does not even matter if a party’s
his pleadings and the question of possession cannot be resolved without deciding the issue of ownership,
title to the property is questionable. For this reason, an ejectment case will not necessarily be decided in
the lower courts and the Court of Appeals, nonetheless, have the undoubted competence to
favor of one who has presented proof of ownership of the subject property. Key jurisdictional facts
provisionally resolve the issue of ownership for the sole purpose of determining the issue of Possession.
constitutive of the particular ejectment case filed must be averred in the complaint and sufficiently
proven.
Such decision, however, does not bind the title or affect the ownership of the land nor is conclusive of
the facts therein found in a case between the same parties upon a different cause of action involving
The statements in the complaint that respondents’ possession of the building was by mere tolerance of
possession.
petitioner clearly make out a case for unlawful detainer. Unlawful detainer involves the person’s
withholding from another of the possession of the real property to which the latter is entitled, after the
In the instant case, the evidence showed that as between the parties, it is the petitioner who has a expiration or termination of the former’s right to hold possession under the contract, either expressed or
Torrens Title to the property. Respondents merely showed their unregistered deeds of sale in support of implied.
their claims. The Metropolitan Trial Court correctly relied on the transfer certificate of title in the name
of petitioner.
A requisite for a valid cause of action in an unlawful detainer case is that possession must be originally
lawful, and such possession must have turned unlawful only upon the expiration of the right to possess.
In Tenio-Obsequio v. Court of Appeals, it was held that the Torrens System was adopted in this country It must be shown that the possession was initially lawful; hence, the basis of such lawful possession must
because it was believed to be the most effective measure to guarantee the integrity of land titles and to be established. If, as in this case, the claim is that such possession is by mere tolerance of the plaintiff,
protect their indefeasibility once the claim of ownership is established and recognized. the acts of tolerance must be proved. (Emphasis supplied.)

It is settled that a Torrens Certificate of title is indefeasible and binding upon the whole world unless and In this case, petitioner has not proven that respondents’ continued possession of the subject properties
until it has been nullified by a court of competent jurisdiction. Under existing statutory and decisional was by mere tolerance of his father, except by a mere allegation thereof. In fact, petitioner has not
established when respondents’ possession of the properties became unlawful – a requisite for a valid We cannot, however, sustain the appellate court’s conclusion that petitioner's failure to initiate any
cause of action in an unlawful detainer case. action to annul the sale to respondents and oust them from the disputed properties had the effect of
registration of respondents’ unregistered Deed of Absolute Sale. We held thus in Ruiz, Sr. v. Court of
Appeals 25 :
In Canlas v. Tubil,24 we enumerated the elements that constitute the sufficiency of a complaint for
unlawful detainer, as follows:
(But) where a party has knowledge of a prior existing interest which is unregistered at that time he
acquired a right to the same land, his knowledge of that prior unregistered interest has the effect of
Well-settled is the rule that what determines the nature of the action as well as the court which has
registration as to him. Knowledge of an unregistered sale is equivalent to registration. As held in
jurisdiction over the case are the allegations in the complaint. In ejectment cases, the complaint should
Fernandez v. Court of Appeals [189 SCRA 780 (1990)],
embody such statement of facts as to bring the party clearly within the class of cases for which the
statutes provide a remedy, as these proceedings are summary in nature. The complaint must show
enough on its face to give the court jurisdiction without resort to parol evidence. Section 50 of Act No. 496 (now Sec. 51 of P.D. 1529), provides that the registration of the deed is the
operative act to bind or affect the land insofar as third persons are concerned. But where the party has
knowledge of a prior existing interest which is unregistered at the time he acquired a right to the same
Unlawful detainer is an action to recover possession of real property from one who illegally withholds
land, his knowledge of that prior unregistered interest has the effect of registration as to him. The
possession after the expiration or termination of his right to hold possession under any contract, express
Torrens system cannot be used as a shield for the commission of fraud (Gustillo v. Maravilla, 48 Phil.
or implied. The possession of the defendant in unlawful detainer is originally legal but became illegal due
442). [Emphasis supplied.]
to the expiration or termination of the right to possess.

In this case, the Quitclaim executed by the elder Corpuz in favor of petitioner was executed ahead of the
An unlawful detainer proceeding is summary in nature, jurisdiction of which lies in the proper municipal
Deed of Sale of respondents. Thus, the sale of the subject properties by petitioner’s father to
trial court or metropolitan trial court. The action must be brought within one year from the date of last
respondents cannot be considered as a prior interest at the time that petitioner came to know of the
demand and the issue in said case is the right to physical possession.
transaction.

... ... ...


We also note that, based on the records, respondents do not dispute the existence of TCT No. T-12980
registered in the name of petitioner. They allege, though, that the land title issued to him was an "act of
In Cabrera v. Getaruela, the Court held that a complaint sufficiently alleges a cause of action for unlawful fraud" 26 on his part. We find this argument to be equivalent to a collateral attack against the Torrens
detainer if it recites the following: title of petitioner – an attack we cannot allow in the instant unlawful detainer case.1âwphi1

(1) initially, possession of property by the defendant was by contract with or by tolerance of It is settled in jurisprudence that a Torrens certificate of title cannot be the subject of collateral
the plaintiff; attack.27 Such attack must be direct and not by a collateral proceeding.28 It is a well-established doctrine
that the title represented by the certificate cannot be changed, altered, modified, enlarged, or
(2) eventually, such possession became illegal upon notice by plaintiff to defendant of the diminished in a collateral proceeding.29 Considering that this is an unlawful detainer case wherein the
termination of the latter’s right of possession; sole issue to be decided is possession de facto rather than possession de jure, a collateral attack by
herein respondents on petitioner's title is proscribed.

(3) thereafter, the defendant remained in possession of the property and deprived the
plaintiff of the enjoyment thereof; and Our ruling in the present case is only to resolve the issue of who has the better right to possession in
relation to the issue of disputed ownership of the subject properties. Questions as to the validity of
petitioner's Torrens title can be ventilated in a proper suit instituted to directly attack its validity, an
(4) within one year from the last demand on defendant to vacate the property, the plaintiff issue that we cannot resolve definitively in this unlawful detainer case.
instituted the complaint for ejectment.

WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, we deny the instant Petition for lack of merit.1âwphi1 The
Based on the above, it is obvious that petitioner has not complied with the requirements sufficient to Decisions of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 90645 (dated January 08, 2008), of the Regional Trial
warrant the success of his unlawful detainer Complaint against respondents. The lower courts and the CA Court of Laoag City in Civil Case No. 3111-13293-65, as well as of the Municipal Trial Court of Laoag City
have consistently upheld the entitlement of respondents to continued possession of the subject in Civil Case No. 3111 -- all dismissing the unlawful detainer case of petitioner – are AFFIRMED.
properties, since their possession has been established as one in the concept of ownership. Thus, the
courts correctly dismissed the unlawful detainer case of petitioner.
We make no pronouncements as to attorney's fees for lack of evidence.

We concur in the appellate court’s findings that petitioner’s father engaged in a double sale of the
disputed properties. The records of the case show that it took petitioner more or less five years from SO ORDERED
1971 when he acquired the property from his father to 1976 when petitioner registered the conveyance
and caused the issuance of the land title registered in his name under the Torrens system. Respondents,
on the other hand, continued their possession of the properties, but without bothering to register them
or to initiate any action to fortify their ownership.
G.R. No. 191432, September 02, 2015 On September 11, 2007, Teresa filed a complaint for unlawful detainer against the respondents before
the Municipal Trial Court in Cities (MTCC), City of Sta. Rosa, Laguna. She prayed that the respondents be
ordered to vacate the subject property and to pay compensation for its use and occupancy.
TERESA D. TUAZON, Petitioner, v. SPOUSES ANGEL AND MARCOSA ISAGON, Respondents.
In their answer, the respondents alleged that they were occupying the subject property as owners. They
DECISION also alleged that Teresa fraudulently obtained TCT No. (N.A.) RT-1925.

BRION, J.: The MTCC and RTC Rulings

The MTCC, in its judgment on January 25, 2008, decided in favor of Teresa and ordered the respondents
We resolve the petition for review on certiorari filed by petitioner Teresa Tuazon (Teresa) to challenge
to vacate the subject property and to pay reasonable rent and attorney's fees. The MTCC held that
the October 28, 2009 Decision and February 11, 2010 Resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP
Teresa was the owner of the property as shown by TCT No. (N.A.) RT-1925, and as owner, she was
No. 107937, penned by Associate Justice Marlene Gonzales-Sison with Associate Justices Andres B.
entitled to enjoy the right of possession over the subject property. It added that a property registered
Reyes, Jr. and Vicente S.E. Veloso, concurring.
under the Torrens system could not be collaterally attacked in an action for unlawful retainer.

The Facts On appeal, the Regional Trial Court (RTC) in Bifian, Laguna, affirmed in toto the decision of the MTCC.
The RTC denied the respondents' motion for reconsideration.
During their lifetime, spouses Melencio Diaz and Dolores Gulay (Dolores) owned Lot 103 of the Santa
Rosa Estate, Barangay Aplaya, Sta. Rosa, Laguna, consisting of 499 square meters (Lot 103). They had
The CA Ruling
three daughters named Maria, Paciencia, and Esperanza. Melencio and Maria predeceased Dolores. On
May 28, 1955, Dolores, Paciencia, and Esperanza adjudicated Lot 103 to Dolores through a Deed of
Extrajudicial Settlement. Maria's children who were still minors at that time were not included in the
The respondents appealed the RTC's ruling to the CA.
settlement.
In its October 28, 2009 Decision, the CA reversed the RTC's ruling. The CA noted that Angel Isagon
On March 17, 1956, Dolores sold Lot 103 to Isabel Torres through a Bilihang Tuluyan (Deed of Absolute
executed a real estate mortgage in favor of Teresa over a portion of Lot 103 but had failed to redeem it.
Sale). Subsequently, Isabel Torres sold Lot 103 to Teresa on September 29, 1973.
Citing Article 2088 of the Civil Code, the CA concluded that Teresa was a mere mortgagee and had no
right to eject the respondents. Instead of foreclosing the property, Teresa filed this action for unlawful
On October 12, 1973, Maria's children, namely Gloria, Angel, Felix, and Flaviano, all surnamed Isagon,
detainer. The CA added that a mortgage was not an instrument that transferred ownership; thus, the
executed a Deed of Conformity. In this instrument, they honored the Deed of Extrajudicial Settlement
disputed property still belonged to the respondents.
executed by their grandmother and aunts, subject to the condition that they would get one-sixth of Lot
103 as their share.
The Petition
Gloria, Felix, and Flaviano also sold their.shares to Teresa. On the other hand, Angel mortgaged his share
to Teresa on October 20, 1975, through a Kasulatan ng Sanglaan. His share consisted of 20.75 square Teresa's present petition for review on certiorari argues that she is the registered owner, not a mere
meters which was one-fourth of the one-sixth share in the property. Angel Isagon thereafter refused and mortgagee, of the property as shown by TCT No. (N.A.) RT-1925. Section 51 of Presidential Decree No.
failed to redeem the mortgaged property. 1929 expressly states that registration is the operative act that conveys registered land. Thus, the TCT is
the best proof of ownership.
Teresa has been paying the real estate taxes due on Lot 103 since 1974 up to the present. Lot 103 is
covered by an undated and reconstituted Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. (N.A.) RT-1925 issued in She adds that the only issue in an unlawful detainer case is the physical possession of the property. As
Teresa's name. the registered owner, she has the right to enjoy all the rights of an owner under Articles 428 and 429 of
the Civil Code, including actual possession.
Sometime in 1972, the petitioner's brother, Antonio Tuazon (Antonio), allowed Spouses Angel and
Marcosa Isagon (respondents) to build a small hut on a portion of Lot 103 without Teresa's knowledge. Our Ruling
The respondents and their children were then living by the seashore and Antonio feared that their house
could be swept away by the floods during a typhoon.
We grant the petition.
In 2000, the respondents started to construct a house on the disputed property despite Teresa's protest.
For years, however, Teresa tolerated their possession and use of the contested area. The sole issue here is who has the better right of physical possession between the registered owner as
shown in the certificate of title and the mortgagor as shown in the Kasulatan ng Sanglaan.
In 2007, Teresa filed a complaint against the respondents before the Lupon
Tagapamayapa of Barangay Aplaya. The parties failed to reach any amicable settlement. While the CA is correct that a mortgage does not transfer ownership, the indefeasibility of a Torrens title
should have been given primary consideration.
On January 24, 2007, Teresa sent a final demand letter to respondents to vacate and to pay rental fees.
The respondents did not reply. An action for unlawful detainer is summary in nature and cannot be delayed by a mere assertion of
ownership as a defense.1 When the parties to an ejectment case raise the issue of ownership, the court
may pass upon that issue only if needed to determine who between the parties has a better right to
possess the property.2 Furthermore, the adjudication on the issue of ownership is only provisional,3 and
subject to a separate proceeding that the parties may initiate to settle the issue of ownership.

A person who possesses a title issued under the Torrens system is entitled to all the attributes of
ownership including possession.4 A certificate of title cannot be subject to a collateral attack in an action
for unlawful detainer. A collateral attack is made when, in an action to obtain a different relief, the
validity of a certificate of title is questioned.5

In the present case, the respondents alleged in their answer that the certificate of title issued in the
name of Teresa was fraudulently obtained. This defense constitutes a collateral attack on the title and
should not therefore be entertained. To directly assail the validity of TCT No. (N.A.) RT-1925, a direct
action for reconveyance must be filed.6

In the present case, based on the certificate of title, Teresa is the owner of the subject property and is
entitled to its physical possession.

WHEREFORE, we hereby GRANT the petition for review on certiorari. The Decision dated October 28,
2009, and the Resolution dated February 11, 2010, of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 107937 are
hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The decision dated October 15, 2008, of Branch 25 of the Regional
Trial Court, Biñan, Laguna, in Civil Case No. B-7472, is hereby REINSTATED.

SO ORDERED.chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

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