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Chapter 1: BACKGROUND, BASIC CONCEPTS & GENERAL PRINCIPLES

Land Title – evidence of right of owner or extent of his interest, by which means he can
maintain control and as a rule assert right to exclusive possession and enjoyment of property.

Deed – instrument in writing which any real estate or interest therein is created, alienated,
mortgaged or assigned or by which title to any real estate may be affected in law or equity.

1. Grantor
2. Grantee
3. Words of grant
4. Description of property
5. Signature of grantor
6. Witnesses

Types of estates:

1. Freehold estate – indicates title of ownership.

a. Fee simple – absolute title; conferred without limitation, qualification or restriction

b. Fee tail – pass title to grantee & his heirs

c. Life state – held for duration of life of grantee

2. Less than freehold estate – a right short of title

a. Estate for years – lease for a period agreed upon, lessor retains ownership of land

b. Tenancy from period to period – lease running from month to month or year to year with
automatic renewal

c. Tenancy at will – person is permitted to occupy land of another without stipulation as to period

3 Stages of Development of Legal System of Transferring Titles:

1. Production & delivery of deed by grantor to grantee without registration


2. Deed of conveyance is recorded to bind 3rd persons
3. Registration of title

Registration – guarantees the title

Recording – does not guarantee the title; need to examine other docs

Purpose of Registration:
1. Serve as constructive notice
2. Prevent fraudulent claims
3. Protect interest of strangers to transaction

Modes of Acquiring Land Titles:

1. Title by public grant – conveyance of public land by government to a private individual


2. Title by acquisitive prescription – open, continuous, exclusive, notorious possession of a
property
3. Title by accretion – alluvion
4. Title by reclamation – filling of submerged land by deliberate act and reclaiming title
thereto; government
5. Title by voluntary transfer – private grant; voluntary execution of deed of conveyance
6. Title by involuntary alienation – no consent from owner of land; forcible acquisition by
state
7. Title by descent or devise – hereditary succession to the estate of deceased owner
8. Title by emancipation patent or grant – for purpose of ameliorating sad plight of tenant-
farmers; not transferable except by hereditary succession

Chapter 2: TORRENS SYSTEM – ORIGIN, NATURE & GENERAL


CHARACTERISTICS

Advantages:

1. Abolishes endless fees


2. Eliminates repeated examination of titles
3. Reduces records enormously
4. Instantly reveals ownership
5. Protects against encumbrances not noted on the Torrens certificate
6. Makes fraud almost impossible
7. It assures
8. Keeps up the system without adding to burden of taxation; beneficiaries of the system
pay the fees
9. Eliminates tax titles
10. Gives eternal title as state ensures perpetuity
11. Furnishes state title insurance rather than private title insurance
12. Makes possible the transfer of titles or of loans within the compass of hours instead of a
matter of days

Purpose of Torrens Law: quiet title to land – once registered, owner might rest secure

Persons Bound When Title Not Registered:

1. Grantor
2. Heirs & devisees
3. Persons with actual notice

Procedure in Land Registration Case:

1. Survey of land by Bureau of lands or duly licensed private surveyor


2. Filing of application for registration by applicant
3. Setting of date of initial hearing of application by RTC
4. Clerk of court to transmit to Land Registration Authority the application, date of initial
hearing & other pertinent docs
5. Publication of notice of filing of application, date & place of hearing – in OG and in
newspaper of general circulation
6. Service of notice – contiguous owners, occupants & those who have interest in property
7. Filing of answer or opposition to application
8. Hearing of case by RTC
9. Promulgation of judgment by court
10. Issuance of decree by RTC – decision; Instruct land registration authority to issue decree
of confirmation & registration
11. Entry of decree of registration in Land Titles Administration
12. Send copy of decree to Register of Deeds
13. Transcription of decree of registration in registration book & issuance of the owner’s
duplicate original certificate of title of the applicant by the Land registration Authority –
upon payment of prescribed fees.

CHAPTER 3: APPLICATION IN ORDINARY REGISTRATION PROCEEDINGS

Who may Apply:

1. Those in open, continuous, exclusive, notorious possession of patrimonial property of


state under bona fide claim of ownership since June 12, 1945 or earlier
2. Those who acquired ownership of private land by prescription
3. Those who acquired ownership of private lands by right of accretion
4. Those who acquired ownership in any manner provided for by law

Limitation to Ownership of Land by Corporation:

1. Private lands
2. At least 60% Filipino to acquire private land
3. Restricted as to extent reasonably necessary to enable it to carry out purpose which it was
created
4. If engaged in agricultural – restricted to 1,024 ha.
5. Patrimonial property of state
6. Lease for 25 years renewable
7. Limited to 1,000 ha.
8. Apply to both Filipinos & foreign cos.

Form & Contents of Application:

1. In writing & signed by applicant or person duly authorized


2. Description of land
3. Citizenship
4. Civil status
5. Full names & address of occupants & adjoining owners

What to Accompany Application:

1. Tracing cloth plan duly approved by the Director of Lands


2. 3 copies of technical descriptions
3. 3 copies of surveyor’s certificate
4. All original muniments of title
5. 4 copies of certificate by city/provincial treasurer of assessed value of land

Amendments Allowed & Not Allowed

1. Substantial change in boundaries or increase in area – new technical description


necessary – need new publication & notice
2. Substitution of name of new owner – file motion with court
3. Decrease the area – file motion in court

Muniment of Title – instruments or written evidences which applicant hold or posses to enable
him to substantiate & prove title to his estate

Transaction Took Place Before Issuance of Decree:

1. Record instrument in Register of Deeds in same manner as if no application was made


2. Present instrument to RTC, motion praying that same be considered in relation to the
pending application

Transaction Took Place after Issuance of Decree:

 Register directly with REGISTER OF DEEDS for purpose of canceling such title &
issuing a TCT.

CHAPTER 4: PUBLICATION, ANSWER & DEFAULT

Notice in conspicuous place in land & bulletin board of municipality – 14 days before
hearing
Hearing – within 7 days after publication in OG

– 25 – 90 days from date of order

To Whom Notice must be Sent:

1. City/municipal mayor & provincial governor


2. Department of Agrarian Reform, Solicitor General & Director of Lands , Director of
Fisheries, Director of Mines
3. Adjoining owners & those who have rights or interest thereto

Requisites of Opposition:

1. Set forth objections to the application


2. State interest claimed by oppositor

General Default

 If no person appears and answers within time prescribed

Special Default

 Party appears at initial hearing without having filed an answer and ask court for time to
file answer but failed to do so within period allowed.

CHAPTER 5: HEARING & DECREE

Who Conducts Hearing:

1. RTC
2. Refer to referee – commissioner

Proceedings for Ordinary Registration (Land registration Act) /Proceeding for judicial
confirmation of Imperfect title under the Public land act

 There exist a title to be confirmed


 Land applied for belongs to the state
 Court may dismiss without prejudice to file new application
 Dismiss with prejudice
 Risk to have application denied without losing land
 Risk involves loss of land
CHAPTER 6: JUDGMENT & DECREE

Decree – issued by land registration authority containing technical description of land; issued
after finality of judgment

1. Decrees dismissing application


2. Decrees of confirmation and registration

 Final after 1 year after decree


 Unless there in innocent purchaser for value
 Subject only to appeal
 Once final, cannot be subject to attack, deemed conclusive against the world

3. Put end to litigation


4. Purpose of Torrens system is protected

 Amendment after 1 year is allowed – creation or extinguishment of new rights; inclusion


of new owners not allowed

Judgment – decision of court constituting its opinion after taking into consideration the
evidence submitted

Writ of Possession – order to sheriff to deliver the land to the successful party litigant; no
prescription

1. Against loser
2. Against anyone unlawfully & adversely occupying

When Writ may not Issue:

 Person entered into property after decree- non claimant; had been there for 10 years

Means to Recover Possession:

1. Forcible entry
2. Unlawful detainer
3. Accion publiciana
4. Accion reindivicatoria

Res Judicata:

1. Former judgment must be final


2. Rendered by court having jurisdiction over subject matter & parties
3. Judgment on merits
4. Identity of parties, subject matter and causes of action
Remedies Available to Aggrieved Party in Registration Proceedings:

1. Motion for new trial – must be brought within 15 days from notice of judgment
2. Fraud, accident, mistake, excusable negligence which ordinary prudence could not have
guarded
3. Newly discovered evidence which could not be discovered & produced at trial
4. Evidence insufficient to justify decision, decision is against the law
5. Appeal – must be brought 15 days from notice of judgment
6. Review of decree of registration – available to party deprived of day in court; became
non-party due to misrepresentation; invoke actual fraud; before expiration of 1 year;
specific acts intended to deceive; will no longer prosper if already transferred to innocent
purchaser for value
7. Plaintiff is owner of land registered in name of defendant
8. Registration procured through actual fraud
9. Property has not issued to innocent purchaser for value
10. Action is filed within 1 year after issuance of decree of registration
11. Relief from judgment – 60 days – 6 months after entry of order; available to party to case,
FAME; after judgment; person deprived of right is party to case
12. Reconveyance – action in personam; available so long as property not passed yet to
innocent purchaser for value; bad faith or with notice of defect
13. Recovery for damages
14. Person is wrongfully deprived of his land by registration in name of another – actual or
constructive fraud
15. No negligence on his part
16. Barred/ precluded from bringing an action
17. Action for compensation has not prescribed

CHAPTER 7: CERTIFICATE OF TITLE

Torrens Title – certificate of ownership issued under the Torrens System of registration by the
government through road naming & declaring owner in fee simple of property described therein
free from all liens except those expressly noted.

Process:

1. Within 15 days from finality of order of judgment directing registration of title – court to
order Land registration Admin to issue decree of registration and certificate of title
2. Clerk of court will send order of court & copies of judgment
3. Administrator to issue decree of registration & original & duplicate of OCT – signed by
Administrator, entered & file decree of registration in LRA
4. Send to Register of Deeds – original & duplicate of title & certificate for entry in his
registration book
5. Enter in record book, dated, signed, numbered & sealed – take effect upon date of entry
6. Register of Deeds to send notice to registered owner ready for delivery after payment of
fees
7. Register of Deeds shall send duplicate & note on each certificate of title to whom it is
issued
8. Original copy to be filed in Register of Deeds; bound in consecutive order.

Action for Partition, Splitting or Consolidation of Titles:

1. Splitting or consolidation – ordinary – Register of Deeds level, no court involved


2. Subdivision plan – approval of NHA, final approval of LRA, then Register of Deeds to
issue memorandum that streets not to be disposed except by way of donation to govt.
shall be effected without approval of NHA.

Annotations at Back of Certificate – need court order; otherwise null & void

CHAPTER 8: VOLUNTARY DEALINGS WITH REGISTERED LAND

Operative Act – registration by owner; deed not registered – binding only between parties

Process of Registration:

1. File instrument creating or transferring interest and certificate of title with Register of
Deeds
2. Owner’s duplicate
3. Payment of fees & documentary stamp tax
4. Evidence of full payment of real estate tax
5. Document of transfer – 1 copy additional for city/provincial assessor
6. Register of Deeds shall make a memorandum on the certificate of title, signed by him
7. Issue TCT

Voluntary dealings

 Need to present title – to record the deed in registry & to make memorandum on title.

Involuntary dealings

 No presentation required; sufficient that annotation in entry book is sufficient

Formal requisites of a deed:

1. Full name
2. Nationality
3. Place of residence
4. Postal address of grantee or other persons acquiring or claiming interest
5. Civil status
6. Whether or not corporation:

a. Register of Deeds to keep an entry book – day book

b. Enter in order of reception all deeds & voluntary instruments, write & processes re land -Year,
month, day, time, minute of reception of instrument; Registered from time of entry

c. Fees of 5 bucks per document to be paid within 15 days

d. Note memorandum & sign & issuance of certificate

e. Documents are numbered & indexed & indorsed with reference to certificate of title– public
records

f. Subject to reasonable regulation

 Cost borne by vendor.

CHAPTER 9: REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE

Real Estate Mortgage – real property/real rights secures fulfillment of an obligation

Kinds:

1. Conventional – agreed upon by parties


2. Legal – Created by operation of law
3. Judicial – results from a judgment
4. Equitable – pacto de retro in form but mortgage in essence

Essential Requisites:

1. Constituted to secure fulfillment of principal obligation


2. Mortgagor be absolute owner of thing mortgaged
3. Person constituting mortgage has free disposal of property

Special Characteristics:

1. Subject matter is realty


2. Real right – attaches to property wherever it is & whoever holds it
3. Accessory – presupposes existence of valid principal obligation; cannot stand alone
4. Indivisibility – even if debt is divisible; mortgage is not
5. Inseparability – mortgage lien is inseparable from property
6. Retention of possession – mortgagor retains possession
Pacto de Retro – Equitable Mortgage

1. Price of sale with right to repurchase is usually inadequate


2. Vendor remains in possession as lessee or otherwise
3. Upon or after expiration of right to repurchase, another instrument extending period
/granting new period is executed
4. Purchaser retains a part of the purchase price
5. Vendor binds himself to pay taxes on thing sold
6. Real intention of parties is that transaction shall secure payment of debt or fulfillment of
other obligation

Real Mortgage Chattel Mortgage


Subject matter is real property Subject matter is movable
May be in private document provided there is
Public document only
affidavit of good faith
Right of redemption for 1 year No right of redemption
Deficiency can be recovered Deficiency cannot be recovered

Execution & Registration

1. Execution of deed in a form sufficient in law (public instrument)


2. Registration with Register of Deeds where the land lies & take effect upon registration
3. Present deed of mortgage together with owner’s duplicate
4. Payment of fees
5. Register of Deeds shall enter upon original certificate of title & upon duplicate a
memorandum – date, time of filing, signature, file number assigned to deed
6. Register of Deeds to note on deed the date & time of filing & reference to volume & page
of registration book in which it was registered
7. No duplicate need be issued

Subject Matter

 Real property plus all its accessions unless contrary is stipulated


 Future property – without legal effect
 Future improvements – deemed included
 Fruits & rents of mortgaged property deemed included
 Continuing credit secured by mortgage valid

Forms:

1. Private document – void & inexistent


2. Public instrument but not recorded – binding between parties but not 3rd persons without
notice
3. Public document & registered – valid & binding to 3rd parties
May Mortgage be Registered Without Duplicate Title: Yes

 If being withheld by the owner, Register of Deeds notifies by mail within 24 hours to
registered owner:

1. Stating that mortgage has been registered


2. Requesting that owner’s duplicate be produced so that memorandum be made thereof

 Owner refuses to comply within reasonable time; Register of Deeds to notify court &
court may enter order requiring owner to produce certificate

Subsequent Dealings in Mortgaged Property

1. May be further alienated – stipulation to contrary is void

 Assignment must also be registered since registration is operative act to affect land
 If not recorded – valid as to parties but not to 3rd parties, right not protected against
somebody who registers & procures better right
 No need to secure permission of mortgagee
 Understood unless prohibited in contract

1. May be further mortgaged – stipulation to contrary is void

1. Pactum commisorium – not allowed

1. Property is mortgaged
2. There is stipulation for automatic appropriation

1. Discharge

 Execute public document canceling or releasing mortgaged in form prescribed by law


 Present instrument with Register of Deeds where land lies together with owner’s
duplicate for registration
 Memorandum of cancellation is annotated on duplicate & original

When Mortgagor Dies

1. Abandon security & prosecute his claim by sharing in general distribution of assets of the
estate
2. Foreclose mortgage by making executor party defendant
3. Foreclose it in due time

Parties in Foreclosure Suit: all persons claiming interest subordinate in right to mortgagee

Action to Foreclose: Prescribes in 10 years (written contract)


Venue: Per stipulation or in absence thereof, where the property lies

Foreclosure

1. JUDICIAL

 Mortgagee to petition in court for foreclosure


 Court to render order for debtor to pay sum due within 90 days and if not paid from date
of service, property be sold at public auction
 Notice & Publication
 Public auction: sale to highest bidder
 Sheriff to issue certificate confirming judicial foreclosure
 File with Register of Deeds final decree of court confirming sale
 Memo entered in certificate of title
 If right of redemption exist, certificate of title of mortgagor not to be cancelled but
memorandum shall be entered upon the certificate duplicate & original
 After expiry of 1 year redemption period & no redemption, title is consolidated to new
owner
 Purchaser to be entitled to new certificate of title & memorandum endorsed on mortgage
deed
 If there is redemption, memorandum to be annotated on certificate of title

2. EXTRA-JUDICIAL

 Allowed only if stipulation between party authorizes extra-judicial foreclosure


 Cannot be made legally outside of city where land lies
 Publication required: post notices for 20 days in 3 public places where property lies & if
property is more than P400.00, publication must be for 3 consecutive weeks in news
paper of general circulation
 If foreclosure by rural banks, exempt from publication in newspaper for loans not
exceeding 3,000.00
 Registration of sale in Register of Deeds:

1. Deed of sale must be supported by certificate of sheriff that said sale was conducted
accordingly stating the date, time, place of sale, names of creditor & debtor, description
of property, name of highest bidder, selling price
2. Present in Register of Deeds where land lies
3. Memorandum on back of certificate is made
4. After expiration of 1 year of redemption period – title is consolidated if no redemption
exercised: purchaser to file with Register of Deeds the deed of sale & sworn statement
attesting to fact that there is no redemption
5. New certificate of title issued in favor of vendee
6. If redeemed – notice of redemption shall be registered & accomplished by way of
memorandum on proper certificate of title

Right of Redemption
 Payment of purchase price plus 1% per month plus taxes if paid by purchaser
 To be exercised within 1 year after registration of sale

Right to Deficiency – allowed

CHAPTER 10: CHATTEL MORTGAGE

Chattel Mortgaged – personal property is registered with Register of Deeds to secure


performance of an obligation

Subject Matter: movables

Deed of Mortgage:

 Requires only description to enable parties & other persons to identify the subject matter

Registration of Chattel Mortgage

1. Execution of document
2. Payment of fees
3. Register of Deeds enters in DAY BOOK in strict order of their presentation chattel
mortgages & other instruments relating thereto (primary process)
4. Register of Deeds thereafter enters in a more detailed form the essential contents of the
instrument in the Chattel Mortgage Register (complementary process)

Effect of Registration:

1. Creates a lien – attaches to the property whoever holds it; binding on subsequent
purchasers
2. Constructive notice

Sale of Chattel Without Consent of Mortgagee – void; criminal act

Effect of Failure to Register:

 Valid between parties but void against 3rd persons


 If instead of registration, it is delivered – it shall be a pledge & not chattel mortgage (if
no chattel mortgage deed executed)
 Actual knowledge is same effect as registration

Affidavit of Good Faith: Statement That —

1. Mortgaged is made to secure obligation specified


2. Valid & just obligation
3. Not entered into for purpose of fraud

Effect of Absence of Affidavit of Good Faith:

 Vitiates mortgage as against creditors & subsequent encumbrances


 Valid as between parties
 No need to be in public document

Assignment of Mortgage

 No need to be registered, permissive only & not mandatory

Cancellation of Chattel Mortgage

 Mortgagee to execute a discharge of the mortgage in manner provided by law

Foreclosure of Mortgage

 The must first be non-payment & at least 30 days have elapsed since then
 Alternatives:

1. Judicial
2. Extra-judicial – only if there is stipulation/authority

Procedure in Foreclosure

1. Notice posted for 10 days in at least 2 public places in municipality where property is to
be sold designating the time, place and purpose of sale
2. Mortgagor is notified in writing at least 10 days before sale
3. Public auction
4. 30 days after sale, officer makes a return & file with Register of Deeds where mortgage
has been recorded
5. Officer’s return operates as a discharge of the lien created by the mortgage
6. Proceeds to be applied:
7. Cost of sale
8. Amount of obligation
9. Subsequent mortgages
10. Balance – mortgagor

Recovery of Deficiency: Allowed

CHAPTER 11: LEASE


Lease – one of parties deliver possession of property to another who is obliged to pay rent for
use of such property.

Registration of Lease

1. File with Register of Deeds the instrument creating lease together with Owner’s
Duplicate of certificate of title
2. Register of Deeds to register by way of memorandum upon certificate of title
3. No new certificate shall be issued

When Prohibition in Mortgaged Property as regards Subsequent Conveyances, etc.:


Leasehold cannot be registered in the title thereof.

Effect of Registration:

1. Creates a real right but without prejudice to rights of 3rd persons


2. If not registered – valid as between parties but not to 3rd persons without notice

Registration – lessor not required to initiate; lessee shall initiate

Aliens:

1. May be granted temporary rights for residential purposes


2. Limit: 25 years, renewable for another 25 years

Who Else May Register: Builder in Good Faith

CHAPTER 12: TRUSTS & POWERS OF ATTORNEY

Trust – obligation of a person to whom legal title to property is transferred to hold the property
according to confidence reposed in him

2 Kinds:

1. Expressed – need to be in writing; cannot be proved by parole evidence


2. Implied – exist by operation of law; can be proved by parole evidence
3. Property is bought but paid by another party
4. Donation is made but donee have no beneficial interest thereon
5. Price of sale of property is loaned & conveyance is made to lender to secure fulfillment
of loan
6. Land passes by succession to a person but legal title is put in another’s name
7. 2 persons purchase property but placed only in one’s name
8. Guardian uses funds of ward to buy property
9. Property is acquired thru mistake or fraud
Power of Attorney – authority granted to a person to dispose one’s property.

Trust Differentiated from Power of Attorney

1. Trust has 3 parties while power of attorney has 2 parties


2. Trust is for benefit of 3rd party while power of attorney is for benefit of principal

Registration of Trust

1. Sworn statement claiming interest by reason of an implied trust with description of land
& reference to number of certificate shall be registered in Register of Deeds
2. Provided not prohibited to do so by instrument creating the trust

Appointment of Trustee by Court

 Certified copy of decree shall be presented to Register of Deeds & surrender duplicate
certificate
 Cancel duplicate & new certificate shall be entered by Register of Deeds

ACTION FOR RE-CONVEYANCE BASED ON IMPLIED TRUST

 Prescribes in 10 years
 If acknowledged in written form – becomes express trust – prescribes upon repudiation

CHAPTER 13: INVOLUNTARY DEALINGS WITH REGISTERED LAND

Involuntary Dealings – transactions affecting land in which cooperation of registered owner is


not needed: it may even be against his will

Attachment

 A writ issued at the institution or during progress of an action commanding the sheriff to
attach the property, rights, credits or effects of the defendant to satisfy demands of the
plaintiff
 Kinds:

1. Preliminary
2. Garnishment
3. Levy on execution

Registration of Attachment / Other Liens


1. Copy of writ in order to preserve any lien, right or attachment upon registered land may
be filed with Register of Deeds where land lies, containing number of certificate of title
of land to be affected or description of land
2. Register of Deeds to index attachment in names of both plaintiff & defendant or name of
person whom property is held or in whose name stands in the records
3. If duplicate of certificate of title is not presented:
4. Register of Deeds shall within 36 hours send notice to registered owner by mail stating
that there has been registration & requesting him to produce duplicate so that
memorandum be made
5. If owner neglects or refuses – Register of Deeds shall report matter to court
6. Court after notice shall enter an order to owner to surrender certificate at time & place to
be named therein

4. Although notice of attachment is not noted in duplicate, notation in book of entry of Register
of Deeds produces effect of registration already.

Effect of Registration of Attachment:

1. Creates real right


2. Has priority over execution sale
3. But between 2 attachments – one that is earlier in registration is preferred
4. If not registered – actual knowledge is same as registration

Duty of Register of Deeds

 Basically ministerial but may refuse registration in ff circumstances:

1. Title to land is not in the name of defendant


2. No evidence is submitted to show that he has present or possible future interest in land
3. Unless: heir

Properties Exempt From Execution: Family Home

Attachment – How continued, reduced or discharged

 Any method sufficient in law


 Document to be registered

1. EXECUTION SALE

 To enforce a lien of any description on registered land, any execution or affidavit to


enforce such lien shall be filed with Register of Deeds where land lies
 Register in registration book & memorandum upon proper certificate of title as adverse
claim or as an encumbrance
 To determine preferential rights between 2 liens: priority of registration of attachment
2. TAX SALE

 Sale of land for collection of delinquent taxes and penalties due the government
 In personam (all persons interested shall be notified so that they are given opportunity to
be heard)
 Notice to be given to delinquent tax payer at last known address
 Publication of notice must also be made in English, Spanish & local dialect & posted in a
public & conspicuous place in place wherein property is situated & at main entrance of
provincial building
 Sale cannot affect rights of other lien holders unless given right to defend their rights: due
process must be strictly observed
 Tax lien superior to attachment
 No need to register tax lien because it is automatically registered once the tax accrues
 But sale of registered land to foreclose a tax lien need to be registered

Procedure of Registration of Tax Sale:

1. Officer’s return shall be submitted to Register of Deeds together with duplicate title
2. Register in registration book
3. Memorandum shall be entered in certificate as an adverse claim or encumbrance
4. After period of redemption has expired & no redemption (2 years from registration of
auction sale) cancellation of title & issuance of new one
5. Before cancellation, notice shall be sent to registered owner: to surrender title & show
cause why it shall not be cancelled

Actual Knowledge is Equivalent to Registration

Adverse Claim

1. Make a statement in writing setting forth alleged interest, from whom acquired, how
acquired, no of certificate of land, name of registered owner, description of land in which
right/interest is claimed – signed & sworn to
2. Statement shall be entitled to registration as adverse claim on certificate of title
3. Effective for 30 days from date of registration
4. After 30 days, may be cancelled by filing of verified petition by party in interest

 Any party may petition in court to cancel adverse claim


 Court to grant speedy hearing
 If adverse claim is adjudged invalid – may be cancelled

5. No 2nd adverse claim based on same ground shall be registered by same claimant

CHAPTER 14: REGISTRATION OF LIS PENDENS


Purpose: keep subject matter within the power of the court until the entry of final judgment

 Therefore creates merely a contingency & not a liens

Effect of Registration:

1. Impossibility of alienating the property in dispute during the pendency of the suit – may
be alienated but purchaser is subject to final outcome of pending suit
2. Register of Deeds duty bound to carry over notice of lis pendens on all new titles to be
issued

Cancellation of Lis Pendens:

1. Before final judgment – court may order cancellation after showing that notice I sonly for
purpose of molesting an adverse party or it is not necessary to protect rights of party who
caused it to be registered
2. Register of Deeds may also cancel by verified petition of party who caused such
registration
3. Deemed cancelled when certificate of clerk of court stating manner of disposal of
proceeding is registered

Notice of Lis Pendens is an Involuntary Transaction

 Sufficient that there is entry in day book

Other Parties who Need to Register:

1. ASSIGNEE IN INVOLUNTARY PROCEEDING FOR INSOLVENCY

 Duty of the officer serving notice to file copy of notice to Register of Deeds where the
property of debtor lies
 Assignee elected or appointed by court shall be entitled to entry of new certificate of
registered land upon presentment of copy of assignment with bankrupt’s certificate of
title (duplicate)
 New certificate shall not that it is entered to him as assignee or trustee in insolvency
proceedings

Judgment / Order Vacating Insolvency Proceedings

 Order shall also be registered


 Surrender title issued in name of assignee & debtor shall be entitled to entry of new
certificate

2. GOVERNMENT IN EMINENT DOMAIN


 Copy of judgment file in Register of Deeds which states description of property,
certificate number, interest expropriated, nature of public use
 Memorandum shall be made or new certificate of title shall be issued

CHAPTER 15: TRANSMISSION BY DESCENT AND DEVISE

When Owner of Property Dies – testate or intestate,

 Administrator shall file with Register of Deeds registration of property in his name to be
vested with ownership as trustee so he can sell, etc, convey, etc
 Not necessary if already empowered in the will

When Judicial Proceeding Not Necessary

 Heirs may partition estate immediately & no need to be burdened with cost/expenses of
an administrator

1. In absence of debts
2. Heirs are all of legal age

Partition / Settlement of Estate

1. JUDICIAL

 After entry of final judgment of partition, copy certified by clerk of court to be filed with
Register of Deeds
 Each owner to gave separate certificate of title (duplicate)
 If ordered to be sold, purchaser shall be entitled to a certificate of title entered in his name
upon presentment of order confirming sale

2. EXTRAJUDICIAL
3. Decedent died intestate
4. No debts
5. Heirs are all of legal age, or minors represented by guardian

 Heirs to execute public instrument to be filed with Register of Deeds


 If disagree with each other, file in court ordinary action for partition
 If there is only 1 heir, may adjudicate to himself entire estate via affidavit to be filed with
Register of Deeds
 If there is movables involved, bond to be filed equivalent to value of property as certified
under oath by parties conditioned upon payment if any just claim which may be filed by
creditor within 2 years after distribution
 Publication in newspaper of general circulation for 3 weeks; not binding to those without
notice
 Final after 2 years

Oral Partition, When Deemed Valid

 In provinces when person dies leaving property not covered by Torrens system – to avoid
legal expenses, heirs make a list of property, pay off debts & assign to each
 Statute of frauds – do not operate because it is not a conveyance but a separation of
property and designation of part which belongs to them

Wills and Letters of Administration

 Executor required to file with Register of Deeds a certified copy of his letters of
administration or the will if there is a will in order that Register of Deeds may register
upon certificate a memorandum with reference to file no & date of filing

Court Authority Needed in Order to Sell

1. May be dispensed with if will empowers him sell


2. Without authority first secured, heir may sell subject to result of pending administration

CHAPTER 16: ASSURANCE FUND

 State creates a fund for the compensation of persons injured by divesting/cutting off of
rights due to the indefensibility of title; following that act of registration is operative act
by which State transfers title; created to relieve innocent persons from harshness of
doctrine that certificate of title is conclusive evidence of an indefeasible title to land.

 Upon entry of certificate in name of owner or TCT, ¼ of 1% shall be paid to Register of


Deeds based on assessed value of land – as contribution to assurance fund; if no
assessment yet, sworn declaration of 2 disinterested persons subject to determination by
court.

 Money shall be under custody of the National treasurer; invest it until P+I aggregates to
500,000, excess shall be paid to the Assurance Fund; annual report of Treasurer to
Secretary of Budget.

Who is Entitled:

1. Claimant must be owner, purchaser or encumbrancer in good faith who suffered actual
damage by loss of land; in short – he is deprived of his land or interest therein
2. No negligence attributable to him
3. Claimant is barred from filing action to recover said land
4. Action to recover from assurance fund has not prescribed
Loss/Damages Should Not be Due to Following Reasons:

1. Breach of trust
2. Mistake in resurvey resulting in expansion of area in certificate of title

Loss/Damages Should be Due to the Following Reasons:

1. Omission, mistake, misfeasance of Register of Deeds or clerk of court


2. Registration of 3rd persons as owner
3. Mistake, omission, misdescription in certificate of title, duplicate or entry in books
4. Cancellation

Against whom Action is Filed:

1. Action due to deprivation of land due to mistake, negligence, omission of Register of


Deeds, etc – Register of Deeds and National Treasurer as defendants; Sol-Gen must
appear
2. Private persons involved – should also be impleaded

Liability:

1. Satisfy claims from private persons first


2. When unsatisfied – secondary liable is the National Treasurer who shall pay thru
assurance fund; thereafter Government shall be subrogated to rights of plaintiff to go
against other parties or securities

Measure of Damages:

 Based on amount not greater than fair market value of land


 Amount to be recovered not limited to 500,000 which is maintained as standing fund
 If fund is not sufficient, National Treasurer is authorized to make up for deficiency from
other funds available to Treasury even if not appropriated

Where and When to File Action against Assurance Fund:

1. Any court of competent jurisdiction – RTC in city where property lies or resident of
plaintiff
2. Action prescribes in 6 years from time plaintiff actually suffered loss
3. If plaintiff is minor, insane or imprisoned – has additional 2 years after disability is
removed to file action notwithstanding expiration of regular period

CHAPTER 17: PETITIONS AND MOTIONS AFTER ORIGINAL REGISTRATION

1. Lost Duplicate Certificate


 Sworn statement that certificate is lost to be filed by person in interest with Register of
Deeds
 Petition to court for issuance of new title
 After notice and hearing – court to order issuance of new title with memorandum that it is
issued in place of lost certificate (duplicate)
 If false statement: complex crime of estafa thru falsification of public document

2. Adverse claim in registered land

 Whoever claims a better right or interest in a land adverse to the registered owner shall
make written statement alleging his right, how and when acquired with description of
land
 Statement to be signed and sworn to
 Entitled to registration as adverse claim – noted on certificate of title
 If there is petition – speedy hearing, determine validity of adverse claim
 May be cancelled without court order; effective only for 30 days
 After cancellation, no adverse claim on same ground may be registered by same claimant

1. Adverse to registered owner


2. Arises after original registration
3. Cannot be registered under provisions of land registration act

 To be made on original certificate, to the duplicate is not necessary because no access


 Contracts of lease, contract to sell but prescription and money claims are not allowed
 Purpose: measure designed to protect the interest of a person over a property where
registration is not provided for by the land registration act; serve as notice and warning to
persons subsequently dealing on said land
 Different with lis pendens: permanent; can only be removed after hearing is done but
adverse claim is only for 30 days: lis pendens – notice that property is in litigation;
adverse claim; somebody is claiming better right
 Recent ruling: adverse claim can only be removed upon court order

3. Petition Seeking Surrender of Duplicate Title

 In voluntary and involuntary conveyances – when duplicate cannot be produced, petition


in court may be filed to compel surrender of certificate of title duplicate to Register of
Deeds
 After hearing, may order issuance of new certificate and annul the old certificate; new
certificate shall contain annotation re annulment of old certificate

4. Amendment and Alteration of Certificate of Title


 A certificate of title cannot be altered, amended except in direct proceeding in court;
summary proceeding
 Entries in registration books also not allowed to be altered except by order of the court
 Grounds:

1. New interest not appearing on the instrument have been created


2. Interest have terminated or ceased
3. Omission or error was made in entering certificate
4. Name of person on certificate has been changed
5. Registered owner has married
6. Marriage has terminated
7. Corporation which owner registered land has dissolved and has not conveyed the
property within 3 years after its dissolution

 What corrections are permitted in title (which does not include lands included in original;
technical description as long as original decree of registration will not be reopened and
rights or interest of persons not impaired; old survey was incorrect; substitution of name
of registered owner)

1. Alteration which do not impair rights and


2. Alteration which impair rights – with consent of all parties
3. Alterations to correct obvious mistakes

5. Reconstitution of original certificate of tile

 As consequence of war – records have been destroyed


 When reconstituted – have same validity as old title
 Can only be done judicially by filing a petition for reconstitution with RTC
 To be published in OG for 2 cons issues and on main entrance of municipality at least 30
days before hearing
 In rem proceedings
 Court to order reconstitution if it deemed fit; issue order to Register of Deeds
 Lack of essential data fatal

6. Transaction evidenced by lost document – how registered

 Register of Deeds forbidden to effect registration of lost or destroyed documents


 Steps by interested parties:

1. Procure authenticated copy of lost or destroyed instrument


2. Secure an order from court
CHAPTER 18: FEES, OFFENSES, PENALTIES

 In connection with original and subsequent registration of lands – payable to Clerk of


court, Register of Deeds, sheriff
 Full payment of fees prerequisite to registration: at least the entry fee of 5.00, rest of the
fees due payable within next 15 days

Offenses:

1. Larceny
2. Perjury – false statement under oath
3. Fraudulent procurement of certificate: fine of not more than 10,000 or imprisonment of 5
years or both in discretion of court
4. Forgery: fine of not more than 10,000 or imprisonment of 10 years or both in discretion
of court
5. Forging of seal in Register of Deeds, name, signature or handwriting of any officer of
court of Register of Deeds
6. Fraudulent stamping or assistance in stamping
7. Forging of handwriting, signature of persons authorized to sign
8. Use of any document which an impression of the seal of the Register of Deeds is forged
9. Fraudulent sale: sale of mortgaged property under the misrepresentation that it is not
encumbered; deceitful disposition of property as free from encumbrance: imprisonment
of 3 years or fine not exceeding 2,00 or both at discretion of court

CHAPTER 19: REGISTRATION OF PUBLIC LANDS

Public Lands – all lands owned by the government

 Inalienable and alienable


 Inalienable – public domain: timber and miner lands
 Alienable/ Disposable – public agricultural land

Public land may be alienated, conveyed to private person.

Procedure:

1. Official issuing instrument of conveyance to issue instrument


2. File instrument with Register of Deeds
3. Instrument to be entered in books and owner’s duplicate to be issued
4. Instrument – only contract between Government and private person and does not take
effect as conveyance if unregistered, it is registration which is operative act of conveying
land; evidence of authority for Register of Deeds to register
5. Fees to be paid by grantee
6. After issuance of certificate of title, land is deemed registered land within the purview of
the Torrens system

Nature of Title to Public Lands conveyed: Indefeasible and Conclusive

 In absence of registration, title to public land is not perfected and therefore not
indefeasible
 In case of 2 titles obtained on same date – one procured thru decree of registration is
superior than patent issued by director of lands
 2 titles procured by one person – one from homestead patent, one from judicial decree &
sold to 2 diff persons, one who bought it for value and in good faith & one who register
first shall have preference.

Classification of Land of Public Domain:

 Classification is exclusive prerogative of executive & not by judiciary


 Anyone who applies for confirmation of imperfect title has burden of proof to overcome
the presumption that the land sought to be registered forms part of public domain
(Regalian doctrine).

Under the Constitution:

1. Agricultural – only one subject to alienation


2. Forest or timber
3. Mineral lands
4. National park

Under the Public Land Act:

1. Alienable/disposable
2. Agricultural
3. Residential, commercial, industrial
4. Educational, charitable
5. Town sites and for public and quasi-public uses
6. Timber lands – inalienable
7. Mineral lands inalienable

 If patent or title is issued – void ab initio for lack of jurisdiction


 Not subject to acquisitive prescription; even if in possession for long time, will not ripen
into ownership
 Except: mineral lands and forest lands acquired before inauguration of Commonwealth in
November 15, 1935; vested rights which are protected.

Fishponds
Before: included in definition of agriculture, conversion of agricultural land to fishponds does
not change character of land

Now: restricted meaning; fishponds has distinct category; cannot be alienated but may be leased
from government.

Director of Lands

 Quasi-judicial officer
 Findings of fact conclusive on higher court with absence of fraud, mistake other than
error of judgment; but not with regards to finding of law
 Empowered to alienate and dispose lands

Modes of Alienating Public Lands:

1. Homestead settlement
2. Sale
3. Confirmation of imperfect or incomplete title
4. Judicial legalization
5. Administrative legalization

 Lease not included since lease does not transfer ownership; free-title grant: free
distribution of public lands to encourage people to cultivate; government furnishes the
applicant with tolls plus cash allowance to enable him to cultivate

Confirmation of Imperfect Title:

1. Last extension granted by Government was until December 31, 1987


2. Right made available to person qualified to acquire alienable and disposable public land
thru open, continuous, exclusive, notorious (OCEN) possession under bonafide claim of
ownership since June 12, 1945.
3. Prior to transfer of sovereignty from Spain to US, have applied for purchase but did not
receive title, without default on their part provided they have occupied since their
application
4. In OCEN possession since June 12, 1945 or earlier
5. Members of cultural minorities in OCEN who has claim of ownership for at least 30
years

Max Land that can be Applied: 144 hectares

 In case of foreigner, sufficient that he is already Filipino citizen at the time of his
application
 Corporation who has less 60% Filipino ownership cannot apply confirmation of
imperfect title; can only lease

Persons Competent to Question Land Grant


 Persons who obtained title from State or thru persons who obtained title from State

PATENT

When is Government Grant Deemed Acquired by Operation of Law:

1. Deed of conveyance issued by government patent/grant


2. Registered with Register of Deeds – mandatory: operative act to convey & transfer title
3. Actual physical possession, open & continuous

 Land ceased to be part of public domain & now ownership vests to the grantee
 Any further grant by Government on same land is null & void
 Upon registration, title is indefeasible

Title Issued Pursuant to Registration of Patent

1. Indefeasible – when registered, deemed incorporated with Torrens system; 1 year after
issuance of patent
2. May not be opened one year after entry by Land Registration Authority; otherwise,
confusion, uncertainty & confusion on government system, of distribution of public lands
may arise & this must be avoided

Except: annullable on ground of fraud, may be reopened even after 1 year because registration
does not shield bad faith

 Court in exercise of equity jurisdiction may direct reconveyance even without ordering
cancellation of title

Aim of Homestead Patent:

 Benevolent intention of government to distribute disposable agricultural land to destitute


citizens for their home and cultivation
 As a matter of public policy, may be repurchased even if after 5 years provided not for
profit
 Right of repurchase not allowed if sold within family & not for cultivating or living but
for speculation purpose

Restrictions:

1. Cannot be alienated within 5 years after approval of application for patent


2. Cannot be liable for satisfaction of debt within 5 years after approval of patent
application
3. Subject to repurchase of heirs within 5 years after alienation when allowed already
4. No corporation, partnership, association may acquire unless solely for commercial,
industrial, educational, religious or charitable purpose or right of way subject to consent
of grantee & approval of Secretary of Natural resources
Exceptions:

1. Action for partition because it is not a conveyance


2. Alienations or encumbrances made in favor of the government

Erred Homesteader not Bared by Pari Delicto

 Pari delicto rule does not apply in void contract


 Violation of prohibition results in void contract
 Action to recover does not prescribe

Homesteader

 If he dies, succeeded by heirs in the application

Legal Restriction in Disposition by Non-Christians (Cultural MINORITIES)

 Conveyance is valid if able to read and can understand language where deed is written
 Otherwise, not valid unless approved by Commission on National Integration
 Safeguard is to protect them against fraud/deceit

CHAPTER 20: CADASTRAL REGISTRATION PROCEEDINGS

Purpose:

 Another means to bring lands under operation of Torrens System


 Ordinary registration is slow for lack of initiative on part of landowners, innovation was
conceived to hasten and accelerate registration
 Government initiates that all lands within a stated region are up for registration – whether
or not owners are interested to settle their titles

Nature of Proceedings:

 In rem
 No defendant & no plaintiff
 Compulsory

Procedure:

1. Cadastral survey

 In opinion of Phil president pursuant to requirement of public interest, title of land within
a specified area needs to be settled and adjudicated
 Order Director of Lands to make survey and plan
 Director gives notice to persons claiming interest in lands & to gen public of day of
survey – published in OG and posted in conspicuous place on lands to be surveyed
 Geodetic engineers commences survey
 During survey, boundaries are marked by monuments

2. Filing of petition

 After survey and plot been made, Director represented by Sol Gen institutes cadastral
proceeding by filing petition in court against holders, claimants, possessors, occupants
 Parcel of lots given their cadastral numbers

3. Publication of notice of hearing

 Court to order date of hearing


 LRA to notify public by publishing notice 1x in OG and 1x in newspaper of general
circulation & copy mailed to person whose address is known & other copies posted in
conspicuous place designated bylaw

4. Filing of answer

 Any person claiming interest in any part of lands subject to petition is required to file
answer
 Answer must give the ff details:

1. Age of claimant
2. Cadastral number of lot claimed
3. Name of barrio or municipality where lot is located
4. Name of owners of adjoining lots
5. If in possession & without grant – no of years in possession
6. If not in possession – state interest claimed
7. If assessed of taxation – assessed value
8. Any encumbrances affecting said lots
9. Hearing of case

 In any convenient place where land lies


 Like an ordinary RTC trial
 Conflicting claims are determined
 Lots claimed are awarded to persons entitles – if they could prove title
 If none could prove title – land is declared public domain

6. Decision

 Claimants are notified of decision

7. Issuance of decree and certificate of title


 Upon order of court, LRA to enter decree of registration
 Decree made basis for issuance of OCT
 Decree are now being directly prepared and issued on regulation forms of such certificate

Nature of Title Covered by 2 Acts:

 Title in good faith & for value


 Errors in plan does not annul decree of registration
 Cancellation & correction is permitted

Land Already Registered

 Jurisdiction is limited only to correction of technical errors


 Court cannot issue decree on land already decreed
 Revision of decree allowed when substantial rights are not impaired; what is prohibited is
registered land to be registered again in name of another
 Jurisdiction subsist to all incidental matters

CADASTRAL PROCEEDING COMPARED TO ORDINARY REGISTRATION

CADASTRAL ORDINARY
Party Initiating Government Private Individual
Subject Matter Private and Public Private Lands
Government does not assert
Ownership ownershipInterested only in Ownership is Asserted
settlement of titles
Government undertakes survey and
Survey On account of owner
advances expenses
Applicant has another chance to
In absence of successful claimant,
As to risk claim is dismissal is without
property goes to government
prejudice

When can Cadastral Proceedings may be Opened

 10 years up to Dec 31, 1968


 Unable to file their claim even while in possession granted right to petition for reopening
of proceedings provided such were not alienated, leased or disposed by government

Cadastral Court does not Award Damages, But may Direct Sheriff to Deliver Possession

 Provisions of land registration act applicable to cadastral proceedings

CHAPTER 21: SYSTEM OF REGISTRATION FOR UNREGISTERED LANDS


 System of registration for unregistered land under the Torrens System (ACT 3344)
 Before: covers voluntary dealings, now includes involuntary dealings
 Effect if prospective; binds 3rd persons after registration but yields to better rights of 3rd
person prior to registration (limited effect to 3rd parties)
 Reason: no strict investigation involved
 Subsequent dealings – also valid if recorded
 Register of Deeds keeps day book & a register; index system is also kept
 Procedure:

1. Presentment of instrument dealing in unregistered land


2. If found in order – registered
3. If found defective – registration is refused writing his reason for refusal

Source:

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