Lecture Property
Lecture Property
Lecture Property
RIGHT OF ACCESSION
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 440. The ownership of property gives the right by accession to everything which is produced
thereby, or which is incorporated or attached thereto, either naturally or artificially.
COMMENT:
(1) Accession Defined Accession is the right of a property owner to everything which is:
(a) produced thereby (accession discreta);
(b) or which is incorporated or attached thereto, either naturally or artificially (accession continua or
accession non-interrumpida), which in turn is divided into:
1) natural accession (accession natural);
2) artificial accession (accession artificial or accession industrial).
[NOTE: Because of the word artificially, it is understood that IMPROVEMENTS made on the property
are included within the scope of accession.].
(2) Other Definitions of Accession
(a) According to Sanchez Roman (Vol. II, p. 89)
Accession is the right of an owner of a thing to the products of said thing as well as to whatever is
inseparably attached thereto as an accessory
(b) According to Stimsons Law Dictionary, Revised Edition, p. 58.
Accession is that by which property is given to a person in addition to what said person already possesses,
said additional property being the result of a natural increase, like land, by deposit of a river; or houses, when built
on ones own land; or the young of animals.
(c) According to Del Viso, Vol. II, p. 33.
Accession is the right which ownership of property gives over everything which the same produces, or
which is attached or incorporated thereto, naturally or artificially
Classification of Accession:
(a) Accession Discreta (To the Fruits)
1) natural fruits
2) industrial fruits
3) civil fruits
(b) Accession Continua (Attachment or Incorporation)
(1) With reference to real property
a) accession industrial
1) building
2) planting
3) sowing
(c) accession natural
(1) alluvium
(2) avulsion
(3) change of course of rivers
(4) formation of islands
(2) With respect to personal property
a) adjunction or conjunction
(1) inclusion (engraftment)
(2) soldadura (attachment)
(3) tejido (weaving)
(b) In action to recover persons property unlawfully in the possession of another, damages may in part consist
of the value of the fruits produced. (See Quizon v. Salud, Ibid.).
(c) A tenant who continues on the land after expiration of the lease contract and upon demand to vacate can be
considered a possessor in bad faith and is responsible for the fruits actually produced as well as those that
could have been produced by due diligence. It will be observed that liability for the fruits is a consequence
of the usurpation and not because of a provision in the contract violated. (See Guido v. Borja, 12 Phil. 71)
Instances When Owner of Land Does Not Own the Fruits
Under Art. 441, the owner of land owns the fruits. In the following cases, it is not the owner who owns the fruits,
but somebody else:
(a) possessor in good faith of the land (He owns the fruits already received). (See Art. 544, par. 1).
(b) usufructuary. (See Art. 566).
(c) lessee gets the fruits of the land (Of course, the owner gets the civil fruits in the form of rentals). (See Art.
1654).
(d) In the contract of antichresis, the antichretic creditor gets the fruits, although of course, said fruits should
be applied first, to the interest, if any is owing, and then to the principal amount of the loan. (See Art. 2132)
Art. 442. Natural fruits are the spontaneous products of the soil, and the young and other products of
animals.
Industrial fruits are those produced by lands of any kind through cultivation or labor.
Civil fruits are the rents of buildings, the price of leases of lands and other property and the amount of
perpetual or life annuities or other similar income.
COMMENT:
(1) Technical Meaning of Fruits
The term natural, Industrial, and civil fruits as defined by the Code are highly technical,
therefore when they are found in a final judgment, there can be no doubt as to their meaning. Thus, if a
final judgment speaks only of natural and civil fruits, it is understood that industrial fruits are NOT
included. (Pamintuan v. Garcia, 39 Phil. 746)
2) Natural Fruits
There are two kinds of natural fruits:
(a) the spontaneous products of the soil (that is, human labor does not intervene).
Examples herbs, common grass. (See 3 Manresa 182).
(b) the young and other products of animals. (See Art. 442, par. 1).
Examples chicks and chicken eggs
3) Industrial Fruits
As defined, they are those produced by lands of any kind thru cultivation or labor. (Art. 442,
par.2).
Examples:
(a) lanzones and bananas
(b) palay and corn
(c) zacate (when this is cultivated as food for horses). (See 3 Manresa 182-183)
(d) all kinds of cultivated vegetables, since there is no doubt also produced by the land thru human labor (but
not canned goods or manufactured products). (3 Manresa 192-193).
[NOTE: Are the cultivated trees in themselves to be considered fruits?]
ANS.: It is submitted that strictly, they are not fruits in the juridical sense for they are really immovables as
long as they are still attached to the land, which may themselves produce fruits. However, there is no doubt we may
consider said trees as fruits when they are expressly cultivated or exploited to carry on an industry. (See 3 Manresa
183)
In the case of Bachrach v. Seifert and Elianoff, 48 O.G. 569, it was held that a dividend, whether in the form of
cash or stock, is income or fruits, because it is declared out of the profits of a corporation, and not out of the capital.
(See also Orozco, et al. v. Araneta, L-3691, Nov. 21, 1951)
CASES:
Bachrach Motor Co. v. Talisay-Silay Milling Co. 56 Phil. 117
FACTS: A milling company, in order to obtain a loan from a bank, requested one of its sugar planters to mortgage
the latters land as security. As a reward, the company gave the mortgagor a bonus.
The bonus was later claimed by:
(a) a creditor of the mortgagor;
(b) the bank. (The bank reasoned out that as mortgagee, it was entitled to the fruits and that the bonus should
be considered as civil fruits).
HELD: The creditor of the mortgagor is entitled. In the first place, a mortgagee is not entitled to the fruits of the
land mortgaged. In the second place, the bonus is not civil fruits. It is not one of those meant by the law when it says
other similar income since this phrase refers merely to things analogous to rents, leases, and annuities. Assuming
that it is income, still it is not income obtained or derived from the land itself, but income obtained as compensation
for the risk assumed by the owner. It should, moreover, be remembered that the bonus was not based upon the value
or importance of the land but upon the total value of the debt secured. And this is something distinct from and
independent of the property mortgaged.
Wait v. Williams 5 Phil. 571
FACTS: From the 1st of a certain month to the 20th, Regidor was entitled to the fruits of a certain property; and
from the 21st to the 30th of the same month, the Obras Pias was entitled. The property was being rented. Who
should get the rentals?
HELD: The rentals for the fi rst 20 days should belong to Regidor; those for the last 10 days should go to the Obras
Pias. This is because civil fruits are deemed to accrue daily. (Art. 544)