PAGES 178-185 Alluvion and Accretion Distinguished
PAGES 178-185 Alluvion and Accretion Distinguished
PAGES 178-185 Alluvion and Accretion Distinguished
Accretion: denotes the act or process by which a riparian land gradually and imperceptivity
receives addition made by the water to which the land is contiguous
Alluvion is brought about by accretion, but the latter term is also used to refer to the former. In
Art 457, accretion is also used to mean the addition or increase received by the land adjacent to
the bank of a river from the deposit of soil
- One claiming accretion has burden of proof
To enjoy benefits of accretion a riparian owner must show by preponderance of evidence that
he has met all conditions
1. The deposit or accumulation of soil or sediment must be gradual and imperceptible
2. The accretion results from the effects or action of the current of the waters of the rive
and
3. The land where accretion takes place must be adjacent to the bank of a river
2. When an island has been formed in a river (Cagayan River), and a grant for the part of the
island is obtained from the State, accretion added thereto in the course of time belongs to
the owner of that portion of the island to which it is added.
- The island must be treated as if it were mainland. Article 457, in speaking of accretion
which the banks of rivers may gradually receive from the effect of the current,
presupposes that the river continues its existence; if the river disappears, it is Article 461
which governs.
- The drying up of a river can’t be treated as an accretion under Art 457. The dried up bed
is property of public dominium
3. The addition formed by alluvion belongs automatically to the riparian owner as a
natural incident to ownership.
- FOOTNOTE: where a land is sold on installment basis, any accretion y the land even
before payment of the last installment belongs to the purchaser.
o Having acquired the beneficial and equitable title over the land the purchaser is
entitled to all the benefits which may accrue to the land as well as suffer the
losses that may befall it.
- But private persons can’t by themselves reclaim land from public waters (e.g. Laguna de
Bay) without proper permission from gov’t authorities and even if such reclamation has
been authorized, the reclaimed lands doesn’t automatically belong to the party claiming
the same as they mays till be subject to the terms of the authority granted earlier.
Article 457 deals with accessions of lands situated on banks of rivers but not on the seashore.
Lands added to the shores by accretion and alluvial deposits caused by the action of the sea
form part of the public domain.
FOOTNOTE: Owner bears loss of land eroded by the sea. Manila Bay is considered a sea for purposes of determining which
law of accretion is to be applied. But Laguna de Bay is a lake, the accretion on which by the mandate of Article 84 of the Spanish
Law of Waters of 1866 which is still a valid law, belongs to the owner of the land contiguous thereto.
1. Thus, Article 457 does not apply where the accretion is caused by action of Manila Bay, it
being a part of the sea, a mere indentation of the same.
- Until a formal declaration on the part of the government through the executive or the
legislative department, to the effect that such lands are no longer needed for coast guard
service, for public use, or for special industries, they continue to be part of the public
domain, not available for private appropriation or ownership nor subject to ordinary
prescription, being outside the sphere of commerce.
2. But accretions on the bank of a lake, like Laguna de Bay, have been held to belong to the
owners of the lands to which they are added.
- That part it w/c becomes covered with water 4-5 months a year, not due to tidal action,
but due to rain, can’t be considered as part of the bed or basin of the Bay nor as
foreshore lands, and therefore, registerable under the Torrens system.
3. Under Article 502(4), lakes and their beds belong to the public domain. Under the
Spanish Law of Waters which was extended to the Philippines and is still in force today
(except insofar as its provisions are inconsistent with the new Civil Code and the Water
Code of the Philippines) “the natural bed or basin of lakes, ponds, or pool is the ground
covered by their waters when at their highest ordinary depth’’ during the dry season
(Sec. 74 thereof.), and “accretion’’ deposited gradually upon lands contiguous to creeks,
streams, rivers and lakes, by accessions or sediments from the waters thereof belong to
the owners of such lands.’’ (Sec. 84 thereof.)
- Therefore, portions of land formed by accretion not forming part of the bed of a lake (i.e., not
covered by its waters at their highest ordinary depth) do not belong to the public
domain.
- All these parts constitute the river, the whole river; it cannot exist without all its parts.
- Since a river is but one compound concept, it should have only one nature, i.e., it should
either be totally public or completely private.
- And since rivers, whether navigable or not, are of public dominion (see Art. 420[1].), it is
implicit that all the three component elements be of the same nature also.
River Bed
1. The natural bed or channel of a creek or river is the ground covered by its waters during
the highest (ordinary) floods. (Art 70 Spanish Law of Waters defining beds of rivers and
creeks)
2. River beds are classified as property of the public domain under Article 420(1) and
Article 502(1). Hence, they are not open to registration under the Torrens system.
- Riverbeds that dry up continue to belong to the State as its property of public dominion
unless there is an express law that provides that dried up river beds belong to some other
person
3. And where a riparian owner claims that a dried river bed is his by accretion, in order to
bring the same under the operation and coverage of the Land Registration Law (now
Property Registration Decree [Pres. Decree No. 1529].), a petition for the registration of
land title should be filed.
- The approval by the court and the Land Registration Authority of a subdivision plan
covering the increased area is not sufficient. The law does not authorize the inclusion of
an area not embraced in the title or in excess of what is stated in the title.
River Banks
Referring to “Those lateral strips or zones of its bed which are washed by the stream only
during such high floods as do not cause inundations.’’ *Art 73 of Spanish Law defining banks
of river)
- The use of the words “of its bed (de sus alveos)” clearly indicates the intent of the law to
consider banks for all legal purposes as part of river bed
- Since undeniably, all beds of rivers are of public ownership, it follows that the banks
which form part of them, are also of public ownership. Article 420(2) is very clear that
“property in- tended for public use such as x x x rivers, x x x banks, shores, x x x and
others of similar character’’ are property of public do- main. (see Art. 638.) River banks
are declared as public property since they are destined for public use.
- That plants can and do grow on the banks which otherwise could not have grown in the
bed which is constantly subjected to the flow of the waters proves the distinction
between “beds’’ and “banks’’ in the physical order. However, in the legal order, legal
definitions prevail.
Reasons for granting a riparian owner right to any land or alluvion deposited by a river:
(1) to compensate him for the danger of loss that he suffers because of the location of his land
(for estates bordering on rivers are exposed to floods and other damage produced by the
destructive force of the waters);
(2) to compensate him for the encumbrances and various kinds of easements to which his
property is subject; and
(3) to promote the interests of agriculture for the riparian owner is in the best position to utilize
the accretion.
Furthermore, it is almost impossible to prove from whose lands the gradual additions came
from.
- a riparian owner cannot acquire the addition to his land caused by special works (e.g.,
dikes) expressly in- tended by him to bring about accretion (i.e., for reclamation
purposes) and not to protect his property from the destructive force of the waters of the
river.
- Where, however, the accreted land had been formed gradually due to the effect of the
water current of the creek, the riparian owner may invoke the benefit of alluvion to
support his claim of title thereto. The fact that the fish traps set up in the creek might
have slowed down its current, and might have been brought about or caused accretion,
will not affect his ownership, in the absence of evidence, to show that the setting up or
erection of the fish traps was expressly intended to cause or bring about the accretion.