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SECOND DIVISION
Promulgated:
DECISION
PERLAS-BERNABE, J.:
• Designated Additional Member per Special Order No. 2797 dated November 5, 2020.
Rollo, pp. 11-31.
2
Id. at 38-51. Penned by Associate Justice Ramon Paul L. Hernando (now a Member of the Court) with
Associate Justices Jose C. Reyes, Jr. (retired Member of the Court) and Stephen C. Cruz, concurring.
3
Id. at 54-55.
4
Id. at 57-69. Penned by Presiding Judge Consuelo Arnog-Bocar.
Decision 2 G.R. No. 223763
The Facts
supposedly extinguished by the full payment of the loan on March 29, 1996,
and the corresponding Release ofMortgage 19 ( 1996 Release of Mortgage) was
executed by Sps. Callo. Thereafter, petitioners demanded Sps. Callo to vacate
the subject lot but they refused. Instead, they filed a petition for security of
tenure against Lolita before the Department of Agrarian Reform Adjudication
Board (DARAB), seeking to be recognized as tenants over the subject lot, and
not to be ejected therefrom, which was, however, dismissed. 20
19
Id. at 139.
20
See id. at 92. See also Decision dated July 18, 1997 in DARAB Case No. R-0307-0002-96; id. at !Oi-
l 03. Penned by Provincial Adjudicator Benjamin M. Yambao.
21
See id.
22
Id . at l 06-108.
23
See id. at 39-40 and 107.
24
Id. at 57-69.
25
See id. at 67-69.
✓
Decision 4 G.R. No. 223763
The CA Ruling
In a Decision26 dated September 30, 2015, the CA reversed and set aside
the RTC Decision, holding that petitioners failed to show clear and convincing
evidence of their title to the subject lot and the fact of fraud on the part of
respondent in registering the same, and thereby dismissed the complaint.27
The sole issue for the Court's resolution 1s whether or not the CA
correctly dismissed the complaint.
At the time respondent filed her free patent application before the
Community Environment and Natural Resources Office 111-3, Olongapo City
(CENRO) on February 9, 2006,29 the governing law was Section 44, Chapter
VII of Commonwealth Act No. (CA) 141, 30 as amended by Republic Act No.
(RA) 6940, 31 which laid down the requirements an applicant must satisfy
before a free patent is granted, thus:
26
Id. at 38-5 1.
27
See id . at 41-50.
28
Id. at 54-55.
29
See Report dated February I 0, 2006 signed by Spl. Land lnvestigator/LM I/DPLI Emelita A . Lambinicio;
records, p. 245.
30
Entitled "AN A CT TO AM END AND COMPILE TIIE L AWS RELATIVE TO LANDS OF THE PUBLIC DOMAIN,"
otherwise known as " The Public Land Act," approved on November 7, 1936.
31
Entitled "AN ACT GRANTING A PERIOD ENDING ON DECEMBER 3 1, 2000 FOR FILING APPLICATIONS FOR
FREE PATENT AND JUDICIAL CONFIRMATION OF IMPERFECT TITLE TO ALIENABLE AND DISPOSABLE
LANDS or THE PUBLIC DOM AIN UNDER CHAPTERS VII AND V III OF THE PUBLIC LAND A CT (CA 141 , AS
AMENDED)," approved on March 28, 1990. RA 9176 (approved on November 13, 2002) extended until
December 31, 2020 the period for the filing of applications for administrative legalization (free patent)
and judicial confirmation of imperfect and incomplete titles to alienable and disposable lands of the
public domain.
Decision 5 G.R. No. 223763
such tract or tracts of such land not to exceed twelve (12) hectares.
(Emphases supplied).
32
820 Phil. 26 (2017).
33
Id. at 54. Also cited in Jaucian v. De Joras, G.R. No. 221928, September 5, 2018.
34
See rollo, p. 62.
35
See Artic le 540 of the Civil Code.
I
Decision 6 G.R. No . 223763
rule that the mortgagor's default does not operate to vest the mortgagee the
ownership of the mortgaged property. Before perfect title over a mortgaged
property may be secured by the mortgagees, they must, in case of non-
payment of the debt, foreclose the mortgage first and thereafter purchase the
mortgaged property at the foreclosure sale. 36 Thus, upon the expiration of the
five (5) year redemption period, mortgagees Sps. Callo should have foreclosed
the mortgage, but they did not do so. Instead, they accepted payment from
Lolita despite the lapse of the redemption period, and executed the
corresponding release of mortgage. Respondent even admitted that the March
1974 mortgage, which was a renewal ofthe 1971 mortgage, 37 had indeed been
redeemed. 38
On the other hand, petitioners ' claim of ownership over the subject lot
was based on their alleged right as heirs of the averred owner Edu veges, who
had declared the same for tax purposes under her name, and which rights they
acquired on the basis of a Final Project of Partition 39 of Eduveges' estate.
Records show that Eduveges was the prior occupant and cultivator of the
subject lot, and was the recorded survey claimant as of 1944,40 whose heirs
had continuously possessed and cultivated the subject lot until the same was
mortgaged to Sps. Callo in 1974, redeemable within five (5) years.41
36
See Ramirez v. CA, 456 Phil. 345, 353 (2003).
37
See TSN, September I 6, 20 I0; records, p. 284.
38
See TSN, November 11 , 20 IO; id. at 295 .
39
See id. at 229-237.
40
Eduveges passed away on September 24, I92 1 (see id. at 229); hence, possession is implicitl y even prior
to I 944.
41
See Supplemental Report dated May 23, 2006 w ritten by Spl. Land Investigator Emel it a A. L ambinicio;
id. at 245-246.
42
Entitled "AN A cr TO AMEND SECTIONS FORTY-FOUR, FORTY-EIGHT AND ONE H UNDRED T WENTY OF
COMMONWEALTH ACT NUMBERED ONE H UNDRED FORTY-ONE, AS AMENDED, OTHERWISE K NOWN AS
THE ' PU8LIC L AND A CT', AND FOR OT! lr:R PURPOSES," approved on June I 8, 1964.
Decision 7 G.R. No . 223763
of the public domain for a certain length of time. Section 4443 thereof, which
governs the administrative legalization by free patent requires possession
from July 4, 1926 or prior thereto. On the other hand, Section 48 (b )44 provides
that when the conditions specified therein - i. e. (a) continuous, exclusive, and
notorious possession and occupation of agricultural lands of the public
domain, (b ) bona fide claim of acquisition or ownership, and (c) possession
and occupation for at least thirty years - are complied with, the possessor is
deemed to have acquired, by operation of law, a right to a government
grant, without necessity of a certificate of title being issued, and the land
ceases to be part of the public domain and beyond the authority of the
Director of Lands. Thus, if by legal fiction, the possessor had acquired the
land in question by grant of the State, it had already ceased to be part of the
public domain and had become private property, at least by presumption,
beyond the control of the Director of Lands. 45 Case law has, thus,
recognized, that in such cases, confirmation proceedings would, in truth be
little more than a formality, at the most limited to ascertaining whether the
possession claimed is of the required character and length of time; and
registration thereunder would not confer title, but simply recognize a title
already vested. T he proceedings would not originally convert the land from
public to private land, but only confirm such a conversion already effected
by operation of law from the moment the required period of possession
became complete.46
43
Sectio n 44. Any natural -born c itizen of the Philippines who is not the owner of mo re than twenty-fo ur
hectares and who since July fourth, ninetee n hund red and twenty-six or prior thereto, has continuously
occupied and cult ivated, e ither by hi mself or throug h hi s predecessors- in- interest, a tract or tracts of
agricultu ral publ ic lands subject to dispositio n, o r who sha ll have paid the real estate tax thereon whi le
the same has not been occupied by any person shall be entitled, under the provisions of thi s chapter, to
have a free patent issued to him for such tract o r tracts of such land not to exceed twenty-four hectares.
A member of the natio nal cultural minorities who has continuously occupied and culti vated, either
by himself or through his predecessors-in-interest, a tract or tracts of land, whether disposable or not
since Jul y 4, 1955, sha ll be entitled to the rig ht gra nted in the preceding paragraph of this
section: Provided, T hat at the time he fi les his free patent application he is not the owner of any real
estate secured or disposable under this provision of the Public Land Law. (U nderscoring s upplied)
44
Sectio n 48 (b) reads:
xxxx
(b) T hose who by themse lves o r through the ir predecessors-in-interest have been, in
continuous, exclusive, and notorio us possession a nd occupation of agricultural lands
of the publi c do ma in, under a bona fide c laim of acq uisition or ow nership, for at least
thirty years immediate ly precedi ng the fi ling of the applicati on for confi rmatio n of
title, except when prevented by war of force majeure. Those sha ll be conclusively
presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a gove rnment grant
and shall be entitled to a certificate of title under the provisions of this chapter.
(Emphas is a nd underscoring s upplied)
45
See Abejaron v. Nabasa, 411 Phil. 552, 566-567 (200 1), c iting Susi v. Razon. 48 Phil. 424, 427-42 8
( 1925).
46
Id. at 568-569, c iting Director of lands v. /n1ermedia1e Appellate Court, 230 Phil. 590, 602 ( 1986).
Decision 8 G.R. No. 223763
In this case, no less than the land investigator who recommended the
grant of respondent's application for free patent recognized petitioners' and
their predecessor's occupation and cultivation as early as 1944. Thus, when
the mortgage was constituted in 1974,47 petitioners have been possessors in
the concept of owners of the subject lot, which is an alienable and disposable
48
land, for at least thirty (30) years, and as such, have in their favor the
conclusive presumption that the subject lot had ceased to be public land.
That the subject lot was not registered under the name of the heirs of
Eduveges (Eduveges heirs) prior to the issuance of OCT No. P-24666 in
respondent's name would not effectively deny the remedy of reconveyance to
the former. An action for reconveyance is a legal and equitable remedy
granted to the rightful landowner, whose land was wrongfully or erroneously
registered in the name of another, to compel the registered owner to transfer
or reconvey the land to him. 49 At the time the subject lot was mortgaged in
1974, the Eduveges heirs already possessed the essential requisites for judicial
confirmation of an imperfect title under CA 141, having completed the
required thirty (30)-year period of open, continuous, adverse and public
possession of the subject lot in the concept of owners. Thus, it cannot be
gainsaid that the Eduveges heirs, by themselves and through their
predecessors-in-interest, had already acquired a vested right over the subject
lot, which conferred an effective title on them as such possessors on account
of which the land ceased to be public, to become private property, at least by
presumption. Notably, respondent continuously recognized the Eduveges
heirs' ownership as she even allowed the redemption of the subject lot despite
the long lapse of the redemption period, and thereafter, filed the DARAB case
seeking to be recognized as tenants thereon. If at all, she only started claiming
an adverse interest thereon in 2006 when she filed the free patent application,
secured an assessment notice over the subject lot, and paid the realty taxes
thereon for the first time in her name. Meanwhile, the subject lot was
continuously declared in Eduveges' name. Considering the foregoing, the
Eduveges heirs' real right of possession over the subject lot cannot be said to
have already been lost. 50 Hence, petitioners' right, as heirs ofEduveges, to ask
for the reconveyance of the subject lot is irrefutable.
As a rule, a free patent that was fraudulently acquired, and the certificate
of title issued pursuant to the same, may only be assailed by the government
in an action for reversion pursuant to Section 101 of CA 141 , as amended. 51 A
recognized exception is that situation where plaintiff-claimant seeks direct
reconveyance from defendant public land unlawfully and in breach of trust
titled by him, on the principle of enforcement of a constructive trust. Thus, a
private individual may bring an action for reconveyance of a parcel of land
47
See Supplemental Report dated May 23, 2006 written by Spl. Land Investigator Emel ita A. Lambinicio;
records, pp. 245-246.
48
See id. at 247.
49
Lorzano v. Tabayag, Jr. , 681 Phil. 39, 57(2012).
50
See Article 555 of the Civil Code, wh ich pertinently provides that the real right of possession is not lost
till after the lapse often years.
51
Lorzano v. Tabayag, Jr., supra at 49.
Decision 9 G.R. No. 223763
even if the title thereof was issued through a free patent to show that the person
who secured the registration of the questioned property is not the real owner
thereof. 52 In sum, since respondent's possession was not shown to be in the
concept of an owner, and that the land applied for had ceased to be part of the
public domain by reason of the operation of RA 3872 in favor of the Eduveges
heirs, the reversal of the assailed decision is in order.
The fact that petitioner was able to secure a title in her name did not operate
to vest ownership upon her of the subject land. Registration of a piece of land
under the Torrens System does not create or vest title, because it is not a mode
of acquiring ownership. A certificate of title is merely an evidence of
ownership or title over the particular property described therein. It cannot be
used to protect a usurper from the true owner; nor can it be used as a shield
for the commission of fraud; neither does it permit one to emich himself at
the expense of others. Its issuance in favor of a particular person does not
foreclose the possibility that the real property may be co-owned with
persons not named in the certificate, or that it may be held in trust for
another person by the registered owner. (Emphasis supplied)
SO ORDERED.
ESTELA Mm~-BERNABE
Senior Associate Justice
52
Id. at 55.
53
5 I 8 Phil. 271, 282-283 (2006); citations omitted.
Decision 10 G.R. No. 223763
WE CONCUR:
AM -~ Ai ARO~JA VIER
A sociate Justice
RICARD
ATTESTATION
I attest that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in
consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the
Court's Division.
ESTELA M[l
.JN:~s-BERNABE
Senior Associate Justice
Chairperson, Second Division
CERTIFICATION