SECOND
DIVISION
GAUDENCIO LABRADOR, represented by LULU
LABRADOR USON, as Attorney-in-Fact, |
|
G.R.
No. 173900 Present:
|
Petitioner, |
|
|
- versus - |
|
CARPIO,
J., Chairperson, NACHURA,
PERALTA, ABAD, and
MENDOZA, JJ. |
SPS. ILDEFONSO PERLAS and PACENCIA PERLAS and SPS. ROGELIO POBRE and MELINDA FOGATA POBRE, |
|
Promulgated: |
Respondents. |
|
August
8, 2010 |
x-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x |
D E C I S I O N
CARPIO, J.:
The
Case
This is a petition for review of the Court of Appeals’
Decision dated 22 November 2005 and Resolution dated 26 July 2006 in CA-G.R.
CV No. 64537. The Court of Appeals affirmed the Decision dated
23 June 1998 of the Regional Trial Court of Iba, Zambales, Branch 70 (RTC).
The
Facts
Petitioner
and respondents presented two different versions of the facts of this case.
Petitioner
Gaudencio Labrador, represented by Lulu Labrador Uson as attorney-in-fact, alleges that he is the registered
owner of a parcel of land situated in Bangan-Alalang,
Barrio Amungan, Iba, Zambales, consisting of 53,358 square meters, and covered
by Original Certificate of Title (OCT) No. P-3030 issued on 16 January 1973. Sometime between 1957 and 1958, Melecio
Labrador (Melecio), petitioner’s father and
predecessor-in-interest, was requested by respondent spouses Ildefonso Perlas and Pacencia Perlas (Spouses Perlas) to be
allowed to live temporarily in a portion of the said parcel of land. Ildefonso Perlas
was a relative of Casiana Aquino, the wife of Melecio. Melecio acceded to the
request, on the condition that Spouses Perlas would
vacate the occupied portion of land upon demand by Melecio
or by any of his heirs or representatives.
Later, Spouses Perlas requested Melecio to allow them to occupy another portion of the land
to be used as vegetable plantation.
Again, Melecio acceded to their request.
In 1979,
without the knowledge and consent of petitioner, Spouses Perlas
sold the portions of land they were occupying to respondent spouses Rogelio Pobre and Melinda Fogata Pobre (Spouses Pobre). Upon
knowledge of the sale sometime in 1992, petitioner instructed his
representative to demand that Spouses Perlas vacate
the occupied portions of land, but the latter refused to do so.
On 20
October 1994, petitioner filed with the RTC of Iba, Zambales, a Petition for Annulment
of Deed of Absolute Sale, Recovery of Possession and/or Ownership, with
Application for Issuance of Preliminary Mandatory Injunction and Temporary
Restraining Order and Damages, docketed as Civil Case No. RTC-1081-I.
Respondents,
on the other hand, allege that since 1957, Ildefonso Perlas
and his family had been living in a parcel of land situated in Sitio Bolintabog, Barangay Amungan, Iba, Zambales.
Ildefonso improved and developed said land without the intervention of Melecio Labrador whose land is separate and distinct from
that occupied by Ildefonso and his family. The subject land occupied by
Ildefonso and his family was declared as alienable and disposable public land
in a Certification dated 20 January 1983 issued by the Provincial Officer of
the Bureau of Lands in Iba, Zambales.
Respondents now claim that Spouses Perlas are the
absolute owners of the subject land measuring 2,903.6 square meters and covered
by Tax Declaration No. 001-1390 issued in 1994.
The Trial Court’s Ruling
On 23 June
1998, the RTC rendered a Decision, the dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE,
judgment is hereby rendered :
1. Declaring Spouses Ildefonso Perlas and Pacencia Perlas to be the lawful owners of lot covered by Tax
Declaration No. 001-1390;
2. Declaring Spouses Rogelio Pobre
and Melinda Fogata Pobre
the lawful owners of lot covered by Exhibit F (Deed of Absolute Sale executed
by defendant Ildefonso Perlas in favor of defendant
Spouses Pobre on 6 March 1979);
3. That in the event the lot covered by Tax
Declaration No. 001-1390 is within Original
Certificate of Title No. P-3030, ordering the plaintiff to reconvey said portion to the defendants.
4. No pronouncement as to damages and costs.
SO ORDERED.
Petitioner
filed a Motion for Reconsideration, but this was denied by the RTC in its Order
dated 28 June 1999.
The Court of Appeals’ Ruling
On appeal, the Court of Appeals rendered
judgment, affirming the decision of the RTC, thus:
WHEREFORE, the instant appeal is DENIED for lack
of merit and the assailed decision dated June 23, 1998 of the Regional Trial
Court of Iba, Zambales,
Branch 70, is AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
Petitioner’s Motion for Reconsideration was denied by the
Court of Appeals in its Resolution dated 26 July 2006.
Hence,
this appeal.
The Issue
The
issue for resolution is whether the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the RTC
Decision.
The Court’s Ruling
We
find the appeal meritorious.
In
its Decision dated 23 June 1998, the trial court recognized the validity of the
issuance of OCT No. P-3030 dated 16 January 1973 in the name of
petitioner. We quote the pronouncement
of the trial court:
There is no doubt that the land owned by plaintiff is
titled in his name and this consists of 53,358 square meters. This cannot be just ignored and the Court
believes that when the Registry of Deed (sic) issued Original Certificate of
Title No. P-3030, all the requirements of the law were
followed. Section 3 of Rule 131 of the
Rules of Court provides:
“Sec. 3.
Disputable Presumptions- The following presumptions are satisfactory if uncontradicted, but may be contradicted and overcome by
other evidence:
x x x x x x
(m) that official duty has
been regularly performed;
x x x x x x
(ff)
that the law had been obeyed.”
Nonetheless, the trial court ruled that the
lot occupied by respondents Ildefonso and Pacencia Perlas, which petitioner claimed to be covered by OCT No.
P-3030, was lawfully owned by said respondents and
hence, validly sold to their co-respondents Rogelio Pobre
and Melinda Fogata Pobre. The trial court ratiocinated that the
testimony of petitioner’s representative and attorney-in fact, Lulu Uson, stating that Spouses Perlas
had been residing on the subject land since Uson was
eight years old, or sometime in 1957, corroborated by the testimony of
petitioner’s witness, Engineer Regino L. Sobrevinas that the subject land was already occupied and
possessed by Spouses Perlas “even before he [Sobrevinas] surveyed it since these are planned to be
donated to the defendants [Spouses Perlas],” showed
that petitioner “recognized the possession and the ownership” by Spouses Perlas of the subject land.
The trial court ruled further that petitioner’s inaction and delay in
asserting his rights over the subject land constituted laches
which barred him from recovering said land.
Meanwhile, Spouses Perlas were in possession
of the subject land, introduced valuable and permanent improvements thereon,
and were issued a tax declaration and several certifications by government
surveyors. These, according to the trial
court, proved Spouses Perlas’ possession and
occupation of the subject land in the concept of an owner. Finally, the trial court ruled that “the area
of 2,903.6 square meters being occupied by the defendants [Spouses Perlas] is a very meager portion of the 53,358 square
meters covered by Original Certificate of Title No. P-3030. Social justice and equity will be well served
if this meager portion be awarded to the defendants.”
We
do not agree.
First,
petitioner has a valid claim over the property covered by OCT No. P-3030 issued
in his name. OCT No.
P-3030 was declared valid by the trial court, and respondents do not question
the title’s validity. Also, under the Torrens System of registration, an OCT
becomes indefeasible and incontrovertible one year after its final decree. It is a fundamental principle in land
registration that the certificate of title serves as evidence of an
indefeasible and incontrovertible title to a property in favor of the person
whose name appears therein.
Second,
contrary to the ruling of the trial court, the testimonies of petitioner’s
witnesses, Lulu Uson and Engineer Sobrevinas,
to the effect that Spouses Perlas were occupying the
subject land since 1957, do not prove ownership or adverse possession by the
spouses, especially in the light of petitioner’s claim that occupation of the
subject land by Spouses Perlas was merely tolerated
by petitioner and his predecessor-in-interest, Melecio
Labrador. The trial court also failed to
consider the portion of Engineer Sobrevinas’
testimony stating that the subject land was “segregated” since it was
“originally planned to be donated to [Spouses] Perlas.” If petitioner recognized the adverse
possession and ownership of the subject land by Spouses Perlas,
why would petitioner plan to donate the same to the latter?
Third,
the trial court’s ruling that petitioner had a long and unexplained inaction in
asserting his claim over the subject property, and hence, is barred by laches from recovering his property, is without basis. Petitioner has a valid title over his
property (i.e., the land covered by OCT P-3030). As a registered owner,
petitioner has a right to eject any person illegally occupying his
property. This right is imprescriptible and can never be barred by laches. In Bishop
v. Court of Appeals, we held, thus:
As registered owners of the lots in
question, the private
respondents have a right to eject any person illegally occupying their
property. This right is imprescriptible. Even if it
be supposed that they were aware of the petitioners’ occupation of the
property, and 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
unauthorized or merely tolerated, if at all. This right is never barred by laches.
Finally,
the trial court cannot hold “social justice and equity” as bases for granting
the subject land to respondents Spouses Perlas. Social justice and equity cannot be used to
justify the court’s grant of property to one at the expense of another who may
have a better right thereto under the law.
These principles are not intended to favor the underprivileged while purposely
denying another of his rights under the law.
In the words of Justice Perfecto, “The magic words ‛social
justice’ are not a shibboleth which courts may readily
avail of as a shield for shirking their responsibility in the application of
law.”
We
note, however, that Spouses Perlas alleged that the
subject land covered by Tax Declaration No. 001-1390,
which they claim to have occupied since 1957, is separate and distinct
from the land covered by OCT No. P-3030 issued in the name of petitioner.
Unfortunately, the trial court neglected to determine whether there is truth to
this allegation. Such determination is crucial in this case since if the
subject land covered by Tax Declaration No. 001-1390 is separate and distinct
from petitioner’s land covered by OCT No. P-3030, then petitioner may have no
basis for his claim on the subject land.
The trial court merely ordered in the dispositive portion of its
Decision: “That in the event the lot covered by Tax Declaration No. 001-1390 is within Original
Certificate of Title No. P-3030, ordering the plaintiff to reconvey said portion to the defendants.”
On
appeal by petitioner, the Court of Appeals held:
The records reveal the following undisputed facts:
a) that defendants-appellees Spouses Perlas have
been in actual possession of the subject property since 1957;
b) that OCT No. P-3030
in the name of the plaintiff-appellant covering an agricultural land with an
area of 53,358 square meters located at Bangan-Alalang,
Amungan, Iba, Zambales was issued on January 18, 1973 by virtue of Free
Patent No. 528213;
c) that a Certification dated January 12, 1983
was signed and issued by district Forester Jose Acain,
Bureau of Forest Development, stating that the subject parcel of land was
alienable and disposable; and
d) that a Certification
dated January 20, 1983 signed by Teofilo T. Murcia,
Officer-in-Charge, Sub-Office No. III-4 (1), Bureau of Lands and Ambrocio D. Pangilinan, Jr., Land
Investigator of the same office, was issued stating that the subject parcel of
land being claimed by Ildefonso Perlas is within the
alienable and disposable area.
The foregoing facts
clearly show that the subject property being occupied by defendants-appellees was previously part of the public land declared
as alienable and disposable, and they have been in possession of the same long
before the issuance of OCT No. P-3030 in the name of the
plaintiff-appellant. These
bolster defendants-appellees’ assertion that the said
property is separate and distinct from that of the plaintiff-appellant
registered under the said title. (Emphasis supplied)
We are not convinced that the
above-enumerated evidences are sufficient to prove that the subject property
claimed and sold by Spouses Perlas is separate and
distinct from the land covered by OCT No. P-3030 issued in the name of
petitioner.
In
view of the foregoing, and considering that it is not a function of this Court
to try facts, or to review, examine, evaluate and weigh the probative value of
the evidence presented, we deem it necessary to remand this case to the trial
court for further proceedings to determine whether the subject land occupied by
Spouses Perlas since 1957 and covered by Tax
Declaration No. 001-1390 is included in the land covered by OCT No. P-3030
issued in the name of petitioner.
WHEREFORE, we GRANT the petition. We SET ASIDE the Court of Appeals’
Decision dated 22 November 2005 and Resolution dated 26 July 2006 in CA-G.R.
CV. No. 64537. We REMAND this
case to the Regional Trial Court of Iba, Zambales, Branch 70, for further proceedings to determine
whether the land covered by Tax Declaration No.
001-1390 issued in the name of respondent Ildefonso Perlas
is included in the land covered by OCT No. P-3030 issued in the name of
petitioner Gaudencio Labrador.
SO ORDERED.
ANTONIO
T. CARPIO
Associate
Justice
WE CONCUR:
ANTONIO EDUARDO B. NACHURA
Associate Justice
DIOSDADO M. PERALTA ROBERTO A. ABAD
Associate Justice Associate Justice
JOSE C. MENDOZA
Associate Justice
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.
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
Chairperson
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, and the Division Chairperson’s
Attestation, I certify 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.
RENATO C. CORONA
Chief Justice