[ G. R. No. L-19496, February 27, 1965 ]
SILVERIO ALMIRAÑEZ AND ISIDRA VILLABONA, MOVANTS AND APPELLEES, VS. GASPARA DEVERA, OPPOSITOR AND APPELLANT. D E C I S I O N
ZALDIVAR. J.:
This is an appeal taken directly
to this Court on questions of law.
The facts as found in the records
may be summarized as follows:
On August 10, 1931, the appellant
Gaspara Devera sold to
Julian Villabona, under a contract of sale with right
to repurchase, a parcel of land situated at Barrio Polo, Municipality of Mauban, Province of Tayabas (now
Quezon), which lot later became known as lot No. 1563
of the Cadastral Survey of Mauban. The consideration
for the sale was the sum of P800.00, and the period for redemption was to
commence at the expiration of two years from August 10,
1931.
Immediately upon the execution of that contract of sale with right of
repurchase, Julian Villabona took possession of
property and since then enjoyed the fruits therefrom
until he died. Julian Villabona died during the
Japanese occupation, and the land in question was inherited by his son Primitivo Villabona. Upon the
death of Primitivo Villabona, this land was inherited by his daughter Nimfa Villabona. On
December 10,
1956,
Nimfa Villabona sold the
said land to the appellees, the spouses Silverio Almirañez and Isidra Villabona, for a
consideration of P2,000.00. Silverio Almiranez and his wife
took possession of the land upon their purchase from Nimfa Villabona who was in
possession of the same at the time of the sale. The possession of Nimfa Villabona dated back from
the death of her father Primitivo Villabona, who had been in possession of the land from the
death of his father Julian Villabona from whom he
(Primitivo) inherited the same. The land taxes on the land in question had been paid by Julian
Villabona and successively by his successors in
interest. As a matter of fact, the tax declaration on the land was transferred
to the name of Julian Villabona way back in
1937.
This lot No. 1563 of the Mauban cadastre, now in question, was among the lots that
were the subject of registration in the cadastral proceedings of the Court of
First Instance of Tayabas (Cadastral Case No. 83, L.
R. C. Record No. 1499); and in a decision rendered on July 16 1941, the Court of
First Instance of Tayabas adjudicated this lot to
Gaspara Devera, subject to
the lien that s mentioned in the decision, as follows:
"Este lote No. 1563 esta sujeto al gravamen de venta con pacto de retro a favor de Julian Villabona, por la suma de P800.00 por el termino de retracto de dos años, a contar desde Agosto 10, 1931 fecha un que se otorgo el documento de venta con pacto de ma retro, marcado Exhibito 'B’.
Later, on December 7,
1954,
Decree of Registration No. N-14538 was issued by the Commissioner of Land
Registration decreeing the registration of lot No. 1563 in the name of Gaspara Devera, subject to the
lien that was dated in the decision, which We have
quoted in the preceding paragraph. Subsequently, or on
February 18,
1955, Original Certificate of Title
No. O-1738,
covering said lot No. 1563, was issued in the name of Gaspara Devera and on the said
original certificate of title the above-mentioned lien regarding the sale with
right of repurchase in favor of Julian Villabona was
mentioned.
Gaspara Devera
had not repurchased the lot in question from Julian Villabona, nor from the successors
in interest of Julian Villabona. The
statement in Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 about the lien
consisting of the sale with right of repurchase in favor of Julian Villabona remained uncancelled. On
June 15,1960, Silverio Almiranez and Isidra Villabona, thru counsel, filed with the Court of First
Instance of Quezon in the cadastral case, a motion
praying that the ownership of lot No. 1563 be consolidated in their favor
pursuant to the contract of sale with right of repurchase executed by Gaspara Devera on August 10, 1931,
and which was noted in Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738, said Gaspara Devera not having re
Purchased the land. It was further prayed that Gaspara
Devera be ordered to deposit with the Clerk of Court t
owner's copy of Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738; that the said original
certificate of title in the name of Gaspara Devera be ordered cancelled and the
Register of Deeds of Quezon be authorized to issue a
transfer certificate of title in the names of Silverio
Almirañez and Isidra Villabona.
Gaspara Devera, thru counsel, filed an opposition to the motion for
consolidation of ownership in favor of Silverio Almirañez and Isidra Villabona. The grounds for the opposition boil down to one
principal point, namely, that the Court of First Instance of Quezon, acting as a cadastral court, has no jurisdiction to
order the consolidation of ownership in favor of the movants and to order the cancellation of Original
Certificate of Title No. O-1738 in the name of the oppositor and replace it with a new transfer certificate of
title in the name of the movants.
After hearing, on
December 20,
1960, the
Court of First Instance of Quezon issued an order
overruling the opposition to the motion for consolidation, and the dispositive portion of the order reads as follows:
"(a) declares the dominion and ownership of Lot No. 1563 of Mauban Cadastre, covered by Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738, of the Land Record of Quezon Province, together with the improvements thereon, consolidated in favor of the spouses Silvcrio Almiranez and Isidra Villabona . . .; and"(b) orders the oppositor Gaspara Devera to surrender the owner's duplicate of Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 to the Clerk of Court, Court of First Instance of Quezon, Lucena, within thirty (30) days from receipt of a copy of the order."When this order becomes final, the Register of Deeds of this province is ordered to cancel said Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 and, in lieu thereof, issue a transfer certificate of title in the name of the spouses Silverio Almirañez and Isidra Villabona upon payment of the fees required by law."
Unable to obtain a reconsideration of the order of December 20,
1960,
Gaspara Devera appealed
directly to this Court.
Counsel for the appellant Gaspara Devera, in this appeal
contends: (1) that the cause of action involved ownership of Lot No. 1563 and is
barred by the prior judgment of the cadastral court registering lot No. 1563 in
the name of the appellant, and that said judgment operates as res judicata
against the motion for consolidation of ownership; (2) that the trial court in
directing the cancellation Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 and the
issuance of another title in favor of the appellees
had in effect revoked the decree of registration of Lot No. 1563 in favor of
appellant Gaspara Devera;
(3) that the motion of June 15, 1960 for consolidation of ownership, based as it
was on a deed of pacto de retro sale with right to repurchase
that was executed on August 10, 1931 was already barred by the statute of
limitations and the motion constitutes a collateral attack upon the decree of
registration of Lot No. 1563; (4) that the motion for consolidation is
essentially a claim for recovery of land, and that the lower court exceeded its
authority when it granted the said motion; and (5) that the appellees have no legal capacity or personality to ask the
lower court to order the consolidation of ownership over Lot No. 1563 in their
favor and to ask for the issuance of a certificate of title in their
names.
The counsel for the appellant
made a lengthy discussion in his appeal brief of the alleged errors committed by
the lower court, but it is noteworthy that he had evaded discussion on the point
regarding the legal effect or implication of the statement in the decision of
the cadastral court that the registration of Lot No. 1563 in the name of Gaspara Devera was subject to the
lien consisting of the sale with right of repurchase in favor of Julian Villabona, and the notation of said lien in the decree of
registration and on Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738. The principal issue in the present case, precisely,
is: what effect must be given to that lien?
The appellant never questioned
the propriety of the inclusion of a statement in the decision, in the decree of
registration, and in the certificate of title, regarding the lien consisting of
the sale with right of repurchase in favor of Julian Villabona. It is presumed that when the Court of First
Instance of Tayabas, acting as a cadastral court, its
decision on July 16, 1941 adjudicating iot 1563 to
Gaspara Devera with the
statement that the registration of said lot was subject to the above-mentioned
lien the contract of sale with right of repurchase that executed by Gaspara Devera on August 10, 1931
in favor of Julian Villabona was properly brought
before the court. We do not agree with the contention of the appellant that the
judgment in the cadastral proceedings constitutes a bar, or operates as res judicata,
against the motion for consolidation presented by the appellees in the present case, because precisely that sale
with right of repurchase was duly recognized and embodied in the decision of the
cadastral court. We hold that what the appellee had
done, in filing the motion for consolidation on June
15, 1960
was not a collateral attack against the decree of registration, as claimed by
the appellant. The appellees simply asked the court to
give effect to the lien which was clearly mentioned, in the decision, in the
decree of registration, and in Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738. When the Court of First Instance of Quezon granted said motion for consolidation and ordered the
cancellation of Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738, it did not thereby
revoke the Decree of Registration No. N-14538, and reopen the registration case.
The lower court simply made effective the very terms of the certificate of title
which was issued pursuant to the decree of registration.
The lien that We have adverted to
refer to the contract of sale of Lot No. 1563 executed by Gaspara Devera in favor of Julian
Villabona for a consideration of P800.00 with right of
repurchase after the
expiration of two years. This contract was executed on August 10,
1931. The
statement in the decision of the cadastral court, in the decree of registration
No. N-14538, and in Original
Certificate of Title No. O-1738, that the period
of redemption was two years from the date of the execution of the contract must
be corrected, because what the contract really recites is that the repurchase
must be made after expiration of two years from the date of the execution of the
contract (Exhibit A). This discrepancy, however, in no way affects the
determination of the legal questions involved in the present
case.
The contract of sale with right
of repurchase was executed on August 10,
1931, so
that the law that governs this transaction are the
provisions of Article 1507, 1508, 1509 and 1518 of the Old Civil Code. Under the
Old Civil Code, upon the execution of the contract of sale with right of
repurchase the ownership over the property sold is transferred to the vendee
subject only to the condition that the vendor exercises his right of repurchase
within the period agreed upon. Under Article 1509, upon the failure of the
vendor to repurchase the vendee irrevocably acquires ownership of the property
sold that is, ownership is consolidated in the vendee by operation of law
(Benito Manalansan vs. Luis Manalang, et al., 108 Phil., 1041).
In the case now before Us, the contract of sale with right of repurchase was
executed on August 10,
1931, and
it provides that the right of the vendor to repurchase would commence to run
after the expiration of two years from the date of the execution of the
contract. The period for repurchase, therefore, commenced to run on
August 11,
1933.
Inasmuch as no definite period was stipulated within which the redemption would
be made after the expiration of two years from the date of the execution of the
instrument, the provisions of Article 1508 of the Old Civil Code governs; that
is, the period for repurchase should be within four years from the expiration of
two years (Rosales vs. Reyes
and Ordoveza, 25 Phil. 495). The period for
redemption, therefore, had expired on August 10,
1937. By
operation of law, upon failure of Gaspara Devera to re-purchase Lot No. 1563 from Julian Villabona on August 10,
1937, the
ownership of the lot became consolidated in favor of Julian Villabona, and the latter had irrevocably acquired ownership
of the property. Even if the period for repurchase is fixed at ten years from
August 10,
1931, the
legal situation is not changed because Gaspara Devera had never repurchased the land in question. The evidence that in 1937 the tax declaration covering the lot in
question was transferred to the name of Julian Villabona.
The evidence also shows that
Julian Villabona was in possession of the land in
question from the time he bought the same on August 10,
1931 up
to the time when he died during the Japanese occupation. After the death of
Julian Villabona his son Primitive Villabona inherited the land and took possession of the same
until he died. Upon the death of Primitivo Villabona his daughter, Nimfa
Villabona inherited the property and took possession
of the same. On December 10,
1956
Nimfa Villabona sold the
land to the appellees Silverio Almiranez and Isidra Villabona, who thereby took
possession of the same. The evidence further shows that while the decision in
the cadastral proceedings was rendered on July 16,
1941, the
decree of registration was issued by the Land Registration Commissioner only on
December 7,
1954 and
Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 in the name of Gaspara Devera was issued on
February 18,
1955. It
was on June 15,
1960, or
barely five years after the issuance of Original Certificate of Title No.
O-1738, when Silverio Almiranez and Isidra. Villabona filed a motion in the lower court to consolidate
their ownership of the land in question, as the successors in interest of the
original vendee, Julian Villabona. The rights of
Julian Villabona as vendee had been transmitted to his
son Primitivo Villabona by
operation of law; likewise the right of Primitivo
Villabona was transmitted upon his death to his
daughter, Nimfa Villabona by
operation of law; and it was this right which she inherited from her father that
Nimfa Villabona had sold to
the spouses Silverio Almiranez and Isidra Villabona. The contention of the appellant, therefore, that
the appellees have no legal capacity or personality to
file the motion of June 15, 1960 before the Court of First Instance of Quezon has no merit (Government vs. Serafica,
61 Phil. 93).
The undisputed fact is that Gaspara Devera had not purchased
lot No. 1563 from Julian Villabona nor from any of the successors in interest of Julian Viliabona. There is no evidence that any extension of time
had been given to Gaspara Devera for the repurchase of the land in question. It is
clear, therefore, that by her own act of selling the land in question to Julian
Viliabona under a contract of sale with right of
repurchase, and by her failure to repurchase the property pursuant to the terms
of that contract of sale, C.aspara Devera had divested "herself of whatever right or title she
had over lot No. 1563 covered by Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 in her name. The fact that the property was registered
in her name did not preclude the recognition of the better right over the
property in favor of another person, or in favor of the successors in interest
of said person. (Cabanos vs. Register of Deeds of Laguna et al.,
40 Phil. 620). This is more so in the present case because the right of the
other person is precisely recognized in the very same certificate of title that
is in the name of Gaspara Devera.
When the Court of First Instance
of Quezon declared the ownership of lot No. 1563
consolidated in favor of the appellees and ordered the
cancellation of Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 in the name of the
appellant and its replacement with a transfer certificate of title in the name
the appellees said court acted properly in accordance
with provisions of Section 112 of Act 496. Said section Provides as follows:
"SEC. 112. No erasure, alteration, or amendment shall be made upon the registration book after the entry of a certificate of title or a memorandum thereon and the attestation of the same by the clerk or any register of deeds, except by order of the court. Any registered owner or other person in interest may at any time apply by petition to the court, upon the ground that registered interests of any description, whether vested, contingent, expectant, or inchoate, have terminated and ceased: or that new interests have arisen or created which do not appear upon the certificate, or that any omission, or mistake was made in entering a certificate or memorandum, thereon, or on any duplicate certificate; or that name of any person on the certificate has been changed; or that the registered owner has been married; or, if registered as married, that the marriage has been terminated; or that a corporation which owned registered land and has been dissolved has not conveyed the same within three years after its dissolution; or upon any other reasonable ground, and the court shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine the petition after notice to all parties in interest, and may order the entry of a new certificate, the entry or cancellation of a memorandum upon a certificate, or grant any other relief upon such terms and conditions, requiring security if necessary, as it may deem proper: Provided, however, That this section shall not be construed to give the court authority to open the original decree of registration, and that nothing shall be done or ordered by the court which shall impair the title or other interest of a purchaser holding a certificate for value and in good faith, of his heirs or assigns, without his or their written consent.Any petition filed under this section and all petitions and motions filed under the provisions of this Act after original registration shall be filed and entitled in the original case in which the decree of registration was entered." (Italics is supplied)
In the case now before Us, the appellees are certainly
persons in interest who had come to court at any time to petition upon the ground
that the interest of the appellant as registered owner, appearing in Original
Certificate of Title No. O-1738, had terminated and ceased, and that they (appellees) have an interest that had been created which do
not appear in the certificate, and they thereby prayed the court to grant them
relief as it may deem proper. In other words, the appellees, Silverio Almiranez and Isidra Villabona, on June 15, 1960, had petitioned the Court of
First Instance of Quezon, as a cadastral court, in the
cadastral case involving Lot No. 1563, and showed to the court that registered
interest of the appellant Gaspara Devera as owner of Lot No. 1563 had terminated and ceased
because said land had been sold by Gaspara Devera to Julian Villabona way
back in 1931 under a contract of sale with right of repurchase and that Gaspara Devera had not repurchased
the land in accordance with the contract of sale, so that the ownership of the
land had been consolidated in favor of Julian Villabona and/or his successors in interest, and, therefore,
Gaspara Devera was no longer
longer the owner of the lot, and because of that the
Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 in the name of Gaspara Devera should be cancelled
and a new transfer certificate of title should be issued in their (appellees') names. The Court of First Instance of Quezon acting as a registration court took cognizance of the
motion of the appellees in the cadastral case, and,
after due notice to the appellants, the motion was heard. The court found that
indeed Gaspara Devera had
sold Lot No. 1563 of the Mauban cadastre to Julian
Villabona on August 10, 1931 under a contract of sale
with right of repurchase and that she had not repurchase the land as provided in
the contract of sale. The court likewise found that Julian Villabona and his successors in interest had been in
possession of the land since August 10,
1931 and
had been paying the taxes on the land. In view of these findings of the court,
and considering that the sale with right of repurchase in favor of Julian Villabona was recorded on the Original Certificate of Title
No. O-1738, the court declared that the ownership of Lot No. 1563 was
consolidated in favor of the appellees, Silverio Almirañez and Isidra Villabona, and ordered that
Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 be surrendered
by the appellant Gaspara Devera and that said original certificate of title be
replaced by a new transfer certificate of title in the names of said appellees. Certainly the facts and circumstances as found by
the lower court also constitute a "reasonable ground" for the action taken by
said court, as contemplated in the provisions of Section 112 of Act 496 (Jose A.
Caoibes et al. vs. Maria C. Sison de Martinez, et al., 54 Off. Gaz.,
366).
Counsel for the appellant
contends that Section 112 of Act 496 would not apply in the present case because
relief under said section "can only be granted if there is unanimity among the
parties, or there is no adverse claim or serious Ejections on the part of any
party in interest. . ." This contention has no application in the present case.
In the case of Felipa Enriquez et al. vs. Vicenta E. de Atienza et al., 100
Phil. 1072; this Court, referring to the phrase "unanimity among the parties"
held:
"A review of all the decisions
dealing with
the application of Section 112 reveals that by “unanimity among the parties’ is meant the absence of serious controversy between the parties in interest as to the title of the party seeking relief under said section . . ." (Italics supplied).
This Court in the same case, further held:
"The unanimity contemplated refers to the subject matter over which the jurisdiction of the court can not be waived by agreement of the parties. Such jurisdiction is determined by law and cannot be acquired by the court by consent or submission of the parties * * *"
In the case now before Us, the title, or right of ownership of the appellees, Silverio Almiranez and Isidra Villabona, over Lot No. 1563 can not be seriously controverted. The existence of the contract of sale with
right of repurchase executed by the appellant in favor of Julian Villabona (predecessor in interest of the appellees) has not been denied by the appellant. The
appellant had not questioned the notation in the decision of the cadastral
court, in the decree of registration, and in Original Certificate of Title No.
O-1738, of the lien consisting of the sale with right of
repurchase in favor of the original vendee Julian Villabona. As We have
adverted to, the appellant had evaded discussion in his brief about the legal
effect of the notation of that lien in the decision, in the decree of
registration and in the original certificate of title issued to her. The
appellant filed an opposition to the motion of the appellees in the court below, but the appellant did not
present any evidence in support of her opposition. The appellant had not
disproved the evidence of the appellees that she
(appellant) had not repurchased Lot No. 1563 from Julian Villabona or from the successors in interest of Julian Villabona and that the appellees
and their successors in interest had been in possession of said lot. We have
pointed out that by operation of law the ownership of Lot No. 1563 was
consolidated in favor of Julian Villabona by the
failure of the appellant to repurchase the same.
The title of the appellees who are seeking relief under Section 112 of Act
496, therefore, is not seriously controverted. What
the appellant is controverting in the present case is
the jurisdiction of the Court of First Instance of Quezon to grant the relief that was prayed for by the appellees. But, as ruled by this Court in the case of Felipa Enriquez et al vs. Vicenta
E. de Atienza, supra the jurisdiction of the Court can
not be the subject of agreement or waiver of the parties. Under the facts and
circumstances of the present case We hold that there is no serious controversy
between the parties as to the title of the appellees
over Lot 1563 so that the requirement of "unanimity among the parties", as
defined by this Court in the case of Felipa Enriquez
et al vs. Vicenta E. de Atienza, supra, has been satisfied. We also hold
that the lower court has jurisdiction to take cognizance of the motion for
consolidation and for the cancellation of the original certificate of title in
the name of the appellant and for the replacement of said original certificate
of title with a transfer certificate of title in the name of the appellees and to grant the relief prayed for, because what
was asked of the lower court was to give effect to what appears on the
certificate of title, and We believe that this is perfectly within the
jurisdiction of the court to do under Section 112 of Act
496.
We hold that the proceedings
contemplated in Section 112 of Act 496 are intended to grant relief to parties
whose title to the property that is covered by a certificate of title is clearly
established, as in the case of the appellees in the
present case. It is not enough that the petition of a party for relief under
said Section 112 is opposed for one reason or another. The opposition must be
serious enough as to place in grave doubt the title over the registered property
of the person who seeks relief under that section. Otherwise, the efficacy of
the remedy contemplated in this Section 112 would be frustrated by the filing of
any protest or claim, more or less baseless, which is intended merely to harass
or prejudice the movant. What should matter is not the allegations in the opposition to the motion filed
in court under Section 112 but the real nature of the title of the movant over the registered property as found by the court
after hearing, of which the parties had been duly
notified.
This Court has ruled that in
proceedings under Section 112 of Act 496 the Court of First Instance, acting as
a registration court, may hear evidence and decide controversial matters with a
view to determining whether the person seeking relief under this section is
entitled to the relief or not. Thus in the case of Concepcion H. Luna, et al. vs. Pedro P. Santos, et al., 102
Phil. 588, this Court held:
"In trying to assail the jurisdiction of the lower court, appellants stand on the premise that the petition for the cancellation of T. C. T. No. 657 issued in the name of Mons. Ariola was pursuant to the provisions of Section 112 of the Land Registration Act and filed with the Court of First Instance of Sorsogon in its capacity as a Land Registration Court. Thus they argued, it being a court of limited jurisdiction, it can not take cognizance of the question of the validity or invalidity of a document for it has to be resolved by a court exercising general jurisdiction. Appellants, however, forget that they were the ones who raised the legality of the transfers of the certificates on the basis of paid instrument (Exh. 1) and even if said question had to be resolved by the lower court as a Land Registration Court, under the principle laid down by Us in the case of Government of the P. I. vs. Serafica, 61 Phil. 93, and reiterated in the case of Caoibes vs. Sison, 102 Phil., 19 promulgated September 27, 1957, We find no reason to declare the Land Registration Courts, that are at the same time of First Instance and of general jurisdiction could not have, at for the take of expediency, entertained and disposed of the question of the validity or invalidity of the instrument referred to (Exh. 1)" (Italics is supplied).
In the case now at bar, what the
lower court did was not to decide on any question affecting the ownership of Lot
No. 1563 that was covered by Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738. We said that the ownership of lot No. 1563 had been
consolidated in favor of Julian Villabona pursuant to
the contract of sale with right of repurchase that was recorded in said original
certificate of title, by operation of law. What the lower count did was simply
to give effect to the lien that was recorded in the certificate of title which,
by operation of law, had vested title on the appellees.
The contention of the appellant,
that the right of action of the appellees based on the
contract of sale with right of repurchase executed on August
10, 1931
was barred by the statute of limitations, has no merit. As We have said, that sale with right of repurchase was recorded
in Original Certificate of Title No. O-1738 and under Section 112 of Act 496
appellees herein, who are persons in interest, may at
any time petition the court to grant relief based on the right that is recorded
in the certificate of title.
WHEREFORE, the orders of the lower court
of December 20, 1960, and July 25,
1961,
appealed from, are affirmed, with costs against the
appellant.
Bengzon, C. J., Bautista Angelo, Reyes,
J.B.L., Barrera, Dizon, Regala, Makalintal and Bengzon, J.P., JJ.,
concur.
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