CLT Realty Vs Phil-Ville Corp

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epublit of tbt llbilippint~


SS>uprtmt Court
;fflanila
FIRST DIVISION
CLT REALTY DEVELOPMENT
CORPORATION,
Petitioner,

G .R. No. 160728

Present:
- versus PHIL-VILLE DEVELOPMENT
AND
HOUSING
CORPORATION, REPUBLIC OF
THE PHILIPPINES (through the
OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR
GENERAL), and the REGISTER
OF DEEDS OF METRO MANILA
DISTRICT
III,
CALOOCAN
CITY,
Respondents.

x- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

SERENO, CJ.,
Chairperson,
LEONARDO-DE CASTRO,
BERSAMIN,
PEREZ, and
PERLAS-BERNABE, JJ.

Promulgated:

MAR 11 2015

~-~ ~: ~ ~-0-~- - - - - - - ~

LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, J.:


Once more, the Court has the opportunity to correct the errors in the
Torrens system about the fake titles that were erroneously issued covering
the controversial Maysilo Estate. This case calls for a direct application of
the Court En Bane's resolutions in Manotok Realty, Inc. v. CLT Realty
Development Corporation 1 as petitioner's title involved here was
conclusively dealt with in those cases.
This is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules
of Court seeking to reverse and set aside the Decision 2 dated February 27,
2003 and the Resolution 3 dated November 10, 2003 (the questioned
Decision and Resolution) both issued by the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
CV No. 52606, which affirmed the Decision4 dated March 15, 1996 of the
Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 122, Caloocan City, in Civil Case No.
C-15045.

565 Phil. 59 (2007) and 601 Phil. 571 (2009).


Rollo, pp. 103-134; penned by Associate Justice Remedios A. Salazar-Fernando with Associate
Justices Ruben T. Reyes and Edgardo F. Sundiam, concurring.
Id. at 137-141.
Id. at 443-476; penned by Judge Silvestre H. Bello, Jr.
/

DECISION

G.R. No. 160728

The questioned Decision and Resolution sustained the RTC Decision,


which ruled in favor of respondent Phil-Ville Development and Housing
Corporation (respondent Phil-Ville) and against petitioner CLT Realty
Development Corporation (petitioner), as shown in the dispositive portion
quoted below:
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing premises, judgment is
hereby rendered:
1.
Declaring plaintiff Phil-Ville Development and Housing
Corporation the true, absolute and legitimate owner of the sixteen (16)
parcels of land subject matter of this case located in Caloocan City
registered in its name;
2.
Declaring null and void defendant CLTs Transfer
Certificate of Title No. T-177013 and ordering defendant to surrender said
title to defendant Register of Deeds of Metro Manila District III;
3.
Ordering the defendant Register of Deeds of Metro Manila
District III to cancel the original title of TCT No. 177013 in the name of
CLT in the records of his office as well as the corresponding owners
duplicate certificate;
4.
Ordering defendant to pay plaintiff the sum of P50,000.00
as for attorneys fees;
5.
The Injunction issued by this Court in its Order dated
August 28, 1992 is hereby dissolved permanently;
6.

To pay the cost of this suit.5

FACTS
This case started with a Complaint6 for Quieting of Title, Damages
and Injunction filed by respondent Phil-Ville against petitioner and the
Register of Deeds of Metro Manila District III on August 28, 1991 before
the RTC of Caloocan City, Branch 122, docketed as Civil Case No. 15045.
Both corporations are domestic, duly organized and existing under and by
virtue of the laws of the Republic of the Philippines.
Respondent Phil-Ville claims that it is the registered owner and actual
possessor of sixteen (16) parcels of land in Baesa, Caloocan City, as shown
in the following table7:
Title No.
C-21568
C-24966
C-33124
5
6
7

Lot Description
Lot 25-A, (LRC) Psd-41914
Lot 25-B-1, (LRC) Psd-42341
Lot 25-B-2, (LRC) Psd-42341

Id. at 475-476.
Id. at 151-165, with Annexes A to R.
Id. at 1167-1168.

Exhibit
B
C
D

DECISION

C-21569
C-33418
C-21570
C-232569
C-28076
C-28077
C-29114
C-27944
C-156145
C-28075
C-29113
C-35359
C-27943

Lot 25-C, (LRC) Psd-41914


Lot 25-D, (LRC) Psd-41914
Lot 25-E, (LRC) Psd-41914
Lot 26, (LRC) Pcs-1828
Lot 27, (LRC) Pcs-1828
Lot 28, (LRC) Pcs-1828
Lot 31-A, (LRC) Psd-42343
Lot 31-B, (LRC) Psd-42343
Lot 34-A-2, (LRC) Psd-306716
Lot 34-B, (LRC) Psd-1234001
Lot 57-A-1, (LRC) Psd-116549
Lot 57-A-2, (LRC) Psd-116549
Lot 57-B, Psd-75893

G.R. No. 160728

E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q

Respondent Phil-Ville claimed that it had been in actual, open,


notorious, public, physical and continuous possession of the 16 parcels of
land before 1980 up to [the] present.8 It fenced said parcels of land in
1980 and 1991.9
Respondent Phil-Ville presented a chart10 showing that the 16 parcels
of land were derived from and were part of Lot 26, Maysilo Estate originally
covered by Original Certificate of Title (OCT) No. 994 issued on May 3,
1917.
Respondent Phil-Ville alleged that based on official records of the
office of respondent Register of Deeds and the Land Registration Authority,
petitioner was issued Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. T-177013,
covering a parcel of land situated in Caloocan City, particularly described as
follows:
A parcel of land (Lot 26, Maysilo Estate, LRC Swo-5268), situated
in the Mun. of Malabon, Caloocan City, Island of Luzon. Bounded on the
NW along lines 1 to 19 by the Tullajan River; on the NE., along lines 19
to 24 by Piedad Estate; on the SE., along lines 24 to 37 by Lot 27 (LRC)
SWO-5268; on the SW., along lines 37 to 46 and 46 to 1 by Lot 25-A
(LRC) SWO 5268 x x x containing an area of EIGHT HUNDRED
NINETY[-]ONE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED FORTY[-]SEVEN
AND FORTY-THREE (891,547.43) x x x.11

Respondent Phil-Ville further claimed that an actual plotting of the


relative position of Lot 26 as particularly described in petitioners
aforementioned TCT No. T-177013 in relation to the positions of all the lots
covered by respondent Phil-Villes transfer certificates of title, respectively,
proved positively that said TCT No. T-177013 of petitioner overlaps
respondent Phil-Villes aforesaid parcels of land. Respondent Phil-Ville
contended that petitioners TCT No. T-177013, although apparently valid or
effective, is in truth and in fact, invalid and ineffective, and unless declared
8
9
10
11

Id. at 1168.
Id.
Id. at 1169.
Id. at 202; Phil-Ville Exhibits, Exh. R.

DECISION

G.R. No. 160728

as such by the court, will inevitably prejudice respondent Phil-Villes title


over its 16 parcels of land, as said title of petitioner is a potential cause of
litigations between respondent Phil-Ville and petitioner, as in the present
suit, as well as suit/s involving respondent Phil-Ville and transferee/s of
petitioner of the entire and/or a portion of Lot 26 in question.12
The other allegations of respondent Phil-Ville as contained in its
Complaint to support its action to quiet title were succinctly summarized by
the Court of Appeals and are quoted below:
[A]n examination of the annotations under the Memorandum of
Encumbrances of Original Certificate of Title No. 994, earlier mentioned
as the mother title of TCT No. 177013, reveals that on September 9, 1918,
TCT No. 4210 was issued in favor of Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P.
Leuterio, cancelling OCT No. 994, Lot 26, over an area of 3,052.93 square
meters and another area of 16,512.50 square meters by virtue of a Deed of
Sale executed on August 21, 1918; another inscription stated that TCT No.
4211 Lot 26 with an area of 871,982 square meters was issued on
September 9, 1918, totally cancelling OCT No. 994 with regard to Lot 26
by virtue of a sale on August 21, 1918 also in favor of Alejandro Ruiz and
Mariano P. Leuterio; said sales were executed by Commissioners Don
Tomas Arguelles and Don Enrique Llopia, duly appointed by the then
Court of First Instance of Rizal in CC-391 and the sale was approved by
the court; if the aforementioned sales were added together, TCT No. 4210
consisting of 3,052.93 square meters and 16,512.50 square meters when
added to the 871,547 square meters of TCT No. 4211 amount to 891,547
square meters, which is equivalent to the total area of Lot No. 26, as
appearing on the face of OCT No. 994; TCT No. 4211 covering Lot 26
with an area of 871,982 (LRC) Pcs-1828 in the names of Alejandro Ruiz
and Mariano P. Leuterio, was cancelled by TCT No. 5261 in the name of
Francisco J. Gonzales, who purchased the property from Alejandro Ruiz
and Mariano P. Leuterio; when Francisco J. Gonzales died, the property
was transferred to his six (6) children in undivided shares under TCT No.
35486, who partitioned among themselves the same property and seven
TCTs were issued to them; the Republic of the Philippines expropriated
the lands of the Gonzales and as a consequence the titles of the Gonzales
were cancelled and in lieu thereof seven (7) new TCTs were issued in the
name of the Republic of the Philippines; thereafter, the Republic of the
Philippines through the National Housing Authority (NHA) consolidated
and subdivided into 77 lots to the 8 vendees of NHA; [respondent PhilVille] subsequently acquired the 8 lots through sale and deeds of exchange
and had the lots titled in its name; Estelita Hipolito, Jose B. Dimson and
[petitioner] CLT were not among the vendees of NHA or of the latters
vendees/transferees covering the disposition of the aforementioned
expropriated lands; a further examination of TCT No. 177013 of
[petitioner] CLT revealed that said title was a transfer from TCT No. R17994 in the name of Estelita I. Hipolito and said TCT No. R-17994 was a
transfer from TCT No. 15166 in the name of Jose B. Dimson married to
Rueta Rodriguez Dimson and TCT No. 15166 originated from OCT No.
994 in the name of Isabel Gil de Gola as judicial administratrix of the
estate of Gonzalo Tuazon and 31 others; the annotations in the
aforementioned titles of Estelita Hipolito and Jose B. Dimson showed that
Estelita Hipolito acquired Lot 26 by virtue of an Order of Court dated
12

Id. at 154.

DECISION

G.R. No. 160728

October 18, 1977, approving a compromise agreement which admitted


that the sale was made by Jose B. Dimson in her favor on September 2,
1976; Jose B. Dimson acquired the lot by virtue of the Court Order dated
June 13, 1966 awarding to him as attorneys fees 25% of whatever
remained under Lot 25-A, 26, 27, 28 and 29 undisposed of the intestate
estate of decedent Concepcion Vidal, one of the registered owners of
properties covered by OCT No. 994; x x x Lot 26 was totally disposed of
on September 9, 1918 and August 21, 1918 in favor of Alejandro Ruiz and
Mariano P. Leuterio, predecessors-in-interest of [respondent], hence, at the
time of the issuance of the Order of Court dated June 13, 1966, granting to
Jose B. Dimson as part of his attorneys fees the undisposed portion of Lot
26, among others, nothing more was left of said Lot 26 which could be
further awarded to or conveyed to Jose B. Dimson as attorneys fees;
consequently, nothing at all was left for Jose B. Dimson to convey to
Estelita Hipolito; by necessary consequence, nothing more of said Lot
26 could be conveyed by Estelita Hipolito to [petitioner] CLT, thus,
rendering TCT No. T-177013 void and ineffective x x x; at the time of
[petitioner] CLTs acquisition of Lot 26, and in the subsequently acquired
title of [petitioner] CLT, an annotation appeared on the TCTs which reads:
(P)ursuant to Ministry Opinion No. 239 dated November 4, 1982, Notice
is hereby given that this titles (sic) is subject to the verification by the LRC
Verification Committee on questionable titles, plan, decrees and other
documents; [petitioner] CLT was not only effectively forewarned of the
questionable character of its predecessors-in-interests title on Lot 26, but
must and should had also known of [respondent Phil-Villes] ownership of
the disputed land because the latter had been in actual possession thereof
then and up to now x x x.13 (Emphasis supplied.)

On the other hand, petitioners allegations contained in its Answer


(With Petition for Issuance of Writ of Preliminary Injunction14 were
likewise summarized by the Court of Appeals as follows:
[Petitioner CLT] is the registered owner of a parcel of land known as Lot
26 of the Maysilo Estate as evidenced by a valid and regular title and
devoid of any infirmity, TCT No. 177013 of the Registry of Deeds of
Caloocan City; it acquired said real property on December 10, 1988 from
Estelita I. Hipolito, the legal registered owner of said property, by virtue
of a Deed of Absolute Sale with Real Estate Mortgage; Estelita I. Hipolito,
in turn, acquired Lot No. 26 of the Maysilo Estate from Jose B. Dimson,
also a previous holder of Torrens title, TCT No. 15166, by virtue of a
Deed of Sale dated September 2, 1976; Jose B. Dimson, on the other hand,
acquired title over Lot No. 26 of the Maysilo Estate by virtue of a Court
Order dated June 13, 1966 issued by the then Court of First Instance of
Rizal in Civil Case No. 4557 concerning the rights and interest of the heirs
of Maria de la Concepcion Vidal over certain parcels of land covered by
OCT No. 994, including Lot No. 26 of the Maysilo Estate; at the time
TCT No. 15166 was issued in favor of Jose B. Dimson, the parcels of land
covered by OCT No. 994 were not totally disposed of, more particularly
Lot No. 26; insofar as Lot 26 was concerned, OCT No. 994 was not yet
cancelled; in view thereof, the Register of Deeds partially cancelled OCT
No. 994 and issued a Torrens Title, TCT No. 15166, in favor of Jose B.
Dimson; contrary to [respondent Phil-Villes] allegations, it was not
occupying its own properties but portions of the property of [petitioner]
13
14

Id. at 105-107.
Records (Vol. I), pp. 183-208.

DECISION

G.R. No. 160728

CLT Realty covered by TCT No. T-177013 of the Registry of Deeds of


Caloocan City; contrary to [respondent Phil-Villes] allegations, its titles
to the aforementioned 16 parcels of land, are the ones which are null and
void; [petitioner] CLT Realtys examination of the available records
revealed that TCT No. 4211, the alleged title from which [respondent PhilVilles] titles originated, was clearly forged and spurious; the same is true
with TCT Nos. 5461, 35486 and the succeeding derivative titles; records
of the alleged deeds of sale in favor of Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P.
Leuterio and the purported court order approving the same cannot be
located; on the face of TCT Nos. 4211, 5261 and 35486, there are patent
infirmities, inconsistencies and irregularities which pointed to the
inescapable conclusion that said titles were falsified and could not have
originated from OCT No. 994; the technical descriptions of Lot 26 in OCT
No. 994 are already in English, however, the technical descriptions in TCT
Nos. 4211, 5261 and 35486 are in Spanish; the subdivision survey is also
missing; there is nothing left on the face of TCT No. 4211 which shows
that it covers Lot 26 of the Maysilo Estate; the original survey dates
indicated in OCT No 994 are different from those found in TCT Nos.
4211, 5261 and 35486; [petitioner] CLT Realtys examination of OCT No.
994 at the Office of the Register of Deeds (Metro ManilaDistrict III)
showed that there is no annotation with respect to the issuance of TCT No.
4211, the alleged deeds of sale in favor of Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P.
Leuterio and the purported court order approving said sales; Psd-21154,
which appeared in TCT Nos. 1368 to 1374, is obviously fictitious; the
records of the Land Management Section (Department of Environment
and Natural Resources) did not contain said plan; the land expropriated by
the Government in G.R. No. L-4918 did not refer to Lot 26 of the Maysilo
Estate; [petitioner] CLT Realty was still pursuing its investigation and
certain that in the near future, it will uncover other pieces of evidence
showing [respondent Phil-Villes] titles and the alleged titles from which
their titles originated were fictitious, void and ineffective.15

To resolve all the issues in this case intelligently, the RTC of


Caloocan City, Branch 122 issued the following Order dated August 28,
1992 in Civil Case No. 15045:
Submitted for resolution before this Court are the applications for
issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction of the plaintiff Phil-Ville
Development and Housing Corporation Incorporated in its Complaint
dated August 26, 1991, and that of the defendant CLT Realty
Development Corporation Incorporated in its Answer dated January 9,
1992.
Plaintiff is claiming ownership of the subject properties by virtue
of the following Transfer Certificates of Title:
NO.
C-21568
C-24966
C-33124
C-21569
C-33418
15

LOT DESCRIPTION
Lot 25-A
Lot 25-B-1
Lot 25-B-2
Lot 25 C
Lot 25 D

Rollo, pp. 108-109.

AREA
497 sq.m.
1,000 sq.m.
1,100 sq.m.
2,000 sq.m.
2,000 sq.m.

DATE
REGISTERED
2-27-79
6-21-79
3-21-80
2-27-79
3-27-80

DECISION

C-21570
C-232569
C-28076
C-28077
C-29114
C-27944
C-156145
C-28075
C-29113
C-35369
C-27943

Lot 25 E
Lot 26
Lot 27
Lot 28
Lot 31-A
Lot 31-B
Lot 34-A-2
Lot 34-B
Lot 57-A-1
Lot 57-A-2
Lot 57-B

G.R. No. 160728

22,000 sq.m.
22,760 sq.m.
20,204 sq.m.
21,179 sq.m.
6,127 sq. m.
6,120 sq.m.
4,000 sq.m.
18,965 sq.m.
2,000 sq.m.
1,298.5 sq.m.
3,290.5 sq.m.

3-5-79
5-9-91
9-12-79
9-12-79
10-22-79
9-26-79
10-9-87
9-12-79
10-22-79
6-3-80
9-26-79

whereas defendant CLT is equally claiming right over the said subject
properties by virtue of Transfer Certificate of Title No. T-177013.
Considering that both parties are claiming title to the subject properties, in
order that the rights and interest of the parties and the public in general
could be fully protected and safeguarded, and in order that this Court
could resolve all the issues in this case intelligently, leaving no stone
unturned, both parties, plaintiff Phil-Ville Development and Housing
Corporation and defendant CLT Realty Development Corporation,
and their respective officers, employees, agents, or representative or
any person acting for and in their respective behalf, are hereby
enjoined from selling, disposing, leasing, encumbering, or otherwise
conveying the subject properties or any portion thereof, covered by
their alleged respective titles, until this Court shall have resolved the
main case.16 (Emphases supplied.)

Petitioner filed a Motion to Subject Questioned Documents to


Scientific or Expert Examination by the National Bureau of Investigation17
(NBI), with reference to TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211 in the names of Alejandro
Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio, which were in the custody of the Register of
Deeds of Caloocan City; Escritura de Venta executed by Don Tomas
Arguelles and Don Enrique Llopia on August 21, 1918, which was in the
custody of the Register of Deeds of Pasig City; Exhibits B, D and F in
CFI Case No. 391; and Mocion in CFI Case No. 391, which were in the
custody of the Register of Deeds of Pasig City.18
Respondent Phil-Ville in turn caused the examination by the
Philippine National Police (PNP) Crime Laboratory Service of the
documents and presented the testimony of Mr. Zacarias Tibol, an expert
witness from the PNP Crime Laboratory Service.19
The NBI Questioned Document Report No. 700-1192 dated March 9,
1993 contained the following with reference to TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211:
20

16
17
18
19
20

Records (Vol. I), pp. 409-410.


Id. at 446-450.
Rollo, p. 111.
Id. at 112.
Records (Vol. II), pp. 79-81.

DECISION

G.R. No. 160728

F I N D I N G S:
Laboratory analysis and comparative examination of the specimens
submitted under magnification and with the aid of photographic
enlargements reveal the following:
1. That the signatures L. GARDOO, Register of Deeds,
appearing in both the questioned and the standard Transfer
Certificates of Title exhibit the presence of sufficient number
of agreeing significant personal writing individualities and the
absence of basic differences, hence, the signatures L.
GARDOO, Register of Deeds, were written by one and the
same person.
2. That fundamental similarities in handwriting habits and
identifying details of letters/elements exist between the
handwritten entries appearing in the questioned and the
standard Transfer Certificates of Title, indicative of common
authorship of the aforementioned handwritten entries.
3. That significant similarities in printing characteristics such as,
letter-design, size, printing lay-out and other minute identifying
details exist between the printed entries, including the presence
of the commonwealth seal watermarks, appearing in the
questioned and the standard Transfer Certificates of Title,
hence the questioned and the standard TCT were prepared from
one source.
C O N C L U S I O N:
The questioned Transfer Certificates of Title Nos. 4210 and 4211 are
genuine.

NBIs Chemistry Report No. C-93-272 dated May 7, 199321 on the


same documents revealed that:
PURPOSE OF THE LABORATORY EXMINATION:
To determine the age of ink and paper.
FINDINGS:
Examinations conducted on the above-mentioned
specimens showed that the handwritten entries were written in
black liquid pen ink, its iron component had oxidized.
Further examinations showed the presence of watermarks,
brown spots and discoloration of the paper.
REMARKS: The above-mentioned specimens could be more or less fifty
(50) years old.

21

Id. at 82.

DECISION

G.R. No. 160728

FINDINGS OF THE LOWER COURT


In its Decision dated March 15, 1996 in Civil Case No. C-15045, the
RTC traced the history of respondent Phil-Villes 16 parcels of land, and we
quote the relevant portions of the said Decision below:
1. Lot 26 of OCT 994, the original title of the Maysilo Estate;
2. TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211 issued to Alejandro Ruiz and
Mariano P. Leuterio, who bought Lot 26 from the owners of
the Maysilo Estate;
3. TCT No. 5261 in the name of Francisco Gonzales, who
acquired the land covered by TCT No. 4211 from the coowners Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio;
4. TCT No. 35486 issued to the heirs of Francisco J. Gonzales
after the latters death and which cancelled their fathers TCT
No. 5261;
5. TCT Nos. 1368-1374 seven (7) titles issued to the Gonzales
children after they partitioned the land covered by their TCT
No. 35486;
6. TCT Nos. 12836 to 12842 also seven (7) titles issued to the
Republic of the Philippines after the government expropriated
the Gonzales Estate [i.e., the seven (7) lots titled in the name of
the Gonzales children under TCT Nos. 1368-1374];
7. TCT No. T-6097 [etc.], issued to the buyers of the sixteen (16)
lots in question from the Republic of the Philippines;
8. TCT No. C-21568 [etc.], in the name of the plaintiff Phil-Ville
over the sixteen (16) lots here in question, which cancelled the
title of the buyers of said lots from the Government.22

The RTC concluded that the land covered by the foregoing series of
titles is none other than Lot 26 of the Maysilo Estate, and declared that this
was sufficiently and satisfactorily established by the following comments
and evidences23:
1.
When Lot 26 was subdivided into three (3) parcels by
agrimensor Fernando on December 22, 1917, he clearly referred to the
subdivided lot as Lot 26 de la Hacienda de Maysilo Psd-2345 (Exh.
DD);
2.
The Escritura de Venta dated August 21, 1918 (Exh.
CC), executed by the Commissioner appointed by the CFI of Rizal (to
partition and sell the Maysilo Estate to the different claimant) in favor of

22
23

Rollo, pp. 468-469.


Id. at 469.

DECISION

10

G.R. No. 160728

Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio expressly mentioned Lot 26 of


Plan Psd-2345 as the subject matter of said sale;
3.
Engineer Juanito Bustalino, defendants witness, confirmed
that the technical description of Lot 26 as appearing in Decree No. 36455
(Exh. ZZZZ as basis of OCT 994 x x x;
4.
Entry AP 666S/0-994 inscribed by Register of Deeds L.
Gardonio in Memorandum of Encumbrances of OCT 994 on September 9,
1918 states, that Lot 26 was subdivided into three (3) portions which were
sold to Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio, who were issued TCT
No. 4210 over the portions with areas of 3,053.93 sq. mts. and 16,512.50
sq. mts., respectively, and TCT No. 4211 over the portion with an area of
871,982 sq. mts.;
5.
TCT No. 4211 of the co-owners Alejandro Ruiz and
Mariano P. Leuterio was cancelled by TCT No. 5261 in the name of
Francisco Gonzales who bought the property covered by said title from
them. When TCT No. 35486 was issued to the heirs later subdivided the
land covered by their TCT No. 35486 into seven (7) lots and seven (7)
titles, the Register of Deeds placed the following annotation on November
21, 1946 at the back of their former title TCT No. 35486;
Entry No. 3731/T-1368 Subdivision of the land
described in this certificate of title into seven (7) lots in
accordance with subdivision plan Psd-21154 duly approved by
the Director of lands together with technical description.
Subdivision Plan Psd-21154 is the survey plan that partitioned the
land originally registered in the name of Francisco J. Gonzales, who
bought the second portion of Lot 26 of the Maysilo Estate registered in the
name of Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio under TCT No. 4211;
6.
After the partition of the land covered by their TCT No.
35486 in the name of the Gonzales children into seven (7) parcels,
resulting in the issuance to them of seven (7) separate titles TCT Nos.
1368-1374 (Exhs. GG-2 GG-8), the Republic of the Philippines
filed Civil Case No. 131 in the CFI of Rizal to expropriate said seven (7)
parcels from the Gonzales children (called Gonzales Estate) and notice of
the filing of said expropriation case was annotated in TCT Nos. 1368-1374
of the Gonzales children on March 6, 1947 as Entry No. 6385-A-Lis
Pendens (Exhs. GG-2 GG-8). The decision of the Supreme Court
in the same expropriation case (G.R. No. L-4918) in favor of the Republic
was likewise annotated by the Register of Deeds on said titles on
November 2, 1954 as Entry No. 766/T-No. 36557;
7.
The decision of the Supreme Court in G.R. No. L-4918
dated May 14, 1954 (94 Phil. 956) expressly states that the subject matter
of the Governments expropriation case against the Gonzales Estate is
situated within the Maysilo Estate, Caloocan and originally covered by
Transfer Certificate of Title No. 35486 x xx now represented by seven (7)
transfer certificates of title, numbered and owned respectively: 1373 by
Jose Leon Gonzales; 1368 by Juan F. Gonzales; 1369 by Maria C.
Gonzales-Hilario; 1372 by Concepcion A. Gonzales-Virata; 1370 by
Consuelo Gonzales Precilla; 1371 by Francisco Felipe Gonzales; and 1374
by Hose Gonzales, et al.

DECISION

11

G.R. No. 160728

8.
In another case also involving the same parcel of land
acquired by the Republic of the Philippines from the Gonzales family
(Baylon vs. PHHC, et. al., G.R. No. 45330-R, February 7, 1973), the High
Court again described the Gonzales Estate as having an area of 871,982
sq. mts. and originally covered by TCT No. 35486 and by Transfer
Certificates of Title No. 1368, 1369, 1370, 1371, 1372, 1373 and 1374 of
the Gonzales Estate;
9.
When the Gonzales filed a case for reversion of the
properties expropriated from them by the Government, the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CV-69786, May 31, 1991, held that the Gonzales
were absolutely divested of the ownership of their land after they were
paid just compensation for their land and titles passed on to the Republic;
10.
The sixteen (16) parcels of land here in question and titles
in the name of plaintiff under TCT Nos. 21548, et al. (Exhs. B Q)
were purchased by Phil-Ville from the tenants-occupants (Exhs. HH-1
HH-7) who on their part bought from the PHHC or their successorsininterests (Exhs. OO AAAA, so that all the titles of the plaintiff over
said sixteen (16) parcels of land are derivatives of the titles of the
Republic of the Philippines;
11.
That the titles of plaintiff Phil-Ville and the title of
defendant CLT overlaps each other as per plans and testimonies presented
to the Court (Exhs. 61 and S).
Therefore, there is absolutely no question that the sixteen (16)
titles of plaintiff over the sixteen (16) parcels of land subject of this
case involves the same lands earlier expropriated by the Government
from the Gonzales Estate.24 (Emphasis added.)

RULING OF THE RTC


The RTC held that there was no doubt that the lots registered in
respondent Phil-Villes 16 titles subject-matter of this case are clearly
located within the large area or Lot 26 of the Maysilo Estate, supposedly
covered by petitioners TCT No. T-177013. Thus, the titles overlapped, and
this fact was not seriously disputed by petitioner.25
As shown in the dispositive portion of the RTC Decision quoted
above, the RTC declared respondent Phil-Ville as the true, absolute and
legitimate owner of the sixteen (16) parcels of land subject matter of this
case located in Caloocan City registered in its name; declared as null and
void petitioners TCT No. T-177013; ordered petitioner to surrender said
title to respondent Register of Deeds of Metro Manila District III and
respondent Register of Deeds to cancel the original title of TCT No. T177013 in the name of petitioner CLT in the records of his office as well as
the corresponding owners duplicate certificate; dissolved the injunction

24
25

Id. at 469-471.
Records (Vol. II), p. 440.

DECISION

12

G.R. No. 160728

issued in its Order dated August 28, 1992; and awarded attorneys fees and
costs.26
We quote the detailed findings and conclusions made by the RTC,
Branch 122 in its Decision dated March 15, 1996 in Civil Case No. C15045, as follows:
For the survey plan of the land allegedly covered by its TCT No. 177013
prepared by Geodetic Engineer Juanito B. Bustalino on February 17
March 31, 1992, presented by it as its Exhibit 61 in this case, shows the
relative locations and positions of the sixteen (16) lots registered in the
name of plaintiff (under its TCT No. C-21568, et al.) in the much bigger
area supposedly covered by defendants TCT No. 177013. The main task
of the Court in this case, is to determine which of the competing and
overlapping titles of the parties are the lots in question [sixteen (16)
lots subject of the complaint] are valid and genuine.
When defendant purchased or acquired the land supposedly
covered by its title TCT No. 177013 on December 10, 1988, from its
predecessor Estelita Hipolito in whose name said land was previously
registered under TCT No. R-17994, the latter title of Hipolito was subject
to the following notice annotated at the back thereof:
Pursuant to Ministry Opinion No. 239 dated November 4,
1982. Notice is hereby given that this title is subject to the
verification by the LRC Verification Committee on questionable
titles, plans, decrees and other documents.
The above notice or warning in Hipolitos title should have put
defendant on its guard when it acquired her alleged interests under
her TCT No. R-17994 on December 10, 1988, and must have spurred
it to investigate the basis of the above-quoted notice or warning in
Hipolitos title.
x x x Estelita Hipolito acquired the land supposedly covered by her
TCT No. R-17994 by virtue of a Court Order dated October 18, 1977
(Exh. RRRR-10) approving the Compromise Agreement between her
and Atty. Jose B. Dimson, wherein the latter transferred to Hipolito on
September 2, 1976 Lot 26 of the Maysilo Estate, supposedly covered by
his TCT No. R-15166, which property in turn appears to have been
acquired by Dimson by virtue of a Court Order dated June 13, 1966 (Exh.
RRRR-11), awarding to him as his attorneys fees whatever remained
undisposed of in Lots 25-A, 26, 27, 28 and 29 of the Maysilo Estate of
Maria De La Concepcion Vidal. Thus, the acquisition by Atty. Dimson
of the interests of the late Maria De La Concepcion Vidal in Lot 26
and other lots of the Maysilo Estate was subject to the condition, that
something remained of said lot in the intestate estate of said deceased
that have not been disposed of. The acquisition of the same Lot 26 by
Estelita Hipolito from Dimson under her TCT No. R-17994, as well as
the subsequent acquisition of the same lot by defendant CLT from
Hipolito under its TCT No. T-177013, were both likewise subject to
the condition, that something or some portion of Lot 26 of the Maysilo

26

Rollo, p. 475.

DECISION

13

G.R. No. 160728

Estate belonging to former co-owner Maria De La Concepcion Vidal


remained undisposed of.
x x x [W]hen Estelita Hipolito presented her Subdivision Plan
(LRC) Psd-288152, to which her TCT No. R-17994 was based to the
Land Registration Authority (LRA) for approval on May 21, 1979,
said plan was disapproved by the Chief of the Division of Registered
Lands, for the reason that it appears to be entirely inside (LRC) Pcs1828; (LRC) Psd-5079; (LRC) Psd-50580 and (LRC) Psd-15345 (Exh.
RRRR-3). And when the LRC appointed a seven (7) man Committee,
headed by its then Deputy Commissioner Paz Lahoz-Argel to verify the
correctness of said action of the Chief of its Division of Registered Lands
and the validity of Estelita Hipolitos TCT No. R-17994, the Committee
unanimously confirmed the disapproval by its aforesaid official of
Hipolitos Plan (LRC) Psd-288152 and recommended the annulment
of her TCT No. R-17994 on the ground that Hipolitos title is a
duplication of TCT No. 4210 and TCT No. 4211 issued as early as
September 5, 1918 in favor of Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P.
Leuterio, TCT No. 4210 being what corresponds to (LRC) Psd-5079
and (LRC) Psd-5080, and the TCT being what was expropriated by
the government, subdivided and consolidated into seventy[-]seven (77)
lots and sold through the National Housing Authority to occupant
thereon under (LRC) Pcs-1828 in the name of the Republic of the
Philippines (Exhs. RRRR, RRRR-1 to RRRR-27).
It is obvious then, that both Estelita Hipolito and defendant CLT
were not innocent transferees of whatever interest Atty. Jose R. Dimson
had in Lot 26 of the Maysilo Estate under his TCT No. 15166, because
they both took said title of Dimson on condition - that there remained
undisposed portions of Lot 26 in the intestate estate of the former owner
Maria De La Concepcion Vidal, also on condition, as annotated at the
back of Hipolitos title TCT No. R-17994, that said title was subject to
verification by the LRC Verification Committee on questionable titles,
plans, decrees and other documents. Finally, subject indeed to the
findings of the Verification Committee of the LRC, that nothing more
was left for the heirs of Maria De La Concepcion Vidal to convey to Jose
R. Dimson as his attorneys fees, and consequently, nothing at all was left
for Jose R. Dimson to convey to Estelita Hipolito (Exhs. RRRR,
RRRR-1 to RRRR-27).
In short, Estelita Hipolitos TCT No. R-17994 is null and void
as no land had been registered thereunder, and defendant CLTs TCT
No. T-177013 which was derived from Hipolitos TCT No. R-17994 is
similarly null and void for the same reason.
xxxx
To repeat, plaintiff traces its titles to the sixteen (16) lots as far
back as TCT No. 4211, issued by the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal on
September 9, 1918, to Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio (Exh.
X), which together with TCT No. 4210 issued to the same parties,
covered Lot 26 of the Maysilo Estate. These two (2) titles, which are now
seventy[-]seven (77) years old, had been issued to co-owners Ruiz and
Leuterio by virtue of the Escritura de Venta executed in their favor by
Don Tomas Arguelles and Don Enrique Llopis on August 21, 1918 before
Notary Public Vicente Foz under the authority given to them by the Court

DECISION

14

G.R. No. 160728

in CFI Case No. 391 (Exh. CC), the two gentlemen Arguelles and
Llopis having been appointed by the Court as commissioners to partition
the vast Maysilo Estate among the co-owners and/or sell parts thereof to
the claimants. x x x.
Now it is beyond question, that the subject-matter of the aforesaid
Escritura de Venta is Lot 26 of Hacienda Maysilo or the Maysilo Estate,
since Lot 26 is so mentioned in the Deed of Sale as the subject-matter
thereof. The same document of sale shows that for the purpose of said
sale, each of which was specifically and technically described therein,
namely: the Primera Porcion with an area of 3,052.93 sq. mts.; the
Segunda Porcion with an area of 871,982 sq. mts.; and the Tercera
Portion with an area of 16,512.50 sq. mts., all of which areas, when
added together have a total area of 891,547.43 sq. mts., the exact area of
Lot 26 appearing in OCT 994 of the entire Maysilo Estate (Exhs. V or
13 and in the corresponding Decree No. 36455, copy of which is still in
the custody of the LRA (Exh. ZZZZ). The technical description of the
three (3) subdivided portions of Lot 26 as appearing in said Escritura de
Venta were determined in the subdivision undertaken by Agrimensor
Fernando on December 22, 1917 (Exhs. DD and DD-1); and when a
Motion was submitted to the Court for the approval of said Escritura de
Venta on January 23, 1918, it was approved on the same day by Judge
W.E. Macmahan (Exh. EE). This is in compliance with Section 44 of
Act 496. The Land Registration Act enacted on November 6, 1902 which
states:
Sec.44. A registered owner holding one duplicate
certificate for several distinct parcels of land may surrender it,
with the approval of the [c]ourt, and take out several
certificates for portions thereof. So a registered owner holding
separate certificates for several distinct parcels may surrender
them, and, with like approval, take out a single duplicate
certificate title for the whole land, or several certificates for the
different portions thereof. Any owner subdividing a tract of
registered land into lots shall file with the clerk a plan of such
land, when applying for a new certificate or certificates, and
the [c]ourt, before issuing the same, shall cause the plan to be
verified and require that all boundaries, streets, and
passageways shall be distinctly and accurately delineated
thereon.
It is clear then that no approval of the Bureau of Land is required.
The Court approval of said sale thus resulted in the issuance to the two
buyers Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio of TCT Nos. 4210 and
4211, the first with respect to the first and third portions of Lot 26
containing an area of 3,053.93 sq. mts., and 16,512.50 sq. mts.,
respectively (Exh. W), and the second with respect to the second portion
of Lot 26 containing an area of 871,982 sq. mts. (Exh. X), all of which
areas, when added together, total 891,547.33 sq. mts., which, as mentioned
earlier, is the exact area of Lot 26 appearing in OCT 994 and Decrees No.
36455. In fact, the Memorandum of Encumbrances at the back of OCT
994, the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal, L. Gardonio, made two entries
both numbered 6665/0-994 noting that the Deed of Sale of the three (3)
portions of Lot 26 to the buyers Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio
was inscribed by him on September 9, 1918 at 10:50 A.M. resulting in the
issuance to them of TCT No. 4210 with respect to the first and third

DECISION

15

G.R. No. 160728

portions and TCT No. 4211 with respect to the second portion (Exh. V15-A).
As for the authenticity of the signatures of Register of Deeds
Gardonio on both titles TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211, they were found to be
genuine and authentic both by the NBI experts who examined them upon
order of this Court (Exhs. WWWW, WWWW-1 to WWWW-27)
and by the PNP Crime Laboratory whom plaintiff also asked to examine
said signatures to determine their genuineness (Exhs. VVVV, VVVV1 to VVVV-8). x x x.
All in all, the Court finds it very clear and entertains no doubt that
TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211 issued to the buyers Alejandro Ruiz and
Mariano P. Leuterio covering the three (3) subdivisions of Lot 26 of the
Maysilo Estate completely and totally cancelled OCT 994 with respect to
said lot, as found by the LRC in its Verification Committee Report on July
21, 1980 (Exhs. RRRR, RRRR-1 to RRRR-27) with the result that
when Atty. Jose B. Dimson sold to Estelita Hipolito Lot 26 which is
supposedly covered by his TCT No. R-15166, the latter did not acquire
anything anymore from him, as said lot had been wholly and completely
disposed of in favor of the buyers Ruiz and Leuterio as early as 1918 and
long before Dimson acquired his supposed title over the same and when
Estelita Hipolito in turn sold to herein defendant CLT the land supposedly
covered by her title TCT No. R-17994, defendant also did not acquire
anything from Hipolito. In short, both Hipolitos and CLTs titles are
null and void for lack of a subject matter allegedly registered
therein.27 (Emphases supplied.)

Aggrieved, petitioner appealed the RTC Decision that nullified its title
and the Court of Appeals docketed it as CA-G.R. CV No. 52606.
On February 10, 1999, the Republic of the Philippines, acting
through the administrator of the Land Registration Authority, filed with the
Court of Appeals a Motion for Intervention and Petition-in-Intervention,
which the Court of Appeals granted over petitioners opposition.
DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS IN CA-G.R. CV NO.
52606
The Court of Appeals rendered its questioned Decision on February
27, 2003, which affirmed the factual findings of the RTC. In addition, the
Court of Appeals made the following observations:
It is not surprising that in this case, the lower court did not discuss
the validity or invalidity of the testimony or findings of the witnesses
presented by both parties. There were plethora of facts and reasons
which led to the inescapable conclusion regarding the questioned
documents validity, genuineness and authenticity.
The NBIs scientific examination and the PNPs handwriting
analysis were not meant to contradict each other since they involve
varying techniques and methods peculiar to each examination. The former
27

Id. at 453-460.

DECISION

16

G.R. No. 160728

aims to establish the age of the ink and paper while the latter aims to
establish the genuineness and authenticity of the signatures on the
questioned documents. Both NBI and PNP findings should complement
each other rather than collide. It is not a test of which is more scientific,
advance or sophisticated, otherwise, one test which is less scientific would
no longer be used. At a glance, there seems to be an apparent discrepancy
in the test results. The NBI experts admission that its estimation of the
age of the ink and strokes had an allowance of plus 5 and 10 years due to
the oxidation reaction, clearly contradicted [petitioners] claim that the
method used by the NBI is an exact science. Moreso, the exactness of the
science theory, self-destructed when the same NBI expert witness
admitted that there is a possibility that the questioned document could be
70 years of age.
xxxx
This Court believes that the mere fact that TCT Nos. 4211, 5261
and 35486 were written differently, i.e., Spanish supposedly instead of
English from the mother title which is written in English, is not enough
reason to declare the same invalid. The fact that [respondent Phil-Ville]
was able to present other certificates of title written in Spanish during or
about the time the questioned titles were issued, belied [petitioners]
speculation that it was not the practice then. The lower court correctly
observed that the translation of the technical description in a mother
title, i.e., from Spanish to English in the subsequent transfer
certificate of title, did not violate any rule or guidelines of the
administrative agency concerned.
In fact, Memorandum of
Encumbrances on OCT No. 994 which dates back in December 1917 to
October 23, 1939 were all written in Spanish, despite the fact that OCT
No. 994 is already in English. This only shows that it was the practice at
that time to use either English or Spanish in official transactions,
depending upon the persons facility with the use of a specific language.
xxxx
This Court finds the explanation of [respondent Phil-Ville]
regarding the alleged non-inclusion of the original survey in TCT Nos.
4210 and 4211 and different date of survey found in the same titles as
against the mother title, satisfactory and with factual basis x x x.
xxxx
It is enough that the technical description of the land in the transfer
certificate is exactly identical and do not exceed the area and technical
description contained in the mother title. It may be a mistake or omission
on the part of the official who issued TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211, but the
same is not fatal.
xxxx
[Petitioners] conclusion that the subdivision of Lot 26 was not
duly approved by the Bureau of Lands, is sufficiently countered by
[respondent Phil-Ville]. Exhibit QQQQQ, a Certification issued by
Engr. Privadi J.G. Dalire, Chief, Geodetic Surveys Divisions, lands
Management Bureau, stated that:
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:

DECISION

17

G.R. No. 160728

This is to certify that according to the Records of


Psd-Surveys approved by this Bureau, page 169 thereof,
Psd-21154 is a subdivision of a titled lot located in
Caloocan, Rizal as surveyed for J.L. Gonzales y Narciso
and approved on November 04, 1946. The original copy
however is found missing in the files of this Bureau. A
tracing cloth approved by the Director of Lands was issued
to the landowners for submission to the Land Registration
Authority (formerly LRC) for use in the issuance of
transfer certificate of title.
The same categorically states that Psu-21154 is the subdivision
plan of Lot No. 26 and was approved on November 4, 1946. In the light of
the said certification, there is no need for the production of the original
survey plan. [Respondent Phil-Ville] is not responsible for the safekeeping
of the original survey plan. Another uncontroverted evidence on the
existence of the alleged missing survey plan is the blue print copy of the
approved plan Psd-21154 kept in the vault of the Register of Deeds of
Pasig, presented and identified by [respondent Phil-Villes] witnesses,
Rolando Golla and Mamerto Lara, of the same office.
xxxx
The allegation of [petitioner] that the owners duplicate copy of
OCT No. 994 in the custody of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal is
spurious or fraudulently altered, does not hold water in the absence of any
proof. Other allegations of fraud and defects of the owners duplicate copy
of OCT No. 994 with the Register of Deeds and Escritura De Venta, are,
likewise, unsubstantiated and merely conjectures.
xxxx
Noteworthy is that the title of [petitioners] predecessor-in-interest,
Jose Dimson, over the subject land was by virtue of a Court Order dated
June 13, 1966 awarding to him as attorneys fees 25% of whatever
remained under Lot 25-A, 26, 27, 28 and 29 undisposed of the intestate
estate of Concepcion Vidal, one of the registered owners of the properties
covered by OCT No. 994. Hence, under the court order, Jose Dimson,
was awarded only 25% of the undisposed estate and whatever that
percentage represents, if any, should be first determined and verified by
the proper government agency, then the Land Registration Commission.
When Estelita Hipolito acquired the property from Jose Dimson and was
subsequently issued TCT No. R-17994, and when [petitioner] acquired the
same property from Estelita Hipolito and was issued TCT No. T-177013,
both titles should necessarily contain an annotation referring to the report
of the LRC with regard to the 25% undisposed estate which should be
covered by the titles. The annotation and report of the LRC, were in effect
the very bases of the titles existence or validity, and not an encumbrance.
The courts order gave Jose Dimson a right to 25% undisposed area of the
aforesaid lots. This annotation merely gave notice that the undisposed
estate was yet to be determined and verified. The LRC report finally
disposed of the issue. The said report stated that there was nothing more
for the heirs of Maria De La Concepcion Vidal to convey to Jose Dimson
as his attorneys fees. In short, there was no undisposed area to speak of,
which Jose Dimson can acquire.

DECISION

18

G.R. No. 160728

The subject annotation is, therefore, not prohibited and proscribed


since it was not an encumbrance.
Thus, the lower court did not err in holding that [petitioner] is
not an innocent transferee of whatever interest Jose Dimson had on
Lot 26 because it took said title of Dimson on condition that there
remained undisposed portion of Lot 26 in the intestate estate of Maria
De La Concepcion Vidal and subject to the verification of the LRC
Verification Committee.28

Acting on petitioners Motion for Reconsideration, the Court of


Appeals issued its questioned Resolution on November 10, 2003 affirming
its earlier Decision and stating that the grounds and arguments raised in
petitioners Motion for Reconsideration were substantially the same that
were raised on appeal and were already judiciously passed upon in the
Decision dated February 27, 2003.29
On December 23, 2003, petitioner filed this Petition for Review on
Certiorari dated November 25, 2003, seeking to reverse the questioned
Decision and Resolution.
After the parties submitted their respective Memoranda,30 this case
was deemed submitted for decision.
THEORY OF PETITIONER
Petitioner claims that the Court of Appeals committed grave
reversible errors and decided questions of substance in a way not in
accordance with law and the applicable decisions of the honorable Court and
has departed from the accepted and usual course of judicial proceedings
necessitating the honorable Courts exercise of its power of supervision, 31
and presented the following arguments:
I.

The Court of Appeals gravely erred when it conveniently


disregarded all the admitted patent and inherent technical defects
and infirmities that plague the alleged TCT Nos. 4211, 5261,
35486 and 1368 to 1374 (from where private respondent Phil-Ville
derives its alleged titles), which pursuant to jurisprudence
conclusively render said titles void and ineffective. 32
A. The fact that the technical descriptions in the alleged TCT Nos.
4211, 5261 and 35486 are written in Spanish while those on the
purported mother title, OCT No. 994, were already written
entirely in English, especially taken in conjunction with the
other patent and inherent technical defects or infirmities,

28
29
30

31
32

Id. at 123-132.
Id. at 141.
Respondent Phil-Villes Memorandum was filed on October 25, 2004 (Rollo, pp. 1442-1555).
Petitioners Memorandum was dated November 22, 2004 (Rollo, pp. 1556-1661).
Rollo, p. 1589.
Id.

DECISION

19

G.R. No. 160728

confirms that said abnormality is a clear proof said alleged


TCTs are spurious.33
B. There was no approved subdivision survey plan for Lot No. 26
of the Maysilo Estate pursuant to which the alleged TCT No.
4211 and another alleged title (TCT No. 4210) could have been
validly issued, which fact is further proven by the absence of
any survey plan number and lot number in said alleged titles
such that said fact and the existence of a survey date therein
different from that of the alleged mother title, OCT No. 994,
especially taken together with the other technical defects,
indubitably shows that the alleged TCTs are spurious.34
C. The fact that the alleged plan Psd-21154, which allegedly
subdivided the lot covered by the alleged TCT No. 35486
(formerly covered by alleged TCT Nos. 4211 and 5261) could
not be traced from the Lands Management Bureau which
purportedly approved said alleged plan, taken in relation with
the other technical defects on the alleged titles from where
private respondent Phil-Ville derived its alleged titles, shows
that said alleged titles are void and ineffective.35
D. The fact that there are material deviations in the tie points used
in the technical descriptions on the alleged TCT Nos. 1368 thru
1374 compared to those in the purported mother lot, OCT No.
994, which defeat the very purpose of tie points and tie lines
and is contrary to the standard practice of adopting the tie
points of the mother lot, taken in conjunction with the other
technical defects confirms that said alleged titles are spurious.36

33
34
35
36
37
38

II.

In order to justify its questioned decision upholding the spurious


titles of private respondent Phil-Ville, the Court of Appeals erred
when it completely disregarded a vital and conclusive evidence,
i.e., the expert and scientific analysis of the Forensic Chemistry
Division of the National Bureau of Investigation on the ink and
paper used on the alleged TCT No. 4211 (where private respondent
Phil-Ville derived its alleged titles), which scientifically found the
alleged TCT No. 4211 to have been prepared only in the 1940s and
not in 1918 as indicated on the face of the document and thus, is
spurious.37

III.

The Court of Appeals gravely erred when it routinely and


erroneously relied on the allegations raised in public respondent
Republics petition-in-intervention notwithstanding the fact that
the State is devoid of any legal interest in the subject matter of the
litigation upon which intervention could be based especially in
light of the fact that, as ruled by the Court of Appeals itself in its
questioned decision, the instant case admittedly involves private
lands only and thus cannot be ordered to be reverted to the
Republic.38

Id. at 1597.
Id. at 1603.
Id. at 1613.
Id. at 1617.
Id. at 1621.
Id. at 1631.

DECISION

20

G.R. No. 160728

IV.

The Court of Appeals gravely erred when it blindly adopted the


trial courts erroneous ruling that petitioner CLT Realty is not an
innocent transferee on the sheer basis of an authorized and illegal
annotation on its TCT.39

V.

The Court of Appeals gravely erred when it perfunctorily denied


petitioner CLT Realtys counterclaims despite clear, convincing
and preponderant basis and evidence thereof.40

Petitioner presents the following as the issues to be resolved by this


Court in this case:

39
40

I.

WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED


WHEN IT DISREGARDED ALL THE ADMITTED PATENT
AND INHERENT TECHNICAL DEFECTS AND INFIRMITIES
THAT PLAGUE THE ALLEGED TCT NOS. 4211, 5261, 35486
AND 1368 TO 1374 (FROM WHERE PRIVATE RESPONDENT
PHIL-VILLE DERIVES ITS ALLEGED TITLES), WHICH
PURSUANT
TO
JURISPRUDENCE
CONCLUSIVELY
RENDER SAID TITLES VOID AND INEFFECTIVE.

II.

WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED


WHEN IT COMPLETELY DISREGARDED A VITAL AND
CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE IN ORDER TO JUSTIFY ITS
QUESTIONED DECISION UPHOLDING THE SPURIOUS
TITLES OF PRIVATE RESPONDENT PHIL-VILLE, I.E., THE
EXPERT AND SCIENTIFIC ANALYSIS OF THE FORENSIC
CHEMISTRY DIVISION OF THE NATIONAL BUREAU OF
INVESTIGATION ON THE INK AND PAPER USED ON THE
ALLEGED TCT NO. 4211 (WHERE PRIVATE RESPONDENT
PHIL-VILLE DERIVED ITS ALLEGED TITLES), WHICH
SCIENTIFICALLY FOUND THE ALLEGED TCT NO. 4211 TO
HAVE BEEN PREPARED ONLY IN THE 1940s AND NOT IN
1918 AS INDICATED ON THE FACE OF THE DOCUMENT
AND THUS, IS SPURIOUS.

III.

WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED


WHEN IT ROUTINELY AND ERRONEOUSLY RELIED ON
THE ALLEGATIONS RAISED IN PUBLIC RESPONDENT
REPUBLICS PETITION-IN-INTERVENTION ALTHOUGH
THE STATE IS DEVOID OF ANY LEGAL INTEREST IN THE
SUBJECT MATTER OF THE LITIGATION UPON WHICH
INTERVENTION COULD BE BASED ESPECIALLY IN LIGHT
OF THE FACT THAT, AS RULED BY THE COURT OF
APPEALS ITSELF IN ITS QUESTIONED DECISION, THE
INSTANT CASE ADMITTEDLY INVOLVES PRIVATE
LANDS ONLY AND THUS CANNOT BE ORDERED TO BE
REVERTED TO THE REPUBLIC.

IV.

WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED


WHEN IT BLINDLY ADOPTED THE TRIAL COURTS
ERRONEOUS RULING THAT PETITIONER CLT REALTY IS

Id. at 1648.
Id. at 1656.

DECISION

21

G.R. No. 160728

NOT AN INNOCENT TRANSFEREE ON THE SHEER BASIS


OF AN AUTHORIZED AND ILLEGAL ANNOTATION ON ITS
TCT.
V.

WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED


WHEN IT PERFUNCTORILY DENIED PETITIONER CLT
REALTYS
COUNTERCLAIMS
DESPITE
CLEAR,
CONVINCING AND PREPONDERANT BASIS AND
EVIDENCE THEREOF.41

THEORY OF RESPONDENT PHIL-VILLE


Respondent Phil-Ville raises as an issue that this petition raises purely
factual issues and this Court must respect the factual findings of the RTC
and the Court of Appeals, which are supported by clear and convincing
evidence.
The other issues according to Phil-Ville are quoted below:

41

II.

WHETHER OR [NOT] LOT 26 COVERED BY PETITIONERS


TCT NO. T-177013 ACTUALLY OVERLAPS THE SIXTEEN
(16) PARCELS OF LAND [COVERED] BY RESPONDENT
PHIL-VILLES SIXTEEN (16) TRANSFER CERTIFICATES OF
TITLE IN QUESTION.

III.

WHETHER OR NOT PETITIONERS TCT NO. T-177013 IS A


SPURIOUS TITLE.

IV.

WHETHER OR NOT RESPONDENT PHIL-VILLES SIXTEEN


(16) TITLES IN QUESTION ARE VALID TITLES.

V.

WHETHER OR NOT TCT NOS. 4210 AND 4211 SUFFER


FROM DEBILITATING TECHNICAL INFIRMITIES.

VI.

WHETHER OR NOT THE USE OF SPANISH TECHNICAL


DESCRIPTION IN TITLES SUCH AS TCT NOS. 4210, 4211
AND 35486 AT THAT TIME IS A COMMON ACCEPTABLE
PRACTICE.

VII.

WHETHER OR NOT THE NON-INCLUSION OF THE DATE


OF ORIGINAL SURVEY IN TCT NOS. 4210, 4211, 5261 AND
35486, IF AT ALL, IS NOT A FATAL OMISSION.

VIII.

WHETHER OR NOT IT IS MANDATORY THAT WHEN LOT


26 WAS SUBDIVIDED INTO THREE (3) LOTS THE
RESULTING LOTS SHOULD BE DESIGNATED AS LOT 26-A,
LOT 26-B AND LOT 26-C.

IX.

WHETHER THE USE OF DIFFERENT TIE POINTS IN


SUBDIVISION OF SEVEN (7) LOTS IN PSD-21154 SHOULD
BE TIED TO BLLM 1.

Id. at 1585-1586.

DECISION

22

G.R. No. 160728

X.

WHETHER OR NOT A COPY OF PLAN PSD-21154 IS NOT


ANYMORE AVAILABLE IN THE BUREAU OF LANDS AND
THAT SAID PLAN DID NOT ACTUALLY EXIST.

XI.

WHETHER OR NOT THE TITLES OF RESPONDENT PHILVILLE HAVE DEFECTS.

XII.

WHETHER OR NOT TCT NOS. 4210 AND 4211 ARE FORGED


CERTIFICATES OF TITLE.

XIII.

WHETHER OR NOT BOTH THE PNP AND NBI CONFIRMED


THE AUTHENTICITY AND GENUINENESS OF TCT NOS.
4210 AND 4211.

XIV. WHETHER OR NOT THE AGE OF THE INK AND PAPER


USED IN TCT NOS. 4210 AND 4211 COULD ONLY BE MORE
OR LESS 50 YEARS OLD.
XV.

WHETHER OR NOT LOT 26 IS THE SAME LAND THAT


WAS EXPROPRIATED BY THE REPUBLIC OF THE
PHILIPPINES.

XVI. WHETHER OR NOT IT IS TOO LATE IN THE DAY FOR


PETITIONER TO CONTEST THE VALIDITY OF THE
RESPONDENT PHIL-VILLES TITLES IN QUESTION.
XVII. WHETHER OR NOT PETITIONER CLT IS AN INNOCENT
PURCHASER OF THE LAND IN QUESTION.
XVIII. WHETHER OR NOT PETITIONERS CLAIM OF OWNERSHIP
OVER LOT 26 IS BARRED BY THE DOCTRINE OF LACHES
OR STALE DEMAND.
XIX. WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS
COMMITTED ANY ERROR IN ALLOWING THE
INTERVENTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES.
XX.

WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS


COMMITTED ANY ERROR IN SUSTAINING THE RULING
OF
THE
TRIAL
COURT
DISMISSING
THE
COUNTERCLAIMS AGAINST RESPONDENT PHIL-VILLE.42

STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE


As this Court is not a trier of facts, with which the records of this case
are replete, the only issue as far as this Court is concerned is the question of
whether or not petitioners TCT No. T-177013 imposes a cloud on
respondent Phil-Villes titles to the 16 parcels of land subject matter of
this case, as provided in Article 476 of the Civil Code.

42

Id. at 1487-1489.

DECISION

23

G.R. No. 160728

DISCUSSION
The New Civil Code provides the basis for an action for Quieting of
Title. The specific provision reads as follows:
ARTICLE 476. Whenever there is a cloud on title to real property
or any interest therein, by reason of any instrument, record, claim,
encumbrance or proceeding which is apparently valid or effective but is in
truth and in fact invalid, ineffective, voidable, or unenforceable, and may
be prejudicial to said title, an action may be brought to remove such cloud
or to quiet the title.
An action may also be brought to prevent a cloud from being cast
upon title to real property or any interest therein.

In Phil-Ville Development and Housing Corporation v. Bonifacio,43


the Court explained the nature of and requisites under this remedy in the
following manner:
Quieting of title is a common law remedy for the removal of any
cloud upon, doubt, or uncertainty affecting title to real property. Whenever
there is a cloud on title to real property or any interest in real property by
reason of any instrument, record, claim, encumbrance, or proceeding that
is apparently valid or effective, but is, in truth and in fact, invalid,
ineffective, voidable, or unenforceable, and may be prejudicial to said
title, an action may be brought to remove such cloud or to quiet the title.
In such action, the competent court is tasked to determine the respective
rights of the complainant and the other claimants, not only to place things
in their proper places, and make the claimant, who has no rights to said
immovable, respect and not disturb the one so entitled, but also for the
benefit of both, so that whoever has the right will see every cloud of doubt
over the property dissipated, and he can thereafter fearlessly introduce any
desired improvements, as well as use, and even abuse the property.
In order that an action for quieting of title may prosper, two
requisites must concur: (1) the plaintiff or complainant has a legal or
equitable title or interest in the real property subject of the action; and (2)
the deed, claim, encumbrance, or proceeding claimed to be casting cloud
on his title must be shown to be in fact invalid or inoperative despite its
prima facie appearance of validity or legal efficacy.
xxxx
Thus, the cloud on title consists of: (1) any instrument, record,
claim, encumbrance or proceeding; (2) which is apparently valid or
effective; (3) but is in truth and in fact invalid, ineffective, voidable, or
unenforceable; and (4) may be prejudicial to the title sought to be quieted.
x x x. (Citations omitted.)

The RTC and the Court of Appeals both arrived at the conclusion that
respondent Phil-Ville had a valid title to the 16 parcels of land subject of the
complaint, and that petitioners title is invalid despite its prima facie
43

G.R. No. 167391, June 8, 2011, 651 SCRA 327, 341-347.

DECISION

24

G.R. No. 160728

appearance of validity. This conclusion was arrived at after a thorough


study of the pieces of evidence presented by both parties.
We see no cogent reason to reverse and disturb the factual findings of
the Court of Appeals quoted above, affirming the RTC Decision, likewise
extensively quoted above, especially as they are supported by the evidence
on record. It has been held in a long string of cases that as a general
rule, findings of fact of the Court of Appeals are deemed final,
conclusive, and binding on this Court.44
The jurisdiction of this Court in a petition for review on certiorari
under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court is limited to reviewing only errors of
law. There are, in fact, exceptions to this general rule, as explained in
Baricuatro, Jr. v. Court of Appeals,45 but we find that they are not present in
this case.
The alleged errors assigned by petitioner to the Court of Appeals are,
even at a glance, factual in nature and are not borne out by the evidence on
record.
As regards the alleged patent and inherent technical defects and
infirmities that plagued TCT Nos. 4211, 5261, 35486 and 1368 to 1374,
from which respondent Phil-Ville derived its titles, we quote with approval
the following findings and conclusions of the RTC, as follows:
It is no wonder then, that in insisting in the validity of its TCT No.
177013 over Lot 26 of the Maysilo Estate, defendant CLT does not rely on
the force and strength of its title but has trained its guns on the alleged
nullity of TCT Nos. 4211, 5261, 35486 and 1368 to 1374 from which PhilVille derived its titles to the sixteen (16) lots here in question. It is
likewise significant, that defendant does not attack the validity of the
Republic of the Philippines TCT Nos. 12836 to 12842 (Exhs. HH to
NN), which the government acquired after it expropriated the lands
covered by TCT Nos. 1368 to 1374 of the Gonzales children, titles that
defendant also claims to be void. Defendant even stated on page 103 of its
memorandum that
Morever, it is not disupted that plalintiffs titles were
all derived from the so-called Gonzales Estate which was
expropriated by the Republic of the Philippines (in proceedings
44
45

Chacon Enterprises v. Court of Appeals, 209 Phil. 634, 647 (1983).


As we held in Baricuatro, Jr. v. Court of Appeals, 382 Phil. 15, 24 (2000): It is a settled doctrine
that findings of fact of the Court of Appeals are binding and conclusive upon this Court. Such
factual findings shall not be disturbed, unless: (1) the conclusion is a finding grounded entirely on
speculation, surmise and conjecture; (2) the inference made is manifestly mistaken; (3) there is
grave abuse of discretion; (4) the judgment is based on a misapprehension of facts; (5) the findings
of fact are conflicting; (6) the Court of Appeals went beyond the issues of the case and its findings
are contrary to the admissions of both appellant and appellees; (7) the findings of fact of the Court
of Appeals are contrary to those of the trial court; (8) said findings of fact are conclusions without
citation of specific evidence on which they are based; (9) the facts set forth in the petition as well
as in the petitioners main and reply briefs are not disputed by the respondents; and (10) the
findings of fact of the Court of Appeals are premised on the supposed absence of evidence and
contradicted by the evidence on record.

DECISION

25

G.R. No. 160728

which commenced in January, 1947) in the case of Republic of


the Philippines vs. Jose Leon Gonzales, et al. x x x.
If the Republic of the Philippines TCT Nos. 12836 to 12842
covering the parcels of land expropriated by it from the Gonzales
Estate are valid and true, then necessarily, plaintiffs titles over the
sixteen (16) parcels of land here in question, which defendant admits
to have been derived from the Republics aforesaid titles, must
likewise be valid and true.
xxxx
x x x [D]efendant tries to cast doubt on the genuineness and
authenticity of the co-owners duplicate copy of OCT 994 existing in the
Office of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal. But the original copy of
OCT 994 (Exh. 13) carries, in its Memorandum of Encumbrances, as
Entry No. 44905/0-994, the following annotation:
Entry No. 44905/0-994 Issuance of co-owners copy:
By order of the Court of First Instance of Rizal, a co-owners
duplicate of this Certificate of Title No. 0-994 has been issued
in favor of Maria De La Concepcion Vidal.
Date of the Instrument March 29, 1962
Date of the Inscription April 12, 1962 at 3:15 P.M.
(Sgd.) JOSE D. SANTOS, Register of Deeds
The co-owners duplicate copy of OCT 994, existing in the Office
of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal must thus be genuine and a true
and faithful copy of the original before the latter was particularly damaged
and destroyed, either by bad handling or by the passage of time,
considering that said copy was issued by the official who had the custody
of the original title and in compliance with a Court Order.
xxxx
The Court has no doubt, therefore, that the co-owners duplicate
copy of OCT 994 presented by plaintiff in this case as its Exhibit V, is
indeed a true and faithful copy of the original of OCT 994 in the custody
of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal, before said original of the title
was materially damaged apparently to old age or mishandling before it
was transferred to the Office of the Register of Deeds of Caloocan City in
1978.
xxxx
Defendant tries to assail the two (2) Seventy[-]Seven (77) years old
titles TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211 in the names of Alejandro Ruiz and
Mariano P. Leuterio cancelling OCT 994 of the Maysilo Estate with
respect to Lot 26 thereof, but the Court finds its efforts fruitless and
unconvincing for the following reasons:
First, defendant invites attention to the fact that while the technical
descriptions of all the lots in the Maysilo Estate contained in OCT 994 are

DECISION

26

G.R. No. 160728

already in English, the lots registered under TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211 are
still in Spanish.
The Court agrees with plaintiff, that agrimensor Fernando who
subdivided Lot 26 into three (3) portions must have prepared their
technical description in Spanish simply because he was more conversant
in that language than in English. In fact, there are other titles in the Office
of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal, which are all derivatives of OCT
994 wherein the technical descriptions of the properties registered therein
are also in Spanish (Exhs. AAAA, BBBB, CCCC and DDDD)
and many entries in the Memorandum of Encumbrances in OCT 994 from
December 1917 to October, 1939 also appear to be written in Spanish.
Then obviously, both Spanish and English were used interchangeably in
legal and official documents in the early years of the American rule in this
country and such documents were either prepared in English and Spanish
depending on which language the person who prepared the document was
more conversant with.
Second, defendant observes that the dates of the original survey of
the Maysilo Estate indicated in OCT 994 do not appear in TCT Nos. 4210
and 4211, which show a different survey date. But, there are also other
titles in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal, likewise
derived from OCT 994 (Exhs. AAAA DDDD) that do not also
mention the dates of the original survey of the Maysilo Estate as indicated
in OCT 994. Again, it is reasonable to assume, that it was not the practice
during those days to state in the succeeding titles the dates of the original
survey of a registered land as stated in its OCT. The failure to state the
date of the original survey in succeeding titles did not render said titles
defective or invalid.
Third, defendant finds it unusual why agrimensor Fernando, who
subdivided Lot 26 into three (3) portions, did not designate said portions
as Lot 26-A, Lot 26-B and Lot 26-C which is the usual practice. But
defendant has not shown any requirement in the Rules of the General Land
Registration Office, the predecessor of the Land Registration Authority
(LRA), nor in the manual of the Bureau of Lands, requiring that the
resultant lots when an isolated survey is made, like the subdivision made
by agrimensor Fernando on Lot 26, should be designated as Lots A, B and
C, a requirement prescribed in cadastral cases.
Fourth, neither does the non-indication of the survey number (a
point also raised by defendant) in TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211 lessen the
validity of these titles. The approval of the Bureau of Lands was not
required in 1918 (Sec. 44, Act No. 496, enacted in 1902). For the technical
description of the subdivided portions of Lot 26 prepared by agrimensor
Fernando were also approved by the Court when it approved the Escritura
de Venta (Exh. CC), embodying said technical descriptions without
indicating the survey number so that we can also believe that the statement
of the survey number in the description of registered lands was not
mandatory at that time, as again shown by other titles derived from OCT
994 and also found in the records of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal
(Exhs. AAAA DDDD) which do not also indicate the survey
numbers of the survey plans which led to their issuance.
Fifth, the fact noted by defendant, that the old titles and documents
relied upon by the plaintiff are still in the files of the Register of Deeds of

DECISION

27

G.R. No. 160728

Pasig, Rizal and had not been transferred to Caloocan City when it was
created, together with the original of OCT 994, is easily explainable.
Caloocan City was formerly a municipality of the Province of Rizal, hence
all land titles over properties in the former municipality of Caloocan and
their supporting documents, formed part of the official records of the
Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal. Upon the creation of Caloocan City in
1977 or 1978, certain titles and documents pertaining to properties located
in Caloocan City were transferred from Pasig, Rizal to the Office of the
Register of Deeds of Caloocan City either upon request of certain parties
or upon the initiative of the latter Officials. Titles not requested to be
transferred and other documents relating to early transactions involving
properties located in the former municipality of Caloocan, however,
remained with the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal, such as
the co-owners duplicate title of OCT 994, owners duplicate of TCT Nos.
4210, 4211 and 5261 and their supporting documents. (see the testimonies
of Deputy Register of Deeds of Caloocan City, Norberto Vasquez, TSN
November 12, 1991, pp. 23, 25; of Rolando Golla, representative of the
Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal, TSN id., p. 23; TSN March 17, 1992, p.
27; TSN December 7, 1992, p. 18; and of Mamerto Lara, Records Officer
of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal, TSN May 5, 1992, pp. 11-16).
Add to all the above, the further consideration that TCT Nos. 4210
and 4211 and the Escritura de Venta (Exhibit CC) as well as all the
other documents supporting said titles and deed of sale are more than 75
years old, so that under the Rules of Court, no other evidence of their
execution and authenticity need to be given as they were produced from a
custody in which would naturally be found if genuine (Rule 132, Sec. 1,
Revised Rules of Court). Moreover, said titles and deed of sale and other
supporting documents, are all public documents and ancient at that, so that
no further evidence than said documents themselves are necessary to
provide their validity, genuineness and authenticity (Sec. 23, Rule 132,
id.).
The Court thus reiterate, that the documents and titles from
which plaintiffs titles to the lots in question are derived, are genuine,
authentic, valid and legitimate.
As already seen, TCT No. 4211 in the name of Alejandro Ruiz and
Marciano P. Leuterio was cancelled by TCT No. 5261 of Francisco J.
Gonzales (Exh. Z), upon whose death, the land covered by TCT No.
5261 was subdivided in Plan Psd-21154 (Exh. U), among the six (6)
Gonzales children, resulting in the issuance to them of TCT Nos. 13681374 (Exhs. GG-2 GG-8). The lands covered by said titles of the
Gonzales children were later expropriated by the government,
consolidated and then divided into seventy[-]seven (77) lots, after these
lots were sold to their claimants occupants or their successors from
plaintiff in turn acquired the sixteen (16) lots here in question.46
46

Rollo, pp. 456-463. The RTC further held:


Even assuming arguendo, that Psd-21154 of the Gonzales family cannot be
found either in the records of the Bureau of Lands or those of the LRA, as claimed by the
defendant, such fact would not detract from the validity of the title TCT No. 4211 of
Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio or the succeeding titles of Francisco J. Gonzales,
those of his six (6) children and later of the government, over the lots in question.
The truth of the matter is that there are existing official records of Plan Psd21154 (Exh. U) of the Gonzales family. For secondary official records of approved Psd
survey in the Bureau of Lands, show that Plan Psd-21154 was a subdivision survey
approved on November 4, 1946, covering lands in Caloocan, Rizal and surveyed for Jose

DECISION

28

G.R. No. 160728

Leon Gonzales y Narciso, et al., as certified by Engineer Privade J. G. Dalire, Chief,


Geodetic Survey Division, Bureau of Lands, to wit:
To Whom It May Concern:
This is to certify that according to the records of Psd-Surveys approved
by this Bureau, page 169 thereof, Psd-21154 is a subdivision of a titled
lot located in Caloocan, Rizal, as surveyed for LL Gonzales y Narciso
and approved on November 04, 1976. The original copy however, is
found existing in the files of this Bureau. A tracing cloth approved by
the Director of Lands was issued the landowners for submission to the
Land Registration Authority (formerly LRC) for use in the issuance of
transfer certificate of title. (Exhs. QQQQ, QQQQ-1 QQQQ-2;
x x x.)
Furthermore, a blue print copy of approved Plan Psd-21154 is being kept in the
vault of the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pasig, Rizal (Exh. U), which plan
became the basis for the issuance of the seven (7) titles, TCT Nos. 1368 - 1374 (Exhs.
GG-2 to GG-8) to the Gonzales children over the subdivided lots in said plan, which
seven (7) lots were in turn later expropriated by the Government. Thus, the Memorandum
of Encumbrances in TCT No. 35486 (Exh. Y) in the name of the widow of Francisco J.
Gonzales children:
Entry No. 3731/T-1368 Subdivision of the Land described in this
certificate of title into seven (7) lots in accordance with subdivision
plan Psd-21154 duly approved by the Director of Lands together with
the technical description.
Date of Instrument November 4, 1946
Date of Inscription November 21, 1946 at 1:10 P.M.
(Sgd.) GREGORIO VELASQUEZ
Acting Register of Deeds/jcl
On the other hand, while Eduardo Alejandro Santos, Jr., Acting Chief of the
Vault Section, Docket Division on the Land Registration Commission, testified that the
original tracing cloth of Plan Psd-21154 is not on file with their office, he stated that the
old approved subdivision plans from the time the LRA was created up to the present are
indeed not intact in their office as these plans could have been lost or some Register of
Deeds perhaps did not follow the proper procedure (TSN March 27, 1995, p. 9). Santos
added that he could not tell conclusively that on 1946, the submission of the original
tracing cloths of subdivision plans to this office was required x x x.
Subdivision Plan Psd-21154 presented in this case by plaintiff as its Exh. U is
therefore unquestionably genuine and authentic and had been duly approved by the
Bureau of Lands, resulting in the issuance of TCT Nos. 1368 1374 to the Gonzales
children, the heirs of Francisco J. Gonzales, who purchased the land covered by TCT No.
4211 from Alejandro Ruiz and Mariano P. Leuterio.
On the alleged use of different tie points, the Court believes that there is really
no necessity of going into the technical matter of the points in determining the validity of
Survey Plan Psd-21154 of the Gonzales family (Exh. U), since said plan and the
succeeding plan LRC (Psd) 1828, covering the same land prepared for the PHHC (Exh.
AA) had both been approved by the Bureau of Lands and the LRC (now LRA), the
government agencies with the power and authority to approve subdivision surveys of
registered lands. There is a presumption of regularity and compliance with existing
regulations when both offices approved the aforesaid survey plans. There is therefore, no
need to belabor the matter of the points brought up by defendant in its memorandum.
Be that as it may, the Court does not agree with defendant that the supposed
deviation in tie points from BLLM 1 of the original survey Psu-2345 made in Psd21154 resulted in the shifting of the position of the seven (7) subdivided lots of the
Gonzales heirs to the west from their original positions, so that they no longer fall exactly
inside the boundaries of the mother lot, as alleged by defendant based on the testimony of
its witness Engineer Juanito Bustalino x x x.
Firstly, the above opinion of Engineer Bustalino is highly theoretical and should
have been established by an actual relocation survey, especially since Bustalino himself
declared an error in tie point would not necessarily change the location of the land
because the land is there and you cannot move (sic) it as its location is very specific
on the ground x x x. Bustalino even admitted that tie lines are not part of the metes and
bounds x x x and that it is also possible that it was the property of defendant CLT and not
that of Phil-Ville that had shifted x x x. (Id. at 463-465.)

DECISION

29

G.R. No. 160728

The Court of Appeals issued the questioned Decision and Resolution


based on the evidence presented on trial even prior to this Courts issuance
of the historically-significant en banc resolutions in the consolidated cases,
commonly entitled Manotok Realty, Inc. v. CLT Realty Development Corp.,47
wherein the Court reconsidered and reversed its earlier Decision in the same
case, as well as related, previously-decided cases, referring to OCT No. 994
covering a portion of the Maysilo Estate. There were two resolutions in said
cases, one dated December 15, 2007 (the 2007 Manotok Resolution) and a
subsequent one dated March 31, 2009 (the 2009 Manotok Resolution).
Of particular relevance to this present case is the ruling in the
2009 Manotok Resolution that TCT No. T-177013, the certificate of title
of herein petitioner CLT, who is also a party to said consolidated cases,
is null and void.48 Therefore, the cloud on respondent Phil-Villes 16
titles subject matter of the complaint had already been removed.
From its Answer in the Complaint filed before the RTC to its
Memorandum filed before this Court, petitioner proudly traces the
problematic TCT No. T-177013 to its previous owner, Estelita Hipolito, who
acquired said lot from Jose Dimson.49 In Manotok, the same title was also
the subject matter of one of the consolidated cases, described as follows:
CLT's claim was anchored on Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT)
No. T-177013 issued in its name by the Caloocan City Register of Deeds,
which title in turn was derived from Estelita Hipolito (Hipolito) by virtue
of a Deed of Sale with Real Estate Mortgage dated 10 December 1988.
Hipolito's title emanated from Jose Dimsons (Dimson) TCT No. R15169, a title issued pursuant to an order of the Court of First Instance
(CFI) of Caloocan City, Branch 33. Dimsons title appears to have been
sourced from OCT No. 994.50 (Citation omitted.)

In Manotok, it was established that the true date of OCT No. 994 is
May 3, 1917, and that there is only one OCT No. 994. The decree of
registration was issued on April 19, 1917, and actually received for
transcription by the Register of Deeds on May 3, 1917. 51 Thus, all the
titles that traced its roots to the spurious OCT No. 994 dated April 19, 1917
were invalidated, including herein petitioners TCT No. T-177013. As held
by the Court:
It is evident from all three titles CLT's, Hipolitos and Dimsons
that the properties they purport to cover were originally registered on
the 19th day April, in the year nineteen hundred and seventeen in the
Registration Book of the Office of the Register of Deeds of Rizal. Note,
as earlier established, there is no such OCT No. 994 originally registered
on 19 April 1917.
47
48
49
50

51

Supra note 1.
Manotok Realty, Inc. v. CLT Realty Development Corp., 601 Phil. 571, 636 (2009).
See petitioners Answer in Records, pp. 183-208, Memorandum in Rollo, pp. 1556-1659.
Manotok Realty, Inc. v. CLT Realty Development Corp., 565 Phil. 59, 70-71 (2007).
Id. at 79.

DECISION

30

G.R. No. 160728

xxxx
From these premises, the Court is able to make the following
binding conclusions. First, there is only one OCT No. 994. As it appears
on the record, that mother title was received for transcription by the
Register of Deeds on 3 May 1917, and that should be the date which
should be reckoned as the date of registration of the title. It may also be
acknowledged, as appears on the title, that OCT No. 994 resulted from the
issuance of the decree of registration on 17 April 1917, although such date
cannot be considered as the date of the title or the date when the title took
effect.
Second. Any title that traces its source to OCT No. 994 dated 17
April 1917 is void, for such mother title is inexistent. The fact that the
Dimson and CLT titles made specific reference to an OCT No. 994
dated 17 April 1917 casts doubt on the validity of such titles since they
refer to an inexistent OCT. This error alone is, in fact, sufficient to
invalidate the Dimson and CLT claims over the subject property if
singular reliance is placed by them on the dates appearing on their
respective titles.52 (Emphasis added.)

As a matter of fact, in Alfonso v. Office of the President and Phil-Ville


Development and Housing Corporation,53 the Court penalized the former
register of deeds of Caloocan who acquiesced to the change of the date of
registration of OCT No. 994 from May 3, 1917 to April 19, 1917, which
wreaked havoc on our countrys land titling system, and led to much
confusion that continued to rear its ugly head in many cases pending
before the courts.
It has taken all three branches of government to correct the massive
confusion caused by the fake titles purportedly covering various portions of
the Maysilo Estate. In Manotok, the Court took note of the Department of
Justice Report dated August 28, 1997 as well as the Senate Report dated
May 25, 1998, which the Solicitor General contended should be considered
by the Court as evidence. As in this case, the Republic of the Philippines
had assiduously intervened in each and every pending case involving the
various titles that have spawned from the spurious OCT No. 994. What the
Court in the 2007 Manotok Resolution did was to conduct its own
investigation as to the controversy, and not just rely on the reports presented
by the Solicitor General from both the executive and the legislative
departments, and to remand the case to a Special Division of the Court of
Appeals for reception of further evidence. The duties of said Special
Division were spelled out in Manotok in this manner:
The Special Division is tasked to hear and receive evidence,
conclude the proceedings and submit to this Court a report on its findings
and recommended conclusions within three (3) months from finality of
this Resolution.

52
53

Id. at 91-96.
548 Phil. 615, 637-638 (2007).

DECISION

31

G.R. No. 160728

In ascertaining which of the conflicting claims of title should


prevail, the Special Division is directed to make the following
determinations based on the evidence already on record and such other
evidence as may be presented at the proceedings before it, to wit:
i.

Which of the contending parties are able to trace back their


claims of title to OCT No. 994 dated 3 May 1917?

ii.

Whether the imputed flaws in the titles of the Manotoks


and Araneta, as recounted in the 2005 Decision, are borne
by the evidence? Assuming they are, are such flaws
sufficient to defeat the claims of title of the Manotoks and
Araneta?

iii.

Whether the factual and legal bases of 1966 Order of Judge


Muoz-Palma and the 1970 Order of Judge Sayo are true
and valid. Assuming they are, do these orders establish a
superior right to the subject properties in favor of the
Dimsons and CLT as opposed to the claims of Araneta and
the Manotoks?

iv.

Whether any of the subject properties had been the subject


of expropriation proceedings at any point since the issuance
of OCT No. 994 on 3 May 1917, and if so what are those
proceedings, what are the titles acquired by the
Government and whether any of the parties is able to trace
its title to the title acquired by the Government through
expropriation.

v.

Such other matters necessary and proper in ascertaining


which of the conflicting claims of title should prevail.54

In the 2009 Manotok Resolution, the Court held that the Report (of the
Special Division) is a commendably exhaustive and pellucid analysis of the
issues referred to the Special Division and is a more than adequate basis55
for the Court to make its final dispositions in the consolidated cases. We
quote the portions of the 2009 Manotok Resolution referring to the CLT title,
as follows:
The ultimate purpose of the inquiry undertaken by the Court of
Appeals was to ascertain which of the four groups of claimants were
entitled to claim ownership over the subject properties to which they
claimed title thereto. One set of properties was disputed between CLT and
the Manotoks, while the other set was disputed between Araneta and the
Heirs of Dimson.
xxxx
Another property in Dimsons name, apparently taken from Lot 26
of the Maysilo Estate, was later sold to Estelita Hipolito, who in turn sold
the same to CLT. Said property was registered by CLT under TCT No. T177013, which also reflected, as its mother title, OCT No. 994 dated 19
54
55

Manotok Realty, Inc. v. CLT Realty Development Corp., 565 Phil. 59, 102-103 (2007).
Manotok Realty, Inc. v. CLT Realty Development Corp., 601 Phil. 571, 577 (2009).

DECISION

32

G.R. No. 160728

April 1917. Said property claimed by CLT encroached on property


covered by titles in the name of the Manotoks. The Manotoks traced their
titles to TCT Nos. 4210 and 4211, both issued in 1918 and both reflecting,
as their mother title, OCT No. 994 dated 3 May 1917.
It is evident that both the Heirs of Dimson and CLT had primarily
relied on the validity of OCT No. 994 dated 19 April 1917 as the basis of
their claim of ownership. However, the Court in its 2007 Resolution held
that OCT No. 994 dated 19 April 1917 was inexistent. The proceedings
before the Special Division afforded the Heirs of Dimson and CLT alike
the opportunity to prove the validity of their respective claims to title
based on evidence other than claims to title the inexistent 19 April 1917
OCT No. 994. Just as much was observed by the Special Division:
xxxx
The Special Division noted that the Heirs of Dimson did not offer
any explanation why their titles reflect the erroneous date of 19 April
1917. At the same time, it rejected CLTs explanation that the
transcription of the erroneous date was a typographical error.
xxxx
Our findings regarding the titles of Jose Dimson necessarily affect
and even invalidate the claims of all persons who seek to derive ownership
from the Dimson titles. These include CLT, which acquired the properties
they laid claim on from Estelita Hipolito who in turn acquired the same
from Jose Dimson. Just as much was concluded by the Special Division as
it evaluated CLTs claims.
xxxx
In view of the foregoing disquisitions, invalidating the titles of
DIMSON, the title of CLT should also be declared a nullity inasmuch as
the nullity of the titles of DIMSON necessarily upended CLTs propriety
claims. As earlier highlighted, CLT had anchored its claim on the strength
of Hipolitos title and that of DIMSONs TCT No. 15166. Remarkably
and curiously though, TCT No. 15166 was never presented in evidence for
purposes of tracing the validity of titles of CLT. On this basis alone, the
present remand proceedings remain damning to CLTs claim of
ownership.
Moreover, considering that the land title of CLT carried
annotations identical to those of DIMSON and consequently included the
defects in DIMSONs title, the fact that whatever typographical errors
were not at anytime cured by subsequent compliance with the
administrative requirements or subjected to administrative correction
bolsters the invalidity of the CLT title due to its complete and sole
dependence on the void DIMSON title.56

Thus, both requisites in order for an action for quieting of title to


prosper have been met in this case: (1) respondent Phil-Ville had
established its equitable title or interest in the 16 parcels of land subject
56

Id. at 585-600.

DECISION

G.R. No. 160728

33

of the action; and (2) TCT No. T-177013, found to overlap titles to said
properties of respondent Phil-Ville, was previously declared invalid.
In fine, the Court of Appeals, in its questioned Decision and
Resolution, did not commit reversible error in upholding the RTC Decision
dated March 15, 1996.
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the petition is hereby
DENIED. Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.

//oA.n~:{f; . .~ A~

TER~ J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO


Associate Justice

WE CONCUR:

MARIA LOURDES P.A. SERENO


Chief Justice
Chairperson

JO

ESTELA

~E~ERNABE

Associate Justice

DECISION

34

G.R. No. 160728

CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, 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.

MARIA LOURDES P.A. SERENO


Chief Justice

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