Bejar vs. Caluag

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FIRST DIVISION

ALMARIO
BEJAR
(Deceased), as substituted
by his heirs - CARMELITA
BEJAR, ALFREDO BEJAR,
GREGORIA B. DANCEL,
BRENDA
B.
MIANO,
LOURDES B. BENDIJO, and
SUSANA B. CAMILO,
Petitioners,

versus -

G.R. No. 171277


Present:
PUNO, C.J., Chairperson,
SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ,
CORONA,
AZCUNA, and
GARCIA, JJ.
Promulgated:
February 15, 2007

MARICEL CALUAG,
Respondent.
x
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ, J.:
Before us is the instant Petition for Review on Certiorari
under Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure, as

amended, assailing the Decision[1] of the Court of Appeals


dated May 23, 2005 in CA-G.R. SP No. 85430.
The factual backdrop of the case is as follows:
On August 2, 2002, the late Almario Bejar, substituted by
his heirs, herein petitioners, filed with the Metropolitan
Trial Court (MeTC), Branch 12, Manila, a complaint for
illegal detainer and damages against Maricel Caluag,
herein respondent, docketed as Civil Case No. 173262CV. The allegations therein are partly reproduced
hereunder:
xxx
4. Plaintiff is the owner of a residential house
made of light materials consisting of wood and
galvanized iron roof built on government-owned
land located at 777 Coral Street, Tondo, Manila.
5. On December 21, 1981, plaintiff sold one-half
(1/2) portion of the said residential house with
an area of twenty-two feet in length and fifteen
feet in width to FernandoMijares in the amount
of Eleven Thousand (P11,000.00) Pesos x x x
6. Subsequently, plaintiff became the owner in
fee simple of the government land where his
residential house was built including the onehalf portion he sold to FernandoMijares, located
at 777 Coral Street, Tondo, Manila, evidenced by
Transfer Certificate of Title No. 156220
registered and entered in the Register of Deeds
of Manila on August 30, 1983 x x x
7. On September 2, 1991, Fernando Mijares,
sold his residential house to Maricel Caluag with
residence address at 1391 R.A. Reyes St., Tondo,

Manila to be used as a warehouse for her


business x x x
8. Plaintiff badly needs the portion of his
land occupied by the defendant to build a
residential house for use of his family;
9. On April 9, 2002, plaintiff through counsel
sent a formal demand letter to defendant for
the latter to vacate the portion of the property
situated at 777 Coral Street, Tondo, Manila
within ten (10) days from receipt of the demand
letter x x x
10. Despite formal demand from the plaintiff
on April 19, 2002, defendant failed and refused
and still fails and refuses to vacate said portion
of the property owned by the plaintiff located
at 777 Coral Street, Tondo, Manila to the
damage and prejudice of plaintiff.
xxx
On October 15, 2002, respondent filed a motion to
dismiss on the ground that the MeTC has no jurisdiction
over the case as it involves the issue of ownership.
On February 10, 2003, respondent filed a supplement to
her motion to dismiss alleging that pursuant to
the Kasulatan ng Bilihan ng Bahay, Almario Bejar sold to
Fernando Mijares both his house and the entire lot on
which it was constructed, citing paragraph 4 of
the Kasulatan which reads:
Na alang alang sa halagang LABING ISANG LIBO
PISO
(P11,000.00) kuartang Filipino
na kasasalukuyang gastahin na aking tinanggap
ng buong kasiyahang loob kayFERNANDO
MIJARES

x x x ay aking ipinagbili, ibinigay, isinulit at inilip


at ng buo kong pagaari na kalahating harapa
n ng bahay ko naipaliwanag sa itaas at ang pa
gbibilikong ito ay kasama ang lahat kong karapa
tan sa lupa kung
may karapatan ako
[2]
na kinatitirikan ng bahay.
On June 16, 2003, the MeTC issued an Order dismissing
Civil Case No. 173262-CV for want of jurisdiction, holding
that the actual issue between the parties is the
enforceability
of
the
subsequent
sale
by
Fernando Mijares to respondent of the subject property;
and that, therefore, jurisdiction properly lies with the
Regional Trial Court (RTC).
On appeal, the RTC, Branch 47, Manila, on January 5,
2004, rendered its Decision reversing the Order of
dismissal of the MeTC. The RTC held that the issue in Civil
Case No. 173262-CV is who has better possession of the
disputed property. The RTC then directed the MeTC to
hear the case on the merits.
Respondent seasonably filed a motion for reconsideration
but it was denied.
Respondent then filed with the Court of Appeals a petition
for review, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 85430.
In its Decision dated May 23, 2005, the Court of Appeals
reversed the RTC judgment, thus:
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is GRANTED.
The assailed decision of the Regional Trial Court,

National Capital Judicial Region, Branch 47,


Manila, in Civil Case No. 03-107631 is
REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The order, dated 16
June 2003, of the Metropolitan Trial Court,
National Capital Judicial Region, Branch
12. Manila in Civil Case No. 173262-CV,
dismissing Almario Bejars complaint for lack of
jurisdiction is hereby REINSTATED.
Let this case be remanded to the Regional Trial
Court, National Capital Judicial Region, Branch
47, Manila for further proceedings pursuant to
Section 8, Rule 40 of the Revised Rules of Court.
SO ORDERED.
The appellate court held that the allegations of the
complaint do not make out a case for illegal detainer or
forcible entry.
Petitioners filed a motion for reconsideration of the
above Decision but in its Resolution dated January 27,
2006, the Court of Appeals denied the same.
Hence, the instant petition.
For our resolution is the issue of whether the MeTC has
jurisdiction over Civil Case No. 173262-CV for illegal
detainer.
There are four (4) remedies available to one who has
been deprived of possession of real property. These are:
(1) an action for unlawful detainer; (2) a suit for forcible
entry;
(3) accion publiciana;
and
(4) accion reinvidicatoria.

In unlawful detainer and forcible entry cases, the only


issue to be determined is who between the contending
parties has better possession of the contested property.
[3]
Pursuant to Section 33 (2) of Batas Pambansa Blg. 129,
as amended by Section 3 of Republic Act No. 7691, it is
the Municipal Trial Courts, Metropolitan Trial Courts in
Cities, and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts that exercise
exclusive original jurisdiction over these cases. The
proceedings are governed by the Rule on Summary
Procedure, as amended.
By
contrast,
an accion publiciana,
also
known
[4]
as accion plenaria de posesion, is a plenary action for
recovery of possession in an ordinary civil proceeding in
order to determine the better and legal right to possess,
independently of title.[5]
There are two distinctions between the summary
ejectment suits (unlawful detainer and forcible entry)
and accion publiciana. The first lies in the period within
which each one can be instituted. Actions for unlawful
detainer and forcible entry must be filed within one
year from the date possession is lost, while
anaccion publiciana may
be
filed
only after
the
expiration of that period but within the period
prescribed in the statute of limitations. The second
distinction involves jurisdiction. An accion publiciana may
only be filed with the RTC, while a complaint for unlawful
detainer or forcible entry may only be filed with the first
level courts earlier mentioned.
An accion reinvidicatoria, unlike the three remedies
previously discussed, involves not only possession, but
ownership of the property. The plaintiff in this action sets

up title in him and prays that he be declared the owner


and be given possession thereof.[6] Otherwise put, the
plaintiff alleges ownership of real property and prays for
recovery of such ownership. Under Article 434 of the Civil
Code, two things must be alleged and proven in
an accion reinvidicatoria: (1) the identity of the property
and (2) plaintiffs title to it. Sole and exclusive jurisdiction
over cases for accion reinvidicatoria is vested in the RTC.
We are guided by the elementary principle that what
determines the nature of an action as well as which court
has jurisdiction over it are the allegations of the
complaint and the character of the relief sought.[7]
To make out a suit for illegal detainer or forcible
entry, the complaint must contain two mandatory
allegations: (1) prior physical possession of the property
by the plaintiff; and (2) deprivation of said possession by
another by means of force, intimidation, threat, strategy
or stealth.[8] This latter requirement implies that the
possession of the disputed property by the intruder has
been unlawful from the very start. Then, the action must
be brought within one year from the date of actual entry
to the property or, in cases where stealth was employed,
from the date the plaintiff learned about it.[9]
An examination of the allegations in the complaint in Civil
Case No.
173262-CV
does
not
show
that Almario Bejar was deprived of his possession of the
property by force, intimidation, threat, strategy or stealth.
Here, the case is for unlawful detainer. The complaint
clearly alleges that Almario Bejar sold one-half portion of
his house to Fernando Mijares; that the latter, in turn, sold
the same portion of the house to respondent; that

eventually, Almario Bejar became the owner in fee simple


of the entire lot where his house was built; that he needs
the portion of the lot occupied by respondent for the
construction of a house for the use of his family; and that
despite demand, respondent failed and still fails to vacate
the
premises. From
the
records,
it
appears
that Almario Bejar filed his complaint within one year
from the date of his last demand upon respondent to
vacate the contested portion of the land.
A suit for unlawful detainer will prosper if the
complaint sufficiently alleges that there is a withholding
of possession or refusal to vacate the property by a
defendant.[10] The cause of action arises from the
expiration or termination of the defendants right to
continue possession which is upon plaintiffs demand to
vacate the premises. The complaint for unlawful detainer
must then be instituted within one year from the date of
the last demand.[11] All these incidents are present in the
instant case.
Considering
that
the
allegations
in Almario Bejars complaint in Civil Case No. 173262-CV
show that it is one for illegal detainer, hence, it is the
MeTC, Branch 12, Manila which has jurisdiction over Civil
Case No. 173262-CV.
WHEREFORE, we GRANT the petition and REVERSE the
assailed Decision of the Court of Appeals. The RTC
Decision is AFFIRMED. Let the records of this case be
remanded to the MeTC, Branch 12, Manila, for further
proceedings with dispatch.
SO ORDERED.

ANGELINA SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
Chairperson
RENATO C. CORONA
Associate Justice

ADOLFO S. AZCUNA
Associate Justice

CANCIO C. GARCIA
Associate Justice

CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Article VIII, Section 13 of the
Constitution, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in
the above Decision were reached in consultation before
the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the
Courts Division.

REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice

Rollo, pp. 36-48. Per Associate Justice Perlita


J. Tria Tirona (retired) and Associate Justice Delilah
Vidallon-Magtolis (retired) and Associate Justice Jose
C. Reyes, Jr., concurring.
[2]
Reproduced from the Decision of the Court of Appeals
in CA-G.R. SP No. 85430, id., pp. 36-48.
[3]
Rivera v. Rivera, G.R. No. 154203, July 8, 2003, 405
SCRA 466, 471.
[1]

[4]

Barredo v. Santiago, 102 Phil. 127, 130 (1957).

[5]

Bishop of Cebu v. Mangaron, 6 Phil. 286, 291


(1906); Ledesma v. Marcos, 9 Phil. 618, 620 (1908).

Alo v. Rocamora, 6 Phil. 197, 198 (1906), Ledesma v.


Marcos, supra.
[7]
Huguete v. Embudo, G.R. No. 149554, July 1, 2003, 405
SCRA 273, 278, citing Caiza v. Court of Appeals, 268
SCRA 640 (1997).
[8]
Baes v. Lutheran Church in the Philippines, G.R. No.
142308, November 15, 2005, 475 SCRA 13, 34,
citing David
v.
Cordova,
464
SCRA
385
(2005), Sps. Tirona v. Alejo, 367 SCRA 17 (2001).
[6]

[9]

Bongato v. Malvar, G.R. No. 141614, August 14, 2002,


387 SCRA 327, 338, citing Sps. Ong v. Court of
Appeals, 355 SCRA 691 (2001).

Varona v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 14148, May 20,


2004, 428 SCRA 577, 584, citing Tirona v. Alejo, 367
SCRA 17 (2001).
[11]
Macasaet v. Macasaet,
G.R.
Nos.
15439192, September 30, 2004, 439 SCRA 625, 633.
[10]

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