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FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. 143573. January 30, 2009.]

ADORACION ROSALES RUFLOE, ALFREDO RUFLOE and RODRIGO


RUFLOE , petitioners, vs . LEONARDA BURGOS, ANITA BURGOS,
ANGELITO BURGOS, AMY BURGOS, ELVIRA DELOS REYES and
JULIAN C. TUBIG , respondents.

DECISION

LEONARDO-DE CASTRO , J : p

Under consideration is this petition for review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court
seeking the reversal and setting aside of the Decision 1 dated January 17, 2000 of the
Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV. No. 49939, and its Resolution 2 dated June 9,
2000, denying petitioners' motion for reconsideration.
The assailed decision reversed and set aside the February 10, 1995 decision 3 of
the Regional Trial Court (RTC) at Muntinlupa, Metro Manila, Branch 276, 4 in its Civil
Case No. 90-359, an action for Declaration of Nullity of Contract and Cancellation of
Transfer Certi cate of Titles and Damages, commenced by the petitioners against
herein respondents.
The factual antecedents are as follows:
Petitioner Adoracion Ru oe is the wife of Angel Ru oe, now deceased, while co-
petitioners Alfredo and Rodrigo are their children. During the marriage of Adoracion and
Angel, they acquired a 371-square meter parcel of land located at Barangay Bagbagan,
Muntinlupa, and covered by Transfer Certi cate of Title (TCT) No. 406851 which is the
subject of the present controversy. ECcDAH

Sometime in 1978, respondent Elvira delos Reyes forged the signatures of


Adoracion and Angel in a Deed of Sale dated September 8, 1978 to make it appear that
the disputed property was sold to her by the spouses Ru oe. On the basis of the said
deed of sale, delos Reyes succeeded in obtaining a title in her name, TCT No. S-74933.
Thus, in November 1979, the Ru oes led a complaint for damages against
delos Reyes with the RTC of Pasay City alleging that the Deed of Sale was falsi ed as
the signatures appearing thereon were forged because Angel Ru oe died in 1974,
which was four (4) years before the alleged sale in favor of delos Reyes. The complaint
was docketed as Civil Case No. M-7690 . 5 They also led a notice of adverse claim on
November 5, 1979.
On December 4, 1984, during the pendency of Civil Case No. M-7690, delos
Reyes sold the subject property to respondent siblings Anita, Angelina, Angelito and
Amy (Burgos siblings). A new title, TCT No. 135860, was then issued in their names. acIASE

On December 12, 1985, the Burgos siblings, in turn, sold the same property to
their aunt, Leonarda Burgos. However, the sale in favor of Leonarda was not registered.
Thus, no title was issued in her name. The subject property remained in the name of the
Burgos siblings who also continued paying the real estate taxes thereon.
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On February 6, 1989, the RTC of Pasay City, Branch 108, 6 rendered its decision in
Civil Case No. M-7690 declaring that the Deed of Sale in favor of delos Reyes was
falsi ed as the signatures of the spouses Ru oe had been forged. The trial court ruled
that Delos Reyes did not acquire ownership over the subject property. Said decision
had become final and executory.
Such was the state of things when, on February 8, 1990, in the RTC of Muntinlupa,
the Ru oes led their complaint for Declaration of Nullity of Contract and Cancellation
of Transfer Certi cate of Titles against respondents Leonarda and the Burgos siblings,
and Delos Reyes. In their complaint, docketed as Civil Case No. 90-359, the Ru oes
basically alleged that inasmuch as the Deed of Sale in favor of Delos Reyes was
falsi ed, no valid title was ever conveyed to the Burgos siblings. 7 The Burgos siblings
executed a simulated deed of sale in favor of Leonarda knowing fully well that their title
was a nullity.
In their common "Answer", respondents maintained that they bought the property
in good faith after they were shown a genuine copy of the title of the disputed property
by Delos Reyes. They also insisted that they were innocent purchasers in good faith and
for value. 8
On February 10, 1995, the trial court rendered a decision declaring that Leonarda
and the Burgos siblings were not innocent purchasers for value and did not have a
better right to the property in question than the true and legal owners, the Ru oes. The
trial court also held that the subsequent conveyance of the disputed property to
Leonarda by the Burgos siblings was simulated to make it appear that Leonarda was a
buyer in good faith. The trial court then directed the Register of Deeds of Makati, Rizal
to reinstate the title of the spouses Ru oe, and to cancel all other titles subsequent to
the said title particularly TCT No. S-74933 issued to Delos Reyes and TCT No. 135860
issued to the Burgos siblings. 9 SACEca

Respondents interposed an appeal to the CA, whereat the appellate recourse


was docketed as CA-G.R. CV. No. 49939.
As stated at the threshold hereof, the CA, in its decision dated January 17, 2000,
reversed and set aside that of the trial court, declaring in the process that respondents
were purchasers in good faith and for value. In so ruling, the CA explained:
Measured by this yardstick, defendants-appellants [herein respondents] are
purchasers in good faith and for value. Amado Burgos bought the subject
property (for his children Anita, Angelina, Angelito and Amy) free from any lien or
encumbrance or any notice of adverse claim annotated thereto. He was presented
with a clean title already in the name of the seller. If a person purchases a piece
of land on the assurance that the seller's title thereto is valid, he should not run
the risk of being told later that his acquisition was ineffectual after all. If we were
to void a sale of property covered by a clean and unencumbered torrens title,
public con dence in the Torrens System would be eroded and transactions would
have to be attended by complicated and inconclusive investigations and
uncertain proof of ownership. The consequences would be that land con icts
could proliferate and become more abrasive, if not violent. (Words in bracket
ours). 1 0 CcaASE

Their motion for reconsideration having been denied by the CA in its equally
challenged resolution of June 9, 2000, petitioners are now with us v i a the present
recourse, faulting the CA as follows:

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A. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS DECIDED THIS CASE IN A WAY
NOT IN ACCORD WITH THE APPLICABLE DECISIONS OF THE HONORABLE
SUPREME COURT.

B. THERE ARE SPECIAL AND IMPORTANT REASONS THAT REQUIRE A


REVIEW OF THE CA DECISION.

C. THE HONORABLE CA ACTED WITH GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION


AMOUNTING TO LACK OF JURISDICTION WHEN IT COUNTERMANDED
THE FINDINGS OF THE REGIONAL TRIAL COURT EVEN ON POINTS AND
QUESTIONS OF CREDIBILITY.

D. THE CA JUDGMENT THAT REVERSED THE RTC DECISION IS NOT


SUPPORTED BY THE EVIDENCE ON RECORD AND IS CONTRARY TO
ESTABLISHED PRECEDENTS LAID DOWN BY THE HONORABLE SUPREME
COURT.ASETHC

E. THE CA ERRED IN LAW IN PRACTICALLY HOLDING THAT A DEAD MAN


ANGEL RUFLOE (ANGEL NEVER SIGNED) VALIDLY DISPOSED OF HIS
PROPERTY (A HOUSE AND LOT COVERED BY A TCT THROUGH A
FALSIFIED DEED OF SALE) AFTER HIS DEATH FOUR (4) YEARS BEFORE
THE EXECUTION OF THE DEED.
F. THE CA ERRED IN LAW IN HOLDING ANITA, ANGELINA, AMY AND
ANGELITO BURGOS AND THEIR SUCCESSOR-IN-INTEREST (THEIR AUNT)
LEONARDA BURGOS ARE BUYERS IN GOOD FAITH.

G. THE CA IGNORED THE PLAIN PROVISIONS OF THE CIVIL CODE THAT "IN
ALL CONTRACTUAL, PROPERTY OR OTHER RELATIONS, WHEN ONE OF
THE PARTIES IS AT A DISADVANTAGE ON ACCOUNT OF HIS MORAL
DEPENDENCE, IGNORANCE, INDIGENCE, MENTAL WEAKNESS, TENDER
AGE OR OTHER HANDICAP, THE COURT MUST BE VIGILANT FOR HIS
PROTECTION." 1 1

In a gist, the issues to be resolved are (1) whether the sale of the subject
property by Delos Reyes to the Burgos siblings and the subsequent sale by the siblings
to Leonarda were valid and binding; and (2) whether respondents were innocent
purchasers in good faith and for value despite the forged deed of sale of their
transferor Delos Reyes. SEIcHa

The issues necessitate an inquiry into the facts. While, as a rule, factual issues are
not within the province of this Court, nonetheless, in light of the con icting factual
ndings of the two (2) courts below, an examination of the facts obtaining in this case
is in order.
The Ru oes aver that inasmuch as the Deed of Sale purportedly executed by
them in favor of delos Reyes was a forgery, she could not pass any valid right or title to
the Burgos siblings and Leonarda. The Ru oes also contend that since the Burgos
siblings and Leonarda acquired the subject property with notice that another person
has a right to or interest in such property, they cannot be considered innocent
purchasers in good faith and for value.
For their part, the Burgos siblings and Leonarda insist that their title is valid and
binding. They maintain that under the Torrens System, a person dealing with registered
land may safely rely on the correctness on the certi cate of title without the need of
further inquiry. For this reason, the Court cannot disregard the right of an innocent third
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person who relies on the correctness of the certificate of title even if the sale is void.
We find merit in the petition.
The issue concerning the validity of the deed of sale between the Ru oes and
Delos Reyes had already been resolved with nality in Civil Case No. M-7690 by the RTC
of Pasay City which declared that the signatures of the alleged vendors, Angel and
Adoracion Ru oe, had been forged. 1 2 It is undisputed that the forged deed of sale was
null and void and conveyed no title. It is a well-settled principle that no one can give
what one does not have, nemo dat quod non habet. One can sell only what one owns or
is authorized to sell, and the buyer can acquire no more right than what the seller can
transfer legally. 1 3 Due to the forged deed of sale, Delos Reyes acquired no right over
the subject property which she could convey to the Burgos siblings. All the transactions
subsequent to the falsi ed sale between the spouses Ru oe and Delos Reyes are
likewise void, including the sale made by the Burgos siblings to their aunt, Leonarda. CcaASE

We now determine whether respondents Burgos siblings and Leonarda Burgos


were purchasers in good faith. It has been consistently ruled that a forged deed can
legally be the root of a valid title when an innocent purchaser for value intervenes. 1 4
An innocent purchaser for value is one who buys the property of another without
notice that some other person has a right to or interest in it, and who pays a full and fair
price at the time of the purchase or before receiving any notice of another person's
claim. 1 5 The burden of proving the status of a purchaser in good faith and for value lies
upon one who asserts that status. This onus probandi cannot be discharged by mere
invocation of the ordinary presumption of good faith. 1 6
As a general rule, every person dealing with registered land, as in this case, may
safely rely on the correctness of the certi cate of title issued therefor and will in no way
oblige him to go beyond the certi cate to determine the condition of the property.
However, this rule admits of an unchallenged exception:
. . . a person dealing with registered land has a right to rely on the Torrens
certi cate of title and to dispense with the need of inquiring further except when
the party has actual knowledge of facts and circumstances that would impel a
reasonably cautious man to make such inquiry or when the purchaser has
knowledge of a defect or the lack of title in his vendor or of suf cient facts to
induce a reasonably prudent man to inquire into the status of the title of the
property in litigation. The presence of anything which excites or arouses
suspicion should then prompt the vendee to look beyond the certi cate and
investigate the title of the vendor appearing on the face of said certi cate. One
who falls within the exception can neither be denominated an innocent purchaser
for value nor a purchaser in good faith and, hence, does not merit the protection
of the law. 1 7 IDSaAH

The circumstances surrounding this case point to the absolute lack of good faith
on the part of respondents. The evidence shows that the Ru oes caused a notice of
adverse claim to be annotated on the title of Delos Reyes as early as November 5,
1979. 1 8 The annotation of an adverse claim is a measure designed to protect the
interest of a person over a piece of real property, and serves as a notice and warning to
third parties dealing with said property that someone is claiming an interest on the
same or may have a better right than the registered owner thereof. Despite the notice
of adverse claim, the Burgos siblings still purchased the property in question.

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Too, at the time the Burgos siblings bought the subject property on December 4,
1984, Civil Case No. M-7690, 1 9 an action for damages, and Criminal Case No. 10914-P,
2 0 for estafa, led by the Ru oes against Delos Reyes, were both pending before the
RTC of Pasay City. This circumstance should have alerted the Burgos siblings as to the
validity of Delos Reyes' title and her authority and legal right to sell the property.
Equally signi cant is the fact that Delos Reyes was not in possession of the
subject property when she sold the same to the Burgos siblings. It was Amado Burgos
who bought the property for his children, the Burgos siblings. Amado was not
personally acquainted with Delos Reyes prior to the sale because he bought the
property through a real estate broker, a certain Jose Anias, and not from Delos Reyes
herself. There was no showing that Amado or any of the Burgos siblings exerted any
effort to personally verify with the Register of Deeds if Delos Reyes' certi cate of title
was clean and authentic. They merely relied on the title as shown to them by the real
estate broker. An ordinarily prudent man would have inquired into the authenticity of the
certi cate of title, the property's location and its owners. Although it is a recognized
principle that a person dealing with registered land need not go beyond its certificate of
title, it is also a rmly established rule that where circumstances exist which would put
a purchaser on guard and prompt him to investigate further, such as the presence of
occupants/tenants on the property offered for sale, it is expected that the purchaser
would inquire rst into the nature of possession of the occupants, i.e., whether or not
the occupants possess the land in the concept of an owner. Settled is the rule that a
buyer of real property that is in the possession of a person other than the seller must
be wary and should investigate the rights of those in possession. Otherwise, without
such inquiry, the buyer can hardly be regarded as a buyer in good faith. 2 1 CTSHDI

In the same vein, Leonarda cannot be categorized as a purchaser in good faith.


Since it was the Ru oes who continued to have actual possession of the property,
Leonarda should have investigated the nature of their possession.
We cannot ascribe good faith to those who have not shown any diligence in
protecting their rights. Respondents had knowledge of facts that should have led them
to inquire and investigate in order to acquaint themselves with possible defects in the
title of the seller of the property. However, they failed to do so. Thus, Leonarda, as well
as the Burgos siblings, cannot take cover under the protection the law accords to
purchasers in good faith and for value. They cannot claim valid title to the property.
Moreover, the defense of indefeasibility of a Torrens title does not extend to a
transferee who takes it with notice of a aw in the title of his transferor. To be effective,
the inscription in the registry must have been made in good faith. A holder in bad faith
of a certi cate of title is not entitled to the protection of the law, for the law cannot be
used as a shield for fraud. 2 2
We quote with approval the following ndings of the trial court showing that the
sale between the Burgos siblings and Leonarda is simulated:
1. The sale was not registered, a circumstance which is inconceivable in a
legitimate transfer. A true vendee would not brook any delay in registering
the sale in his favor. Not only because registration is the operative act that
effects property covered by the Torrens System, but also because
registration and issuance of new title to the transferee, enable this
transferee to assume domiciliary and possessory rights over the property.
These bene ts of ownership shall be denied him if the titles of the property
shall remain in the name of vendor. Therefore, it is inconceivable as
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contrary to behavioral pattern of a true buyer and the empirical knowledge
of man to assume that a buyer who invested on the property he bought
would be uninvolved and not endeavor to register the property he bought.
The nonchalance of Leonarda amply demonstrates the pretended sale to
her, and the evident scheme of her brother Amado who invested on the
property he bought. caIETS

2. Despite the sale of property to Leonarda, the sellers continued paying taxes
on the property from the time they acquired it from Elvira in 1984 up to the
present or a period of ten years. The tax payment receipts remained in the
name of Anita and her siblings, (Exhibits "16" to "16-H"). On the other hand,
Leonarda does not even pretend to have paid any tax on the land she
allegedly bought in 1985. Even the Tax Declaration issued in 1988, three
years after the sale to her (Leonarda) is still in the name of her nieces and
nephew. These circumstances can only account for the fact that her nieces
and nephew remained the owners of the land and continued paying taxes
thereon.
3. Leonarda never exercised the attributes of ownership. Far from it, she
vested the exercise of domiciliary and possessory rights in her brother
Amado the father of Anita, Angelina, Angelito and Amy, by constituting him
with full power including the ejectment of plaintiffs, to defend and to enter
a compromise of any case he may le. She allowed the children of Amado
to remain as the registered owners of the property without pressing for its
transfer to her.

4. And, this simulated sale is the handiwork of Amado who apparently acted
advisedly to make it appear that his sister Leonarda as the second
transferee of the property is an innocent purchaser for value. Since he or
his children could not plausibly assume the stance of a buyer in good faith
from the forger Elvira Delos Reyes, knowing of Elvira's defective title,
Amado hoped that the entry of his sister Leonarda, might conjure the
image and who might pass off as an innocent purchaser, specially
considering that the notice of adverse claim of the Plaintiffs which was
annotated in Elvira's title was not, strangely enough, NOT carried over in
the title of his children, who were made to appear as the sellers to their
Aunt Leonarda. It was a neat chicanery of Amado to bring the property out
of the reach of Plaintiffs thru a series of transfers involving a third party, to
make her appear as an innocent purchaser for value. His sister could be
manipulated to evict or oust the real owners from their own property thru a
documentary manipulation. Unfortunately, his scheme has not passed
unnoticed by a discerning and impartial evaluator, like this court. The
Municipal Court of Muntinlupa in Civil Case No. 17446 has even
established that Amado's children Anita and others are buyers in bad faith
who knew of the defective title of their transferor Elvira Delos Reyes, the
forger, as aforestated. ASIDTa

These circumstances taken altogether would show that the sale, which occurred
between Leonarda and the Burgos siblings, was simply a scheme designed to cleanse
the title passed on to them by the forger Delos Reyes. Respondents had to resort to
this strategy because they were fully aware that their title, having originated from the
forged deed of sale of Delos Reyes, was not a clean and valid title. The trial court
explained, thus:
And, this simulated sale is the handiwork of Amado who apparently acted
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advisedly to make it appear that his sister Leonarda as the second transferee of
the property is an innocent purchaser for value. Since he or his children could not
plausibly assume the stamp of a buyer in good faith from the forger Elvira Delos
Reyes, knowing Elvira's defective title, Amado had hoped that the entry of his
sister Leonarda, might conjure the image and might pass off as an innocent
purchaser. . . . . It was a neat chicanery of Amado to bring the property out of the
reach of plaintiffs [herein petitioners] thru a series of transfers involving a third
party, to make her appear as an innocent purchaser for value. Unfortunately, his
scheme has not passed unnoticed by a discerning and impartial evaluator, like
this Court. 2 3 (Words in bracket ours)EHDCAI

Patently, the Burgos siblings were not innocent purchasers for value and the
simulated sale to Leonarda did not remove the defect in their title.
Accordingly, we sustain the trial court's award of P20,000.00 as moral damages,
P50,000.00 as exemplary damages, and P50,000.00 as attorney's fees. 2 4
However, the actual damages in the amount of P134,200.00 should be deleted.
In view of this Court's ruling that the property rightfully belongs to petitioners and must
be restored to them, there is no more basis for the award of said actual damages to the
Rufloes.
WHEREFORE, the petition for review is hereby GRANTED. The assailed decision
and resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV. No. 49939 are REVERSED and SET
ASIDE. Accordingly, the decision of the trial court is hereby REVIVED, except the award
of actual damages which must be deleted. ATcaID

SO ORDERED.
Carpio, * Austria-Martinez, ** Corona and Carpio-Morales, ** JJ., concur.
Puno, C.J., is on official leave.

Footnotes

* Acting Chairperson in lieu of Chief Justice Reynato S. Puno as per Special Order No. 552-
A. aEcDTC

** Additional Members in lieu of Chief Justice Reynato S. Puno and Justice Adolfo S.
Azcuna as per Special Order No. 553.
1. Penned by then Associate Justice Romeo A. Brawner, now Commissioner of the
Commission on Elections, with Associate Justice Fermin A. Martin, Jr. (now ret.) and
Associate Justice Renato C. Dacudao (now ret.) concurring; rollo, pp. 45-50.
2. Id., at 52.
3. Id., at 83-90.
4. Presided by Judge N.C. Perello.

5. Entitled, "Adoracion Rosales Rufloe, Alfredo Rufloe and Rodrigo Rufloe v. Elvira Delos
Reyes, Pedro Solima, Estrellita Solima, Estollo Calalang and Julian Tubig"; records, pp.
131-134.
6. Presided by Judge Priscilla C. Mijares; rollo, pp. 72-75.
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7. Records, pp. 1-11.
8. Id., at 28-33.
9. Supra note 3.
10. Rollo, p. 49.
11. Id., at 11-12.
12. See note 6.
13. Consolidated Rural Bank, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 132161, January 17, 2005,
448 SCRA 347, 363. ScTaEA

14. Cayana v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 125607, March 18, 2004, 426 SCRA 10, 22.
15. Domingo v. Reed, G.R. No. 157701, December 9, 2005, 477 SCRA 227, 241.
16. Uy v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 109197, June 21, 2001, 359 SCRA 262, 271.
17. Sandoval v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 106657, August 1, 1996, 260 SCRA 283, 295.
18. Documentary Exhibits of Leonarda Burgos, et al., Exhibit 12, p. 22.
19. Supra note 5.
20. Records, pp. 126-130.
21. Republic v. De Guzman, G.R. No. 105630, February 23, 2000, 326 SCRA 267, 277.
22. Samonte v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 104223, July 12, 2001, 361 SCRA 173, 183.
23. Rollo, p. 87.
24. Article 2208 (1), Civil Code of the Philippines.

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