Title
Director of Lands vs. Reyes
Case
G.R. No. L-27594
Decision Date
Nov 28, 1975
Alinsunurin sought land registration of 16,800 hectares in Fort Magsaysay, claiming inheritance. Government opposed, citing public forest status. Court voided registration, ruling land public domain; possessory title insufficient, mandatory survey plan missing.

Case Summary (G.R. No. L-27594)

Factual Background and Nature of the Land

The original applicant, Alipio Alinsunurin, filed the application on February 24, 1964 with the trial court, alleging ownership by inheritance from Maria Padilla, the late owner who allegedly held title and possession based on a possessory information title issued during the Spanish regime on March 5, 1895. The land sought to be registered was undisputedly inside the Fort Magsaysay reservation established by Proclamation No. 237, dated December 10, 1955 (as referenced in the oppositors’ claim), and was largely uncultivated, mountainous, and thickly forested with commercially valuable timber. Only a small portion was allegedly cultivated by homesteaders who had been issued patents by the Director of Lands.

The oppositors contested the application on two main grounds: that the applicant lacked sufficient title and that the applicant was not shown to have been in open, exclusive, continuous, and notorious possession and occupation of the land for at least thirty (30) years immediately preceding the filing, and further that approximately thirteen thousand nine hundred fifty-seven (13,957) hectares of the area consisted of public forest and formed part of the military reservation.

Substitution of Parties and Trial Court Decision

On May 10, 1966, Alipio Alinsunurin sought substitution, requesting that Paranaque Investment and Development Corporation be recognized as applicant in his stead after it acquired all rights and interests over the property. The trial court granted the motion on June 10, 1966.

After trial, the lower court rendered its decision on November 19, 1966 adjudicating and ordering registration in favor of: (a) Paranaque Investment and Development Corporation for the two-thirds (2/3) portion, and (b) Roman C. Tamayo, for the one-third (1/3) portion. The decision also acknowledged rights of Ariosto Santos arising from a joint manifestation entered July 19, 1966.

On December 12, 1966, the oppositors filed a Notice of Appeal from the entire decision to the Supreme Court. The notice was furnished to counsel for Paranaque Investment and Development Corporation, but no copy was furnished to counsel for Roman C. Tamayo, although the latter was later served with copies of the pleadings and records embodied the notice. The oppositors filed their Record on Appeal on January 18, 1967, after an extension. Thereafter, an amended record was required and filed on March 16, 1967, with service on the appellees.

Order for Decree of Registration Pending Appeal and Resulting Titles

While the Record on Appeal was pending approval, both Paranaque Investment and Development Corporation and Roman C. Tamayo filed motions for issuance of a decree of registration pending appeal. The Government opposed them.

On March 11, 1967, the trial court ruled that its November 19, 1966 decision had become final as to Tamayo’s share, then directed the issuance of a decree of registration for the entire land: one-third (1/3) pro-indiviso for Roman C. Tamayo and two-thirds (2/3) pro-indiviso for Paranaque Investment and Development Corporation, subject to the final outcome of the appeal.

Pursuant to that order, the Commissioner of Land Registration issued Decree No. 113485 on March 14, 1967, and the Register of Deeds of Nueva Ecija issued Original Certificate of Title No. 0-3151 on March 15, 1967. The amended record was approved on April 12, 1967, and forwarded to the Supreme Court.

Certiorari and Mandamus (G.R. No. L-27594): Issues on Appeal, Severability, and Execution Pending Appeal

Because the trial court denied reconsideration of the order directing issuance of the decree, the Government filed certiorari and mandamus with preliminary injunction on May 29, 1967, seeking to nullify the March 11, 1967 order, the decree issued pursuant thereto, and the resulting title; it also sought to compel the trial court to certify the entire proceedings and to allow appeal from its decision in toto.

On June 5, 1967, the Supreme Court issued a writ of preliminary injunction, restraining the trial judge from issuing a writ of possession, restraining the applicants from taking possession or exercising acts of ownership, and restraining the Register of Deeds from accepting for registration documents referring to the subject land until a notice of lis pendens was filed and annotated in the title certificates of Roman Tamayo and Paranaque Investment and Development Corporation under Sec. 24, Rule 14, Rules of Court. The applicants complied by causing the notice of lis pendens to be inscribed in the primary entry book and annotated in the memorandum of encumbrances on Original Certificate of Title No. 0-3151.

The Court first addressed the claim that failure to serve a copy of the Notice of Appeal on Tamayo’s counsel was fatal. The Court held that such failure was not fatal because Tamayo was admittedly served with copies of the original and the Amended Record on Appeal, in which the notice was embodied; thus, it could not impair the right of appeal.

The Court further held that the appeal taken by the Government affected the whole decision and was not severable. It then declared that execution pending appeal was not applicable in land registration proceedings, characterizing it as fraught with dangerous consequences because it may lead to the issuance of Torrens titles based on judgments that are not final, which would be a nullity. The Court emphasized that a decree in land registration must issue only after the decision becomes final and executory, because title flows from the decree.

Applying these principles, the Court concluded that the trial court acted without jurisdiction or exceeded jurisdiction in ordering the issuance of a decree of registration despite a timely appeal from the entire decision. It treated the improvident order as void.

Intervening Civil Case, Subdivision, and Cancellation of Original Certificate of Title

As an additional safeguard, the Government’s side had already caused the notice of lis pendens to be annotated, and the Supreme Court held that such notice could not be cancelled until termination of the litigation. The Court noted that during the pendency of the appeal, the trial court in a separate proceeding, Civil Case No. 4696, assumed jurisdiction despite the pending appeal involving the same land and decided in favor of reconveyance plaintiffs.

In alleged violation of the Supreme Court’s injunction, Paranaque Investment and Development Corporation executed a subdivision plan based on the single parcel covered by Original Certificate of Title No. 0-3151 and deeded six lots to Honofre A. Andrada and Nemesio P. Diaz. The Register of Deeds was then ordered, on September 23, 1968, to cancel Original Certificate of Title No. 0-3151 and to issue new titles to transferees free from all liens and encumbrances, and the Register of Deeds did not carry over the notice of lis pendens on the new titles. Subsequent transactions followed, including a transfer of about four thousand (4,000) hectares to the Land Bank of the Philippines in consideration of P8,940,000.00.

The Supreme Court ruled that the order cancelling Original Certificate of Title No. 0-3151 and issuing subsequent titles free from liens was void ab initio because Civil Case No. 4696 was an action in personam to decree reconveyance of portions subject to the outcome of the appeal; it was therefore barred by the pendency of the appeal. The Court further held that the order could not be construed to authorize cancellation of the notice of lis pendens, which was not created by the reconveyance case but by the pending litigation and had to be carried over.

While the Court recognized that misfeasance by the Register of Deeds might expose the officer to civil and even criminal liability for prejudice caused to innocent third parties, it held that such acts could not prejudice the petitioners-appellants, who were protected by the Supreme Court’s writ of injunction and by the notice of lis pendens. The Court stressed that the injunction restrained the Register of Deeds from accepting documents for registration until lis pendens was annotated, so subsequent transferees could not claim innocence. It also held that an order in Civil Case No. 4696 could not overrule the Supreme Court’s injunction. Thus, the notice of lis pendens remained in full force and effect, binding subsequent transferees of the land subject of the appeal. The Court also observed that entry of lis pendens in the day book was sufficient to constitute registration and notice.

Appeal on the Merits (G.R. No. L-28144): Statutory Requirements and Failure to Prove a Registerable Title

Turning to the merits, the Supreme Court scrutinized the evidentiary and legal requisites for registration. First, it noted that the original tracing cloth plan, which required approval by the Director of Lands, was not submitted in evidence. The Court treated submission as a statutory requirement of mandatory character, and it held that without a duly approved plan and technical description, the plan had little evidentiary value.

The applicant had presented blueprints of survey plans, but one was not formally offered in evidence, and the other lacked approval by the Director of Lands. The applicant justified the failure to submit the original tracing cloth by suggesting that the Land Registration Commission checked the survey plans and the tracing cloth must be there. The Court rejected the justification, stressing that the Land Registration Commission did not approve original survey plans. It held that the applicant could retrieve and submit the original tracing cloth if it had been forwarded there. The Court further reasoned that a core feature of the Torrens system was the absolute certainty of the identity of the land and that the purpose of the statutory requirement was to fix the exact identity of the land shown in the approved plan and technical descriptions. It also obser

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