Title
Mendiola vs. Sangalang
Case
G.R. No. 205283
Decision Date
Jun 7, 2017
Dispute over land ownership after forged deed; heirs co-own property; petitioner fails to prove better possession rights.
A

Case Summary (G.R. No. 205283)

Ownership Title, Possession, and the Family Relationship

The property consisted of a residential house split into two halves and a four-door, one-storey commercial building. While Honorata was alive, petitioner used one half of the residential house and Vilma Aquino’s son used the other half, and the commercial building was leased to third persons. After Honorata’s death, this factual arrangement continued until respondent discovered in 2003 that the property had already been registered in the names of petitioner and Vilma. Respondent and his siblings learned that the transfer was based on a Deed of Sale dated January 29, 1996 supposedly executed by Honorata in favor of petitioner and Vilma, resulting in TCT No. N-148021 being issued in their names.

Respondent’s Alleged Occupation and the Initial Demand for Ejectment

In July 2003, after Vilma’s son left the residential unit, respondent allegedly entered the residential house without permission and, using force and violence upon things, broke open the door and detained the premises. On April 11, 2005, petitioner and Vilma demanded that respondent vacate, but respondent refused. The dispute was brought to the barangay for conciliation, but no settlement was reached. Consequently, on October 18, 2005, petitioner and Vilma commenced a complaint for accion publiciana against respondent seeking the return of the illegally occupied unit and payment of reasonable rental.

Respondent’s Defense and the Deed of Sale Issue

In his Answer, respondent asserted that, as an heir of Honorata, he became a co-owner of the property with petitioner and Vilma in equal undivided shares. He further disputed the Deed of Sale underlying petitioner and Vilma’s claim of ownership, emphasizing that the deed was executed only in 1996, which was after Honorata’s death in 1994. Thus, respondent contested the validity of petitioner and Vilma’s asserted title and corresponding right to exclude him from possession.

RTC Proceedings and Conversion of the Case to Vindicatory Considerations

On November 15, 2007, the RTC rendered its Decision dismissing the complaint. The RTC observed that respondent raised a defense of co-ownership, and that, under Section 16, Rule 70, the case effectively required resolution of ownership because the issue of possession could not be fully determined without deciding ownership. The RTC further held that it was undisputed the parties were all heirs of Honorata, entitling them to an equal right over the property. The RTC also treated the resolution of a criminal complaint for falsification filed by respondent against petitioner and Vilma as a prejudicial question.

RTC Dispositive Ruling

The RTC held that petitioner and Vilma failed to prove a better right to the property in dispute. It dismissed the complaint, and it ordered petitioner and Vilma to pay respondent, jointly and severally, PHP 10,000.00 as attorney’s fees.

The Appeal to the Court of Appeals

Petitioner and Vilma appealed to the CA, assigning as the sole error the RTC’s conversion of the action from accion publiciana to accion reivindicatoria. They insisted that they did not seek recovery of ownership but merely restoration of possession. The CA, however, denied the appeal.

CA Ruling on Possession and Equal Co-Ownership

The CA disagreed with the RTC insofar as the RTC characterized the case as converted to an action for recovery of ownership. Nevertheless, the CA affirmed dismissal because petitioner and Vilma still failed to prove the better right to possession. In resolving the possessory issue, the CA held that, since the parties were co-owners pro indiviso, they had an equal right to possess the property. The CA thus sustained the RTC’s dismissal on the correct ground—failure to establish superior possession—while rejecting the specific procedural conclusion regarding conversion.

Supreme Court Issue

The Supreme Court framed the inquiry as whether petitioner had a better right of possession over the property sufficient to evict respondent through the possessory action.

Supreme Court’s Ruling: No Better Right of Possession

The Supreme Court denied the petition. It held that, in reaching the same conclusion as the RTC and the CA, both courts were permitted to pass upon claims of ownership only to the extent necessary to resolve the issue of possession, consistent with Section 16, Rule 70. The Court emphasized that ownership may be determined in such a manner solely to determine possession.

Petitioner and Vilma relied on their claim as registered owners under the Torrens system, while respondent claimed possession based on entitlement as a co-heir. The Court ruled that there was no error in the findings in respondent’s favor because petitioner and Vilma’s asserted ownership rested on a deed that was legally defective.

The Deed of Sale Was Void Due to Honorata’s Death

The Supreme Court noted that it was undisputed that the Deed of Sale was executed in 1996. However, Honorata died in 1994; thus, she could not have signed the deed in 1996. The Court characterized any supposed signature as a product of forgery. From this premise, the Court held that the deed was void and produced no civil effect. It explained that an instrument of this nature does not create, modify, or extinguish a juridical relation.

Registered Ownership Did Not Create Rights Under a Void Deed

The Court rejected petitioner’s and Vilma’s argument that their registered status entitled them to possession despite the deed’s forgery. It stated that courts could not ignore a patent defect merely because a party holds a Torrens title. Citing the principle that a person does not acquire rights from a forged transaction, the Court held that when the instrument is forged—even if accompanied by the owner’s duplicate certificate of title—the registered owner does not lose the original owner’s title, and the assignee in the forged deed does not acquire rights or title.

The Court invoked the explanation in Spouses Reyes v. Montemayor that registration merely confirms title already existing and vested, and that the indefeasibility of Torrens title should not be used to facilitate fraud. It further stressed the requirement that good faith must concur with registration because registration cannot become a means of perpetrating fraud against the rightful owner. It held that if registration is fraudulent, the registered holder holds the property as a mere trustee for the person whose title is rightful.

Direct or Collateral Attack Was Not Dispositive Where Title Was Void

The Court also dismissed petitioner’s attempt to rely on the rule that a certificate of title is generally not subject to collateral attack. It reasoned that once petitioner’s title was determined to be void due to forgery, whether the attack was direct or collateral became irrelevant. It reiterated the settled rule that an action to declare the nullity of a void title does not prescribe and is susceptible to both direct and collateral attack, citing Spouses De Guzman v. Agbagala. It thus concluded that respondent was not precluded from questioning petitioner and Vilma’s title in the accion publiciana case.

Consequence: Honorata’s Title Remained and Co-Ownership Contro

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