Title
Spouses Dela Rosa vs. Heirs of Valdez
Case
G.R. No. 159101
Decision Date
Jul 27, 2011
Dispute over 103-hectare land in Antipolo; SC upheld writ favoring Valdez/Malvar based on Sales Patent, no prejudgment found.
A

Case Summary (G.R. No. 58122)

Petitioner and Relief Sought

Petitioners Dela Rosa filed a Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45, challenging the Court of Appeals’ dismissal of their certiorari petition. They sought annulment of RTC orders that directed issuance of a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction placing the Valdez and Malvar intervenors in possession of the subject property, and prayed for a temporary restraining order (TRO) and/or writ of preliminary injunction to prevent enforcement.

Respondents and Claims

Intervenors Valdez and Malvar claimed ownership and possession based on Sales Patent No. 38713 issued to Juan Valdez (dated September 5, 1983) and related documentary evidence; Valdez purportedly later transferred interests to the Malvar parties. MCDC claimed rights derived from a Deed of Absolute Sale (January 16, 1996) and earlier possession as influenced by Valdez. NEPVI claimed co-ownership by deed of conveyance and sought possession to protect its asserted interests.

Key Dates and Procedural Milestones

  • Sales Patent No. 38713 dated September 5, 1983 (in the name of Juan Valdez).
  • Deed of absolute transfer/ conveyance from Valdez to Malvar dated September 6, 2001.
  • RTC Orders granting writ of preliminary mandatory injunction: December 16, 2002 and denial of reconsideration on February 28, 2003.
  • Court of Appeals Decision dismissing Dela Rosa’s certiorari petition: June 10, 2003; Resolution denying reconsideration: July 24, 2003.
  • Supreme Court TRO issued October 8, 2003 (later lifted).
  • Final Supreme Court disposition: Petition denied and CA decision affirmed; TRO lifted and bond cancelled.

Applicable Law

Constitutional basis: 1987 Philippine Constitution (applicable pursuant to decision date). Procedural and substantive authorities invoked include the Rules of Court (Rule 58 on preliminary injunctions), and controlling jurisprudence cited by the trial court and appellate courts, including rulings on preliminary mandatory injunctions (e.g., Nelly Raspado; Cagayan de Oro City Landless Residents Assoc.; Development Bank of the Philippines v. CA; Levi Strauss v. Vogue Traders).

Procedural Posture in Trial Court

MCDC filed a Complaint for Quieting of Title and Declaration of Nullity of Transfer Certificates of Title against the Dela Rosas and other parties (Civil Case No. 00-6015). NEPVI and the Valdez/Malvar parties filed complaints-in-intervention. The RTC considered competing documentary proofs and possession claims and was asked to issue a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction to place certain intervenors in possession pendente lite.

Facts Found or Admitted by the RTC

The pleadings and admitted facts established: the subject parcel is 103 hectares; Dela Rosa spouses and Valdez spouses had been in possession of parts of the parcel; multiple occupants and unknown defendants occupied portions; certifications showed Transfer Certificate of Title No. 451423-A (or 451423-A/451423-A variants in the record) was not recorded in the Registries of Deeds of Marikina or Antipolo; Sales Patent No. 38713 existed and efforts had been made to register it.

RTC’s Reasons for Granting Preliminary Mandatory Injunction

The RTC concluded that intervenors Valdez and Malvar had established, at least tentatively, a clear legal right to the property by virtue of Sales Patent No. 38713 and related documentary evidence (payment receipt, transmittal and indorsements), while MCDC’s and NEPVI’s claims were subject to unfulfilled conditions or lacked credible proof. The court found the Dela Rosas’ asserted title to be doubtful: their claimed Titulo de Propriedad No. 4136 had been nullified in prior jurisprudence, and their alleged TCT No. 451423-A did not appear in registries and appeared to be derived by manipulation of the technical description from Valdez’s patent. The court also found manifold acts of dispossession, continued unlawful occupation, and sales or leases by Dela Rosa that caused grave and irreparable damages to the intervenors.

Legal Standard for Preliminary Mandatory Injunction Applied

The RTC and subsequently the appellate courts applied Rule 58: a preliminary injunction (including mandatory) may be issued when the applicant is entitled to the relief demanded, failure to grant it would probably work injustice, or acts are being done likely to render judgment ineffectual. The courts emphasized that a mandatory injunction is more cautiously regarded and appropriate only when the claimant’s right is clear or at least tentatively established and not substantially disputed.

Discretion, Grave Abuse, and Appellate Review

The Supreme Court reiterated that issuance of preliminary injunctions rests within the trial court's sound discretion, and appellate interference is warranted only upon a finding of grave abuse of discretion (arbitrary, despotic, or capricious conduct equivalent to lack of jurisdiction). The Court found no grave abuse in the RTC’s issuance of the writ given the factual findings, documentary proofs deemed probative by the RTC, and the circumstances of continuing dispossession.

Documentary Evidence and Credibility Issues

The RTC gave probative value to the Land Management Bureau’s December 5, 1990 official communication and to records (payment receipt, transmittal to the Registry of Deeds, indorsements) showing the issuance of Sales Patent No. 38713 and efforts to register it. The RTC discounted an unsigned October 2, 1994 letter as lacking evidentiary weight. The court regarded the absence of Dela Rosa’s TCT in registry certifi

...continue reading

Analyze Cases Smarter, Faster
Jur helps you analyze cases smarter to comprehend faster, building context before diving into full texts. AI-powered analysis, always verify critical details.