SPA. DE LA CRUZ v. RAMISCAL

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SPA. DE LA CRUZ v. RAMISCAL G.R. No.

137882 February 4, 2005 Facts: Respondent Olga Ramiscal is the registered owner of a parcel of land. Petitioner, Spa. Elizabeth and Alfredo De La Cruz are occupants of a parcel of land located at the back of Ramiscals property, owned by the mother of Alfredo. The subject matter of this case is a long strip of land owned by respondent which is being used by petitioners as their pathway to and from the nearest public highway from their property. Respondent leased her property, including the building thereon, to Phil. Orient Motors. Phil. Orient Motors also owned a property adjacent to that of respondents. Years later, Phil. Orient Motors sold its property to San Benito Realty. It was only during the relocation survey and location plan for both contiguous properties of respondent and San Benito Realty that respondent discovered that the aforementioned pathway being occupied by petitioners is part of her property. Respondent filed a complaint, seeking the demolition of the structure allegedly illegally constructed by petitioners on her property. Respondent asserted in her complaint that petitioners have an existing right of way to a public highway other than the current one they are using, which she owns. Petitioners claimed that such use was with the knowledge of respondent. They also alleged that respondent initiated the construction on her property of a motor shop known as Phil. Orient Motors and they, as well as the other occupants of the property at the back of respondents land, opposed the construction of the perimeter wall as it would enclose and render their property without any adequate ingress and egress. They asked respondent to give them an easement on the eastern side of her property, which would be reciprocated with an easement by the owner of another adjacent estate. Respondent did not want to give them the easement on the eastern side of her property but, instead, offered to them the disputed passageway, which offer they had accepted. Issue: W/N Petitioners are entitled to a voluntary or legal easement of right of way Ruling: An easement or servitude is a real right, constituted on the corporeal immovable property of another, by virtue of which the owner has to refrain from doing, or must allow someone to do, something on his property, for the benefit of another thing or person. Petitioners herein failed to show by competent evidence other than their bare claim that they entered into an agreement with respondents. The hands of this Court are tied from giving credence to petitioners self-serving claim that such right of way was voluntarily given them by respondent for the following reasons: First, petitioners were unable to produce any shred of document evidencing such agreement. The Civil Code is clear that any transaction involving the sale or disposition of real property must be in writing. Thus, the dearth of corroborative evidence opens doubts on the veracity of the naked assertion of petitioners that indeed the subject easement of right of way was a voluntary grant from respondent. Second, as admitted by the petitioners, it was only the foreman, Mang Puling, who talked with them regarding said pathway on the northern side of respondents property. Thus, petitioner Elizabeth de la Cruz testified that she did not talk to respondent regarding the arrangement proposed to them by Mang Puling despite the fact that she often saw respondent. It is, therefore, foolhardy for petitioners to believe that the alleged foreman of respondent had the authority to bind the respondent relating to the easement of right of way. Third, their explanation that said Mang Puling submitted said agreement to the Quezon City Engineers Office, in connection with the application for a building permit but said office could no longer produce a copy thereof, does not inspire belief. P etitioners should have requested a subpoena duces tecum from said court to compel the Quezon City Engineers Office to produce said document or to prove that

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