Abobon v. Abobon - Case

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[G.R. NO.

155830 - August 15, 2012]


NUMERIANO P. ABOBON, Petitioner, v. FELICITAS ABATA ABOBON and GELIMA ABATA
ABOBON, Respondents.
DECISION
BERSAMIN, J.:
The controversy involves the rightful possession of a parcel of registered land. The respondents,
who were the registered owners, sued the petitioner, their first cousin, to recover 1the possession
of the land in question, stating that they had only allowed the petitioner to use the land out of
pure benevolence, but the petitioner asserted that the land belonged to him as owner by right of
succession from his parents.
Antecedents
Respondents Felicitas and Gelima Abobon were the plaintiffs in this action for recovery of
possession and damages brought against petitioner Numeriano Abobon (Numeriano) in the 2nd
Municipal Circuit Trial Court of Labrador-Sual in Pangasinan (MCTC). They averred that they
were the registered owners of that parcel of unirrigated riceland with an area of 4,668 square
meters, more or less, and situated in Poblacion, Labrador, Pangasinan, and covered by Transfer
Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 201367 of the Registry of Deeds of Pangasinan (Exhibit A); that they
had allowed Numeriano, their first cousin, the free use of the land out of benevolence; and that
they now immediately needed the parcel of land for their own use and had accordingly demanded
that Numeriano should vacate and return it to them but he had refused.
In his answer, Numeriano admitted being the first cousin of the respondents and the existence of
TCT No. 201367 covering the land in question, and having received the demand for him to
vacate. He alleged, however, that he did not vacate because he was the owner of the land in
question. He asserted that if the land in question related to the unirrigated riceland with an area
of 3,000 square meters that he was presently tilling and covered by tax declaration no. 2 in the
name of his father, Rafael Abobon (Rafael), then the respondents did not have a valid cause of
action against him because he had inherited that portion from his parents; that he and his
predecessors-in-interest had also continuously, publicly and adversely and in the concept of
owner possessed the parcel of land for more than 59 years; that in 1937, his grandfather Emilio
Abobon (Emilio), the original owner, had granted that portion of 3,000 square meters to Rafael
when he got married to his mother, Apolonia Pascua, by means of a donation propter nuptias;
that since then his parents had possessed and tilled the land; that he himself had exclusively
inherited the land from his parents in 1969 because his brother Jose had received his own
inheritance from their parents; that the possession of his parents and his own had continued
until the present; that assuming that the respondents were the true owners of the land, they
were already estopped by laches from recovering the portion of 3,000 square meters from him.
On August 23, 2000, after due proceedings, the MCTC ruled in favor of the respondents,1 finding
that the respondents parents Leodegario Abobon (Leodegario) and Macaria Abata (Macaria) had
purchased the property on February 27, 1941 from Emilio with the conformity of Emilio s other
children, including Rafael; that on February 4, 1954, Leodegario and Macaria had registered
their title and ownership under TCT No. 15524; that on February 16, 1954, Leodegario and
Macaria had sold the land to Juan Mamaril; that on February 25, 1954, Juan Mamaril had
registered the land in his name under TCT No. 15678; that on November 13, 1970, Juan Mamaril
had sold the land back to Leodegario, and TCT No. 87308 had been issued under the name of
Leodegario; that on January 16, 1979, Leodegario had submitted a sworn statement as required
by Presidential Decree No. 27 to the effect that his tenant on the land had been one Cornelio
Magno; that on April 15, 1993, the respondents had inherited the land upon the death of
Leodegario; that on October 22, 1994, the respondents had adjudicated the land unto themselves
through a deed of extrajudicial settlement; that after due publication of the deed of extrajudicial
settlement, the respondents had registered the land in their own names on December 20, 1994,
resulting in the issuance of TCT No. 201367 to them; that after the 1989 palay harvest, the
respondents had allowed the petitioner the free use of the land out of benevolence; that the
respondents had started to verbally demand that the petitioner vacate the land on May 25, 1993;
and that because the petitioner had refused to vacate, the respondents had then brought a
complaint in the barangay on May 31, 1996, where mediation had failed to settle the dispute.
The MCTC further found that the 3,000 square-meter land Numeriano referred to as donated to
his parents was not the same as the land in question due to their boundaries being entirely
different; that in the donation propter nuptias (Exhibit 11), Emilio had stated that the parcels of
land thereby covered had not been registered under Act No. 496 or under the provisions of the
Spanish Mortgage Law, whereas the land in question had already been registered; that even
assuming that the 3,000 square-meter land was inside the land in question, his claim would still
not prosper because the donation propter nuptias in his parents favor had been invalid for not
having been signed and accepted in writing by Rafael, his father; that the donation propter
nuptias had also been cancelled or dissolved when his mother had signed as an instrumental
witness and his father had given his consent to the sale of the land in question then covered by
Original Certificate No. 28727 by Emilio to Leodegario; and that his parents assent to the sale
signified either that his parents had conformed to the dissolution of the donation propter
nuptias in their favor, or that the land sold to Leodegario had been different from the land
donated to them.
The MCTC held that the respondents were not guilty of laches because of their numerous acts
and transactions from 1941 until 1996 involving the land in question, specifically: (a) the sale of
the land to Juan Mamaril and its repurchase by Leodogario; (b) the registration of title and
ownership; (c) the extrajudicial partition of the property by the heirs of Leodegario; (d) Numeriano
s free use of the land from 1989 onwards upon being allowed to do so by the respondents; (e) the
verbal demands from the respondents since 1993 for Numeriano to vacate the land; and (f) the
commencement of the action to recover possession against Numeriano. It considered such acts
and transactions as negating any notion of the respondents abandonment of their right to assert
ownership.2rbl r l l lbrr
The MCTC disposed thus:rl
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiffs
and against the defendant as follows:rbl r l l lbrr
1. Declaring the plaintiffs as the true and lawful owner and possessor of the land in question;
2. Ordering the defendant to vacate the premises in question and to surrender its possession to
the plaintiffs;
3. Ordering the defendant to pay the plaintiffs the amount of P20,000.00 as moral damages and
the amount of P5,000.00 as exemplary damages;
4. Ordering the defendant to pay the amount of P10,000.00 as and for attorney s fees;
5. Dismissing the counterclaim;
6. Ordering the defendant to pay the costs of the suit.
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SO ORDERED.3rll
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Numeriano appealed to the Regional Trial Court in Lingayen City, Pangasinan (RTC), which, on
April 16, 2001, upheld the MCTC,4 viz:rbl r l l lbrr
WHEREFORE, PREMISES well-considered, the appeal taken by defendant/appellant is hereby
DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
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Citing the variance between the description of the land in question and the description of the
land covered by the donation propter nuptias, as well as the failure of Numeriano to explain his
parents participation in the sale of the land in question in 1941 to Leodegario and Macaria, the
RTC concluded that the land in question was really separate and distinct from the property
donated to his parents in 1937;5 and lent credence to the respondents claim that they had
allowed him to use the land only out of their benevolence.6rll
Still dissatisfied, Numeriano appealed via petition for review to the Court of Appeals (CA),
submitting that he was the lawful owner and possessor of the 3,000 square meter parcel of land
that he occupied and cultivated; and that the respondents TCT was invalid.7rll
On May 16, 2002, however, the CA rejected Numeriano s submissions and affirmed the
RTC,8 holding that the respondents were in possession of a certificate of title that enjoyed the
conclusive presumption of validity, by virtue of which they were entitled to possess the land in
question; that the parcel of land that he owned was different from the land in question; and that
his impugning the validity of the respondents TCT partook of the nature of an impermissible
collateral attack against the TCT, considering that the validity of a Torrens title could be
challenged only directly through an action instituted for that purpose.9rll
The CA, pointing out that the MCTC s declaration that the respondents were the true owners of
the land in question went beyond the ambit of a possessory action that was limited to
determining only the issue of physical possession,10 deleted the declaration, and disposed as
follows:rbl r l l lbrr
WHEREFORE, the foregoing premises considered. The Decision under appeal is hereby
AFFIRMED with the modification that the declaration by the Municipal Circuit Trial Court of
respondents as to the owners of the subject parcel of land is
deleted.rbl r l l lbrr
SO ORDERED.
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Hence, this appeal, with Numeriano positing as follows:
I.
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ERRED IN AWARDING POSSESSION
OF SUBJECT PREMISES TO RESPONDENTS WITHOUT CITING ANY REASONS THEREFOR AND
DESPITE THE FACT THAT EVIDENCE ON HAND SHOWS PETITIONER BECAME THE LAWFUL
OWNER THEREOF PRIOR TO TIME RESPONDENTS ACQUIRED THE SAME.
II.
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ERRED IN NOT HOLDING THAT THE
LOT BEING CLAIMED BY RESPONDENTS IS DIFFERENT FROM THAT BEING CLAIMED BY
PETITIONER.
III.
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ERRED IN HOLDING THAT
PETITIONER SHOULD FILE A SEPARATE ACTION FOR ANNULMENT OF TITLE AS THERE IS NO
NEED THEREFOR.
IV.
ASSUMING SANS ADMITTING THAT PETITIONER IS NOT THE LAWFUL OWNER OF SUBJECT
PREMISES, WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ERRED IN AFFIRMING
THE RTC S AND MCTC S DECISIONS ORDERING PETITIONER TO PAY DAMAGES, ATTORNEY S
FEES AND COSTS OF SUIT AND DISMISSING HIS COUNTERCLAIM.11rll
Ruling
The appeal lacks merit.
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First of all, a fundamental principle in land registration under the Torrens system is that a
certificate of title serves as evidence of an indefeasible and incontrovertible title to the property in
favor of the person whose name appears therein.12 The certificate of title thus becomes the best
proof of ownership of a parcel of land;13 hence, anyone who deals with property registered under
the Torrens system may rely on the title and need not go beyond the title.14 This reliance on the
certificate of title rests on the doctrine of indefeasibility of the land title, which has long been
well-settled in this jurisdiction. It is only when the acquisition of the title is attended with fraud
or bad faith that the doctrine of indefeasibility finds no application.15rll
Accordingly, we rule for the respondents on the issue of the preferential right to the possession of
the land in question. Their having preferential right conformed to the age-old rule that whoever
held a Torrens title in his name is entitled to the possession of the land covered by the
title.16 Indeed, possession, which is the holding of a thing or the enjoyment of a right, 17 was but
an attribute of their registered ownership.
It is beyond question under the law that the owner has not only the right to enjoy and dispose of
a thing without other limitations than those established by law, but also the right of action
against the holder and possessor of the thing in order to recover it. 18 He may exclude any person
from the enjoyment and disposal of the thing, and, for this purpose, he may use such force as
may be reasonably necessary to repel or prevent an actual or threatened unlawful physical
invasion or usurpation of his property.19rll
Secondly, Numeriano denies to the respondents the right to rely on their TCT, insisting that he
had become the legal owner of the land in question even before the respondents had acquired it
by succession from their parents, and that he had acted in good faith in possessing the land in
question since then. He argues that he did not need to file a separate direct action to annul the
respondents title because "by proving that they are owners thereof, said title may be annulled as
an incidental result."20rll
Numeriano s argument lacks legal basis. In order for him to properly assail the validity of the
respondents TCT, he must himself bring an action for that purpose. Instead of bringing that
direct action, he mounted his attack as a merely defensive allegation herein. Such manner of
attack against the TCT was a collateral one, which was disallowed by Section 48 of Presidential
Decree No. 1529 (The Property Registration
Decree), viz:rbl r l l lbrr
Section 48. Certificate not Subject to Collateral attack. A certificate of title shall not be subject to
collateral attack. It cannot be altered, modified, or cancelled except in a direct proceeding in
accordance with law.
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Thirdly, the core issue in an action for the recovery of possession of realty like this one concerned
only the priority right to the possession of the realty.21 As such, Numeriano s assertion of
ownership in his own right could not be finally and substantively determined herein, for it was
axiomatic that the adjudication of the question of ownership in an action for the recovery of
possession of realty would only be provisional and would not even be a bar to an action between
the same parties involving the ownership of the same property.22rll
Fourthly, Numeriano insists that the land he occupied had been donated to his parents and was
different from the land in question.
His insistence was bereft of factual support. All the lower courts uniformly found that his
evidence related to a parcel of land entirely different from the land in question. According to the
MCTC, "the land for which he has presented evidence to support his claim of ownership is
entirely different from the land the plaintiffs are claiming."23 On its part, the RTC held that "the
land, subject matter of this controversy is all of 4668 sq. meters and bearing different boundaries
from that of the donated property and was already registered under OCT No. 28727 as early as
1926," such that "the subject property is separate and distinct from that property donated to the
defendant s parents in 1937."24 Agreeing with both lower courts, the CA declared: "(i)n fine, what
these decisions are saying is that petitioner may have evidence that he owns a parcel of land but,
based on the evidence he had presented, the said parcel of land is different from the one he is
presently occupying."25rll
We sustain the lower courts. The findings of fact of lower courts, particularly when affirmed by
the CA, are final and conclusive upon the Court. In this as well as in other appeals, the Court,
not being a trier of facts, does not review their findings, especially when they are supported by
the records or based on substantial evidence.26 It is not the function of the Court to analyze or
weigh evidence all over again, unless there is a showing that the findings of the lower courts are
absolutely devoid of support or are glaringly erroneous as to constitute palpable error or grave
abuse of discretion.27 There has been no such showing made by Numeriano herein.
Lastly, the Court must undo the awards of moral and exemplary damages and attorney s fees.
To be recoverable, moral damages must be capable of proof and must be actually proved with a
reasonable degree of certainty. Courts cannot simply rely on speculation, conjecture or
guesswork in determining the fact and amount of damages.28 Yet, nothing was adduced here to
justify the grant of moral damages. What we have was only the allegation on moral damages,
with the complaint stating that the respondents had been forced to litigate, and that they had
suffered mental anguish, serious anxiety and wounded feelings from the petitioner s refusal to
restore the possession of the land in question to them.29 The allegation did not suffice, for
allegation was not proof of the facts alleged.
The Court cannot also affirm the exemplary damages granted in favor of the respondents.
Exemplary damages were proper only if the respondents, as the plaintiffs, showed their
entitlement to moral, temperate or compensatory damages.30 Yet, they did not establish their
entitlement to such other damages.
As to attorney s fees, the general rule is that such fees cannot be recovered by a successful
litigant as part of the damages to be assessed against the losing party because of the policy that
no premium should be placed on the right to litigate.31 Indeed, prior to the effectivity of the
present Civil Code, such fees could be recovered only when there was a stipulation to that effect.
It was only under the present Civil Code that the right to collect attorney s fees in the cases
mentioned in Article 220832 of the Civil Code came to be recognized.33 Such fees are now included
in the concept of actual damages.34rll
Even so, whenever attorney s fees are proper in a case, the decision rendered therein should still
expressly state the factual basis and legal justification for granting them.35 Granting them in the
dispositive portion of the judgment is not enough;36 a discussion of the .factual basis
and legal justification for them must be laid out in the body of the decision. 37 Considering that
the award of attorney's fees in favor of the respondents fell short of this requirement, the Court
disallows the award for want of the factual and legal premises in the body of the decision. 38 The
requirement for express findings of fact and law has been set in order to bring the case within the
exception and justify the award of the attorney's fees. Otherwise, the award is a conclusion
without a premise, its basis being improperly left to speculation and conjecture.39rll
WHEREFORE, the Court AFFIRMS the decision promulgated on May 16, 2002 by the Court of
Appeals, with the MODIFICATION that the awards of moral damages, exemplary damages and
attorney's fees are DELETED.rbl r l l lbrr
The petitioner shall pay the costs of suit.

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