7 Rep
7 Rep
7 Rep
- versus -
MACARIA L. TUASTUMBAN, Respondent.
TINGA, J.:
This is a petition for review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court assailing the
Amended Decision[1] dated 23 June 2006 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV
No. 71071 entitled Macaria L. Tuastumban v. Republic of the Philippines which
granted respondent Macaria L. Tuastumbans Motion for Reconsideration of its
earlier Decision[2] dated 20 February 2006 and thereby affirmed with modification
the Judgment[3] dated 11 December 2000 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Cebu
City, Branch 5. Said judgment granted respondents petition for the reconstitution of
a lost Original Certificate of Title (OCT).
The RTC found the petition to be sufficient in form and substance and set the hearing
of the petition on 29 March 2000. The RTC also directed the Branch Clerk of Court
to publish a copy of the Notice of Hearing in the Official Gazette and to send copies
thereof to the owners of the adjoining properties of Lot No. 7129, respondents
counsel, the Solicitor General, the Administrator of the Land Registration Authority
and the Register of Deeds of Cebu Province.
On the scheduled hearing, the Branch Clerk of Court announced three times in open
court to find out if there was any opposition to the petition. There being none, the
court proceeded to receive respondents exhibits to establish the jurisdictional
facts. Thereupon, the RTC proceeded to try the case.
According to the Certification by the Community Environment and Natural
Resources Office (CENRO) of Cebu City, Lot No. 7129 was granted to the heirs of
Sofia Lazo via Patent No. 43619 issued on 21 July 1938. Respondent claims she
bought the property from the said owners who are also her relatives, as evidenced
by an Extrajudicial Declaration of Heirs with Waiver of Inheritance Rights and
Deed of Absolute Sale. She claims that since the time of purchase, she has been
occupying and possessing the land and paying the realty taxes thereon. Respondent
prayed for reconstitution of the title covering the property since the title, supposedly
on file and under the custody of the Register of Deeds of Cebu Province, had either
been lost or destroyed during World War II as certified by said office. Cebu City
Prosecutor Edilberto Ensomo, representing the Office of the Solicitor General, did
not present any evidence against respondent.
Thus, on 11 December 2000, the RTC rendered its decision, the dispositive portion
of which reads:
SO ORDERED.[5]
The CA held that respondents proffered evidence fall under Sec. 2(f) of R.A.
26 which pertains to any other document which, in the judgment of the court, is
sufficient and proper basis for reconstituting the lost or destroyed certificate of
title. Resort to the sources under Sec. 2(f) is justified only when the sources under
Secs. 2(a) to (e) are unavailable. Respondent, though, had failed to lay the basis to
warrant consideration of sources under Sec. 2(f). There was no proof of loss of the
best source for reconstitution which is the owners duplicate copy of the certificate
of title; therefore, the succeeding sources for reconstitution cannot validly be
considered.
The Court of Appeals traced the ownership of Lot No. 7129 based on the
records of the Bureau of Lands, Friar Lands Division, now the CENRO of the
DENR. It found that: The property was part of the Talisay-Minglanilla Friar Lands
Estate covered by one mother title, OCT No. 188. Under Act No. 1120 or the Friar
Lands Act, the whole estate was purchased by the Government of
the Philippines and portions thereof were sold by installment to actual
possessors. One such possessor was Sofia Lazo who was granted Sales Patent No.
43619 on 21 July 1938. This led to the issuance by the Philippine Government of a
Deed of Conveyance which led to the issuance by the Register of Deeds of a transfer
certificate of title (TCT) in favor of the Heirs of Sofia Lazo, and not an original
certificate of title as claimed by respondent.
The Court of Appeals noted that aside from the CENRO Certification, blue
print of Advance Plan and Technical Description of Lot No. 7129, respondent also
offered in evidence a Report[15] from the Administrator of the Land Registration
Authority (LRA) which indicated that:
The CA believed that these government records as duly certified and reported
by the CENRO and the LRA uphold the prior existence of a certificate of title in
favor of the Heirs of Sofia Lazo over Lot No. 7129. Since the Register of Deeds had
already certified that no such copy of the title exists in its records, coupled with the
fact that there were no private oppositors or claimants to the petition for
reconstitution and the failure of herein petitioner Republic of the Philippines,
represented by the Cebu City Prosecutor, to present any evidence against respondent
or to object to any of respondents offer of evidence, the Court of Appeals concluded
that reconstitution should issue. Respondents alleged failure to prove the loss of the
owners duplicate certificate of title was held to be justified by petitioners failure to
deny or oppose the allegation. As the allegation of loss was never specifically
denied, the averment in respondents petition was deemed admitted without need of
evidence to prove the same. Thus, respondent properly resorted to the sources of
reconstitution under Sec. 2(f) of R.A 26. The CA added that petitioners objections
were belatedly raised in the appeal before the appellate court and should be barred.
Thus, the fallo of the Amended Decision reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, petitioner-appellees Motion for
Reconsideration is GRANTED. Thus, Our Decision dated 20 February 2006 is
RECONSIDERED.Accordingly, the RTC Judgment dated 11 December 2000 is
AFFIRMED WITH MODIFICATION that what is to be reconstituted is the lost
Transfer Certificate of Title, and not Original Certificate of Title, over Lot No. 7129
in favor of the Legal Heirs of Sofia Lazo.
SO ORDERED.
In this petition for review, petitioner alleges that the Court of Appeals erred in
reversing its 20 February 2000 Decision considering the lack of legal and factual
bases for the reconstitution. It argues that:
Petitioner also points out that respondent, during her testimony, made no
mention of the owners duplicate copy of the alleged lost certificate of title, which is
the best source for reconstitution. Neither was there executed any affidavit of loss
attesting to the circumstances of the loss of said owners duplicate copy. The tax
declaration presented by respondent cannot also be relied on since it is settled that
tax declarations or realty tax payments are not conclusive evidence of ownership.
Petitioner also assails the Certification by the Register of Deeds of Cebu. The
Certification, it is claimed, belies the fact that a certificate of title covering the
subject property was issued prior to its loss since said Certification simply states that
according to the records of this office x x x no certificate of title covering Lot No.
7129, Flr-133, Talisay-Minglanilla Estate, Cebu, was issued in the name of and/or
as claimed to be owned by the Legal Heirs of Sofia Lazo and that all deeds/records
were either burned or lost during the last World War.
Petitioner concludes that since there was no evidence presented showing that an
OCT or TCT had been issued prior to its alleged loss, there can be no legal or factual
basis for its reconstitution. While there were certifications, technical descriptions
and tax declarations presented, these are insufficient bases under RA 26. Respondent
also did not make any reference to an OCT or TCT number but merely repeatedly
mentioned an original certificate of title covering Lot No. 7129.
The issue at bar is whether the documents presented by respondent constitute
sufficient basis for the reconstitution of title to Lot No. 7129. We hold that
respondents evidence is inadequate.
The governing law for judicial reconstitution of titles is R.A. No. 26. Sections
2[18] and 3[19] of RA 26 enumerate the sources upon which reconstitution should
issue. Section 2 refers to source documents for reconstitution of the original
certificate of title while Sec. 3 refers to sources for reconstitution of transfer
certificates of title. The requirements of Secs. 2 and 3 are almost identical, referring
to documents from official sources which recognize the ownership of the owner and
his predecessors-in-interest.[20] In Republic v. Intermediate Appellate Court,[21] the
Court ruled that any other document in Secs. 2(f) and 3(f) of RA 26 refers to
documents similar to those previously enumerated therein, that is, those mentioned
in Sections (a), (b), (c), (d) and (e). The Court reiterated this ruling in Heirs of Dizon
v. Hon. Discaya[22] and Republic v. El Gobierno de las Islas Filipinas.[23] The
documents alluded to in Secs. 2(f) and 3(f) must be resorted to in the absence of
those preceding in order. If the petitioner for reconstitution fails to show that he had,
in fact, sought to secure such prior documents and failed to find them, the
presentation of the succeeding documents as substitutionary evidence is
proscribed.[24]
From the foregoing, the following must be present for an order for
reconstitution to issue: (a) that the certificate of title had been lost or destroyed; (b)
that the documents presented by petitioner are sufficient and proper to warrant
reconstitution of the lost or destroyed certificate of title; (c) that the petitioner is the
registered owner of the property or had an interest therein; (d) that the certificate of
title was in force at the time it was lost and destroyed; and (e) that the description,
area and boundaries of the property are substantially the same as those contained in
the lost or destroyed certificate of title.
Even if we base respondents petition on Sec. 2(f) of R.A. No. 26 as the Court
of Appeals did, and as respondent now argues in this petition, reconstitution would
still not issue. Resort to other documents in Sec. 2(f) must be employed only when
the documents earlier referred to in Secs. 2(a) to (e) do not avail.Respondent reasons
that she can only rely on Sec. 2(f) because the required documents enumerated in
Secs. 2(a) to (e) may only be procured from the Register of Deeds which had already
certified that all such records were burned or destroyed in the last World War. She
also adds that secondary evidence may now be presented in accordance with Sec. 5,
Rule 130 of the Revised Rules on Evidence. Said section provides that when the
original document has been lost or destroyed, or cannot be produced in court, the
offeror, upon proof of its execution or existence and the cause of its unavailability
without bad faith on his part, may prove its contents by a copy, or by a recital of its
contents in some authentic document, or by the testimony of witnesses in the order
stated. The order of presentation of presentation of secondary evidence under Sec.
5, Rule 130 is existence, execution, loss, contents. The order may be changed if
necessary in the discretion of the court.[30]
The problem though is that respondent has not established the issuance or
existence of the certificate of title covering Lot No. 7129 nor of the other documents
enumerated in Secs. 2(b) to (e) that would prove the existence, execution and
contents of the certificate of title sought to be reconstituted. There is nothing in the
evidence she presented that would show that Lot No. 7129 had been registered in
the name of the Legal Heirs of Sofia Lazo and that the certificate of title in the name
of the said heirs over said property had been issued.
which should have been the normal sequence of events under Section 12 [31] of Act
No. 1120 or the Friar Lands Act upon payment by Sofia Lazo and her heirs of the
final installment to the Government. The certification from the Register of Deeds
moreover categorically shows that no certificate of title over Lot No. 7129 was
issued in the name of or claimed to be owned by the heirs of Sofia Lazo. The tax
declaration and real property tax clearance under respondents name also cannot be
relied upon to establish the existence of the certificate of title as they merely prove
payment of the realty taxes imposed on the property. The Blue Print of Advance Plan
and Technical Description of Lot No. 7129 also do not prove the prior valid existence
of the certificate of title as they are mere descriptions of Lot 7129. The LRA report
also does not confirm the existence of the certificate of title but merely attests to the
correctness of the plan and technical description which may subsequently be used as
basis for the inscription of the technical description in the reconstituted title. The
LRA report also states that the whole of the Talisay-Minglanilla Estate was subject
of a registration case for which Decree No. 2787 was issued on 15 July 1908, but it
does not indicate that Lot No. 7129 which is part of the Talisay-Minglanilla Estate
was the subject of a separate registration proceeding resulting in the issuance of a
decree of registration for said lot.
At best, respondents evidence may prove only that Lot No. 7129 was patented
to Sofia Lazo and her heirs and that the same was later sold to respondent.We are
not here making a categorical ruling on the ownership of Lot No. 7129, since
ownership of the property is not the issue in this case. However, respondent is
emphatic in her claim that ownership of the property has already been transferred
from the Government to Sofia Lazo and her heirs by virtue of the issuance of Sales
Patent No. 43619 on 21 July 1938. Indeed, jurisprudence has consistently held that
under Act No. 1120, the equitable and beneficial title to the land passes to the
purchaser the moment the first installment is paid and a certificate of sale is
issued. When the purchaser finally pays the final installment on the purchase price
and is given a deed of conveyance and a certificate of title, the title, at least in equity,
retroacts to the time he first occupied the land, paid the first installment and was
issued the corresponding certificate of sale.[32] Furthermore, in the event of the death
of the holder of the certificate of sale before the issuance of the deed of conveyance,
the interest of
the holder of the certificate passes to his or her legal heirs, pursuant to Sec. 16[33] of
Act No. 1120, as amended. However, in the case at bar, respondent failed to prove
that an original certificate of title or transfer certificate of title actually existed. Lot
No. 7129 may have actually been registered and the certificate of title thereto may
have actually been issued, but the fact remains that this was not proven by the
evidence presented in this case. There is also the possibility that the property had
never been registered and that the certificate of title never issued. In that case,
respondents remedy may be another proceeding probably for the registration of title
to Lot No. 7129 and not for reconstitution. Because reconstitution presupposes the
existence of an original certificate of title which was lost or destroyed, if there is no
such original certificate of title, there is actually nothing to reconstitute.
One last point. Respondent contends that fair play dictates that petitioner
should have timely raised its objections to the petition for reconstitution during the
hearings before the RTC. She claims it is unfair of petitioner to belatedly propound
its opposition and for said opposition to be given merit at this time. The fact that no
opposition
is filed by a private party or by the Republic of the Philippines will not relieve
respondent, as petitioner in the petition for reconstitution, of his burden of proving
not only the loss or destruction of the title sought to be reconstituted but also that at
the time the said title was lost or destroyed, he or his predecessor-ininterest was the
registered owner thereof. The Republic is not estopped from assailing the decision
granting the petition if, on the basis of the law and the evidence on record, such
petition has no merit.[34]
SO ORDERED.