Heirs of The de Luzuriaga v. Republic20180927-5466-1t7ucpq
Heirs of The de Luzuriaga v. Republic20180927-5466-1t7ucpq
Heirs of The de Luzuriaga v. Republic20180927-5466-1t7ucpq
DECISION
JR. J :
VELASCO, JR., p
Before us are two petitions under Rule 45 interposed by the heirs of the late Jose
De Luzuriaga, assailing the November 26, 2004 Decision 2 and May 25, 2005 Resolution
3 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 75321. The rst is a Veri ed Petition
for Review on Certiorari under G.R. No. 169019 , while the second is styled
Supplemental Petition and docketed as G.R. No. 168848 . HCaIDS
The assailed CA decision and resolution reversed and set aside the Orders dated
August 31, 2001 4 and October 24, 2002 5 in Cadastral Case No. 97-583 of the Regional
Trial Court (RTC), Branch 51 in Bacolod City.
The Facts
Subject of the instant controversy is Lot No. 1524 of the Bacolod Cadastre,
particularly described as follows:
A parcel of land (Lot No. 1524 of the Cadastral Survey of Bacolod), with
the improvements thereon, situated in the Municipality of Bacolod. Bounded on
the N. and NE., by the Lupit or Magsungay Pequeño River; on the SE., by Calle
Araneta and Lots Nos. 440, 442 and 441; on the SW., by the Sapa Mamlot; and on
the W. by Creeks . . .; containing an area of [TWO HUNDRED SIXTY EIGHT
THOUSAND SEVEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTY TWO (268,772) square meters],
more or less. 6
On May 16, 1997, petitioners led an Application for the Registration of Title,
docketed as Cad. Case No. 97-583 before the RTC. In it, the subject lot was speci cally
identi ed as Lot No. 1524, AP-06-005774, Cad. 39, Bacolod Cadastre, situated in the
City of Bacolod, Island of Negros. The survey plan, conducted by Geodetic Engineer
Eluminado E. Nessia, Jr. and duly approved on May 17, 1997 by the Department of
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Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) Regional O ce, Iloilo City; and the
technical description of the subject lot, prepared by the O ce of the Regional Technical
Director, Land Management Services, DENR, Region VI, Iloilo City, were submitted to the
RTC.
On May 12, 1998, the application was amended to state, thus: ". . . that the parcel
of land in question be ordered registered and that an original Certi cate of Title be
issued in the name of the late Jose R. [De] Luzuriaga, Sr. pursuant to Decree No. 22752
covering Lot No. 1524 of Bacolod Cadastre." 7
Subsequently, the RTC issued an Order of general default except as against
respondent Republic of the Philippines, which entered its due appearance through the
O ce of the Solicitor General (OSG) which, in turn, designated Bacolod Assistant City
Prosecutor Abraham Bayona to represent the OSG at the trial.
Among the evidence petitioners adduced during the hearings was a copy of
Decree No. 22752 8 dated October 7, 1916, issued by the General Land Registration
O ce (GLRO) pursuant to the decision in the cadastral case con rming and granting
unto the late Jose R. De Luzuriaga full ownership of Lot No. 1524.
RTC Decision Granting Application for Registration of Lot 1524
By Decision 9 dated May 24, 1999, the trial court rati ed its order of general
default and judicially confirmed the incomplete title of the late De Luzuriaga, Sr. over Lot
No. 1524 pursuant to Decree No. 22752. The fallo reads: ECSHAD
As soon as this decision becomes nal, let an Original Certi cate of Title
be issued in the name of the late Jose R. De Luzuriaga, Sr., pursuant to Decree
No. 22752 covering Lot No. 1524 of Bacolod Cadastre in accordance with law.
SO ORDERED.
The OSG, for the Republic, received a copy of the Decision on June 22, 1999, but
opted not to file an appeal.
Pursuant to the above decision the Bacolod Registry issued Original Certi cate
of Title (OCT) No. RO-58 in the name of De Luzuriaga, Sr.
DAALCO Sues for Quieting of Title
Meanwhile, in September 1999, Dr. Antonio A. Lizares, Co., Inc. (DAALCO) led a
Complaint 1 0 against petitioners before the RTC for Quieting of Title, Annulment and
Cancellation of [OCT] No. RO-58 with prayer for injunctive relief and damages, docketed
as Civil Case No. 99-10924 and entitled Dr. Antonio A. Lizares Co., Inc., (DAALCO) v.
Jose R. De Luzuriaga, III, et al. 1 1 In gist, DAALCO claimed that its predecessor-in-
interest, Antonio Lizares, was the registered, lawful, and absolute owner of Lot No.
1524 as evidenced by a Transfer Certi cate of Title (TCT) No. 190-R (T-247 [T-19890])
issued by the Register of Deeds (RD) of Bacolod City on February 8, 1939. Said TCT
served to replace OCT No. 2765 in the name of Lizares and was issued pursuant to
Decree No. 22752, GLRO Cad. Rec. No. 55 as early as November 14, 1916 and
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registered in the registration book of the O ce of the RD of Negros Occidental, at Vol.
10, p. 283.
To buttress its case, DAALCO pointed to the fact that the RD, after the nality of
the May 24, 1999 RTC Decision, did not issue an OCT in the name of De Luzuriaga, Sr.,
as prayed for in the application of petitioners and as ordered by the cadastral court.
What the RD instead issued — owing to the issuance in 1916 of OCT No. 2765 in the
name of Lizares — was a reconstituted title, i.e., OCT No. RO-58. Finally, DAALCO
maintained having been in actual, open, and continuous possession as registered owner
of the subject lot. cHCIDE
SO ORDERED. 2 0
The CA predicated its ruling on the following factors: (1) the merits of the
petition for relief from judgment far outweigh the procedural technicalities that
obstruct it, i.e., not veri ed and led out of time; and (2) the Republic was able to make
out a prima facie case of "double titling", supported by a Letter/Report 2 1 issued by the
Bacolod City RD on December 7, 2001 showing that Lot No. 1524 was already
registered under, and an OCT already issued in, another man's name. HAICET
Through the equally assailed May 25, 2005 Resolution, the CA denied petitioners'
motion for reconsideration.
Hence, we have these petitions, with the supplemental petition led on July 28,
2005; while the main petition for review on certiorari was led on August 11, 2005,
which explains the lower docket number of the former.
The Issues
Petitioners raise as ground for review in G.R. No. 169019 the following issues
and assignment of errors:
A. WITH ALL DUE RESPECT, THE HONORABLE [CA] SERIOUSLY
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ERRED IN GRANTING THE PETITION FOR CERTIORARI OF THE SOLICITOR
GENERAL'S OFFICE, WITHOUT MAKING A DEFINITE FINDING OF ACTUAL
PRESENCE OF GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION, COMMITTED BY THE LOWER
COURT, VIOLATING THE WELL-KNOWN PRINCIPLE THAT CERTIORARI IS NOT
PROPER WHERE THERE IS NO GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION, AND WHEN
THERE ARE UNSETTLED FACTUAL CONTROVERSIES IN THE CASE;
B. WITH ALL DUE RESPECT, THE HONORABLE [CA] IN ITS HEREIN
CONTESTED DECISION . . . DIRECTLY VIOLATED THE LONG-HELD PRINCIPLE OF
"JUDICIAL STABILITY" THAT HOLDS THAT NO REVIEW CAN BE HAD BY ONE
COURT OF A DECISION OF ANOTHER COURT OF CONCURRENT JURISDICTION,
AND THE RULE THAT NO SUCCEEDING JUDGE CAN REVIEW A DECISION OF THE
PREVIOUS PRESIDING JUDGE, AS HELD BY THE SUPREME COURT IN HACBANG
V. LEYTE AUTOBUS CO., INC. 62 O.G. 31, Aug. 1, 1966, MIRANDA VS. COURT OF
APPEALS, 71 SCRA 295, AND NERY VS. LEYSON, 339 SCRA 23;
MOST IMPORTANTLY:
I n G.R. No. 168848 , petitioners raise the sole issue in their Supplemental
Petition of:
WHETHER OR NOT THE RESOLUTION DATED NOVEMBER 26, 2004 AND
RESOLUTION DATED MAY 25, 2005 WERE CONTRARY TO LAW AND/OR
JURISPRUDENCE OF THE SUPREME COURT 2 3
In the meantime, on September 12, 2005, DAALCO led a Motion for Leave to
Intervene, 2 4 apprising the Court of, among other things, the pendency of its complaint
docketed as Civil Case No. 99-10924.
The CA acted within its sound discretion in giving, under the factual premises and
for reasons set out in the assailed decision, due course to the Republic's petition for
relief from judgment and remanding the case to the trial court for reception of
evidence. Under the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case, we agree with the
appellate court's holding that the RTC committed grave abuse of discretion in
dismissing the petition for relief from the May 24, 1999 Decision.
Procedural Issue: Relaxation of the Rules to Promote Substantial Justice
We can concede that the unveri ed petition for relief from judgment of the OSG
was led out of time. Such a petition must be led within: (a) sixty (60) days from
knowledge of judgment, order, or other proceedings to be set aside; and (b) six (6)
months from entry of such judgment, order, or other proceedings. 2 5 In the case at bar,
the OSG admits receiving the May 24, 1999 Decision on June 22, 1999. Thus, when it
did not le a notice of appeal of said decision within the 15-day reglementary period for
ling an appeal, the OSG was left with the remaining remedy of relief from judgment
subject to the conditions provided under Secs. 1 and 3 of Rule 38 of the Rules of Court.
But, as thing turned out, the OSG, for the Republic, belatedly led its petition only on
November 24, 1999, or more than ve months from receipt or knowledge of the May
24, 1999 RTC Decision.
The Republic ascribes its failure to le a timely notice of appeal or a petition for
relief from judgment on the negligence of the OSG person — in charge of receiving all
pleadings assigned to Asst. Solicitor Jose na C. Castillo — who belatedly gave the
copy of the RTC Decision to the latter due to oversight. And the Republic prays for the
relaxation of the rigid application of the Rules based on the merits of its petition for
relief from judgment.
While the reglementary periods xed under the rules for relief from judgment are
mandatory in character, 2 6 procedural rules of the most mandatory character in terms
of compliance may, in the interest of substantial justice, be relaxed. 2 7 Since rules of
procedure are mere tools designed to facilitate the attainment of justice, they are not to
be applied with severity and rigidity when such application would clearly defeat the very
rationale for their existence. In line with this postulate, the Court can and will relax or
altogether suspend the application of the rules, or except a particular case from the
rules' operation when their rigid application tends to frustrate rather than promote the
ends of justice. 2 8 STcEaI
Decree No. 22752 is the same decree petitioners relied upon in Cad. Case No.
97-583 for judicial con rmation of imperfect title over subject Lot No. 1524. Obviously,
one and the same decree cannot serve as basis for a valid grant of separate titles in fee
simple over the same lot to two different persons.
Ownership of subject lot best ventilated in civil case
Third. Since petitioners and DAALCO separately claim owning Lot No. 1524, the
ownership issue would be best litigated in Civil Case No. 99-10924 led by DAALCO for
quieting of title. Lest it be overlooked, both parties anchor in a way their ownership
claim on Decree No. 22752. It ought to be stressed, however, that an OCT was issued
several months after Decree No. 22752 was rendered, and the certi cate was issued to
Lizares, not to De Luzuriaga, Sr. De Luzuriaga, Sr., during his lifetime, never contested or
assailed the title issuance to Lizares, suggesting the possibility of a lawful transfer of
ownership from one to the other during the period material. In any case, for purposes of
Cad. Case No. 97-583, the fact that an OCT was already issued for the subject lot
would, perforce, foreclose the issuance of another OCT for the same lot.
As has been consistently held, neither prescription nor laches may render
ine cacious a decision in a land registration case. 3 3 In line with this doctrine of the
inapplicability of prescription and laches on registration cases, the Court has ruled that
"the failure on the part of the administrative authorities to do their part in the issuance
of the decree of registration cannot oust the prevailing party from ownership of the
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land." 3 4 Following these doctrinal pronouncements, petitioners argue that they can
rightfully bank on Decree No. 22752 to defeat the claim of DAALCO.
Petitioners' above posture may be given cogency but for the issuance, pursuant
to the same decree, of OCT No. 2765 in the name of Lizares. Nothing on the records
adequately explains, nor do petitioners attempt to do so, how a registration decree
adjudicating Lot No. 1524 to De Luzuriaga, Sr. became the very medium for the
issuance of a certi cate of title in favor of Lizares. Consequently, whatever rights
petitioners might have over the subject lot as heirs of De Luzuriaga, Sr. ought to be
litigated against the successors-in-interest of Lizares to put a nal rest to their clashing
claims over Lot No. 1524. HDATSI
Here, the presiding judge of the RTC, Branch 51 in Bacolod City, by the remand to
the court of Cad. Case No. 97-583, is not asked to review and/or annul a nal judgment
of his or her predecessor or of another RTC, as there is nothing for the presiding judge
to nullify in the rst place, the annulling act having been taken by the CA. Hence, the trial
court's invocation, as seconded by petitioners, of the teachings of Nery, 4 2 is off-
tangent. Nery, it is true, held that a trial court is without jurisdiction to annul a nal
judgment of a co-equal court. Nery was, however, cast against a different factual and
legal milieu. Su ce it to state for the nonce that Nery involved a nal judgment of the
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RTC against which no petition for relief has been interposed. In view of the rst reason,
the final judgment was not effectively set aside, unlike here.
WHEREFORE , the Veri ed Petition for Review on Certiorari and Supplemental
Petition are hereby DENIED for lack of merit. Accordingly, the CA's November 26, 2004
Decision and May 25, 2005 Resolution in CA-G.R. SP No. 75321 are hereby AFFIRMED.
AFFIRMED
Costs against petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Ynares-Santiago, Chico-Nazario, Nachura and Peralta, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
2. Rollo (G.R. No. 168848), pp. 21-25. Penned by Associate Justice Arsenio J. Magpale and
concurred in by Associate Justices Mariflor P. Punzalan Castillo and Ramon M. Bato, Jr.
3. Id. at 48-49.
4. Id. at 181-183. Penned by Judge Anita G. Chua.
5. Id. at 195-197.
6. Id. at 226-227.
7. Id. at 168.
8. Id. at 226-228.
9. Id. at 170-174. Penned by Presiding Judge Ramon B. Posadas.
10. Id. at 240-258.
11. The complete case title is: Dr. Antonio A. Lizares Co., Inc., (DAALCO) v. Jose R. De
Luzuriaga, III, Lance, Rock, Anthony, Perpetua, and Deke Mark all surnamed Gianon
representing the heirs of Norma De Luzuriaga Gianon, Irene Garovillo De Luzuriaga,
Rolando, Rogie, Rogine, Mark, Mat and Bernie all surnamed De Luzuriaga Diaz, Desiree
Depallo, Israel De Luzuriaga and Frederick De Luzuriaga, representing the heirs of
Manuel De Luzuriaga, Rosanna, Jeremy, Franklin, Corazon, Teresa, Idoy, Alindajao and
Bagatsing, all surnamed Valero, representing the heirs of Remedios De Luzuriaga Valero
and the Register of Deeds of Bacolod City.
12. Rollo (G.R. No. 168848), pp. 175-180, dated November 23, 1999.
13. G.R. No. 103558, November 17, 1992, 215 SCRA 783.
14. Garbin v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 107653, February 5, 1996, 253 SCRA 187.
15. Rollo (G.R. No. 168848), p. 183.
16. Id. at 184-194, dated December 11, 2001.
17. G.R. No. 136100, July 24, 2000, 336 SCRA 419.
27. Department of Agrarian Reform v. Republic, G.R. No. 160560, July 29, 2005, 465 SCRA
419, 428; citing Yao v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 132428, October 24, 2000, 344 SCRA
202, 221.
28. Metro Rail Transit Corporation v. Court of Tax Appeals, G.R. No. 166273, September 21,
2005, 470 SCRA 562, 566; citing Go v. Tan, G.R. No. 130330, September 26, 2003, 412
SCRA 123, 128-129.
29. Guy v. Asia United Bank, G.R. No. 174874, October 4, 2007, 534 SCRA 703, 716; citing
Heavylift Manila, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 154410, October 20, 2005, 473 SCRA
541 and Robern Development Corporation v. Quitain, G.R. No. 13042, September 23,
1999, 315 SCRA 150.
30. Linton Commercial Co., Inc. v. Hellera, G.R. No. 163147, October 10, 2007, 535 SCRA
434, 446; citing Precision Electronics Corporation v. National Labor Relations
Commission, G.R. No. 86657, October 23, 1989, 178 SCRA 667, 670.
31. Regalado v. Regalado, G.R. No. 134154, February 28, 2006, 483 SCRA 473, 482; citing
Tuason v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 116607, April 10, 1996, 256 SCRA 158.
32. Supra note 21.
33. Republic v. Nillas, G.R. No. 159595, January 23, 2007, 512 SCRA 286, 299; citing Sta.
Ana v. Menla, 111 Phil. 947 (1961) and other cases.
34. Republic v. Nillas, supra.
35. Supra note 9.
36. Florentino v. Rivera, G.R. No. 167968, January 23, 2006, 479 SCRA 523, 530; citing Jose
Clavano, Inc. v. Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board, G.R. No. 143781, February 27,
2002, 378 SCRA 172, 182-183.
37. Florez v. UBS Marketing Corporation, G.R. No. 169747, July 27, 2007, 528 SCRA 396,
405; citing Ex-Bataan Veterans Agency, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission,
G.R. No. 121428, November 29, 1995, 250 SCRA 418.
38. Sec. 7. Upon the receipt of the order of the court setting the time for initial hearing of
the petition, the Commission on Land Registration shall cause notice thereof to be
published twice, in successive issues of the Official Gazette, in the English language.
The notice shall be issued by order of the Court, attested by the Commissioner of the
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Land Registration Office, . . . .
39. SEC. 35 (Cadastral Survey preparatory to filing of petition) (b) Thereupon, the Director
of Lands shall give notice to persons claiming any interest in the lands, as well as to the
general public, of the day on which such survey will begin, giving as fully and accurately
as possible the description of the lands to be surveyed. Such notice shall be published
once in the Official Gazette, and a copy of the notice in English or the national language
shall be posted in a conspicuous place on the bulletin board of the municipal building of
the municipality in which the lands or any portion thereof is situated. A copy of the
notice shall also be sent to the mayor of such municipality as well as to the barangay
captain and likewise to the Sangguniang Panlalawigan and the Sangguniang Bayan
concerned. . . .
40. 1 Regalado, REMEDIAL LAW COMPEDIUM 400 (8th rev. ed.); citing Vda. de Sayman v.
Court of Appeals, Nos. L-29479 & 29716, February 21, 1983, 120 SCRA 676.
41. RULES OF COURT, Rule 38, Sec. 6.