Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

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G.R. No. 161030. September 14, 2011.

*
JOSE FERNANDO, JR., ZOILO FERNANDO, NORMA
FERNANDO BANARES, ROSARIO FERNANDO
TANGKENCGO, HEIRS OF TOMAS FERNANDO,
represented by ALFREDO V. FERNANDO, HEIRS OF
GUILLERMO FERNANDO, represented by RONNIE H.
FERNANDO, HEIRS OF ILUMINADA FERNANDO,
represented by BENJAMIN ESTRELLA and HEIRS OF
GERMOGENA FERNANDO, petitioners, vs. LEON
ACUNA, HERMOGENES FERNANDO, HEIRS OF
SPOUSES ANTONIO FERNANDO AND FELISA
CAMACHO, represented by HERMOGENES FERNANDO,
respondents.

Property; Land Titles; The right to recover possession of


registered land is imprescriptible, the registered landowner may lose
his right to recover possession of his registered property by reason of
laches.·Section 47 of Presidential Decree No. 1529, otherwise
known as the Property Registration Decree, states that „[n]o title to
registered land in derogation of the title of the registered owner
shall be acquired by prescription or adverse possession.‰ Thus, the
Court has held that the right to recover possession of registered
land is imprescriptible because possession is a mere consequence of
ownership. However in Heirs of Anacleto B. Nieto v. Municipality of
Meycauayan, Bulacan, 540 SCRA 100 (2007), the Court had
recognized the jurisprudential thread regarding the exception to the
foregoing doctrine that while it is true that a Torrens title is
indefeasible and imprescriptible, the registered landowner may lose
his right to recover possession of his registered property by reason
of laches.
Same; Same; Laches; Words and Phrases; Laches means the
failure or neglect for an unreasonable and unexplained length of
time to do that which, by observance of due diligence, could or
should have been done earlier; Essential Elements of Laches.·
Laches means the failure or neglect for an unreasonable and
unexplained length of time to do that which, by observance of due
diligence, could or should have been done earlier. It is negligence or
omission to assert a right
_______________

* FIRST DIVISION.

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500 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED

Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

within a reasonable time, warranting the presumption that the


party entitled to assert his right either has abandoned or declined
to assert it. Laches thus operates as a bar in equity. The essential
elements of laches are: (a) conduct on the part of the defendant, or
of one under whom he claims, giving rise to the situation
complained of; (b) delay in asserting complainantÊs rights after he
had knowledge of defendantÊs acts and after he has had the
opportunity to sue; (c) lack of knowledge or notice by defendant that
the complainant will assert the right on which he bases his suit;
and (d) injury or prejudice to the defendant in the event the relief is
accorded to the complainant.
Same; Reconveyance; The essence of an action for reconveyance
is that the certificate of title is respected as incontrovertible.·As
aptly observed by the appellate court, the party thus aggrieved has
the right to recover his or their title over the property by way of
reconveyance while the same has not yet passed to an innocent
purchaser for value. As we held in Medizabel v. Apao, 482 SCRA
587 (2006), the essence of an action for reconveyance is that the
certificate of title is respected as incontrovertible. What is sought is
the transfer of the property, in this case its title, which has been
wrongfully or erroneously registered in another personÊs name, to
its rightful owner or to one with a better right. It is settled in
jurisprudence that mere issuance of the certificate of title in the
name of any person does not foreclose the possibility that the real
property may be under co-ownership with persons not named in the
certificate or that the registrant may only be a trustee or that other
parties may have acquired interest subsequent to the issuance of
the certificate of title.
Same; Same; Prescription; An action for reconveyance of
registered land based on implied trust prescribes in ten (10) years,
the point of reference being the date of registration of the deed or the
date of issuance of the certificate of title over the property; the ten
year prescriptive period applies only when the person enforcing the
trust is not in possession of his property.·An action for
reconveyance of registered land based on implied trust prescribes in
ten (10) years, the point of reference being the date of registration of
the deed or the date of the issuance of the certificate of title over the
property. However, this Court has ruled that the ten-year
prescriptive period applies only when the person enforcing the trust
is not in possession of the property. If a person claiming to be its
owner is in actual posses-

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VOL. 657, SEPTEMBER 14, 2011 501

Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

sion of the property, the right to seek reconveyance, which in effect


seeks to quiet title to the property, does not prescribe. The reason is
that the one who is in actual possession of the land claiming to be
its owner may wait until his possession is disturbed or his title is
attacked before taking steps to vindicate his right.
Same; Accretion; Requisites for the Application of the Principle
of Accretion.·However, we find that the Court of Appeals erred in
ruling that the principle of accretion is applicable. The said
principle is embodied in Article 457 of the Civil Code which states
that „[t]o the owners of lands adjoining the banks of rivers belong
the accretion which they gradually receive from the effects of the
current of the waters.‰ We have held that for Article 457 to apply
the following requisites must concur: (1) that the deposit be gradual
and imperceptible; (2) that it be made through the effects of the
current of the water; and (3) that the land where accretion takes
place is adjacent to the banks of rivers. The character of the Sapang
Bayan property was not shown to be of the nature that is being
referred to in the provision which is an accretion known as alluvion
as no evidence had been presented to support this assertion.
Same; Same; Rivers and their natural beds are property of
public dominion; In the absence of any provision of law vesting
ownership of the dried-up river bed in some other person, it must
continue to belong to the State.·Even assuming that Sapang Bayan
was a dried-up creek bed, under Article 420, paragraph 1 and
Article 502, paragraph 1 of the Civil Code, rivers and their natural
beds are property of public dominion. In the absence of any
provision of law vesting ownership of the dried-up river bed in some
other person, it must continue to belong to the State.

PETITION for review on certiorari of a decision of the


Court of Appeals.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Cresenciano C. Santiago for petitioners.

LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, J.:
This is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45
of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure seeking to reverse and
set

502

502 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

aside the Decision1 dated November 24, 2003 of the Court


of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 75773, entitled „Jose
Fernando, Jr., et al. v. Heirs of Germogena Fernando, et
al.,‰ which reversed and set aside the Decision2 dated May
16, 2002 of Branch 84, Regional Trial Court (RTC) of
Malolos, Bulacan in Civil Case No. 256-M-97.
At the heart of this controversy is a parcel of land
covered by Original Certificate of Title (OCT) No. RO-487
(997)3 registered in the names of Jose A. Fernando,
married to Lucila Tinio, and Antonia A. Fernando, married
to Felipe Galvez, and located in San Jose, Baliuag,
Bulacan. When they died intestate, the property remained
undivided. Petitioners herein·namely, Jose Fernando, Jr.,
Zoilo Fernando, Norma Fernando Banares, Rosario
Fernando Tangkencgo, the heirs of Tomas Fernando, the
heirs of Guillermo Fernando, the heirs of Iluminada
Fernando and the heirs of Germogena Fernando·are the
heirs and successors-in-interest of the deceased registered
owners. However, petitioners failed to agree on the division
of the subject property amongst themselves, even after
compulsory conciliation before the Barangay Lupon.
Thus, petitioners, except for the heirs of Germogena
Fernando, filed a Complaint4 for partition on April 17, 1997
against the heirs of Germogena Fernando. In the
Complaint, plaintiffs alleged, among others, that they and
defendants are common descendants and compulsory heirs
of the late spouses Jose A. Fernando and Lucila Tinio, and
the late spouses Antonia A. Fernando and Felipe Galvez.
They further claimed that their predecessors-in-interest
died intestate and without instructions as to the disposition
of the property left by them
_______________
1 Rollo, pp. 26-44; penned by Associate Justice Mercedes Gozo-Dadole
with Associate Justices Eugenio S. Labitoria and Rosmari D. Carandang,
concurring.
2 CA Rollo, pp. 31-38.
3 Records, Vol. 1, pp. 6-7.
4 Id., at pp. 2-5.

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VOL. 657, SEPTEMBER 14, 2011 503


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

covered by OCT No. RO-487 (997). There being no


settlement, the heirs are asking for their rightful and
lawful share because they wish to build up their homes or
set up their business in the respective portions that will be
allotted to them. In sum, they prayed that the subject
property be partitioned into eight equal parts,
corresponding to the hereditary interest of each group of
heirs.
In their Answer5 filed on May 20, 1997, defendants
essentially admitted all of the allegations in the complaint.
They alleged further that they are not opposing the
partition and even offered to share in the expenses that
will be incurred in the course of the proceedings.
In his Complaint in Intervention6 filed on January 12,
1998, respondent Leon Acuna (Acuna) averred that in the
Decision7 dated November 29, 1929 of the Cadastral Court
of Baliuag, Bulacan, the portion of the property identified
as Lot 1303 was already adjudicated to: (a) Antonio
Fernando, married to Felisa Camacho; (b) spouses Jose
Martinez and Gregoria Sison; (c) spouses Ignacio de la Cruz
and Salud Wisco; and (d) Jose Fernando, married to Lucila
Tinio, the petitionersÊ predecessor-in-interest. He likewise
claimed that in a 1930 Decision of the Cadastral Court, the
portion identified as Lot 1302 was also already adjudicated
to other people as well.
Respondent Acuna further alleged that Salud Wisco,
through her authorized attorney-in-fact, Amador W. Cruz,
sold her lawful share denominated as Lot 1303-D with an
area of 3,818 square meters to Simeon P. Cunanan,8 who in
turn sold the same piece of land to him as evidenced by a
Deed of Sale.9 He also belied petitionersÊ assertion that the
_______________
5 Id., at pp. 11-12.
6 Id., at pp. 80-85.
7 Id., at pp. 88-89.
8 Id., at p. 91.
9 Id., at p. 92.

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504 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

subject property has not been settled by the parties after


the death of the original owners in view of the Decision10
dated July 30, 1980 of the Court of First Instance (CFI) of
Baliuag, Bulacan, in LRC Case No. 80-389 which ordered
the Register of Deeds of Bulacan to issue the corresponding
certificates of title to the claimants of the portion of the
subject property designated as Lot 1302.11 Norma
Fernando, one of the petitioners in the instant case, even
testified in LRC Case No. 80-389. According to respondent
Acuna, this circumstance betrayed bad faith on the part of
petitioners in filing the present case for partition.
Respondent Acuna likewise averred that the action for
partition cannot prosper since the heirs of the original
owners of the subject property, namely Rosario, Jose Jr.,
Norma, Tomas, Guillermo, Leopoldo, Hermogena,
Illuminada and Zoilo, all surnamed Fernando, and Lucila
Tinio, purportedly had already sold their respective one-
tenth (1/10) share each in the subject property to Ruperta
Sto. Domingo Villasenor for the amount of P35,000.00 on
January 25, 1978 as evidenced by a „Kasulatan sa Bilihang
Patuluyan.‰12 He added that he was in possession of the
original copy of OCT No. RO-487 (997) and that he had not
commenced the issuance of new titles to the subdivided lots
because he was waiting for the owners of the other portions
of the subject property to bear their respective shares in
the cost of titling.
Subsequently, a Motion for Intervention13 was filed on
June 23, 1998 by respondent Hermogenes Fernando
(Hermogenes), for himself and on behalf of the heirs of the
late spouses, Antonio A. Fernando and Felisa Camacho.
According to him, in
_______________
10 Id., at pp. 93-98.
11 It would appear from the annotation of said July 30, 1980 Decision
on the back of OCT No. RO-487 (997) that Lot 1302 was further
subdivided into Lots 1302-A to 1302-J with petitionersÊ ascendant Jose
Fernando allocated Lot 1302-D.
12 Records, Vol. 1, p. 99.
13 Id., at pp. 137-138.

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VOL. 657, SEPTEMBER 14, 2011 505


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

the July 30, 1980 Decision of the CFI of Bulacan, their


predecessors-in-interest had already been adjudged owners
of Lots 1302-A, 1302-F, 1302-G,14 1302-H and 1302-J of
OCT No. RO-487 (997) and any adverse distribution of the
properties would cause respondents damage and prejudice.
He would also later claim, in his Answer-in-Intervention,15
that the instant case is already barred by res judicata and,
should be dismissed.
In the interest of substantial justice, the trial court
allowed the respondents to intervene in the case.
The plaintiffs and defendants jointly moved to have the
case submitted for judgment on the pleadings on May 7,
1999.16 However, the trial court denied said motion in a
Resolution17 dated August 23, 1999 primarily due to the
question regarding the ownership of the property to be
partitioned, in light of the intervention of respondents
Acuna and Hermogenes who were claiming legal right
thereto.
In their Manifestation18 filed on April 12, 2000,
petitioners affirmed their execution of a Deed of Sale in
favor of Ruperta Sto. Domingo Villasenor in 1978, wherein
they sold to her 1,000 square meters from Lot 1303 for the
sum of P35,000.00.
After the pre-trial conference, trial ensued. On
September 19, 2000, petitioner Elizabeth Alarcon testified
that they (plaintiffs) are not claiming the entire property
covered by OCT No. RO-487 (997) but only the area
referred to as Lot 1303 and Sapang Bayan. She also
admitted that Lot 1302 had already been divided into ten
(10) sublots and allocated to various owners pursuant to
the July 30, 1980 Decision of the CFI of Baliuag, Bulacan
and these owners already have their

_______________
14 In the dispositive portion of said 1980 Decision, Lot 1302-G was
adjudicated to Antonia A. Fernando.
15 Records, Vol. 1, pp. 149-152.
16 Id., at p. 165.
17 Id., at pp. 185-188.
18 Id., at pp. 264-266.

506

506 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

own titles. She likewise claimed that the entire area


consisting of Lot 1303 and Sapang Bayan is based on the
subdivision plan of Lot 1303. She admitted that plaintiffsÊ
predecessor-in-interest was only allocated a portion of Lot
1303 based on the said plan. However, she claimed that the
November 29, 1929 Decision subdividing Lot 1303 was
never implemented nor executed by the parties.19
Petitioner Norma Fernando testified on October 3, 2000
that she is one of the children of Jose A. Fernando and
Lucila Tinio. She affirmed that plaintiffs were only
claiming Lot 1303 and Sapang Bayan. She also testified
that Sapang Bayan was supposedly included in Lot 1302
and was previously a river until it dried up. Unlike Lot
1302, the rest of the property was purportedly not
distributed. She likewise averred that she is aware of a
November 29, 1929 Decision concerning the distribution of
Lot 1303 issued by the cadastral court but insisted that the
basis of the claims of the petitioners over Lot 1303 is the
title in the name of her ascendants and not said Decision.20
On November 16, 2000, as previously directed by the
trial court and agreed to by the parties, counsel for
respondent Hermogenes prepared and submitted an
English translation of the November 29, 1929 Decision. The
same was admitted and marked in evidence as Exhibit
„X‰21 as a common exhibit of the parties. The petitioners
also presented Alfredo Borja, the Geodetic Engineer who
conducted a relocation survey of the subject property.
After plaintiffs rested their case, respondent
Hermogenes testified on December 7, 2000. In his
testimony, he claimed to know the plaintiffs and defendants
as they were allegedly his relatives and neighbors. He
confirmed that according to the November 29, 1929
Decision, portions of Lot 1303 was desig-

_______________
19 Records, Vol. 2, pp. 7-65; TSN, September 19, 2000.
20 Id., at pp. 97-129; TSN, October 3, 2000.
21 Id., at pp. 155-156.

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Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

nated as Lots 1303-A, 1303-B, 1303-C and 1303-D which


were adjudicated to certain persons, including Jose
Fernando, while the rest of Lot 1303 was adjudicated to his
parents, Antonio A. Fernando married to Felisa Camacho.
According to respondent Hermogenes, his familyÊs tenant
and the latterÊs children occupied the portion of Lot 1303
allotted to his (Hermogenes) parents while the rest of Lot
1303 was occupied by the persons named in the said
November 29, 1929 Decision. He admitted, however, that
nobody among the purported possessors of Lot 1303
registered the lots assigned to them in the Decision.22
On January 18, 2001, respondent Hermogenes presented
a witness, Engineer Camilo Vergara who testified that the
subject land is divided into Lots 1302 and 1303 with a
creek dividing the two lots known as Sapang Bayan. He
also identified a Sketch Plan numbered as PSD-45657 and
approved on November 11, 1955.23 During the hearing on
January 30, 2001, respondent Hermogenes made an oral
offer of his evidence and rested his case. On the same date,
respondent Acuna, in lieu of his testimony, offered for the
parties to simply stipulate on the due execution and
authenticity of the Deeds of Sale dated April 6, 1979 and
December 28, 1980, showing the transfer of Lot 1303-D
from Salud Wisco to Simeon Cunanan and subsequently to
respondent Acuna. When counsel for plaintiffs and
defendants agreed to the stipulation, albeit objecting to the
purpose for which the deeds of sale were offered, the trial
court admitted AcunaÊs exhibits and Acuna rested his
case.24
On February 15, 2001, plaintiffs recalled Norma
Fernando as a rebuttal witness. In her rebuttal testimony,
she identified the tax declaration25 over the said property
in the name of

_______________
22 Id., at pp. 201-237; TSN, December 7, 2000.
23 Id., at pp. 258-296; TSN, January 18, 2001.
24 Id., at pp. 330-340; TSN, January 30, 2001.
25 Id., at p. 429.

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Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

Jose A. Fernando; an official receipt26 dated October 3,


1997 issued by the Office of the Treasurer of the
Municipality of Baliuag, Bulacan for payment of real
property taxes from 1991 to 1997; and a real property tax
clearance27 dated October 6, 1997, to show that plaintiffs
have allegedly been paying the real property taxes on the
entire property covered by OCT No. RO-487 (997).
However, she further testified that they were now willing
to pay taxes only over the portion with an area of 44,234
square meters, which is included in their claim.28
In a Decision dated May 16, 2002, the trial court ruled
that plaintiffs and defendants (petitioners herein) were
indeed the descendants and successors-in-interest of the
registered owners, Jose A. Fernando (married to Lucila
Tinio) and Antonia Fernando (married to Felipe Galvez), of
the property covered by OCT No. RO-487 (997). After
finding that the parties admitted that Lot 1302 was
already distributed and titled in the names of third persons
per the July 30, 1980 Decision of the CFI of Baliuag,
Bulacan the trial court proceeded to rule on the allocation
of Lot 1303 and Sapang Bayan.
With respect to Lot 1303, the trial court found that the
November 29, 1929 Decision of the Cadastral Court,
adjudicating said lot to different persons and limiting Jose
FernandoÊs share to Lot 1303-C, was never implemented
nor executed despite the lapse of more than thirty years.
Thus, the said decision has already prescribed and can no
longer be executed. The trial court ordered the reversion of
Lot 1303 to the ownership of spouses Jose A. Fernando and
Lucila Tinio and spouses Antonia A. Fernando and Felipe
Galvez under OCT No. RO-487 (997) and allowed the
partition of Lot 1303 among petitioners as successors-in-
interest of said registered owners. Excluded from the
partition, however, were the portions of

_______________
26 Id., at p. 430.
27 Id., at p. 431.
28 Id., at pp. 352-360; TSN, February 15, 2001.

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Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

the property which petitioners admitted had been sold or


transferred to Ruperta Sto. Domingo Villasenor and
respondent Acuna.
As for the ownership of Sapang Bayan, the trial court
found that the same had not been alleged in the pleadings
nor raised as an issue during the pre-trial conference. Also,
according to the trial court, the parties failed to clearly
show whether Sapang Bayan was previously a dry portion
of either Lot 1302 or Lot 1303. Neither was there any proof
that Sapang Bayan was a river that just dried up or that it
was an accretion which the adjoining lots gradually
received from the effects of the current of water. It was
likewise not established who were the owners of the lots
adjoining Sapang Bayan. The trial court concluded that
none of the parties had clearly and sufficiently established
their claims over Sapang Bayan.
The dispositive portion of the May 16, 2002 Decision of
the trial court reads:

„WHEREFORE, all the foregoing considered, judgment is hereby


rendered ordering the reversion of Lot 1303, except the portions
allotted to Acuna and Ruperta Sto. Domingo Villasenor, to the
ownership of Jose Fernando and Lucia Tinio and Antonia Fernando
and Felipe Galvez under OCT No. 997 and thereafter allowing the
partition of said Lot 1303 among the plaintiffs and the defendants
as successors-in-interest of Jose and Lucia as well as Antonia and
Felipe after the settlement of any inheritance tax, fees, dues and/or
obligation chargeable against their estate.‰29
All the parties, with the exception of respondent Acuna,
elevated this case to the Court of Appeals which rendered
the assailed November 24, 2003 Decision, the dispositive
portion of which reads:

„WHEREFORE, premises considered, the decision dated May 16,


2002, of the Regional Trial Court of Malolos, Bulacan, Third

_______________
29 CA Rollo, pp. 37-38.

510

510 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

Judicial Region, Branch 84, in Civil Case No. 256-M-97, is hereby


REVERSED and SET ASIDE and the complaint dated April 17,
1997 filed by plaintiffs-appellants is dismissed. Costs against
plaintiffs-appellants.‰30

Hence, plaintiffs and defendants in the court a quo


elevated the matter for our review through the instant
petition.
Petitioner raises the following issues for consideration:

1. Whether or not the ownership of Lot 1303 and the Sapang Bayan
portion of the piece of land covered by O.C.T. No. RO-487 (997) or
Plan Psu-39080 should revert to the descendants and heirs of the
late spouses Jose Fernando and Lucila Tinio and Antonia
Fernando, married to Felipe Galvez;
2. Whether or not a title registered under the Torrens system, as the
subject original certificate of title is the best evidence of ownership
of land and is a notice against the world.31

The petition is without merit.


Petitioners based their claims to the disputed areas
designated as Lot 1303 and Sapang Bayan on their
ascendantsÊ title, OCT No. RO-487 (997), which was issued
on February 26, 1927 in the name of Jose A. Fernando
married to Lucila Tinio and Antonia A. Fernando married
to Felipe Galvez. The Court now rules on these claims in
seriatim.
PetitionersÊ claim with respect to Lot 1303
As the records show, in the November 29, 1929 Decision
of the Cadastral Court of Baliuag, Bulacan (in Cadastral
Record No. 14, GLRO Cad. Record No. 781) which was
written in Spanish, Lot 1303 had already been divided and
adjudicated

_______________
30 Rollo, p. 44.
31 Records, Vol. 2, p. 12.

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Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

to spouses Jose A. Fernando and Lucila Tinio; spouses


Antonia A. Fernando and Felipe Galvez; spouses Antonio
A. Fernando and Felisa Camacho; spouses Jose Martinez
and Gregoria Sison; and spouses Ignacio de la Cruz and
Salud Wisco from whom respondent Acuna derived his
title. The English translation of the said November 29,
1929 Decision was provided by respondent Hermogenes
and was adopted by all the parties as a common exhibit
designated as Exhibit „X.‰ The agreed English translation
of said Decision reads:

„Lot No. 1303 – This lot is decreed in record No. 448, G.L.R.O.
Record No. 25414 and actually with Original Certificate No. 997
(exhibited today) in the name of Jose A. Fernando and Antonia A.
Fernando, who now pray that said lot be subdivided in accordance
with the answers recorded in the instant cadastral record, and the
sketch, Exh. „A‰, which is attached to the records.
A part or portion of the lot has been claimed by Antonio A.
Fernando, of legal age, married to Felisa Camacho; another portion
by the spouses Jose Martinez and Gregoria Sison; another portion
by Antonia A. Fernando, of legal age, married to Felipe Galvez;
another portion by Jose A. Fernando, of legal age, married to Lucila
Tinio; and another portion by the spouses Ignacio de la Cruz and
Salud Wisco, both of legal age. The part claimed by the spouses Jose
A. Martinez and Gregoria Sison is Lot 1303-A of Exh. A; the part
claimed by Antonia A. Fernando is Lot 1303-B of said exhibit; the
part claimed by Jose A. Fernando is Lot 1303-C of said exhibit, and
the part claimed by the spouses Ignacio de la Cruz and Salud Wisco
is Lot 1303-D of the aforementioned Exhibit.
The subdivision of said lot is hereby ordered, separating from the
same the portions that correspond to each of the claimants, which
portions are known as Lots 1303-A, 1303-B, 1303-C, and 1303-D in
the sketch, Exh. „A‰, and once subdivided, are adjudicated in favor
of the spouses, Jose Martinez and Gregoria Sison, of legal age, Lot
No. 1303-A, in favor of Antonia A. Fernando, of legal age, married
to Felipe Galvez, Lot No. 1303-B; in favor of Jose A. Fernando, of
legal age, married to Lucila Tinio, Lot 1303-C; in favor of the
spouses Ignacio de la Cruz and Salud Wisco, of legal age, Lot 1303-
D; and the rest of Lot 1303 is adjudged in favor of Antonio A.
Fernando married to Felisa Camacho. It is likewise ordered that
once the

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512 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

subdivision plan is approved, the same be forwarded by the Director


of Lands to this Court for its final decision.
It is ordered that the expense for mentioned subdivision, shall be
for the account of the spouses Jose Martinez and Gregoria Sison,
Antonia A. Fernando, Jose A. Fernando, the spouses Ignacio de la
Cruz and Salud Wisco, and Antonio A. Fernando.‰32

From the foregoing, it would appear that petitionersÊ


ascendants themselves petitioned for the cadastral court to
divide Lot 1303 among the parties to the 1929 case and
they were only allocated Lots 1303-B and 1303-C. Still, as
the trial court noted, the November 29, 1929 Decision was
never fully implemented in the sense that the persons
named therein merely proceeded to occupy the lots
assigned to them without having complied with the other
directives of the cadastral court which would have led to
the titling of the properties in their names. Nonetheless, it
is undisputed that the persons named in the said
November 29, 1929 Decision and, subsequently, their heirs
and assigns have since been in peaceful and uncontested
possession of their respective lots for more than seventy
(70) years until the filing of the suit for partition on April
17, 1997 by petitioners which is the subject matter of this
case. Respondent Hermogenes, who testified that
petitioners were his relatives and neighbors, further
affirmed before the trial court that the persons named in
the November 29, 1929 Decision took possession of their
respective lots:
ATTY. VENERACION:
Q This Jose A. Fernando married to Lucila Tinio, you testified earlier
are the parents of the plaintiffs. Did they take possession of lot
1303-C?
A Yes, sir. They took possession.
Q Did they take possession of the other lots?
A No. Yes, the portion⁄

_______________

32 Id., at pp. 155-156.

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Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

Q The other lots in the name of the other persons. Did they take
possession of that?
A Yes, they took took possession of the other⁄ No, sir.
Q I am asking you whether they took possession, the children⁄
ATTY. SANTIAGO:
  The questions are already answered, your Honor.
ATTY. VENERACION:
  What is the answer?
ATTY. SANTIAGO:
  ItÊs in the record.
COURT:
  The persons named in the Decision already took possession of the
lots allotted to them as per that Decision. So that was already
answered. Anything else?
ATTY. VENERACION;
  No more question, Your Honor.33

It is noteworthy that petitioners do not dispute that the


November 29, 1929 Decision of the cadastral court already
adjudicated the ownership of Lot 1303 to persons other
than the registered owners thereof. Petitioners would,
nonetheless, claim that respondentsÊ purported failure to
execute the November 29, 1929 Decision over Lot 1303 (i.e.,
their failure to secure their own titles) meant that the
entire Lot 1303 being still registered in the name of their
ascendants rightfully belongs to them. This is on the theory
that respondentsÊ right to have the said property titled in
their names have long prescribed.
On this point, we agree with the appellate court.
Section 47 of Presidential Decree No. 1529, otherwise
known as the Property Registration Decree, states that
„[n]o title to registered land in derogation of the title of the
registered owner shall be acquired by prescription or
adverse pos-

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33 TSN, December 7, 2000, pp. 28-29.

514

514 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

session.‰ Thus, the Court has held that the right to recover
possession of registered land is imprescriptible because
possession is a mere consequence of ownership.34
However, in Heirs of Anacleto B. Nieto v. Municipality of
Meycauayan, Bulacan,35 the Court had recognized the
jurisprudential thread regarding the exception to the
foregoing doctrine that while it is true that a Torrens title
is indefeasible and imprescriptible, the registered
landowner may lose his right to recover possession of his
registered property by reason of laches.
Thus, in Heirs of Batiog Lacamen v. Heirs of Laruan,36
the Court had held that while a person may not acquire
title to the registered property through continuous adverse
possession, in derogation of the title of the original
registered owner, the heir of the latter, however, may lose
his right to recover back the possession of such property
and the title thereto, by reason of laches.
In the more recent case of Bartola M. Vda. De Tirona v.
Encarnacion,37 we similarly held that while jurisprudence
is settled on the imprescriptibility and indefeasibility of a
Torrens title, there is equally an abundance of cases where
we unequivocally ruled that registered owners may lose
their right to recover possession of property through the
equitable principle of laches.
Laches means the failure or neglect for an unreasonable
and unexplained length of time to do that which, by
observance of due diligence, could or should have been done
earlier. It is negligence or omission to assert a right within
a reasonable time, warranting the presumption that the
party entitled to assert his right either has abandoned or
declined to assert

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34 Umbay v. Alecha, 220 Phil. 103, 107; 135 SCRA 427, 430 (1985).
35 G.R. No. 150654, December 13, 2007, 540 SCRA 100, 107.
36 160 Phil. 615, 622; 65 SCRA 605, 611 (1975).
37 G.R. No. 168902, September 28, 2007, 534 SCRA 394, 409.

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VOL. 657, SEPTEMBER 14, 2011 515


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

it. Laches thus operates as a bar in equity.38 The essential


elements of laches are: (a) conduct on the part of the
defendant, or of one under whom he claims, giving rise to
the situation complained of; (b) delay in asserting
complainantÊs rights after he had knowledge of defendantÊs
acts and after he has had the opportunity to sue; (c) lack of
knowledge or notice by defendant that the complainant will
assert the right on which he bases his suit; and (d) injury
or prejudice to the defendant in the event the relief is
accorded to the complainant.39
In view of respondentsÊ decades long possession and/or
ownership of their respective lots by virtue of a court
judgment and the erstwhile registered ownersÊ inaction and
neglect for an unreasonable and unexplained length of time
in pursuing the recovery of the land, assuming they
retained any right to recover the same, it is clear that
respondentsÊ possession may no longer be disturbed. The
right of the registered owners as well as their successors-
in-interest to recover possession of the property is already a
stale demand and, thus, is barred by laches.
In the same vein, we uphold the finding of the Court of
Appeals that the title of petitionersÊ ascendants wrongfully
included lots belonging to third persons.40 Indeed,
petitionersÊ ascendants appeared to have acknowledged this
fact as they were even the ones that prayed for the
cadastral court to subdivide Lot 1303 as evident in the
November 29, 1929 Decision. We concur with the Court of
Appeals that petitionersÊ ascendants held the property
erroneously titled in their names under an implied trust for
the benefit of the true owners. Article 1456 of the Civil
Code provides:

_______________
38 Heirs of Domingo Hernandez, Sr. v. Mingoa, Sr., G.R. No. 146548,
December 18, 2009, 608 SCRA 394, 415, citing Isabela Colleges, Inc. v.
Heirs of Nieves Tolentino-Rivera, 397 Phil. 955, 969; 344 SCRA 95, 107
(2000).
39 Olegario v. Mari, G.R. No. 147951, December 14, 2009, 608 SCRA
134, 147.
40 Rollo, p. 42.

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516 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

„ART. 1456. If property is acquired through mistake or fraud,


the person obtaining it is, by force of law, considered a trustee of an
implied trust for the benefit of the person from whom the property
comes.‰

As aptly observed by the appellate court, the party thus


aggrieved has the right to recover his or their title over the
property by way of reconveyance while the same has not
yet passed to an innocent purchaser for value.41 As we held
in Medizabel v. Apao,42 the essence of an action for
reconveyance is that the certificate of title is respected as
incontrovertible. What is sought is the transfer of the
property, in this case its title, which has been wrongfully or
erroneously registered in another personÊs name, to its
rightful owner or to one with a better right. It is settled in
jurisprudence that mere issuance of the certificate of title
in the name of any person does not foreclose the possibility
that the real property may be under co-ownership with
persons not named in the certificate or that the registrant
may only be a trustee or that other parties may have
acquired interest subsequent to the issuance of the
certificate of title.43
We cannot subscribe to petitionersÊ argument that
whatever rights or claims respondents may have under the
November 29, 1929 Decision has prescribed for their
purported failure to fully execute the same. We again
concur with the Court of Appeals in this regard. An action
for reconveyance of registered land based on implied trust
prescribes in ten (10) years, the point of reference being the
date of registration of the deed or the date of the issuance
of the certificate of title

_______________
41 Id., citing Huang v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 108525, September
13, 1994, 236 SCRA 420; Vda. De Esconde v. Court of Appeals, 323 Phil.
81; 253 SCRA 66 (1996).
42 G.R. No. 143185, February 20, 2006, 482 SCRA 587, 608.
43 Pineda v. Court of Appeals, 456 Phil. 732, 748; 409 SCRA 438, 448
(2003), citing Lee Tek Sheng v. Court of Appeals, 354 Phil. 556, 561-562;
292 SCRA 544, 548 (1998).

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VOL. 657, SEPTEMBER 14, 2011 517


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

over the property. However, this Court has ruled that the
ten-year prescriptive period applies only when the person
enforcing the trust is not in possession of the property. If a
person claiming to be its owner is in actual possession of
the property, the right to seek reconveyance, which in effect
seeks to quiet title to the property, does not prescribe. The
reason is that the one who is in actual possession of the
land claiming to be its owner may wait until his possession
is disturbed or his title is attacked before taking steps to
vindicate his right.44
PetitionersÊ claim with respect to Sapang Bayan
As for the issue of the ownership of Sapang Bayan, we
sustain the appellate court insofar as it ruled that
petitioners failed to substantiate their ownership over said
area. However, we find that the Court of Appeals erred in
ruling that the principle of accretion is applicable. The said
principle is embodied in Article 457 of the Civil Code which
states that „[t]o the owners of lands adjoining the banks of
rivers belong the accretion which they gradually receive
from the effects of the current of the waters.‰ We have held
that for Article 457 to apply the following requisites must
concur: (1) that the deposit be gradual and imperceptible;
(2) that it be made through the effects of the current of the
water; and (3) that the land where accretion takes place is
adjacent to the banks of rivers.45 The character of the
Sapang Bayan property was not shown to be of the nature
that is being referred to in the provision which is an
accretion known as alluvion as no evidence had been
presented to support this assertion.
In fact from the transcripts of the proceedings, the
parties could not agree how Sapang Bayan came about.
Whether it was a gradual deposit received from the river
current or a

_______________
44 Medizabel v. Apao, supra note 42.
45 Republic v. Court of Appeals, 217 Phil. 483, 489; 132 SCRA 514, 520
(1984).

518

518 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

dried-up creek bed connected to the main river could not be


ascertained.
Even assuming that Sapang Bayan was a dried-up creek
bed, under Article 420, paragraph 146 and Article 502,
paragraph 147 of the Civil Code, rivers and their natural
beds are property of public dominion. In the absence of any
provision of law vesting ownership of the dried-up river bed
in some other person, it must continue to belong to the
State.
We ruled on this issue in Republic v. Court of Appeals,48
to wit:

„The lower court cannot validly order the registration of Lots 1


and 2 in the names of the private respondents. These lots were
portions of the bed of the Meycauayan river and are therefore
classified as property of the public domain under Article 420
paragraph 1 and Article 502, paragraph 1 of the Civil Code of the
Philippines. They are not open to registration under the Land
Registration act. The adjudication of the lands in question as
private property in the names of the private respondents is null and
void.‰49

Furthermore, in Celestial v. Cachopero,50 we similarly


ruled that a dried-up creek bed is property of public
dominion:

„A creek, like the Salunayan Creek, is a recess or arm extending


from a river and participating in the ebb and flow of the sea. As
such, under Articles 420(1) and 502(1) of the Civil Code, the
Salunayan Creek, including its natural bed, is property of the
public

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46 Art. 420. The following things are property of public dominion:
(1)  Those intended for public use, such as roads, canals, rivers, torrents,
ports and bridges constructed by the State, banks, shores, roadsteads, and
others of similar character; x x x.
47 Art. 502. The following are of public dominion:
(1) Rivers and their natural beds; x x x.
48 Supra note 45.
49 Id., at p. 491; p. 522.
50 459 Phil. 903; 413 SCRA 469 (2003).

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VOL. 657, SEPTEMBER 14, 2011 519


Fernando, Jr. vs. Acuna

domain which is not susceptible to private appropriation and


acquisitive prescription. And, absent any declaration by the
government, that a portion of the creek has dried-up does not, by
itself, alter its inalienable character.‰51

Therefore, on the basis of the law and jurisprudence on


the matter, Sapang Bayan cannot be adjudged to any of the
parties in this case.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the petition is
hereby DENIED. The assailed Decision dated November
24, 2003 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 75773
is hereby AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioners.
SO ORDERED.

Corona (C.J., Chairperson), Bersamin, Del Castillo and


Villarama, Jr., JJ., concur.

Petition denied, judgment affirmed.

Note.·It is true that an action for reconveyance will


not prosper when the property to be reconveyed is in the
hands of an innocent purchaser for value. (Santos vs. Heirs
of Dominga Lustre, 561 SCRA 120 [2008])
··o0o··

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51 Id., at p. 928; pp. 485-486.
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