THIRD DIVISION
[G.R. No. 171726. February 23, 2011.]
VICENTE YU CHANG AND SOLEDAD YU CHANG, petitioners,vs.REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, respondent.
DECISION
VILLARAMA, JR., J p:
This petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure, as amended, assails the Decision 1 dated August 26, 2005 and the Resolution 2 dated February 13, 2006 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 67430. The CA reversed and set aside the April 28, 2000 Decision 3 of the Regional Trial Court of Pili, Camarines Sur, Branch 31, in LRC No. P-115, LRA Rec. No. N-68012, which granted petitioners' application for registration of title over two parcels of land, denominated as Lots 2199 and 2200 of Cad. 291, Pili Cadastre.
The antecedent facts, as culled from the records, are as follows:
On March 22, 1949, petitioners' father, L. Yu Chang 4 and the Municipality of Pili, Camarines Sur, through its then Mayor, Justo Casuncad, executed an Agreement to Exchange Real Property 5 wherein the former assigned and transferred to the Municipality of Pili his 400-square-meter residential lot in Barrio San Roque, Pili, Camarines Sur, in exchange for a 400-square-meter piece of land located in San Juan, Pili. Thereafter, L. Yu Chang and his family took possession of the property thus obtained and erected a residential house and a gasoline station thereon. He also declared the property in his name under Tax Declaration No. 01794 6 and 01795 7 and paid the real property taxes thereon as evidenced by twenty-eight (28) official receipts from February 21, 1951 up to March 10, 1976. When L. Yu Chang died on September 30, 1976, his wife, Donata Sta. Ana and his seven children inherited the property and succeeded in the possession of the property.
On March 1, 1978, a Deed of Transfer and Renunciation 8 of their rights over the property was executed by L. Yu Chang's five children, Rafaela, Catalina, Flaviana, Esperanza, and Antonio, in favor of herein petitioners. After the transfer, petitioners had the subject property surveyed and subdivided into two lots, Lot 2199 9 and Lot 2200 10 of Plan SWO-05-000888, Pili Cadastre. Petitioners also declared the lots in their names for taxation purposes as shown in Tax Declaration No. 02633 11 and paid the real property taxes thereon.
On February 21, 1997, petitioner Soledad Yu Chang, for herself and in representation of her brother and co-petitioner, Vicente Yu Chang, filed a petition 12 for registration of title over the aforementioned lots under the Property Registration Decree. In their petition, they declared that they are the co-owners of the subject lots; that they and their predecessors-in-interest "have been in actual, physical, material, exclusive, open, occupation and possession of the above described parcels of land for more than 100 years"; 13 and that allegedly, they have continuously, peacefully, and adversely possessed the property in the concept of owners. Hence, they are entitled to confirmation of ownership and issuance and registration of title in their names. SITCEA
In support of their application, petitioners submitted the following documents, to wit:
1. Agreement to Exchange Real Property;
2. Deed of Transfer and Renunciation;
3. Approved Plan of Lot 2199 and Lot 2200, Cad. 291, Pili Cadastre;
4. Approved Technical Description of Lot 2199;
5. Approved Technical Description of Lot 2200;
6. Field Appraisal and Assessment Sheet (FAAS) A.R.P. No. 026-044 for Lot 2199 Cad. 291; and
7. Field Appraisal and Assessment Sheet (FAAS) A.R.P. No. 026-043 for Lot 2200 Cad. 291 Pili Cadastre.
The Republic, through the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), filed an Opposition 14 to the application, alleging, inter alia,that: (1) neither the applicants nor their predecessors-in-interest have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession of the land since June 12, 1945 or prior thereto; (2) the muniments of title, tax declarations and tax receipts do not constitute competent and sufficient evidence of a bona fide acquisition of the land; and (3) that the parcels of land applied for are portions of the public domain and are not subject to private appropriation.
No other parties filed their opposition. Thus, on December 14, 1998, an Order of General Default 15 was issued by the trial court.
After hearing, the trial court rendered a Decision granting petitioners' application. The fallo of the trial court's decision reads:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, decision is hereby rendered as follows:
1. Confirming the imperfect title of the herein applicants Vicente Yu Chang and Soledad Yu Chang over the two (2) parcels of land described in paragraph two (2) page 2 of the Petition, particularly Lot 2199, Plans S"0-05-000888, Cad. 291, Pili Cadastre and Lot 2200, Plan SWO-05-000888, Cad. 291, Pili Cadastre; both Filipino citizens, residents of #14 Joaquin St.,Corinthian Garden, Quezon City and San Juan, Pili, Camarines Sur respectively;
2. Ordering the dismissal of the application in the Cadastral proceeding with respect to Lots 2199 and 2200, Cad. 291, Pili Cadastre under CAD Case No. N-9;
3. After finality of this decision, let the corresponding decree of registration be issued by the Administrator, Land Registration Authority to the herein applicants above-mentioned.
SO ORDERED. 16
The Republic appealed the decision to the CA on the ground that the court a quo erred in granting petitioners' application for registration of Lots 2199 and 2200 despite their failure to show compliance with the requirements of the law. In addition, the Republic asserted that the land was classified as public forest land; hence, it could not be subject to appropriation and alienation.
As aforesaid, the CA reversed the trial court's decision on August 26, 2005, and dismissed petitioners' application for land registration. The CA considered the petition to be governed by Section 48 (b) of Commonwealth Act (C.A.) No. 141 or the Public Land Act, as amended, and held that petitioners were not able to present incontrovertible evidence that the parcels of land sought to be registered are alienable and disposable. 17 The CA relied on the testimony of Lamberto Orcena, Land Management Officer III of CENRO, Iriga City, who testified that prior to October 30, 1986, the entire area encompassing the right side of the Naga-Legaspi Highway, including the subject properties, was classified as forest land. According to the CA, even if the area within which the subject properties are located is now being used for residential and commercial purposes, such fact will not convert the subject parcels of land into agricultural land. 18 The CA stressed that there must be a positive act from the government declassifying the land as forest land before it could be deemed alienable or disposable land for agricultural or other purposes. 19
Additionally, the CA noted that the lands sought to be registered were declared disposable public land only on October 30, 1986. Thus, it was only from that time that the period of open, continuous and notorious possession commenced to toll against the State.
Aggrieved, petitioners are now before this Court via the present appeal, raising the sole issue of whether the appellate court erred in dismissing their application for registration of title on the ground that they failed to prove compliance with the requirements of Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act,as amended.
Petitioners insist that the subject properties could no longer be considered and classified as forest land since there are buildings, residential houses and even government structures existing and standing on the land. 20 In their Memorandum, 21 petitioners point out that the original owner and possessor of the subject land was the Municipal Government of Pili which was established in 1930. The land was originally part of the municipal ground adjacent to the Municipal Building located at the right side of the Naga-Legaspi National Highway. 22 From 1949, when L. Yu Chang acquired the property through barter and up to the filing of petitioners' application in 1997, petitioners and their predecessors-in-interest had been in actual physical and material possession of the land in the concept of an owner, notorious and known to the public and adverse to the whole world.
The Republic, through the OSG, for its part, maintains that petitioners failed to prove their open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession of the subject lots for the period of time required by law. The OSG also submits that the subject lands were declared as alienable and disposable only on October 30, 1986. HECTaA
We deny the petition for lack of merit.
Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act, as amended by P.D. 1073, under which petitioners' application was filed, provides:
SEC. 48. The following described citizens of the Philippines, occupying lands of the public domain or claiming to own any such lands or an interest therein, but whose titles have not been perfected or completed, may apply to the Regional Trial Court of the province or city where the land is located for confirmation of their claims and the issuance of a certificate of title therefor, under the Property Registration Decree, to wit:
xxx xxx xxx
(b) Those who by themselves or through their predecessors[-]in[-]interest have been in the open, continuous, exclusive, and notorious possession and occupation of alienable and disposable agricultural lands of the public domain, under a bona fide claim of acquisition or ownership, since June 12, 1945, except when prevented by war or force majeure. These shall be conclusively presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a Government grant and shall be entitled to a certificate of title under the provisions of this chapter.
xxx xxx xxx 23
Under this provision, in order that petitioners' application for registration of title may be granted, they must first establish the following: (1) that the subject land forms part of the disposable and alienable lands of the public domain and (2) that they have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of the same under a bona fide claim of ownership, since June 12, 1945, or earlier. 24 Applicants must overcome the presumption that the land they are applying for is part of the public domain and that they have an interest therein sufficient to warrant registration in their names arising from an imperfect title. 25
In the instant case, petitioners did not adduce any evidence to the effect that the lots subject of their application are alienable and disposable land of the public domain. Instead, petitioners contend that the subject properties could no longer be considered and classified as forest land since there are building structures, residential houses and even government buildings existing and standing on the area. This, however, is hardly the proof required under the law. As clarified by this Court in Heirs of Jose Amunategui v. Director of Forestry, 26 a forested area classified as forest land of the public domain does not lose such classification simply because loggers or settlers may have stripped it of its forest cover. Parcels of land classified as forest land may actually be covered with grass or planted with crops by kaingin cultivators or other farmers. "Forest lands" do not have to be on mountains or in out-of-the-way places. The classification of land is descriptive of its legal nature or status and does not have to be descriptive of what the land actually looks like. 27 Unless and until the land classified as forest land is released in an official proclamation to that effect so that it may form part of the disposable agricultural lands of the public domain, the rules on confirmation of imperfect title do not apply. 28 As aptly held by the appellate court:
[T]he fact that the area within which the subject parcels of land are located is being used for residential and commercial purposes does not serve to convert the subject parcels of land into agricultural land. It is fundamental that before any land may be declassified from the forest group and converted into alienable or disposable land for agricultural or other purposes, there must be a positive act from the government. A person cannot enter into forest land and by the simple act of cultivating a portion of that land, earn credits towards an eventual confirmation of imperfect title. The Government must first declare the forest land to be alienable and disposable agricultural land before the year of entry, cultivation and exclusive and adverse possession can be counted for purposes of an imperfect title. 29
Moreover, during the hearing of petitioners' application, the Republic presented a Report 30 of Rene Gomez, Land Investigator/Inspector, CENRO No. V-2-3, which disclosed that the lots applied for by the petitioners were classified as alienable and disposable under Project No. 9-E, L.C. Map No. 3393 and released and certified as such only on October 30, 1986. A Compliance 31 dated January 19, 1999 submitted by OIC-CENR Officer Joaquin Ed A. Guerrero to the trial court also stated that Lots. 2199 and 2200 of Cad. 291 were "verified to be within Alienable and Disposable area under Project No. 9-E, L.C. Map No. 3393, as certified on October 30, 1986 by the then Bureau of Forestry". Evidently, therefore, the subject lots were declared alienable and disposable only on October 30, 1986. Prior to that period, the same could not be the subject of confirmation of imperfect title. Petitioners' possession of the subject forest land prior to the date when it was classified as alienable and disposable is inconsequential and should be excluded from the computation of the period of possession. 32 To reiterate, it is well settled that possession of forest land, prior to its classification as alienable and disposable land, is ineffective since such possession may not be considered as possession in the concept of owner. 33 The adverse possession which can be the basis of a grant of title in confirmation of imperfect title cases cannot commence until after forest land has been declared and alienable. 34
Much as this Court wants to conform to the State's policy of encouraging and promoting the distribution of alienable public lands to spur economic growth and remain true to the ideal of social justice, our hands are tied by the law's stringent safeguards against registering imperfect titles. 35 Here, petitioners failed to present "well-nigh incontrovertible" evidence necessary to prove their compliance of the requirements under Section 48 (b) of C.A. No. 141. Hence, the Court of Appeals did not err in dismissing their application for confirmation and registration of title. aSTAIH
WHEREFORE,the petition is hereby DENIED.The Decision dated August 26, 2005 and the Resolution dated February 13, 2006 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 67430 are hereby AFFIRMED.
With costs against the petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Bersamin, Abad ** and Sereno, JJ., concur.
Brion, * J., see separate opinion.
Separate Opinions
BRION, J.:
I concur in the result for the reasons discussed below.
The Facts
The petitioners' father, L. Yu Chang, was the owner of a 400 square meter property located in San Roque,Pili, Camarines Sur. On March 22, 1949,he agreed to exchange this property for a similarly-sized property in San Juan,Pili, Camarines Sur (subject property) owned by the Municipality of Pili (embodied in an Agreement to Exchange Real Property).From then on, L. Yu Chang and his family took possession of the subject property where they constructed a residential house and a gas station. When L. Yu Chang died, his other children ceded their rights to the subject property to the petitioners (as embodied in a Deed of Transfer and Renunciation dated March 1, 1978).
On February 21, 1997,petitioners (as co-owners) filed a petition for registration of title over the subject property,contending that they and their predecessors-in-interest have been in actual, physical, material, exclusive, open occupation and possession of the [subject property] for more than 100 years" and that "they have continuously, peacefully, and adversely possessed the [subject] property in the concept of owners." Hence, they possessed the [subject] property in the concept of owners." Hence, they claimed to be entitled to a confirmation of ownership and the issuance and registration of title in their names.
The Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Pili, Camarines Sur granted the petitioners' application. On appeal, the CA reversed the RTC's decision. Agreeing with the respondent Republic of the Philippines (represented by the Office of the Solicitor General),the Court of Appeals(CA) declared that the petitioners failed to present incontrovertible evidence that the subject property sought to be registered are alienable and disposable, as required under Section 48 (b) of Commonwealth Act No. 141 (Public Land Act).The CA pointed out that, according to official records, the subject property was previously classified as forest land, and was declared disposable public land only on October 30, 1986.Thus, it was only from that time that the period of open, continuous and notorious possession commenced to toll against the State.
The petitioners seek the reversal of the CA's judgment through the present petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court. They insist that the subject property can no longer be considered and classified as forest land because there are buildings, residential houses, and government structures existing on the land. cSEAHa
The Ponencia
The ponenciadenied the petition for lack of merit.
The ponencia declared that a petition for registration under Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act 1 can prosper only if the following are established: (a) that the subject property forms part of the disposable and alienable lands of the public domain, and (b) that the petitioners have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of the subject property under a bona fide claim of ownership since June 12, 1945 or earlier.
The ponencia agreed with the CA and held that the petitioners failed to adduce any evidence showing that the subject property is alienable and disposable land of the public domain; the petitioners' insistence that the subject property can no longer be considered and classified as forest land because there are structures erected thereon is unavailing because "the classification of land is descriptive of the land's legal nature or status, and does not have to be descriptive of the what the land actually looks like." Unless and until a land classified as a forest land is formally declared in an official proclamation to be part of the disposable agricultural lands of the public domain, the rules on confirmation of imperfect title do not apply. 2
Since the subject property was declared alienable and disposable only on October 30, 1986, it is only from that time that the petitioners' possession can be considered as basis to establish their claim of ownership over the subject property. Prior to the classification of a forest land as alienable and disposable agricultural land, the land of public domain cannot be alienated. 3 Prescription does not lie against the State and adverse possession, which is the basis for a confirmation of title, cannot commence. 4 In these lights, the ponencia concluded that the petitioners failed to prove compliance with the requirements of Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act.
An Alternative View
While the ponencia denied the petition and thereby arrived at the correct result, it failed to make the proper consideration in resolving the basic issue presented — i.e.,whether the petitioners have a valid title over the subject property that can be registered under the law.
a. Registration under Section 14 (1) of Property Registration Decree
Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act reads:
Sec. 48. The following-described citizens of the Philippines, occupying lands of the public domain or claiming to own any such lands or an interest therein, but whose titles have not been perfected or completed, may apply to the Court of First Instance of the province where the land is located for confirmation of their claims and the issuance of a certificate of title therefor, under the Land Registration Act, to wit:
xxx xxx xxx
(b) Those who by themselves or through their predecessors in interest have been in open, continuous, exclusive, and notorious possession and occupation of alienable and disposable lands of the public domain, under a bona fide claim of acquisition or ownership, since June 12, 1945, except when prevented by war or force majeure.These shall be conclusively presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a Government grant and shall be entitled to a certificate of title under the provisions of this chapter. DcCHTa
Complementing Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act is Section 14 (1) of Presidential Decree (P.D.) No. 1529 (Property Registration Decree),which provides:
Sec. 14. Who may apply. — The following persons may file in the proper Court of First instance [now Regional Trial Court] an application for registration of title to land, whether personally or through their duly authorized representatives:
(1) Those who by themselves or through their predecessors-in-interest have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of alienable and disposable lands of the public domain under a bona fide claim of ownership since June 12, 1945, or earlier.
Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act is the law that recognizes the substantive right of a possessor and occupant of an alienable and disposable land of the public domain, while Section 14 (1) of the Property Registration Decree recognizes this right by authorizing its registration, thus bringing the land within the coverage of the Torrens System. 5 The mode of acquisition recognized by Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act and made registrable under Section 14 (1) of the Property Registration Decree is through confirmation of an imperfect or incomplete title. 6 Both provisions allow confirmation of an imperfect or incomplete title only if the claimant has been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of alienable and disposable lands of the public domain since June 12, 1945 or earlier.
Parenthetically, I discussed the use of "June 12, 1945" as the cut-off date in my dissenting opinion in Heirs of Mario Malabanan v. Republic, based on the legislative history of the Public Land Act and the Court's ruling in Abejaron v. Nabasa. 7 Prior to the Public Land Act's amendment by P.D. No. 1073, the law provided for "a simple 30-year prescriptive period for judicial confirmation of imperfect title." 8 P.D. No. 1073, however, "changed the required 30-year possession and occupation period provision, to possession and occupation of the land applied for since June 12, 1945, or earlier." 9 The significance of this date though was never explained by the law. In order not to prejudice the vested rights of those who complied with the original 30-year period of possession (but whose possession began only after the June 12, 1945 cut-off date set by P.D. No. 1073), the Court declared that the P.D.'s requirements as inapplicable to them:
Filipino citizens who by themselves or their predecessors-in-interest have been, prior to the effectivity of P.D. 1073 on January 25, 1977, in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of agricultural lands of the public domain, under a bona fide claim of acquisition of ownership, for at least 30 years, or at least since January 24, 1947 may apply for judicial confirmation of their imperfect or incomplete title under Sec. 48(b) of the Public Land Act. 10
Whether the cut-off date is June 12, 1945 or January 24, 1947 (applying the 30-year prescriptive period used prior to the effectivity of P.D. No. 1073), the petitioners' application for registration of land pursuant to Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act [in relation with Section 14 (1) of the Property Registration Decree] should be denied. The facts stated that the petitioners (through their predecessors-in-interest) possessed the subject property only after the March 22, 1949 exchange agreement with the Municipality of Pili. The petitioners' obvious failure to meet the law's alternative deadline renders any discussion of Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act unnecessary. cSEaTH
b. Registration under Section 14 (2) of theProperty Registration Decree
Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act and Section 14 (1) of the Property Registration Decree, however, are not the only open avenues to register title over the land. "[E]ven if possession of the alienable public land commenced on a date later than June 12, 1945, and such possession being open, continuous and exclusive, then the possessor may have the right to register the land by virtue of Section 14 (2) of the Property Registration Decree." 11 Section 14 (2) of the Property Registration Decree states:
SECTION 14. Who may apply. — The following persons may file in the proper Court of First Instance an application for registration of title to land, whether personally or through their duly authorized representatives:
xxx xxx xxx
(2) Those who have acquired ownership of private lands by prescription under the provisions of existing laws.
But this recourse is open only to private lands acquired through prescription; the provision thus calls for the application of Civil Code concepts of private property and prescription.
Prescription is a mode of acquiring ownership and other real rights over immovable property through the lapse of time in the manner and under the conditions laid down by law. 12 Acquisitive prescription of dominion and other real rights may be ordinary or extraordinary. 13 If the applicant's possession of the immovable property is coupled with good faith and just title, the lapse of 10 years is sufficient; 14 otherwise, the law requires 30 years of uninterrupted, adverse possession of the property. 15
Whether ordinary or extraordinary, prescription will run only against properties that are within the commerce of men. Properties of public dominion are not susceptible to acquisitive prescription. 16 Article 1113 of the Civil Code states that property of the State or any of its subdivisions not patrimonial in character shall not be the object of prescription. Properties of the public dominion become patrimonial properties only when they no longer intended for public use or for public service. 17 A land declared as alienable and disposable by the government does not necessarily become patrimonial property; it remains part of the public dominion:
[T]here must be an express declaration by the State that the public dominion property is no longer intended for public service or the development of the national wealth or that the property has been converted into patrimonial. Without such express declaration, the property, even if classified as alienable or disposable, remains property of the public dominion,pursuant to Article 420(2),and thus incapable of acquisition by prescription. It is only when such alienable and disposable lands are expressly declared by the State to be no longer intended for public service or for the development of the national wealth that the period of acquisitive prescription can begin to run.Such declaration shall be in the form of a law duly enacted by Congress or a Presidential Proclamation in cases where the President is duly authorized by law. 18
Thus, the 10 or 30-year period of prescription that Section 14 (2) of the Property Registration Decree and the Civil Code speak of commences to run only from the time the land, separately from being declared alienable and disposable, is declared as patrimonial property of the State, i.e.,properties held by the State in its private capacity. 19 aSTECI
Tested against these requirements in the application of Section 14 (2) of the Property Registration Decree, it is clear that the petitioners' application for registration of their title should be denied. Although the subject property was declared alienable, and disposable by the government on October 30, 1986, the petitioners — for purposes of a claim of prescription — failed to establish whether it had also been declared as patrimonial property.
Thus, the petitioners have no basis to register the subject property either on the basis of Section 14 (1) or 14 (2) of the Property Registration Decree. For this reason, the petition should be denied.
Footnotes
*Designated Acting Chairperson per Special Order No. 925 dated January 24, 2011.
**Designated additional member per Special Order No. 926 dated January 24, 2011.
1.Rollo,pp. 49-60. Penned by Associate Justice Magdangal M. De Leon, with Associate Justices Salvador J. Valdez, Jr. and Mariano C. Del Castillo (now a Member of this Court),concurring.
2.Id. at 64-66. Penned by Associate Justice Magdangal M. De Leon, with Associate Justices Jose L. Sabio, Jr. and Mariano C. Del Castillo (now a Member of this Court),concurring.
3.Id. at 176-182. Penned by Judge Martin P. Badong, Jr.
4."Leoncio Yu Chang" in other parts of the records.
5.Records, pp. 9-11.
6.Exh. "M",Additional Exhibits for the Petitioners.
7.Exh. "M-1",id.
8.Records, pp. 12-13.
9.Lot 2199 was described as follows: "A parcel of land (Lot-2199 of Plan SWO-05-000888 Cad. 291, Pili Cadastre),situated in the Poblacion, Municipality of Pili, Province of Camarines Sur, Island of Luzon. Bounded on the S.W.,along line 1-2 by Lot 2184 on the N.W.,along line 2-3 by Lot 2198, all of Cad. 291, Pili Cadastre, on the N.E.,along line 3-4 by National Road (20.00m. wide) and on the S.E.,along line 4-1 by Lot 2200, SWO-05-000888. Containing an area of ONE HUNDRED THIRTY[-]THREE (133) square meters. ..." (Records, p. 2.)
10.Lot 2200 was described as follows: "A parcel of land (Lot-2200 of Plan SWO-05-000888, Cad. 291, Pili Cadastre),situated in the Poblacion, Municipality of Pili, Province of Camarines Sur, Island of Luzon. Bounded on the N.W.,along line 1-2 by Lot 2199, SWO-05-000888, on the N.E.,along line 2-3 by Lot 2394, beyond by National Road (20.00 m. wide) on the S.E.,along line 3-4 by Lot 1, Cad. 291, Pili Cadastre, (Lot 2, PSU-48590 Port. Accepted),and on the S.W.,along line 4-1 by Lot 2184, Cad-291 Pili Cadastre. Containing an area of TWO HUNDRED SIXTY[-]FOUR (264) square meters. ..." (Id.)
11.Exh. "O",Additional Exhibits for the Petitioners.
12.Records, pp. 1-7. Exh. "A", entitled Re: Petition for Land Registration of Lot 2199 and Lot 2200 of Plan SWO-05-000888, CAD. 291, Pili Cadastre and to Cover the Same under the Operation of the Property Registration Decree and to Have the Title Thereto Registered and Confirmed.
13.Id. at 3; rollo,p. 33.
14.Records, pp. 61-62.
15.Id. at 118.
16.Id. at 181-182.
17.Rollo,p. 57.
18.Id. at 58.
19.Id. 58-59.
20.Id. at 22.
21.Id. at 112-123.
22.Id. at 120.
23.See Agcaoili, PROPERTY REGISTRATION DECREE AND RELATED LAWS (LAND TITLES AND DEEDS), 2006 Ed., p. 69.
24.Ong v. Republic,G.R. No. 175746, March 12, 2008, 548 SCRA 160, 166.
25.Collado v. Court of Appeals,G.R. No. 107764, October 4, 2002, 390 SCRA 343, 361.
26.No. L-27873, November 29, 1983, 126 SCRA 69.
27.Id. at 75.
28.Id.
29.Rollo,pp. 58-59.
30.Exh. "5",Additional Exhs. For the Oppositor.
31.Exh. "R",records, p. 121.
32.Ponciano, Jr. v. Laguna Lake Development Authority,G.R. No. 174536, October 29, 2008, 570 SCRA 207, 227 citing Republic v. Herbieto,G.R. No. 156117, May 26, 2005, 459 SCRA 183, 201-202; Almeda v. Court of Appeals,G.R. No. 85322, April 30, 1991, 196 SCRA 476, 480; Vallarta v. Intermediate Appellate Court,No. L-74957, June 30, 1987, 151 SCRA 679, 690; Republic v. Court of Appeals, No. L-40402, March 16, 1987, 148 SCRA 480, 492.
33.Supra note 23 at 74.
34.See Republic v. Diloy,G.R. No. 174633, August 26, 2008, 563 SCRA 413, 424.
35.Republic v. Bibonia,G.R. No. 157466, June 21, 2007, 525 SCRA 268, 277.
BRION, J.:
1.Sec. 48. The following-described citizens of the Philippines, occupying lands of the public domain or claiming to own any such lands or an interest therein, but whose titles have not been perfected or completed, may apply to the Court of First Instance of the province where the land is located for confirmation of their claims and the issuance of a certificate of title therefor, under the Land Registration Act, to wit:
xxx xxx xxx
(b) Those who by themselves or through their predecessors in interest have been in open, continuous, exclusive, and notorious possession and occupation of alienable and disposable lands of the public domain, under a bona fide claim of acquisition or ownership, since June 12, 1945,except when prevented by war or force majeure.These shall be conclusively presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a Government grant and shall be entitled to a certificate of title under the provisions of this chapter.
2.Ponencia at 7.
3.CONSTITUTION, Article XII, Section 2.
4.CIVIL CODE, Article 1113; Celestial v. Cachopero,G.R. No. 142595, October 15, 2003, 413 SCRA 469.
5.See Heirs of Mario Malabanan v. Republic, G.R. No. 178987, April 29, 2009, 587 SCRA 172, 190-191. I concurred with therein majority's opinion with respect to the relation between Section 48 (b) of the Public Land Act and Section 14 (1) of the Property Registration Decree, see pp. 230-234.
6.Effectively, this is a grant of title by the State under Section 11 (4) of the Public Land Act, which states:
SEC. 11. Public lands suitable for agricultural purposes can be disposed of only as follows and not otherwise:
(1) For homestead settlement;
(2) By sale;
(3) By lease;
(4) By confirmation of imperfect or incomplete title;
(5) By judicial legalization;
(6) By administrative legalization (free patent).
7.G.R. No. 84831, June 20, 2001, 359 SCRA 47.
8.Heirs of Mario Malabanan v. Republic, supra note 2 at 234.
9.Id. at 235.
10.Id. at 236, citing Abejaron v. Nabasa.
11.Heirs of Mario Malabanan v. Republic, supra note 2 at 197.
12.CIVIL CODE, Article 1106. By prescription, one acquires ownership and other real rights through the lapse of time in the manner and under the conditions laid down by law.
In the same way, rights and conditions are lost by prescription. (1930a)
13.CIVIL CODE, Art. 1117. Acquisitive prescription of dominion and other real rights may be ordinary or extraordinary.
14.CIVIL CODE, Article 1134. Ownership and other real rights over immovable property are acquired by ordinary prescription through possession of ten years.
15.CIVIL CODE, Art. 1137. Ownership and other real rights over immovables also prescribe through uninterrupted adverse possession thereof for thirty years, without need of title or of good faith.
16.Celestial v. Cachopero, supra note 4.
17.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;
(2) Those which belong to the State, without being for public use, and are intended for some public service or for the development of the national wealth. (339a)
Art. 421. All other property of the State, which is not of the character stated in the preceding article, is patrimonial property. (340a)
Art. 422. Property of public dominion, when no longer intended for public use or for public service, shall form part of the patrimonial property of the State. (341a)
18.Heirs of Malabanan v. Republic, supra note 2 at 203, which position is similar to what I discussed in my dissenting opinion, at 253-254.
19.CIVIL CODE, Art. 425. Property of private ownership, besides the patrimonial property of the State, provinces, cities, and municipalities, consists of all property belonging to private persons, either individually or collectively.