G.R. No. 48714 - Gregorio Jandusayvs. Court of Appeals
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
G.R. No. L-48714 April 18, 1989
GREGORIO JANDUSAY, EUSEBIO JANDUSAY, DEMETRIA JANDUSAY and LEONILA FABRO,petitioners,
vs.
COURT OF APPEALS, EMETERIA SALVA, ESPERANZA SALVA, PEDRO LAZO, PAULA LAZO BRIGIDO LAZO, JULIO LAZO, ARCADIA LAZO, and MACARIA LAZO,respondents.
Vicente M. Macabidang, Sergio Angeles & Associates for petitioners.
R. Estrella and P. Funelas for respondent Macaria Lazo.
NARVASA,J.:
The controversy at bar concerns the ownership of one of two pieces of land embraced in a Torrens title: Parcel No. 1 of Original Certificate of Title No. 61 of the Registry of Deeds of Oriental Mindoro, issued on August 7, 1911 in the name of Jorge Lingon, married to Arcadia Ganibo The lot is situated in Barrio Catiningan Pola Oriental Mindoro and has an area of 84,964.25 square meters, more or less.
1) on the one hand, the collateral relatives of Jorge Lingon, herein private respondents, who — after the death of Lingon on February 16, 1949 without issue (his wife, Arcadia Ganibo having died earlier) — adjudicated unto themselves the property covered by OCT No. 61 in virtue of a Deed of Extrajudicial Partition executed on January 14, 1956 and thereafter caused cancellation of said title and the issuance of a new one in their names, TCT No. T-5420 ;
2) on the other, the petitioners herein, the heirs of Dominga Marquez, who claim that in January, 1915 Jorge Lingon had sold the land embraced in OCT No. 61 to a certain Mariano Lontok for P500 by a deed allegedly thumb-marked by Lingon before the Justice of the Peace of Pola, Oriental Mindoro, which deed was not however registered; that by a deed entitled "Escritura de Compraventa" executed on April 30, 1917 and another entitled "Transfer of Real Property" executed on July 24, 1918, Mariano Lontok had conveyed the same property to Dominga Marquez; and that Dominga Marquez and her children had thereafter taken possession of the land and declared it for taxation purposes since 1918.
Litigation over said Parcel No. 1 of OCT NO. 61 began with the filing of a complaint for recovery of possession thereof in the Court of First Instance of Oriental Mindoro by herein private respondents, the heirs of Jorge Lingon, hereafter collectively referred to simply as the SALVAS.
WHEREFORE, a decision is hereby rendered in favor of the JANDUSAYS and against the SALVAS:
1. Dismissing the action of the SALVAS against the JANDUSAYS in Civil Case No. R-667, with costs against the former in favor of the latter;
2. Declaring the annulment and the consequent cancellation of Transfer Certificate of Title No. T-5420 in the name of the SALVAS over the land in question, as to Parcel No. 1 described therein which is the land in litigation;
3. Ordering the Register of Deeds of Oriental Mindoro to issue a new Transfer Certificate of Title on the same Parcel No. 1 of Transfer Certificate of Title No. T-5420 in the name of JANDUSAYS, specially, Gregorio Jandusay, Demetria Jandusay, Eusebio Jandusay and Leonila Fabro,pro-indivisoin equal parts; and
4. Condemning the SALVAS in Civil Case No. R-668 to pay the costs thereof to the JANDUSAYS in said case.
No pronouncement as to damages in both cases, R-667 and R668.
Both the SALVAS and the JANDUSAYS appealed to the Court of Appeals.
The three (3) justices of the division to which the appeal was initially assigned could not agree on a unanimous verdict;
The Resolution overturned the Decision of November 8, 1976 and disposed of the appeals as follows:
WHEREFORE, granting the Motion for Reconsideration, the judgment appealed from is hereby set aside, and another one entered 1) dismissing Civil Case No. 668-R, the suit for Annulment of Title; and 2) ordering Gregorio Jandusay et al. to surrender possession of Parcel No. I covered by TCT No. T-5420, to Emeterio Salva et al., upon this Decision becoming final. No costs in both instances.
A motion for reconsideration was in due time submitted by the JANDUSAYS, and one for amendment of the resolution, by the SALVAS.ℒαwρhi৷The motions were disposed of by a Resolution dated August 3, 1978,
WHEREFORE, 1) the Motion for Reconsideration filed by the JANDUSAYS is hereby denied for lack of merit; 2) In respect of the Motion for Amendment of our Resolution dated February 28, 1978, Bled by the SALVAS, the Court resolves:
a) The SALVAS are hereby authorized to withdraw the owner's duplicate of Transfer Certificate of Title No. T-5420 attached to the records of this case, under proper receipt;
b) The petition to include compensatory damages in favor of the SALVAS is denied, their entitlement to them not having been indubitably established.
The JANDUSAYS are now before this Court, having timely filed a petition for review oncertiorari,
The JANDUSAYS argue that the challenged resolutions should be set aside because they are tainted by several serious errors.
Their first contestation is that the resolutions reversing, and sustaining reversal of, a special decision of five (5) — having been rendered when there were only three (3) members of that special division, the other two (2) having in the meantime ceased to be members of the Court of Appeals — are "contrary to the letter and spirit of Paragraph 3, of Section 2, Article X of the 1973 Constitution" which in part states that "no decision rendereden bancor in division may be modified or reversed except by the Court sittingen banc." The theory is palpably unmeritorious. A reading of the cited paragraph in the context of the others in the Section at once discloses that it can have no reference except to the Supreme Court, and that indeed it cannot possibly apply to the Court of Appeals since, in the exercise of adjudicatory powers, that Court never sitsen bancbut only in divisions of three justices (or special divisions of five).
The next point that the JANDUSAYS try to make is that the resolutions (a) wrongly concluded that they had failed to establish by preponderance of evidence: (i) the due execution and delivery of the deed of sale of the lot in question by Jorge Lingon in 1915 in favor of Mariano Lontok, and the deed of sale by the latter in 1917 of the same property to Dominga Marquez; and (ii) "the loss and contents of the deed of sale executed in 1915 by Jorge Lingon in favor of Mariano Lontok over the litigated property," and (b) wrongly applied "the survivorship disqualification rule and .. (disregarded) the rules on admission by privy and declaration against interest made by Jorge Lingon" testified to by Demetria Jandusay.
In the proceedings before the Trial Court the JANDUSAYS could not present in evidence the original of the deed of sale allegedly executed in 1915 by Jorge Lingon in favor of Mariano Lontok (from whom, in turn, the Jandusays' predecessor-in-interest had acquired the land in question). It apparently had been lost. They therefore submitted secondary evidence to establish the sale, consisting of the sworn declarations of Mariano Lontok, Severo Geronimo (bilasof Lingon), Enrique Morente, Demetria Jandusay and Gregorio Jandusay.
Now, the findings in the Resolution of February 28, 1978 — to the effect that the evidence had not satisfactorily established "the loss of the deed of sale between JORGE and LONTOK,"
The appealed Resolution correctly applied the so-calledSurviving Party Rule or the Dead Man's Actto exclude the testimony of Demetria Jandusay relative to the statement ascribed to Jorge Lingon that the Jandusays should "not .. insist in having the deed of sale registered or annotated .. as according to him before he dies he would sell his property and that in all probability we might as well but his remaining property."
SEC. 20.Disqualification by reason of interest or relationship.— The following persons cannot testify as to matters in which they are interested, directly or indirectly, as herein enumerated:
(a) Parties or assignors of parties to a case, or persons in whose behalf a case is prosecuted against an executor or administrator or other representative of a deceased person, .. upon a claim or demand against the estate of such deceased person .. cannot testify as to any matter of fact occurring before the death of such deceased person .. ;
x x x x x x x x x
There can be no doubt that the JANDUSAYS' suit in the Trial Court had for its essential object the enforcement of a deed of sale allegedly executed by the deceased Jorge Lingon during his lifetime; so that in truth, and adapting the language of the Dead Man's Act, the JANDUSAYSwere parties or persons in whose behalf a case was being prosecuted upon a claim or demand against the estateof Jorge Lingon. For that sale, supposedly executed about 40 years prior to the institution of the action, was the definitive foundation of the JANDUSAYS' asserted cause of action, i.e., the cancellation of the title of the collateral heirs of the vendor and the reconveyance of the property to them by said heirs, the theory obviously being that at the time of the vendor's death, the property no longer formed part of his estate and therefore could not possibly have been inherited by his heirs. Nor can there be any doubt that the suit was being prosecuted againstrepresentatives of the deceased person,i.e., Lingon's collateral relatives, who had adjudicated the property to themselves as intestate heirs and who, in the action were asserting a defense (denial of the sale) which the deceased might have himself set up if living.
It is not amiss to state in this connection that the challenged Resolution refusal to accord veracity to the statement attributed to Jorge Lingon supposedly asking for deferment of registration of the sale in favor of the JANDUSAYS because it "runs counter to the fact that the partial sales made by JORGE of Parcel No. 2 were all registered," and because the failure of the JANDUSAYS for an unreasonably long period to resort to readily available legal remedies to compel the delivery of the certificate of title and have the sale to them annotated thereon militated against their averment that Lingon had indeed sold the land to them had refused to lend them the title so that the sale could be registered.
The JANDUSAYS also argue that the failure of Jorge Lingon to dispossess them and their predecessors-in-interest from the litigated property for a period of thirty-four (34) years, and a like failure by the SALVAS to do so for seven (7) years, justify the application of the equitable doctrine of laches in their (the JANDUSAYS') favor, as well as the ruling inMejia de Lucas v. Gamponia,100 Phil. 277;Pabalate v. Echavari, Jr.,37 SCRA 518; andHeirs of Lacamen vs. Heirs of Laruan,"65 SCRA 605."
If JORGE's inaction in dispossessing the JANDUSAYS of the LITIGATED PROPERTY can be alleged against him in a question of title, the inaction of the JANDUSAYS or their predecessors-in-interest in not compelling JORGE to formally transfer the title to the LITIGATED PROPERTY to them for several years can also be alleged against the JANDUSAYS in this controversy over title. Further, if, as alleged, inaction of the SALVAS from 1949 when JORGE Lingon died, up to 1956 when they executed the extrajudicial partition, betrayed their hesitancy in taking such step knowing too well the weakness of their claim by the same token, the legal inaction, the failure to take remedial steps of the JANDUSAYS from 1930 when they learned of the existence of the title, up to JORGE Lingon's death in 1949, and thence up to 1956 when they filed their counter-suit against the SALVAS only after the latter had instituted their action for recovery of possession, could also be interpreted as an awareness on their part of the weakness of their claim of title. In other words, 'Laches' and inaction imputed to the SALVAS may likewise be laid at the feet of the JANDUSAYS. The 'laches' of one nullifies the 'laches' of the other. One who seeks equity must himself be deserving of equity. When parties are in culpability similarly situated in eodem loco it is a general principle of law that one may claim no advantage over the other – a principle consistently applied in the 'pari delicto'rule imbedded in our legal system (Arts. 1411, 1412, 100, 453, Civil Code).
The cases of Mejia de Lucas v. Gamponia, 100 Phil. 277 (1956), that ofPabalate v. Echavari, Jr.,.. 37 SCRA 518, which applied it, as well as that of Heirs of Lacamen v. Heirs of Laruan, .. 65 SCRA 605 cannot be invoked herein to justify a judgment in favor of the JANDUSAYS on the ground of laches, due to fundamental differences: 1) the first two cases involved the prohibition against the sale of free patents where under the pertinent law, anoriginal patenteeis given seven years from conveyance within which to bring an action to recover the property. Plaintiffs therein failed to exercise that right within the reglementary period but allowed 37 years (in the Mejia Case) and 32 years (in the Pabalate Case) to lapse; hence, the Supreme Court ruling that the original owners' right to recover the possession of the property and the title thereto from the defendants had, by patentee's inaction and neglect, been converted into a stale demand. In contrast, an action to recover possession of aregisteredland, such as that brought by the SALVAS,never prescribesin view of Section 46 of the Land Registration Act to the effect that no title to registered land in derogation of that of the registered owner shall be acquired by prescription or adverse possession. In fact, as held inJ.M. Tuason & Co. Inc. vs. Macalindong,L-15398, December 29, 1962, 6 SCRA 938, the right to file an action to recover possession based on a Torrens Title is imprescriptible and is not bared under the doctrine of laches. And even if laches were invocable, and that plaintiffs had 'slept on their rights', with equal vigor can it be said that defendants themselves are chargeable with 'Laches. 2) In the three mentioned cases, the fact of sale of the litigated properties was admitted unlike in this case where such sale has beenchallenged,nor has it even been proven. 3) In addition, the sale in this case to the JANDUSAYS was not made by the original registered owner himself. It is merely alleged that he had sold it to LONTOK who, in turn sold it to the JANDUSAYS.
The JANDUSAYS next attack the very title of the SALVAS. They contend that the property covered by OCT No. 61 was conjugal property of the spouses Jorge Lingon and Arcadia Ganibo that upon the latter's death, the widower, Jorge Lingon, inherited only one-half thereof in usufruct "while the naked ownership could be inherited" by the decedent's collateral relatives; that the SALVAS are "not collateral relatives by blood of Jorge Lingon," and could not therefore have validly inherited from him and in truth acquired nothing by their execution of a deed of extrajudicial partition of Lingon's estate, the execution thereof being, in addition, attended by fraud.
WHEREFORE,finding no error in the Resolutions subject of appeal, dated February 28, 1978 and August 3, 1978, the same are herebyAFFIRMEDin all respects. Costs against petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Cruz, Gancayco, Griño-Aquino and Medialdea, JJ., concur.
Footnotes