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5 Francisco VS Ca

This document is a summary of a Supreme Court of the Philippines case from 1980. It describes a land dispute where the trial court initially registered the land to private respondents Alejandro Santos and Ramona Francisco based on an ex-parte hearing. Petitioner Fausta Francisco then filed a petition for review alleging she and her family had possessed the land since time immemorial. The trial court, after holding a trial where both parties testified, then reversed its initial decision and registered the land to Fausta Francisco instead. The Court of Appeals later reversed this second decision, but one justice dissented finding Fausta Francisco had actually possessed the land.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
77 views7 pages

5 Francisco VS Ca

This document is a summary of a Supreme Court of the Philippines case from 1980. It describes a land dispute where the trial court initially registered the land to private respondents Alejandro Santos and Ramona Francisco based on an ex-parte hearing. Petitioner Fausta Francisco then filed a petition for review alleging she and her family had possessed the land since time immemorial. The trial court, after holding a trial where both parties testified, then reversed its initial decision and registered the land to Fausta Francisco instead. The Court of Appeals later reversed this second decision, but one justice dissented finding Fausta Francisco had actually possessed the land.

Uploaded by

Jasper Lim
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 7

7/11/2020 G.R. No.

L-35787

Today is Saturday, July 11, 2020

Constitution Statutes Executive Issuances Judicial Issuances Other Issuances Jurisprudence International Legal Resources AUSL Exclusive

Republic of the Philippines


SUPREME COURT
Manila

SECOND DIVISION

G.R. No. L-35787 April 11, 1980

FAUSTA FRANCISCO, petitioner,


vs.
COURT OF APPEALS, ALEJANDRO F. SANTOS and RAMONA FRANCISCO (Substituted by JOSE SAN
DIEGO; CELSO GARROVILLAS, HONORIO GARROVILLAS, EDILBERTO GARROVILLAS, AMALIA
GARROVILLAS; VIRGINIA GARROVILLAS, PACITA GARROVILLAS and LOPE GARROVILLAS), respondents.

Sumulong Law Office for petitioner.

Candido G. del Rosario & Associates for private respondents.

BARREDO, J.:

Petition for review of the judgment rendered by a vote of 3 to 2 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. No. 37818-R,
entitled Alejandro F. Santos and Ramona Francisco, applicants-respondents, vs. Fausta Francisco, petitioner-
appellee, reversing the decision of the Court of First Instance of Rizal in Land Registration Case No. N-4383, L.R.C.
Record No. N-25140, wherein said trial court granted the petition for review of the decree of registration earlier
issued by it, after a virtually ex-parte hearing and judgment, and ordered said previous decision and decree set
aside and the land in question registered instead in the name of now herein petitioner Fausta Francisco.

As recounted in the original decision of the Court of Appeals, on May 23, 1964, the aforementioned trial court
rendered a decision ordering the registration of the land in dispute situated in Barrio Singalong, Antipolo, Rizal, in
the names of herein private respondents Alejandro F. Santos and Ramona Francisco, which decision became final
and executory, and on June 27, 1964 the order was issued to the Land Registration Commission to issue the
corresponding decree, which it did, No. N-99323 on July 13, 1964, followed by the issuance of Original Certificate of
Title No. 4064 in their names.

According to the Record on APPEAL on July 31, 1964, herein petitioner Fausta Francisco, filed a petition for review
alleging under oath inter alia that:

2. She is the absolute owner in fee simple of the land applied for in this case, which is situated in Barrio
Singalong, Municipality of Antipolo, Province of Rizal and covered by Plan Psu-1992781 and now
embraced in Original Certificate of Title No. 4064 of the Register of Deeds of the Province of Rizal.

3. She and her predecessors in interest have been in continuous, open, adverse, peaceful and
uninterrupted possession of the land in dispute since time immemorial.

4. Alejandro F. Santos and Ramona Francisco obtained a Decree of Registration No. N-99332 for the
parcel of land in question through fraud. In their application dated October 29, 1963, they claimed to be
the owners of this parcel of land by possession. This is not true. Alejandro F. Santos and Ramona
Francisco have never been in possession of the parcel of land in question.

5. Petitioner and her five (5) brothers and sisters namely, Anastacia, Leoncio, Paula, Perfecta, all
surnamed Francisco, with residence in Morong, Rizal and Venancia Francisco Nepomuceno, residing
in Calumpang, Marikina, Rizal, who are the adjacent registered owners of the land in question, were
not notified of any alleged survey of this land nor of the present application for registration.

6. Neither petitioner nor her tenant was notified of the alleged survey nor of the present application for
registration as actual occupant and possession of the land in question.

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7. Notice of this land registration proceedings was published in The Official Gazzette but herein
petitioner does not read it.

8. The land in question was never actually surveyed by or for the applicants for reason among others
that when petitioner caused the recent survey of the same there were no monuments found on this
land.

Herein private respondents opposed the above petition for review maintaining principally that:

4. That in her petition for review, petitioner claims to be the owner of the land covered by the decree of
registration but failed to state in said petition how she became the owner thereof and under what color
of title does she claim to be owner of the land; neither did petitioner attached any instrument supporting
her claim other than a supposed affidavit of merit signed by her alone containing allegations amounting
to the existence of intrinsic fraud only; that assuming without admitting that there was indeed intrinsic
fraud, nevertheless said allegations even if true is not sufficient ground for reopening and review of the
corresponding decree of registration;

5. That petitioner's petition is not sufficient in form and substance and therefore should be dismissed by
the Honorable Court. In support of this contention, we most respectfully quote the following doctrine:

The essential requisite for a valid petition for the reopening and review of a decree under Sec. 38 of Act
496 is that it be made only by a person who has been deprived of land or of any interest therein by
virtue of the decree sought to be reconsidered. A mere claim of ownership is not sufficient and the
petition of any person whose interest in the land is short of absolute ownership, lacks the essential
requisite, and for that reason should not be considered. Thus in the case of Broce vs. Apurado, 26 Phil.
581, 586, the Supreme Court clearly and unequivocably said: "In order to obtain the benefits of section
38 the applicant (1) must have an estate or interest in the land, and (2) must show fraud in the
procurement of the decree of registration. A mere claim of ownership is not sufficient to avoid a
certificate of title obtained under the Land Registration Act.' (Philippine Land Registration Law, Vargas,
Mañalac & Manalac p. 284). (Rec. on Appeal, pp. 20-22.)

It may be noted at this point that because the Bureau of Lands withdrew its opposition to herein respondents'
application, Judge Guillermo Torres, the trial judge, commissioned the clerk of court to receive their evidence and
subsequently rendered his original favorable decision. In contrast, when Judge Torres gave due course to herein
petitioner's petition for review, he held a trial and heard the evidence of the parties himself, with private respondent
Alejandro F. Santos and his former witnesses Lauro Cruz and Eugenio Francisco as well as petitioners and her
witnesses testifying in open court. After such trial, on April 5, 1966, the same judge, the Honorable Guillermo Torres,
rendered the new decision now in dispute reversing that of May 23, 1964, thus setting aside the latter, the decree of
registration and original certificate of title of private respondents issued pursuant thereto and ordering in stead that
the land under litigation be registered in the name of petitioner. When Justice Mateo Canonoy prepared the first draft
of the decision, the other two members of the Division, Justices Antonio Lucero and Eulogio Serrano disagreed with
him. Justices Juan F. Enriquez and Manuel P. Barcelona were designated to join to form the division of five required
by law, and on March 17, 1972, with Justice Canonoy as ponente and Justices Enriquez and Barcelona concurring,
the decision favorable to herein private respondents was promulgated. Justice Serrano dissented in-art extended
opinion pointing out the existence of actual fraud committed by private respondents in securing the judgment in their
favor and sustaining, with a careful analysis of the relevant and material evidence, the contention of petitioner that
she, by herself and thru her predecessor in interest has been the one, instead of respondents, in continuous, open,
adverse possession of the land in issue, under a claim of title. In due time, petitioner filed a motion for
reconsideration. which was denied with the same votation.

In reversing himself in the 'light of the evidence he himself had subsequently heard, instead of his clerk of court,
unlike in the original proceeding, Judge Torres reasoned out and made 'his findings thus:

Petitioner alleges in her petition for review that applicants Alejandro F. Santos and Ramona Francisco
obtained through fraud Decree No. N-99332; that she is the absolute owner in fee simple of that parcel
of land in question situated in Barrio Singalong, Municipality of Antipolo, Province of Rizal described in
Plan Psu-1992791 and embraced in Original Certificate of Title No. 4064 of the Registry of Deeds of
the Province of Rizal; that she has been in possession of said land, together with her father who is her
predecessor in interest, openly, peacefully, adversely and continuously since time immemorial On the
other hand, applicants-respondents contend in their application for registration that the land in question
was owned by applicant Alejandro Santos' father, Toribio Santos, and that upon the latter's death in
1922, he inherited the said parcel of land. However in the presentation of his evidence in this petition
for review, Alejandro F. Santos testified that this land had no previous owner; that he merely occupied
this land sometime in 1920 and had been in possession of the same for more than thirty years.

The main issues in this case are: (a) Whether or not the applicant secured thru fraud Decree No. N-
99332 and (b) Who is the true and absolute owner of the land in question.
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It appears clearly from the evidence that since 1918, Diego Francisco, father of petitioner, had
occupied the parcel of land in question; that this land is a portion of a bigger parcel of land with an area
of fifty hectares which was occupied and possessed by Diego Francisco since 1918. Comprising this
fifty-hectare parcel of land are the land in question described in Plan Psu-199278, Exhibit A, the land
described in Plan Psu-199277, Exhibit B, and the land described in plan H-1 14240, Exhibit C,
embraced in Transfer Certificate of Title No. 23434, Exhibit J, formerly the homestead patent of Diego
Francisco. The whole area of fifty hectares is fenced with barbed wire and planted with mango trees, a
portion planted to palay and a bigger portion devoted to pasturing of carabaos. All these improvements
were introduced by petitioner's father, Diego Francisco, during his lifetime. In 1940, Diego Francisco,
was able to obtain a title on a portion of this big parcel of land, now embraced in Transfer Certificate of
Title No. 23434, Exhibit J, in the names of petitioner Fausta Francisco and her sister and brother,
Anastacia, Leoncio, Venancia, Perfecta and Paula, all surnamed Francisco.

The petitioner's father, Diego Francisco, died in the year 1941 and after his death, petitioner continued
to possess the land in question which was not embraced in Transfer Certificate of Title No. 23434,
Exhibit J, and her possession over said portion of the land is open, public, peaceful, continuous,
adverse against the whole world, and in the concept of an owner. In 1964, petitioner had the land in
question surveyed by a private land surveyor, Jose de Guzman, who, upon inquiry from the Bureau of
Lands, discovered that there was already a survey plan in the name of the applicant in this case,
Alejandro F. Santos. Petitioner likewise discovered that this land is already titled in the name of the said
Alejandro F. Santos.

It was clearly established that petitioner, as adjacent owner of the land in question was not notified of
the alleged survey. The Surveyor's Certificate, Exhibit 6, with respect to notices of adjoining owners
cannot be given any credence. It could be seen from Exhibit 6 that Jose P. Cruz, who is no longer the
adjoining owner of the land in litigation and who is admittedly dead was notified on October 29, 1962
and that said Jose P. Cruz appeared on the date of the survey, although being dead, it was, impossible
for him to appear on the date of the survey. The Santol Creek was also allegedly notified but that it did
not appear. This is ridiculous. The Santol Creek is not a person or entity, and the one notified should
have been the proper government official or office. Similarly, it was made to appear by applicants-
respondents that Diego Francisco, petitioner's father, an adjoining owner, was notified of the survey.
Diego Francisco has been long dead, since 1941, and neither petitioner nor any of her brother or
sisters received the purported notice. By thus avoiding the sending of actual notices to the petitioner
and other interested parties, applicants were able to have the land in question surveyed, Plan Psu-
1992791. It is likewise admitted that neither petitioner nor any of her brother or sisters as adjacent
owners were notified of the registration proceedings in this case. It was established thru the testimony
of the petitioner that she does not read the Official Gazzette, the publication where the notice of initial
hearing was published. By thus avoiding the sending of actual notice of initial hearing to petitioner as
adjoining owner and as actual owner and possessor of the land in question, the applicants were able to
obtain the decision dated May 23, 1964 in their favor. Furthermore, the Court is convinced by the
evidence that it is petitioner and her father before her, who have actually possessed and occupied the
land in question, and not the applicants Alejandro F. Santos and Ramona Francisco. It was shown thru
the testimony of Quiterio San Jose, former Mayor of Teresa, Rizal, who is an adjacent owner across the
Santol Creek, that Alejandro F. Santos was never in possession of this land in question and that it was
Diego Francisco who was the one in possession of this parcel of land during his lifetime and after his
death, his heirs. By virtue of this continuous, adverse, and open possession of the land in question for
forty-seven (47) years now, Fausta Francisco has become the absolute owner of this parcel of land.
(Pp. 26-31, Record on Appeal.)

To the foregoing, We only need to add by adoption the following well taken discussion by distinguished counsel of
petitioner in his memorandum of December 13, 1973:

The true adjoining owners at the

time of the filing of application

When the applicants, the spouses Alejandro Santos and Ramona Francisco, filed their application for
registration on October 29, 1963, they did not state the true adjoining owners at the North, East, and
West, of the land in question.

At the North, they stated that the adjoining owner was Diego Francisco, when in truth and in fact, as
they knew full well, Diego Francisco died in 1942 and his homestead patent title over the land at the
North had been cancelled and transferred to his children-heirs namely Fausta (petitioner herein),
Anastacia, Paula, Perfects, Venancia, and Leoncio, all surnamed Francisco (see TCT No. 23434
issued to the latter and marked as Exh. 'J').

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At the East, they stated that the adjoining owner was Jose P. Cruz, when in truth and in fact, as they
knew full well, Jose P. Cruz died in 1952 and his homestead patent title over the land at the East had
been cancelled and transferred to Estela Angeles to whom his children (Lauro Cruz and two others
sold on January 1, 1954 (see TCT No. 32697 issued to Estela Angeles marked as Exh. 'L-2'). On
November 7, 1957, Estela Angeles sold the land to Vicente Antonio who issued T. C. T. No. 32697
(Exh. 'L-3'). On August 31, 1959, Vicente Antonio sold the land in favor of Antonio Astudillo (TCT No.
96527 (Exh. 'L-4'), who in turn sold the land to Arturo Rojas (TCT No. 100145 (Exh. 'L-5') who on May
22, 1962 sold the land to Pilar v. Romack who was issued T. C. T. No. 100146 on June 7, 1962.

At the West, they stated that the adjoining owner was Eugenio Francisco, when in truth and in fact, as
they knew full well, at the time of the filing of their application, Paula Francisco (sister of petitioner
Fausta Francisco) was the actual occupant and possessor of the said parcel of land. The application
for registration of the said land filed by Eugenio Francisco in the Court of First Instance of Rizal was
opposed by Paula Francisco and is to be noted that Eugenio Francisco was not even present during
the hearing and did not continue presenting evidence. After Pauli Francisco had presented her
evidence, the Court of First Instance decided that the said land at the West should be registered and
decreed in the name of Paula Francisco, which decision became final as Eugenio Francisco did not
appeal therefrom, resulting in the issuance of decree and OCT No. 6945 to Paula Francisco (see the
said decision of the CFI Rizal attached to our motion for reconsideration dated August 26, 1966 filed
with the respondent Court of Appeals, Annex 'B' of Petition).

Motive of the Applicants in not stating the true adjoining owners

The intent and motive of applicants in not stating that the true adjoining co-owners at the North were
Fausta Francisco and her sisters and brother, was because they knew that Fausta was the one
occupying the land in question or at least that Fausta was claiming the land in question to be hers, so if
notice of their application for registration were sent to her as an adjoining co-owner at the North, she
would surely oppose their application for registration.

The intent and motive of the applicants in making it appear that the adjoining owner at the East was still
Jose P. Cruz, when in truth it was already Estela Angeles, was because they were intending to utilize
Lauro Cruz (son of Jose P. Cruz) as their witness to testify, as he did testify, before the Deputy Clerk of
Court that he was the boundary owner at the East and as such knew that applicant Alejandro Santos
had been in possession of the land in question since 1929 when the latter's father died.

The intent and motive of the applicants in not stating the true fact that both Eugenio Francisco and
Paula Francisco were claiming to be the owners of the land at the West, was because they knew that
Paula was the sister of petitioner Fausta Francisco, so if notice of their application for registration were
sent to Paula as one of the claimants to the land at the West, Paula would surely tell her sister Fausta
about it, and the latter would surely oppose their application for registration. Moreover, applicants were
intending to utilize Eugenio Francisco as their witness to testify, as he did testify, before the Deputy
Clerk of Court that he was the boundary owner at the West and as such knew that the applicant
Alejandro Santos had been in possession of the land in question since 1929 when the latter's father
died.

It will thus be seen that the applicants did not state the true adjoining owners with the deliberate
intention of preventing notices of their application for registration to be sent to petitioner Fausta
Francisco and to her sister Paula Francisco, and in that way prevent petitioner from appearing in the
land registration case and file an opposition to their application for registration. (Pp. 198-201, Record.)

Indeed, how could two dead persons and a creek be legally upheld as having been separately properly notified of
the application here under discussion? It is high time, the Court made it patently clear and emphasized that it is the
inescapable duty of surveyors to find out by themselves who are the occupants and boundary owners of any land
being surveyed by them for purposes of registration. Beyond doubt, had the surveyors of respondents complied with
this simple and logical obligation imposed by the very nature of their professional undertaking, the obvious
anomalies extant in the instant case would not have happened. No dead persons nor a creek could have been
certified as duly notified by the Land Registration Office of the application!

Besides, as pointed out in the above-quoted portions of petitioner's memorandum, the boundary owner at the north
in 1963 when the application of respondents was filed could not have been Diego Francisco, for the simple reason
that said person had died twenty-one years before or in 1942. Factually, under ordinary circumstances, if
respondents were indeed in possession of the land in dispute, it stands to reason they would have known of their
neighbor's long demise. More, legally speaking, Diego Francisco had a Torrens Title which was duly transferred
subsequently in TCT 23434 (Exh. J) to the name of his children. Registration under the Torrens System constitutes,
at the very least, constructive notice to any boundary owner of who is his neighbor.

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The same observations may be made insofar as Jose P. Cruz, the alleged former boundary owner in the east. He
had died in 1952, eleven years before the application, and the title he had acquired over his land had been
transferred several times in the Office of the Register of Deeds to Estela Angeles, T. C. T. 32697, Exh. L-2; to
Vicente Antonio, T. C. T. No. 32697 (sic) Exh. L-3; to Antonio Astudillo, T. C. T. 96527, Exh. L-4; to Arturo Rojas, T.
C. T. 100145, E Exh. L-5; to Pilar V. Romack, T. C. T. 100146 on June 7, 1962. (See Petitioner's memo pp. 1-2.)
These facts have never been denied in any pleading of respondents.

Again, respondents knew or ought to have known that the boundary owner in the west could not have been Eugenio
Francisco, because it is judicial record that OCT No. 6945 was actually issued to Paula Francisco who had opposed
Eugenio's attempt to have the land registered in his name. (See Annex B of the petition.)

In addition, it is admitted that petitioner was never notified of the application, let alone her not having had any
chance to read or perhaps even know the Official Gazzette.

In the light of the foregoing, the matters that require Our resolution in the instant case may be said to be one of
mixed fact and law, but apparently more legal than factual. Did respondents commit fraud of the nature
contemplated in Section 38 of the Land Registration Act, (Act 496) that would warrant the cancellation of the decree
of registration and Torrens Title already issued to them? The pole star jurisprudential pronouncements in this
respect are found, as every student of Land Registration knows, in Grey Alba vs. De la Cruz, 17 Phil. 49, by Justice
Trent. Therein, it was declared definitely that a land registration proceeding is one in rem and notice thereof by
publication binds the whole world, inclusive of those who may be adversely affected thereby, innocent factually as
they might have been of such publication. Understandably, such a rule could be the only way to give meaning to the
finality and indisputability of the Torrens title to be issued. It may be said that to a certain degree such a strict rule
could result in actual injustice, considering not only the rather irregular publication of the Official Gazzette and other
publications, and, of course, the illiteracy, not to speak, of the inaccessability to those concerned of such
publications.

Thus, Grey Alba should not be read, as the majority in the Court of Appeals decision under review, did as entirely
depriving victims of obvious fraudulent intent of the remedy of having a decree reopened. This is clear in that
decision itself. As the present Chief Justice, Hon. Enrique M. Fernando, pointed out in Minlay vs. Sandoval 53
SCRA 1, "all that is required is a showing according to this leading Grey Alba decision" of intention to deprive
another of (his) just rights, which constitutes the essential characteristic of actual fraud." And in this connection, the
Chief Justice went on thus: "It is to be stressed likewise that the Land Registration Act commands that the applicant
'shall also state the name in full and the address of the applicant, and also the names and addresses of all
occupants of the land and of all adjoining owners, if known; and, if not known, it shall state what search has been
made to find them (Section 21 of Act No. 496 [1902].) What can be clearer, therefore, than that the lower court was
not sufficiently mindful of what the law ordains when it refused to hear petition petitioner on his claim that appellee
Sandoval was guilty of fraud in including in his application the disputed lot." The pertinent statutory provision reads
thus:

SEC. 21. The application shall be in writing, signed and sworn to by the applicant, or by some person
duly authorized in his behalf. All oaths required by this Act may be administered by any officer
authorized to administer oaths in the Philippine Islands. If there is more than one applicant, the
application shall be signed and sworn to by and in behalf of each. It shall contain a description of the
land and shall state whether the applicant is married; and, if married, the name of the wife or husband;
and, if unmarried, whether he or she has been married, and, if so, when and how the married relation
terminated. If by divorce, when, where, and by what court the divorce was granted. It shall also state
the name in full and the address of the applicant, and also the names and addresses of all occupants
of the land and of all adjoining owners, if known; and, if not known, it shall state what search has been
made to find them. It may be in form as follows:

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

To the Honorable Judge of the Court of Land Registration:

I (or we) the undersigned, hereby apply to have the land hereinafter described brought under the
operation of the Land Registration Act, and to have my (or our) title therein registered and confirmed.
And I (or we) declare: (1) That I am (or we are) the owner (or owners) in fee simple (or by possessory
information title) of a certain parcel of land with the buildings (if any, if not, strike out the words 'with the
buildings'), situated in (here insert accurate description). (2) That said land at the last assessment for
taxation was assessed at ... dollars. (3) That I (or we) do not know of any mortgage or encumbrance
affecting said land, or that any other person has any estate or interest therein, legal or equitable in
possession remainder, reversion, or expectancy (if any, add 'other than as follows,' and set forth each
clearly). (4) That I (or we) obtained title (if by deed, state name of grantor, date and place of record, and
file the deed or state reason for not filing. If any other way, state it (5) That said land is ... occupied (if
occupied, state name in full and place of residence and post office address of occupant and the nature
of this occupancy. If unoccupied, insert 'not'). (6) That the names and addresses so far as known to me
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(or us) of the owners of all lands adjoining the above land are as follows (same directions as above.)
(7) That I am (or we are) married. (Follows literally the directions given in the prior portions of this
section.) (8) That my (or our) full name (or names), residence, and post office address is (or are) as
follows:

.......................…………Dated this day ......... of ................... in the year nineteen hundred and
.........................

(Signature).............................

(SCHEDULE OF DOCUMENTS)

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

Province (or city) of.................................. ...........................(date.

There personally appeared the above-named....................... known to me to be the signer (or signers)
of the foregoing application, and made oath that the statements therein, so far as made of his (or their)
own knowledge, are true and so far as made upon information and belief, that he (or they) believe them
to be true. The residence certificate................ of the applicant (or applicants, or representative) was
exhibited (or applicants, or representative) was exhibited to me being No. ............... issued
at.................. dated....................., 19 ....

BEFORE ME:

(Notary Public or other official authorized to administer oaths)

As maybe readily noted, No. (6) of the suggested sufficient form says: "That the names and addresses so far as
known to me (or us) of the owners of all lands adjoining the above land are as follows (same directions as above But
more importantly, it should be borne in mind, the text of the law requires not mere statement of the lack of
knowledge of the names of the occupants and adjoining owners by also "what search has been made to find them."
As earlier indicated, respondents could not have escaped, if they had "search(es)" as the law definitely mandates,
the names of their "colindantes.", it being a fact that the latter's lands were duly registered. Surely, they would have
known, as it can be presumed they did, that Diego Francisco and Jose P. Cruz, whom they would name as
boundary owners in their application in 1963 had already been long dead and buried. In Grey Alba, the reason found
by the Court for the failure of the applicant to notify the acknowledged occupant of the land applied for was because,
from the circumstances known to them, it was evident that they were no more than their lessees and could have had
no registerable interest at all in the property, which is far from what happened in the instant case. Here, We cannot
bring Ourselves to believe that the naming of Diego Francisco and Jose P. Cruz, two persons long dead, as
boundary owners in their application, not to speak of the "creek", (who was also "proven" to have been notified)
does not constitute actual fraud. Petitioner's evidence of her own occupancy, considering it is contradicted by
respondents' evidence, need not be mentioned anymore. Anyway, the unrebuttable proof alone is to Us sufficient by
and large, to uphold not only the dissenters in the Court of Appeals but also the trial judge who had heard the
respondent Alejandro Santos and his witness Lauro Cruz somehow deviate substantially and materially from their
testimonies given before the clerk of court in the original proceeding.

In Grey Alba itself, We find the following significant pronouncements at p. 50, (Vol. 17, Phil.) "By fraud is meant
actual fraud, dishonesty of some sort. This meaning should be given to the word 'fraud' in section 38 of the Land
Registration Act. Proof of constructive fraud is not sufficient to authorize the Court of Land Registration to reopen a
case and modify its decree. Specific acts intended to deceive and deprive another of his right, or to in some manner
injure him must be alleged and prove'.

We hold that as above discussed, the majority decision of the Court of Appeals under review, cannot be reconciled
even with Grey Alba. The emphasis given in that decision to the in rem character of land registration proceedings
and the broad legal significance of such kind of proceeding could not have by any degree minimized the
paramouncy of truth and justice itself in any actual case before the court. As Our Chief Justice quoted from Justice
Torres "The registration of (land) cannot serve as a protecting mantle to cover and shelter bad faith" (p. 12, 53
SCRA), just as it is reiterated therein what We said in Estiva v. Alvero, 37 Phil. 498, "it is fraud to knowingly omit or
conceal a fact, upon which benefit is obtained to the prejudice of a third person." (taken from Nicolas vs. Director of
Lands, 9 SCRA 934, at p. 938.) Accordingly, it is Our considered opinion that in law, the better view is that of the
distinguished dissenters in the Court of Appeals, and We find no alternative but to uphold the same. Incidentally, the
binding force of a finding of fact of the Court of Appeals, assuming the instant case were in any degree factual in
nature, diminishes correspondingly according to the number and content of the dissent, when there is or are any. In
the case at bar, it is Our conclusion that the majority's bases, much more its reliance in their purely literal
understanding of Grey Alba do not conform with the dictates of truth and justice.

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7/11/2020 G.R. No. L-35787

WHEREFORE, the decision of the Court of Appeals under review is reversed, and the second decision of Judge
Guillermo Torres of April 5, 1966 is affirmed, without prejudice to petitioner and the trial court complying with the
additional requirements for the issuance of the corresponding title in favor of petitioner. Costs against private
respondents.

Antonio, Aquino, Concepcion, Jr., Guerrero and De Castro, JJ., concur.

The Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation

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