FIRST DIVISION
[G. R. No. 123490. August 9, 2000]
SPOUSES NENA ARRIOLA and FRANCISCO ADOLFO, GENEROSA
CAWIT-LUMAYNO, MANUEL LUMAYNO, TERESITA LUMAYNO-FLORES, ZENAIDA
LUMAYNO-JACILDO, MADELINE LUMAYNO-PRIEST, MA.VICTORIA LUMAYNO-PETERSEN, and
BEMELO MAHILUM, petitioners, vs. DEMETRIO, LOLITA, PEDRO, NENA, BRAULIO
and DOMINGA, all surnamed MAHILUM, and THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS, 10th
DIVISION, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
PARDO,
J.:
The case before the Court
is an appeal from the decision of the Court of Appeals, the dispositive portion
of which reads:
“WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is hereby REVERSED and set aside and another one rendered declaring:
“1. plaintiffs-appellants as absolute owners of one-half of Lot. No. 1478-B of Escalante Cadastre, less the portions owned by Ugtongan Elementary School and Ricardo Mahilum;
“2. Ricardo Mahilum as the owner of that portion described in TCT No. 60561, which was bought by his predecessor-in-interest Fausto Moncada from Simeon Mahilum;
“3. the government as the owner of that portion sold by Simeon to Ugtongan Elementary School;
“4. the reconstituted title OCT No. RO-1076 in the name of Eusebio Mahilum and all the titles issued resulting from its partition as null and void.
“The heirs of Maximo Mahilum having failed to assert their right over the one-half portion of the whole property, the partition and subsequent transfer of ownership as to this portion stays.
"SO ORDERED."[1]
The facts, as found by
the Court of Appeals, are as follows:
“The subject of the case at bench is a parcel of land known as Lot No. 1478-B of the Escalante Cadastre, located at Ugtongan, Escalante, Negros Occidental, containing an area of 11.1278 hectares.
"Lot No. 1478-B was originally owned by the spouses Eusebio Mahilum and Dionisia Blase. On February 13, 1912, Eusebio and Dionisia sold the land to their son Simeon Mahilum, who took possession thereof and enjoyed the fruits of the land in concept of owner, openly, publicly and uninterruptedly except in 1972. He had the land declared in his name for taxation purposes.
"On March 10, 1931, the Court of First Instance of Negros Occidental acting as a cadastral court rendered judgment adjudicating the land to the spouses Simeon Mahilum and Adriana Pabalate.
"In 1932, Simeon Mahilum sold one-half (1/2) of the property to his brother Maximo.
"Sometime thereafter, Simeon Mahilum sold 500 square meters of the property to Fausto Moncada and another 500 sq. m., more or less to Ugtongan Elementary School.
"On July 2, 1969, at the
instance of his sister Rosario Mahilum, Simeon, who is an illiterate, affixed
his thumbmark on a document denominated as an Extra-Judicial Partition of
Inherited Real Estates[2] on the misrepresentation of Rosario Faustina that
Eusebio Mahilum's heirs would partition three other lots and did not include
Simeon's Lot 1478-B.
"On July 11, 1970, an inexistent title to the land in the names of Sps. Eusebio Mahilum and Dionisia Blase was reconstituted on the strength of the technical description of the land and an affidavit executed by Rosario Mahilum, and OCT No. RO-1076 was issued.
"The defendants-heirs of
Eusebio Mahilum then partitioned the property among themselves to the exclusion
of Simeon Mahilum and on October 26, 1970, the following titles[3] were issued:
“Lot 1478-B-1 TCT#60557 – Joaquin Mahilum
B-3 60559 – Rosario Mahilum
B-4 60560 – Rosario Mahilum having bought Quirino Mahilum’s share
B-5 60561 – Fausto Moncada
B-6 60562 – Eusebio Mahilum and Dionisia Blase
B-7 60563 – Teresita Lumayno having bought Albina Mahilum’s share
B-8 60564 – Felipe Mahilum
B-9 60565 – Heirs of Juan Mahilum
B-10 60566 – Santiago Mahilum ½ and Maximo Mahilum ½
"Later, TCT NO. T-60564 was cancelled and TCT No. T-69709 was issued to defendant spouses Nena Arriola Adolfo and Francisco Adolfo who bought Felipe Mahilum's share; likewise TCT No. T-60561 in the name of Fausto Moncada was cancelled when he sold his lot to spouses Ricardo Mahilum and Elena Bacuado.
"Generosa Cawit Lumayno and Braulio Lumayno later purchased Rosario Mahilum's share and were substituted as party defendants.
"In 1972 Simeon Mahilum discovered that the inexistent title was reconstituted and the property partitioned.
"On March 13, 1973, Simeon
Mahilum and the heirs of Maximo Mahilum filed a complaint for annulment of
title with the then Court of First Instance of Negros Occidental, alleging that
the reconstituted OCT No. RO-1076 was null and void since there was no prior
title to be reconsituted in the name of Eusebio Mahilum and Dionisia
Blase;[4] that Simeon Mahilum was the rightful owner of
Lot 1478-B, the same having been adjudicated to him by the CFI at the
cadastral proceedings in 1931; that Simeon's thumbmarks on the Extra-Judicial
Partition were obtained thru fraudulent misrepresentations. Consequently, all titles that flowed
therefrom are null and void.
"In their answer, defendants contend that the property in question which was owned by Eusebio Mahilum and Dionisia Blase never truly conveyed to Simeon Mahilum. When cadastral proceedings in Escalante, Negros Occidental, went underway, Eusebio Mahilum entrusted to his eldest son, Simeon the task of handling all matters pertaining to the titling of the land inasmuch as he was too old to withstand the rigors attendant to the case, traveling to Bacolod to find a lawyer and to attend the hearings and take care of the other pertinent aspects of the registration proceedings. They assert their right of dominion over their respective portions of the property by reason of inheritance from their deceased parents/grandparents, Eusebio and Dionisia Mahilum.
"For their part, the other defendants profess to be purchasers in good faith not aware of any flaw in their predecessors' titles.
"A second amended complaint was
filed by plaintiffs minus the heirs of Maximo Mahilum as "they are no
longer interested because they have no more father and they have no money to
spend for the case."[5]
"After trial, the lower court rendered the assailed decision, the dispositive portion of which reads:
"WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, the Court hereby:
"1. Orders the dismissal of this case;
"2. Orders the plaintiffs to pay jointly and severally defendants the sum of P5,000.00 as attorney's fees;
"3. Orders respondents Francisco Mahilum and Rosela Mahilum to forthwith surrender possession of the lands owned by defendants Generosa Lumayno and Teresita Lumayno;
“4. Finds the respondent spouses Francisco Mahilum and Rosela Mahilum guilty of contempt of court and sentences them to an imprisonment of TEN (10) days;
" 5. Orders the continued confinement of respondents beyond ten (10) days should they still fail or refuse to restore said defendants-petitioners to the possession of their lands.
" SO ORDERED."[6]
On May 17, 1991,
respondents appealed to the Court of Appeals.[7]
After the parties had
submitted their respective briefs, on September 14, 1995, the Court of Appeals
promulgated its decision reversing the appealed decision, the decretal part of
which is quoted in the opening paragraph of this decision.[8]
Hence, this appeal.[9]
The issues raised are (1)
whether Simeon Mahilum acquired the subject property by purchase from his
parents, or by inheritance, and (2) whether the titles issued as a
result of partition of subject lot were void.
The issues raised are
factual. We may not review the
appellate court's findings of fact in an appeal via certiorari.[10] The findings of fact of the Court of Appeals
supported by substantial evidence are conclusive and binding on the parties and
are not reviewable by this Court,[11] unless the case falls under any of the
exceptions to the rule,[12] such as diverse factual findings of the
lower courts[13] or the findings are entirely grounded on
speculalations.[14] Petitioner failed to prove that the case
falls within the exceptions.[15]
Thus, the question
of whether the subject parcel of land, Lot 1478-B was sold by the
original owners, Eusebio Mahilum and Dionisia Blase to their son Simeon
is a factual issue. Nonetheless, the cadastral court in its decision
rendered in 1931 declared the land to be owned by Simeon. The ruling was uncontested until 1973, when
Simeon filed the complaint for annulment of reconstituted title in
the name of Eusebio Mahilum and Dionisia Blase.
We agree with the Court
of Appeals that it was much too late for petitioners' claim. Laches had set in.[16]
In like manner, we agree with the
Court of Appeals that the partition of the same lot was fraudulent. Rosario knew there was no other way to
obtain the partition of the subject property than having her brother
Simeon sign a deed of partition, making the latter believe that the deed
pertained to the three other lots. The
scheme was simple enough considering that Simeon was illiterate. The law, however, requires that in
case one of the parties to a contract is unable to read and fraud is alleged,
the person enforcing the contract must show that the terms thereof have
been fully explained to the former.[17]
We are not persuaded that Rosario clearly and
fully explained the contents of the deed of partition to her brother
Simeon. Petitioners' allegations are
negated by the fact that Simeon not only strongly opposed the survey of the
land in 1970 but also filed a complaint for annulment of reconstituted title in
1973. Consent, having been obtained by fraud, the deed entered into could be
annulled.[18] Hence, if the deed was null, the
reconsituted title and all transfer titles arising therefrom were also void.[19]
IN VIEW WHEREOF, the Court DENIES the petition for review,
hereby AFFIRMING the decision of the Court of Appeals.
No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J.,
(Chairman), Puno, Kapunan, and Ynares-Santiago,
JJ., concur.
[1] In
CA-G.R. CV No. 34520, promulgated September 14, 1995, Solano, J., ponente,
Benipayo and Galvez, JJ., concurring.
[2]
Exh. “2”, Original Record, Vol. I, pp. 16-17
[3] Original
Record, Vol. I, pp. 18-28.
[4]
Rosario Mahilum’s deposition, p. 10, Original Record, Vol. I, p. 248.
[5]
TSN, June 10, 1985, p. 10.
[6] Petition,
annex “A”, Rollo, pp. 44-52.
[7] Docketed
as CA-G.R. CV No. 34520.
[8] Petition,
Annex “A”, Rollo, pp. 44-52.
[9] Filed
on February 15, 1996, Petition, Rollo, pp. 10-43. On November 20, 1996, we gave due course to
the petition.
[10] Rongavilla
vs. Court of Appeals, 294 SCRA 289 [1998]; Cristobal vs. Court of
Appeals, 353 Phil. 320 [1998]; Sarmiento vs. Court of Appeals, 353 Phil.
834 [1998]; Concepcion vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 120706, January
31, 2000, citing Congregation of the Religious of the Virgin Mary vs.
Court of Appeals, 353 Phil. 591 [1998] and Sarmiento vs. Court of
Appeals, supra.
[11] Atillo
vs. Court of Appeals, 266 SCRA 596 [1997]; Baricuatro vs. Court
of Appeals, G.R. No. 105902, February 9, 2000, citing Titong vs. Court
of Appeals, 287 SCRA 102, 111 [1998]; Bañas vs. Court of Appeals, G.R.
No. 102967, February 10, 2000, citing Guerrero vs .Court of Appeals, 285
SCRA 670, 678 [1998], Sta. Maria vs. Court of Appeals, 285 SCRA 351,
357-358 [1998], citing Medina vs. Asistio, 191 SCRA 218, 223-224 [1990].
[12] Cebu
Shipyard and Engineering Works, Inc. vs. William Lines, Inc., 306 SCRA
762, 774-775 [1999]; Fuentes vs. Court of Appeals, 268 SCRA 703 [1997].
[13] Yobido
vs. Court of Appeals, 281 SCRA 1 [1997].
[14] Philippine
Deposit Insurance Corporation vs. Court of Appeals, 283 SCRA 462 [1997];
Baricuatro vs. Court of Appeals, supra.
[15] Rivera
vs. Court of Appeals, 348 Phil. 734, 743 [1998].
[16] Olizon v. Court of Appeals, 236 SCRA 148,
[1994]; Heirs of Teodoro de la Cruz vs. Court of Appeals, 298 SCRA 172
[1998], citing Lola vs. Court of Appeals, 145 SCRA 439 [1986].
[17] Article 1332, Civil Code of the Philippines; Lustan vs.
Court of Appeals, 266 SCRA 663 [1997].
[18] Article
1330, Civil Code of the Philippines; Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage
System vs. Court of Appeals, 297 SCRA 287 [1998]; Theis vs. Court
of Appeals, 268 SCRA 167 [1997].
[19] Jose
vs. Court of Appeals, 192 SCRA 735 [1990].