Conclusive evidence
This case once more demonstrates the value given by the courts on a certificate of title issued under the
The case involved a strip of dry land formed by accretion caused by a river. Adjacent to this dry land was Lot C under the lawful possession of the spouses Pacio and Dory. The couple averred that they and their predecessors in interest had been cultivating the said land adjoining their lot C since it was formed by accretion.
Records however disclosed that in 1938, the said accretion was already surveyed as lot B and subdivided into two lots (B-1 with an area of 17,500 sq.m. and B-2 with an area of 5,492 sq.m.) and that on August 5, 1969 Original Certificate of Title (OCT) No. P-16110 was issued in the name of Marcos.
Sometime in 1982, while the spouses Pacio and Dory were harvesting their crops from the two lots, Marcos arrived and told them that these lots were his properties. Again in 1984, Marcos’ wife Emy told them to stop gathering coconuts from said lots. This prompted Pacio to investigate the claim of Marcos and Emy leading to his discovery that said lots were indeed already under the name of Marcos covered by OCT No. P-16110.
So on
No more. Under the Torrens law, the Original Certificate of Title as well as the owner’s duplicate certificate copy thereof can be received in evidence in all courts of the Philippines and shall be conclusive on all matters contained therein principally as to the identity of the owner of the land concerned. And if there are pre-existing claims and liens which existed prior to the issuance of the Certificate of Title, they are cut off if not noted thereon and the certificate so issued binds the whole world.
In this case the lots Nos. B-1 and B-2 were inside lot B of Marcos as evidenced by Original Certificate of Title No. P-16110 issued on
The Supreme Court here just sustained the findings of facts and rulings of the Regional Trial Court and the Court of Appeals because of the procedural rule that in reviewing said decision on certiorari, it is not a trier of facts and it is not its function to examine and evaluate the probative value of the evidence presented before the concerned tribunal.
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