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Opinion

Possession and ownership

A LAW EACH DAY (KEEPS TROUBLE AWAY) - Jose C. Sison - The Philippine Star

This is an ejectment case where the issue is the prior physical possession of the property or possession de facto, and not the issue of ownership thereof. The question that arose in this case is whether the court can still pass upon the issue of ownership in an ejectment suit. This is answered and explained in our case for today.

The property involved here is a 109-square meter parcel of land covered by a Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) located in a first-class subdivision. It is registered in the name of Mandy and Lina, whose marriage was already declared void because of Mandy’s previous marriage to another woman.

When Lina, who was then working in the US, came home to the Philippines, she was surprised to find out that said property was occupied by persons unknown to her. Upon inquiry, the occupants informed her that they were lessees paying rentals to her nephew Andy. She then told the occupants that she is the owner of the property and that she did not authorize Andy to lease the property to anyone.

Then Lina confronted Andy, who confirmed that he is managing the property and collecting rentals for his aunt Mila, the sister of Lina. Upon telling Andy that she is the owner of the property, Andy and his aunt Mila voluntarily left the premises and turned it over to Lina. So, Lina took possession of the land and designated her other sister Cora to administer it. She also made arrangements with the lessees to pay the rentals to Cora. Thus, she changed the locks of the gate of the property.

Three weeks later, when Lina was back in the US, Cora informed her that Andy and Mila entered the premises by destroying the locks using a bolt cutter and prohibited the tenants from entering the premises. Thus, Cora reported the matter to the barangay and hired a lawyer to demand that Andy, Mila and their tenants turn over possession of the property to her sister Lina. But despite demands, Andy and Mila refused, thereby forcing Lina to file a forcible entry complaint against them.

In answer to the complaint, Mila and Andy averred that the complaint is without legal basis because Lina was not the owner of the property. They insisted that although Lina was described in the property’s title as the wife of Mandy, their marriage was already nullified for being bigamous. Moreover, Mandy already declared that Mila is the new owner of the property.

After trial, the Metropolitan Court (MeTC) rendered a decision in favor of Lina, ordering Mila and Andy to vacate the premises and to pay the reasonable amount of P5,000 as actual damages until they vacate the premises, plus attorney’s fees. This was affirmed by the Regional Trial Court (RTC).

The RTC ruled on the issue of ownership and found that Lina is a co-owner of the property as it was acquired during the subsistence of her marriage to Mandy and that Mandy can only sell his share of the property, but the document he executed in favor of Mila regarding his share in the property is not proof that he transferred ownership thereof to Mila.

The Court of Appeals (CA), however, declared that the forcible entry case is not proper due to the contrasting claim of ownership. So it reversed and set aside the RTC decision without prejudice to the institution by the parties of the proper action before a court of competent jurisdiction to ventilate and resolve with conclusiveness the conflicting claims of ownership over the subject property. Was the CA correct?

The Supreme Court said that the CA is not correct. Even if the issue of ownership is raised in the pleadings, like in this case, the courts may pass upon such issue in an ejectment case which relates only to physical or material possession so as to determine the issue of possession, especially if the former is inseparably linked with the latter.

The Rules of Court in fact expressly allow in Section 16, Rule 70 that the issue of ownership shall be resolved in deciding the issue of possession if the question of possession is intertwined with the issue of ownership. But this provision is only an exception and is allowed only in this limited instance if the question of possession cannot be resolved without deciding the issue of ownership.

For a forcible entry suit to prosper, the plaintiff must allege and prove: (a) that they have prior physical possession of the property; (b) that they were deprived of the possession either by force, intimidation, threat, strategy or stealth and (c) that the action was filed within one year from the time the owners or legal possessors learned of their deprivation of the physical possession of the property. In this case, Lina was already in possession of the property when Andy and Mila forcibly entered it again. (Esperral vs Esperal and Biaoco, G.R. 229076, Sept. 16, 2020)

TCT

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