Civillaw (Property) Memoryaida B O 2001 I - Property: Real Rights Arises From (OPLUMEPARP)
Civillaw (Property) Memoryaida B O 2001 I - Property: Real Rights Arises From (OPLUMEPARP)
Civillaw (Property) Memoryaida B O 2001 I - Property: Real Rights Arises From (OPLUMEPARP)
I – PROPERTY
Requisites:
1. Utility
2. Individuality/Substantivity
3. Susceptibility of appropriation
Real Rights
Personal Rights
Immovable property
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4. By analogy/by law – contracts for public works, servitude & other real rights over
immovable property
Movable property
4. things w/c can be transported w/o impairment of real property where they are fixed
6. shares of stocks of agricultural, commercial & industrial entities although they may have
real estate
Classification of Movables
2. non-consumable
1. Public dominion –
Characteristics:
a) outside the commerce of men – cannot be alienated or leased
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2. Private Ownership –
Title II – OWNERSHIP
Definitions of Ownership
Independent and general right of a person to control a thing particularly in his possession,
enjoyment, disposition, and recovery, subject to no restrictions except those imposed by the
state or private persons, without prejudice to the provisions of the law.
Power of a person over a thing for purposes recognized by law & within the limits
established by law
Attributes:
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2. immovable –
a) forcible entry – used by person deprived of possession through violence, intimidation
(physical possession, 1 year unlawful deprivation)
b) unlawful detainer – used by lessor/person having legal right over property when
lessee/person withholding property refuses to surrender possession of property after
expiration of lease/right to hold property (physical possession, 1 year from unlawful
deprivation)
Elements:
a) Person exercising rights is owner or lawful possessor
Available only when possession has not yet been lost, if already lost – resort to
judicial process
b) owner is unknown
Limitation on Ownership
1. general limitations for the benefit of the state (eminent domain, police power, taxation)
5. inherent limitations arising from conflicts with other similar rights (contiguity of property)
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6. owner cannot make use of a thing which shall injure/prejudice rights of 3rd persons
(neighbors)
7. acts in state of necessity – law permits injury or destruction of things owned by another
provided this is necessary to avert a greater danger (with right to indemnity – vs.
principle of unjust enrichment)
8. true owner must resort to judicial process – when thing is in possession of another; law
creates a disputable presumption of ownership to those in actual possession
a) identify property
b) show that he has better title
Accession – owner of thing becomes owner of everything it may produce or those which
may be incorporated or united thereto
1. principle of justice
Obligation of owners:
a) Immovables – accretion
1. Alluvium - owner of lands adjoining banks of river belongs the accretion gradually
received from effects of the water's current
Requisites:
a. deposit is gradual & imperceptible
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2. Owner of adjoining land to old bed shall have right to acquire the same by
paying its value – value not to exceed the value of area occupied by new bed
3. Right to damages and demolition even if with injury to work if owner of land is in
bad faith
2. Oblige the planter, builder to pay for price of land or rent, except when value of
lands is greater than thing built – convert to rent
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3. Right of retention ceases when obliged to pay for value of and if he fails to do so
4. Right to damages
2. Right to damages
2. When builder is in bad faith & owner in good faith & owner compel builder to
remove improvements, owner is not subsidiarily liable
3. When 3rd person is paid by builder, builder may demand from landowner the
value of labor & materials
b) Movables
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a. that to w/c the other intended to be united as ornament or for its use of
perfection
b. value
c. volume
Rights:
1. If both are in good faith – owner of principal acquired the accessory with
indemnification
2. If both are in good faith – may separate them if no injury will be caused;
Rights:
3. If person who made the transformation is in bad faith, owner of material shall
appropriate the work to himself w/o paying maker or demand indemnity for
value of materials & damages
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3. Commixtion / confusion – 2 things of the same or different kinds are mixed & are
not separable w/o injury
Rights:
1. If both owners are in good faith – Each owner shall acquire a right
proportional to the part belonging to him (vis-a-vis the value of the things
mixed or confused)
2. If one owner is in bad faith – he shall lose the thing belonging to him plus
indemnity for damages caused to owner of other thing mixed with his thing
Reasons:
1. prevent litigation
3. real interest of both parties which requires that precise state of title be known
put end to vexatious litigation in respect to property involved; plaintiff asserts his own
estate & generally declares that defendant’s claim is w/o foundation
when proper:
1. contract has been extinguished or terminated
3. remove cloud
Requisites:
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3. Return to defendant all benefits received – he who wants justice must do justice
2. collapse resulting from total or partial damage; no repair made – owner; state may
compel him to demolish or make necessary work to prevent if from falling
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Co-ownership
Causes/Sources:
1. law
2. contracts
3. succession
e) partners cannot transfer rights w/o consent of other co-partners, not co-ownership
Rights of co-owners
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6. Right to exempt himself from obligation of paying necessary expenses and taxes by
renouncing his share in the pro-indiviso interest; but can’t be made if prejudicial to co-
ownership
7. Right to make repairs for preservation of things can be made at will of one co-owner;
receive reimbursement therefrom; notice of necessity of such repairs must be given to
co-owners, if practicable
9. Right to alienate, assign or mortgage own part; except personal rights like right to use
and habitation
14. Right to share in proceeds of sale of thing if thing is indivisible and they cannot agree
that it be allotted to one of them
Duties/Liabilities
2. Pay necessary expenses and taxes – may be exercised by only one co-owner
4. Duty to obtain consent of all if thing is to be altered even if beneficial; resort to court if
non-consent is manifestly prejudicial
5. Duty to obtain consent of majority with regards to administration and better enjoyment of
the thing; controlling interest; court intervention if prejudicial – appointment of
administrator
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7. Co-owners cannot ask for physical division if it would render thing unserviceable; but can
terminate co-ownership
8. After partition, duty to render mutual accounting of benefits and reimbursements for
expenses
9. Every co-owner liable for defects of title and quality of portion assigned to each of the
co-owner
1. creditors of assignees may take part in division and object if being effected without their
concurrence, but cannot impugn unless there is fraud or made notwithstanding their
formal opposition
2. non-intervenors – retain rights of mortgage and servitude and other real rights and
personal rights belonging to them before partition was made
Ti t l e V: P O S S E S S I O N
How acquired:
1. physical
2. constructive –
tradicion brevi manu (one who possess a thing short of title of owner – lease );
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2. tradicion longa manu – pointing out to transferee the things which are being
transferred
c. proper acts and legal formalities established for acquiring rights – donation, sale
Degrees of possession:
Classes of ownership:
Effects:
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b. intent to possess
a. representative has intention to acquire for another and not for himself
5. in good faith – not aware that there exist flaw in title or mode w/c invalidates it; mistake
upon doubtful question of law; always presumed;
2. one who succeeds by hereditary title shall not tack the bad faith of predecessors in
interest except when he is aware of flaws affecting title;
but effects of possession in good faith shall not benefit him except from date of death of
decedent.
Minors/ Incapacitated
may acquire material possession but not right to possession; may only acquire them through
guardian or legal representatives
Acquisition
2. the following do not affect acts of possession ( not deemed abandonment of rights );
possession not interrupted
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c. acts of violence
Rights of possessor:
2. Possession acquired and enjoyed in concept of owner can serve as title for acquisitive
prescription
3. Person in concept of owner has in his favor the legal presumption of just title (prima
facie)
6. Possessor in good faith entitled to fruits received before possession is legally interrupted
( natural and industrial – gathered or severed; civil – accrue daily )
7. Possessor in good faith entitled to part of net harvest and part of expenses of cultivation
if there are natural or industrial fruits ( proportionate to time of possession );
owner has option to require possessor to finish cultivation and gathering of fruits and give
net proceeds as indemnity for his part of expenses;
8. Possessor has right to be indemnified for necessary expenses whether in good faith or
in bad faith;
Possessor in good faith has right of retention over thing unless necessary expenses paid by
owner
9. Possessor in good faith has right to be reimbursed for useful expenses with right of
retention;
owner has option of paying expenses or paying the increase in value of property which
thing acquired by reason of useful expenses
10. Possessor in good faith may remove improvements if can be done w/o damage to
principal thing- unless owner exercises option of paying; possessor in bad faith not
entitled.
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11. Possessor in good faith and bad faith may not be entitled to payment for luxurious
expense but may remove them provided principal is not injured – provided owner does
not refund the amount expended
12. Improvements caused by nature or time to inure to the benefit of person who has
succeeded in recovering possession
13. Wild animals possessed while in one’s control; domesticated – possessed if they retain
habit of returning back home
14. One who recovers, according to law, possession unjustly lost is deemed to have enjoyed
it w/o interruption
Liabilities/duties of Possessor
1. Return of fruits if in bad faith – fruits legitimate possessor could have received
3. Possessor in good faith not liable for loss or deterioration or loss except when fraud and
negligence intervened
4. Possessor in bad faith liable for loss or deterioration even if caused by fortuitous event
5. Person who recovers possession not obliged to pay for improvements which have
ceased to exist at time of occupation
Loss of possession:
Not lost:
1. Even for time being he may not know their whereabouts, possession of movable is not
deemed lost
2. When agent encumbered property without express authority – except when ratified
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Usufruct – right to enjoy another’s property with correlative duty of preserving its form and
substance
a. things – movable/immovable
Kinds:
1. legal - parents over children
3. mixed – prescription
4. total
5. partial
6. simultaneous
7. successive
8. pure
9. conditional
Rights of usufructuary:
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but can’t do acts of ownership such as alienation or conveyance except when property is:
a. consumable
c. appraised when delivered; if not appraised & consumable – return same quality
(mutuum)
4. Right not exempt from execution and can be sold at public auction by owner
5. Naked owner still have rights but w/o prejudice to usufructuary; may still exercise act of
ownership –bring action to preserve
6. Right to fruits growing at time usufruct begins; growing fruits at termination of usufruct
belongs to owner
8. Right to enjoy accessions & servitudes in its favor & all benefits inherent therein
9. Right to make use of dead trunks of fruit bearing trees & shrubs or those uprooted/cut by
accident but obliged to plant anew
10. Right of usufructuary of woodland – ordinary cutting as owner does habitually or custom
of place; cannot cut down trees unless it is for the restoration of improvement of things in
usufruct – must notify owner first
11. Right to leave dead, uprooted trees at the disposal of owner with right to demand that
owner should clear & remove them – if caused by calamity or extraordinary event –
impossible to replace them
12. Right to oblige owner to give authority & furnish him proofs if usufruct is extended to
recover real property or real right
14. Right to introduce useful & luxurious expenses but with no obligation of reimbursement
on part of owner; may remove improvement if can be done w/o damage
15. Right to set-off improvements against damages he made against the property
16. Right to administer when property is co-owned; if co-ownership cease – usufruct of part
allotted to co-owner belongs to usufructuary – not affected
17. Right to demand the increase in value of property if owner did not spend for
extraordinary repairs when urgent & necessary for preservation of thing
1. Alienate thing
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4. Construct any works and make any improvement provided it does not diminish value or
usufruct or prejudice right of usufructuary
Obligations of usufructuary:
1. Pay expenses to 3rd persons for cultivation & production at beginning of usufruct; whose
who have right to fruits should reimburse expenses incurred
2. Generally, usufructuary has no liability when due to wear & tear, thing deteriorates,
obliged to return in that state; except when there is fraud or negligence, then he shall be
liable
b) Posting of security
1. not applicable to parents who are usufructuary of children except when 2 nd
marriage contracted
2. excused – allowed by owner, not required by law or no one will be injured
6. If usufruct is constituted on animals – duty bound to replace dead animals that die from
natural causes or became prey; if all of them perish w/o fault but due to contagious
disease / uncommon event – deliver remains saved;
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7. Obliged to make ordinary repairs – wear & tear due to natural use of thing and are
indispensable for preservation; owner may make them at expense of usufructuary –
during existence of usufruct
8. Obliged to make expenses due to his fault; cannot escape by renouncing usufruct
12. Obliged to notify owner of act of 3 rd person prejudicial to rights of ownership – he is liable
if he does not do so for damages – as if it was caused through his own fault
13. Expenses, cost & liabilities in suits brought with regard to usufructuary – borne by
usufructuary
Obligations of owner
1. extraordinary expenses; usufructuary obliged to inform owner when urgent and there is
the need to make them
5. if property is expropriated for public use – owner obliged to either replace it or pay legal
interest to usufructuary of net proceeds of the same
Extinguishment of usufruct
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usufruct cannot be constituted in favor of a town, Corp or assoc. for more than 50 years
if owner wishes to construct a new building – pay usufructuary the value of interest of
land & materials
both share in insurance if both pays premium; if only owner – then proceeds will go to
owner only
effect if bad use of the thing – owner may demand the delivery of and administration of
the thing with responsibility to deliver net fruits to usufructuary
at termination of usufruct:
thing to be delivered to owner with right of retention for taxes & extraordinary expenses
w/c should be reimbursed
2) Law
3) Donation
4) Tradition
5) Intellectual Property
6) Prescription
7) Succession
1. There should be a corporeal thing (tangible) which must have a “corpus” (body) & that
thing should have no owner
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kinds of animals:
a) wild – considered res nullius when not yet captured; when captured
& escaped – become res nullius again
b) domesticated animals – originally wild but have been captured & tamed; now
belong to their capturer; has habit of returning to premises of owner; becomes
res nullius if they lose that habit of returning & regain their original state of
freedom
c) domestic/tame animals – born & ordinarily raised under the care of people;
become res nullius when abandoned by owner
abandoned movables
Animals:
a) Swarm of bees
- owner shall have right to pursue them to another’s land (owner to identify latter
for damages, if any)
- land owner shall occupy/retain the bees if after 2 days, owner did not pursue the
bees
- when they go to another breeding place, they shall be owned by the new owner
provided they are not enticed
Movables:
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- consist of (1) money, precious objects & 2) hidden & owner is unknown
- finding must be by chance in order that stranger may be entitled to ½ of the
treasure
- if owner is unknown, give to mayor; mayor shall announce finding of the movable
for 2 weeks in way he deems best
- If owner does not appear 6 months after publication, thing found shall be
awarded to finder
PRESCRIPTION
mode by which one acquires ownership and other real rights thru lapse of time;
Kinds:
1. Acquisitive
2. Extinctive
b. STATE
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4. juridical persons except the state with regards to property not patrimonial in
character
8. between co-heirs/co-owners
a. private property
1. public domain
2. in transmissible rights
4. registered land
Renunciation of prescription:
persons with capacity to alienate may renounce prescription already obtained but not the
right to prescribe in the future
prescription is deemed to have been tacitly renounced; renunciation results from the acts
w/c imply abandonment of right acquired
creditors & persons interested in making prescription effective may avail themselves
notwithstanding express or tacit renunciation
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1. ordinary
2. extra-ordinary
2. just title
4. in concept of an owner
3. in concept of an owner
GOOD FAITH
Reasonable belief that person who transferred thing is the owner & could validly transmit
ownership
JUST TITLE (TRUE & VALID) – must be proved & never presumed
a) Titulo Colorado -
b) Titulo putativo -
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title must be one which would have been sufficient to transfer ownership if grantor
had been the owner
IN CONCEPT OF OWNER
possession not by mere tolerance of owner but adverse to that of the owner
INTERRUPTION
a) Natural
- through any cause, possession ceases for more than 1 year
b) civil
- produced by judicial summons;
- except
1. void for lack of legal solemnities
c) possession in wartime
a. Present possessor may tack his possession to that of his grantor or predecessor in
interest
TACKING PERIOD
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PRESCRIPTION OF ACTIONS
30 years
- action over immovables from time possession is lost
10 years
- mortgage action
- upon a judgement
8 years
- action to recover movables from time possession is lost
6 years
- upon an oral contract
- upon a quasi-contract
5 years
- actions where periods are not fixed by law
4 years
- upon injury to rights of plaintiff
- upon a quasi-delict
1 year
- for forcible entry & detainer
- for defamation
Rights not extinguished by prescription:
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5. probate of a will
6. quiet title
DONATION
Characteristics:
Requisites of Donation:
Requirements of a donation:
1. subject matter – anything of value; present property & not future, must not impair
legitime
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(suppletory)
Irrevocable at the instance of the donor; Revocable ad mutuum (exclusive will of
may be revoked only by reasons provided donor)
by law
Revoked only for reasons provided for by
law (except onerous donations)
Acceptance
a) acceptance must be made personally or thru agent
movable:
1. Title remains with donor (full or naked ownership)& conveyed only upon death
1) pure/simple
2) remuneratory
3) conditional
4) onerous
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imposed>oblicon
excess>donation
c) form of
acceptance
Required Required Required Required
d) reservation
w/regards to
personal support
& legitime
Applicable Applicable Applicable Not Applicable
e) warranty
against eviction &
hidden defects
In bad faith only In bad faith only In bad faith only Applies
f) revocation
Applicable Applicable Applicable Applicable
1. natural & juridical persons w/c are not especially disqualified by law
a) by themselves
- if pure & simple donation
3. conceived & unborn child, represented by person who would have been
guardian if already born
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2. relatives of priest within 4th degree, church, order, community where priest belongs
3. physician, nurse, etc. who took care of donor during his last illness
All or part of donor’s present property provided he reserves sufficient means for the
support of the ff:
a) himself
REVOCATION OF DONATIONS
2. If child came out to be alive & not dead contrary to belief of donor
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Action for revocation based on failure to comply with condition in case of conditional
donations
1. Donee commits offense against person, honor, property of donor, spouse, children
under his parental authority
2. Donee imputes to donor any criminal offense or any cat involving moral turpitude even if
he should prove it unless act/crime has been committed against donee himself, spouse
or children under his parental authority
3. Donee unduly refuses to give support to donor when legally or morally bound to give
support to donor
Extent: portion which may Extent: whole portion but Extent: Whole portion
impair legitime of heirs court may rule partial returned
revocation only
Property must be returned Property in excess Property to be returned
Alienation/mortgages done
prior to recording in
Register of Deeds:
If already sold or cannot be Alienations/mortgages Prior ones are void;
returned – the value must imposed are void unless demand value of property
be returned registered with Register of when alienated and can’t be
If mortgaged – donor may Deeds recovered or redeemed
redeem the mortgage with from 3rd persons
right to recover from donee
Fruits to be returned at Fruits to be returned at
filing of action for filing of complainant
revocation
Prescription of action is 4 Prescription is 4 years from Prescription is 1 year from
years from birth, etc. non-fulfilment knowledge of fact and it
was possible for him to
bring action
Action cannot be Action cannot be
renounced renounced in advance
Right of action transmitted
Right of action at instance Heirs can’t file action
to heirs of donor but may be
transmitted to heirs
Action extends to donee’s Action does not extend to
heirs donee’s heirs
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1. personal to the donor; general rule is heir cannot institute if donor did not institute
a) donor has instituted proceedings but dies before bringing civil action for
revocation
b) donor already instituted civil action but died, heirs can substitute
c) donee killed donor or his ingratitude caused the death of the donor
3. can only make heirs of donee liable if complaint was already filed when donee died
Inofficious donations:
2. action to reduce to be filed by heirs who have right to legitimate at time of donation
5. if 2 or more donation at same time – treated equally & reduction is pro rata but donor
may impose preference which must be expressly stated in donation
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