Severo Amor Gabriel Florentino, Et Al
Severo Amor Gabriel Florentino, Et Al
Severo Amor Gabriel Florentino, Et Al
DOCTRINE: Under article 541 of the Civil Code, the visible and permanent sign of an easement
"is the title that characterizes its existence.”
Upon Maria’s death, Encarnacion did not object to the continued existence of the windows. The
existence of this apparent sign (windows) under Art. 624 is equivalent to title, that is, it is as if
there is an implied contract between the two new owners that the easement should be
constituted, since no objection had been made to the continued existence of the windows. The
easement of light and view and with it, that of altius non tollendi (non-building of a higher
structure) was constituted at the time of the death of the original owner of both properties.
Facts:
Maria Florentino owned a house and a camarin or warehouse in Vigan, Ilocos Sur.
o On the north side, the house has three windows on the upper story, and a fourth
one on the ground floor
o Through these windows the house receives light and air from the lot where
the camarin stands.
Maria Florentino made a will
o devising the house and the land on which it is situated to Gabriel Florentino, one
of the respondents herein, and to Jose Florentino, father of the other
respondents = DOMINANT ESTATE
o also devising the warehouse and the lot where it is situated to Maria Encarnacion
Florentino (niece of Maria Florentino) = SERVIENT ESTATE
Upon the death of the testatrix (Maria Florentino), nothing was said or done by the
devisees in regard to the windows in question
Maria Encarnacion Florentino thereafter sold her lot and the warehouse thereon to the
petitioner, Severo Amor
Severo Amor destroyed the old warehouse and started to build instead a two-story house
Respondents, Gabriel Florentino, Jose Florentino, et al filed an action to prohibit
petitioner herein from building higher than the original structure and from executing any
work which would shut off the light and air that had for many years been received through
the four windows referred to
CFI denied the petition because the construction of the house had almost been
completed
CA ruled Art 541 of the Spanish Civil Code applies in this case
o Art. 541. The existence of an apparent sign of easement between two estates,
established by the proprietor of both, shall be considered, if one of them is
alienated, as a title so that the easement will continue actively and passively,
unless at the time the ownership of the two estates is divided, the contrary is
stated in the deed of alienation of either of them, or the sign is made to disappear
before the instrument is executed.
Issue/s:
1. W/N Article 541 applies to a division of property by succession – YES
2. W/N respondents acquired the easements through prescription – YES
3. W/N petitioner Amor is an innocent purchaser – NO
Ruling:
1. It was established by the findings of fact of the the CA (cannot be reviewed by SC) that
Maria Florentino died in 1892 and not in 1885, hence, Article 541 of the Civil Code applies
and not the Spanish law (Partidas).
2. The prescriptive period under any legislation that may be applied - the Partidas, Civil Code or
Code of Civil Procedure - has elapsed without the necessity of formal prohibition on the owner of
the servient estate
According to article 537 of the Civil Code, continous and apparent easements may be
acquired by prescription for 20 years
Under sections 40 and 41 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the period is 10 years
The respondent's action was brought in 1938
3. petitioner was in duty bound to inquire into the significance of the windows, particularly
because in the deed of sale, it was stated that the seller had inherited the property from her aunt,
Maria Florentino
the establishment of the easement "was an act which was in fact respected and
acquiesced in by the new owner of the servient estate, since he purchased it without
making any stipulation against the easement existing thereon, but on the contrary
acquiesced in the new owner of the servient estate, since he purchased it without making
any stipulation against the easement existing thereon, but on the contrary, acquiesced in
the continuance of the apparent sign thereof."
DISPOSITIVE:
Wherefore, the judgment appealed from should be and is hereby affirmed, with costs against the
petitioner. So ordered.
1) The Majority opinion committed a travesty on justice when it ignored the evidence produced by
Amor that the testator’s death occurred before the effectivity of the Code.
2) Hence, the law on easement will not apply. Moreover, the Spanish Law and the Partidas
provided for only three ways of acquiring easements: 1) contract 2) testament 3)
prescription. There was no provision similar to the doctrine of apparent sign.
RECAP OF RULINGS:
1. Maria Florentino having died in 1892, according to a finding of fact of the Court of Appeals,
which we cannot review, Article 541 of the Civil Code is applicable to this case.
2. Granting, arguendo, that Maria Florentino died in 1885, nevertheless that same principle
embodied in article 541 of the Civil Code was already an integral part of the Spanish law before
the promulgation of the Civil Code in 1889, and therefore, even if the instant case should be
governed by the Spanish law prior to the Civil Code, the easement in question would also have to
be upheld.
3. The easement under review has been acquired by respondents through prescription.
4. The petitioner was not an innocent purchaser, as he was in duty bound to inquire into the
significance of the windows.