Easement Arts 613
Easement Arts 613
Easement Arts 613
EASEMENTS OR SERVITUDES
Chapter 1 - Easements in General
This article defines Real Easement, and the terms Dominant Estate and Servient Estate.
A servitude is broader in scope. For example, an easement does not include the right to
draw water. However at present, both terms are interchangeable.
Difference from Usufruct: An easement grants less rights than a usufruct. An easement
never carries with it the right to possess. The rights granted by an easement are very
limited.
1. Classified as to BENEFIT
A real easement is one in favor of another immovable - the dominant estate; also
called a predial easement.
This is more common than the personal easement.
Example: Easement of Water - lower estates are burdened to allow water to naturally
descend from upper estate and flow into the lower estate
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b. PERSONAL (Art. 614)
o “Art. 614. Servitudes may also be established for the benefit of a community, or of
one or more persons to whom the encumbered estate does not belong.”
Example: Easement for Drawing Water; Easement of Right of Way for community or for
private person/s, Passage of livestock .
Discuss: North Negros Sugar Co., v. Hidalgo, 63 Phil. 664 – an estate owner who gives a road
easement for the benefit of the community cannot discriminate against one person and allow others
to pass the same road.
ii.) According to whether or not their existence is indicated (Art. 615, pars. 4, 5)
a. CONTINUOUS
o Continuous easements are those the use of which is or may be incessant, without the
intervention of any act of man.
o Example: Party walls; Easement of light and view
b. DISCONTINUOUS
o Discontinuous easements are those which are used at intervals and depend upon the
acts of man
o Example: Right of way – used only when man passes thru it
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NOTA BENE:
1. The use of a foot path or road may be apparent but it is not a continuous easement
because its use is at intervals and depends upon the acts of man. A right of way
cannot be acquired by prescription. (Abellana Sr. v. CA, 208 SCRA 316, 1992)
2. A right of way is an interest in the land, any agreement creating it should be drawn
and executed with the same formalities as a deed to a real estate and must be in
writing. (Obra v. Victoriano et al, GR149125, Aug. 9, 2003)
o Apparent easements are those which are made known and are continually kept in
view by external signs that reveal the use and enjoyment of the same.
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a.) In patiendo (Article 680, 1st part) - To allow something to be done to his property
Example: easement of light and view in a party wall.
Example: Easement of light and view when the window or opening is on one´s own wall or
estate (dominant estate). Servient estate is prohibited to close the window, or
construct building or do anything that would obstruct the light/view.
5. As to Source
“Art. 619. Easements are established by law or by the will of the owners. The
former are called legal and the latter voluntary easements.”
o North Negros Sugar Co. v. Hidalgo, 63 Phil. 664 (discuss majority decision and
dissenting opinion, p. 653)
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o Legal Effects:
a.) No true easement is constituted where both properties were owned by the same
person at the time of the alleged creation of easement (Privatization and Management
Office v. Legaspi Towers 300, Inc., 593 SCRA 382)
o Real right – an action in rem may be imposed against the servient estate owner
(example: easement on a dam to supply water; easement to maintain wires across ones land)
o It is a real right on another’s property, corporeal and immovable, whereby the owner of
the latter must refrain from doing or allowing somebody else to do something to be done
on his property for the benefit of another person or tenement. (Unisource Commercial Dev.
v. Chung, 593 SCRA 230)
o Easement is a real right that may be alienated by the dominant estate owner, although
the naked title of ownership of the land owned by the servient estate owner is
maintained.
Art. 709. The titles of ownership, or of other rights over immovable property, which
are not duly inscribed or annotated in the Registry of Property shall not prejudice
third persons.
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d.) An EASEMENT IS INHERENT OR INSEPARABLE FROM THE ESTATE TO WHICH IT
BELONGS. THUS, IT IS INTRANSMISSIBLE – unless the affected estate is also
transmitted or alienated.
o Art. 617. Easements are inseparable from the estate to which they actively or
passively belong.
- This means that an easement cannot exist independent of the immovable to which it
is attached. (See nature of easement in Art. 613)
Consequently:
- Registration of the dominant estate under the Torrens system without registration of
the voluntary easements in its favor, does not end the easement.
- But registration of the servient estate without registration of the easement burdening
it, ends the voluntary easement. (Unisource Commercial etc. v. Chung, 593 SCRA 230)
Exception:
a.) Actual knowledge of the existence of the easement by grantee or transferee of the
servient estate at the time of purchase, is equivalent to registration. He will be bound
by it, even if no registration has been made. He cannot also claim indemnity.
b.) There is an understanding or stipulation among the parties that the easement would
continue to exist.
o Art. 618. Easements are indivisible. If the servient estate is divided between two or
more persons, the easement is not modified, and each of them must bear it on the
part which corresponds to him.
If it is the dominant estate that is divided between two or more persons, each of
them may use the easement in its entirety, without changing the place of its use,
or making it more burdensome in any other way.
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f.) EASEMENT IS A LIMITATION OR ENCUMBRANCE ON THE SERVIENT ESTATE TO
BENEFIT ANOTHER.
o Confers use and benefit to the Dominant estate, which may be exercised or not
o Easement is an abnormal restriction on ownership of the servient estate. Thus,
cannot be presumed. It has to be established by law or by the will of the owners. (Art.
619)
g.) EASEMENT MAY BE PERPETUAL – as long as the dominant and/or the servient estate
exists, unless ended by causes enumerated in the law such as the Modes of Extinguishment
of Easements stated in Art. 631.
Section 2
MODES OF ACQUIRING EASEMENTS
Discuss: Bogo-Medellin Milling Co., Inc., vs. CA, G.R. No. 124699. July 31, 2003 (report case)
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o EQUIVALENTS OF TITLE - HOW EASEMENT IS ACQUIRED
Art. 623. The absence of a document or proof showing the origin of an easement
which cannot be acquired by prescription may be cured by a deed of recognition
by the owner of the servient estate or by a final judgment.
Art. 624. The existence of an apparent sign of easement between two estates
established or maintained by the owner of both, shall be considered, should either
of them be alienated, as a title in order that the easement may continue actively and
passively, unless, at the time the ownership of the two estates is divided, the
contrary should be provided in the title of conveyance of either of them, or the sign
aforesaid should be removed before the execution of the deed.
This provision shall also apply in case of the division of a thing owned in common
by two or more persons.
RULES in Art. 624 re acquisition of easement title thru principle of APPARENT SIGN OF
EASEMENT:
a.) BEFORE alienation, there is no true easement as there is only one owner of the two
estates. (see Art. 613 - nature of easement)
b.) AFTER alienation – Easement arises if the sign continues to remain after either of the
two estates is alienated.
NOTA BENE:
1. Rules in Article 624 will not apply if both estates are alienated to the Same owner/person,
for then there would be no true easement unless there is further alienation, this time, to
different persons/owners.
2. Article 624 provides ―”The existence…as title in order that the easement may
continue…”
o Comment: Civil law authors observed that, the use of the word ―”continue” is wrong. It
should be ―the easement may “arise” since there is no easement yet. There is no easement
yet, since both properties have only 1 owner. There are only seeds of a potential easement.
Easement will only arise once the property is divided and alienated to another owner.
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DISCUSS Cases of: Valisno v. Adriano, GR 37409, May 23, 1988, pp.667-668
o Amor v. Florentino, 74 Phil. 404; Juan Gargantos v. Tan Yanon
Art. 620. Continuous and apparent easements are acquired by virtue of a title or by
prescription of ten years.
Art. 621. In order to acquire by prescription the easements referred to in the preceding
article, the time of possession shall be computed thus:
in positive easement, from the day on which the owner of the dominant estate, or the
person who may have made use of the easement, commenced to exercise it upon the
servient estate;
and in negative easements, from the day on which the owner of the dominant estate
forbade, by an instrument acknowledged before a notary public, the owner of the servient
estate, from executing an act which would be lawful without the easement.
b.) If the easement is negative, the period is counted from the time the Notarial
Prohibition was made on the servient estate.
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NOTE :
a.) Start counting from the 1st act constituting the exercise of the easement was
performed – if the opening through which the light and view passes is a party wall.
Rationale: If the neighbor does not like the opening, he can always close it.
b.) Start counting from the time when the owner of the dominant estate serves a notarial
prohibition on the owner of the prospective servient estate – if the opening is made
on the dominant owner‘s own wall.
Rationale: The neighbor cannot close the opening since it‘s in the dominant
owner‘s property.
1. Relova v. Lavarez, 9 Phil. 149 – dam in Lavarez’ estate used to supply water to riceland of
Relova for 30 years by; prescription has set in – canot be destroyed by Lavarez
2. Emeteria Liwag, vs. Happy Glen Loop Homeowners Association, Inc., G. R. No. 189755 ,
July 4, 2012 -
Art. 625. Upon establishment of an easement, all the rights necessary for its use are
considered granted.
Example: Article 641. An easement for drawing water may carry with it the easement of right of
way. If the well is in the middle of someone else‘s property how can one draw water
without having to pass through that person‘s land?
Note:
1. To prejudice or affect 3rd parties, voluntary easements must be registered.
2. For legal easements registration is not generally essential for this exists as a matter of
law and necessity. (example: easement of water –lower estate obliged to receive water from
higher estate)
Q. Once an easement is established, can a dominant estate owner allow others to use the
easement granted him, or use it in any other manner beyond what was previously
established between the parties?
Art. 626. The owner of the dominant estate cannot use the easement except for the
benefit of the immovable originally contemplated. Neither can he exercise the easement
in any other manner than that previously established.
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Illustrate: A has a right of way over estate of B. Later, A acquired estate C. Can estate
C (owned by A) now also enjoy the right of way over estate B since C is now owned by
A?
Ans: NO. Apply Art. 626 (also cite/add Art. 627)
Article 626 was meant to correct the SC ruling in - VALDERRAMA, RODRIGUEZ, URRA vs.
NORTH NEGROS SUGAR CO., INC. , G.R. NO. L-23810-12, December 18, 1925 (48 PHIL. 482)
FACTS: Valderrama executed a contract with North Negros (NNSC) whereby NNSC agreed
to install a sugar central of minimum capacity of 300 tons for grinding and milling all sugar
cane grown by Valderrama who in turn bound himself to furnish the central all the cane they
need for sugar production. NNSC constructed a railroad on Valderrama‘s land to transport
the sugarcane harvested. However, Valderrama was unable to supply the required amount
of sugarcane. NNSC had to contract with other sugar cane growers from Cadiz who
delivered to NNSC using the railroad that passes thru land of Valderrama.
Valderrama alleged that the easement granted in favor of North Negros Sugar was only for
the transportation of the sugarcane of Valderrama. By transporting upon the road, through
the servient estates, the cane of the planters of Cadiz, this alters the easement, making it
more burdensome.
HELD: The SC said that the easement was created to enable NNSC to build and maintain a
railroad for transportation of sugar cane. To limit use exclusively to the cane of the hacienda
owners would make the contract ineffective. Furthermore, it is against the nature of the
easement to pretend that it was established in favour of the servient estates.
The easement was created in favor of the dominant estate owner/corporation NNSC and not
for the hacienda owners. It is true that the owner of the dominant estate, in making on the
servient estate the necessary works for the use and preservation of the easement, cannot
alter it, nor make it more burdensome (art. 543 of the Civil Code); but this does not mean
that the defendant cannot transport in the wagons passing upon the railroad other cane that
of the plaintiffs. What is prohibited by the legal provision above cited is that the defendant, in
excavations or building materials outside of the area of 7 meters, because in the first case,
the easement will be altered, and in the second it would become more burdensome. But
nothing of the kind happens when the defendant transport on the railroad, crossing the
servient estates, the cane of the planters of Cadiz; the railroad continues to occupy the same
area on the servient estates, and the incumbrance resulting from the easement continues to
be the same, whether the tractors traverse the line 10, 20 or 30 times a day transporting
cane for the central.
Comment: Since the easement for right of way was created thru a Voluntary Easement or
contract, the solution to the problem in Valderrama vs. NNSC would have been to stipulate in
the contract of easement the terms and conditions on the use of the easement, and grounds for
termination of the easement.
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Section 3
Q. What are the requirements, limitations or restrictions to the owner of the dominant estate in
case he makes any work necessary for the use or preservation of the easement?
Art 627. The owner of the dominant estate may make, at his own expense, on the servient
estate any works necessary for the use and preservation of the servitude, but without
altering it or rendering it more burdensome.
For this purpose he shall notify the owner of the servient estate, and shall choose the
most convenient time and manner so as to cause the least inconvenience to the owner of
the servient estate.
o Study/Discuss: Goldcrest Realty Corp. vs. Cypress Gardens Condominium Corp., 584 SCRA 435
Art. 628. Should there be several dominant estates, the owners of all of them, shall be
obliged to contribute to the expenses referred to in the preceding article, in proportion to
the benefits which each may derive from the work. Any one who does not wish to
contribute may exempt himself by renouncing the easement for the benefit of the others.
If the owner of the servient estate should make use of the easement in any manner
whatsoever, he shall also be obliged to contribute to the expense in the proportion
stated, saving an agreement to the contrary.
Art. 629. The owner of the servient estate cannot impair, in any manner whatsoever the
use of the servitude.
This article is about – “how and when can the place of the easement may be changed by the
servient estate”.
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Art. 630. The owner of the servient estate retains the ownership of the portion on which
the easement is established, and may use the same in such a manner as not to affect the
exercise of the easement.
See SUMMARY of the Rights and Obligations of Dominant and Servient Estates, pp. 675-676,
Paras, Vol. 2, 16th ed.,
Section 4
MODES OF EXTINGUISHMENT OF EASEMENTS
(2) By merger in the same person of the ownership of the dominant and servient
estates;
with respect to discontinuous easements, this period shall be computed from the
day on which they ceased to be used;
and, with respect to continuous easements from the day on which an act contrary
to the same took place;
(4) When either or both of the estates fall into such condition that the easement
cannot be used;
but it shall revive if the subsequent condition of the estates or either of them
should again permit its use,
unless when the use becomes possible, sufficient time for prescription has
elapsed, in accordance with the provisions of the preceding number;
(5) By the expiration of the term or the fulfillment of the condition, if the easement is
temporary or conditional;
(7) By the redemption agreed upon between the owners of the dominant and servient
estates.
See pp. 677- 682 details of discussion of how easements are ended.
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Other causes for ending easement is thru –
a.) Expropriation of the servient estate
b.) Permanent impossibility to make use of the easement
c.) Annulment, rescission or cancellation of the title that constituted the easement.
d.) Abandonment of the servient estate
e.) Resolution of the right of the grantor to create the easement as when there is redemption
of the property sold a retro because of the exercise of the right of conventional
redemption.
f.) Registration of the servient estate as free from any easement, unless there is knowledge
and stipulation on the existence of the easement on the part of the transferee.
g.) In case of legal easement of right of way, the opening of an adequate outlet to the
highway ends the easement, if the servient estate owner demands it.
Art. 632. The form or manner of using the easement may prescribe as the easement itself,
and in the same way.
See discussion pp. 682, and case of Ongsiako et al. v. Ongsiako, et al, l7510, Mar. 30, 1957 pp.
682-682
Art. 633. If the dominant estate belongs to several persons in common, the use of the
easement by any one of them prevents prescription with respect to the others.
The use by one co-owner of the dominant estate benefits the other co-owners. Hence, there will
be no prescription due to non-use, with respect to their own shares.
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