111986-2005-Dolar v. Barangay Lublub
111986-2005-Dolar v. Barangay Lublub
111986-2005-Dolar v. Barangay Lublub
SYLLABUS
GARCIA , J : p
Via this petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court,
petitioner Edgardo D. Dolar seeks the annulment and setting aside of the Orders dated
January 3, 2002 1 and March 5, 2002 2 of the Regional Trial Court at Iloilo City, Branch 38, in
its consolidated Civil Cases No. 98-033 and 00-140 .
The facts:
Petitioner and Sera n Jaranilla were co-owners of a parcel of land with an area of
4.6 hectares, identi ed as Lot No. 1, Pcs-06-000744 (Lot No. 1, for brevity), situated in
Brgy. Lublub, Municipality of Dumangas, Iloilo. Said property forms part of Lots No. 4181
and 4183 of the Dumangas Cadastre.
On September 16, 1981, petitioner and Jaranilla donated Lot No. 1 to respondent
Barangay Lublub, subject to the following conditions:
A.)That the area donated shall be for the purpose of con[s]tructing building
and/or establishing public plaza, sports complex, public market, health centers
and the like for the use of the Barangay of Lublub . . . which area shall be
hereinafter be known as DON VENANCIO DOLAR PLAZA and shall be so
designated in a proper landmark;
C.)That . . . should the use of the area be converted to uses other than
herein stipulated, then this DEED OF DONATION shall be deemed revoked and the
ownership shall revert back to the DONORS . . . (Underscoring added) 3
Then barangay captain Jose Militar accepted the donation in behalf of Brgy. Lublub.
Following the execution of the deed of donation, Brgy. Lublub immediately took
possession of the donated property, which soon became the site of several government
o ce buildings and recreational facilities. For what in hindsight is a typical case of
complacency on the part of a government unit, respondent barangay did not have the
donation registered under its name. On April 12, 1989, or almost eight (8) years from
contract execution, petitioner was issued Transfer Certi cate of Title (TCT) No. T-129837
4 by the Registry of Deeds of Iloilo covering the donated area. IaAHCE
In its Answer With Counterclaim, 7 Brgy. Lublub, after traversing the material
allegations of the complaint, alleged the following as affirmative defenses:
3.2.The said donation was made and accepted on the same public
instrument duly notarized by notary public Nicolas P. Sonalan . . .
3.3.The acceptance of donation was made by then Barangay Captain of
Barangay Lublub Jose Militar with authority from the barangay council;
3.4.After the said deed of donation was executed in compliance with the
conditions set forth in the deed of donation and within ve (5) years from its
execution thereof several structures/buildings were constructed thereon for the
use and benefit of Brgy. Lublub, Dumangas, Iloilo. . . . ;
And, as grounds for its motion to dismiss embodied in the same answer, Brgy. Lublub
raised the matter of lack of cause of action or prescription of the cause of action, if any,
thus:
4.3Plaintiff proceeded with his complaint . . . without rst seeking the revocation
of the deed of donation in a proper court . . . as provided for under Article
764 of the New Civil Code;
4.4What plaintiff did was to unilaterally revoke the deed of donation . . . and
proceeded with the ling of this case with the assumption that the deed of
donation was already validly revoked. . . . .
xxx xxx xxx
4.6It must be noted that the deed of donation was executed in September 16,
1981. Even if the donee . . . failed to comply with the conditions of the deed
within 5 years or until 1986, plaintiff should have sought revocation of the
donation within 4 years from 1986 or until 1990 only. . . . ;
4.7The deed of donation having been executed in 1981 yet, the donee . . . took
possession of the same in concept of an owner, with just title, adverse,
open, peaceful and continuously up to the present. Hence, even if the
donation is void or conditions were not complied with, the property is now
owned by the donee, . . . as it can be considered that it has been acquired
by prescription.
On top of its Answer with Counterclaim, Brgy. Lublub, this time renamed and known
as Brgy. P.D. Monfort North, led with the same branch of the court a complaint for
Cancellation of Title, Reconveyance/Issuance of Title, Declaration of Nullity of Notice of
Delinquency in the Payment of Real Property Tax . 8 Named as defendants were petitioner
and his wife, certain municipal o cials of Dumangas and the Provincial Treasurer and
Register of Deeds of Iloilo. In its complaint, docketed as Civil Case No. 00-140 , the
plaintiff barangay averred having conducted an investigation which led to the discovery
that the spouses Dolar, colluding with some local o cials, engineered the whole levy
process which culminated in the auction sale of what is now a very valuable donated
property.
To Brgy. Lublub's complaint, petitioner interposed a Motion to Dismiss 9 on grounds
of forum shopping and litis pendentia, obviously on account of the pendency of Civil Case
No. 98-033.
Eventually, the two (2) cases, Civil Cases No. 98-033 and 00-140, wherein the
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respective principal defendants have each interposed a motion to dismiss, were
consolidated.
In the herein assailed Order dated January 3, 2002 , 1 0 the trial court, on the
nding that petitioner's action was already barred by extinctive prescription under Article
7 6 4 , 1 1 in relation to Articles 733 1 2 and 1144 (1) 1 3 of the Civil Code, granted the
Barangay's motion to dismiss in Civil Case No. 98-033 and denied petitioner's similar
motion in Civil Case No. 00-140, to wit:
Obviously, since the petitory portion of his complaint in Civil Case No. 98-
033 seeks for quieting of his title over the subject property and seeks judgment
declaring him to be the absolute owner thereof, plaintiff Dolar also seeks the
revocation of the subject deed of donation. . . .
. . . . Accordingly, in the light of the foregoing jurisprudence, the action to
revoke donation was to have been led within ten (10) years from the time the
action accrued, i.e., from the time of the non-compliance of the conditions . . . .
In yet another Order dated March 5, 2002 , 14 same court denied petitioner's
motion for reconsideration.
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Therefrom, petitioner directly comes to the Court on pure questions of law,
submitting issues which may be formulated in the following wise:
1.Whether or not his action is one for revocation of donation instead of for
quieting of title; whether or not the action for quieting has prescribed.
2.Whether or not the deed of donation in question is (a) valid for defective
acceptance and/or (b) no longer effective by reason of the automatic
reversion clause therein.
3.Whether or not respondent barangay had acquired the property in question by
acquisitive prescription.
Petitioner's long silence vis-à-vis the kind of development structures that Barangay
Lublub had decided to put up or allowed to be established on the subject area cannot but
be taken as an indicia of his satisfaction with respondent barangay's choice of public
service projects. The prolonged silence was broken only after the provincial and municipal
governments advertised, then sold the property in a public auction to satisfy questionable
tax liabilities.
Much is made by petitioner about his execution of the 1989 deed of donation, which,
to him, should be utilized as a point of reference in determining the prescriptive period 2 8
defined under either Article 764 or 1144 of the Civil Code. He states:
. . . It has not been explained up to this juncture why the Deed of Donation
of June 1989 . . . is not being mentioned or considered when it is alleged in the
complaint. As will be noted in the Deed of Donation dated 1981 the property was
jointly owned by plaintiff Dolar and Jarantilla, with separate title; in Annex "B", the
Donation of 1989 only plaintiff Dolar signed the same as the only registered
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owne[r] of the lot donated; . . . . As previously adverted to, the prescriptive period
for violation or contravention of the terms and conditions of Annex "B" should be
reckoned from 1994 and therefore this action filed in 1998 is within the period. ETDHSa
With the view we take of the case, the execution of the 1989 deed of donation is
really of little moment in terms of furthering petitioner's cause. For, at that time, the
property subject of this recourse was no longer his to donate, having earlier relinquished
his ownership thereon. Nemo dat qui non habet — No one can give what he has not. 2 9
Stated a bit differently, respondent barangay's right over the donated area proceeds from
the 1981 donation. The legal effects, therefore, of its action or inaction respecting the
donated property should be assayed on the basis of the 1981 donation.
The last issue raised pivots on whether or not respondent barangay can acquire the
subject property by acquisitive prescription, the petitioner's thesis being that prescription
does not run against registered land. 3 0
Petitioner's point is theoretically correct and may perhaps tip the balance in his
favor, but for the fact that the respondent barangay anchors its title and right over the
donated lot, rst and foremost, by virtue of the deed of donation. Admittedly, standing
alone, adverse, continuous and long possession of a piece of real property cannot defeat
the title of a registered owner. But, then, this postulate presupposes a Torrens Title
lawfully acquired and issued. As may be recalled, however, respondent barangay instituted
Civil Case No. 00-140, supra, for Cancellation of Title, Reconveyance/Issuance of Title
precisely because of the dubious manner by which petitioner allegedly acquired his TCT
No. T-129837 over a lot he admits donating.
Parenthetically, petitioner's contention that the donation was invalid because it was
not registered in the Registry of Property deserves no merit. For, as between the parties to
the donation and their assigns, the registration of the deed of donation with the Registry of
Deeds is not needed for its validity and e cacy. In Pajarillo vs. Intermediate Appellate
Court, 3 1 the Court emphatically dismissed the notion that registration was necessary to
make the donation a binding commitment insofar as the donor and the donee were
concerned.
As a nal consideration, let it be made clear that this opinion merely resolves the
question of the correctness of the dismissal by the trial court of Civil Case No. 98-033
on the basis of facts attendant thereto in the light of applicable laws and jurisprudence. It
is not meant to prejudge the outcome of Civil Case No. 00-140 which, while related to
Civil Case No. 98-033, tenders different issues, foremost of which is the validity of a
Torrens title issued over a piece of land to one who had previously donated the same.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED for lack of merit.
Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Panganiban, Corona and Carpio-Morales, JJ., concur.
Sandoval-Gutierrez, J., is on official leave.
Footnotes
1.Penned by Judge Roger B. Patricio; Rollo, pp. 25-30.
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2.Rollo, pp. 73-74.
3.Rollo, pp. 183-185.
4.Rollo, p. 226.
This action shall prescribe after four years from the non-compliance with the condition. . . .
12.Art. 733. Donations with an onerous cause shall be governed by the rules on contracts . . . .
13.Art. 1144 (1) provides that an action upon a written contract must be brought within ten (10)
years from the time the right of action accrues.
14.See Note #2, supra.
15.Article 745. The donee must accept the donation personally, or through an authorized
person with a special power for the purpose, or with a general and su cient power;
otherwise, the donation hall be void.
16.Local Government Code of 1983.
23.Article 476. Whenever there is a cloud on title to real property or any interest therein, by
reason of any instrument, record, claim, encumbrance or proceeding which is apparently
valid or effective but is in truth and in fact invalid, ineffective, voidable, or unenforceable,
and may be prejudicial to said title, an action may be brought to remove such cloud or to
quiet the title. . . .
24.Art. 1144 provides that an action upon a written contract must be brought within ten years
from the time the right of action accrues.
25.Mamadsual vs. Moson, 190 SCRA 82 [1990].
26.De Luna vs. Abrigo, 181 SCRA 150 [1990] citing cases.
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27.Rollo, p. 366.
28.Memorandum for Petitioner, pp. 15-16; Rollo, pp. 416-417.