Heirs of Yusingco v. Busilak
Heirs of Yusingco v. Busilak
Heirs of Yusingco v. Busilak
DECISION
PERALTA , J : p
Before the Court is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of
Court assailing the Decision 2 of the Court of Appeals (CA), Cagayan de Oro City, dated
July 31, 2013 in CA-G.R. SP No. 04500. The questioned CA Decision set aside the Joint
Decision 3 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 30, Surigao City, dated August 17,
2011, which a rmed with modi cation the February 25, 2011 Omnibus Judgment 4 of
the Municipal Trial Court in Cities (MTCC), Branch 1, Surigao City, in ve (5)
consolidated cases for accion publiciana and/or recovery of possession.
The pertinent factual and procedural antecedents of the case are as follows:
On August 11, 2005, herein petitioners led ve separate (5) Complaints 5 for
accion publiciana and/or recovery of possession against herein respondents and a
certain Reynaldo Peralta. The suits, which were subsequently consolidated, were led
with the MTCC of Surigao City, which were later ra ed to Branch 1 thereof. Petitioners
uniformly alleged in the said Complaints that: they are owners of three (3) parcels of
land, denominated as Lot Nos. 519, 520 and 1015, which are all located at Barangay
Taft, Surigao City; they inherited the lots from their predecessor-in-interest, Alfonso
Yusingco; they were in possession of the said properties prior to and at the start of the
Second World War, but lost possession thereof during the war; after the war,
petitioners discovered that the subject properties were occupied by several persons,
which prompted petitioners to le separate cases for accion reivindicatoria and
recovery of possession against these persons; during the pendency of these cases,
herein respondents entered different portions of the same properties and occupied
them without the knowledge and consent of petitioners; petitioners were forced to
tolerate the illegal occupation of respondents as they did not have su cient resources
to protect their property at that time and also because their ownership was still being
disputed in the earlier cases led; subsequently, the cases which they earlier led were
decided in their favor and they were declared the owners of the subject properties;
thereafter, petitioners demanded that respondents vacate the said properties, but the
latter refused.
In their Answer, respondents raised essentially similar defenses, contending, in
essence, that: they have been in possession of the subject properties for more than
thirty (30) years; petitioners never actually possessed the said parcels of land and that
they never had title over the same; thus, petitioners' claim would be in con ict with and
inferior to respondents' claim of possession.
Footnotes
2. Penned by Associate Justice Edgardo T. Lloren, with the concurrence of Associate Justices
Marie Christine Azcarraga-Jacob and Edward B. Contreras, Annex "A" to Petition, rollo,
pp. 21-28.
3. Penned by Presiding Judge Evangeline S. Yuipco Bayana; rollo, pp. 42-57.
9. Id. at 12-13.
10. Spouses Valdez, Jr. v. Court of Appeals , 523 Phil. 39, 45-46 (2006); Encarnacion v. Amigo ,
533 Phil. 466, 472 (2006); Suarez v. Spouses Emboy, Jr., 729 Phil. 315, 329-330 (2014).
11. Amoroso v. Alegre, Jr. , 552 Phil. 22, 34 (2007); Serdoncillo v. Spouses Benolirao , 358 Phil.
83, 96 (1998).
12. Id.
13. Amoroso v. Alegre, Jr., supra, at 35.
14. Serdoncillo v. Spouses Benolirao, supra note 11.
15. Spouses Stilgrove v. Sabas, 538 Phil. 232, 244 (2006).