Elizabeth Lee and Pacita Yu Lee Digest

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ELIZABETH LEE and PACITA YU LEE, HON.

JUDGE JOSE
D. ALOVERA,* Presiding Judge, Regional Trial Court,
Branch 17, Roxas City, THE REGISTER OF DEEDS OF
ROXAS CITY, petitioners, vs. REPUBLIC OF THE
PHILIPPINES, represented by THE DIRECTOR OF LANDS
AND THE ADMINISTRATOR, LAND REGISTRATION
AUTHORITY and THE HON. COURT OF APPEALS,*
respondents.
March 1936 - Rafael, Carmen, Francisco, Jr., Ramon,
Lourdes, Mercedes, Concepcion, Mariano, Jose, Loreto,
Manuel, Rizal and Jimmy, all surnamed Dinglasan sold
to Lee Liong, a Chinese citizen, a parcel of land with an
approximate area of 1,631 square meters, designated
as Lot 398 and covered by Original Certificate of Title
No. 3389, situated at the corner of Roxas Avenue and
Pavia Street, Roxas City.[3]
In 1948, the former owners filed with the CFI, Capiz an
action against the heirs of Lee Liong for annulment of
sale and recovery of land.
The plaintiffs assailed the validity of the sale because
of the constitutional prohibition against aliens
acquiring ownership of private agricultural land,
including residential, commercial or industrial
land.
RTC and CA dismissed the same.
Plaintiffs appealed to the Supreme Court. On
June 27, 1956, the Supreme Court ruled thus:
granting the sale to be null and void and can not give title to
the vendee, it does not necessarily follow therefrom that the
title remained in the vendor, who had also violated the
constitutional prohibition, or that he (vendor) has the right to
recover the title of which he has divested himself by his act in
ignoring the prohibition. In such contingency another
principle of law sets in to bar the equally guilty vendor
from recovering the title which he had voluntarily
conveyed for a consideration, that of pari delicto.[5]

July 1, 1968 - The same former owners Rafael A.


Dinglasan, together with Francisco, Carmen, Ramon,
Lourdes, Mercedes, Concepcion, Mariano, Jose, Loreto,
Rizal, Jimmy, and Jesse Dinglasan filed with the CFI,
Capiz an action for recovery of the same parcel of land.
Citing the case of Philippine Banking
Corporation v. Lui She, they submitted that
the sale to Lee Liong was null and void for
being violative of the Constitution.
September 23, 1968 - The heirs of Lee Liong
filed with the trial court a motion to dismiss the
case on the ground of res judicata. On
October 10, 1968, and November 9, 1968, the
trial court denied the motion. The heirs of Lee
Liong elevated the case to the Supreme Court
by petition for certiorari. On April 22, 1977, the
Supreme Court annulled the orders of the trial
court and directed it to dismiss the case,
holding that the suit was barred by res
judicata.[10]
September 7, 1993 - Elizabeth Manuel-Lee and
Pacita Yu Lee filed with the RTC a petition for
reconstitution of title of Lot No. 398 of the Capiz

Cadastre, formerly covered by Original Certificate of


Title No. 3389 of the Register of Deeds of Roxas City.
Petitioners alleged that they were the widows of the
deceased Lee Bing Hoo and Lee Bun Ting, who
were the heirs of Lee Liong, the owner of the lot.
Lee Liong died intestate in February 1944. On
June 30, 1947, Lee Liongs widow, Ang Chia,
and his two sons, Lee Bun Ting and Lee Bing
Ho, executed an extra-judicial settlement
of the estate of Lee Liong, adjudicating to
themselves the subject parcel of land.
December 9, 1948, the Register of Deeds, Capiz,
Salvador Villaluz, issued a certification that a transfer
certificate of title over the property was issued in the
name of Lee Liong. However, the records of the
Register of Deeds, Roxas City were burned during the
war. Thus, as heretofore stated, on September 7, 1968,
petitioners filed a petition for reconstitution of title.
Regional Trial Court ordered the reconstitution of the
lost or destroyed certificate of title in the name of Lee
Liong on the basis of an approved plan and technical
description
Solicitor General filed with the Court of Appeals a
petition for annulment of judgment in
Reconstitution alleging that
1. the petitioners were not the proper parties
in the reconstitution of title, since their
predecessor-in-interest Lee Liong did not
acquire title to the lot because he was a
Chinese citizen and was constitutionally not
qualified to own the subject land.
Court of Appeals promulgated its decision declaring the
judgment of reconstitution void.
Petitioners submitted that
1. the Solicitor General was estopped from
seeking annulment of the judgment of
reconstitution after failing to object during
the reconstitution proceedings before the
trial court, despite due notice.
2. the Solicitor General merely acted on the
request of private and politically powerful
individuals who wished to capitalize on the
prime location of the subject land.
3. the ownership of the land had been settled
in two previous cases of the Supreme
Court, where the Court ruled in favor of
their predecessor-in-interest, Lee Liong.
4. that they acquired ownership of the land
through actual possession of the lot and their
consistent payment of taxes over the land for
more than sixty years.
Solicitor General submitted that the decision in the
reconstitution case was void; otherwise, it would
amount to circumventing the constitutional
proscription against aliens acquiring ownership of
private or public agricultural lands.
ISSUE:
1. WON the reconstitution was proper? NO.

2.

WON Lee Liong was qualified? NO but please


see Caveat portion!
RULING:
1. YES.
The reconstitution of a certificate of title denotes
restoration in the original form and condition of a lost
or destroyed instrument attesting the title of a person
to a piece of land. The purpose of the reconstitution of
title is to have, after observing the procedures
prescribed by law, the title reproduced in exactly the
same way it has been when the loss or destruction
occurred.
The documents recorded and issued by the
ROD to them were all destroyed during the war.
The fact that the original of the transfer
certificate of title was not in the files of the
Office of the Register of Deeds did not imply
that a transfer certificate of title had not been
issued. In the trial court proceedings,
petitioners presented evidence proving the sale
of the land from the Dinglasans to Lee Liong
and the latters subsequent possession of the
property in the concept of owner. Thus, the trial
court, after examining all the evidence before
it, ordered the reconstitution of title in the
name of Lee Liong.
Incidentally, it must be mentioned that reconstitution
of the original certificate of title must be based on an
owners duplicate, secondary evidence thereof, or
other valid sources of the title to be
reconstituted. In this case, reconstitution was based
on the plan and technical description approved by the
Land Registration Authority.[36] This renders the order
of reconstitution void for lack of factual support.[37] A
judgment with absolutely nothing to support it is void.
Any change in the ownership of the property must be
the subject of a separate suit.[41] Thus, although
petitioners are in possession of the land, a separate
proceeding is necessary to thresh out the issue of
ownership of the land.

2. YES
The sale of the land in question was consummated
sometime in March 1936, during the effectivity of the
1935 Constitution. Under the 1935 Constitution, aliens
could not acquire private agricultural lands, save in
cases of hereditary succession. Thus, Lee Liong, a
Chinese citizen, was disqualified to acquire the land in
question.
The fact that the Court did not annul the sale of the
land to an alien did not validate the transaction, for it
was still contrary to the constitutional proscription

against aliens acquiring lands of the public or private


domain.
THE CAVEAT
However, the proper party to assail the illegality of the
transaction was not the parties to the transaction.
1. In sales of real estate to aliens incapable of
holding title thereto by virtue of the provisions
of the Constitution both the vendor and the
vendee are deemed to have committed the
constitutional violation and being thus in pari
delicto the courts will not afford protection to
either party. The proper party to assail the sale
is the Solicitor General. This was what was
done in this case when the Solicitor General
initiated an action for annulment of judgment
of reconstitution of title. While it took the
Republic more than sixty years to assert itself,
it is not barred from initiating such action.
Prescription never lies against the State.
2.

Although ownership of the land cannot revert


to the original sellers, because of the doctrine
of pari delicto, the Solicitor General may
initiate an action for reversion or escheat of the
land to the State, subject to other defenses, as
hereafter set forth.

In this case, subsequent circumstances militate


against escheat proceedings because the land is
now in the hands of Filipinos. The original vendee,
Lee Liong, has since died and the land has been
inherited by his heirs and subsequently their heirs,
petitioners herein. Petitioners are Filipino citizens, a
fact the Solicitor General does not dispute.
THE PURPOSE OF THE PROHIBITION
The constitutional proscription on alien ownership of
lands of the public or private domain was intended to
protect lands from falling in the hands of nonFilipinos.
In this case, however, there would be no more
public policy violated since the land is in the
hands of Filipinos qualified to acquire and own
such land. If land is invalidly transferred to an
alien who subsequently becomes a citizen or
transfers it to a citizen, the flaw in the
original transaction is considered cured
and the title of the transferee is rendered
valid. Thus, the subsequent transfer of the
property to qualified Filipinos may no longer be
impugned on the basis of the invalidity of the
initial transfer. The objective of the
constitutional provision to keep our lands in
Filipino hands has been achieved.

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