Calimlim Vs Ramirez

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CALIMLIM vs. HON. RAMIREZG.R. No.

L-34362November 19, 1982118 SCRA 399

Facts:

A judgment for a sum of money was rendered in favor of Independent Mercantile Corporation against a
certain Manuel Magali by the Municipal Court of Manila. The Notice of Levy made on a parcel of land
registered in the name of "Domingo Magali, married to Modesta Calimlim", specified that the said levy
was only against "all rights, title, action, interest and participation of the defendant Manuel Magali over
the parcel of land described in this title." The Certificate of Sale executed by the Provincial Sheriff of
Pangasinan in favor of Independent Mercantile Corporation also stated that the sale referred only to the
rights and interest of Manuel Magali over the land described. Manuel Magali is one of the several
children of Domingo Magali who had died in 1940 and herein petitioner Modesta Calimlim.

Independent Mercantile Corporation filed a petition in the respondent Court to compel Manuel Magali
to surrender the owner's duplicate of TCT No. 9138 in order that the same may be cancelled and a new
one issued in the name of the said corporation. Not being the registered owner and the title not being in
his possession, Manuel Magali failed to comply with the order of the Court directing him to surrender
the said title. This prompted Independent Mercantile Corporation to file an ex-parte petition to declare
TCT No. 9138 as cancelled and to issue a new title in its name. The said petition was granted by the
respondent Court and the Register of Deeds of Pangasinan issued a new title in the name of the
corporation, TCT No. 68568. Petitioner, upon learning that her husband's title over the parcel of land
had been cancelled, filed a petition with the respondent Court, sitting as a cadastral court, praying for
the cancellation of TCT No. 68568 but the court dismissed the petition. Petitioner thereafter filed in the
LRC Record No. 39492 for the cancellation of TCT No. 68568 but the same was dismissed therein.
Petitioners then resorted to the filing of a complaint in for the cancellation of the conveyances and sales
that had been made with respect to the property, covered by TCT No. 9138, against Francisco Ramos
who claimed to have bought the property from Independent Mercantile Corporation. Private
respondent Francisco Ramos, however, failed to obtain a title over the property in his name in view of
the existence of an adverse claim annotated on the title thereof at the instance of the herein
petitioners. Francisco Ramos filed a Motion to Dismiss on the ground that the same is barred by prior
judgement or by statute of limitations. Resolving the said Motion, the respondent Court dismissed the
case on the ground of estoppel by prior judgment.

Issue:

Whether or not dismissal of the case is proper on the ground of estoppel by prior judgment

Ruling:

No. It is error to consider the dismissal of the petition filed by the herein petitioner in LRC Record No.
39492 for the cancellation of TCT No. 68568 as a bar by prior judgment against the filing of the
subsequent civil case. In order to avail of the defense of res judicata, it must be shown, among others,
that the judgment in the prior action must have been rendered by a court with the proper jurisdiction to
take cognizance of the proceeding in which the prior judgment or order was rendered. If there is lack of
jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the suit or of the parties, the judgment or order cannot operate
as an adjudication of the controversy. This essential element of the defense of bar by prior judgment or
res judicata does not exist in the case. The petition filed by the petitioners in LRC Record No. 39492 was
an apparent invocation of the authority of the respondent Court sitting as a land registration court.
Reliance was apparently placed on Section 112 of the Land Registration Act wherein it provides that a
Court of First Instance, acting as a land registration court, is a court of limited and special jurisdiction. As
such, its proceedings are not adequate for the litigation of issues pertaining to an ordinary civil action,
such as, questions involving ownership or title to real property.

Also, the petitioners in the instant case may not be faulted with laches. When they learned that the title
to the property owned by them had erroneously and illegally been cancelled and registered in the name
of another entity or person who had no right to the same, they filed a petition to cancel the latter's title.
It is unfortunate that in pursuing said remedy, their counsel had to invoke the authority of the
respondent Court as a cadastral court, instead of its capacity as a court of general jurisdiction. Their
petition to cancel the title in the name of Independent Mercantile Corporation was dismissed upon a
finding by the respondent Court that the same was "without merit." No explanation was given for such
dismissal nor why the petition lacked merit. There was no hearing, and the petition was resolved solely
on the basis of memoranda filed by the parties which do not appear of record. It is even a possibility
that such dismissal was in view of the realization of the respondent Court that, sitting as a cadastral
court, it lacked the authority to entertain the petition involving as it does a highly controversial issue.
Upon such petition being dismissed, the petitioners instituted Civil Case No. SCC-180, or only two and
one-half years after the dismissal of their petition in LRC Record No. 39492. Hence, we see no
unreasonable delay in the assertion by the petitioners of their right to claim the property which
rightfully belongs to them. They can hardly be presumed to have abandoned or waived such right by
inaction within an unreasonable length of time or inexcusable negligence. In short, their filing of Civil
Case No. SCC-180 which in itself is an implied non-acceptance of the validity of the proceedings had in
LRC Record No. 39492 may not be deemed barred by estoppel by laches.

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