RP v. Santos
RP v. Santos
RP v. Santos
DECISION
BERSAMIN, J : p
By law, accretion the gradual and imperceptible deposit made through the eects
of the current of the water belongs to the owner of the land adjacent to the
banks of rivers where it forms. The drying up of the river is not accretion. Hence, the
dried-up river bed belongs to the State as property of public dominion, not to the
riparian owner, unless a law vests the ownership in some other person.
Antecedents
Alleging continuous and adverse possession of more than ten years, respondent
Arcadio Ivan A. Santos III (Arcadio Ivan) applied on March 7, 1997 for the
registration of Lot 4998-B (the property) in the Regional Trial Court (RTC) in
Paraaque City. The property, which had an area of 1,045 square meters, more or
less, was located in Barangay San Dionisio, Paraaque City, and was bounded in the
Northeast by Lot 4079 belonging to respondent Arcadio C. Santos, Jr. (Arcadio, Jr.),
in the Southeast by the Paraaque River, in the Southwest by an abandoned road,
and in the Northwest by Lot 4998-A also owned by Arcadio Ivan. 1
On May 21, 1998, Arcadio Ivan amended his application for land registration to
include Arcadio, Jr. as his co-applicant because of the latter's co-ownership of the
property. He alleged that the property had been formed through accretion and had
been in their joint open, notorious, public, continuous and adverse possession for
more than 30 years. 2 aICHEc
The City of Paraaque (the City) opposed the application for land registration,
stating that it needed the property for its ood control program; that the property
was within the legal easement of 20 meters from the river bank; and that assuming
that the property was not covered by the legal easement, title to the property could
not be registered in favor of the applicants for the reason that the property was an
orchard that had dried up and had not resulted from accretion. 3
On May 10, 2000, 4 the RTC granted the application for land registration, disposing:
Once this Decision became (sic) nal and executory, let the corresponding
Order for the Issuance of the Decree be issued.
SO ORDERED.
The Republic, through the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), appealed. THIAaD
Ruling of the CA
In its appeal, the Republic ascribed the following errors to the RTC, 5 to wit:
II
III
The Republic led a motion for reconsideration, but the CA denied the motion on
October 20, 2003. 7 HAICET
Issues
II
III
IV
To be resolved are whether or not Article 457 of the Civil Code was applicable
herein; and whether or not respondents could claim the property by virtue of
acquisitive prescription pursuant to Section 14 (1) of Presidential Decree No. 1529
(Property Registration Decree).
Ruling
I.
The CA grossly erred in applying Article 457
of the Civil Code to respondents' benefit
Article 457 of the Civil Code provides that "(t)o the owners of lands adjoining the
banks of rivers belong the accretion which they gradually receive from the eects of
the currents of the waters."
On the basis of the evidence presented by the applicants, the Court nds
that Arcadio Ivan A. Santos III and Arcadio C. Santos, Jr., are the owners of
the land subject of this application which was previously a part of the
Paraaque River which became an orchard after it dried up and further
considering that Lot 4 which adjoins the same property is owned by
applicant, Arcadio C. Santos, Jr., after it was obtained by him through
inheritance from his mother, Concepcion Cruz, now deceased.
Conformably with Art. 457 of the New Civil Code, it is provided that:
"Article 457. To the owners of the lands adjoining the bank of rivers
belong the accretion which they gradually receive from the eects of
the current of the waters." 9AaSTIH
It could not be denied that "to the owners of the lands adjoining the banks of
rivers belong the accretion which they gradually receive from the eects of
the current of the waters" (Article 457 New Civil Code) as in this case,
Arcadio Ivan Santos III and Arcadio Santos, Jr., are the owners of the land
which was previously part of the Paraaque River which became an orchard
after it dried up and considering that Lot 4 which adjoins the same property
is owned by the applicant which was obtained by the latter from his mother
(Decision, p. 3; p. 38 Rollo). 10
The Republic submits, however, that the application by both lower courts of Article
457 of the Civil Code was erroneous in the face of the fact that respondents'
evidence did not establish accretion, but instead the drying up of the Paraaque
River.
Respondents as the applicants for land registration carried the burden of proof to
establish the merits of their application by a preponderance of evidence, by which is
meant such evidence that is of greater weight, or more convincing than that oered
in opposition to it. 11 They would be held entitled to claim the property as their own
and apply for its registration under the Torrens system only if they established that,
indeed, the property was an accretion to their land.
Accretion is the process whereby the soil is deposited along the banks of rivers. 12
The deposit of soil, to be considered accretion, must be: (a) gradual and
imperceptible; (b) made through the eects of the current of the water; and (c)
taking place on land adjacent to the banks of rivers. 13 Accordingly, respondents
should establish the concurrence of the elements of accretion to warrant the grant
of their application for land registration.DAcaIE
However, respondents did not discharge their burden of proof. They did not show
that the gradual and imperceptible deposition of soil through the eects of the
current of the river had formed Lot 4998-B. Instead, their evidence revealed that
the property was the dried-up river bed of the Paraaque River, leading both the
RTC and the CA to themselves hold that Lot 4998-B was "the land which was
previously part of the Paraaque River . . . (and) became an orchard after it dried
up."
Still, respondents argue that considering that Lot 4998-B did not yet exist when the
original title of Lot 4 was issued in their mother's name in 1920, and that Lot 4998-
B came about only thereafter as the land formed between Lot 4 and the Paraaque
River, the unavoidable conclusion should then be that soil and sediments had
meanwhile been deposited near Lot 4 by the current of the Paraaque River,
resulting in the formation of Lot 4998-B.
The argument is legally and factually groundless. For one, respondents thereby
ignore that the eects of the current of the river are not the only cause of the
formation of land along a river bank. There are several other causes, including the
drying up of the river bed. The drying up of the river bed was, in fact, the uniform
conclusion of both lower courts herein. In other words, respondents did not establish
at all that the increment of land had formed from the gradual and imperceptible
deposit of soil by the eects of the current. Also, it seems to be highly improbable
that the large volume of soil that ultimately comprised the dry land with an area of
1,045 square meters had been deposited in a gradual and imperceptible manner by
the current of the river in the span of about 20 to 30 years the span of time
intervening between 1920, when Lot 4 was registered in the name of their
deceased parent (at which time Lot 4998-B was not yet in existence) and the early
1950s (which respondents' witness Runo Allanigue alleged to be the time when he
knew them to have occupied Lot 4988-B). The only plausible explanation for the
substantial increment was that Lot 4988-B was the dried-up bed of the Paraaque
River. Conrming this explanation was Arcadio, Jr.'s own testimony to the eect
that the property was previously a part of the Paraaque River that had dried up
and become an orchard. AaITCH
We observe in this connection that even Arcadio, Jr.'s own Transfer Certicate of
Title No. 44687 conrmed the uniform conclusion of the RTC and the CA that Lot
4998-B had been formed by the drying up of the Paraaque River. Transfer
Certicate of Title No. 44687 recited that Lot 4 of the consolidated subdivision plan
Pcs-13-002563, the lot therein described, was bounded "on the SW along line 5-1 by
Dried River Bed." 14 That boundary line of "SW along line 5-1" corresponded with
the location of Lot 4998-B, which was described as "bounded by Lot 4079 Cad. 299,
(Lot 1, Psu-10676), in the name of respondent Arcadio Santos, Jr. (Now Lot 4, Psd-
13-002563) in the Northeast." 15
The RTC and the CA grossly erred in treating the dried-up river bed as an accretion
that became respondents' property pursuant to Article 457 of the Civil Code. That
land was denitely not an accretion. The process of drying up of a river to form dry
land involved the recession of the water level from the river banks, and the dried-up
land did not equate to accretion, which was the gradual and imperceptible
deposition of soil on the river banks through the eects of the current. In accretion,
the water level did not recede and was more or less maintained. Hence, respondents
as the riparian owners had no legal right to claim ownership of Lot 4998-B.
Considering that the clear and categorical language of Article 457 of the Civil Code
has conned the provision only to accretion, we should apply the provision as its
clear and categorical language tells us to. Axiomatic it is, indeed, that where the
language of the law is clear and categorical, there is no room for interpretation;
there is only room for application. 16 The rst and fundamental duty of courts is
then to apply the law. 17
The State exclusively owned Lot 4998-B and may not be divested of its right of
ownership. Article 502 of the Civil Code expressly declares that rivers and their
natural beds are public dominion of the State. 18 It follows that the river beds that
dry up, like Lot 4998-B, continue to belong to the State as its property of public
dominion, unless there is an express law that provides that the dried-up river beds
should belong to some other person. 19 aSAHCE
II
Acquisitive prescription was
not applicable in favor of respondents
The RTC favored respondents' application for land registration covering Lot 4998-B
also because they had taken possession of the property continuously, openly,
publicly and adversely for more than 30 years based on their predecessor-in-interest
being the adjoining owner of the parcel of land along the river bank. It rendered the
following ratiocination, viz.: 20
In this regard, the Court found that from the time the applicants became the
owners thereof, they took possession of the same property continuously,
openly, publicly and adversely for more than thirty (30) years because their
predecessors-in-interest are the adjoining owners of the subject parcel of
land along the river bank. Furthermore, the fact that applicants paid its realty
taxes, had it surveyed per subdivision plan Csd-00-000343 (Exh. "L") which
was duly approved by the Land Management Services and the fact that
Engr. Chito B. Cainglet, OIC-Chief, Surveys Division Land Registration
Authority, made a Report that the subject property is not a portion of the
Paraaque River and that it does not fall nor overlap with Lot 5000, thus, the
Court opts to grant the application.
Finally, in the light of the evidence adduced by the applicants in this case and
in view of the foregoing reports of the Department of Agrarian Reforms,
Land Registration Authority and the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources, the Court nds and so holds that the applicants have satised all
the requirements of law which are essential to a government grant and is,
therefore, entitled to the issuance of a certicate of title in their favor. So
also, oppositor failed to prove that the applicants are not entitled thereto,
not having presented any witness. TEcCHD
The relevant legal provision is Section 14 (1) of Presidential Decree No. 1529
(Property Registration Decree), which pertinently states:
Section 14. Who may apply. The following persons may le in the
proper [Regional Trial Court] an application for registration of title to land,
whether personally or through their duly authorized representatives:
Under Section 14 (1), then, applicants for conrmation of imperfect title must prove
the following, namely: (a) that the land forms part of the disposable and alienable
agricultural lands of the public domain; and (b) that they have been in open,
continuous, exclusive, and notorious possession and occupation of the land under a
bona de claim of ownership either since time immemorial or since June 12, 1945.
21
The Republic assails the ndings by the lower courts that respondents "took
possession of the same property continuously, openly, publicly and adversely for
more than thirty (30) years." 22 ICTacD
Although it is well settled that the ndings of fact of the trial court, especially when
armed by the CA, are accorded the highest degree of respect, and generally will
not be disturbed on appeal, with such ndings being binding and conclusive on the
Court, 23 the Court has consistently recognized exceptions to this rule, including the
following, to wit: (a) when the ndings are grounded entirely on speculation,
surmises, or conjectures; (b) when the inference made is manifestly mistaken,
absurd, or impossible; (c) when there is grave abuse of discretion; (d) when the
judgment is based on a misapprehension of facts; (e) when the ndings of fact are
conflicting; (f) when in making its ndings the CA went beyond the issues of the
case, or its ndings are contrary to the admissions of both the appellant and the
appellee; (g) when the ndings are contrary to those of the trial court; (h) when the
ndings are conclusions without citation of specic evidence on which they are
based; (i) when the facts set forth in the petition as well as in the petitioner's main
and reply briefs are not disputed by respondent; and (j) when the ndings of fact are
premised on the supposed absence of evidence and contradicted by the evidence on
record. 24
Here, the ndings of the RTC were obviously grounded on speculation, surmises, or
conjectures; and that the inference made by the RTC and the CA was manifestly
mistaken, absurd, or impossible. Hence, the Court should now review the findings.
In nding that respondents had been in continuous, open, public and adverse
possession of the land for more than 30 years, the RTC declared:
In this regard, the Court found that from the time the applicant became the
owners thereof, they took possession of the same property continuously,
openly, publicly and adversely for more than thirty years because their
predecessor in interest are the adjoining owners of the subject parcel of land
along the river banks. Furthermore, the fact that the applicant paid its realty
taxes, had it surveyed per subdivision plan Csd-00-000343 (Exh. "L") which
was duly approved by the Land Management Services and the fact that
Engr. Chito B. Cainglet, OIC Chief, Surveys Division Land Registration
Authority, made a Report that the subject property is not a portion of the
Paraaque River and that it does not fall nor overlap with Lot 5000, thus, the
Court opts to grant the application.
The principle that the riparian owner whose land receives the gradual deposits of
soil does not need to make an express act of possession, and that no acts of
possession are necessary in that instance because it is the law itself that pronounces
the alluvium to belong to the riparian owner from the time that the deposit created
by the current of the water becomes manifest 27 has no applicability herein. This is
simply because Lot 4998-B was not formed through accretion. Hence, the ownership
of the land adjacent to the river bank by respondents' predecessor-in-interest did
not translate to possession of Lot 4998-B that would ripen to acquisitive prescription
in relation to Lot 4998-B.
On the other hand, the claim of thirty years of continuous, open, public and adverse
possession of Lot 4998-B was not even validated or preponderantly established. The
admission of respondents themselves that they declared the property for taxation
purposes only in 1997 and paid realty taxes only from 1999 28 signied that their
alleged possession would at most be for only nine years as of the ling of their
application for land registration on March 7, 1997. SIaHTD
Yet, even conceding, for the sake of argument, that respondents possessed Lot
4998-B for more than thirty years in the character they claimed, they did not
thereby acquire the land by prescription or by other means without any competent
proof that the land was already declared as alienable and disposable by the
Government. Absent that declaration, the land still belonged to the State as part of
its public dominion.
Article 419 of the Civil Code distinguishes property as being either of public
dominion or of private ownership. Article 420 of the Civil Code lists the properties
considered as part of public dominion, namely: (a) those intended for public use,
such as roads, canals, rivers, torrents, ports and bridges constructed by the State,
banks, shores, roadsteads, and others of similar character; and (b) those which
belong to the State, without being for public use, and are intended for some public
service or for the development of the national wealth. As earlier mentioned, Article
502 of the Civil Code declares that rivers and their natural beds are of public
dominion.
Whether the dried-up river bed may be susceptible to acquisitive prescription or not
was a question that the Court resolved in favor of the State in Celestial v.
Cachopero, 29 a case involving the registration of land found to be part of a dried-up
portion of the natural bed of a creek. There the Court held:
A creek, like the Salunayan Creek, is a recess or arm extending from a river
and participating in the ebb and ow of the sea. As such, under Articles
420(1) and 502(1) of the Civil Code, the Salunayan Creek, including
its natural bed, is property of the public domain which is not
susceptible to private appropriation and acquisitive prescription.
And, absent any declaration by the government, that a portion of
the creek has dried-up does not, by itself, alter its inalienable
character. IcAaEH
Had the disputed portion of the Salunayan Creek dried up after the present
Civil Code took eect, the subject land would clearly not belong to petitioner
or her predecessor-in-interest since under the aforementioned provision of
Article 461, "river beds which are abandoned through the natural change in
the course of the waters ipso facto belong to the owners of the land
occupied by the new course," and the owners of the adjoining lots have the
right to acquire them only after paying their value.
And both Article 370 of the Old Code and Article 461 of the present Civil
Code are applicable only when "[r]iver beds are abandoned through the
natural change in the course of the waters." It is uncontroverted, however,
that, as found by both the Bureau of Lands and the DENR Regional
Executive Director, the subject land became dry as a result of the
construction an irrigation canal by the National Irrigation Administration.
Thus, in Ronquillo v. Court of Appeals , this Court held:
Indeed, under the Regalian doctrine, all lands not otherwise appearing to be clearly
within private ownership are presumed to belong to the State. 30 No public land can
be acquired by private persons without any grant, express or implied, from the
Government. It is indispensable, therefore, that there is a showing of a title from
the State. 31 Occupation of public land in the concept of owner, no matter how long,
cannot ripen into ownership and be registered as a title. 32
Subject to the exceptions dened in Article 461 of the Civil Code (which declares
river beds that are abandoned through the natural change in the course of the
waters as ipso facto belonging to the owners of the land occupied by the new
course, and which gives to the owners of the adjoining lots the right to acquire only
the abandoned river beds not ipso facto belonging to the owners of the land aected
by the natural change of course of the waters only after paying their value), all river
beds remain property of public dominion and cannot be acquired by acquisitive
prescription unless previously declared by the Government to be alienable and
disposable. Considering that Lot 4998-B was not shown to be already declared to be
alienable and disposable, respondents could not be deemed to have acquired the
property through prescription.
Nonetheless, respondents insist that the property was already classied as alienable
and disposable by the Government. They cite as proof of the classication as
alienable and disposable the following notation found on the survey plan, to wit: 33
aSIHcT
NOTE
This survey is inside L.C. Map No. 2623, Proj. No. 25 classied as
alienable/disposable by the Bureau of Forest Dev't. on Jan. 3,
1968.
Was the notation on the survey plan to the eect that Lot 4998-B was "inside" the
map "classied as alienable/disposable by the Bureau of Forest Development on 03
Jan. 1968" sucient proof of the property's nature as alienable and disposable
public land?
As to the proofs that are admissible to establish the alienability and disposability of
public land, we said in Secretary of the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources v. Yap 34 that: cCaATD
To prove that the land in question formed part of the alienable and
disposable lands of the public domain, petitioners relied on the
printed words which read: "This survey plan is inside Alienable and
Disposable Land Area, Project No. 27-B as per L.C. Map No. 2623,
certied by the Bureau of Forestry on January 3, 1968," appearing
on Exhibit "E" (Survey Plan No. Swo-13-000227).
These rulings of the Court indicate that the notation on the survey plan of Lot 4998-
B, Cad-00-000343 to the eect that the "survey is inside a map classied as
alienable/disposable by the Bureau of Forest Dev't" did not prove that Lot 4998-B
was already classied as alienable and disposable. Accordingly, respondents could
not validly assert acquisitive prescription of Lot 4988-B.
WHEREFORE, the Court REVERSES and SETS ASIDE the decision of the Court of
Appeals promulgated on May 27, 2003; DISMISSES the application for registration
of Arcadio C. Santos, Jr. and Arcadio Ivan S. Santos III respecting Lot 4998-B with a
total area of 1,045 square meters, more or less, situated in Barangay San Dionisio,
Paraaque City, Metro Manila; and DECLARES Lot 4998-B as exclusively belonging
to the State for being part of the dried-up bed of the Paraaque River.
SO ORDERED.
Sereno, C.J., Leonardo-de Castro, Villarama, Jr. and Reyes, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
2. Id. at 138-142.
3. Id. at 255-258.
5. CA Rollo, p. 26.
7. Id. at 155.
11. Rivera v. Court of Appeals , G.R. No. 115625, January 23, 1998, 284 SCRA 673,
681.
12. Heirs of Emiliano Navarro v. Intermediate Appellate Court , G.R. No. 68166,
February 12, 1997, 268 SCRA 74, 85.
13. Republic v. Court of Appeals , No. L-61647, October 12, 1984, 132 SCRA 514,
520.
16. Cebu Portland Cement Company v. Municipality of Naga, Cebu , Nos. 24116-17,
August 22, 1968, 24 SCRA 708, 712.
17. Quijano v. Development Bank of the Philippines , No. L-26419, October 16, 1970,
35 SCRA 270, 277.
18. The Civil Code states:
19. II Tolentino, Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the Civil Code of the Philippines ,
1994, pp. 137-138, opines:
When River Dries Up. The present article contemplates a case where a river bed is
abandoned by a natural change in the course of the river, which opens up a new
bed. It has no reference to a case where the river simply dries up. In fact, it
cannot be applied at all to the drying up of the river, because there are no persons
whose lands are occupied by the waters of the river. Who shall own the river
bed thus left dry? We believe that in such case, the river bed will
continue to remain property of public dominion. Under article 502 of the
Code, rivers and their natural beds are property of public dominion. In
the absence of any provision vesting the ownership of the dried up
river bed in some other person, it must continue to belong to the State.
21. Republic v. Alconaba, G.R. No. 155012, April 14, 2004, 427 SCRA 611, 617.
23. Bulos, Jr. v. Yasuma, G.R. No. 164159, July 17, 2007, 527 SCRA 727, 737.
24. Citibank, N.A. (formerly First National City Bank) v. Sabeniano , G.R. No. 156132,
October 16, 2006, 504 SCRA 378, 409.
25. Ebreo v. Ebreo , G.R. No. 160065, February 28, 2006, 483 SCRA 583, 594; Seria
v. Caballero , G.R. No. 127382, August 17, 2004, 436 SCRA 593, 604; Del Rosario
v. Republic , G.R. No. 148338, June 6, 2002, 383 SCRA 262, 274; Bartolome v.
Intermediate Appellate Court, G.R. No. 76792, March 12, 1990, 183 SCRA 102,
112.
26. Ebreo v. Ebreo, supra; Heirs of Mariano, Juan, Tarcela and Josefa Brusas v. Court
of Appeals , G.R. No. 126875, August 26, 1999, 313 SCRA 176, 184; Rivera v.
Court of Appeals , G.R. No. 107903, May 22, 1995, 244 SCRA 218, 222; Director of
Lands v. Intermediate Appellate Court , G.R. No. 73246, March 2, 1993, 219 SCRA
339, 348; San Miguel Corporation v. Court of Appeals , G.R. No. 57667, May 28,
1990, 185 SCRA 722, 725.
27. I Tolentino, Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the Civil Code of the Philippines ,
1994, p. 28.
29. G.R. No. 142595, October 15, 2003, 413 SCRA 469, 485-489.
30. Republic v. Sayo, G.R. No. 60413, October 31, 1990, 191 SCRA 71, 74.
31. Gordula v. Court of Appeals , G.R. No. 127296, January 22, 1998, 284 SCRA 617,
630.
32. Pagkatipunan v. Court of Appeals , G.R. No. 129682, March 21, 2002, 379 SCRA
621, 627.
34. G.R. No. 167707 and G.R. No. 173775, October 8, 2008, 568 SCRA 164, 192-
193.
35. G.R. No. 134308, December 14, 2000, 348 SCRA 128, 139-140.
36. G.R. No. 169397, March 13, 2007, 518 SCRA 250, 259-260.
37. G.R. No. 154953, June 26, 2008, 555 SCRA 477, 489-491.