Ching v. Malaya

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Topic:

Ching v. Malaya
JOSE CHING and CARIDAD CHING, petitioners, vs. HON. ANTONIO Q. MALAYA, as
Presiding Judge of the CFI of Laguna, Branch IV, Hon. MAXIMIANO C. ASUNCION, as
Presiding Judge of the CFI of Laguna Branch II, and Spouses CESAR ALVARADO and
ARACELI ALVARADO, respondents.

No. L-56449. August 31, 1987.

CRUZ, J.

Doctrine: The issuance of certificate of title in the absence of evidence to the contrary should be presumed
valid. Registration of the property is binding against the whole world unless annulled for cause in the
proper cases.

FACTS:

The petitioners (Jose and Caridad Ching) filed a complaint for ejectment against private defendants (Cesar
and Araceli Alvarado) who had forced their way into the disputed premises without any right whatsoever
and had refused to vacate the same despite repeated demands. These demands were based on the petitioners'
claim that they were the owners of the said property, having acquired it by virtue of a valid sale. The private
respondents, in their answer, had challenged the claimed sale, arguing that the property belonged to them
by right of inheritance. They had argued that the municipal court had no jurisdiction and should dismiss the
complaint because the case was one of ownership and not of mere possession.

The municipal court, affirming its jurisdiction, proceeded to trial and thereafter rendered judgment ordering
the private respondents to vacate the disputed property. It also required them to pay the petitioners back
and current rentals at P1,000.00 a month until actual surrender of the premises, as well as a P3,000.00
attorney's fee plus the costs of the suit.

On appeal, this decision was set aside by the respondent judge (Judge Malaya – CFI Laguna), who held
that the municipal court had no competence to resolve the case as it involved a question of ownership. The
petitioners, disagreeing, filed this petition.

ISSUE: Whether or not the municipal court had the authority to try and decide the case in the first instance
despite in the light of adverse assertions of ownership over the property.

RULING: YES.

Under Sec. 88 of R.A. No. 296, as amended, which was the law then in force, allowed the municipal court
to receive evidence upon the question of ownership in ejectment cases, but only whenever it was necessary
to do so for the purpose of determining the character and extent of possession and damages for detention.

The issue of ownership, in view of the respondent court (Court of First Instance), had removed the case
from the jurisdiction of the municipal court as the parties both injected the issue of ownership to support
their adversary claims to the possession of the property. However, the Supreme Court held that:

"The mere circumstance that proof of title, or evidence of ownership, had been introduced during
the trial before the Municipal Court would not deprive said court of jurisdiction to rule on the
question of who had the prior physical possession. Even where defendant in a detainer or forcible
entry alleges title to the property in his answer, it is declared in a great number of cases that the
Topic:
Ching v. Malaya
Justice of the Peace or the Court of First Instance on appeal will not be divested of its jurisdiction
by such allegations alone."

There is one exception, however, and that is where it appears during the trial that, by the nature of the
evidence presented, the issue of possession cannot be decided without deciding the issue of ownership.
In such a case, the jurisdiction of the municipal court is lost and the action should be dismissed.

After examining the facts of this present case, the Court finds that it does not come under the exception to
the rule. The property in question which was covered by TCT No. T-85126 and registered in the name of
petitioner Jose Ching in the Registry of Deeds of Laguna. The basis of the registration is a deed of sale
executed in his favor by Felix Carpio, the former owner, who had acquired it from Brigido Alvarado, Cesar
Alvarado's supposed father. The record does not show that such registration has been challenged since the
issuance in 1978 of the said certificate of title, which in the absence of evidence to the contrary should
be presumed valid. There is no encumbrance on the land, and there is no adverse claim or notice of lis
pendens annotated in the certificate. Such registration, it may be added, is binding against the whole
world unless annulled for cause in proper cases.

Finally, the fact that the petitioners themselves adduced evidence of ownership over the property in question
did not, as claimed, have the effect of divesting the municipal court of its jurisdiction. As permitted in the
above-cited Section 88 of R.A. No. 296, the plaintiff in an ejectment case may introduce such evidence for
the purpose of proving the character of his possession and the amount of damages he is claiming for unjust
deprivation of such possession. The petitioners were only trying to prove their right to possession and
damages by establishing their right of ownership.

FALLO: WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The decision of the respondent court dated January
5, 1981, is set aside and that of the municipal court dated July 5, 1979, is reinstated, with costs against the
private respondents. This decision is immediately executory. SO ORDERED.

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