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PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

EN BANC

[G.R. No. 37654. December 14, 1934. ]

ANTONIO FACTOR, ET AL., Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. ISIDRA MANUEL, ET AL., Defendants-Appellants.

Isidoro Gonzalez for the appellants.

Lucio Javillonar for Appellees.

SYLLABUS


1. TORRENS REGISTRATION; JUDGMENT AND DECREE; PERSONAL ACTION FOR FRAUDULENT REGISTRATION. — Appellants, in a land registration proceeding, were, over the opposition of appellees, declared the owners of certain land. Appellees petitioned for a review of the decree on the ground of fraud, but the petition was denied. Later appellants filed suit for damages against appellees by reason of appellees’ illegal possession of said land, which suit was decided in appellants’ favor; whereupon appellees filed an action for damages under the Land Registration Act predicated on substantially the same facts as those alleged in their petition for review of the decree of registration, which were also the same facts upon which their defenses in the civil action for damages began by appellants, were based: Held, the matter is res adjudicata.


D E C I S I O N


ABAD SANTOS, J.:


This is an action for damages brought by the plaintiffs and appellees against the defendants and appellants by reason of a final decree of registration which, plaintiffs claimed, the defendants obtained fraudulently, and by which they were deprived of their property. After due trial, the court below found for the plaintiffs and, instead of awarding them the damages sought, ordered the defendants to convey to the plaintiffs the property alleged to have been illegally registered, and to pay to the latter the sum of P1,260 as damages for income derived from the property during the year 1926-1927, and a like sum yearly thereafter and until the delivery of the possession of said property to the plaintiffs. From this judgment the defendants prosecuted this appeal.

The principal question raised by the appellants is that of res adjudicata. On this point, the evidence shows that, as to the part of the property claimed by Antonio Factor, the issues now raised have already been concluded by a suit for the recovery of property began by the appellants in 1914 against said Antonio Factor, the issues now raised have already been concluded by a suit for the recovery of property began by the appellants in 1914 against said Antonio Factor and decided on appeal by this court in 1918 in favor of the former. 1 The record further shows that in 1919 appellants applied for the registration in their names of a parcel of land described in an unperfected possessory information title issued in the name of their father Tomas Manuel, deceased. Said application was opposed by the herein appellees, and the principal issues thus raised concerned, among other things, the identity and area of the land sought to be registered, and the respective rights of the parties to said land. After a protracted trial, the court below in February 1924 dismissed appellees’ opposition and decreed the registration of the land in the names of the appellants. From this order the then opponents, appellees herein, appealed to this court, but this court affirmed said order in November 1924. 2 In or about January 1925 appellees herein filed a petition for review of the decree on the ground of fraud, which petition was denied after due hearing.

In the meantime, in 1924, appellants brought an action against the appellees to recover damages for unlawful possession of the property in question. In said case, numbered 3680 in the court below, appellees set up, as special defenses, the very grounds on which their petition for review of the decree of registration was based. After due trial, the court below, in an elaborate opinion in which it recited in full the evidence adduced by the appellees in substantiation of their defenses, decided the case in favor of the appellants. From said decision the appellees appealed, which appeal was dismissed by this court for lack of merit.

In another suit filed by the appellants against the appellees for damages by reason of fruits and other products gathered by the latter from the property in question during the year 1926, the appellees appear to have set up practically the same defenses interposed in the previous civil case No. 3680. On motion of counsel for the appellees, the decision in the case was held in abeyance until the decision of this court in civil case No. 3680 was promulgated, whereupon judgment was rendered by the court below in favor of the appellants.

Scarcely one month had elapsed from the date of the promulgation of the decision of this court in civil case No. 3680, the present suit was begun by the appellees. This suit is predicated on substantially the same facts as those alleged in the petition filed by the appellees for review of the decree of registration above adverted to, which were also the same facts upon which their defenses in the two civil actions were based.

It is thus clear that the rights asserted in the instant case have already been concluded, as to Antonio Factor, by four decisions of the court below and by three of this court; and, as to the other appellees, by three decisions of the appeal in the aforesaid civil case No. 3680, which affected all the parties herein, this court said: "This is a futile effort on the part of the appellants (appellees herein) to retry title to land which has been determined against them in a land registration proceeding . . ." And continued: "Perhaps the nearest point that comes to be a debatable question in the case is whether or not the defendants (appellees herein) might be considered possessors in good faith of the land during the time the fruits and produce in question were taken, but in view of ancient litigation and pendency of the registration proceeding No. 798, this contention is evidently without merit."cralaw virtua1aw library

In deciding the instant case in favor of the appellees the lower court relied on Estrellado and Alcantara v. Martinez (48 Phil., 256). But this case is not in point. This was an action for damages instituted by Estrellado who was wrongfully deprived of her land by virtue of a decree of registration issued in favor of Martinez. In the registration proceeding, Estrellado was not made a party. When she sought a review of said decree on the ground of fraud, her petition was denied on the sole ground that no fraud was proven, but her right to the land claimed by her was fully recognized in the order of denial. Moreover, Estrellado’s rights were not concluded by judgments such as those rendered against the appellees in the present case.

In view of the conclusion we have reached, we deem it unnecessary to discuss the other questions raised by the appellants.

The judgment appealed from is, therefore, reversed and the complaint herein dismissed, with costs against the appellees in both instances. So ordered.

Malcolm, Villa-Real, Butte and Diaz, JJ., concur.

Endnotes:



1. G. R. No. 22397. Manuel v. Mabalay, promulgated November 19, 1924, not reported.

2. G. R. No. 13029. Manuel v. Factor and Mendez, promulgated August 24, 1918, not reported.

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