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Republic Vs CA, 132 SCRA 514

This document summarizes a court case regarding a land dispute over ownership of three lots near a fishpond. The private respondents applied to register the lots, claiming they were additions to the land from river deposits (accretions). The lower court granted the application, finding Lots 1 and 2 were accretions. However, the Supreme Court overturned this, finding no evidence the additions were made gradually by river currents as required for accretions under the Civil Code. The land area claimed as accretions was too large to have occurred through natural river processes. Therefore, the private respondents' claim of ownership through accretion was rejected.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
709 views3 pages

Republic Vs CA, 132 SCRA 514

This document summarizes a court case regarding a land dispute over ownership of three lots near a fishpond. The private respondents applied to register the lots, claiming they were additions to the land from river deposits (accretions). The lower court granted the application, finding Lots 1 and 2 were accretions. However, the Supreme Court overturned this, finding no evidence the additions were made gradually by river currents as required for accretions under the Civil Code. The land area claimed as accretions was too large to have occurred through natural river processes. Therefore, the private respondents' claim of ownership through accretion was rejected.
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FIRST DIVISION property of Rafael Singson; on the S., along line 2-3, by Meycauayan River; on the SW.

, along
line 3-4, by Lot 3 of plan Psu-131892; and on the N., along line 4-1, by property of Mariano
G.R. No. L-61647 October 12, 1984 Tancinco (Lot 1, Psu-111877). ... containing an area of FIVE THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED
REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES (DIRECTOR OF LANDS), petitioner, FIFTY THREE (5,453) SQUARE METERS. ...
vs. Lot 3-Psu-131892
THE HON. COURT OF APPEALS, BENJAMIN TANCINCO, AZUCENA TANCINCO (Maria C. Tancinco)
REYES, MARINA TANCINCO IMPERIAL and MARIO C.
TANCINCO, respondents. A parcel of land (Lot 3 as shown on plan Psu-131892), situated in the Barrio of Ubihan,
Municipality of Meycauayan, Province of Bulacan. Bounded on the NE., along line 1-2, by
The Solicitor General for petitioner. property of Mariano Tancinco (Lot 1, Psu-111877); and along line 2-3, by Lot 2 of plan Psu-
Martin B. Laurea for respondents. 131892; on the S., along line 3-4, by Meycauayan River, on the SW., along line 4-5, by Lot 1 of
plan Psu-131892; and along line 5-6 by property of Mariano Tancinco (Lot 2, Psu-111877), and
on the NW., along line 6-1, by property of Joaquina Santiago. ... containing an area of ONE
THOUSAND NINE HUNDRED EIGHTY FIVE (1,985) SQUARE METERS. ...
GUTIERREZ, JR., J.:+.wph!1
On April 5, 1974, Assistant Provincial Fiscal Amando C. Vicente, in representation of the
This is a petition for certiorari to set aside the decision of the respondent Court of Appeals (now Bureau of Lands filed a written opposition to the application for registration.
Intermediate Appellate Court) affirming the decision of the Court of First Instance of Bulacan,
Fifth Judicial District, Branch VIII, which found that Lots 1 and 2 of Plan Psu-131892 are On March 6, 1975, the private respondents filed a partial withdrawal of the application for
accretion to the land covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 89709 and ordered their registration with respect to Lot 3 of Plan Psu-131892 in line with the recommendation of the
registration in the names of the private respondents. Commissioner appointed by the Court.
Respondents Benjamin Tancinco, Azucena Tancinco Reyes, Marina (should be "Maria") On March 7, 1975, Lot 3 was ordered withdrawn from the application and trial proceeded only
Tancinco Imperial and Mario C. Tancinco are registered owners of a parcel of land covered by with respect to Lots 1 and 2 covered by Plan Psu-131892.
Transfer Certificate of Title No. T-89709 situated at Barrio Ubihan, Meycauayan, Bulacan
bordering on the Meycauayan and Bocaue rivers. On June 26, 1976, the lower court rendered a decision granting the application on the finding
that the lands in question are accretions to the private respondents' fishponds covered by
On June 24, 1973, the private respondents filed an application for the registration of three lots Transfer Certificate of Title No. 89709. The dispositive portion of the decision
adjacent to their fishpond property and particularly described as follows: t.hqw reads: t.hqw

Lot 1-Psu-131892 WHEREFORE, it appearing that Lots 1 & 2 of plan Psu-131892 (Exh. H) are accretions to the
(Maria C. Tancinco) land covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 89709 of the Register of Deeds of Bulacan, they
belong to the owner of said property. The Court, therefore, orders the registration of lots 1 & 2
A parcel of land (lot 1 as shown on plan Psu-131892), situated in the Barrio of Ubihan, situated in the barrio of Ubihan, municipality of Meycauayan, province of Bulacan, and more
Municipality of Meycauayan, Province of Bulacan. Bounded on the NE., along line 1-2, by Lot particularly described in plan Psu-131892 (Exh. H) and their accompanying technical
3 of plan Psu-131892; on the SE., along lines 2-3-4, by Meycauayan River; on the S.W., along descriptions (Exhs. E, E-1) in favor of Benjamin Tancinco, married to Alma Fernandez and
fines 4-5-6-7-8-9, by Bocaue River; on the NE., along line 9-10, by property of Joaquina residing at 3662 Heatherdown, Toledo, Ohio 43614 U.S.A.; Azucena Tancinco Reyes, married
Santiago; on the E., NE., and NW., along lines 10-11-12-1, by property of Mariano Tancinco (Lot to Alex Reyes, Jr., residing at 4th St., New Manila, Quezon City; Marina Tancinco Imperial,
2, Psu-111877). ... containing an area of THIRTY THREE THOUSAND NINE HUNDRED married to Juan Imperial, residing at Pasay Road, Dasmarias Village, Makati, Rizal; and
THIRTY SEVEN (33,937) SQUARE METERS. ... Mario C. Tancinco, married to Leticia Regidor, residing at 1616 Cypress St., Dasmarias Village,
Lot 2-Psu-131892 Makati, Rizal, all of legal age, all Filipino citizens.
(Maria C. Tancinco) On July 30, 1976, the petitioner Republic appealed to the respondent Court of Appeals.
A parcel of land (Lot 2 as shown on plan Psu-131892), situated in the Barrio of Ubihan, On August, 19, 1982, the respondent Court rendered a decision affirming in toto the decision
Municipality of Meycauayan, Province of Bulacan. Bounded on the E., along line 1-2, by of the lower court. The dispositive portion of the decision reads: t.hqw
1
DAHIL DITO, ang hatol na iniakyat ay sinasangayunan at pinagtitibay sa kanyang kabuuan The above-quoted article requires the concurrence of three requisites before an accretion
nang walang bayad. covered by this particular provision is said to have taken place. They are (1) that the deposit be
gradual and imperceptible; (2) that it be made through the effects of the current of the water;
The rule that the findings of fact of the trial court and the Court of Appeals are binding upon and (3) that the land where accretion takes place is adjacent to the banks of rivers.
this Court admits of certain exceptions. Thus in Carolina Industries Inc. v. CMS Stock
Brokerage, Inc. (97 SCRA 734) we held that this Court retains the power to review and rectify The requirement that the deposit should be due to the effect of the current of the river is
the findings of fact of said courts when (1) the conclusion is a finding grounded entirely on indispensable. This excludes from Art. 457 of the New Civil Code all deposits caused by human
speculations, surmises and conjectures; (2) when the inference made is manifestly mistaken, intervention. Alluvion must be the exclusive work of nature. In the instant case, there is no
absurd, and impossible; (3) where there is grave abuse of discretion, (4) when the judgment is evidence whatsoever to prove that the addition to the said property was made gradually
based on a misapprehension of facts; and (5) when the court, in making its findings, went through the effects of the current of the Meycauayan and Bocaue rivers. We agree with the
beyond the issues of the case and the same are contrary to the admissions of both appellant and observation of the Solicitor General that it is preposterous to believe that almost four (4)
appellee. hectares of land came into being because of the effects of the Meycauayan and Bocaue rivers.
The lone witness of the private respondents who happens to be their overseer and whose
There are facts and circumstances in the record which render untenable the findings of the trial husband was first cousin of their father noticed the four hectare accretion to the twelve hectare
court and the Court of Appeals that the lands in question are accretions to the private fishpond only in 1939. The respondents claim that at this point in time, accretion had already
respondents' fishponds. taken place. If so, their witness was incompetent to testify to a gradual and imperceptible
The petitioner submits that there is no accretion to speak of under Article 457 of the New Civil increase to their land in the years before 1939. However, the witness testified that in that year,
Code because what actually happened is that the private respondents simply transferred their she observed an increase in the area of the original fishpond which is now the land in question.
dikes further down the river bed of the Meycauayan River, and thus, if there is any accretion to If she was telling the truth, the accretion was sudden. However, there is evidence that the
speak of, it is man-made and artificial and not the result of the gradual and imperceptible alleged alluvial deposits were artificial and man-made and not the exclusive result of the
sedimentation by the waters of the river. current of the Meycauayan and Bocaue rivers. The alleged alluvial deposits came into being not
because of the sole effect of the current of the rivers but as a result of the transfer of the dike
On the other hand, the private respondents rely on the testimony of Mrs. Virginia Acua to the towards the river and encroaching upon it. The land sought to be registered is not even dry land
effect that: t.hqw cast imperceptibly and gradually by the river's current on the fishpond adjoining it. It is under
two meters of water. The private respondents' own evidence shows that the water in the
xxx xxx xxx fishpond is two meters deep on the side of the pilapil facing the fishpond and only one meter
... when witness first saw the land, namely, Lots 1 & 2, they were already dry almost at the level deep on the side of the pilapil facing the river
of the Pilapil of the property of Dr. Tancinco, and that from the boundaries of the lots, for about The reason behind the law giving the riparian owner the right to any land or alluvion deposited
two (2) arms length the land was still dry up to the edge of the river; that sometime in 1951, a by a river is to compensate him for the danger of loss that he suffers because of the location of
new Pilapil was established on the boundaries of Lots 1 & 2 and soil from the old Pilapil was his land. If estates bordering on rivers are exposed to floods and other evils produced by the
transferred to the new Pilapil and this was done sometime in 1951; that the new lots were then destructive force of the waters and if by virtue of lawful provisions, said estates are subject to
converted into fishpond, and water in this fishpond was two (2) meters deep on the side of the incumbrances and various kinds of easements, it is proper that the risk or danger which may
Pilapil facing the fishpond ... . prejudice the owners thereof should be compensated by the right of accretion. (Cortes v. City
The private respondents submit that the foregoing evidence establishes the fact of accretion of Manila, 10 Phil. 567). Hence, the riparian owner does not acquire the additions to his land
without human intervention because the transfer of the dike occurred after the accretion was caused by special works expressly intended or designed to bring about accretion. When the
complete. private respondents transferred their dikes towards the river bed, the dikes were meant for
reclamation purposes and not to protect their property from the destructive force of the waters
We agree with the petitioner. of the river.
Article 457 of the New Civil Code provides: t.hqw We agree with the submission of the Solicitor General that the testimony of the private
respondents' lone witness to the effect that as early as 1939 there already existed such alleged
To the owners of lands adjoining the banks of rivers belong the accretion which they gradually
alluvial deposits, deserves no merit. It should be noted that the lots in question were not
receive from the effects of the current of the waters.
included in the survey of their adjacent property conducted on May 10, 1940 and in the
Cadastral Survey of the entire Municipality of Meycauayan conducted between the years 1958
2
to 1960. The alleged accretion was declared for taxation purposes only in 1972 or 33 years after
it had supposedly permanently formed. The only valid conclusion therefore is that the said
areas could not have been there in 1939. They existed only after the private respondents
transferred their dikes towards the bed of the Meycauayan river in 1951. What private
respondents claim as accretion is really an encroachment of a portion of the Meycauayan river
by reclamation.

The lower court cannot validly order the registration of Lots 1 & 2 in the names of the private
respondents. These lots were portions of the bed of the Meycauayan river and are therefore
classified as property of the public domain under Article 420 paragraph 1 and Article 502,
paragraph 1 of the Civil Code of the Philippines. They are not open to registration under the
Land Registration Act. The adjudication of the lands in question as private property in the
names of the private respondents is null and void.

WHEREFORE, the instant petition is GRANTED. The decision appealed from is hereby
REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The private respondents are ordered to move back the dikes of
their fishponds to their original location and return the disputed property to the river to which
it belongs.

SO ORDERED. Teehankee, Actg. C.J., Melencio-Herrera, Plana, Relova and De


la Fuente, JJ., concur.

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