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PASIÑO vs. Monterroyo

Laureano Pasiño occupied and cultivated a 24-hectare plot of public land in 1933 and was granted a homestead patent over the entire land, but he died in 1950 before the patent was registered. Laureano's heirs did not receive the patent. Respondents then claimed ownership over Lot No. 2139, part of the 24-hectare plot, alleging continuous possession since 1949. Petitioners, Laureano's heirs, applied for free patent titles over the lot in 1994. The courts ruled in favor of respondents, finding they had possessed the land for over 30 years, and the lot had become private land by the time of petitioners' application since the earlier homestead patent was not registered as

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
328 views2 pages

PASIÑO vs. Monterroyo

Laureano Pasiño occupied and cultivated a 24-hectare plot of public land in 1933 and was granted a homestead patent over the entire land, but he died in 1950 before the patent was registered. Laureano's heirs did not receive the patent. Respondents then claimed ownership over Lot No. 2139, part of the 24-hectare plot, alleging continuous possession since 1949. Petitioners, Laureano's heirs, applied for free patent titles over the lot in 1994. The courts ruled in favor of respondents, finding they had possessed the land for over 30 years, and the lot had become private land by the time of petitioners' application since the earlier homestead patent was not registered as

Uploaded by

Elaine Grace
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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PASIÑO vs.

MONTERROYO

FACTS:
Lot No. 2139 was part of a 24-hectare land occupied, cultivated and cleared by
Laureano Pasiño in 1933. The 24-hectare land formed part of the public domain
which was later declared alienable and disposable. Laureano filed a homestead
application over the entire 24-hectare land which was approved by the Director of
Lands. Laureano died in 1950. The Director of Lands issued an order for the issuance
of a homestead patent in favor of Laureano. Laureano’s heirs did not receive the
order and consequently, the land was not registered under Laureano’s name or
under that of his heirs.

Pasiños heirs simultaneously filed applications for grant of Free Patent Titles over
their respective shares of Lot No. 2139 before the Land Management Bureau (DENR).
The DENR granted petitioners’ applications and issued OCTs in their favor.
Petitioners alleged that their possession of Lot No. 2139 was interrupted when
respondents forcibly took possession of the property. Respondents alleged that they
had been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession of Lot No. 2139,
by themselves and through their predecessors-in-interest, since 10 July 1949. They
further alleged that the Land Management Bureau had no authority to issue the free
patent titles because Lot No. 2139 was a private land.

The trial court decided in favor of all the defendants. Petitioners appealed but the
CA affirmed the trial court’s decision. Petitioners filed a motion for reconsideration
but it was denied. Hence, this petition.

ISSUE:
Whether the CA erred in sustaining the trial court’s decision declaring respondents
as the rightful owners and possessors of Lot No. 2139?

HELD:
In this case, the trial court found that the preponderance of evidence favors
respondents as the possessors of Lot No. 2139 for over 30 years, by themselves and
through their predecessors-in-interest. Considering that petitioners’ application for
free patent titles was filed only on 8 January 1994, when Lot No. 2139 had already
become private land ipso jure, the Land Management Bureau had no jurisdiction to
entertain petitioners’ application.

Once a homestead patent granted in accordance with law is registered, the


certificate of title issued by virtue of the patent has the force and effect of a Torrens
title issued under the land registration law. In this case, the issuance of a homestead
patent in 1952 in favor of Laureano was not registered. Section 103 of Presidential
Decree No. 1529 mandates the registration of patents, and registration is the
operative act to convey the land to the patentee. Hence, the court sustain the trial
court that the non-registration of Laureano’s homestead patent had rendered it
functus officio. Petition is denied. The decision of the CA is affirmed.

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