PROPERTY QUIETING OF TITLE 476-481.odt
PROPERTY QUIETING OF TITLE 476-481.odt
Whenever there is a cloud on title to real property or any interest therein, by reason of any instrument, record, claim,
encumbrance or proceeding which is apparently valid or effective but is in truth and in fact invalid, ineffective,
voidable or unenforceable, and may be prejudicil to said title, an action may be brought to remove such cloud or to
quiet the title.
An action may also be brought to prevent a cloud from being cast upon title to real property or any interest therein.
Quieting of Title
1. Section 377 of the Code of Civil Procedure, actions to remove a cloud from the title to real estate shall be
brought in the province where the land is situated.
2. It is a common-law remedy for the removal of any cloud upon or doubt or uncertainty with respect to title to
real property.
3. Purpose is to secure an adjudication that a claim of title to or an interest in property, adverse to that of the
complainant is invalid, so that the complainant and those claiming under him may be forever afterward free
from any danger of hostile claim.
4. When the instrument is not valid on its face, the remedy does not apply.
5. The result is not binding upon the whole world, therefore, not in rem. It is really in personam bcause it is
enforceable only against the defeated pary or privies.
6. The Court said that a suit to quiet title brought against one co-owner, is not res judicata with respect to the
other co-ownerw who were not made parties thereto.
Torrens System
1. Purpose of the Torrens System is to quiet title to land and to stop forever any question as to its legality.
2. An indirect or collateral attack on a Torrens Title is not allowed.
Collateral Attack
When a separate and new lawsuit is filed to challenge some aspect of an earlier and separate case, it is called a
collateral attack on the earlier case. This is different than an appeal, which is a challenge to some aspect of a decision
made in the same case.
In personam
Res Judicata
Once a final judgment has been handed down in a lawsuit, subsequent judges who are confronted with a suit that is
identical to or substantially the same as the earlier one will apply the res judicata doctrine to preserve the effect of the
first judgment.
Decided
Doctrines
1. An agent, with the written authority of his principal to sell the latter's property, sold the same after the death of the
principal but antedated the contract of sale.
2. If the contract is forged.
3. A contract by an incapacitated person.
4. A mortgage valid on its face and will cause prejudice although in reality invalid.
1. It is an action to prevent a cloud. Requisites are 1) That there is a fixed determination on the part of the defendant
to create a cloud and 2) it is not sufficient that the danger is merely speculative.
2. A bill invoking the aid of equity "because he fears," that is, because the complainant apprehends an injury to his
ATTY. FLORINIE F. ABREGUNDA,CPA,MBA
SUBJECT: PROPERTY
TOPIC: QUIETING OF TITLE (476-481)
property rights or interests, from the fault or neglect of another. Such bills are entertained to guard against possible or
prospective injuries, and to preserve the means by which existing rights may be protected from future or contingent
violations; differing from injunctions. in that the latter correct past and present or imminent and certain injuries.
Prescription
As a general rule, it is settled that an aciton to quiet title does not prescribe
1. If the plaintiff is in possession of the property, the aciton does not prescribe.
2. If the plaintiff is not in possession of the property, the action may prescribe. Moreover, even if the action is broought
within the period of limitations, it may be barred by laches
Laches
Laches is the legal doctrine that an unreasonable delay in seeking a remedy for a legal right or claim will prevent it
from being enforced or allowed if the delay has prejudiced the opposing party. The doctrine is an equitable defense
that seeks to prevent "legal ambush" from a party who is negligent in failing to timely make a claim. It recognizes that
the opposing party's ability to obtain witnesses and other evidence diminishes over time, due to unavailability, fading
memory, or loss. Disallowing the negligent party's action on the ground of laches is a form of estoppel.
Laches is an equitable form of estoppel based on delay. The theory behind allowing the defense is that the law
shouldn't aid those who "sleep on their rights". For a defense of laches to succeed, it must be proven that the party
invoking the doctrine has changed its position as a result of the delay, resulting in being in a worse position now than
at the time the claim should have been brought. For example, the delay in bringing the claim may have caused much
larger potential damages to be awarded; the ability to pay the claim is lacking due to assets being otherwise used in
the meantime; the property sought to be recovered has already been sold; or evidence or testimony may no longer be
available to defend against the claim.
ARTICLE 477
The plaintiff must have legal or equitable title to, or interest in the real property which is the subject matter of the
action, He need not be in possissionof said property.
Title of the
Plaintiff
1. The palintiff must either have the legal (registered) ownership or the equitable (beneficial) ownership. Otherwise,
the action will not prosper.
2. Nieto v Quines L-14643 SC rule that one who has complied with all the terms and conditions which would entitle him
to a homestead patent, even without a right on the land is to be regarded as the equitable owner thereof.
If Plaintiff is In
Possession
If Plaintiff Is Out
of Possession
1. Period Prescribes
2. Aside from being given the right to remove or prevent cloud, he may also bring the ordinary actions of ejectment,
publiciana or reivindicatoria within the proper prescriptive periods.
Action of
Ejectment
Ejectment is a lawsuit brought by the owner of real property to remove a party who is unlawfully occupying the
property. It differs from an action for unlawful detainer (eviction) against a non-paying or unsatisfactory tenant
ATTY. FLORINIE F. ABREGUNDA,CPA,MBA
SUBJECT: PROPERTY
TOPIC: QUIETING OF TITLE (476-481)
because it is against someone who has tried to claim title to the property, rather than someone merely unlawfully
occupying property.
Action Publiciana
It is a plenary action for recovery of possession in an ordinary civil proceeding, in order to determine the better and
legal right to possess, independently of title. The objective of the plaintiffs in accion publiciana is to recover possession
only, not ownership. However, where the parties raise the issue of ownership, the courts may pass upon the issue to
determine who between the parties has the right to possess the property. This adjudication, however, is not a final and
binding determination of the issue of ownership; it is only for the purpose of resolving the issue of possession where
the issue of ownership is inseparably linked to the issue of possession. The adjudication of the issue of ownership,
being provisional, is not a bar to an action between the same parties involving title to the property
Accion
Reivindicatoria
ARTICLE 478
There may also be an action to quiet title or remove a cloud therefrom when the contract, instrument or other
obligaiton has been extinguished or has terminated or has been barred by extinctive prescription.
Extinctive
Prescription
It is a sanction which consists of the extinction of right of action which was not exercised in the period of limitation.
The substantive law of action, referred to as the right of action is extinguished by prescription if it is not exercised
within the time limit which has been set by law
ARTICLE 479
The plaintiff mst return to the defendant all benefits he may have received from the latter, or reimburse him for
expenses that may have redounded to the plaintiff's benefit.
ARTICLE 480
The principles of the general law on the quieting of title are hereby adopted insofar as they are not in conflict with this
Code.
Conflict of Law
If there is conflict between the Civil Code and general law on the quieting of title, the former shall prevail.
Regarding
Defenses
Adverse
possession
A method of gaining legal title to real property by the actual, open, hostile, and continuous possession of it to the
exclusion of its true owner for the period prescribed by state law. Personal property may also be acquired by adverse
possession.
Adverse possession is similar to prescription, another way to acquire title to real property by occupying it for a period
of time. Prescription is not the same, however, because title acquired under it is presumed to have resulted from a lost
grant, as opposed to the expiration of the statutory time limit in adverse possession.
SUBJECT: PROPERTY
TOPIC: QUIETING OF TITLE (476-481)
ARTICLE 481
The procedure for the quieting of title or the removal of a cloud therefrom shall be governed by such rules of court as
the Supreme Court shall promulgate.
Rules and
Procedure
1. The venue of the aciton is determined by the situation or location of the premises ad not by the residence of the
party.
2. The process or notice should accurately describe the property and state in general terms the nature and extent of
the plaintiff's claim
3. The suit cannot be brought in the name of one pary for the use and benefit of another is not only may but must be
prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.
4. in a suit for the quieting of title the actual possessor at the time of th4e filing of the aciton must be respected in his
possession until after there is an adjudicaiton on the merits. If said actual possessor is disturbed in the meantime by
the other pary, the former is entitled to a writ of preliminary injuction against said disturbers.
Action for
Quieting of Title
Will Not Prosper
Court's Task
The court is tasked to determine the respective rights of the parties so that the complaint and those claiming under
him may be forever free from danger of hostile claim.