G. R. No. 8936

CONSUELO LEGARDA, WITH HER HUSBAND MAURO PRIETO, PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLANTS, VS. N. M. SALEEBY, DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE. D E C I S I O N

[ G. R. No. 8936. October 02, 1915 ] 31 Phil. 590

[ G. R. No. 8936. October 02, 1915 ]

CONSUELO LEGARDA, WITH HER HUSBAND MAURO PRIETO, PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLANTS, VS. N. M. SALEEBY, DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE. D E C I S I O N

JOHNSON, J.:

From the record the following facts appear: First.  That the plaintiffs and the defendant occupy, as owners, adjoining lots  in the district of Ermita in the city of Manila. Second.  That there exists and has existed for  a number of years a stone wall between the said lots.   Said wall is located on the lot of the plaintiffs. Third. That  the plaintiffs, on the 2d day of March, 1906, presented a petition  in the Court of Land Registration for the registration of their lot.   After a consideration of said petition the court, on the 25th day of October, 1906, decreed that the title  of the  plaintiffs  should  be registered and issued to them the original certificate provided for under the torrens system.  Said registration  and certificate  included the wall. Fourth.  Later the predecessor of the defendant presented a petition in the Court of Land Registration for the registration of  the  lot now occupied by him.   On the 25th day of March,  1912, the court decreed the registration  of said title and issued the  original certificate provided for under the torrens system.  The description of  the  lot given in the petition of the defendant  also included said wall. Fifth.  Several months later (the 13th day of December, 1912)  the plaintiffs discovered  that  the  wall which had been  included  in the certificate granted to them had also been  included  in the certificate granted to the defendant. They immediately presented a petition in the Court of Land Registration for an adjustment and correction of the error committed by including said wall in the registered  title of each  of  said parties.   The lower  court however, without notice to the defendant, denied said petition upon the theory that, during the pendency of the petition for the registration of the defendant’s land, they  failed to make any objection to the registration of said lot, including  the wall,  in the name of  the defendant. Sixth.  That  the land occupied by the wall  is registered in the name of each of the  owners of  the adjoining lots. The wall is not a joint wall. Under these facts, who is the owner of  the  wall and the land occupied by it? The decision of the lower court is based upon the theory that the  action for the registration of the lot of the defendant was a  judicial proceeding and that the  judgment or decree was binding upon  all parties  who did not  appear and oppose it.   In other words, by reason of the fact that the plaintiffs had not opposed the registration of that part of the lot  on which the wall  was  situate  they had lost it, even  though it had been theretofore  registered in  their name.  Granting  that theory to be the correct one, and granting  even that the  wall  and the land occupied by it, in fact,  belonged to the defendant  and his predecessors, then  the  same theory should be applied to the defendant himself.  Applying that theory to him, he had already lost whatever right he had therein, by permitting the plaintiffs to have the same registered in their name, more than six years before.   Having thus lost his right,  may he be permitted to regain it by simply including it in a petition for registration?  The plaintiffs  having secured the registration of their lot, including the wall, were  they obliged to constantly be  on the alert and to watch all  the proceedings in the land court to see that some one  else  was not  having all, or a portion of the same,  registered?  If that question is to be answered in the  affirmative, then the whole scheme and  purpose  of the  torrens  system of  land  registration must  fail.  The real purpose of that system is to quiet title to land; to put a stop forever to any question of the legality of the title, except claims which were noted  at the  time of registration, in the certificate, or  which may arise subsequent thereto.   That being  the purpose of the law, it would seem that once a  title  is  registered  the owner may rest secure, without the necessity of waiting in the portals of the court,  or sitting in the  “mirador de su casa,” to avoid the possibility of losing his land.  Of course, it can not be denied that the proceeding for the registration of land under the torrens system is judicial (Escueta vs. Director of Lands, 16 Phil. Rep.,  482).   It is clothed with all the forms of an action and the result is  final  and binding upon  all the world.  It is an  action in rem.  (Escueta vs. Director  of Lands  (supra); Grey Alba vs.  De la Cruz, 17 Phil. Rep., 49; Roxas vs. Enriquez, 29 Phil. Rep., 31; Tyler vs. Judges, 175 Mass., 71; American Land Co. vs. Zeiss, 219 U. S., 47.) While the proceeding is judicial, it involves more in its consequences than does an ordinary action.  All the world are parties, including the government.  After the registra tion is complete and final and there exists no fraud, there are no innocent third parties who  may  claim  an interest. The rights of all the world are foreclosed by the decree of registration.  The government itself assumes the burden of giving notice to all  parties.   To permit persons who  are parties in the registration proceeding (and they are all  the world) to again litigate  the  same questions, and to again cast doubt upon the  validity  of the registered  title, would destroy the very purpose  and  intent of the law..  The registration, under the torrens system, does not give the owner any better title than he had.   If  he does not already have a perfect title, he can not have it registered.  Fee simple titles only may be registered.  The  certificate  of’registra- tion accumulates  in  one document a precise and correct statement of the exact status of the fee held by its owner. The certificate,  in the absence of fraud, is the  evidence of title and shows  exactly the real interest of its owner.  The title once registered, with very few exceptions,  should  not thereafter be impugned, altered, changed, modified, enlarged, or diminished,  except in  some direct proceeding  permitted by law.  Otherwise all security in  registered titles would be lost.  A registered  title  can not  be  altered, modified, enlarged, or diminished  in a  collateral proceeding and  not even by  a direct proceeding,  after the lapse of the period prescribed by law. For the difficulty involved  in  the present case the Act (No. 496) providing for the registration of titles  under  the torrens system affords us no remedy.  There is  no provision in said Act giving the parties  relief under conditions like the present.  There  is nothing in the Act  which indicates  who  should be the owner  of land which  has been registered in the name of two different persons. The rule, we think, is well settled that the decree ordering the registration of a particular parcel of land  is a bar to future litigation over the same between  the same parties. In view of the fact that  all the world are parties, it must follow that future  litigation over the title is forever barred; there can be no persons  who  are not parties to the action. This, we think, is the rule, except as to rights which are noted in the certificate or which arise subsequently, and with certain other exceptions which need not be discussed at present.   A title once registered can  not be defeated, even by an adverse, open,  and notorious possession.   Registered title under the torrens system can not be defeated by prescription  (section 46, Act No. 496).  The title, once registered, is notice to the world.  All  persons must take notice.  No one can plead ignorance of the registration. The question, who  is  the  owner of  land registered  in the name of two different persons, has been presented  to the courts in other jurisdictions.  In some jurisdictions, where the “torrens” system has been adopted, the difficulty has been settled by express statutory provision.   In others it has been settled by the courts.  Hogg, in his excellent discussion  of the “Australian  Torrens System,” at page 823, says: “The general  rule is  that in the case  of two certificates  of title,  purporting to  include the same land, the earlier in date prevails, whether the land comprised  in the latter certificate be wholly, or only  in part, comprised in the earlier certificate.   (Oelkers vs.  Merry,  2 Q. S.  C. R.,  193; Miller vs. Davy, 7 N.  Z. R., 155; Lloyd vs. May- field, 7 A. L. T.  (V.) 48;  Stevens  vs. Williams, 12 V. L. R., 152;  Register of Titles vs. Esperance Land Co., 1 W. A. R.,  118.)”  Hogg adds however that, “if it can be  clearly ascertained by the ordinary rules of construction relating to written documents, that the inclusion of the land in the certificate of title of prior date is a mistake, the mistake may be rectified by holding the latter of  the two  certificates of title to be conclusive.”  (See  Hogg on the “Australian Torrens System,”  supra,  and  cases cited.   See also the excellent  work of Niblack  in his “Analysis of the Torrens System,”  page  99.)   Niblack,  in  discussing the  general question, said: “Where two certificates  purport to  include the same land the earlier in date prevails.   *   *    *  In successive registrations,  where more than one certificate is issued  in respect of a particular estate or interest  in land, the person claiming under the prior certificate is entitled to the estate or interest; and that person is deemed to hold under the prior certificate who is the holder of,  or whose claim is derived directly or indirectly from the person who was the holder  of the earliest certificate issued  in respect thereof.   While  the acts  in  this  country do not expressly cover the case of the issue of two certificates for the same land, they provide that a registered  owner shall hold the  title, and the  effect of  this  undoubtedly is  that where  two certificates  purport to include  the same  registered land, the  holder of the  earlier one continues  to hold the title” (p. 237). Section 38 of Act No.  496, provides that; “It (the decree of registration)  shall be conclusive upon  and  against all persons,  including the  Insular Government and  all the branches  thereof, whether mentioned by name in  the application, notice,  or citation, or included in the general description  ‘To all whom it may concern.’  Such  decree shall not be opened by reason of the absence, infancy, or other disability of any person affected thereby, nor by any proceeding in any court for reversing judgments or decrees;  subject, however,  to  the  right of any person deprived  of  land  or of any estate or  interest therein by decree of  registration obtained by fraud to file in the Court  of Land Registration a  petition for review within one  year after entry of the decree  (of registration),  provided no innocent purchaser for value has acquired an interest.” It will  be  noted, from said section, that the  “decree  of registration”  shall  not be opened, for any reason, in any court,  except for fraud,  and not even for fraud, after the lapse of one  year.  If then the decree of registration can not be opened for any reason, except for fraud,  in a direct proceeding for that purpose, may such decree be opened or set aside in a collateral proceeding by including a portion of the land in a subsequent certificate or decree  of registration ? We do not believe the  law contemplated that a person  could be deprived of  his registered title  In that way. We have in this jurisdiction a general statutory provision which  governs the right of the ownership of land  when the same is registered in the ordinary registry in the  name of two different persons.  Article 1473  of the Civil  Code provides, among other things, that when one piece of real property has  been sold  to  two different persons it  shall belong to the  person acquiring it, who first inscribes it in the registry.  This rule, of course, presupposes  that each of the vendees or purchasers has acquired title to the land. The real ownership in such a case depends upon priority of registration.  While we do not now decide that the general provisions of the Civil Code are applicable to the  Land Registration Act, even though we see no objection thereto, yet we think, in the  absence of other express provisions, they should  have a persuasive influence in adopting a rule for  governing the effect of a  double  registration  under said Act.  Adopting the rule which we believe to be  more in consonance with the purposes and the real intent of the torrens system,  we are of the  opinion and* so  decree that in case land has been registered under the Land Registration Act in the name of two different persons, the earlier in date shall prevail. In reaching the above conclusion, we have not overlooked the  forceful  argument of the  appellee.  He says, among other things;  “When  Prieto et  al. were served with notice of the application of Teus (the  predecessor of  the defendant) they became defendants in a proceeding wherein he, Teus, was seeking to foreclose their right, and that of others, to the parcel of land described in his application.  Through their failure to  appear and contest his right thereto, and the subsequent entry  of  a default judgment against them, they became irrevocably bouncf by the decree adjudicating such land to Teus.  They had  their day  in court and can not  set up their own omission as ground for impugning the validity  of a judgment duly  entered by a court of competent jurisdiction. - To decide  otherwise would be to hold that lands with torrens titles are above the law and beyond the jurisdiction of the courts.” As was said above, the primary and fundamental purpose of the torrens system is to quiet title.   If the holder of a certificate cannot rest secure in his registered title then the purpose of the law is defeated.  If those dealing with registered land cannot rely upon the certificate, then nothing has been  gained by the registration and  the  expense incurred thereby has been in vain.  If the  holder may lose a strip of his registered land by the method adopted in the present case, he  may  lose it all.  Suppose within the six years which elapsed after the plaintiff had secured their title, they had mortgaged or sold their right,  what would be the position or right of the mortgagee or vendee?  That mistakes are  bound to occur cannot  be denied, and sometimes the damage done thereby is irreparable.  It  is the duty of the courts to  adjust the rights of the  parties under such circumstances so as to minimize such damages, taking into consideration all of the conditions and the diligence of the respective parties to avoid them.  In the present case, the appellee was first negligent (granting that he was the real owner, and if he was not  the real owner he can not complain) in  not opposing the registration in  the name of the appellants.  He was a party-defendant in an action for the registration of the lot in question, in the name of the appellants, in 1906.  “Through his failure to appear and to oppose such  registration,  and  the subsequent entry of a default judgment against him, he became irrevocably bound by the decree adjudicating  such land to  the appellants.  He had  his day  in  court  and should not be permitted to set up his own omissions as the ground for impugning the validity of a judgment duly entered by a  court of competent jurisdiction.”  Granting that  he was  the  owner of  the land upon which the walk is located, his failure to oppose the registration of the same in the name of the appellants, in the absence of fraud, forever closes  his mouth against impugning the validity of that judgment.  There is no more reason why the doctrine invoked by the appellee should be applied to the appellants than to him. We have decided, in case of double registration under the Land Registration Act, that the owner of the  earliest certificate is the owner of the land.  That is the rule between original parties.  May this rule be applied to successive vendees of the owners of such certificates?  Suppose that one or the other of the parties, before the error  is discovered, transfers his original certificate to an “innocent purchaser.” The general rule is that the vendee of land has no greater right, title, or interest than his vendor; that he acquires the right which  his  vendor  had,  only.  Under that  rule the vendee  of  the earlier certificate would  be the owner as against the vendee of the owner of the later certificate. We find  statutory  provisions which, upon  first reading, seem to cast some doubt  upon the rule that the vendee acquires the interest of  the vendor only.   Sections 38, 55, and 112  of Act No. 496 indicate that the vendee may acquire rights and  be protected against defenses  which the vendor would not.   Said sections speak of available rights in favor of third parties which are cut off by virtue of the sale of the land to an “innocent  purchaser.”   That is to say, persons who had had a  right or interest in land wrongfully included in an original certificate would be unable to enforce such rights against an “innocent purchaser,” by  virtue of the provisions of said sections.  In the present case  Teus had his land, including the wall, registered in his name.  He subsequently sold the  same to the appellee.  Is the appellee an “innocent purchaser,” as that phrase is used in said sections?   May  those who have been deprived of their land by reason of a mistake in the original certificate in favor of Teus be deprived of  their right to the same, by  virtue of the sale by him to the appellee?  Suppose the appellants had sold their lot, including the wall, to an “innocent purchaser,” would such  purchaser be included in the phrase “innocent purchaser,” as the same is used in said sections? Under these  examples there  would be two innocent  purchasers  of the same land,  if said sections are to be applied. Which of the  two innocent purchasers, if they are both to be regarded  as innocent  purchasers,  should  be protected under the  provisions of  said sections?   These questions indicate the difficulty with which we are met in giving meaning and effect to the phrase “innocent purchaser,” in said sections. May the purchaser of land which has been included in a “second original  certificate” ever be regarded as an “innocent purchaser,” as against the rights or interest of the owner of the first original certificate, his heirs, assigns, or vendee?  The first original  certificate  is recorded  in the public registry.  It is never issued until it is recorded. The record is notice to all the world.  All persons are charged with the knowledge of what it contains.  All persons dealing with  the land so recorded,  or any portion  of it,  must be charged with notice of whatever it contains.  The purchaser is charged with notice of every fact shown by the  record and is presumed to know every  fact which the record discloses.  This rule  is so well established that it is scarcely necessary to  cite authorities in its support  (Northwestern National Bank vs. Freeman, 171 U. S., 620, 629;  Delvin on Real Estate, sections 710, 710 [a]). When a conveyance  has  been properly  recorded such record is constructive notice  of its contents and all interests, legal and equitable, included therein.  (Grandin vs. Anderson,  15 Ohio State,  286, 289; Orvis vs. Newell, 17  Conn., 97; Buchanan vs. International Bank, 78 111., 500; Youngs vs. Wilson, 27 N. Y., 351; McCabe vs. Grey, 20 Cal., 509; Montefiore vs. Browne, 7 House of Lords Cases, 341.) Under the rule of notice, it is presumed that the purchaser has examined every instrument of record affecting the title. Such presumption is irrebutable.   He is charged with notice of every fact shown by  the record and is presumed to know every fact which an examination of the record would have  disclosed.  This presumption cannot be overcome  by proof of innocence or good faith.  Otherwise the very purpose and  object of the law requiring a record would  be destroyed.  Such presumption cannot be defeated by proof of want of knowledge of what the record contains any more  than one may be permitted to show that he was ignorant of the provisions of the law.  The rule that all persons must take notice of the facts which the public record contains is a rule of law.   The rule must be absolute.   Any variation would lead to endless confusion and useless litigation. While there is no  statutory provision in force here requiring that original deeds of conveyance of real property be recorded, yet there is a rule requiring mortgages to be recorded.  (Arts. 1875 and 606  of the Civil Code.)  The record of a mortgage is indispensable to its validity.   (Art. 1-875.)  In the face of that statute would the courts allow a mortgage to be valid which had not been recorded, upon the plea of ignorance of the statutory provision, when third parties  were interested?  May  a purchaser of land, subsequent to the recorded mortgage, plead ignorance of its existence, and by reason  of such ignorance have the land released from such lien?  Could a purchaser of land, after the recorded mortgage,  be relieved from the mortgage lien by the plea that he was a bona fide purchaser?  May there be a bona fide purchaser of said land, bona fide in the sense that he had no knowledge  of the existence of the mortgage?  We believe the rule that all persons must take notice of what the public record  contains is just as obligatory upon all persons  as the rule that all men must know the law; that no one can plead ignorance of the law.  The fact that all men know the law is contrary to the presumption. The conduct of men, at times, shows clearly that they do not know the law.   The rule, however, is mandatory and obligatory, notwithstanding.  It  would be just as  logical to allow the plea of ignorance of the law affecting a contract as to allow  the defense of ignorance of the existence and contents of a public record. In  view, therefore, of the foregoing rules  of law, may the purchaser of land from the owner of the second original certificate be an “innocent purchaser,” when a part or all of such land had theretofore been registered in the name of another,  not the vendor?  We are of the  opinion that said sections 38, 55, and 112 should not be applied to such purchasers.   We  do not believe  that the phrase “innocent purchaser” should be applied to such a purchaser.  He cannot be regarded as an “innocent purchased because  of the facts contained in the record of the first original certificate. The rule should not be applied to the purchaser of a parcel of land the vendor of which is not the owner of the original certificate, or his successors.  He, in no sense, can be an “innocent purchaser” of the portion of the land  included in another earlier  original certificate.  The rule  of notice of what the record  contains precludes the idea of innocence. By reason of the prior registry there cannot be an  innocent purchaser of  land  included  in a  prior original certificate and in a  name  other than that of the vendor, or his  successors.   In order to minimize the difficulties we think this is the  safer rule to establish.  We believe  the phrase  “innocent purchaser,”  used in said sections, should be limited only to cases where unregistered land has been wrongfully included in a certificate under the torrens  system. When land is once brought under the torrens system, the record of the original certificate and all subsequent  transfers thereof is notice to all the world.  That  being the  rule, could Teus even be regarded as the holder in good faith  of that part of the  land included in his certificate which  had theretofore been included in the original certificate of  the appellants? We think not.   Suppose, for example, that  Teus had never had his lot registered under the torrens system.   Suppose he had sold his lot to the appellee and had included in his deed of transfer the very strip of land now in  question. Could  his vendee be regarded as  an “innocent purchaser” of said strip?   Would his vendee be an “innocent purchaser” of said strip?  Certainly not.  The record of the original certificate of the appellants precludes the possibility.   Has the appellee gained any right by reason of  the registration of the  strip of land in the name of his vendor?  Applying the rule of notice  resulting from the record of the title of the appellants,  the question must be answered in the negative.  We are  of the opinion that these rules  are more in harmony with the purpose of Act No. 496 than the  rule contended for by the appellee.  We believe that the purchaser from the owner of the later certificate,  and his  successors, should  be required to resort to  his  vendor for damages, in case of a mistake like the present, rather than to molest the holder of the first certificate who  has been guilty of  no negligence.  The holder of the first original certificate and his  successors should be permitted to rest secure in  their title, against one who had  acquired rights in conflict therewith and who had full and  complete knowledge of their rights.  The purchaser of land included in the second original certificate, by reason of the facts contained in the public record and the knowledge with which he is charged and by reason  of his negligence, should suffer the loss, if any, resulting from such purchase, rather than  he who has obtained the first certificate and who was innocent of any act of negligence. The foregoing decision does not solve,  nor pretend  to solve, all the difficulties resulting from double registration under the torrens  system and the subsequent transfer  of the land.  Neither  do we now attempt to decide the effect of the former registration in the ordinary registry upon the registration under the torrens system.  We  are  inclined to the view, without deciding it, that the record under the torrens system must, by the very nature and purposes of that system, supersede  all  other registries.  If that view is correct then it will  be sufficient, in  dealing with land registered and recorded under the  torrens  system, to examine that record alone.  Once  land is registered and recorded under the torrens system, that record alone can  be examined for the purpose of ascertaining the real status of the title to the land. It would seem to be a just and equitable rule, when two persons have  acquired equal rights in the same  thing,  to hold that  the  one who acquired it  first and who has  complied with  all  the requirements  of the law should  be protected. In  view of  our conclusions, above stated, the judgment of the lower court  should be and is hereby revoked.  The record is  hereby returned  to  the  court now having and exercising the jurisdiction heretofore exercised by the land court, with  direction to make  such orders and decrees in the premises as may correct the error heretofore made in including the land in question in the second original certificate issued in favor of the predecessor of the appellee, as well as in all other duplicate certificates issued. Without any finding as to costs, it is so ordered. Arellano, C. J. Torres, and Araullo, JJ., concur. Carson J., with whom concurs