[ G.R. No. L-499, March 20, 1948 ]
TOMAS GARCIA ET AL., PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLEES, VS. LUCIA DINERO AND THE DIRECTOR OF LAND, DEFENDANTS. LUCIA DINERO, APPELLANT.
D E C I S I O N
PARAS, J.:
The trial court, sustaining plaintiffs' complaint, held that Free Patent No. 2540 is null and void. The defendant-appellant, Lucia Dinero, herein contends that the lower court erred in holding that the land is private, and not public, and that the sale of June 9, 1937 in favor of Tomas Garcia and Francisca Aguilan is valid.
the private character of the land, especially in so far as the appellant is concerned, should be beyond controversy. The fact was recognized when her parents bought the property from Tomas Garcia and Francisca Aguilan in 1930 and when she and her mother, by virtue of that sale, consolidated their title thereto after the death of appellant's father, Cosme Dinero. the possessory information registered as early as 1901 is of course prima facie proof of ownership on the part of Angelo Aguilan, father of Francisca Aguilan (La 0 vs. Director of Lands, 43 0ff. Gaz., 504), and such private ownership was not affected by the issuance of Free Patent No. 2540, at the istance of the appellant hereself, since the Public Land Law applies only to lands of the public domain, and the Director of Lands has no authority to grant to another a free patent for land that has ceased to be a public land and has passed to private ownership, and a title so issued is null and void. (Lacaste vs. Director of Lands, 63 Phil. 654; Lizada vs. Omanan, 59 Phil. 547, 555.)
Free Patent No. 2540 being thus a nullity as regards the land in question, which was already private before and at the time the appellant filed her application with the Director of Lands, there is no merit in appellant's contention that the resale from her and her mother on June 9, 1937 to the appellees, Tomas Garcia and Francisca Aguilan, is violative of section 118 of Comraonwealth Act No. 141 prohibiting alienation of lands acquired under the free patent or homestead provisions from the date of the approval of the application and for five years after the issuance of the patent or grant.
The appealed judgment is, therefore, hereby affirmed, with costs against the appellant. So ordered.
Perfecto, Hilado, Briones, and Tuason, JJ., concur.