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[VICENTE P. CAPISTRANO v. PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ce53d?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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101 Phil. 1117

[ G.R. No. L-9628, August 30, 1957 ]

VICENTE P. CAPISTRANO, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK AND PROVINCIAL SHERIFF OF QUEZON, DEFENDANTS AND APPELLANTS.

REYES, A., J.:

This is an  action to cancel an execution lien annotated on a Torrens certificate  of title.

The  facts  are  not  in  dispute.  By a  deed  executed on July 17,  1946,  the spouses  Fulgencio  Moreno  and Maria Salome sold to the  plaintiff Vicente  P.  Capistrano the land described in  TCT No.  19920 of the land records of  Quezon  province,  subject to  a mortgage  constituted upon said land in  favor of the Agricultural and Industrial Bank. Though the  buyer had assumed the  obligation of paying the said mortgage, the  sale could not then be registered because the Rehabilitation  Finance Corporation, as  successor  to  the  Agricultural and  Industrial  Bank, had  possession  of  the  owner's  duplicate  certificate of title and would not release  it unless the buyer also  assumed the obligation of  paying  a deficiency claim against the seller Fulgencio Moreno  (in connection with a prior loan) for which the same land was made answerable.  And the sale  was still unregistered when, nearly four years later, i.e., on June 22, 1950, the  land was levied upon to satisfy a  judgment  against Moreno  in favor of the  Philippine National Bank, the levy being on that same day recorded in the  register of deeds of  Quezon province and annotated upon the certificate  of title.

On July  25, 1952, the Rehabilitation  Finance Corporation, answering an inquiry from the  Philippine National Bank,  informed the latter that the land could  no longer be  "attached"  to satisfy  the judgment against Moreno because the same had1 already been  sold by  Moreno  and his wife to Capistrano.  And later, when the land  was advertised for auction by the  provincial sheriff, Capistrano filed a third party claim asserting his  title thereto by  virtue of the sale  made in his favor by the Morenos on  July 17, 1946.

Notified of the third party claim, the Philippine National Bank put up the necessary bond of indemnification, where- upon the provincial  sheriff proceeded with  the auction. And the bank having  submitted the only bid, a certificate of sale was issued to it by the  sheriff, which was registered on November 26, 1952 and annotated on the title certificate.

On  November  16,  1953,  Capistrano,  after  paying Moreno's  mortgage  obligation' with  the  Rehabilitation Finance Corporation, obtained a cancellation  of mortgage from the latter, and upon the cancellation being recorded in  the registry of deeds  he was  issued a clean  title (T-16984) except for the annotation thereon that it  was subject to the execution. lien in favor  of the  Philippine National Bank.

To cancel  that annotation  and at the same  time have the  execution  sale  declared  void,  Capistrano  instituted the  present  action in the Court of  First  Instance of Quezon province.  He then  won.  But the defendants have appealed,  and the case is  now  before us because the question at issue  is purely legal.

It  is to be  noted  from  the  above statement of facts that though the land in question was deeded to Capistrano as  far back  as 1946, it was  not  until November  19, 1953 that the  conveyance was  registered,  and  during that  interregnum the land was  subjected to  a levy of execution which  was recorded in the registry long before the registration of the deed of sale in favor of Capistrano. The  question  presented  is whether,  upon  those  facts, the  sale  should  take precedence  over the levy instead of the levy taking precedence over the sale.

Following the doctrine  laid down in Lanci vs. Yangco (52 Phil. 563), the trial  court  gave precedence  to  the sale.  To  this  we  cannot agree, for that  doctrine  has already  been  declared  abandoned  (Philippine  National Bank  vs. Camus, 70 Phil. 269; Resolution on motion  for reconsideration in Hernandez vs.  Katigbak, 69 Phil. 748), and the  rule  now followed is  that  if  the attachment or levy  of  execution,  though  posterior  to  the sale, is registered before the sale is registered, it takes precedence over the latter (Ramirez vs. Causin, et al., supra, p. 1009).

The rule is not altered  by the fact that at the time of the execution sale the Philippine National  Bank had information  that the land  levied upon  had  already been deeded by the judgment debtor and his "Wife to Capistrano. The auction sale being a  necessary sequel  to  the levy, for this  was effected precisely to carry out  the  sale,  the purchase made  by  the bank at said auction  should enjoy the same legal  priority that the levy had over  the sale in favor  of  plaintiff.  In other  words, the  auction sale retroacts to the  date of the levy. Were the rule otherwise, the  preference  enjoyed by  the  levy of  execution in a case like the present would be meaningless  and illusory (Vargas  vs. Tancioco,  et  al.,  67 Phil.  308;  Philippine Executive Commission vs. Abadilla,  74 Phil.  68.)

In view  of  the foregoing,  the  judgment  below   is reversed and plaintiff's action dismissed.  With coats.

Paras,  C. J, Bengzon,  Padilla, Montemayor, Bautista Angela, Labrador,  Concepcion, Reyes, J. B. L., Endencia and Felix, JJ,,  concur.

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