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[MARIA SALUD FLORES v. DIRECTOR OF LANDS](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/cf7b?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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17 Phil. 512

[ G. R. No. 6095, December 16, 1910 ]

MARIA SALUD FLORES, APPLICANT, VS. THE DIRECTOR OF LANDS, OPPONENT.

D E C I S I O N

ARELLANO, C.J.:

Maria Salud Flores applied to the Court of  Land Registration for the registration of  two parcels of land situated in Antipolo, Province of  Rizal,  and her application received favorable action, as the adjudication and registration  of the property was decreed on May 15,  1908.

But subsequently, on July 13 of the same year, Mariano Limjap petitioned for a revision of  the proceedings had in connection with one of the said parcels and a new hearing was granted.

At  this new hearing the applicant recognized the right of the opponent, Mariano Limjap, to the portion of land which was the subject of the opposition and the revision.

The land adjudicated to Maria Salud Flores, concerned in Limjap's opposition, is that situated in Samboanga, municipality of Antipolo, Province of  Rizal, with  an area  of 20,081.96 square meters, the boundaries of which are  set forth  in  the application and are herein taken for granted, since  the identity of the property, which is also admitted, was agreed upon.  This land that is the subject of Limjap's opposition contains 437 square meters and 50 square decimeters and  was acquired at a public  auction held by the provincial treasurer of Rizal on July 22, 1904.

The Court of Land Registration, in  view of the acquiescence of  the applicant, Maria  Salud  Flores, decreed,  on June  30, 1908, the adjudication and registration of the parcel of land claimed  by  Mariano Limjap and his wife, Maria Escolar.  Some time afterwards, Limjap conveyed his  right in the said piece of land to Cayetano Arguelles.

The plan of the said Samboanga land having been  drawn by  the Bureau  of  Lands, the applicant  signified her  acceptance.

The facts  thus far,  which give rise to no discussion whatever and  are  stated as  antecedents  of  those  which constitute the subject matter of the present appeal, are:
  1. The applicant, in  order  to distinguish and separate the parcel of  land corresponding to  Limjap, presented a plan,  in  agreement with that  drawn by the  Bureau  of Lands and signed only by herself, in which the  said parcel is demarcated, with an area of 437.50 square meters, and the remainder, pertaining to the applicant, 18,706.50 square meters.

  2. On August 28, 1909, the Court of Land Registration issued the following order:
    "Whereas, in the plan subscribed by the applicant, Maria Salud  Flores, on the 26th of May last,  and which is an exact copy of that drawn by the Bureau of Lands, specification is made of the portion of land adjudicated to Mariano Limjap y Nolasco,  by a transaction entered into between the latter and the said applicant, which  portion has been conveyed to Mr. Cayetano Arguelles y Fernandez  *  *  * let  a decree be entered in favor of  the aforementioned Arguelles for the said  portion of land referred to  in the technical description subscribed by the  applicant,  Maria Salud Flores, and by Mariano Limjap."
  3. A surveyor of the Court of Land Registration represented to the latter that the said plan was signed by a person  not authorized by the provisions  of Act No. 1937 to sign plans, and that it should be returned to the applicant with the requirement that  she present a new plan duly approved by the Bureau of Lands.

  4. The clerk of the Court of Land Registration also called the attention of the applicant to the incorrectness  of the statement of the area of each one  of the two parcels of land, and suggested to her the necessity of filing an amended application, without  which the decree of registration could not be issued.  Both the applicant and Cayetano Arguelles filed the new application, rectifying the area of each parcel of land in the following manner: That of Arguelles's land was given as  435.^3 square meters, instead of 487.50 square meters;  and  that of Maria  Salud  Flores's, as  18,708.47 square meters, instead of 18,706.50 square meters.

  5. On February 26, 1910, the Court of Land Registration, in harmony  with the  representation made by  one  of  its surveyors, and contained in fact No. 3 above, made a ruling wherein it ordered that the plan referred to be admitted.

  6. On March  17,  1910, the Attorney-General protested against and toolran exception to the said ruling, and prayed for its reconsideration on the ground that it was contrary to the provisions of Acts Nos.  1875 and 1937, and announced, moreover, that, in case his  motion to reconsider was denied, he likewise would take exception thereto.

  7. The Court of Land Registration, on March 22, 1910, ruled upon the said  motion for  reconsideration, denying the same and admitting the exceptions taken to both rulings. In this manner the question was submitted on appeal.
Is it necessary that a plan, exactly copied from one drawn by the Bureau of Lands, in which a  parcel of land is demarcated which must be segregated therefrom as belonging to an opponent or some other person  not the applicant, be signed by a surveyor authorized to exercise his profession, and that it be again approved by the said  Bureau?

Arguments for  the contrary opinion are: (1) That, in the case of# Maria Guia Garcia, No. 5399, it  was decided that,  when the  original plan has been  approved  by the Bureau of  Lands, as in the case under examination, it is not necessary to require that the plan of the segregated portion be  again approved by the Bureau  aforementioned, inasmuch as the surveyors of the Court of Land Registration  likewise have the technical and  other knowledge required of those of that Bureau and the necessary ability to fudge whether the segregation made of a piece of land on a plan already approved by the Bureau  of Lands is or is not correct;  (2) that,  even when the plans have been approved by the Bureau of Lands, the surveyors of the Court of Land Registration  are  not exempt from the duty of examining  them before they are  published or before the titles are decreed; and (3) that the  procedure of a new approval by the Bureau of Lands, in the cases of the segregation of any portion of  a  parcel or tract of land,  the plan of which has already been examined and approved by the said Bureau, would only mean an unnecessary repetition of labor.

The following arguments support an affirmative decision of the preceding question: (1)  That there is no comparison between the case of Maria  Guia Garcia and the present one, since, in the former, the applicant sold a portion of her property after it had been registered, while, in the present case, the property  has  not yet been  registered and  the segregation of a part of the same was not  effected by any act  of the applicant, but through a decree of the Court of Land Registration issued as a result of a  revision  obtained by the  real owner of the  land  before the decision became final;  (2) that,  were the said plan admitted,  the adjudication would  have to be made in accord with  the measurements  and other data given in the plan, relative to the segregated  portion, although the area given  in  the said plan, both to the lesser  and to the  greater parcel, was found to be inexact and incorrect, and, moreover,  the said plan is signed by the  applicant herself, who  is  not even a private surveyor,  and no value can be attached to the  allegation  that it  is  a copy of an original, approved plan, because this original does not  contain  the portion segregated in that copy;  (3)  that the boundaries of  the segregated portion were established by  an unauthorized person, and  hence the inexactness  in area; and, finally, that, it being the duty of the surveyors of the Court  of Land Registration, as it  is in  fact, to examine the plans submitted to the court, it was a surveyor of the court who complied with  his duty in examining the plan and it  was he who proposed the rejection of the measurements therein established by  one who  was not a surveyor, pursuant  to the conditions required in section 5 of Act No. 1937.

Since these provisions of the law must be observed, the order appealed from is reversed,  and the  Court of Land Registration  shall  require the  filing of another plan prepared in conformity with the provisions of Act No. 1937. So ordered.

Torres,  Johnson, Moreland, and Trent, JJ., concur.

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