Director of Forestry vs. Muñoz, 23 SCRA 1183

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Republic of the Philippines

SUPREME COURT
Manila

EN BANC

G.R. No. L-24796           June 28, 1968

DIRECTOR OF FORESTRY, FOREST STATION WARDEN, DISTRICT 13, BUREAU


OF FORESTRY, BOARD OF DIRECTORS, NATIONAL WATERWORKS AND
SEWERAGE AUTHORITY 1 and CHIEF OF STAFF, ARMED FORCES OF THE
PHILIPPINES, petitioners,
vs.
HON. EMMANUEL M. MUÑOZ, as Judge of the Court of First Instance of Bulacan,
Branch I, the SHERIFF OF THE PROVINCE of BULACAN, and PINAGCAMALIGAN
INDO-AGRO DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, INC., respondents.

-----------------------------

G.R. No. L-25459           June 28, 1968

PINAGCAMALIGAN INDO-AGRO DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, INC., petitioner,


vs.
HON. MACARIO PERALTA, JR., in his capacity as the Secretary of National
Defense;
HON. ENETERIO DE JESUS, in his capacity as Undersecretary of National
Defense;
GENERAL RIGOBERTO ATIENZA, in his capacity as the Chief of Staff; 2 Armed
Forces of the Philippines,
COLONEL MANUEL V. REYES, in his capacity as the Judge Advocate General,
Armed Forces of the Philippines;
and the TASK FORCES COMMANDER, Task Force Preserve (Tabak Division), 1st
Infantry Division, Fort Magsaysay, Nueva Ecija, respondents.

Office of the Solicitor General for petitioner Director of Forestry, et al.


Gualberto Cruz for respondent Pinagcamaligan Indo-Agro Development Corporation.

SANCHEZ, J.:

Two original actions involving divers legal questions are now before this Court.

In the first, L-24796, the corresponding government officials seek — on certiorari and


prohibition — to annul the order and writ of execution issued by the Court of First
Instance of Bulacan in its Civil Case 3035-M allowing Pinagcamaligan Indo-Agro
Development Corporation, Inc. (Piadeco, for short) to haul its logs in the area
hereinafter to be mentioned.
In the second, L-25459, it was Piadeco's turn to ask — on prohibition and injunction —
for a ruling that respondent government officials are "without authority and jurisdiction to
stop logging operations, construction of the roads, cutting, gathering and removing of
timber and other forest products" from said corporation's private woodland area.

Because of their interrelation, the two case are here jointly considered.

The following undisputed facts control:

Piadeco claims to be the owner of Some 72,000 hectares of land 3 located in the
municipalities of Angat, Norzagaray and San Jose del Monte, province of Bulacan, and
in Antipolo and Montalban, province of Rizal. Piadeco's evidence of ownership consists
of Titulo de Propiedad No. 4136, dated April 25, 1894,4 and a deed of absolute sale of
July 12, 1962, in its favor. Piadeco applied for registration as private woodland some
10,000 hectares of this land. The Bureau of Forestry, on December 4, 1963, issued in
Piadeco's name Certificate of Private Woodland Registration No. PWR 2065-New,
covering but a portion of the land an aggregate area of 4,400 hectares and an average
stand of 87.20 cubic meters, situated in the municipalities of Angat, Norzagaray, and
San Jose del Monte, all of the province of Bulacan, and Montalban, in Rizal. It was to
expire on December 31, 1964. By virtue of the registration certificate, Piadeco
conducted logging operations..

The controversy in the these cases began on April 11, 1964, when Acting Director of
Forestry Apolonio F. Rivera issued an order cancelling PWR No. 2065-New. He
required Piadeco to surrender the original certificate to him. Ground for this cancellation
was that Piadeco had violated forestry rules and regulations for cutting trees within the
Angat and Marikina Watershed Reservations, expressly excluded from the said
certificate.5

On April 14, 1964, Forest Station Warden Reinaldo B. Marquez, District 13, Bureau of
Forestry, wrote Piadeco requesting the latter to desist, effective the same day, April 14,
1964, from conducting its logging operation inside or outside the area covered by PWR
2065-New, and to refrain from removing logs already cut unless they have been scaled
and properly invoiced by forestry officers.

Previously, on April 10, 1964, Nawasa's board of directors advised Piadeco, by letter, of
the revocation of the 1964 grant to Piadeco, of a right of way from a barrio in Bosoboso,
Antipolo, to Montalban, Rizal, as an access road to its logging concession under PWR
2061.

Offshot of the foregoing is Piadeco's petition for certiorari and prohibition with


preliminary injunction, lodged on April 17, 1964 with the Court of First Instance of
Bulacan.6 This petition was directed against the Director of Forestry, Forest Station
Warden Marquez and Nawasa, essentially upon the averment that their acts heretofore
narrated were "all precipitate, arbitrary, whimsical and capricious." On the same day,
April 17, 1964, Judge Emmanuel M. Muñoz of the Bulacan court directed the
government authorities to show cause why preliminary injunction should not issue.

On May 4, 1964, over the Director of Forestry's opposition, the judge ordered the
issuance — upon a P10,000-bond — of a writ of preliminary injunction restraining the
Director of Forestry, the Forest Station Warden and Nawasa from carrying out and
executing the April 10, 1964 revocation by Nawasa of Piadeco's right of way, the April
11, 1964 order of the Director of Forestry, and the April 14, 1964 directive of the Forest
Station Warden, heretofore mentioned.

On May 5, 1964, Piadeco moved to declare the forestry officials in default for failure to
answer its petition on time.

On May 6, 1964, unaware of Piadeco's May 5 motion, the forestry officials, upon a
motion dated April 29, 1964, asked the Bulacan court to dismiss Piadeco's petition upon
the averments that said court had no jurisdiction over their persons or the subject matter
of the petition, and that administrative remedies have not yet been exhausted by
Piadeco. On the same date, too, but in a separate motion, said forestry official asked for
a reconsideration of the lower court's order granting preliminary injunction, bottomed
upon their charge that the illegal cutting of trees by Piadeco inside the Angat and
Marikina Watershed Reservations — which are the main source of water supply of the
City of Manila and its surrounding towns and cities — poses a grave danger of causing
them to dry up to the prejudice and irreparable injury of the inhabitants thereof. Piadeco
file written opposition on May 13, 1964.

On May 14, 1964, acting on the aforesaid motion for reconsideration and opposition
thereto, the judge below ruled that although Piadeco is entitled to injunction, the
continuance thereof would cause great damage to the government, while Piadeco can
be fully compensated for any damages Piadeco may suffer because of the dissolution
thereof. That bond, however, was not filed by the forestry officials.

On July 13, 1964, upon Piadeco's May 5 motion earlier adverted to, the forestry officials
were declared in default.

On July 24, 1964, said forestry officials filed a verified motion to set aside the default
order and to admit their answer thereto attached. They pleaded excusable neglect
and/or oversight of the clerk of the records of the Records section of the Bureau of
Forestry.

On July 29, 1964, the court shunted aside the foregoing motion for the reason that their
six days' delay was not excusable and their answer was prepared only after three days
from their receipt of the order of default. A motion for reconsideration registered by the
forestry officials on August 12, 1964 was unavailing. The court below struck down that
motion on September 4, 1964.
Thus it is, that Piadeco submitted evidence ex parte to the court below against the
Director of Forestry and the Forest Station Warden.

Piadeco had, in the meantime, entered into an amicable settlement with Nawasa
whereby Piadeco's case against Nawasa was withdrawn, the right of way granted by
Nawasa to Piadeco remaining revoked and cancelled; and Nawasa's counterclaim
against Piadeco was also withdrawn in consideration of P1,651.59 paid by Piadeco to
Nawasa, representing the former's liabilities to the latter.

On December 29, 1964, the court below rendered judgment. It approved Piadeco's
compromise agreement with Nawasa. It held that Piadeco was the owner of the land in
question; that its operation was not in violation of forestry rules and regulations; that
aside from its regulation certificate, Piadeco was permitted by Nawasa thru the latter's
Resolution 1050, Section of 1963, to conduct selective logging within the Angat-
Marikina Watershed upon payment of P2.00 for every cubic meter of timber classified in
the first group and P1.75 belonging to the second group; that similar permits were
issued to other individuals by the Director of Forestry with the acquiescence of Nawasa;
that Piadeco's logging under Resolution 1050 aforesaid could not be contrary to forestry
rules and regulations; and that, upon the doctrine laid down in Santiago vs. Basilan
Lumber Co., L-15532, October 31, 1963, even if Piadeco's private woodland was
unregistered, it still retains its inherent "rights of ownership, among which are (its) rights
to the fruits of the land and to exclude any persons from the enjoyment and disposal
thereof", its only liability being the payment of surcharges on the timber severed from
the land. Thereupon, the court reinstated the writ of preliminary injunction earlier issued
and made it permanent, with costs..

Meanwhile, on December 28, 1964, one day before the rendition of the judgment just
mentioned, Piadeco applied for the renewal of its Certificate of Private Woodland
Registration PWR 2065-New, which would expire on the last day of that month. On
January 12, 1965, in reply thereto, Assistant Director of Forestry J. L. Utleg denied the
renewal requested. He informed Piadeco that its Titulo de Propiedad 4136 was not
registerable under Forestry Administrative Order No. 12-2 which took effect on January
1, 1963. The expiration of its registration certificate and the non-renewal thereof
notwithstanding, Piadeco continued logging operations. It was about this time that illegal
logging was denounced by some members of Congress thereby attracting national
attention. This led to a directive by the President of the Philippines on March 8, 1965 to
stop all illegal logging operations. Complying therewith, the Secretary of Agriculture and
Natural Resources wrote the Secretary of National Defense with the request that units
of the Armed Forces of the Philippines be detailed at the areas involved, deputizing
them agents of the Bureau of Forestry to assist in the enforcement of forest laws, rules
and regulations, and the protection of the forests. The Secretary of National Defense, in
turn, direct the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces to implement the request. And, the
Chief of Staff dispatched at ask force of the army into the Angat area, which impounded
and seized all logs cut by Piadeco and other loggers which were purportedly conducting
illegal operations.
On May 11, 1965, Piadeco sought from the Bulacan court an ex parte writ of execution
of the December 29, 1964 decision. That decision had by then become final for failure
of the forestry officials to appeal therefrom. Piadeco prayed that it be not molested in its
logging operations including the hauling of about 600 pieces (unscaled) and 1,000
pieces of mixed (scaled and unscaled) timber from the log ponds.

On May 12, 1965, the Bulacan court presided over temporarily by Judge Ricardo C.
Puno set Piadeco's motion for execution for hearing on May 27, 1965. Before the day of
the hearing arrived, however, Piadeco withdrew its ex parte motion for execution with
the manifestation that it would look for a more expeditious way or a more appropriate
remedy to enable it to haul the logs before the rains set in. But on May 27, 1965,
Piadeco refiled its motion for execution with Judge Muñoz, who had meanwhile
resumed his duties.

On June 1, 1965, Judge Muñoz granted Piadeco's motion. In line therewith, on June 3,
1965, the corresponding writ of execution was issued, directing a special sheriff to make
effective and execute the aforesaid lower court's decision of December 29, 1964.

Execution notwithstanding, the forestry officials still refused to permit Piadeco to haul its
logs. Because of this, on June 11, 1965, Piadeco asked the court below to declare the
forestry officials and those acting under them in contempt. On June 30, 1965, the
forestry officials opposed. They averred that Piadeco's registration certificate already
expired on December 31, 1964; that despite this expiration, Piadeco continued illegal
logging operations, which resulted in the seizure of its logs: that after December 31,
1964, the December 29, 1964 decision of the court below became functus officio and
could no longer be executed. Piadeco's rejoinder of July 1, 1965 was that its registration
certificate is not expirable and that it is not a license.

On July 8, 1965, the judge came out with an order declaring that notwithstanding "the
expiration of petitioner's [Piadeco's] license (?) on December 31, 1964, their said
property remains registered with the Bureau of Forestry subject only to renewal, in
which case it can still pursue its logging operations, conditioned upon the payment by it
of forest charges." The judge took into consideration a certificate issued on May 4, 1965
by Assistant Director of Forestry J. L. Utleg, as officer-in-charge, that "all the timber
cut ... during the lifetime" of the registration certificate "may be transported by" Piadeco
"provided they are properly documented." Finding that Piadeco "complied with all the
requirements of the Bureau of Forestry and the Bureau of Internal Revenue as regards
the proper documentation of the logs in question," the judge thereupon directed the
forestry officials "and all members of the Armed Forces stationed along the way" to
allow Piadeco "to haul its logs which have already been properly documented."

This precipitated the filing on July 28, 1965 by the Director of Forestry, the Forest
Station Warden, the Armed Forces Chief of Staff 7 of an original petition with this Court
(L-24796, now at bar) for certiorari and prohibition with preliminary injunction to annul
the June 1,1965 order of execution, the June 3, 1965 writ of execution and the July 8,
1965 order allowing Piadeco to haul its logs. Named respondents were Piacedo, Judge
Emmanuel M. Muñoz of the Bulacan court, and the Provincial Sheriff of Bulacan..

On July 30, 1965, this Court issued a writ of preliminary injunction, as prayed for by the
aforenamed government officials. On August 3, 1965, Piadeco sought the dissolution
thereof for the reason, amongst others, that Mr. J. L. Utleg, Assistant Director of
Forestry and Officer-in-Charge of the Bureau of Forestry, was already agreeable
mentioned, as per his letter of June 7, 1965 to Piadeco informing the latter that the writ
of execution was being referred to the Forest Station Warden for compliance. On
August 9, 1965, the Solicitor General blocked Piadeco's motion to dissolve, with an
allegation, amongst others, that the June 7, 1965 letter just mentioned was deemed
recalled when the Director Forestry — realizing that the said writ would allow Piadeco to
continue logging after the expiration and non-renewal of its certificate in a public forest
area or in an area excluded from the expired permit — did not give effect to the said
letter.

On August 18, 1965, manifestation was made by the Solicitor General to this Court thru
a motion dated August 17, 1965, that the logs seized and imposed by the armed forces
were being exposed to the elements; that the rainy season having set in, there was
grave danger that the said logs might deteriorate and become useless. He thus prayed
that the forestry officials be authorized to turn the logs over to the engineer corps of the
Armed Forces for the construction of prefabricated schoolhouses pursuant to General
Circular V-337, series of 1961, of the Bureau of Internal Revenue. On August 31, 1965,
Piadeco objected upon the ground that the said logs are still its private property; and
that there is no law empowering the State to seize, confiscate and turn over the cut logs
to the Armed Forces.

On September 29, 1965, Piadeco, in turn, petitioned for preliminary injunction and
moved again to dissolve this Court's writ of preliminary injunction of July 30, 1965. It
called attention to the fact that the writ of preliminary injunction issued by the court
below on May 4, 1964 in Civil Case 3035-M is still enforceable and has not yet been
dissolved because the forestry officials have not filed their P10,000.00-bond as required
by the trial court in its order of May 14, 1964.

On October 8, 1965, this Court denied the two motions of Piadeco, declared that the
writ of preliminary injunction it issued stands enforced and is effective until otherwise
lifted, and authorized the Solicitor General to effect the removal of all the logs subject of
his motion of August 17, 1965 from the log ponds but only for the purpose of turning
them over to the Armed Forces for safekeeping and custody pending final resolution of
the case.

On October 14, 1965, Piadeco traversed the averments of the forestry officials' petition
before this Court, thru an answer dated October 12, admission of which was however
denied for being late. The case was submitted without further memoranda.
Meanwhile, a companion case (L-25459, also at bar)emerged from subsequent events
hereunder related.

On October 20, 1965, pending this Court's resolution of the foregoing petition of the
forestry officials (L-24796), Piadeco wrote the Director of Forestry with a request to
grant it "AUTHORITY to cut, gather and remove timber" from its alleged private
woodland. At the same time, it advised the Director of Forestry that "in the absence of
such authority or permit", it "shall cut, gather and remove timber from the said area
subject to the payment of regular forest charge and 300% surcharge for unlawful cutting
in accordance with the penal provisions" of Section 266 of the Tax Code.

On November 4, 1965, Acting Director J. L. Utleg replied. He told Piadeco that "pending
meticulous study" of its application for renewal of PWR 2065-New, his "[o]ffice is not
now in a position to grant" the desired authority and "will consider any cutting, gathering
and removal of timber" from the land "to be illegal, hence, subject to the provisions of
Section 266 of the National Internal Revenue Code."

Obviously taking the foregoing letter as a case, Piadeco, on December 6, 1965, advised
the Director that immediately upon receipt of said letter, it (Piadeco) resumed logging
operations within its private woodland area in the municipality of Montalban, Rizal,
"thereby subjecting all timber cut therefrom to the payment of 300% penalty, plus
regular forest charges." Piadeco also requested the Director to inform the Task Force
Commander that it "can be allowed to continue its logging operation within their private
woodland" subject to Section 266 of the Tax Code.

So, on December 7, 1965, Acting Director J. L. Utleg notified the Task Force
Commander, through the Undersecretary of National Defense, that Piadeco "can
conduct logging operations within its private woodland, as it is a constitutional right on
its part to use and enjoy its own property and the fruits thereof" but that whatever timber
cut therefrom "should be subject to the payment not only of the regular charges but also
of the surcharges imposed by Section 166" of the Tax Code. This notwithstanding, the
army authorities refused to heed Utleg's December 7, 1965 letter and stood pat on its
posture not to allow Piadeco to conduct logging operations.

Hence, it was Piadeco's turn to come to this Court on December 22, 1965 on an original
petition for injunction and prohibition (L-25459 aforesaid) against respondents Secretary
of National Defense, the Undersecretary of National Defense, the Chief of Staff, the
Judge Advocate General and the Task Force Commander (Task Force Preserve, Tabak
Division). Specifically, Piadeco charges as follows: On December 17, 1965, army men
[Capt. Zamuco, Lt. Oresque, Sgts. Albino, Gutierrez, Ramirez, and Sawada, and Cpl.
Manlapus], boisterously, unlawfully, wilfully, and feloniously entered — upon orders of a
certain Major Elfano — Piadeco's land at Barrio Anginan, Montalban, Rizal, outside the
watershed reservations. They made a portion of the land their private quarters. They
prevented Piadeco's officers (a) from continuing its logging operations, especially the
construction of the road inside the land; (b) from cutting, gathering and removing timber
and other forest products therefrom; and (c)from living and moving in freedom and
engaging in the pursuit of happiness on said land. Piadeco asks principally that
respondent officials be declared "without authority and jurisdiction to stop logging
operations, construction of the roads, cutting, gathering and removing of timber and
other forest products from the Private Woodland area" of the former.

There was a prayer for the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction which this Court,
however, denied on December 31, 1965, and upon reconsideration, on February 1,
1966.

After respondents' answer, and hearing on oral arguments, the case was submitted for
decision.

1. Basic to an intelligent appraisal of the rights of Piadeco, who comes to us as an


alleged private wood landowner, is the all-important question: Is Piadeco's title
registrable with the Bureau of Forestry?

The pertinent statutory provision is Section 1829 of the Revised Administrative


Code, viz:

SEC. 1829. Registration of title to private forest land. — Every private owner of


land containing timber, firewood and other minor forest products shall register his
title to the same with the Director of Forestry. A list of such owners, with a
statement of the boundaries of their property, shall be furnished by said Director
to the Collector of Internal Revenue, and the same shall be supplemented from
time to time as occasion may require.

Upon application of the Director of Forestry the fiscal of the province in which any
such land lies shall render assistance in the examination of the title thereof with a
view to its registration in the Bureau of Forestry.

Ampliatory thereof is Section 7, Forestry Administrative Order 12-1 of July 1, 1941, as


amended by Forestry Administrative Order 12-2, which took effect on January 1, 1963.
It reads:

7. Titles that may be registered. — Only the following titles covering lands
containing timber, firewood and other minor forest products may be registered
under and pursuant to Section 1829 of the Revised Administrative Code;

(a) Administrative titles granted by the present Government, such as homestead


patent, free patent, and sales patent; and

(b) Judicial titles, such as Torrens Title obtained under the Land Registration Act
(Act 496, as amended) or under the Cadastral Act (Act No. 2259, as amended).

The amendment of Forestry Administrative Order 12-1 by Forestry Administrative Order


12-2 consisted in the omission of one paragraph, paragraph (c), which particularized as
one of the titles registrable pursuant to Section 1829 of the Revised Administrative
Code, "[t]itles granted by the Spanish sovereignty in the islands and duly recognized as
valid titles under the existing laws."

Piadeco's position is that such amendment contravenes said Section 1829, which does
not specify the titles that are registrable thereunder; and that it is diametrically opposed
to the Opinion of the Attorney General of October 15, 1919, which ruled that a royal title
"issued in September, 1896, and inscribed in the Registry of Property within a year after
its issuance is valid, and therefore its owner is entitled to the benefits" of Section 1829
aforesaid. Also cited are the Opinion of the Secretary of the Interior of November 7,
1916, stating that registration under Section 1829 is not subject to change and
revocation unless title is established in a different person by judicial declaration; the
Opinion of the Director of Forestry of January 8, 1925, which recognized as registrable,
titles "such an informacion posesoria ..., composicion con el estado and purchase under
the Spanish sovereignty" amongst others; and the Opinion of the Collector of Internal
Revenue of February 6, 1926, declaring imperfect titles within the purview of Section
45(a) of Act 2874, as also registrable.

True it is that the law, Section 1829, does not describe with particularity titles that may
be registered with the Bureau of Forestry. Concededly, too, administrative authorities in
the past considered as registrable, titles issued during the Spanish regime. In fact, as
late as 1962, Forestry Administrative Order 12-1 was still in force, authorizing
registration of such Spanish titles. But when Forestry Administrative Order 12-2 came
into effect on January 1, 1963, that order should be deemed to have repealed all such
previous administrative determinations.

There should be no question now that Forestry Administrative Order 12-2 has the force
and effect of law. It was promulgated pursuant to law. Section 1817, Revised
Administrative Code, empowers the Bureau of Forestry, with the approval of the
department head, to issue regulations "deemed expedient or necessary to secure the
protection and conservation of the public forests in such manner as to insure a
continued supply of valuable timber and other forest products for the future, and
regulating the use and occupancy of the forests and forest reserves, to the same end."
Forestry Administrative Order 12-2 was recommended by the Director of Forestry, and
approved by the Secretary of Agriculture and Natural Resources. It is no less a valid
law. It is an administrative regulation germane to the objects and purposes of the law. A
rule shaped out by jurisprudence is that when Congress authorized the promulgation of
administrative rules and regulations to implement a given legislation, "[a]ll that is
required is that the regulation should be germane to the objects and purposes of the
law; that the regulation be not in contradiction with it, but conform to the standards that
the law prescribes."8 In Geukeko vs. Araneta, 102 Phil. 706, 712, we pronounced that
the necessity for vesting administrative authorities with power to make rules and
regulations for various and varying details of management has been recognized and
upheld by the courts.
And we are certainly totally unprepared to jettison Forestry Administrative Order 12-2 as
illegal and unreasonable.

Spanish titles are quite dissimilar to administrative and judicial titles under the present
system. Although evidences of ownership, these Spanish titles may be lost thru
prescription. They are, therefore, neither indefeasible nor imprescriptible. The law in this
jurisdiction, both under the present sovereignty and the previous Spanish regime is that
ordinary prescription of ten years may take place against a title recorded in the Registry
of Property "in virtue of another title also recorded," 9 and extra-ordinary prescription of
thirty years will run, even "without need of title or of good faith." 10 For possession for
along period fixed by law, the "unquestionable foundation of the prescription of
ownership ... weakens and destroys the force and value of the best possible title to the
thing possessed by one who is not the owner thereof." 11 The exception, of course, is the
Torrens title, expressly recognized to be indefeasible and impresciptible. 12

And more. If a Spanish title covering forest land is found to be invalid, that land is public
forest land, is part of the public domain, and cannot be appropriated. 13 Before private
interests have intervened, the government may decide for itself what portions of the
public domain shall be set aside and reserved as forest land. 14 Possession of forest
lands, however long, cannot ripen into private ownership. 15

In this case, it is undisputed that Picadeco's title which it sought to register was issued
by the Spanish sovereignty — Titulo de Propiedad No. 4136, dated April 25 or 29,
1894. It is unmistakably not one of those enumerated in Section 7 aforesaid. It should
not have been allowed registration in the first place. Obviously, registration thereof can
never be renewed.

2. Piadeco is nonetheless insistent in its plea that it can still cut, gather, and remove
timber from its alleged private woodland, upon payment of forest charges and
surcharges.

The purposes of registration, as succinctly stated in Section 6, Forestry Administrative


Order 12-1 dated July 1, 1941, are:

6. Objects of registration — (a) to exempt the owners of private woodlands from


the payment of forest products gathered therefrom for commercial or industrial
purposes.

(b) To regulate the transportation of forest products gathered or collected


therefrom and to avoid fraud which may be committed in connection with
utilization of such forest products with respect to their origin.

(c) To determine the legality of private claims for the protection of the interest of
the owners as well as of the Government, and to exclude all land claimed under
valid titles from the mass of the public forest in order to facilitate the protection,
administration, and supervision of the latter.
The foregoing has in part gained judicial approval in Santiago vs. Basilan Lumber
Company, L-15532, October 31, 1963, where we pronounced: "Obviously, the purpose
of the registration required in Section 1829 of the Administrative Code is to exempt
the titled owner of the land from the payment of forestry charges as provided for under
Section 266 of the National Internal Revenue Code." 16 And Section 266 of the Tax
Code, therein mentioned, provides in full:

SEC. 266. Charges collectible on forest products cut, gathered and removed


from unregistered private lands. — The charges above prescribed shall be
collected on all forest products cut, gathered and removed from any private
land the title to which is not registered with the Director of Forestry as required
by the Forest Law: Provided, however, That in the absence of such registration,
the owner who desires to cut, gather and remove timber and other forest
products from such land shall secure a license from the Director of Forestry in
accordance with the Forest Law and regulations. The cutting, and the removing
of timber and other forest products from said private lands without license shall
be considered as unlawful cutting, gathering and removing of forest products
from public forest and shall be subject to the charges prescribed in such cases in
this Chapter. (As amended by Rep. Act No. 173, approved June 20, 1947.) 17

Following this provision in the Tax Code is Section 267, which in part provides:

SEC. 267. Surcharges for illegal cutting and removal of forest products or for
delinquency. — Where forest products are unlawfully cut or gathered in any
public forest without license or, if under license, in violation of the terms thereof,
the charges on such products shall be increased by three hundred per centum....

To recapitulate, registration of titles by the owners of private woodlands with the Bureau
of Forestry results in an exemption "from the payment of forest products gathered
therefrom for commercial or industrial purposes." If an owner fails to so register, he is
obliged to pay forest charges, as prescribed in Sections 264 and 265 of the Tax Code,
because "he still retain(s) his rights of ownership, among which are his rights to the
fruits of the land and to exclude any person from the enjoyment and disposal thereof
(Art. 429, New Civil Code)."18 However, as provided in Section 266 above-quoted, if an
owner does not register his title, but he desires to cut, gather and remove timber and
other forest products from his land, he may "secure a license from the Director of
Forestry in accordance with the Forest Law and regulations." If he does not, under the
same Section 266, his cutting, gathering and removing of timber and other forest
products "shall be considered as unlawful cutting, gathering and removing of forest
products from public forests and shall be subject to the charges prescribed in such
cases." And this would bring into play Section 267, where, as heretofore quoted, the
charges on forest products "unlawfully cut and gathered in any public forest without
license, or, if under license, in violation of the terms thereof ... shall be increased by
three hundred per centum."
But it should be stressed that all of the situations herein mentioned refer specifically
to owners of private woodlands. The position Piadeco has taken is a jump ahead of
where it should be. We are not ready to grant the assumption that Piadeco owns the
forest land it seeks to register. Such unwillingness can come from even a superficial
assessment of Piadeco's pretensions of ownership based on the Titulo de Propiedad in
question.

Neither said Titulo, nor a copy thereof, was presented in the two proceedings before us.
What we have is merely a description thereof, viz:

TITULO DE PROPIEDAD NUMERO 4136


DATED APRIL 25, 1894, ISSUED BY
GOBIERNO CIVIL DE LA PROVINCIA
DE BULACAN

Titulo de Propiedad Numero 4136, in the name of Dn. Mariano San Pedro y
Esteban, dated April 25, 1894, being a gratuitous composicion title, grated to Dn.
Mariano San Pedroy Esteban, by the Spanish Government in the Philippines,
pursuant to Resolution dated April 14, 1894, of the Board of Land Adjustment of
the (Spanish) Administration Civil de Filipinas, as authorized under Royal Decree
of May 14, 1867 and August 31, 1888, and signed by Dn. Alejandro Garcia, El
Jefede la Provincia de Bulacan and Dn. Mariano Lopez Delgado El Secretario de
la Junta, with the Seal of the Spanish Government in the Philippines attached
thereto and to said Titulo de Propiedad Numero 4136, is affixed a "Sello 10aA*s
1894 y 95 de Peso" documentary stamp bearing Serial Number NO. 292-404
inscribed in the Office of the Registry of Property of Bulacan, on pages 127 and
129 of Book I, for Norzagaray, as Tax Declaration (Fincas) Nos. 57 and 58,
Inscripcion No. 1, on July 16, 1894 (or within one (1) year from April 25, 1894,
pursuant to Royal Decree of January 12, 1863), the inscription of the said
TITULO DE PROPIEDAD NUMERO 4136 of Dn. Mariano San Pedro y Esteban,
having been accomplished by the Office of the Land Registry of Bulacan, on the
said date of July 16, 1894, by the then Registrar of Bulacan, Dn. Miguel de Lizan,
as follows:

Ynscrito el titulo que precede, a los folios ciento veinti-sietey ciento veintinueve
del Tomo primero de Norzagaray, fincas numeros cincuenta y siete y cincuenta y
ocho inscripcion numero uno, Bulacan, diez y seis de julio de mil ocho cientos
noventa y cuatro (Fdo.) MIGUEL DE LIZAN.

Two (2) vast parcels of land (agricultural and mountainous lands), together with
the improvements thereon, including all the trees in the mountains, all mineral
deposits or resources ( pertenecia minera), including lime, gravel and lumber for
ship building, located in the Provinces of Bulacan, Rizal, Quezon and Quezon
City, and bounded, on the North, by Sierra Madre Mountains and Rio Grande
(Laog to Kinabayunan); on the East, by Maputi, Umiray and Caliwatcanan (Ibona
Estate and Public Land); on the South by Susong Dalaga and Cupang
(Hegmatangan to Pinugay) and on the West, by Pugad-Lawin and Sapang-Alat
(Pinugay, Public Land, Bignay, Lauan to Laog).

The various types of titles granted by the Spanish crown, it will be remembered, were:
(1) the "titulo real" or royal grant; (2) the "concession especial" or special grant; (3) the
"composicion con el estado" title or adjustment title; (4) the "titulo de compra" or title by
purchase; and (5) the "informacion posesoria" or possessory information title, which
could become a "titulo gratuito" or a gratuitous title. 19

Piadeco's Titulo appears to be an adjustment title. Piadeco asserts in its answer in L-


2479620 that it is a "titulo de composicion con el estado" 21 or a "composicion" with the
State.22 The given description of Titulo de Propiedad No. 4136 above-quoted calls it a
"gratuitous composition title."

Title by "composicion con el estado" was granted by the Direccion General de


Administracion Civil, pursuant to the Royal Decree of June 25, 1880, or by the Chief of
the Province by delegation, pursuant to the Royal Decree of August 31, 1888, or under
the Royal Decree of February 13,1894, otherwise known as the Maura Law. The theory
behind this title is that all lands belong to the State. Applicants to be entitled to
adjustment must possess the lands sought to be acquired for a number of
years.23 These titles, as the "titulo real", altho evidences of ownership, may be lost by
prescription.24

Piadeco's Titulo de Propiedad 4136, as heretofore described, was signed, pursuant to


the Royal Decrees of May 14, 1867 and August 31, 1888, by Dn. Alejandro Garcia, el
Jefe de la Provincial de Bulacan, and Dn. Mariano Lopez Delgado, el Secretario de la
Junta, purportedly with the Seal of the Spanish Government in the Philippines.

The main difficulty here lies with the requirements, then obtaining, for the issuance of
Spanish adjustment titles.

The Royal Decree of August 31, 1888 — under which Piadeco's title was issued —
classified public lands subject to adjustment into two groups:

First. Those bounded at any point thereof by other lands belonging to the State, and
those which, though entirely encircled by private lands, had a total area of more than 30
hectares.

Second. Those with an area of less than 30 hectares and entirely bounded by private
lands.

By this royal decree, adjustment of the lands of the first group just mentioned continued
to be heard and determined by the general directorate of civil administration with the
intervention of the Inspector General of Forests; adjustment of lands of the second
group were heard and determined by "a provincial board for the adjustment of lands
"headed by a Civil or Military-Civil Governor as president. When the provincial board
approves the adjustment, "the chief of the province, in his capacity as deputy of the
General Directorate of Civil Administration, shall issue the corresponding title." 25

The property here involved unquestionably belongs to the first group. That is because
the area thereof is more than 30 hectares (72,000 or 74,000 hectares); and, going by
the descripcion of its boundaries, the property is bounded by public land. In particular,
the description is that it is "bounded, on the North, by Sierra Madre Mountains and Rio
Grande (Laog to Kinabayunan); on the East, by Maputi, Umiray and Caliwatcanan
(Ibona Estate and Public Land); on the South by Susong Dalaga and Cupang
(Hegmatangan to Pinugay) and on the West, by Pugad-Lawin and Sapang-Alat
(Pinugay, Public Land, Bignay, Lauanto Laog)."26

As stated, the title were was "signed by Dn. Alejandro Garcia, El Jefe de la Provincia de
Bulacan, and by Dn. Mariano Lopez Delgado, El Secretario de la Junta, with the Seal of
the Spanish Government in the Philippines attached thereto."

Piadeco now claims before this Court that its title "appears to be issued by (on its face)
the DIRECTOR GENERAL DE ADMINISTRACION DE FILIPINAS"; that the title is in
printed form, with the dry seal in the form of a mountain, bearing the inscription, "Office
of the Inspector General of Forests in the Philippine Islands — Adjustment of Lands"
and the rubric of the said Inspector General of Forests and is serially numbered,
pursuant to the Circular dated February 14, 1894 of the General Directorate of Civil
Administration. In the same breath, however, Piadeco avers that the title was approved
by the Chief of the Province of Bulacan as Deputy of the General Directorate of Civil
Administration and the said Chief issued Titulo 4136 pursuant to the Royal Decree of
August 31, 1888.27 These averments, we must say, merely emphasize the necessity of
adducing evidence to prove the validity of Piadeco's title, which should be done in
appropriate land registration proceedings. Ramirez vs. Director of Lands, 60 Phil. 114,
123, struck down a similar title covering land which it thereupon declared public forest
land, upon grounds, amongst others, that the title was not issued by the proper
authority. On this ground, this Court there specifically declared —

Judging from the area of the land28 in question and that of the two-third portions
from which it has been segregated, upon the supposition that the three-third
portions above-mentioned constitute the whole tract of land which had originally
passed from Tomas Ilao, it is obvious that the same belonged to the first group,
as defined in the aforesaid Royal Decree, on the ground that the area thereof
greatly exceeded thirty hectares and was not entirely bounded by private lands.
Notwithstanding such facts, the title Exhibit D-2 was not issued by the General
Directorate of Civil Administration with the intervention of the Inspector General
of Forests, but merely by the provincial board, in open violation of the laws and
regulations relative thereto.29

But an important moiety here is the deeply disturbing intertwine of two undisputed
facts. First. The title embraces land "located in the Provinces of Bulacan, Rizal, Quezon,
and Quezon City." Second. The title was signed only by the provincial officials of
Bulacan, and inscribed only in the Land Registry of Bulacan. Why? The situation,
indeed, cries desperately for a plausible answer.

To be underscored at this point is the well-embedded principle that private ownership of


land must be proved not only through the genuineness of title but also with a clear
identity of the land claimed.30 This Court ruled in a case involving a Spanish title
acquired by purchase that the land must be concretely measured per hectare or
per quiñon, not in mass (cuerpos ciertos),31 That fact that the Royal Decree of August
31, 1888 used 30 hectares as a basis for classifying lands strongly suggests that the
land applied for must be measured per hectare.

Here, no definite are seems to have been mentioned in the title. In Piadeco's "Rejoinder
to Opposition" dated April 28, 1964 filed in Civil Case 3035-M, it specified the area
covered by its Titulo de Propiedad as 74,000 hectares.32 In its "Opposition" of May 13,
1964 in the same case, it described the land as containing 72,000 hectares. 33 Which is
which? This but accentuates the nebulous identity of Piadeco's land. Piadeco's
ownership thereof then equally suffers from vagueness, fatal at least in these
proceedings.

Piadeco asserts that Don Mariano San Pedro y Esteban, the original owner appearing
on the title, acquired his rights over the property by prescription under Articles 4 and 5
of the Royal Decree of June 25, 1880, 34 the basic decree that authorized adjustment of
lands. By this decree, applications for adjustment — showing the location, boundaries
and area of land applied for — were to be filed with the Direccion General de
Administracion Civil, which then ordered the classification and survey of the land with
the assistance of the interested party or his legal representative. 35

The Royal Decree of June 5, 1880 also fixed the period for filing applications for
adjustment at one year from the date of the publication of the decree in the Gaceta de
Manila on September 10, 1880, extended for another year by the Royal Order of July
15, 1881.36 If Don Mariano sought adjustment within the time prescribed, as he should
have, then, seriously to be considered here are the Royal Orders of November 25, 1880
and of October 26, 1881, which limited adjustment to 1,000 hectares of arid lands, 500
hectares of land with trees and 100 hectares of irrigable lands. 37 And, at the risk of
repetition, it should be stated again that Piadeco's Titulo is held out to embrace 72,000
or 74,000 hectares of lands.

But if more were needed, we have the Maura Law (Royal Decree of February 13, 1894),
published in the Gaceta de Manila on April 17, 1894.38 That decree required a second
petition for adjustment within six months from publication, for those who had not yet
secured their titles at the time of the publication of the law. 39 Said law also abolished the
provincial boards for the adjustment of lands established by Royal Decree of December
26, 1884, and confirmed by Royal Decree of August 31, 1888, which boards were
directed to deliver to their successors, the provincial boards established by Decree on
Municipal Organization issued on May 19, 1893, all records and documents which they
may hold in their possession.40
Doubt on Piadeco's title here supervenes when we come to consider that that title was
either dated April 29 or April 25, 1894, twelve or eight days after the publication of the
Maura Law.

Let us now take a look, as near as the record allows, at how Piadeco exactly acquired
its rights under the Titulo. The original owner appearing thereon was Don Mariano San
Pedro y Esteban. From Piadeco's explanation — not its evidence —41 we cull the
following: On December 3,1894, Don Mariano mortgaged the land under pacto de retro,
redeemable within 10 years, for P8,000.00 to one Don Ignacio Conrado. This
transaction was said to have been registered or inscribed on December 4, 1894. Don
Mariano failed to redeem within the stipulated period. When Don Ignacio died, his
daughter, Maria Socorro Conrado, his only her, adjudicated the land to herself. At about
the same time, Piadeco was organized. Its certificate of registration was issued by the
Securities and Exchange Commission on June 27, 1932. Later, Maria Socorro, heir of
Don Ignacio, became a shareholder of Piadeco when she conveyed the land to
Piadeco's treasurer and an incorporator, Trinidad B. Estrada, in consideration of a
certain amount of Piadeco shares. Thereafter, Trinidad B. Estrada assigned the land to
Piadeco. Then came to the scene a certain Fabian Castillo, appearing as sole heir of
Don Mariano, the original owner of the land. Castillo also executed an affidavit of
adjudication to himself over the same land, and then sold the same to Piadeco.
Consideration therefor was paid partially by Piadeco, pending the registration of the
land under Act 496.

The question may well be asked: Why was full payment of the consideration to Fabian
Castillo made to depend on the registration of the land under the Torrens system, if
Piadeco was sure of the validity of Titulo de Propiedad 4136? This, and other factors
herein pointed out, cast great clouds of doubt that hang most conspicuously over
Piadeco's title.

The standing presumption, we must not forget, is that land pertains to the State, and
any person seeking to establish ownership over land must conclusively show that he is
the owner. 42 And his presumption clings with greater force here where "a portion" of
the land Piadeco claims is, as Piadeco itself admits, directly affected by Proclamation
No. 71 dated March 10, 1927 of the then Governor-General Leonard Wood of the
Philippines, which reserved for watershed purposes an area of 62,309.0952 hectares of
land located in Montalban, Province of Rizal, in San Jose del Monte, Norzagaray,
Angat, San Rafael, and San Miguel, Province of Bulacan, in Peñaranda, Province of
Nueva Ecija, and in Infanta, Province of Tayabas (now Quezon),subject to "private
rights if any there be." Private rights must then have to be proved. It will be remembered
that, by Article VIII of the Treaty of Paris of December 10,1898, property of the public
domain was relinquished and ceded by the Kingdom of Spain to the United States of
America, which, of course, transferred the same to the present Republic.

Assertion has likewise been made that Piadeco's title has already been judicially
recognized in the judgment rendered in Civil Case 3035-M, the case below, at least
insofar as the portion of the land that lies in Bulacan is concerned. This is less than
persuasive. Piadeco's title was not directly in issue in the court below. A reading of the
decision thereof suggests that said title was not submitted therein. The judge did not
even examine that title. According to the decision, Piadeco's ownership was gleaned
merely from the registration certificate which stated that a copy of Piadeco's land title,
including the corresponding plan, was submitted to the Director of Forestry. A mere
statement by the judge below that Piadeco appears to be the owner of the land cannot
wipe out the objectionable features of its title.

From all the foregoing, our conclusion is that we cannot give prima facie value to
Piadeco's title. We cannot thus truly state that Piadeco is a private woodland owner for
purpose of these proceedings. This all the more strengthens our view that Piadeco
needs to acquire an indefeasible title to be entitled to registration under Section 1829 of
the Revised Administrative Code.

3. Even on the assumption that Piadeco's alleged title is registrable, said corporation
cannot complain against the cancellation thereof by the Director of Forestry on April 11,
1964. Why?

When the Director of Forestry cancelled Piadeco's registration certificate, he only


performed his duty as he saw fit. By Forestry Administrative Order 12-2, "[t]he Director
of Forestry may cancel a certificate of registration for any violation of the provision of
this Order or of the forest and internal revenue laws and regulations or of the terms and
conditions embodied in the certificate, or when found that the area is no longer covered
with forest, or upon failure of the landowner thereof, or of his representatives, to obey,
follow or implement instructions of the said Director of Forestry." 43 To him, a condition
expressly written into the registration certificate was being violated. Piadeco was found
to be cutting trees within the Angat and Marikina Watershed Reservations in direct
contravention of a specific prohibition in the certificate. And this, upon the basis of
positive and actual findings of qualified and competent forestry officers.

Quite revealing is Piadeco's admission44 before the court below that "it made cuttings on
that portion of its own private land within the Angat and Marikina Watershed
Reservation where it was constructing its access road to the area covered by P.W.P.
No. 2065 to the construction of which no objection was interposed by ... Nawasa as per
its resolution No. 126, Series of 1964." 45 Deducible from the foregoing is that Piadeco
was cutting within the watershed reservations outside the area covered by its
registration certificate, altho within the land it claims in private ownership, which is now
disputed.

Piadeco's registration certificate should remain cancelled. It could be stricken down


anytime. It is a nullity. And, notwithstanding the fact that said registration certificate had
expired and was not renewed, Piadeco had the temerity to continue operations.
Correctly, there was necessity for freezing forthwith Piadeco's illegal acts. 46

4. True it is that the judgment below virtually reinstated Piadeco's registration certificate.
However, as shall be discussed later on in this opinion, that judgment has now no legal
effect. For, said certificate, by its very terms, expired on December 31, 1964. Piadeco
cannot be heard to protest further.

But Piadeco still insists that it objected to the expiry date of the registration certificate,
when it was issued that certificate. Granting the truth of this averment, Piadeco
nonetheless accepted the certificate, did not follow up its objection to its logical
conclusion, sat supinely until the certificate was cancelled; only then did it renew the bid
that its registration certificate is non-expirable.

At all events, Piadeco's submission is inaccurate. Forestry Administrative Order 12-2,


promulgated pursuant to law, amended Section 11 of Forestry Administrative Order 12-
1, the pertinent part of which reads:

(b) Duration of the certificate. — The certificate of registration issued under this


Order shall be made to expire on the last day of the 12th month from the date of
its issuance.

This regulation is not without rational basis. This Court had occasion to say once 47 that:
"Land may be classified as forestry or mineral today, and, by reason of the exhaustion
of the timber or mineral, be classified as agricultural land tomorrow. And vice-versa, by
reason of the rapid growth of timber or the discovery of valuable minerals, land
classified as agricultural today may be differently classified tomorrow." Forestry
Administrative Order 12-2 verily declares that certificates "are renewable for as long as
there are substantial amounts of forestry in the area, upon filing of the necessary
application therefor" and that those "cancelled for causes may be renewed upon
submission of application for registration by the owner and if the cause of cancellation is
explained satisfactorily."48 If only for purposes of effective regulation, annual registration
of private woodlands cannot be successfully assailed.

5. We cannot place our stamp of approval on Piadeco's claim that it should be permitted
to remove from the premises those logs that have already been cut before December
31, 1964, the expiry date of its registration certificate. We have already said that its
registration certificate is a nullity. Even if it is not, the facts and the law will not support
its plea.

It is not altogether clear whether the 600 pieces of unscaled and the 1,000 pieces of
mixed (scaled and unscaled)timber sought to be hauled by Piadeco, were cut before
December 31, 1964. Piadeco could present only one auxiliary invoice thereon, which
but covers 256 logs and that very invoice stated that those logs were "cut or ordered
cut" in the area covered by P.W.R. No. 2065-New, "after its expiration on Dec. 31,
1964."49

Worse, a factual assumption that the logs were cut before that date, is meaningless in
law. A contrary view would easily lend itself to misuse and mischief. For, loopholes
could then be bored through which an unscrupulous logger may crawl. Such that a
holder of a registration certificate could be at complete liberty to just cut and cut during
the lifetime of that certificate and leave the hauling for later, as he pleases, even long
after expiry thereof. This, we must say, should not be allowed to pass.

6. Absent a valid registration certificate under Section 1829 of the Revised


Administrative Code, or a license to cut, gather and remove timber, and more important,
credible evidence of private ownership over the forestry land in question, Piadeco's
logging operations logically descend to the level of unlawful cutting from public forests.

Seizure made by the government authorities here of logs illegally cut cannot be branded
as illegal. It was but in obedience to Bureau of Internal Revenue General Circular No. V-
337 of May 24, 1961, which prescribed rules on the disposition of illegally cut logs,
pursuant to a directive from the Office of the President to the Secretary of Finance on
March 22, 1961. Section 3 of Circular V-337 declares as follows:

3. Logs illegally cut from public forests, such as timberlands, forest reserves
other than national parks, 50 communal forests and communal pastures shall be
subject to seizure and delivered to the nearest Bureau of Internal Revenue
Officer who in turn shall deliver them to the duly authorized representative of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines for use in the manufacture of prefabricated
school houses. The illegal cutter shall not be allowed to pay the forest charges
and surcharges and other fees on the logs cut. However, if such forest charges
and fees have already been paid, the same shall be retained by the Bureau of
Internal Revenue Officer concerned as part of the collection for forest charges,
but shall not be the basis for the release of such logs. On the other hand, such
payment shall be used as evidence should the illegal cutter be prosecuted in
court for the violation of the corresponding forest laws. 51

Could this Court then justifiably order the delivery to Piadeco of the logs impounded
right there on the land? The answer must certainly have to be in the negative; a contrary
posture is tantamount to abetting a wrong. The logs belong to the State. They are not
Piadeco's. Piadeco cannot later on come back to claim them by curing defects in the
proof of its ownership over the land. It has submitted the controversy over the logs for
decision to this Court. Any ruling thereon should bind Piadeco. It cannot be overturned
by fresh convincing proof of ownership, which it should have offered in the first place.

We hold that government seizure of Piadeco's logs here complained of is valid.

7. The view this Court takes of the cases at bar is but in adherence to public policy that
should be followed with respect to forest lands. Many have written much, and many
more have spoken, and quite often, about the pressing need for forest preservation,
conservation, protection, development and reforestation. Not without justification. For,
forests constitute a vital segment of any country's natural resources. It is of common
knowledge by now that absence of the necessary green cover on our lands produces a
number of adverse or ill effects of serious proportions. Without the trees, watersheds try
up; rivers and lakes which they supply are emptied of their contents. The fish disappear.
Denuded areas become dust bowls. As waterfalls cease to function, so will hydroelectric
plants. With the rains, the fertile topsoil is washed away; geological erosion results. With
erosion come the dreaded floods that wreak havoc and destruction to property — crops,
livestock, houses and highways — not to mention precious human lives. Indeed, the
foregoing observations should be written down in a lumberman's decalogue.

Because of the importance of forests to the nation, the State's police power has been
wielded to regulate the use and occupancy of forests and forest reserves.

To be sure, the validity of the exercise of police power in the name of the general
welfare cannot be seriously attacked. Our Government has definite instructions from the
Constitution's preamble to "promote the general welfare." Jurisprudence has time and
again upheld the police power over individual rights, because of the general welfare.
Five decades ago, Mr. Justice Malcolm made it clear that the "right of the individual is
necessarily subject to reasonable restraint by general law for the common good" and
that the "liberty of the citizen may be restrained in the interest of public health, or of the
public order and safety, or otherwise within the proper scope of the police power." 52 Mr.
Justice Laurel, about twenty years later, affirmed the precept when he declared that "the
state in order to promote the general welfare may interfere with personal liberty, with
property, and with business and occupations" and that"[p]ersons and property may be
subjected to all kinds of restraints and burdens, in order to secure the general comfort,
health, and prosperity of the state." 53 Recently, we quoted from a leading American
case,54 which pronounced that "neither property rights nor contract rights are absolute;
for government cannot exist if the citizen may at will use his property to the detriment of
his fellow, or exercise his freedom of contract to work them harm," and that, therefore,
"[e]qually fundamental with the private right is that of the public to regulate in the
common interest.55

These precepts more than suffice to sustain the validity of the government's action with
respect to Piadeco's logging operations.

8. We come to consider the effects of the judgment in Civil Case 3035-M, where the
Court of First Instance of Bulacan adjudged Piadeco's operation not to be in violation of
forestry rules and regulations and made permanent the writ of preliminary injunction
issued against the defaulting forestry authorities, upon Piadeco's ex-parte evidence.
That judgment, it should be remembered, is sought to be executed by Piadeco and the
execution proceedings in that case are not before this Court on review.

Said judgment enjoined the forestry officials from carrying out and executing the order
of April 11, 1964 and the implementing letter of April 14, 1964, cancelling Piadeco's
registration certificate, PWR 2065-New. But when execution was ordered on June 1,
1965, and the writ of execution issued on June 3, 1965, and when the court ordered on
July 8, 1965 that Piadeco be allowed to haul its logs, the registration certificate had
already expired on December 31, 1964. It is, therefore, not inappropriate for us to say
that judgment had already become functus officio56 and can no longer be executed.
The over-all position we have here taken should dispose of all other issues raised by
the parties; hence, unnecessary is a discussion thereof.

For the reasons given —

The petition for certiorari and prohibition in L-24796 is hereby granted; the June 1, 1965
order of execution, the June 3, 1965 writ of execution issued pursuant thereto, and the
July 8, 1965 order, allowing respondent Pinagcamaligan Indo-Agro Development
Corporation, Inc. to haul its logs, all of the Court of First Instance of Bulacan in Civil
Case 3035-M, are hereby declared null and void; the writ of preliminary injunction
issued herein is hereby made permanent; and the Chief of the Engineer Corps, Armed
Forces of the Philippines, who was permitted by this Court on October 8, 1965 to retain
for safekeeping and custody the logs previously seized by the State from the log ponds
of respondent Pinagcamaligan Indo-Agro Development Corporation, Inc., is now given
authority to use the same for the manufacture of prefabricated school houses; and —

The petition of Pinagcamaligan Indo-Agro Development Corporation, Inc. for injunction


and prohibition in L-25459 is hereby denied.

Costs in both cases against Pinagcamaligan Indo-Agro Development Corporation, Inc.


So ordered.

Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, J.B.L., Dizon, Makalintal, Zaldivar, Castro, Angeles and
Fernando, JJ., concur.

ESCRA NOTES:

Administrative law; Bureau of Forestry; Forestry Administrative Order No. 12–2; Titles that
may be registered pursuant to Section 1829 of the Revised Administrative Code.—Only the
following titles covering lands containing timber, firewood and other minor forest products may
be registered under and pursuant to Section 1829 of the Revised Administrative Code: (a)
Administrative titles granted by the present Government, such as homestead patent, free
patent, and sales patent; and (b) Judicial titles, such as Torrens Title obtained under the Land
Registration Act (Act 496, as amended) or under the Cadastral Act (Act No. 2259, as amended).

Same; Validity of administrative rules and regulations; Requisites.—A rule shaped out by
jurisprudence is that when Congress authorizes the promulgation of administrative rules and
regulations to implement a given legislation, all that is required is that the regulation should be
germane to the objects and purposes of the law; that the regulation be not in contradiction
with it, but conform to the standards that the law prescribes (People v. Exconde, 101 Phil. 1125,
1129–1130, citing Calalang v. Williams, 70 Phil. 727; Pangasinan Transportation v. Public Service
Commission, 70 Phil. 221; People v. Rosenthal, 68 Phil. 328; Rubi v. Provincial Board of
Mindoro, 39 Phil. 660).

Land registration; Prescription; Spanish titles and administrative and judicial titles
distinguished.—Spanish titles are quite dissimilar to administrative and judicial titles under the
present system. Although evidence of ownership, these Spanish titles may be lost thru
prescription. They are, therefore, neither indefeasible nor imprescriptible. The law in this
jurisdiction, both

_____________

2 On March 14, 1966, this Court noted petitioner’s motion for substitution of party respondents
and for leave of court to include incumbents of the positions of Secretary and Undersecretary
of National Defense, and the Chief of Staff, Armed Forces of the Philippines. under the present
sovereignty and the previous Spanish regime is that ordinary prescription of ten years may take
place against a title recorded in the Registry of Property in virtue of another title also recorded,
and extraordinary prescription of thirty years will run, even without need of title or of good
faith. For possession for a long period fixed by law, the unquestionable foundation of the
prescription of ownership x x x weakens and destroys the force and value of the best possible
title to the thing possessed by one who is not the owner thereof. The exception, of course, is
the Torrens title, expressly recognized to be indefeasible and imprescriptible.

Same; Possession of forest Iands cannot ripen into private ownership.—Possession of forest
lands, however, long, cannot ripen into private ownership (Adorable v. Director of Lands, L-
13663, Mar. 25, 1960).

Same; Effect of registration of titles with the Bureau of Forestry; Effect of non-registration
thereof.—To recapitulute registration of titles by the owners of private woodlands with the
Bureau of Forestry results in an exemption “from the payment of forest products gathered
therefrom for commercial or industrial purposes”. If an owner fails to so register, he is obliged
to pay charges, as prescribed in Sections 264 and 265 of the Tax Code, because “he still retain(s)
his rights of ownership, among which are his rights to the fruits of the land and to exclude any
person from the enjoyment and disposal thereof (Art. 429, New Civil Code).” However, as
provided in Section 226 above-quoted, if an owner does not register his title, but he desires to
cut, gather and remove timber and forest products from his land, he may “secure a license from
the Director of Forestry in accordance with the Forest Law regulations.” If he does not, under
the same Section 266, his cutting, gathering and removing of forest products from public forests
shall be subject to the charges prescribed in such cases.” And this would bring into play Sec.
267, where, as heretofore quoted, the charges on forest products “unlawfully cut and gathered
in any public forest without license, or, if under license, in violation of the terms thereof x x x
shall be increased by three hundred per centum.”

Same; Types of titles granted by the Spanish crown.—The various types of titles granted by the
Spanish crown, it will be remembered, were: the “titulo real” or royal grant; the “concession
especial” or special grant; the “composicion con el estado” title or adjustment title; the “titulo
de compra” or title by purchase; and the “informacion posesoria” or possessory information
title, which could become a “titulo gratuito” or a gratuitous title.

Remedial law; Execution of judgment; Functus officio.—A judgment which had already
become functus officio can no longer be executed. Director of Forestry vs. Muñoz, 23 SCRA
1183, No. L-24796, No. L-25459 June 28, 1968

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