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Outline Co Ownership and Possession

The document discusses co-ownership of property. It defines co-ownership as the right of common dominion that two or more persons have over an ideal or non-physically divided portion of a thing. Each co-owner has control over their ideal share. Sources of co-ownership include law, contracts, succession, and occupation. The rights of each co-owner include using and benefiting from the property, contributing to expenses, opposing alterations, and asking for partition. Co-ownership can be extinguished by destruction of the property, all interests merging in one person, acquisitive prescription, or partition.

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Khryz Callëja
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
914 views8 pages

Outline Co Ownership and Possession

The document discusses co-ownership of property. It defines co-ownership as the right of common dominion that two or more persons have over an ideal or non-physically divided portion of a thing. Each co-owner has control over their ideal share. Sources of co-ownership include law, contracts, succession, and occupation. The rights of each co-owner include using and benefiting from the property, contributing to expenses, opposing alterations, and asking for partition. Co-ownership can be extinguished by destruction of the property, all interests merging in one person, acquisitive prescription, or partition.

Uploaded by

Khryz Callëja
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
  • Co-Ownership: Analyzes the legal implications and characteristics of co-ownership, detailing rights, responsibilities, and legal provisions.
  • Possession: Covers the legal definition of possession, types, acquisition processes, and legal effects.

V.

CO-OWNERSHIP

A. Definition

The right of common dominion which two or more persons have in a


spiritual part (or ideal portion) or a thing which is not physically divided.

B. Characteristics

1. The recognition of ideal shares, defined but not physically identified.


2. Each co owner has absolute control over his ideal share;
3. Mutual respect among co-owner in regard to use enjoyment and
preservation of thing as a whole.

C. Differences between partnership and joint tenancy.


D. Differences between partnership and co-ownership.
E. Sources of co-ownership

a. Law, e.g., party walls, hedges and ditches; co-ownership


b. Contract (duration of co-ownership, Art. 494)
c. Succession
d. Chance (Commixtion, hidden treasure)
e. Occupation (harvesting and fishing)

F. Rights of each co-owner as to thing owned in common:

a. To use the thing according to the purpose intended may be altered by


agreement, express or implied, provided:
i. It is without injury or prejudice to interest of co-ownership and;
ii. Without preventing the use of other co-owners, Art. 486

b. To share in the benefits in proportion to his interest, provided the charges


are borne by each in the same proportion (Art. 485)

- Contrary stipulation in void


- Presumption is that portions are equal unless contrary is proved.

c. Each co-owner may bring an action in ejectment (Art. 487)

d. To compel other co-owner to contribute to expenses for preservation of


the thing or right owned in common and to payment of taxes (Art. 488)

- Co-owners option not to contribute by waiving his undivided interest


equal to amount of contribution (exception: if waiver prejudicial to
co-ownership)
- Requisites before repairs for preservation may be made of expenses
for embellishment or improvement may be made (Art. 489)
- Effects of failure to notify co-owners
e. To oppose any act of alteration; remedy of other co-owners
re: acts of alteration (Art. 491)

1. Acts of alteration
Concept
Distinguished from acts of administration Art. 492.
Effect of acts of alteration and remedies of non-consenting co-
owner

Is lease of real property owned in common an act of alteration? Art.


647 in relation to Art. 1878(8)

f. To protest against acts of majority which are prejudicial to minority (Art.


492 par. 3)

g. To exercise legal redemption Art. 1620, 1623

h. To ask for partition Art. 494

G. Implications of co-owners right over his ideal share:

a. Co-owner has the right:


1. To share in fruits and benefits
2. To alienate, mortgage or encumber and dispose of his ideal share
(but other co-owners may exercise right of legal redemption)
3. To substitute another person in the enjoyment of thing
4. To renounce part of his interest to reimburse necessary expenses
incurred by another co-owner (art. 488)

b. Effect of transaction by each co-owner

1. Limited to his share in the partition


2. Transferee does not acquire any specific portion of whole property
until partition
3. Creditors of co-owners may intervene in partition or attack the
same if prejudicial (Art. 497)

H. Are the rules on co-ownership applicable to conjugal partnership of gains or


absolute community of property?

I. Special rules on ownership based on provisions of Condominium Act (RA


No. 4726)

1. Concept of Condominium
2. Essential requisites for Condominium
3. Rights and Obligations of Condominium owner
J. Extinguishment of co-ownership

1. Total destruction of thing

2. Merger of all interests in one person

3. Acquisitive prescription

a. By a third person
b. By one co-owner as against the other co-owners requisites and
unequivocal acts of:

i. Unequivocal acts of repudiation of co-ownership (acts


amounting to ouster of other co-owners) known to other co-owners
and shown by clear and convincing evidence

ii. Open and adverse possession, not mere silent extraordinary


acquisitive prescription.

iii. The presumption is that possession by co-owner is not


adverse.

4. Partition or Division

a. Right to ask for partition at any time except:

i. When there is a stipulation against it (not over ten years)

ii. When condition of indivision is imposed by transferor (donor


or testator) not exceed 20 years Art. 494

iii. When the legal nature of community prevents partition


(party wall)

iv. When partition is generally prohibited by law (e.g. absolute


community of property)

v. When partition would render the thing unserviceable (but the


thing may be sold and co-owners divide the proceeds ( Art.
494)

Action for partition will fail if acquisitive prescription has set in.

b. Effect of Partition
Arts. 1091, 543, 1092-1093, 499-501
c. Right of Creditors of individual co-owners Art. 497

d. Procedure for Partition Rule 69 Rules of Court

Cases:

Del Campo vs CA, GR 108228, February 1, 2001

De Guia vs CA, GR 120864, October 8, 2003

Mercado vs CA, G.R. No. 108952, January 26, 1995

Tan vs CA, G.R. No. 79899, April 24, 1989, 172 SCRA 660.

VI. POSSESSION

A. Definition and Concept (Art. 523)

Possession is the holding of a thing or the enjoyment of a right, whether by


material occupation or by the fact that the thing or the right is subjected to the
action of our will.

It is a real right independent of and apart from ownership i.e., the right of
possession (jus possessionis), as distinguished from the right to possess (jus
possidendi)

1. Essential requisites of possession:

a. Holding or control or control of a thing or right (corpus) consists of either


i. The material or physical
ii. Exercise of a right
iii. Constructive possession

b. Intention to possess (animus possidendi)

B. Degrees of holding or possession

1. Mere holding or possession without title whatsoever and in violation of


the right of the owner, e.g. possession of a thief or a usurper of land.

2. Possession with juridical title but not that of ownership e.g. possession of
tenant, depository agent, bailee, trustee, lessee, antichretic creditor. This degree of
possession will never ripen into full ownership as long as there is no repudiation of
concept under which property is held.
3. Possession with just title or title sufficient to transfer ownership, but not
from the true owner e.g. possession of a vendee from vendor who pretends to be
the owner.

This degree of possession ripens into full ownership by lapse of time.

4. Possession with just title from the true owner. The delivery of possession
transfers ownership, and strictly speaking, is the jus possidendi.

C. Cases of possession:

1. Possession for oneself, or possession exercised in ones own name and


possession in the name of another (Art. 524)

2. Possession in the concept of an owner and possession in the concept of a


holder with the ownership belonging to another (Art. 525)

3. Possession in good faith and possession in bad faith (Art. 526)

Mistake upon a doubtful or difficult question of law as a basis of good


faith.

D. Things or rights susceptible of appropriation may be the object of possession


(Art. 530)

E. What may not be possessed by private persons

a. Res communes
b. Property of public dominion
c. Right under discontinuous and/or non-apparent easement

F. Acquisition of Possession

1. Ways of acquiring possession (Art. 531)

a. Material occupation to the thing

i. The doctrine of constructive possession


ii. Includes constructive delivery;

1. Traditio brevi manu (thing already in transferees hands,


e.g. under a contract of lease, then delivered under a sale)
2. Traditio constitutum possessorium (thing remains in
trasferrors hands, e.g. sale, then retained under a
commodatum)
b. Subjection to the action of our will
Includes traditio longa manu and traditio symbolica

c. Proper acts and legal formalities refers to the acquisition of


possession by sufficient title, inter vivos or mortis causa, lucrative or
onerous. Examples: donation, succession ( testate on intestate),
contracts, judicial writs of possession, writ of execution of judgments
execution and registration of public instruments.

2. By whom may possession be acquired: (Art. 532)

a. By same person; elements of personal acquisition


b. By his legal representative; requisites
c. By his agent
d. By any person without any power whatsoever but subject to
ratification, without prejudice to proper case of negotiorum gestio
(Art. 2144), 4129, 2150)
e. Qualifiedly, minors and incapacitated persons (Art. 525)

3. What do not affect possession (Art. 537, 1119)

a. Acts merely tolerated


b. Acts executed clandestinely and without the knowledge of the
possessor
c. Acts by violence as long as possessor objects thereto (i.e. he files a
case) (Art. 536)

4. Rules to solve conflict of possession (Art. 538)

General Rule: Possession cannot be recognized in two different


personalities, except in cases of co-possession by co-possessors without
conflicting claims or interest.

In case of conflicting possession preference is given to:

a. Present possessor or actual possessor

b. If there are two or more possessors, the one longer in possession

c. If dates of possession are the same, the one who presents a title

d. If all conditions are equal, the thing shall be place in judicial


deposit pending determination of possession or ownership through
proper proceedings
G. Effects of Possession

1. In general, every possessor has a right to be respected in his


possession; if disturbed therein, possessor has right to be protected in or restored to
said possession (Art. 539)

a. Action to recover possession

i. Summary proceedings forcible entry and unlawful detainer.


Plaintiff may ask for writ of preliminary mandatory injunction.
ii. accion publiciana (based on the superior right of possession, not
of ownership)
iii. accion Revindicatoria (recovery of ownership)
iv. Action for replevin (possession or ownership for
movable property)

2. Possessor can employ self-help (Art. 429)

3. Entitlement to fruits possessor in good faith / bad faith

4. Reimbursement for expenses possessor in good faith /bad faith


Liability for loss or deterioration of property by possessor
in bad faith. (Art. 553; 552)

5. Possession of movable acquired in good (in concept of owner) is


equivalent to title (Art. 559)

- Possessor has actual title which is defeasible only by true owner


- One who has lost a movable or has been unlawfully deprived thereof
may recover it without reimbursement, except if possessor acquired it
at a public sale.

H. Effect of possession in the concept of owner:

a. Possession may ripen into full ownership, subject to certain


exceptions
b. Presumption of just title and cannot be obliged to show or prove it
(Art. 541); exceptions (Art. 1131)
c. possessor may bring all actions necessary to protect his possession
except accion reivindicatoria
d. May employ self-help under Art. 429
e. Possessor may ask for inscription of such real right of possession in
the registry of property
f. Has right to the fruits and reimbursement for expenses (assuming he is
a possessor in good faith)
g. Upon recovery of possession which he has been unlawfully deprived
may demand fruits and damages.
h. Generally, he can do on the things possessed everything that the law
authorizes owner to do until he is ousted by one who has a better
right.
i. Possession in good faith and possession in bad faith. (Art. 528).

I. Presumptions in favor of the possessor:

1. Of good faith until the contrary is proved (Art. 527)

2. Of continuity of initial good faith in which possession was


commenced or possession in good faith does not lose this character
except in the case and from the moment possessor became aware or is
not unaware of improper or wrongful possession. (Art. 528).

3. Of enjoyment of possession in the same character in which possession


was acquired until contrary is proved (Art. 529)

4. Of non-interruption of possession in favor of present possessor who


proves possession at a previous time until the contrary is proved (Art.
554) Arts. 112-1124)

5. Of continuous possession or non-interruption of possession of which


he was wrongfully deprived for all purposes favorable to him (Art.
561)

6. Other presumptions with respect to specific properties of property


rights:

i. Of extension of possession of real property to all movables


contained therein so long as it is not shown that the movables
should be excluded; exceptions (Art. 426).
ii. Non-interruption of possession of hereditary property (Art. 533
& 1078)
iii. Of just title in favor of possessor in concept of owner (Art. 541;
but also see Art. 1141).

J. Possession may be lost by:

a. Abandonment
b. Assignment, either onerous or gratuitous
c. Destruction of total loss of thing or it goes out of commerce
d. Possession by another, if possession has lasted longer than one year;
real right of possession not lost until after ten (10) years.
- subject to art. 537 (acts merely tolerated, etc.)
Cases:
Cequena vs Bolante GR No. 137944. April 6, 2000
Dizon vs Beltran. GR No. 221071 January 18, 2017
Lamsis vs Dong-E. GR No. 173021. October 20, 2010

V. 
CO-OWNERSHIP 
 
A. Definition 
 
 
The right of common dominion which two or more persons have in a 
spiritual part (or i
e.  
To oppose any act of alteration; remedy of other co-owners 
 
re: acts of alteration (Art. 491) 
 
1. 
Acts of alteratio
J.  
Extinguishment of co-ownership 
 
1. 
Total destruction of thing  
 
2.  
Merger of all interests in one person 
 
3
c. Right of Creditors of individual co-owners Art. 497 
 
d. Procedure for Partition – Rule 69 Rules of Court 
 
 
Cases:
3. Possession with just title or title sufficient to transfer ownership, but not 
from the true owner e.g. possession of a
b. Subjection to the action of our will  
Includes traditio longa manu and traditio symbolica  
 
c. Proper acts and legal fo
G. 
Effects of Possession  
 
1. 
In general, every possessor has a right to be respected in his 
possession; if disturbed th
h.  
Generally, he can do on the things possessed everything that the law 
authorizes owner to do until he is ousted by one w

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