BAGUIO CITY – The city government’s protracted battle to reclaim tracts of land covered by spurious Certificates of Ancestral Land Titles (CALTs) in key areas in the city finally bore fruit after the Supreme Court nullified CALTs and their derivative titles covering lots claimed by the heirs of Cosen Piraso and Josephine Abanag.
In a 17-page decision dated Sept. 25, 2019 which was received by the Office of the Solicitor General on Nov. 12, 2019 and furnished the City Legal Office by lawyer Marlon Bosantog of the OSG, Acting Chief Justice Antonio Carpio granted the petition for review of the OSG and reversed the decision and resolution of the Court of Appeals dated January 15, 2013 that upheld the validity of the subject CALTs.
The High Tribunal also declared as “null and void” the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) Resolution Nos. 107-2010-AL and 108-2010-AL that paved the way for the issuance of the titles; O-CALT Nos. 129 and 130 including corresponding Transfer Certificates of Title Nos. and CALT Nos. covering 36 parcels of lot.
The Piraso claims cover the Casa Vallejo property along Upper Session Road while Abanag’s include the Pacdal Circle, Wright Park, and the city government’s titled property in Lualhati barangay.
The city government under former mayor Mauricio Domogan through the City Legal Office under Melchor Carlos Rabanes since 2009 had sought the annulment of said CALTs along with those issued covering the claims of Lauro Carantes at South Drive, Ikang Paus at Green Valley and at the Loakan Airport maintaining that the lots are within forest and park reservations and therefore inalienable.
Together they worked closely with the OSG to pursue the cancellation of the titles.
In annulling the CALTs, the court ruled that the NCIP “has no legal authority to issue CALTs or CADTs (Certificate of Ancestral Domain Titles)” over said properties as townsite reservation areas in the city.
It said Baguio City is not covered by the Republic Act No. 8371 or the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act bu virtue of Section 78 that provides that the city “shall remain to be governed by its Charter and all lands proclaimed as part of its townsite reservation shall remain as such until other reclassified by appropriate legislation.”
The court averred that the section provides exceptions particularly those “prior land rights and titles recognized and acquired through any judicial, administrative or other process before the effectivity of the IPRA and territories which became part of Baguio after the effectivity of the IPRA which is November, 1997.
However, the court ruled that the subject claims do not qualify under said exceptions citing antecedent facts and court decisions that proved that “respondents were not among the original and additional claimants” over subject properties.
“…The said lots in the present case were not shown to be part of any ancestral land prior to the effectivity of the IPRA. To stress, private respondents’ rights over the subject properties… were never recognized in any administrative or judicial proceedings prior to the effectivity of the IPRA law,” the court said.
“The CALTs and CADTs issued by the NCIP to respondents are thus void.”
Domogan who led the fight to reclaim the lots then sought the stoppage of the issuance of spurious CALTs over forest reservations.
In 2013, he bemoaned the fact that one-fifth of the city’s total land area had been covered by CALTS including the irregular ones as he sought the help of the national government then under President Aquino.
By: Aileen P. Refuerzo