The Supreme Court has clarified the proper legal remedies for recovering land, affirming that property owner Lea Victa-Espinosa correctly filed a case to regain possession of her lot in Cavite.
In a ruling penned by Associate Justice Ricardo Rosario, the Court En Banc said Espinosa properly filed an accion publiciana against spouses Noel and Leny Agullo, who refused to vacate a portion of the land she had purchased.
The case stemmed from Espinosa’s discovery that the Agullos were occupying part of her property. After her demand for them to leave was ignored, she sought relief before the Regional Trial Court (RTC).
SC clarifies rules on land ownership
The RTC dismissed her complaint, ruling that it was premature since it was filed less than a year after the alleged dispossession, when she should have instead filed an ejection case., This news data comes from:http://xnwoesy.redcanaco.com
Later, the Court of Appeals reversed the ruling, treating Espinosa’s case as an accion reivindicatoria, a legal remedy based on ownership.
In response, the Agullos elevated the matter to the high court, insisting that the case was a premature accion publiciana.
However, the Supreme Court denied their petition. It explained that while ejectment suits are available within one year if force, intimidation, threat, strategy, or stealth is involved, an accion publiciana may be filed even earlier if such circumstances are absent. Since Espinosa did not allege that Agullos used any of these means, the Court said her case was correctly filed.
SC clarifies rules on land ownership

The high tribunal also reiterated the distinctions: ejection covers unlawful possession within a year; accion publiciana involves possession disputes beyond a year or without forceful entry; and accion reivindicatoria seeks both ownership and possession.
The Supreme Court ordered the RTC to proceed with trial and resolve the case.
- Bishops demand broad probe into flood project corruption
- Filipino weightlifter Vanessa Sarno banned for 2 years for anti-doping violation
- UK's mass facial-recognition roll-out alarms rights groups
- Xi and Putin's hot mic moment: How long will science extend the human life span?
- Sara Discaya admits owning 28 luxury cars
- OVP ready to submit to lifestyle check if ordered, no word from Sara
- MMDA prepares for PH hosting of FIVB
- Hope dwindles for survivors days after deadly Afghan quake
- Five journalists among 20 killed in Israeli strikes on Gaza hospital
- IBP to form good governance panel