An action for
reconveyance is an action in personam available to
a person whose property has been wrongfully registered under the Torrens system
in another’s name. Although the decree is recognized as incontrovertible
and no longer open to review, the registered owner is not necessarily held free
from liens. As a remedy, an action for reconveyance is filed as an
ordinary action in the ordinary courts of justice and not with the land
registration court. Reconveyance
is always available as long as the property has not passed to an innocent third
person for value. A notice of lis
pendens may thus be annotated on the certificate of title immediately upon
the institution of the action in court. The notice of lis pendens will avoid transfer to an
innocent third person for value and preserve the claim of the real owner.( Id.
at 190. (Emphases ours.)
The rule is that: (1) a
judgment in rem is binding upon the
whole world, such as a judgment in a land registration case or probate of a
will; and (2) a judgment in personam
is binding upon the parties and their successors-in-interest but not upon
strangers. A judgment directing a party
to deliver possession of a property to another is in personam; it is binding only against the parties and their
successors-in-interest by title subsequent to the commencement of the
action. An action for declaration of
nullity of title and recovery of ownership of real property, or re-conveyance,
is a real action but it is an action in
personam, for it binds a particular individual only although it concerns
the right to a tangible thing. Any
judgment therein is binding only upon the parties properly impleaded. (Alonso v. Cebu Country Club, Inc., 426
Phil. 61, 86-87 (2002).
In Domagas v. Jensen, we have explained
the nature of an action in personam
and enumerated some actions and proceedings which are in personam, viz:
“The settled rule is that the
aim and object of an action determine its character. Whether a proceeding is in rem, or in personam, or quasi in rem
for that matter, is determined by its nature and purpose, and by these only. A
proceeding in personam is a
proceeding to enforce personal rights and obligations brought against the
person and is based on the jurisdiction of the person, although it may involve
his right to, or the exercise of ownership of, specific property, or seek to
compel him to control or dispose of it in accordance with the mandate of the
court. The purpose of a proceeding in personam is to impose, through the
judgment of a court, some responsibility or liability directly upon the person
of the defendant. Of this character
are suits to compel a defendant to specifically perform some act or actions to
fasten a pecuniary liability on him. An action in personam is said to be one which has for its object a judgment
against the person, as distinguished from a judgment against the propriety to
determine its state. It has been held that an action in personam is a proceeding to enforce personal rights or
obligations; such action is brought against the person. As far as suits for
injunctive relief are concerned, it is well-settled that it is an injunctive
act in personam. In Combs v. Combs, the appellate court held
that proceedings to enforce personal rights and obligations and in which
personal judgments are rendered adjusting the rights and obligations between
the affected parties is in personam. Actions for recovery of real property are in personam.” (Emerita Munoz vs. ATTY. VICTORIANO R. YABUT, JR. and SAMUEL GO CHAN, G.R. No. 142676,
June 6, 2011, LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, J.).
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