Just recently, my husband saw a very good property in their
province in Iligan. It is located on the road side and a residential property.
Although it is only 90.00 sqm the location is prodigious and there is a big potential
to increase its value in the near future.
So we decided to take a look at it and see what are the
things that we can do, steps that need to follow and learn how to negotiate
with the lot owner. Luckily, my mom works as Records / Land Management Officer
in DENR for more than 20 years, and everybody knows that “Mother knows best!”
and from her, we learned the things that we need to consider before buying a
property especially from an individual owner.
We also checked the same information online and this is what
we got:
CHECKLIST
BEFORE BUYING A PROPERTY
Here
are the tips a buyer must remember before buying any property in the
Philippines, especially if you are buying a single property from an individual:
1.
Make sure the “Transfer Certificate of Title” is authentic. The easiest way to
check if the title to the property you are buying is authentic is by getting
“Certified True Copy” of the title from the Register of Deeds. This office is
usually located at the city or municipal hall where the property is located.
Ask the seller of the property for a photocopy of the title -you will need the
title number and the name of the owner to get a certified true copy of the
title from the Register of Deeds.
In addition to this, you should also consider the memo I found below when obtaining the certified true copy of the Title from The Register of Deeds:
http://www.foreclosurephilippines.com/certified-true-copies-titles-require-identification-authority-quezon-city-registry-of-deeds/ |
2.
Verify that title is clean – meaning the property is not mortgaged (no liens
& encumbrances on the property). You can see that at the back of the title
with the heading “Encumbrances”. This page must be empty if you are told that
the title is “clean”. But sometimes the space for the technical description of
the property on the front page of the title is not enough and the description
of the property is continued on the “Encumbrances” page, this is of course all
right.
3. Make sure that the land described on the title is really the land that you are buying. You can validate this at the Register of Deeds or by hiring a private land surveyor or a geodetic engineer. Land titles don’t have any street name and number to pin point a property, it is a must to confirm that the actual property you are buying matches the technical description on the Transfer Certificate of Title.
3. Make sure that the land described on the title is really the land that you are buying. You can validate this at the Register of Deeds or by hiring a private land surveyor or a geodetic engineer. Land titles don’t have any street name and number to pin point a property, it is a must to confirm that the actual property you are buying matches the technical description on the Transfer Certificate of Title.
4.
Make sure that the sellers are the real owners. If you are buying from an
individual property owner, ask for identification papers like passport or
driver’s license, it is also a good idea to talk to the neighbors to confirm
the identity of the sellers (you might as well ask some history of the
property).
5. Confirm that the yearly real estate taxes are paid. Ask for a copy of the Tax Declaration and Tax Receipts to confirm that real estate tax payments are up to date.
5. Confirm that the yearly real estate taxes are paid. Ask for a copy of the Tax Declaration and Tax Receipts to confirm that real estate tax payments are up to date.
7 TIPS FOR WORRY-FREE REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Real
Estate transactions in the Philippines are sometimes a cause for worry due to
the many inherent problems in the system. What follows are some tips and rules
to follow for a worry-free (or “less problematic”) Real Estate transaction:
Tip
#1. Deal only with Titled property. There
are many properties in the Philippines that are not titled, or registered under
the Torrens system. If you buy an untitled property (usually evidenced by only
a Tax Declaration), you would not enjoy the benefits of the Torrens system, and
you will be forced to investigate for yourself the “chain of ownership” from
the present owner up to the first, which usually dates back to the 1920′s. With
titled property, you can rely on the fact that the owner of the property is
that which is stated in the title.
Tip
#2. Stick to those properties registered in the names of actual sellers
themselves. Most
properties in the Philippines are titled in the names of the grand parents or
even great grandparents of the owners. thus, there is still the need to execute
an extra-judicial settlement, which has a “grace period” of two years within
which an excluded heir can question the settlement and the sale. This type of
litigation is fairly common and is the usual source of problems. Thus, avoid
properties not titled in the names of the actual seller.
Tip
#3. Avoid SPAs (Special Power of Attorney) – deal with the actual sellers
themselves. Another
of the common sources of property litigation in the Philippines are those
involving special power of attorneys. This is an instrument that empowers a
party to deal with the property of another, usually for the purpose of selling
the property. Oftentimes, unscrupulous individuals procure a special power of
attorney surreptitiously from the unwitting owner who is led to believe that
the document being signed is something else. Believe it or not, most of the
property owners in the Philippines have finished only primary schooling and
cannot read English documents. If you must deal with property being sold
through an SPA, verify the SPA by questioning the notary public who executed
the same, and even meeting the property owner himself.
Tip
#4. Always check the copy of the title on file with the register of deeds. In the
copy on file with the register of deeds are annotated the “involuntary liens”
(i.e. claims of third parties and the government, road right of way, etc.).
Although the title may still be registered in the name of a person, ownership
might have been transferred, questioned, or otherwise affected, and this can be
seen at the back of the title on file with the register of deeds. Secure a
certified true copy of the title from the register of deeds. Do this yourself
or through a trusted party, never from the seller or his middleman.
Tip
#5. Always have the property identified by a licensed surveyor to be what is
being stated in the title. Once
you have decided to buy the property, ask the seller to allow you to conduct a
relocation survey. Although you might be required to shell out additional
expense for the survey, then you can actually be assured of the metes and
bounds of the property and that the property you are buying is actually that
stated on the title. Furthermore, by asking for a relocation survey, the
adjacent owners are summoned, and thus if there be any unforseen questions some
of them would be voiced out during the relocation survey.
Tip
#6. Always see to it that you have a road right of way. Just
merely looking at the property and seeing a road is not enough. Check the title
and see whether or not it is actually bounded by a road lot, road, or street.
The surveyor can point this out to you. Most foreigners like the countryside
and coasts, where agricultural lands are located. Thus, most agricultural lands
when subdivided into smaller parts do not provide for a road in the subdivision
plan. Be sure therefore that you have access to the land otherwise, you might
be required to purchase a right of way, oftentimes at exorbitant prices such
that you are forced to enter into litigation to have the court fix a reasonable
price.
Tip
#7. Never forget to have your deed of sale, contract of sale or other document
over the land annotated on the copy on file with the register of deeds. This
should be clear enough to be sure that your records are correctly stored and
your property properly transferred to you in official government documents.
QUESTIONS ON LAND TITLE
Title
is a generic term that refers to the legal evidence of ownership one has over a
property. It includes such documents as Tax Declarations, Real Property Tax
Receipts, Deeds of Sale, and the Torrens Title. What we normally think of as
title is actually a Certificate of Title also known as the Torrens Title, which
results from the Torrens System of Land Registration. The Certificate of Title
is the best form of evidence of land ownership.
The
following are some of the most commonly encountered questions on Land Title
and/or Land ownership in the Philippines.
1. How
can one acquire Land Title?
The
easiest is through sale and by executing a document called Deed Of Sale, which
shows the legal transfer of title from the name of the seller to the buyer. The
Deed Of Sale is then taken to the Registry of Deed to be officially recorded.
This type of title is also called Transfer Certificate of Title.
When
no title has yet been issued over a parcel of land, Title it can be acquired
either through:
◦
Judicial proceedings – by filing a petition for registration in Court
◦
Administrative proceedings – by a filing an appropriate application for patent
(e.g. homestead) in the Administrative body (DENR) and registration of this
patent becomes the basis for issuance of the Original Certificate of Title by
the Register of Deeds.
2. Are
there lands with no Land Certificate of Title yet?
Yes
and they are called public lands and include the following:
◦
Alienable or disposable (A & D Lands) – those that can be acquired or
issued title. The Philippines Constitution provides that only agricultural
lands can be disposed of to private citizens.
◦
Non-alienable lands – includes timber or forest lands, mineral lands, national
parks. No title can be issued over any portion within this area.
3. Can
a foreigner have the Land Title in his/her name?
Unfortunately,
the answer is – Land Title can only be put in the name of a Filipino or a
Corporation with at least 60% Filipino ownership. As a foreigner, it would be
helpful to be aware of this limitation on your right of owning Land in the Philippines.
Please refer to the article that discusses land ownership in the Philippines
made especially to the foreigners.
TYPICAL TRANSACTION COSTS - PURCHASES FROM INDIVIDUALS
1.
Capital gains tax – 6% of actual sale price. This is paid by the seller but in
some cases it might be expected that the buyer pays. This percentage could
differ if the property assessed is being used by a business or is a title-
owned by a corporation; in this case the percentage is 7.5%
2.
Document stamp tax – 1.5% of the actual sale price. This is paid by the seller
but in some cases it might be expected that the buyer pays.
3.
Transfer tax – 0.5% of the actual sale price.
4.
Registration fee – 0.25% of the actual sale price.
OTHER USEFUL GUIDES
a.
General Information
As a
rule, only Filipino citizens and corporations or partnerships with least 60% of
the shares are owned by Filipinos are entitled to acquire land in the
Philippines.
Aliens
can acquire land in the Philippines only on a few exceptions: 1) Acquisition
before the 1935 constitution. 2) Acquisition thru hereditary succession -if the
foreigner is a legal heir. 4) Purchase of not more than 40% interest as a whole
in a condominium project. 4) Purchase by a former natural born Filipino citizen
who acquired foreign citizenship & has not applied and granted dual
citizenship can purchase up to 1,000 square meters of residential land and 1
hectare of agricultural or farm land.
b.
Modes of Acquiring Land:
◦
Private Grant – voluntary transfer or conveyance of private property by a
private owner, such as sale or donation.
◦
Public Grant – acquisition of alienable lands of the public domain by homestead
patent, free patent, sales patent or other government awards.
◦
Involuntary Grant – acquisition of private party against the consent of the
former owner, such as foreclosure sale, execution sale, or tax sale
◦
Inheritance – acquisition of private property through hereditary succession.
◦
Reclamation – filling of submerged land, subject to existing laws and
government regulations.
◦
Accretion – acquisition of more lands adjoining the banks of rivers due to the
gradual deposit of soil as a result of the river current.
◦
Prescription – acquisition of title by actual, open, continuous, and
uninterrupted possession in the concept of owner for the period required by law.
Acquisition
is the act of procuring or getting a hold of real estate property. Disposition
is the manner of alienation, transfer of possession and ownership thereof as
prescribed by the Philippine law. The acquisition and disposition of real
estate is embodied in written agreements or contracts voluntarily entered into
and subscribed by the selling and buying parties thereof, before a public
officer designated as the Notary Public of the City or Province where the
subject property is located. Thereafter, the instrument embodying the
particular real estate transaction is required by law to be recorded in the
Registry of Deeds in the City or Province where the real estate property is
involved and located. The Philippines uses the “Torrens” system of real estate
ownership.
c. The
Bundle of Rights Theory
The
bundle of rights theory inherent to property ownership are the right to use
(Jus-Utendi), the right to enjoy the fruits of (Jus-Fruendi), the right to
dispose (Jus-Disponendi), the right to abuse (Jus-Abutendi), the right to
recover (Jus-Vindicandi), and the right to possess (Jus-Possidendi). The rights
incident to ownership are, the right:
◦
to enjoy and dispose of a property without other limitations than those
established by law;
◦
to file action against third parties to recover ownership;
◦
to use force as may be reasonably necessary to repeal or prevent an actual or
threatened unlawful invasion or usurpation of his property (Art. 429, NCC,
relate to Art. 312, RPC);
◦
the right to enclose or fence property – walls ditches, live or dead hedges –
or by any other means without detriment of servitudes constituted thereon;
◦
to demand indemnity for damages caused to property;
◦
the right to compensation in the event of expropriation;
◦
the right to be restored to possession in case of unlawful dispossession;
◦
the right to the surface and subsurface of the land, right to construct thereon
any works, plantation and excavation without detriment to servitude and subject
to special laws and without right to complain of the reasonable requirements of
aerial navigation;
◦
the right to hidden treasure;
◦
the right to accession and fruits of the property;
◦
the right to “quiet title” to real property or any interest therein.
d.
Limitations on right of property ownership
◦
CONSTITUTIONAL – such as police power, eminent domain or expropriation of
private property for public use, taxation and escheat when revision of private
property to state ownership in case of death of property owner without an heir;
◦
LEGAL – zoning ordinances, regulations on subdivision projects, building code,
and other special laws and regulations; and
◦
CONSENSUAL/VOLUNTARY – easements and servitudes, usufructs, lease agreements,
restrictions in subdivision and condominium deeds or restriction.
e. The
Regalian Doctrine of property ownership
A
principle in law which means that all natural wealth – agricultural, forest or
timber, and mineral lands of the public domain and all other natural resources
belong to the state. Thus, even if the private person owns the property where
minerals are discovered, his ownership for such does not give him the right to
extract or utilize said minerals without permission from the state to which
such minerals belong.
f. The
Steward Concept of property ownership
The
Steward Concept is a legal doctrine which holds that property ownership
presupposes concomitant obligations to the state and the community and that
property is supposed to be held by the individual only as trustee for people in
general; and that as mere steward, the property owner must exercise his rights
to the property not just for his own exclusive and selfish benefit or interest but
for the good and general welfare of the nation as a whole.
But of course, the best thing that we can do is to consult and chat with some experts in this field because buying property is not just purchasing a pair of shoes. It is a long time investment so we should value every cent that we will spend on it.
I hope this will help you guys! xoxo
sources:
investph.com,
real-estate-guide.philsite.net,
livinginthephilippines.com,
http://www.femalenetwork.com/girltalk/index.php topic=224013.10;wap2,
http://www.foreclosurephilippines.com/certified-true-copies-titles-require-identification-authority-quezon-city-registry-of-deeds/
This is a very interesting post! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge about buying a house and lot in the Philippines.
ReplyDeletethank you @james abram
ReplyDeletehttps://plus.google.com/116987922738469445569/posts