How to Lift a Writ of Preliminary Attachment Annotated on a Land Title in the Philippines

A practical, practitioner-level guide to dissolving the writ, clearing the land title, and avoiding common pitfalls—written for litigants, counsel, and real-estate stakeholders.


1) What an Attachment Annotation Means

A writ of preliminary attachment is a provisional remedy under Rule 57 of the Rules of Court that lets a plaintiff provisionally “seize” a defendant’s property to secure satisfaction of any judgment. For real property, the sheriff levies by filing the writ and levy papers with the Register of Deeds (RD). The RD then annotates the levy on the title (OCT/TCT). That annotation creates a judicial lien that:

  • Binds the property from the time of annotation, not earlier.
  • Does not transfer ownership, but clouds the title and chills sale or financing.
  • Generally outranks later encumbrances, but yields to earlier-recorded liens (e.g., prior mortgages) and to legal exemptions.

2) When (and Why) You Can Lift or Discharge an Attachment

You can move to lift or discharge an attachment anytime after levy and before satisfaction of judgment. Typical avenues:

  1. Posting a Counter-Bond / Cash Deposit

    • The defendant posts a counter-bond (or cash deposit) equal to the plaintiff’s bond or the value of the property attached—whichever the court sets.
    • The writ is discharged as to the bonded property. This is the speediest route when the writ was properly issued but you need to free the title now (e.g., for a sale or loan).
  2. Proving the Writ Was Improperly or Irregularly Issued Grounds commonly invoked:

    • No valid ground for attachment (e.g., the affidavit is conclusory, lacks specific facts, or does not fit the rule-based grounds like fraud, absconding, or non-residence).
    • Defective affidavits/bonds (insufficient undertaking, non-accredited surety, lack of authority, wrong amounts).
    • Procedural defects (e.g., lack of prior or contemporaneous service of summons without a valid exception; levy on exempt property such as a properly constituted family home, subject to statutory exceptions).
    • Lack of jurisdiction over the principal case or over the defendant/subject matter.
  3. By Supervening Events

    • Dismissal of the main action;
    • Final judgment for the defendant;
    • Compromise/quitclaim expressly requiring lifting;
    • Satisfaction of the secured claim;
    • Expiration by terms of order (rare) or abandonment (e.g., failure to prosecute leading to dismissal).

Practical note: Even if you win on impropriety, courts may still allow the plaintiff to re-apply if curable defects exist. If time is of the essence, consider a counter-bond in parallel.


3) The Two-Track Strategy: Choose Your Path (or Run Both)

A. Fastest Clean Title: Counter-Bond Route

  • Who uses it? Borrowers needing immediate bank clearance; sellers with an ongoing deal.
  • Trade-off: Upfront cost (premium/cash).
  • Outcome: Court discharges the attachment upon approval of the bond/deposit; RD cancels the annotation upon presentation of the court’s order.

B. Litigate the Defects: Improper/Irregular Issuance

  • Who uses it? Defendants with strong factual/legal flaws to point to.
  • Trade-off: Hearings, evidence, and potential delay.
  • Outcome: Court dissolves the writ; RD cancels the annotation based on the order.

You may file both: (1) a motion to discharge by counter-bond (immediate relief) and (2) a motion to dissolve for impropriety (to recover damages for wrongful attachment later).


4) Step-by-Step: From Courtroom to Clean Title

Step 1: Prepare and File the Motion(s)

  • Caption: In the same case that issued the writ.

  • Relief:Discharge of writ as to TCT No. ___” (counter-bond) and/or “Dissolution for improper issuance.”

  • Attachments (as applicable):

    • Counter-bond (surety from a court-accredited bonding company) or Official Receipt for cash deposit.
    • Affidavits & evidence showing defects (e.g., no valid ground; exempt family home).
    • Certified copy of title (CTC), levy papers, sheriff’s return, and the RD annotation page.
  • Notice & Hearing: Set per local practice; ensure proper service on the plaintiff and, if seeking cancellation directives, copy-furnish the RD.

Step 2: Summary Hearing

  • Be ready to argue probable cause defects or prove bond sufficiency.
  • For family home claims, submit proof of constitution and valuation; address statutory exceptions (e.g., debts prior to its constitution).

Step 3: Court Order

  • Ask the court to (a) discharge/dissolve the attachment and (b) direct the RD to cancel the annotation on TCT/OCT No. ____, describing the Entry No., date, and parties exactly as in the memorial.

Step 4: Implement with the Register of Deeds

  • Bring to the RD:

    • Certified true copy of the court order (with finality notation if required by your RD; some accept an immediately executory discharge order),
    • Owner’s duplicate title,
    • Valid IDs, and payment of fees.
  • The RD cancels the memorial and issues an updated title printout or new CCT reflecting the cancellation.

Tip: Some RDs ask for a Sheriff’s Notice of Release or a Court-issued writ of cancellation. If your RD is strict, file a short “Motion for Issuance of Writ/Notice to RD” after getting the discharge order.


5) Evidentiary & Procedural Angles That Win (or Lose) Lifting Motions

  • Grounds specificity: Attachment affidavits must state concrete facts, not mere conclusions (“defendant is fraudulent”).
  • Bond compliance: Applicant’s bond must be valid, sufficient, and from an accredited surety; defects are fertile grounds for discharge.
  • Service of summons: Except for recognized exceptions, lack of prior or contemporaneous service may void the levy.
  • Exempt property: Family home and certain co-owned or conjugal/community property interests can be non-attachable or only attachable to the debtor’s share.
  • Valuation mismatch: If the property’s value far exceeds the claim and there’s no showing of necessity, argue partial discharge or substitution.
  • Bad-faith attachment: Preserve your record for damages for wrongful attachment—prove malice or lack of reasonable cause.

6) What Happens to the Case After Lifting?

  • Counter-bond path: The main case continues; the counter-bond stands in place of the property for any eventual judgment.
  • Impropriety path: If dissolved for lack of grounds, the plaintiff loses the security but may still prosecute the main claim.
  • Damages: A defendant may recover damages, costs, and attorney’s fees for wrongful attachment, typically after judgment on the merits.

7) Special Issues for Real Property

  • Priority fights: An attachment annotated after a prior mortgage is subordinate to that mortgage.

  • Lis pendens vs. Attachment:

    • Lis pendens gives notice of a claim affecting title or possession; it is not a levy.
    • Attachment is a lien to secure a money judgment. If both are annotated, you must lift each via the appropriate remedy.
  • Pending sale: You may sell while the annotation exists, but buyers and banks usually refuse until cancellation appears on the title.


8) Checklists

A. Quick Checklist—Discharge by Counter-Bond

  • Draft Motion to Discharge Attachment (By Counter-Bond)
  • Attach Counter-Bond/Cash Deposit OR
  • CTCs of Title & RD Annotation, levy papers
  • Notice of Hearing and Proof of Service
  • Proposed Order expressly directing RD to cancel annotation
  • After grant: Secure certified orderFile with RD with owner’s duplicate title → Pay fees

B. Quick Checklist—Dissolution for Improper/Irregular Issuance

  • Draft Motion to Dissolve (state factual/legal defects)
  • Attach affidavits and documentary proof (defective affidavit/bond, lack of summons, exemptions)
  • Notice of Hearing and Proof of Service
  • Proposed Order directing RD cancellation
  • After grant: same RD steps as above

9) Sample Pleading Language (Editable)

Motion Title: Motion to Discharge Writ of Preliminary Attachment (As to TCT No. ___) and to Direct the Register of Deeds to Cancel Annotation Core Prayer (extract): “Respondent respectfully prays that the Honorable Court: (1) discharge the writ of preliminary attachment as to TCT No. ___ upon approval of the attached counter-bond/cash deposit; or alternatively, dissolve the writ for improper issuance on the grounds set forth; and (2) direct the Register of Deeds of ______ to cancel the annotation of levy/attachment Entry No. ____ dated ____ on the said title.”

Order (extract): “The Writ of Preliminary Attachment issued on __ is DISCHARGED/DISSOLVED as to TCT No. ___. The Register of Deeds of ____ is DIRECTED to CANCEL the annotation of levy/attachment Entry No. ____ dated ____ on TCT No. ____ upon presentation of a certified copy of this Order.”


10) Timelines & Practical Tips

  • Timing: You can move to discharge immediately after levy; don’t wait if a transaction depends on a clean title.
  • Accredited surety: Use a court-accredited company; attach proof of accreditation and the agent’s authority.
  • Precision at RD: The RD relies on exact memorial details (Entry No., date, parties). Quote them verbatim.
  • Finality notation: Ask the court for a line that the order is immediately executory (when applicable) or request a certificate of finality to avoid RD pushbacks.
  • Partial discharge: If multiple parcels or levies exist, you can ask to discharge only one (e.g., the land you’re selling) by tailoring the bond amount.
  • Family home claims: Be ready with proof of constitution, valuation, and exception analysis—banks and courts scrutinize these closely.
  • Coordination: Proactively copy-furnish the RD with your motion/order drafts; many RDs appreciate clarity on the exact cancellation text.

11) FAQs

Q: Can the RD cancel on the strength of a sheriff’s release alone? A: Most RDs require a court order explicitly directing cancellation. Provide what your local RD requires, but a certified court order is universally accepted.

Q: If I post a counter-bond, is my title instantly clean? A: Only after the court approves the bond and orders discharge, and the RD cancels the annotation. Posting alone isn’t enough.

Q: Can a buyer accept a title with an attachment annotation? A: Legally possible, but commercially risky. Standard practice is to require cancellation before closing.

Q: Do I get damages if the writ is dissolved? A: You may claim damages for wrongful attachment, usually resolved with or after judgment in the main case and against the applicant’s bond.


12) Bottom Line

To lift an attachment annotation on a land title, you must (1) win in court—either by counter-bond or by proving impropriety—and (2) implement at the RD using a clear, specific court order. The tightest playbook is to file a discharge motion with a counter-bond, submit a RD-ready proposed order, and walk the order through the RD with complete memorial details and the owner’s duplicate title.


This article provides general procedural guidance. For a live case, tailor your motion to the issuing court’s practices and the RD’s documentary requirements in your locality.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.