The Story of Lee Liong Building

Lee Liong Building.


Passing by  Roxas Avenue, one could not help but sigh at the sight of  the deserted building that the locals call Lee Liong. This is the oldest surviving pre-war building in the city’s business district and the only art deco structure in the city center. It definitely merits restoration or at least a decent sprucing up. However, the property is in the private hands and has been untouched since it has fallen over protracted court battles involving two families and the state.

The property was originally owned by the landed Dinglasan family. In March 1936, they sold this 1,574-square meter property on the junction of what is now Roxas Avenue and Pavia Street to Lee Liong, a Chinese citizen for P6,000.00. The immigrant then built the concrete art deco building which he used both as a commercial and residential structure. The ground floor was used for his lumber business,  while the upper floor served as his family’s home. In February 1944, Lee Liong died and the property passed on to his widow Ang Chia, and his sons Lee Bing Hoo and Lee Bun Ting. The family, however, waited until 1947 before they divided the property. 

In 1948, Rafael Dinglasan and his family filed a case against Lee’s widow and his children to recover the ownership of the property, including damages amounting to P1,000 a month. The Dinglasans contended that the sale was conditional and they had the right to repurchase it during the last years of a ten-year period. However, the courts found that the sale was an absolute one.

The Dinglasans further contended that the sale was null and void since Lee Liong was a foreigner and that ownership of a property by an alien violated the provisions of the Constitution (Article XIII, section 5). However, in 1956, the Court found that Lee Liong was not aware of that constitutional prohibition, while the Dinglasans knew about it because one of the sellers, Judge Rafael Dinglasan, was then an assistant attorney in the Department of Justice, yet they did not inform Lee about it at the time of the sale.  The case reached the Supreme Court but the Dinglasans’ claims were dismissed.

Roxas Avenue after World War II. Notice the  portion of the Lee Liong Building on the left side. Image from Dennis Laserna. 

The Dinglasans did not give up. In 1968, they filed an action for recovery citing the same reasons that the sale violated the Constitution. Once again, the case was elevated to the Supreme Court, which dismissed the case. But the court battles did not end there.

In 1993, with the Lee brothers now dead, their respective wives, Elizabeth and Pacita requested for a copy of the tile from the Register of Deeds since the original was burned during the war. Then another case came about after the Office of the Solicitor General filed for the reversion of the ownership of the property to the public domain, which the lowerclower affirmed, but the Court of Appeals reverted this decision, declaring the Lees as the “absolute and lawful owners of Lot No. 398.” It has been explained that if “land is invalidly transferred to an alien who subsequently becomes a citizen or transfers it to a citizen, the flaw in the original transaction is considered cured and the title of the transferee is rendered valid." For the case of Lee Liong, while he was an alien barred from owning a property, the transfer of the property to his heirs, who were Filipinos, corrected the flaw in the original transaction. Case solved but the building had already endured decades of neglect.

The Lee Liong Building is the remaining reminder of the belle époque years of Capiz. Strong and proud, while roofless and in pitiful condition today, it survived World War II, typhoons, years of desertion, and nasty lawsuits. On the ground floor, a carinderia and pawnshop still operates and I could see a makeshift mezzanine was installed by the occupants. But what I lament the most is the fact that the owners failed to step in to tidy up the place.

 

I took this photo of Lee Liong Building during the Enhanced Community Quarantine some time in April 2020. 

 

 

 


The Sugarcane Estates of Ylaya

Sugarcane plantations in present-day President Roxas, Capiz.


In the annual report of Capiz submitted by Governor Jugo Vidal to Governor-General Luke Edward Wright in 1904, one would be in awe to learn about the abundance of natural resources in the province, but you would also disgust the abject situation of the ordinary people. As the cliche goes, it was the best of times, it was the worst of times.  

At the turn of the 20th century, Capiz remained one the top sugar-producing provinces in the Philippines. The Ylaya part of Capiz*,  was known for rice, nipa spirits, and sugarcane.  Governor Vidal reports that for the years 1903-1904, the province had shipped 2,800 piculs of sugar but this was down from 9,289 piculs it exported in 1902-1903. These figures were shameful pittance compared to what the province was producing. The governor recalled that between 1895-1897, the province shipped more than 250,000 piculs. The sugar estates in Jaboyana in Pilar alone produced 50,000 piculs in 1896. Meanwhile, the steam machineries in the haciendas in Rosario, Cabugcabug, Aranguel, Lantagan, Carmen, Curilang, Binontucan, Dulangan and six more yielded between 10,000 to 20,000 piculs for each estate. The lands between Pilar and Pontevedra were so fertile that the produce were deemed better in quality than those in Concepcion (Iloilo) and Negros Oriental, the governor boasted. During the pre-revolution boom, about 100 piculs per hectare could be harvested. Shipping these sugarcane was no problem too, because these towns have "good anchorage grounds, where steamers drawing from 12 to 15 feet of water can lie." Not to mention were the plentiful supply of timber available in the mountains surrounding the areas.

Alas, these sugar estates suffered severe losses from the hands of the revolutionary forces between 1897 and 1898. Only the estates in Lantangan and Curilang were spared. The presence of brigands also overwhelmed the hacienderos and the lands ended up in neglect. The planters could not get money from the banks to purchase carabaos needed for cultivation since many have failed to repay debts incurred before 1897. One by one these sugar estates were seized by bankers and foreign merchants from Iloilo. Take the case of a certain Senor Alvaro Alcantara and his brothers, who lost their estates in Cabugcabug, Carmen and Rosario to Iloilo-based merchant, Mr. Wichof. These estates were valued at P100,000. While labor-wise, Capiz could compete with the haciendas in Negros since wages back then were only one-half than what is paid to plantation workers in Negros, but lack of lack of capital have forced the planters out one by one.

 

*Capiz, before 1957 was divided into two, the Ylaya or Ilaya portion and the Aklan valley area which now comprises the province of Aklan.

Reference

Fifth Annual Report of the Philippine Commission 1904, Part 1. Washington: Government Printing Office.


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