Orders vs. Occupation: Inside the Purok 6B Crisis
In Barangay Bambang, Los Baños, Laguna, the long-standing dispute over Purok 6B has reached a decisive and difficult stage, one that highlights a fundamental reality often misunderstood in similar cases: the presence of illegal occupants, and the limited role of the municipal government when private property rights and court orders are involved.

For decades, Purok 6B has been home to families who built lives on land they did not legally own. While many residents assert long-term occupancy, some spanning over 40 years, and others cite historical ties to what was once Camp Eldridge (now Camp Macario Sakay), these narratives, though deeply personal, have not translated into legal ownership. Court records and sources confirm that residents have been unable to present formal documentation establishing rightful claim to the property.
The legal standing of the land has been clear for years.
In 1992, the property was lawfully acquired by a private individual, Jesus Casus, through a government-sanctioned sale. Several residents acknowledged that their stay was merely by tolerance, an arrangement that allowed temporary occupancy with the condition that they vacate upon request. This agreement, reportedly supported by affidavits, placed residents in a precarious legal position from the outset.
Ownership later transferred to Bambangland Corporation in 2016, further solidifying the land’s private status. When notices to vacate were issued in 2017 and subsequently ignored, the corporation pursued legal action. By April 2, 2018, the Municipal Trial Court ruled in favor of the property owner, a decision that was upheld when the Regional Trial Court dismissed the residents’ appeal in 2021.
From that point forward, the issue was no longer ambiguous.
The continued occupation of the land despite final court rulings placed remaining residents in the category of illegal occupants under the law. While some families had already accepted relocation packages, including cash assistance ranging from P80,000 to P100,000 or land allocations, others chose to stay, some even claiming to have made payments in hopes of securing ownership. However, such claims, absent legal basis, held no weight against a valid land title and enforceable court decisions.
This is where the role of the municipal government becomes critical to clarify.
Contrary to public perception, the local government of Los Baños does not have the authority to halt or override a court-ordered demolition involving private property. Mayor Neil Andrew Nocon and municipal officials may facilitate dialogue, coordinate relocation efforts, and ensure that due process is observed, but they cannot legally intervene to stop enforcement once a writ of demolition has been issued by the authorities.
The demolition in Purok 6B is not an initiative of the municipal government, it is final and executory court order. The responsibility for enforcement lies with the court sheriff, with assistance from law enforcement agencies to maintain order during operations. The local government’s role is largely supportive, particularly in addressing humanitarian concerns, but it does not extend to reversing judicial decisions.
Efforts by residents to delay the process through legal remedies, including a petition for a temporary restraining order in 2023 and subsequent appeals to higher courts, ultimately failed. By 2024, even the Court of Appeals had denied motions for reconsideration, effectively exhausting available legal options.
By April 2026, the demolition proceeded as scheduled, following formal notice to the municipal government. The scale and structure of the community, with many houses built from concrete, have prolonged the process, but not altered its legal basis.
The situation in Purok 6B highlights a difficult but essential distinction: length of stay does not equate to ownership, and expectation does not override documentation. It also illustrates the limits of local governance in the face of private property rights and judicial authority.
As the remaining structures come down, the story of Purok 6B is no longer just about displacement, it is about the consequences of informal settlement on privately owned land, the uneven outcomes among residents, and the hard line that the law ultimately draws.
In the end, while compassion may shape public sentiment, it is legal ownership, and the courts that uphold it, that determine the outcome.