SP Cases
SP Cases
SP Cases
place the plaintiff in possession, all without due process of law; that a writ
of injunction should not be used to take away property from one and give it
to another; and that the writ of preliminary injunction operates only upon
unperformed and unexecuted acts to prevent a threatened but nonexistent
injury, or to prevent the defendant from committing further acts of
dispossession against the plaintiff.
However, the law has now been changed, and under Article 539 of the New
Civil Code, a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction is now available to
the plaintiff during the pendency of his action to recover possession. We
reproduce said Article 539:
"ART. 539. Every possessor has a right to be respected in his possession;
and should he be disturbed therein he shall be protected in or restored to
said possession by the means established by the laws and the Rules of
Court.
A possessor deprived of his possession through forcible entry may within
ten days from the filing of the complaint present a motion to secure from
the competent court, in the action for forcible entry, a writ of preliminary
mandatory injunction to restore him in his possession. The court shall
decide the motion within thirty (30) days from the filing thereof."
The reason for this change in the law is found in the report of the Code
Commission which says the following:
"The writ of preliminary injunction is called for by the fact that there are at
present prolonged litigations between the owner and usurper, and the
former is frequently deprived of his possession even when he has an
immediate right thereto." (Report of the Code Commission, p. 98).
In the present case, according to the findings of the trial court, plaintiff
Saturnina was actually placed in possession on the land in question by the
sheriff, in execution of a final judgment in her favor. The defendantpetitioners herein were appraised of said action of the sheriff, knew that
Saturnina was placed in material possession of the property, and yet they
apparently entered the land by force and intimidation and deprived
Saturnina of the possession given to her by the sheriff. It will also be
remembered that Saturnina, in her complaint against the defendantspetitioners herein, asked for the issuance of the writ of injunction, at the
same time offering to file a bond. It is therefore clear that the case comes
under the provisions of Article 539 of the New Civil Code, authorizing the
issuance of a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction, as was done by
respondent Judge Querubin.
In view of the foregoing, the petition for a writ of certiorari is hereby
denied, with costs.
BACOLOD-MURCIA MILLING CO., INC. and HON. JOSE F.
FERNANDEZ vs. CAPITOL SUBDIVISION, INC. and THE HON.
COURT OF APPEALS
The Bacolod-Murcia Milling Co., Inc., applied for a writ of certiorari to
annul and set aside the resolution adopted on 18 March 1966 by the Fourth
Division of the Court of Appeals, in its Case CA-G.R. No. 27141-R, entitled
Capitol Subdivision, Inc. vs. Judge Jose F. Fernandez and Bacolod-Murcia
Milling Co., enjoining enforcement of a writ of preliminary injunction
issued by respondent Judge Fernandez in Civil Case No. 7698 of the Court
of First Instance of Occidental Negros, upon posting by Capitol
Subdivision, Inc. of a bond in the sum of P50,000.00.
On 11 April 1966, we enjoined enforcement of the resolution of the Court of
Appeals upon the Milling Company's putting up a bond of P100,000.00.
The entire case originated in a suit filed on 10 October 1965 by BacolodMurcia Milling Company (hereinafter termed the Central) against Capitol
Subdivision, Inc. (herein designated as the Subdivision) "to award plaintiff
a legal easement of right of way over defendant's property known as
"Hacienda Mandalagan", particularly Lots 410-3 and 1205 of the Bacolod
cadastre. The complaint averred that on 30 August 1920 the original
owners of said "Hacienda" had entered into a milling contract with the
Central for a period of thirty (30) years, later extended to forty-five (45)
years, from the crop year 1920-1921; that the contract stipulated that the
planter gratuitously ceded for a period of forty-five (45) years a right of
way for the railways, canals, water pipes and telephone lines that the
Central might require, and that although a certain portion of the
"Hacienda" was intended for subdivision the easement of right of way
granted would be always respected; that pursuant to the stipulation, the
Central had built a railroad line occupying 2,138 lineal meters in length
and seven (7) meters wide, over the lands of the "Hacienda Mandalagan
using the same for transporting to Sto. Nio Dock the export sugar of the
Central and its adherent planters, and other materials, that the milling
contracts would expire on the crop year 1964-1965, and the Subdivision
had demanded from plaintiff Central the removal of the railroad tracks and
threatened to close the same; that such action, if carried out, would cause
irreparable damage to the Central and its planters, who have to fill a yearly
quota which is part of the commitment to the Republic of the United
States, unless the right of way and its continued use be legally recognized
as a legal easement of right of way, upon payment of reasonable
compensation, for a period coterminous with the existence and operation
of the Central. Plaintiff then prayed for a writ of preliminary injunction to
restrain the Subdivision from interfering, obstructing, or preventing the
passage of the Central's locomotives and cars, as otherwise plaintiff's mill
operation would be completely paralyzed.
In issuing the preliminary writ for defendant to permit the Central to use
its railway, in the manner established under the milling contract, the court
of origin in effect extended that corresponding part of the contract even
beyond the term stipulated by the parties. Such action is not warranted by
law. The function of an injunction is the maintenance of the status quo as
of the time of its issuance, and at that time, the right of the Central under
the milling contract had uncontrovertibly expired. It needs no emphasizing
that the court can not create contracts between the parties.
Neither can it be said that the isolation in which petitioner Central would
find itself, if not allowed to use its contractual right of way, was not due to
its own acts. The Central had every reason to know that its continued
operation of the railway in its present route would expire on 30 September
1965, and is held bound to know the requisites upon which the law
conditions the right to demand a compulsory right of way. Yet the record is
bereft of showing that the petitioner Central took seasonable any legal or
otherwise, to secure the uninterrupted operation of the railway in question.
This laches of the Central is another reason that makes the issuance of the
preliminary junction complained of entirely unwarranted and abusive, for
a remedy based on equity may not be awarded in favor of those who sleep
on their rights.
Finally, the charge of petitioner Central, that the resolution of the Court of
Appeals anticipated the final decision on the merits by the court below, is
without merit. Said resolution correctly declared that the preliminary
injunction was issued on an erroneous premise, "the premature
assumption that respondent Bacolod-Murcia Milling Co., Inc., is entitled to
the legal easement prayed for by it", since the existence of the statutory
requisites for such easement had not been properly averred or proved, as
elsewhere discussed in this decision. Of course, petitioner may duly show
at the hearing on the merits that the preconditions required by the Civil
Code do actually exist; but until that is done, the right to the legal servitude
is not clear, and the writ of injunction is unwarranted, and issued in grave
abuse of discretion.
Wherefore, the petition for certiorari is dismissed, and the preliminary
injunction previously issued by this Court is lifted and set aside, and the
injunction of the Court of Appeals is restored. Costs against petitioner,
Bacolod-Murcia Milling Co., Inc.
G.R. No. 13228
We are of the opinion that the contract was not void as constituting an
unreasonable restraint of trade. We have been cited to no statutory
expression of the legislative will to which such an agreement is directly
obnoxious. The rule in this jurisdiction is that the obligations created by
contracts have the force of law between the contracting parties and must
be enforce in accordance with their tenor. (Civil Code, art 1091.) The only
limitation upon the freedom of contractual agreement is that the pacts
established shall not be contrary to "law, morals or public order." (Civil
Code, Art. 1255.) The industry of counsel has failed to discover any direct
expression of the legislative will which prohibits such a contract as that
before us. It certainly is not contrary to any recognized moral precept, and
it therefore only remains to consider whether it is contrary to "public
order." This term, as correctly stated by Manresa (Commentaries, vol. 8, p.
606) "does not mean, as here used, the actual keeping of the public peace,
but signifies the public weal . . . that which is permanent, and essential in
institutions . . . ." It is the equivalent, as here used and as defined by
Manresa, of the term "public policy" as used in the law of the United
States. Public policy has been defined as being that principle under which
freedom of contract or private dealing is restricted for the freedom of
contract or private dealing is restricted for the good of the community.
(People's Bankvs. Dalton, 2 Okla., 476.) It is upon this theory that
contracts between private individuals which result in an unreasonable
restraint of trade have frequently being recognized by article 1255 of our
Civil Code, the court of these Islands are vested with like authority.
conflicts with, and must, to avail the defendant, for some sufficient reason,
prevail over, the manifest public policy, which, as a rule holds him to his
bond . . . .
array of figures they have laid out merely succeeded in proving that the
damage, if any they may suffer is susceptible of mathematical
computation. It is not then irreparable. As already stated, this term has a
definite meaning in law. It does not have reference to the amount of
damages that may be caused but rather to the difficulty of measuring the
damages inflicted. If full compensation can be obtained by way of
damages, equity will not apply the remedy of injunction (28 Am. Jur., 244;
43 C.J.S., 427, 446).
Neither can respondent corporations contend that their integration would
mean the destruction of their existing private systems. The most that can
happen would be a diminution of benefits in proportion to the reduction of
the contributions to their private systems. But while they may suffer such
reduction in benefits they also stand to benefit under the government
system. Bear in mind that the integration does not mean the
discontinuance of the private system for under the law three alternatives
are open to respondents in effecting the integration. 1 In other words,
respondents may continue with whatever private social system they may
have at present as a complement to the benefits afforded to them under the
government system without prejudice to their integration into the
government security system.
It may be conceded that, if the injunction be lifted, the possible damages
respondents may suffer are their contributions and those of their
employers to the government security system. But restoration of said
contributions had been assured by petitioner should the provision under
consideration be declared unconstitutional and invalid. There can always
be an appropriate arrangement to provide for refund in the event of such
circumstance. Surely, the millions of pesos available to the Social Security
System would be more than sufficient to compensate respondents for the
contributions they have made.
The same thing may not be said if the enforcement of the law is restrained,
for then respondents would be more harassed and prejudiced in case the
constitutionality of the law is upheld, since they will have to pay all the
back contributions from September, 1957, including interests, up to the
time the preliminary injunction is dissolved. Restoration would then be
much more difficult in view of the contingencies that may arise with regard
to the members of their private system. There are, to be sure, more weighty
reasons favoring the lifting of the injunction issued by respondent judge.
PREMISES CONSIDERED, petition is granted. The writ of preliminary
injunction issued by respondent judge is hereby lifted. No costs.
G.R. No. L-14595
While we have these decisions in mind, it might be well to recall that in one
way or another, the whole question harks back to the legality of sections
1578 and 1579 of the Administrative Code. But in addition, according to the
averments of the plaintiff's complaint which are provisionally admitted by
the demurrer of the defendant, the plaintiff's claim is, that he was not
engaged in the business of a commission merchant in the city of Manila,
and so was not liable to the payment of a tax as such, and that he is without
means of complying with the demand of the defendant under protest or
otherwise. Such, likewise, was one of three grounds which were suggested
as giving equitable jurisdiction to the Supreme Court of the State of
Michigan. Regarding it, Judge Cooley said:
The force of the third contention must rest in the fact that
enforcing the tax may in some cases compel the suspension of
business, because it is more than the person taxed can afford to
pay. But if this consideration is sufficient to justify the transfer
of a controversy from a court of law to a court of equity, then
every controversy where money is demanded may be made the
subject of equitable cognizance. To enforce against a dealer a
promissory not may in some cases as effectually break up his
business as to collect from him a tax of equal amount. This is not
what is known to the law as irreparable injury. The courts have
never recognized the consequences of the mere enforcement of a
money
demand
as
falling
within
that
category.
(Youngblood vs. Sexton [1875], 32 Mich., 406.)
No one could very convincingly argue against the force of these leading
cases. Not neglecting, therefore, to remember their importance, the precise
and narrower question is suggested Did the addition of the words
"without interest" in the statute so deprive an aggrieved taxpayer of his
adequate remedy at law as to justify judicial interference? In two recent
decisions of this court, interest on judgments for the recovery of taxes was
allowed, but without deciding this precise question. Thus, in Viuda e Hijos
de Pedro P. Roxas vs. Rafferty [1918], 37 Phil., 957), it was said that
whether interest could be adjudged a taxpayer against the United States, a
State of the American Union, or the Government of the Philippine Islands,
was beside the question. And in Hongkong & Shanghai Banking
Corporation vs. Rafferty [1918], 39 Phil., 145), it was said that whether
interest may be recovered under section 1579 of the Administrative Code,
is left for decision when a case arises after the Code became effective. As
the point can no longer be evaded, we shall proceed to resolve it, and in so
doing can find no better approach than that to be found in the right to
interest.
It is well settled both on principle and authority that interest is not to be
awarded against a sovereign government, as the United States or a State,
unless its consent has been manifested by an Act of its Legislature or by a
lawful contract of its executive officers. If there be doubt upon the subject,
that doubt must be resolved in favor of the State. In Gosman's Case
([1881], L. R. 17 Ch. Div., 771) Sir George Jessel, Master of the Rolls,
speaking for the Court of Appeals, summed up the Law of England in this
concise statement: "There is no ground for charging the Crown with
interest. Interest is only payable by statute or by contract." In AttorneyGeneral vs. Cape Fear Navigation Co. ([1843], 37 N.C., 444) Chief Justice
Ruffin laid down as undoubted law that "the State never pays interest
unless she expressly engages to do so." Judge Cooley says that "The
recovery (in tax suits) must be limited to the money received. . . . Interest is
recoverable only when expressly allowed by statute." (2 Cooley on
Taxation, 3d Ed., p. 1510; Savings and Loan Society vs. San Francisco
[1901], 131 Cal., 356.) In United Statesvs. Sherman [1878], 98 U.S., 465)
the court, in considering a law relating to suits against revenue officers
providing for recovery of the amount payable out of the treasury, held that
the amount recoverable did not include interest upon the judgment.
Justice Strong, delivering the opinion of the court, in part said:
When the obligation arises, it is an obligation to pay the amount
recovered; that is, the amount for which judgment has been
given. The act of Congress says not a word about interest.
Judgments, it is true, are by the law of South Carolina, as well as
by Federal legislation, declared to bear interest. Such legislation,
however, has no application to the government. And the interest
is no part of the amount recovered. It accrues only after the
recovery has been had. Moreover, whenever interest is allowed
either by statute or by common law, except in cases where there
has been a contract to pay interest, it is allowed for delay or
default of the debtor. But delay or default cannot be attributed to
the government. It is presumed to be always ready to pay what it
owes.
As this is the main rule, the converse proposition must be equally true, that
taxes only draw interest as do sums of money when expressly authorized. A
corollary to the principle is also self-evident, that interest cannot be
recovered on an abatement unless the statute provides for it. (1 Cooley on
Taxation, 3d Ed., p. 20; 2 Cooley on Taxation, 3d Ed., p. 1392; City of
Lowell vs. County Commissioners of Middlesex [1862], 3 Allen [Mass.],
550.) The only contrary dictum is to the effect that where an illegal tax has
been collected, the citizen who has paid and is obliged to bring suit against
the collector is entitled to interest from the time of the illegal exaction.
(Erskine vs.Van Arsdale [1872], 15 Wall., 75; National Home vs. Parrish
[1913], 229 U.S., 494; Matter of O'Berry [1904], 179 N.Y., 285.) The
distinction undoubtedly arises through the fiction that the suit is against
the collector and not against the State, although the judgment is not to be
paid by the collector but directly from the treasury.
It has been urged that since interest is in the nature of damages, it is
proper for allowance. While this may be true in the general run of cases, it
is not necessary true when the sovereign power is concerned. The state is
not amenable to judgments for damages or costs without its consent.
(Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corporation vs.Rafferty, supra, citing
numerous decisions.) In Morley vs. Lakeshore & Michigan Southern
Railway Co. ([1892], 146 U.S., 162, followed recently in Missouri &
Arkansas Lumber & Mining Co. vs. Greenwood District of Sebastian
County, Arkansas [1919], U.S. Sup. Ct. Adv. Op., April 1, 1919, p .239), the
United States Supreme Court had under consideration a state statute
which reduced the rate of interest upon all judgments obtained within the
courts of the state. The court said:
After the cause of action, whether a tort or a broken contract, not
itself prescribing interest till payment, shall have been merged
into a judgment, whether interest shall accrue upon the
judgment is a matter not of contract between the parties, but of
legislative discretion, which is free, so far as the Constitution of
the United States is concerned, to provide for interest as a
penalty or liquidated damages for the nonpayment of the
judgment, or not to do so. When such provision is made by
statute, the owner of the judgment is, of course, entitled to the
interest so prescribed until payment is received, or until the
State shall, in the exercise of its discretion, declare that such
interest shall be changed or cease to accrue. Should the statutory
damages for nonpayment of a judgment be determined by a
State, either in whole or in part, the owner of a judgment will be
entitled to receive and have a vested right in the damages which
shall have accrued up to the date of the legislative change; but
after that time his rights as to interests as damages are, as when
he first obtained his judgment, just what the legislature chooses
to declare. He has no contract whatever on the subject with the
defendant in the judgment, and his right is to receive, and the
defendant's obligation is to pay, as damages, just what the State
chooses to prescribe. . . .
If it be true, as we have endeavored to show, that interest
allowed for nonpayment of judgments is in the nature of
statutory damages, and if the plaintiff in the present case has
received all such damages which accrued while his judgment
remained unpaid, there is no change or withdrawal of remedy.
His right was to collect such damages as the State, in its
discretion, provided should be paid by defendant who should fail
to promptly pay judgments which should be entered against
them, and such right has not been destroyed or interfered with
by legislation. The discretion exercised by the legislature in
prescribing what, if any, damages shall be paid by way of
compensation for delay in the payment of judgments is based on
reasons of public policy, and is altogether outside the sphere of
private contracts.
Our statute, it will be remembered, not only does not authorize interest but
negatives the payment of interest .While, therefore, coming under the
purview of the general principle pertaining to legislative discretion, it also
avoids any trouble to be found in those decisions which allow interest
without any express provision on the subject, because the statute provides
that interest shall not be allowed .From whatever direction we look at the
subject, therefore, we reach either the conclusion that the law is valid, or
that the plaintiff has not proven such a case of irreparable injury as would
warrant the issuance of the extraordinary writ of injunction.
The reason for what superficially seems to be a harsh ruling goes back to
the fundamental conception of the nature of taxation. It is but a truism to
restate that taxation is an attribute of sovereignty. It is the strongest of all
the powers of government. It involves, as Chief Justice Marshall in his
historical statement said, the power to destroy. (McCulloch vs. Maryland
[1819], 4 Wheat., 316; Loan Association vs. Topeka [1875], 20 Wall., 655.)
"The right of taxation where it exists," the court said in
Austin vs. Aldermen ([1868], 7 Wall., 694), "is necessarily unlimited in its
nature. It carriers with it inherently the power to embarrass and
destroy." 1awph!l.net
Public policy decrees that, since upon the prompt collection of revenue
there depends the very existence of government itself, whatever
determination shall be arrived at by the Legislature should not be
interfered with, unless there be a clear violation of some constitutional
inhibition. As said in Dows vs. The City of Chicago, supra, "It is upon
taxation that the several states chiefly rely to obtain the means to carry on
their respective governments, and it is of the utmost importance to all of
them that the modes adopted to enforce the taxes levied should be
interfered with as little as possible. Any delay in the proceedings of the
officers, upon whom the duty is devolved of collecting the taxes, may
derange the operations of government, and thereby cause serious
detriment to the public." Or as said in Snyder vs. Marks, supra, "The
system prescribed by the United States in regard to both customs duties
and internal revenue taxes, of stringent measures, not judicial, to collect
them, with appeals to specified tribunals and suits to recover back moneys
illegally exacted, was a system of corrective justice, intended to be
The main issue now before this Court is: Can the Judge of the Court of
First Instance of Rizal issue a restraining order and writ of preliminary
injunction joining the City Fiscal of Manila from proceeding with the
preliminary investigation of a criminal complaint if before the former a
civil action with prejudicial question is raised?
On the issue of jurisdiction to take cognizance of the petition for certiorari
and prohibition with injunction, it is already a settled rule that jurisdiction
or authority of court of first instance to control or restrain the acts which
are being committed or about to be commited within the territorial
boundaries of their respective provinces and districts. (Alhambra Cigar
and Cigarette Manufacturing Co., Inc. v. The National Administrator of
Regional Office No. 2, etc., et al., G.R. No. L-20491, August 31, 1965, and
the cases cited therein)
The contention of the respondents that the decisions of this Court cited in
the Alhambra Cigar and Cigarette case,supra, do not apply in the instant
case because they sought the writs of injunction and prohibition from the
Court of First Instance of Rizal not through a complaint but through a
third-party complaint, is untenable for we agree with the observation of
the Solicitor General that there is no basic difference and fundamental
reason for making a distinction in the issuance of the writ whether through
an original complaint or third-party complaint.
Another point to be considered is that, "as a general rule, an injunction will
not be granted to restrain a criminal prosecution." (Kwong Sing v. City of
Manila, 41 Phil. 103; Gorospe v. Peaflorida, 101 Phil. 886; University of
the Philippines v. City Fiscal of Quezon City, G.R. No. L-18562, July 31,
1961; and Lava v. Gonzales, G.R. No. L-23048, July 31, 1964).
We do not have to discuss whether there is a prejudicial question involved
in this case, for even assuming that there is, still the Judge of the Court of
First Instance of Rizal cannot enjoin the City Fiscal of Manila from
proceeding with the preliminary investigation of the complaint, the latter
being outside of the territorial jurisdiction of the former.
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby granted and the writ of preliminary
injunction dated April 11, 1962, restraining the respondent Judge from
enforcing his questioned orders, is hereby made permanent. No costs.
G.R. No. L-21988
ALICIA S. GONZALES, represented by her Attorney-inFact, HUMBERTO DE LOS SANTOS, petitioner-appellant, vs. THE
SECRETARY OF PUBLIC WORKS AND COMMUNICATIONS,
DISTRICT ENGINEER, Province of Davao and
LUCIA O. TOLENTINO, respondents-appellees.
Appeal by petitioner Alicia S. Gonzales from an order of the Court of First
Instance of Davao dismissing Civil Case No. 3689 thereof.
The records show that, acting upon a letter-complaint filed by Lucia O.
Tolentino, and after hearing Alicia S. Gonzales, among others, the
Undersecretary of Public Works and Communications rendered, on July
11, 1961, a decision ordering the demolition of certain dams constructed by
Gonzales and three other persons across Cabatan River and seemingly
enclosing Gonzales' fishponds in Magbongcogon, Lupon, Davao. On
subsequent motion of Gonzales, this decision was reconsidered by the
Head of said Department on September 7. However, on appeal taken by
Tolentino, the last action thus taken by said Department Head was, on
December 1, 1961, reversed by the Office of the President, which ordered
the dams aforementioned demolished. Accordingly, said Department
directed the District Engineer of Davao to proceed with the demolition of
the dams. A reconsideration of the decision of the Executive having been,
subsequently, denied, on January 16, 1962, the District Engineer of Davao
advised Gonzales that the former's representatives would execute said
decision.
Hence, on January 17, 1962, Gonzales commenced against the Secretary of
Public Works and Communications, the District Engineer of Davao and
Lucia O. Tolentino, said Civil Case No. 3689, which is an action
for certiorari, prohibition with preliminary injunction and/or preliminary
mandatory injunction, to prevent the demolition of petitioner's dams in
compliance with the departmental order aforementioned. Acting upon a
motion to dismiss filed by respondent Tolentino and upon the authority
of Samar Mining Co. vs. Arnaldo, G.R. No. L-17709 (June 30, 1961)
and Acosta vs,. Alvendia, G.R. No. L-14598 (October 31, 1960), the lower
court dismissed the case. A reconsideration of the order to this effect
having been denied, Gonzales interposed the present appeal.
The only question raised therein is whether the Court of First Instance of
Davao had jurisdiction to entertain said Case No. 3689, considering that its
main purpose was to prevent the enforcement of a decision of the Secretary
of Public Works and Communications, who is in Manila. The cases relied
upon in the order appealed from do not justify the conclusion reached
therein.
SYLLABUS
1. CRIMINAL PROCEDURE; MANDAMUS DOES NOT LIE TO COMPEL
CHIEF OF POLICE TO SUBSCRIBE AND SWEAR TO A CRIMINAL
COMPLAINT. Before the accused were arraigned on the original
complaint for less serious physical injuries, the private prosecutor tended a
second amended complaint charging the accused with serious physical
injuries, but the chief of police refused to sign it and the justice of the peace
denied the oral petition of the private prosecutor to order the chief of
police to sign it. Held: That mandamus does not lie against either the chief
of police or the justice of the peace. To subscribe and swear to a criminal
complaint is not a ministerial but a discretionary act of a peace officer. To
coerce him by mandamus to perform such an act would make him a mere
robot and nullify the oath.
2. ID.; PROCEDURE WHERE OFFERED PARTY DESIRES TO AMEND
HIS COMPLAINT. All criminal actions must be commenced either by
complaint or information. (Section 1, Rule 106.) "Complaint is a sworn
written statement charging a person with an offense, subscribed by the
offended party, any peace officer or other employee of the Government or
governmental institution in charge of the enforcement or execution of the
law violated." (Section 2, id.) Thus, under the law the offended party
himself may subscribe and swear to the complaint in question. The correct
procedure for him to follow was to ask for the dismissal of the original
complaint for less serious physical injuries and to file another complaint
for serious physical injuries, subscribed and sworn to by himself. The
justice of the peace would have to accept it and give it due course by
holding the preliminary investigation required by Rule 108. Should the
justice of the peace refuse to issue the warrant of arrest after the
preliminary investigation, and should the offended party be dissatisfied
with the action of the justice of the peace, he could appeal to the provincial
fiscal. This goes to show that appellant has not been excluded from the use
and enjoyment of a right; he simply did not know how to exercise his right.
3. ID.; INJUNCTION REMAINS IN FORCE BECAUSE NOT EXPRESSLY
DISSOLVED BY JUDGMENT OF DISMISSAL AND IN VIEW OF APPEAL
TAKEN FROM SAID JUDGMENT. In the action for mandamus, the trial
court issued a temporary injunction to restrain the justice of the peace
from going ahead with the trial of criminal case No. 1. After hearing the
case, the trial court entered judgment dismissing the action without,
however, expressly dissolving the injunction. That judgment was
subsequently appealed. The question to determine is whether the first
order issued by the trial court, which may be considered as a temporary
injunction, was ipso facto dissolved by the judgment dismissing the action,
notwithstanding the appeal from said judgment and notwithstanding the
absence of an express provision therein dissolving the injunction. In the
instant case the appeal, which was expressly admitted by the trial court,
would have been a moot case if the court had dissolved the temporary
injunction. That is evidently the reason why the trial court refrained from
dissolving it in the order of dismissal. The injunction ordered the justice of
the peace to suspend all further action in criminal case No. 1 "hasta nueva
orden." Held: That in view of the abstention by the trial court from
expressly dissolving the temporary injunction, and in view of the appeal
from the judgment of dismissal, the temporary injunction was not
dissolved but remained in force until the appeal was finally decided. Hence
the actuations of the justice of the peace in violation of said injunction
were null and void.
DECISION
Appellant is the offended party in criminal case No. 1 of the justice of the
peace court of Alitagtag, Batangas, filed by the chief of police against
Apolonio Jumarang and Geronimo Jumarang, for less serious physical
injuries alleged to have been committed on January 13, 1943. An attempt
was subsequently made by the chief of police to amend the complaint by
charging the accused with frustrated homicide instead of less serious
physical injuries, but the amended complaint was rejected by the justice of
the peace. On March 6, 1943, before the accused were arraigned on the
original complaint, the private prosecutor tendered a second amended
complaint (exhibit C) charging the accused with serious physical injuries,
but the chief of police refused to sign it and the justice of the peace denied
the oral petition of the private prosecutor to order the chief of police to
sign it. The private prosecutor, announcing his intention to institute a
mandamus proceeding in the Court of First Instance, objected to the
arraignment of the accused upon the original complaint. The objection was
overruled, and the accused were arraigned.
On March 11, 1943, appellant filed a petition for mandamus against the
justice of the peace and the chief of police of Alitagtag to compel the latter
to sign the second amended complaint exhibit C, and the former to accept
said complaint; and, in the meantime, to restrain the justice of the peace
from going ahead with the trial of said criminal case No. 1. Upon the filing
of said petition the Court of First Instance issued the following order:
From that order the petitioner has appealed to this Court. In the
meantime, and on August 2, 1943, the justice of the peace called criminal
case No. 1 for trial and then and there dismissed it for nonappearance of
the offended party and his witnesses. In a motion filed by the petitionerappellant herein on September 1, 1943, he prays this Court to "issue an
order requiring the reinstatement of the said criminal case No. 1, to vacate
the order of dismissal and to arrest the accused," upon the ground that the
hearing of said criminal case and the entry of the order of dismissal were in
violation of the trial courts injunction. Action upon said motion was
deferred until the consideration of the case on the merits.
We find the order appealed from to be correct in every respect. It is patent
that mandamus does not lie here against either the chief of police or the
justice of the peace. To subscribe and swear to a criminal complaint is not
a ministerial but a discretionary act of a peace officer. To coerce him by
mandamus to perform such an act would make him a mere robot and
nullify the oath.
All criminal actions must be commenced either by complaint or
information. (Section 1, Rule 106.) "Complaint is a sworn written
statement charging a person with an offense, subscribed by the offended
party, any peace officer or other employee of the Government or
governmental institution in charge of the enforcement or execution of the
law violated." (Section 2, id.) Thus, under the law the offended party
himself may subscribe and swear to the complaint in question. The correct
procedure for him to follow was to ask for the dismissal of the original
complaint for less serious physical injuries and to file another complaint
for serious physical injuries, subscribed and sworn to by himself. The
justice of the peace would have to accept it and give it due course by
holding the preliminary investigation required by Rule 108. Should the
justice of the peace refuse to issue the warrant of arrest after the
preliminary investigation, and should the offended party be dissatisfied
with the action of the justice of the peace, he could appeal to the provincial
fiscal. This goes to show that appellant has not been excluded from the use
and enjoyment of a right; he simply did not know how to exercise his right.
We have now to consider appellants motion to vacate the order of
dismissal of criminal case No. 1 entered by the justice of the peace during
the pendency of this appeal. The question to determine is whether the first
order issued by the trial court, which may be considered as a temporary
injunction, was ipso facto dissolved by the judgment dismissing the action,
notwithstanding the appeal from said judgment and notwithstanding the
absence of an express provision therein dissolving the injunction.
In an action for injunction, the judgment granting, dissolving, or denying
an injunction is immediately operative, unless otherwise ordered by the
court. (See section 4, Rule 39.) But in an action in which the writ of
preliminary injunction has been issued as an auxiliary remedy, does the
judgment of dismissal ipso facto dissolve the writ of preliminary injunction
notwithstanding an appeal? In the cases of Watson v. Enriquez, 1 Phil.,
480, and Sitia Teco v. Ventura, 1 Phil., 497, the trial court, in rendering
judgment in favor of the defendants, dissolved the temporary injunction
theretofore issued by it. This Court held that the dissolution was operative
notwithstanding the appeal from the judgment. This Court quoted with
approval from Knox Company v. Harshman, 132 U.S., 14, that "when an
injunction has been dissolved, it cannot be revived except by a new
exercise of judicial power, and no appeal by a dissatisfied party can of itself
revive it." It was also held in said cases that the trial court "has the power,
if the purposes of justice require it, to order a continuance of the status quo
until a decision should be made by the appellate court or until that court
should order to the contrary."cralaw virtua1aw library
In the instant case the trial court did not dissolve the temporary injunction
it had issued. Thus, we have here the converse of the Watson and Sitia
Teco cases. There it was held that once an injunction has been dissolved, it
stays dissolved unless revived by another order. Here we have an
injunction which has not been dissolved and which, therefore, should
remain in force, unless otherwise ordered by the court, until the case is
finally decided. In the instant case the appeal, which was expressly
admitted by the trial court, would have been a moot case if the court had
dissolved the temporary injunction. That is evidently the reason why the
trial court refrained from dissolving it in the order of dismissal. The
injunction ordered the justice of the peace to suspend all further action in
criminal case No. 1 "hasta nueva orden." We hold, therefore, that in view of
the absention by the trial court from expressly dissolving the temporary
injunction, and in view of the appeal from the judgment of dismissal, the
temporary injunction was not dissolved but remained in force until the
appeal was finally decided. Hence the actuations of the justice of the peace
in violation of said injunction were null and void.
Wherefore, the judgment appealed from is affirmed, without prejudice to
the right of the appellant to present a new complaint against Apolonio
Jumarang and Geronimo Jumarang for either less serious physical injuries
or serious physical injuries. No finding as to costs.
CASTOR AGUILAR, petitioner, vs. ERNESTO TAN and THE
COURT OF APPEALS, respondent.
VICENTE RIVERA, JR., in his capacity as Director of civil
Aviation, petitioner, vs. ERNESTO TAN and THE COURT OF
APPEALS, respondent.
The primary object of the petitions in these two cases for certiorari is to
reverse and/or nullify the June 16, 1964 decision and September 21, 1964
resolution of the Court of Appeals, it appearing that said decision and
resolution would have the effect of depriving Castor Aguilar of his alleged
right to operate the porterage service at the Manila International Airport
and vesting it in respondent Ernesto Tan.1
The cases have their roots in Civil Case No. 2190-P of the Court of First
Instance of Rizal, entitled "Ernesto Tan, Plaintiff, versus Urbano B.
Caldoza,
et
al.,
Defendants,
Celso
Gazzingan,
Intervenor",
Issues having been joined and the following oral arguments on the merits,
the Court of Appeals, on September 21, 1964, issued an extended
resolution to be held in abeyance, the same stands with the instant
resolution incorporated therein as part hereof."
Hence, this appeal by certiorari. As prayed for, we issued a cease-anddesist order on November 7, 1964 in L-23600 (Castro Aguilar, Petitioner,
versus Ernesto Tan and the Court of appeals, Respondents).
1. Petitioners assail the June 16, 1964 decision of the Court of Appeals.
Petitioners' claim is that at the time that decision was rendered, the court
had not yet acquired jurisdiction over their persons. They submit that the
decision was void for lack of due process.
Beyond question is the fact that the June 16, 1964 decision was rendered
by the Court of Appeals without giving notice to herein petitioners of Tan's
petition therein and without giving them an opportunity to be heard. Had
the proceedings stopped there, unquestionably, that decision would have
to be stricken down as null and void. But petitioners complained. They
separately moved to set aside the decision. They stress lack of the process.
The Court of Appeals listened to their plea. Thus, on June 27, 1964, the
appellate court resolved to hold in abeyance its June 16, 1964 decision, and
ordered respondents (petitioners herein) to file their answers thereto.
Summonses were served upon the Director and Aguilar. Thereafter, they
filed their respective answers. The case was heard before the appellate
court on the merits. The parties argued orally their respective causes
thereat.
There is then reason to say that the situation here presented comes within
the coverage of the rule that "[w]hat the law prohibits is not the absence
of previous notice, but the absolute absence thereof and lack of
opportunity to be heard."5 We have said that where a party was given a
chance to be heard with respect to his motion for reconsideration there is
sufficient compliance with the requirements of due process. 6 Such is the
case here.
Considering then that the decision of June 16, 1964 was suspended, that
meanwhile herein petitioners were given a chance to traverse the
averments of the petition, have had full opportunity to speak and explain
their side of the case, we feel that the fundamental safeguards of due
process were not denied petitioners. Where previously there was error,
subsequently such error was corrected. Originally victims of hasty justice,
petitioners were subsequently given fair treatment. The vice existed; but it
was cured.
2. Now to the core of the case. The judgment of the trial court dissolved the
preliminary injunctive writ which gave respondent Tan the right to operate
the porterage service. The appellate court's directive is that such judgment
should not be enforced. It is the Court of Appeals' view that Tan's appeal
from the adverse decision "suspended all proceedings to oust him until
such appeal shall have been finally disposed of by the appellate court."
The rule that an appeal does not stay execution of the judgment decreeing
the dissolution of a preliminary injunction has a history in this country
which dates back to 1902. That was the ruling of this Court in Watson &
Co., Limited vs. Enriquez (November 13, 1902), 1 Phil. 480, 481-482,
closely followed on November 22 of the same year by Sitia Teco vs.
Ventura, 1 Phil. 497, 499.7
3. Whether or not there was grave abuse of discretion on the part of the
Court of Appeals in enjoining the lower court from enforcing its decision
dissolving the injunctive writ is the next problem we are to grapple with.
Deeply ingrained in jurisprudence is the principle that the writs
of certiorari and prohibition are granted "to keep an inferior court within
the bounds of its jurisdiction or to prevent it from committing such a grave
abuse of discretion amounting to excess of jurisdiction." 8 As we have said
in Albert vs. Court of First Instance of Manila (Branch VI), L-26364, May
29, 1968, 23 SCRA 948, 965, "the office of the writ of certiorari has been
reduced to the correction of defects ofjurisdiction solely and cannot legally
be used for any other purpose."9
Let us now look into the reasons of the appellate court for granting the
writs.
The resolution of September 21, 1964, which was issued after hearing both
parties, confirmed the conclusion reached in the June 16, 1964 decision
that the writs prayed for should be granted, thus: