Uy Kiao Eng Vs Nixon Lee
Uy Kiao Eng Vs Nixon Lee
Uy Kiao Eng Vs Nixon Lee
Court, contending in the main that the petition for mandamus is not the proper
remedy and that the testimonial evidence used by the appellate court as basis for its
ruling is inadmissible.
Issue:
Whether or not mandamus is the proper remedy of the respondent.
Held:
The Court cannot sustain the CAs issuance of the writ.
Mandamus is a command issuing from a court of law of competent jurisdiction, in
the name of the state or the sovereign, directed to some inferior court, tribunal, or
board, or to some corporation or person requiring the performance of a particular
duty therein specified, which duty results from the official station of the party to
whom the writ is directed or from operation of law. This definition recognizes the
public character of the remedy, and clearly excludes the idea that it may be resorted
to for the purpose of enforcing the performance of duties in which the public has
no interest. The writ is a proper recourse for citizens who seek to enforce a public
right and to compel the performance of a public duty, most especially when the
public right involved is mandated by the Constitution. As the quoted provision
instructs, mandamus will lie if the tribunal, corporation, board, officer, or person
unlawfully neglects the performance of an act which the law enjoins as a duty
resulting from an office, trust or station.
The writ of mandamus, however, will not issue to compel an official to do anything
which is not his duty to do or which it is his duty not to do, or to give to the
applicant anything to which he is not entitled by law. Nor will mandamus issue to
enforce a right which is in substantial dispute or as to which a substantial doubt
exists, although objection raising a mere technical question will be disregarded if
the right is clear and the case is meritorious. As a rule, mandamus will not lie in the
absence of any of the following grounds: [a] that the court, officer, board, or person
against whom the action is taken unlawfully neglected the performance of an act
which the law specifically enjoins as a duty resulting from office, trust, or station;
or [b] that such court, officer, board, or person has unlawfully excluded
There being a plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law for
the production of the subject will, the remedy of mandamus cannot be availed of.
Suffice it to state that respondent Lee lacks a cause of action in his petition. Thus,
the Court grants the demurrer.