Notor Vs Martinez
Notor Vs Martinez
Notor Vs Martinez
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11/28/2014
There can be no doubt as to the jurisdiction of the courts of the Commonwealth and of the Republic. In the case of
Co Kan Cham vs. Valdez Tau, 75 Phil., 113, 371; 41 Off. Gaz., 779, we have held that the judicial acts and
proceedings of the courts of justice during the Japanese military occupation which are not of a political complexion,
were good and valid and, by virtue of the principle of post preliminary in international law, remained good and valid
after the liberation of the Philippines. The litigation between the parties herein is certainly not of a political
complexion, since it involves merely their civil rights, and it is immaterial whether the currency in dispute was
Japanese military notes. At any rate, the tender of payment was made during the Japanese military occupation
when military notes were legal tender. Under the rules of Public international Law, the right of the military
occupant, in the exercise of his governmental power, to issue military currency as legal tender has never been
seriously questioned. (Haw Pia vs. China Banking Corporation, 80 Phil., 604; 45 Off Gaz. (Supp. to No. 9), 229;
Philippine Trust Company vs. Araneta, G. R. No. L-2734, March 17, 19491). In the case of Haw Pia vs. China
Banking Corporation, supra, we have already recognized the validity of a payment of a mortgage indebtedness in
Japanese military notes. This has to be so, because "the law made by the occupant within his admitted power,
whether morally justifiable or not will bind any member of the occupied population as against any other member of
it, . . . as far as it produces an effect during the occupation." (Hilado vs. De la Costa and Philippine National Bank,
G. R. No. L-150, April 30, 19492). In the case at bar we are not authorizing the circulation of Japanese military
notes, as legal tender at present, but we are merely giving effect to a payment that was valid and binding at the
time it was made. The third assignment of error is likewise without merit.
Wherefore, the appealed decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed with costs against the herein petitioner. So
ordered.
Moran, C. J., Ozaeta, Feria, Bengzon, Tuason, Montemayor and Reyes, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1 83 Phil., 132.
2 83 Phil., 471.
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