Rabuco V Villegas

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The case is a consolidation of two cases which concern the actions of the

respondent city mayor of Manila after a large fire of undetermined origin gutted
the Malate area where the petitioners had build their homes and dwellings on 19
April 1970. In sum, the mayor and his subordinate officials had prevented herein
petitioners from reconstructing or rebuilding their burnt dwellings.

The RTC sidetracked the core issue of the case by ruling that the petitioners'
houses were constructed in violation of city ordinances and in fact, constituted
public nuisances.

The "dominant and inextricable issue" at bar, as correctly perceived by the


appellate court is the constitutionality of Republic Act 3120 whereby Congress
converted the lot in question together with another lot in San Andres, Malate
"which are reserved as communal property" into "disposable or alienable lands of
the State to be placed under the administration and disposal of the Land Tenure
Administration" for subdivision into small lots not exceeding 120 square meters per
lot for sale on installment basis to the tenants or bona fide occupants thereof 6
and expressly prohibited ejectment and demolition of petitioners' homes under
section 2 of the Act as quoted in the appellate court's certification resolution,
supra.

If the Act is invalid and unconstitutional for constituting deprivation of property


without due process of law and without just compensation as contended by
respondents city officials, then the trial court's refusal to enjoin ejectment and
demolition of petitioners' houses may be upheld. Otherwise, petitioners' right
under the Act to continue possession and occupation of the premises and to the
lifting and dismissal of the order of demolition issued against them must be
enforced and the trial court's judgment must be set aside.

Respondent city officials claim that RA3120 is invalid and unconstitutional for
depriving the City of Manila of property without due process of law and without
just compensation.

Issue: W/N RA3120 is unconstitutional for unjustly depriving the City of Manila of
property by denying it due process and just compensation.

Held: Granted.

Respondents city officials' contention that the Act must be stricken down as
unconstitutional for depriving the city of Manila of the lots in question and
providing for their sale in subdivided small lots to bona fide occupants or tenants
without payment of just compensation is untenable and without basis, since the lots
in question are manifestly owned by the city in its public and governmental
capacity and are therefore public property over which Congress had absolute control
as distinguished from patrimonial property owned by it in its private or
proprietary capacity of which it could not be deprived without due process and
without just compensation.

Here, Republic Act 3120 expressly declared that the properties were "reserved as
communal property" and ordered their conversion into "disposable and alienable
lands of the State" for sale in small lots to the bona fide occupants thereof. It
is established doctrine that the act of classifying State property calls for the
exercise of wide discretionary legislative power which will not be interfered with
by the courts.

The Court therein reaffirmed the established general rule that "regardless of the
source or classification of land in the possession of a municipality, excepting
those acquired with its own funds in its private or corporate capacity, such
property is held in trust for the State for the benefit of its inhabitants, whether
it be for governmental or proprietary purposes. It holds such lands subject to the
paramount power of the legislature to dispose of the same, for after all it owes
its creation to it as an agent for the performance of a part of its public work,
the municipality being but a subdivision or instrumentality thereof for purposes of
local administration. Accordingly, the legal situation is the same as if the State
itself holds the property and puts it to a different use" and stressed that "the
property, as has been previously shown, was not acquired by the City of Manila with
its own funds in its private or proprietary capacity. That it has in its name a
registered title is not questioned, but this title should be deemed to be held in
trust for the State as the land covered thereby was part of the territory of the
City of Manila granted by the sovereign upon its creation." 10

There as here, the Court holds that the Acts in question (Republic Acts 4118 in
Salas and Republic Act 3120 in the case at bar) were intended to implement the
social justice policy of the Constitution and the government program of land for
the landless and that they were not "intended to expropriate the property involved
but merely to confirm its character as communal land of the State and to make it
available for disposition by the National Government: ... The subdivision of the
land and conveyane of the resulting subdivision lots to the occupants by
Congressional authorization does not operate as an exercise of the power of eminent
domain without just compensation in violation of Section 1, subsection (2), Article
III of the Constitution, but simply as a manifestation of its right and power to
deal with state property."

Since the challenge of respondents city officials against the constitutionality of


Republic Act 3120 must fail as the City was not deprived thereby of anything it
owns by acquisition with its private or corporate funds either under the due
process clause or under the eminent domain provisions of the Constitution, the
provisions of said Act must be enforced and petitioners are entitled to the
injunction as prayed for implementing the Act's prohibition against their ejectment
and demolition of their houses.

"Regardless of the source or classification of land in the possession of a


municipality, excepting those acquired with its own funds in its private or
corporate capacity, such property is held in trust for the State for the benefit of
its inhabitants, whether it be for governmental or proprietary purposes."

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