Case Digest Art 82
Case Digest Art 82
Case Digest Art 82
Default (Rule 9)
FIRST DIVISION
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DECISION
On September 29, 2000, petitioners filed before the RTC, Manila, a complaint for Quieting of
Title and Cancellation of TCT No. 122452, docketed as Civil Case No. 00-98813. The complaint averred
that defendants (respondents) may be served with summons and legal processes through Atty. Rogelio G.
Pizarro, Jr., with office address at 2830 Juan Luna St., Tondo, Manila.[6] The summons, together with the
copies of the complaint, were then served on Atty. Pizarro. The record shows that before the filing of the
said complaint, Atty. Pizarro wrote a demand letter[7] on behalf of respondents and addressed to petitioner
German Anunciacion, among others, demanding that they vacate the land owned by his clients
(respondents), who needed the same for their own use. The said demand letter reads:
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I would like to inform you that your occupation and possession of the said land is
based on mere tolerance of the owners, and without any payment on your part of any
rental. Now, the owners need the subject property for their own use.
In view thereof, I hereby demand that you vacate the said land within a period of
fifteen (15) days from receipt of this letter. Otherwise, much to our regret, I shall be
constrained to institute the proper criminal and/or civil action against you.
Trusting that you will give this matter your most serious and preferential
attention.
On October 27, 2000, respondents, through their counsel, Atty. Norby C. Caparas, Jr., filed a
Motion to Dismiss[8] on the ground that the complaint stated no cause of action. Petitioners filed their
Comment on the Motion to Dismiss[9] on November 6, 2000.
A Supplemental Motion to Dismiss and Reply to the Comment on the Motion to Dismiss [10] dated
November 13, 2000 was filed by respondents, alleging an additional ground that petitioners failed to pay
the required filing fee. The petitioners filed, on November 27, 2000, their Opposition to the Supplemental
Motion to Dismiss and Comment to the Reply to the Comment on the Motion to Dismiss.[11]
Thereafter, respondents filed a Second Supplemental Motion to Dismiss and Manifestation dated
November 27, 2000,[12] citing the following grounds:
1.) That the court has no jurisdiction over the person of the defending party.
2.) That the court has no jurisdiction over the subject matter of the claim.
3.) That the pleading asserting the claim states no cause of action.
Petitioners then filed their Additional Comment on the Motion to Dismiss, Supplemental Motion
to Dismiss and Comment on the Second Supplemental Motion to Dismiss.[13]
In its order of February 19, 2001, the trial court sustained the respondents and dismissed the
complaint for lack of jurisdiction over the persons of respondents as defendants. The trial court ruled as
follows:
However, the Court finds for the defendants on the Second Supplemental
Motion.
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In the case at bar Atty. Pizarro, Jr., has not been shown to be a trustee of an
express trust, a guardian, or any of the above for the action to be allowed to be defended
by a representative.
The fact that Atty. Pizarro, Jr., was the lawyer of the defendants in the demand
letters do not per se make him their representative for purposes of the present action. To
this effect, service on lawyer of defendant is an invalid service of summons. (Cordova v.
Provincial Sheriff of Iloilo, 89 SCRA 59)
Going to the other raised issue, Section 20, Rule 14 of the 1997 Rules of Civil
Procedure provides
The presentation of all objections then available as was done by the movants
subserves the omnibus motion rule and the concomitant policy against multiplicity of
suits.
The motion for reconsideration filed by the petitioners was denied for lack of merit.
Aggrieved, petitioners filed before the CA a Petition for Certiorari, seeking the nullification of the
RTC Orders dated February 19, 2001 and May 16, 2001, on the ground that the said orders were issued
with grave abuse of discretion.
On November 19, 2001, the CA dismissed the petition upon finding that there was no waiver of
the ground of lack of jurisdiction on the part of respondents in the form of voluntary
appearance. Applying Section 20, Rule 14 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure, the CA held that
although the grounds alleged in the two (2) earlier Motion to Dismiss and Supplemental Motion to
Dismiss were lack of cause of action and failure to pay the required filing fee, the filing of the said
motions did not constitute a waiver of the ground of lack of jurisdiction on their persons as
defendants. The CA then concluded that there was no voluntary appearance on the part of
respondents/defendants despite the filing of the aforesaid motions. The CA also rejected petitioners
contention that the service made to Atty. Rogelio Pizarro, Jr. was deemed service upon
respondents/defendants, thus:
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client. Atty. Pizarro cannot be deemed counsel on record since Defendants were not the
ones (sic) who instituted the action, like plaintiffs who did the same thru counsel and
therefore, obviously the one who signed the pleadings is the counsel on record. Sadly, the
Motion to Dismiss filed by Private Respondents were signed not by Atty. Pizarro but by
someone else. How then could Petitioners claim that Atty. Pizarro represents Private
Respondents?
Secondly, the fact that Atty. Pizarro was the one who wrote and signed the
August 19, 2000 letter, on behalf of Private Respondents, demanding that Petitioners
vacate the premises of the formers land does not fall under the substituted service rule. To
be sure, Section 7 of Rule 14 of the 1997 Rules, provide thus:
In the case at bench, service upon Atty. Pizarro did not fall under the aforequoted
rule and therefore cannot qualify as substituted service. Since the service made by
Petitioners was defective, the Public Respondent court never did acquire jurisdiction over
the persons of defendants and therefore correctly ordered the dismissal of the
complaint.[14]
Petitioners moved for a reconsideration of the decision but it, too, was denied by the CA in its
Resolution of March 31, 2002.
Hence, the instant petition which raises the following assignment of errors:
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In the Resolution dated July 14, 2003, the Court gave due course to the petition and required the
parties to submit their respective memoranda. In compliance, the respondents filed their Memorandum on
September 8, 2003,[15] while the petitioners filed their Memorandum on September 24, 2003.[16]
While it is a settled doctrine that findings of fact of the CA are binding and not to be disturbed,
they are subject to certain exceptions for very compelling reasons, such as when: (1) the conclusion is a
finding grounded entirely on speculation, surmise and conjecture; (2) the inference made is manifestly
mistaken; (3) there is grave abuse of discretion; (4) the judgment is based on a misapprehension of facts;
(5) the findings of fact of the CA are contrary to those of the trial court; (6) said findings of fact are
conclusions without citation of specific evidence on which they are based; and (7) the findings of fact of
the CA are premised on the supposed absence of evidence and contradicted by the evidence on
record.[17] The Court finds here cogent reason to take exception from the general rule.
Respondents, through counsel, filed a motion to dismiss dated October 25, 2000,[18] with only one
ground, i.e., that the pleading asserting the claim states no cause of action. Under this ground,
respondents raised the issues quoted hereunder:
II. The Government of the Republic of the Philippines has recognized the
authenticity of TCT No. 122452; and
III. Plaintiffs do NOT have the legal personality to quiet the title of the subject property.
Section 20, Rule 14 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure (the Rules) states:
The filing of the above-mentioned Motion to Dismiss, without invoking the lack of jurisdiction
over the person of the respondents, is deemed a voluntary appearance on the part of the respondents under
the aforequoted provision of the Rules. The same conclusion can be drawn from the filing of the
Supplemental Motion to Dismiss and Reply to the Comment on the Motion to Dismiss dated November
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13, 2000 which alleged, as an additional ground for the dismissal of petitioners complaint, the failure of
plaintiffs to pay the required filing fee again but failed to raise the alleged lack of jurisdiction of the court
over the person of the respondents.
It was only in respondents Second Supplemental Motion to Dismiss dated November 27, 2000
that respondents for the first time raised the courts lack of jurisdiction over their person as defendants on
the ground that summons were allegedly not properly served upon them. The filing of the said Second
Supplemental Motion to Dismiss did not divest the court of its jurisdiction over the person of the
respondents who had earlier voluntarily appeared before the trial court by filing their motion to dismiss
and the supplemental motion to dismiss. The dismissal of the complaint on the ground of lack of
jurisdiction over the person of the respondents after they had voluntarily appeared before the trial court
clearly constitutes grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction or in excess of jurisdiction
on the part of the RTC.
Quite apart from their voluntary appearance, respondents Supplemental Motion to Dismiss and
Second Supplemental Motion to Dismiss were clearly in violation of Rule 15, Section 8 in relation to
Rule 9, Section 1 of the Rules.
Sec. 1. Defenses and objections not pleaded. Defenses and objections not pleaded
either in a motion to dismiss or in the answer are deemed waived. However, when it
appears from the pleadings or the evidence on record that the court has no jurisdiction
over the subject matter, that there is another action pending between the same parties for
the same cause, or that the action is barred by prior judgment or by statute of limitations,
the court shall dismiss the claim. (emphasis ours)
Applying the foregoing rules, respondents failure to raise the alleged lack of jurisdiction over
their persons in their very first motion to dismiss was fatal to their cause.They are already deemed to have
waived that particular ground for dismissal of the complaint. The trial court plainly abused its discretion
when it dismissed the complaint on the ground of lack of jurisdiction over the person of the
defendants. Under the Rules, the only grounds the court could take cognizance of, even if not pleaded in
the motion to dismiss or answer, are: (a) lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter; (b) existence of
another action pending between the same parties for the same cause; and (c) bar by prior judgment or by
statute of limitations.
We likewise cannot approve the trial courts act of entertaining supplemental motions to dismiss
which raise grounds that are already deemed waived. To do so would encourage lawyers and litigants to
file piecemeal objections to a complaint in order to delay or frustrate the prosecution of the plaintiffs
cause of action.
Although the CA correctly observed that Atty. Pizarro, as the lawyer of the respondents in the
demand letters, does not per se make him their representative for purposes of the present action, a
scrutiny of the record shows that the address of Atty. Pizarro and Atty. Norby Caparas, Jr., (the counsel
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who eventually entered his appearance for respondents) is the same. This circumstance leads us to believe
that respondents belated reliance on the purported improper service of summons is a mere afterthought, if
not a bad faith ploy to avoid answering the complaint.
At this point, we find it appropriate to cite Philippine American Life & General Insurance
Company v. Breva,[20] where this Court held that:
The trial court did not commit grave abuse of discretion when it denied the motion to
dismiss filed by the petitioner due to lack of jurisdiction over its person. In denying the
motion to dismiss, the CA correctly relied on the ruling in Lingner & Fisher GMBH vs.
Intermediate Appellate Court, thus:
In the recent case of Teh vs. Court of Appeals, the petitioner therein also filed a
motion to dismiss before filing his answer as defendant in the trial court on the ground of
failure to serve the summons on him. In that case, the Court agreed with the appellate
court's ruling that there was no abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court when the
latter denied the petitioner's motion to dismiss the complaint and ordered the issuance of
an alias summons.
To be sure, a trial court should be cautious before dismissing complaints on the sole ground of
improper service of summons considering that it is well within its discretion to order the issuance and
service of alias summons on the correct person in the interest of substantial justice.
Accordingly, the Court finds that the CA erred in dismissing the petition and affirming the
challenged orders of the RTC which dismissed the complaint on the ground of lack of jurisdiction over
the person of the respondents who were the defendants.
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby GRANTED. The CAs Decision dated November 19, 2001
and the Resolution dated March 31, 2002 in CA-G.R. SP No. 65516affirming the Orders dated February
19, 2001 and May 16, 2001 of the RTC in Civil Case No. 00-98813 are reversed and set
aside. Consequently, Civil Case No. 00-98813 is hereby ordered REINSTATED. Let the records of this
case be remanded to the court of origin for further proceedings.
SO ORDERED.