Aquino Vs Municipalty of Malay, Aklan
Aquino Vs Municipalty of Malay, Aklan
Aquino Vs Municipalty of Malay, Aklan
CRISOSTOMO B. AQUINO, Petitioner,
vs.
MUNICIPALITY OF MALAY, AKLAN, represented by HON. MAYOR JOHN P.
YAP, SANGGUNIANG BA YAN OF MALAY, AKLAN, represented by HON.
EZEL FLORES, DANTE PASUGUIRON, ROWEN AGUIRRE, WILBEC GELITO,
JUPITER GALLENERO, OFFICE OF THE MUNICIPAL ENGINEER, OFFICE
OF THE MUNICIPAL TREASURER, BORACAY PNP CHIEF, BORACAY
FOUNDATION, INC., represented by NENETTE GRAF, MUNICIPAL
AUXILIARY POLICE, and JOHN and JANE DOES, Respondents.
DECISION
VELASCO, JR., J.:
The Facts
Petitioner is the president and chief executive officer of Boracay Island West
Cove Management Philippines, Inc. (Boracay West Cove). On January 7, 2010,
the company applied for a zoning compliance with the municipal government of
Malay, Aklan.2 While the company was already operating a resort in the area,
the application sought the issuance of a building permit covering the
construction of a three-storey hotel over a parcel of land measuring 998 sqm.
located in Sitio Diniwid, Barangay Balagab, Boracay Island, Malay,
Aklan,which is covered by a Forest Land Use Agreement for Tourism Purposes
(FLAgT) issued by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources
(DENR) in favor of Boracay West Cove.
Through a Decision on Zoning dated January 20, 2010, the Municipal Zoning
Administrator denied petitioner’s application on the ground that the proposed
construction site was withinthe "no build zone" demarcated in Municipal
Ordinance 2000-131 (Ordinance).3 As provided in the Ordinance:
(b) No Build Zone – the space twenty-five (25) meters from the edge of the mean
high water mark measured inland;
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In due time, petitioner appealed the denial action to the Office of the Mayor on
February 1, 2010. On May 13, 2010, petitioner followed up his appeal through
a letter but no action was ever taken by the respondent mayor. On April 5,
2011, however, a Notice of Assessment was sent to petitioner asking for the
settlement of Boracay West Cove’s unpaid taxes and other liabilities under pain
of a recommendation for closure in view of its continuous commercial operation
since 2009 sans the necessaryzoning clearance, building permit, and business
and mayor’s permit. In reply, petitioner expressed willingness to settle the
company’s obligations, butthe municipal treasurer refused to accept the
tendered payment. Meanwhile, petitioner continued with the construction,
expansion, and operation of the resort hotel.
Subsequently, on March 28, 2011, a Cease and Desist Order was issued by the
municipal government, enjoining the expansion of the resort, and on June 7,
2011, the Office of the Mayor of Malay, Aklan issued the assailed EO 10,
ordering the closure and demolition of Boracay West Cove’s hotel.
Alleging that the order was issued and executed with grave abuse of discretion,
petitioner filed a Petition for Certiorari with prayer for injunctive relief with the
CA. He argued that judicial proceedings should first be conducted before the
respondent mayor could order the demolition of the company’s establishment;
that Boracay West Cove was granted a FLAgT by the DENR, which bestowed
the company the right to construct permanent improvements on the area in
question; thatsince the area is a forestland, it is the DENR—and not the
municipality of Malay, or any other local government unit for that matter—that
has primary jurisdiction over the area, and that the Regional Executive
Director of DENR-Region 6 had officially issued an opinion regarding the legal
issues involved in the present case; that the Ordinance admits of exceptions;
and lastly, that it is the mayor who should be blamed for not issuing the
necessary clearances in the company’s favor.
In rebuttal, respondents contended that the FLAgT does not excuse the
company from complying with the Ordinance and Presidential Decree No. 1096
(PD 1096), otherwise known as the National Building Code of the Philippines.
Respondents also argued that the demolition needed no court order because
the municipal mayor has the express power under the Local Government Code
(LGC) to order the removal of illegally constructed buildings.
In its assailed Decision dated August 13, 2013, the CA dismissed the petition
solely on procedural ground, i.e., the special writ of certiorari can only be
directed against a tribunal, board, or officer exercising judicial or quasi-judicial
functions and since the issuance of EO 10 was done in the exercise of
executive functions, and not of judicial or quasi-judicial functions, certiorari
will not lie. Instead, the proper remedy for the petitioner, according to the CA,
is to file a petition for declaratory relief with the Regional Trial Court.
The Issues
Stripped to the essentials, the pivotal issues in the extant case are as follows:
1. The propriety under the premises ofthe filing of a petition for certiorari
instead of a petition for declaratory relief;
Resolving first the procedural aspect of the case, We find merit in petitioner’s
contention that the special writ of certiorari, and not declaratory relief, is the
proper remedy for assailing EO 10. As provided under Sec. 1, Rule 63 of the
Rules of Court:
SECTION 1. Who may file petition. – Any person interested under a deed, will,
contract or other written instrument, whose rights are affected by a statute,
executive order or regulation, ordinance or any other governmental regulation
may, before breach or violation thereof, bring an action in the appropriate
Regional Trial Court to determine any question of construction or validity
arising, and for a declaration of his rights or duties, thereunder. x x x
(emphasis added)
An action for declaratory relief presupposes that there has been no actual
breach of the instruments involved or of the rights arising thereunder. Since
the purpose of an action for declaratory relief is to secure an authoritative
statement of the rights and obligations of the parties under a statute, deed, or
contract for their guidance in the enforcement thereof, or compliance
therewith, and not to settle issues arising from an alleged breach thereof, it
may be entertained before the breach or violation of the statute, deed or
contract to which it refers. A petition for declaratory relief gives a practical
remedy for ending controversies that have not reached the state where another
relief is immediately available; and supplies the need for a form of action that
will set controversies at rest before they lead to a repudiation of obligations, an
invasion of rights, and a commission of wrongs.4
In the case at bar, the petition for declaratory relief became unavailable by EO
10’s enforcement and implementation. The closure and demolition of the hotel
rendered futile any possible guidelines that may be issued by the trial court for
carrying outthe directives in the challenged EO 10. Indubitably, the CA erred
when it ruled that declaratory relief is the proper remedy given such a
situation.
On the propriety of filing a petition for certiorari, Sec. 1, Rule 65 of the Rules of
Court provides:
For certiorari to prosper, the petitioner must establish the concurrence of the
following requisites, namely:
The CA fell into a trapwhen it ruled that a mayor, an officer from the executive
department, exercises an executive function whenever he issues an Executive
Order. This is tad too presumptive for it is the nature of the act to be
performed, rather than of the office,board, or body which performs it, that
determines whether or not a particular act is a discharge of judicial or
quasijudicial functions. The first requirement for certiorari is satisfied if the
officers act judicially in making their decision, whatever may be their public
character.6
In the case at bench, the assailed EO 10 was issued upon the respondent
mayor’s finding that Boracay West Cove’s construction, expansion, and
operation of its hotel inMalay, Aklan is illegal. Such a finding of illegality
required the respondent mayor’s exercise of quasijudicial functions, against
which the special writ of certiorari may lie. Apropos hereto is Our ruling in City
Engineer of Baguio v. Baniqued:9
With the foregoing discussion, the CA erred in ruling that the respondent
mayor was merely exercising his executive functions, for clearly, the first
requisite for the special writ has been satisfied.
Aside from the first requisite, We likewise hold that the third element, i.e., the
unavailability of a plain, speedy,or adequate remedy, is also present herein.
While it may be argued that, under the LGC, Executive Orders issued by
mayors are subject to review by provincial governors, 10 this cannot be
considered as an adequate remedy given the exigencies of petitioner’s
predicament. In a litany of cases, We have held that it is inadequacy, not the
mere absence of all other legal remedies and the danger of failure of justice
without the writ, that must usually determine the propriety of certiorari. A
remedy is plain, speedy and adequate ifit will promptly relieve the petitioner
from the injurious effects of the judgment, order, or resolution of the lower
court or agency. It is understood, then, that a litigant need not mark time by
resorting to the less speedy remedy of appeal in order to have an order
annulled and set aside for being patently void for failureof the trial court to
comply with the Rules of Court.11
Before applying this doctrine, it must first be borne in mind that respondents
in this case have already taken measures towards implementing EO 10. In fact,
substantial segments of the hotel have already been demolished pursuant to
the mayor’s directive. It is then understandable why petitioner prayed for the
issuance ofan injunctive writ––a provisional remedy that would otherwise have
been unavailable had he sought a reversal from the office of the provincial
governor of Aklan. Evidently, petitioner correctly saw the urgent need for
judicial intervention via certiorari.
In light of the foregoing, the CA should have proceeded to grab the bull by its
horns and determine the existence of the second element of certiorari––whether
or not there was grave abuse of discretion on the part of respondents.
Upon Our finding that a petition for certiorari under Rule 65 is the appropriate
remedy, We will proceed to resolve the core issues in view of the urgency of the
reliefs prayed for in the petition. Respondents did not commit grave abuse of
discretion
Article 694 of the Civil Code defines "nuisance" as any act, omission,
establishment, business, condition or property, or anything else that (1) injures
or endangers the health or safety of others; (2) annoys or offends the senses; (3)
shocks, defies or disregards decency or morality; (4) obstructs or interferes with
the free passage of any public highway or street, or any body of water; or (5)
hinders or impairs the use of property.12
In the case at bar, the hotel, in itself, cannot be considered as a nuisance per
sesince this type of nuisance is generally defined as an act, occupation, or
structure, which is a nuisance at all timesand under any circumstances,
regardless of locationor surrounding.15 Here, it is merely the hotel’s particular
incident––its location––and not its inherent qualities that rendered it a
nuisance. Otherwise stated, had it not been constructed in the no build zone,
Boracay West Cove could have secured the necessary permits without issue. As
such, petitioner is correct that the hotel is not a nuisance per se, but to Our
mind, it is still a nuisance per accidens.
illegal constructions
We agree with petitioner’s contention that, under Section 447(a)(3)(i) of R.A. No.
7160, otherwise known as the Local Government Code, the Sangguniang
Panglungsod is empowered to enact ordinances declaring, preventing or
abating noise and other forms of nuisance. It bears stressing, however, that the
Sangguniang Bayan cannot declare a particular thing as a nuisance per se and
order its condemnation. It does not have the power to find, as a fact, that a
particular thing is a nuisance when such thing is not a nuisance per se; nor
can it authorize the extrajudicial condemnation and destruction of that as a
nuisance which in its nature, situation or use is not such. Those things must
be determined and resolved in the ordinary courts of law.If a thing, be in fact, a
nuisance due to the manner of its operation, that question cannot be
determined by a mere resolution of the Sangguniang Bayan. (emphasis
supplied)
Otherwise stated, the government may enact legislation that may interfere with
personal liberty, property, lawfulbusinesses and occupations to promote the
general welfare.19
One such piece of legislation is the LGC, which authorizes city and municipal
governments, acting through their local chief executives, to issue demolition
orders. Under existing laws, the office of the mayor is given powers not only
relative to its function asthe executive official of the town; it has also been
endowed with authorityto hear issues involving property rights of individuals
and to come out with an effective order or resolution thereon. 20 Pertinent herein
is Sec. 444 (b)(3)(vi) of the LGC, which empowered the mayor to order the
closure and removal of illegally constructed establishments for failing tosecure
the necessary permits, to wit:
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(b) For efficient, effective and economical governance the purpose of which is
the general welfare of the municipality and its inhabitants pursuant to Section
16 of this Code, the municipal mayor shall:
xxxx
(3) Initiate and maximize the generation of resources and revenues, and apply
the same to the implementation of development plans, program objectives and
priorities as provided for under Section 18 of this Code, particularly those
resources and revenues programmed for agro-industrial development and
country-wide growth and progress, and relative thereto, shall:
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i. Illegality of structures
In the case at bar, petitioner admittedly failed to secure the necessary permits,
clearances, and exemptions before the construction, expansion, and operation
of Boracay Wet Cove’s hotel in Malay, Aklan. To recall, petitioner declared that
the application for zoning compliance was still pending with the office of the
mayor even though construction and operation were already ongoing at the
same time. As such, it could no longer be denied that petitioner openly violated
Municipal Ordinance 2000-131, which provides:
xxxx
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(e) Any building, structure, or contraption erected in any public place
within the Municipality of Malay such as but not limited to streets,
thoroughfares, sidewalks, plazas, beachesor in any other public place are
hereby declared as nuisance and illegal structure.Such building
structure or contraption shall be demolished by the owner thereof or any
of his authorized representative within ten (10) days from receipt of the
notice to demolish. Failure or refusal on the part of the owner or any of
his authorized representative to demolish the illegal structure within the
period here inabove specified shall automatically authorize the
government of the Municipality of Malay to demolish the same, gather
and keep the construction materials of the demolished structure.
(emphasis supplied)
Petitioner cannot justify his position by passing the blame onto the respondent
mayor and the latter’s failure to act on his appeal for this does not, in any way,
imply that petitioner can proceed with his infrastructure projects. On the
contrary,this only means that the decision of the zoning administrator denying
theapplication still stands and that petitioner acquired no right to construct on
the no build zone. The illegality of the construction cannot be cured by merely
tendering payment for the necessary fees and permits since the LGU’s refusal
rests on valid grounds.
Instead of taking the law into his own hands, petitioner could have filed, as an
alternative, a petition for mandamus to compel the respondent mayor to
exercise discretion and resolve the controversy pending before his office. There
is indeed an exception to the rule that matters involving judgment and
discretion are beyond the reach of a writ of mandamus, for such writ may be
issued to compel action in those matters, when refused. Whether or not the
decision would be for or against petitioner would be for the respondent mayor
to decide, for while mandamus may be invoked to compel the exercise of
discretion, it cannot compel such discretion to be exercised in a particular
way.21 What would have been important was for the respondent mayor to
immediately resolve the case for petitioner to be able to go through the motions
that the zoning clearance application process entailed.
In the case at bench, the due process requirement is deemed to have been
sufficiently complied with. First, basic is the rule that public officers enjoy the
presumption of regularity in the performance of their duties. 22 The burden is on
the petitioner herein to prove that Boracay West Cove was deprived of the
opportunity to beheard before EO 10 was issued. Regrettably, copies of the
Cease and Desist Order issued by the LGU and of the assailed EO 10 itself
were never attached to the petition before this Court, which documents could
have readily shed light on whether or not petitioner has been accorded the 10-
day grace period provided in Section 10 of the Ordinance. In view of this fact,
the presumption of regularity must be sustained. Second, as quoted by
petitioner in his petition before the CA, the assailed EO 10 states that
petitioner received notices from the municipality government on March 7 and
28, 2011, requiring Boracay West Cove to comply with the zoning ordinance
and yet it failed to do so.23 If such was the case, the grace period can be
deemed observed and the establishment was already ripe for closure and
demolition by the time EO 10 was issued in June. Third, the observance of the
10-day allowance for the owner to demolish the hotel was never questioned by
petitioner so there is no need to discuss the same. Verily, the only grounds
invoked by petitioner in crying due process violation are (1) the absence of a
court order prior to demolition and (2) the municipal government’s exercise of
jurisdiction over the controversy instead of the DENR. Therefore, it can no
longer be belatedly argued that the 10-day grace period was not observed
because to entertain the same would result in the violation of the respondents’
own due process rights. Given the presence of the requirements under Sec. 444
(b)(3)(vi) of the LGC, whether the building constituted a nuisance per seor a
nuisance per accidensbecomes immaterial. The hotelwas demolished not
exactly because it is a nuisance but because it failed to comply with the legal
requirements prior to construction. It justso happened that, in the case at bar,
the hotel’s incident that qualified it as a nuisance per accidens––its being
constructed within the no build zone––further resulted in the non-issuance of
the necessary permits and clearances, which is a ground for demolition under
the LGC. Under the premises, a court order that is required under normal
circumstances is hereby dispensed with.
d. The FLAgT cannot prevail over the municipal ordinance and PD 1096
Taken in conjunction with the exceptions laid down in Sections 6 and 8 of the
Ordinance, petitioner argues that Boracay West Cove is exempted from
securing permits from the LGU. Said exceptions read:
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The rights granted to petitioner under the FLAgT are not unbridled.
Forestlands, although under the management of the DENR, are not exempt
from the territorial application of municipal laws, for local government units
legitimately exercise their powers of government over their defined territorial
jurisdiction.
Furthermore, the conditions set forth in the FLAgT and the limitations
circumscribed in the ordinance are not mutually exclusive and are, in fact,
cumulative. As sourced from Sec. 447 (a)(5)(i) of the LGC:
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(5) Approve ordinances which shall ensure the efficient and effective
delivery of the basic services and facilities as provided for under Section
17 of this Code, and in addition to said services and facilities, shall:
Thus, aside from complying with the provisions in the FLAgT granted by the
DENR, it was incumbent on petitioner to likewise comply with the no build
zone restriction under Municipal Ordinance 2000-131, which was already in
force even before the FLAgT was entered into. On this point, it is well to stress
that Sections 6 and 8 of the Ordinance do not exempt petitioner from
complying with the restrictions since these provisions adverted to grant
exemptions from the ban on constructions on slopes and swamps, not on the
no build zone.
Additionally, the FLAgT does not excuse petitioner from complying with PD
1096. As correctly pointed out by respondents, the agreement cannot and will
not amend or change the law because a legislative act cannot be altered by
mere contractual agreement. Hence, petitioner has no valid reason for its
failure to secure a building permit pursuant to Sec. 301 of the National
Building Code.
e. The DENR does not have primary jurisdiction over the controversy
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(b) Such basic services and facilities include, but are not limited to, the
following:
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(ii) Pursuant to national policies and subject to supervision, control and review
of the DENR, implementation of community-based forestry projects which
include integrated social forestry programs and similar projects; management
and control of communal forests with an area not exceeding fifty (50) square
kilometers; establishment of tree parks, greenbelts, and similar forest
development projects. (emphasis added)
Petitioner has made much of the fact that in line with this provision, the DENR
Region 6 had issued anopinion favourable to petitioner. 25 To petitioner, the
adverted opinion effectively reversed the findings of the respondent mayor that
the structure introduced was illegally constructed.
We disagree.
In alleging that the case concernsthe development and the proper use of the
country’s environment and natural resources, petitioner is skirting the
principal issue, which is Boracay West Cove's non-compliance with the permit,
clearance, and zoning requirements for building constructions under national
and municipal laws. He downplays Boracay West Cove's omission in a bid to
justify ousting the LGU of jurisdiction over the case and transferring the same
to the DENR. He attempts to blow the issue out of proportion when it all boils
down to whether or not the construction of the three-storey hotel was
supported by the necessary documentary requirements.
Based on law and jurisprudence, the office of the mayor has quasijudicial
powers to order the closing and demolition of establishments.1âwphi1 This
power granted by the LGC, as earlier explained, We believe, is not the same
power devolved in favor of the LGU under Sec. 17 (b )(2)(ii), as abovequoted,
which is subject to review by the DENR. The fact that the building to be
demolished is located within a forestland under the administration of the
DENR is of no moment, for what is involved herein, strictly speaking, is not an
issue on environmental protection, conservation of natural resources, and the
maintenance of ecological balance, but the legality or illegality of the
structure.1âwphi1 Rather than treating this as an environmental issue then,
focus should not be diverted from the root cause of this debacle-compliance.
Ultimately, the purported power of review by a regional office of the DENR over
respondents' actions exercised through an instrumentality of an ex-parte
opinion, in this case, finds no sufficient basis. At best, the legal opinion
rendered, though perhaps informative, is not conclusive on the courts and
should be taken with a grain of salt.
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the petition is hereby DENIED for lack
of merit. The Decision and the Resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
SP No. 120042 dated August 13, 2013 and February 3, 2014, respectively, are
hereby AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.