INDIANA AEROSPACE UNIVERSITY, Petitioner, vs. COMMISSION ON HIGHER EDUCATION (CHED
INDIANA AEROSPACE UNIVERSITY, Petitioner, vs. COMMISSION ON HIGHER EDUCATION (CHED
INDIANA AEROSPACE UNIVERSITY, Petitioner, vs. COMMISSION ON HIGHER EDUCATION (CHED
When the delayed filing of an answer causes no prejudice to the plaintiff, default orders should
be avoided. Inasmuch as herein respondent was improvidently declared in default, its Petition
for Certiorari to annul its default may be given due course. The act of the Commission on Higher
Education enjoining petitioner from using the word "university" in its corporate name and
ordering it to revert to its authorized name does not violate its proprietary rights or constitute
irreparable damage to the school. Indeed, petitioner has no vested right to misrepresent itself
to the public. An injunction is a remedy in equity and should not be used to perpetuate a
falsehood.chanrob1
Director Gaduyon informed the school president “It was explained that there was a
violation committed by his institution when it used the term university unless the school
had complied with the basic requirement of being a university as prescribed in CHED
Memorandum Order No. 48, s. 1996.'
o Respondent ordered the petitioner to desist from using the term “university”
in any branch
Respondent rejected pets. appeal and ordered the latter to cease and desist from using
the word university.
However, prior to that, petitioner filed a Complaint for Damages with prayer for Writ
of Preliminary and Mandatory Injunction and Temporary Restraining Order against
respondent,
Respondent judge denied the motion to dismiss and at the same time ordered a Writ of
preliminary injunction in favor of petitioner. In addition, respondent is ordered to
answer within 15 days. However, respondent failed to answer within reasonable time
and hence declared in default.
Petitioner filed before the RTC a motion to declare respondent in default pursuant to
Section 3, Rule 9 in relation to Section 4, Rule 16 of the ROC and at the same time
praying for motion to set aside hearing on Oct. 30, 1998.
On the same date, respondent filed a Motion for Extension of time to file its answer.
Petitioner, on Nov. 11, 1998 filed its Opposition to the Motion for Extension of Time to
Respondent’s answer and Motion to Expunge Respondent’s Answer and at the same
time praying that's its motion to be heard on Nov. 27, 1998.
RTC issued an order directing the Office of Solicitor General to file within a period of ten
days from the date of its written opposition to the Motion to Expunge (Respondent’s)
Answer and within the same period to file a written Notice of Appearance in the case.
Unable to file their written opposition to the motion to expunge given by the public
respondent, the OSG filed a motion to Admit Written Opposition stating the reasons for
the same time, attaching thereto the Opposition with Formal Entry of Appearance.
The respondent should NOT HAVE BEEN DECLARED IN DEFAULT, because its answer
had been filed long before the RTC ruled upon the petitioner’s motion to declare in
default.
An order denying a motion to dismiss is interlocutory, and so the proper remedy in such a case is
to appeal after a decision has been rendered. A writ of certiorari is not intended to correct every
controversial interlocutory ruling; it is resorted to only to correct a grave abuse of discretion or a
whimsical exercise of judgment equivalent to lack of jurisdiction. Its function is limited to
keeping an inferior court within its jurisdiction and to relieve persons from arbitrary acts—acts
which courts or judges have no power or authority in law to perform. It is not designed to
correct erroneous findings and conclusions made by the court.
In the case at bar, we find no grave abuse of discretion in the RTC's denial of the Motion to
Dismiss, as contained in the August 14, 1998 Order. The CA erred in ruling otherwise. The trial
court stated in its Decision that petitioner was an educational institution, originally registered
with the Securities and Exchange Commission as the "Indiana School of Aeronautics, Inc." That
name was subsequently changed to "Indiana Aerospace University" after the Department of
Education, Culture and Sports had interposed no objection to such change.
Respondent issued a formal Cease and Desist Order directing petitioner to stop using the word
"university" in its corporate name. The former also published an announcement in the March
21, 1998 issue of Freeman, a local newspaper in Cebu City, that there was no institution of
learning by that name. The counsel of respondent was quoted as saying in the March 28, 1998
issue of the newspaper Today that petitioner had been ordered closed by the respondent for
illegal advertisement, fraud and misrepresentation of itself as a university. Such acts, according
to the RTC undermined the public's confidence in petitioner as an educational institution. This
was a clear statement of a sufficient cause of action.