SECOND DIVISION
KNECHT, INCORPORATED, as G.R.
No. 145254
trustee for the stockholders and
creditors of ROSE PACKING
CO., INC.,
Petitioner, Present:
PUNO, J., Chairperson,
SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ,
-
v e r s u s - CORONA,
AZCUNA
and
GARCIA, JJ.
MUNICIPALITY OF CAINTA and
ENCARNACION GONZALES-WONG,
Respondents. Promulgated:
July 20, 2006
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D E C I S I O N
CORONA, J.:
This petition for review on
certiorari seeks the reversal of the September 27, 2000 decision[1] of the Court of Appeals (CA) in
CA-G.R. SP No. 48440, a petition for annulment of judgment.
The decision in CA-G.R. SP No. 48440 affirmed various orders of different trial courts in three separate and distinct proceedings, namely:
(1)
March 24, 1994 order of RTC-Pasig
City, Branch 151 (formerly, CFI-Rizal, Branch I) in Civil Case
No. 9165 (a case for specific performance and damages) authorizing the
issuance of an alias writ of execution in favor of UCC;
(2)
June 16, 1992 order of RTC-Antipolo,
Branch 73 in Civil Case No. 90-1817 (an expropriation case) directing the
Municipality of Cainta to deposit 10% of the provisional value of the property;
(3)
June 22, 1992 orders of RTC-Antipolo,
Branch 73 in Civil Case No. 90-1817 declaring that the Municipality of
Cainta had the lawful right to expropriate the property and also granting the
municipality’s motion for a writ of possession;
(4)
June 26, 1992 order of RTC-Antipolo,
Branch 73 in Civil Case No. 90-1817 excluding Rose Packing (petitioner’s
predecessor-in-interest) as party-defendant in the expropriation proceedings;
(5)
February 21, 1994 order of RTC-Antipolo,
Branch 73 in Civil Case No. 90-1817 denying Rose Packing’s motion for
reconsideration of the order of its exclusion; and
(6)
April 24, 1997 order of RTC of RTC-Antipolo,
Branch 73 in LRC Case No. 96-1743 dismissing petitioner’s petition for
cancellation of encumbrances annotated on TCT No. 613113 in its name.
The facts and issues of each case are summarized below.
Civil Case
No. 9165
In 1965, Rose Packing Co., Inc. (Rose
Packing) sold three parcels of land situated in Sto. Domingo, Cainta, Rizal to
United Cigarette Corporation (UCC). The largest parcel was covered by Transfer
Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 73620 while the two other parcels were
unregistered. TCT No. 73620 was mortgaged to the Philippine Commercial and
Industrial Bank (PCIB).[2]
When Rose Packing, however, refused
to comply with its commitments under the contract, UCC filed a suit for
specific performance and damages against it and its president, Rene Knecht, in
the then Court of First Instance (CFI) of Rizal, Branch I. It was docketed as
Civil Case No. 9165.
On July 15, 1969, the trial court
decided in favor of UCC.[3] The CFI decision was upheld on appeal by the
CA and subsequently by this Court.[4]
Entry of judgment was accordingly made on March 23, 1977.
The judgment in favor of UCC,
however, could not be immediately implemented because PCIB, during the pendency
of Civil Case No. 9165, foreclosed on the mortgage on the lot covered by TCT
No. 73620. Rose Packing tried to stop the foreclosure by filing a separate case
but the trial court[5]
denied its prayer for temporary restraining order (TRO) or preliminary
injunction. PCIB subsequently purchased the lot in the foreclosure sale,
consolidated its title over the property and had it registered in its name. TCT
No. 73620 was thus cancelled and TCT No. 286176 was issued in PCIB’s name.
Rose Packing questioned the validity
of the foreclosure in the CA[6]
but the CA ruled in favor of PCIB. When the case was elevated to this Court,
however, we invalidated[7]
the foreclosure, in effect reverting the title to Rose Packing.
Interpreting our decision as removing
the impediment to the execution of judgment in Civil Case No. 9165, UCC,
through its liquidator Alberto Wong,[8]
moved for the execution of the 1969 decision in that case.
On March 24, 1994, the Regional Trial
Court (RTC) of Pasig City, Branch 151 (formerly, CFI-Rizal, Branch I),[9] ordered the issuance of an alias
writ of execution in favor of UCC.[10]
The March 24, 1994 order was among those
questioned in and affirmed by the CA in its September 27, 2000 decision on
petitioner’s suit for annulment of judgment (CA-G.R. SP No. 48440). The CA decision in turn is now under our
review.
Civil
Case No. 90-1817
In the meantime, on June 22, 1990,
the Municipality of Cainta filed a complaint for expropriation against PCIB and
Rose Packing in the RTC of Antipolo, Rizal, Branch 73. [11]
It was docketed as Civil Case No. 90-1817.
In
its complaint, the Municipality of Cainta alleged that Rose Packing owned a
parcel of land in Brgy. Sto. Domingo, Cainta, Rizal which was foreclosed by
PCIB in whose name it was then registered under TCT No. 286176.
The
expropriation complaint was based on Sangguniang Bayan (SB) Resolution No.
89-020 which sought to purchase the land as the site of the municipal
administration compound and SB Resolution No. 89-021 which called for the
condemnation of said land if the negotiation for its voluntary sale failed. The
negotiation did fail, hence, the complaint for expropriation.[12]
On
November 29, 1990, Rose Packing moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to
state a cause of action. Subsequently, Rose Packing filed a supplemental motion
to dismiss alleging that it never received a formal offer to purchase from the
municipality. It also averred that it could no longer be sued in view of its
dissolution in 1986.[13]
It added that the property sought to be expropriated was under litigation and
its expropriation would only complicate matters.
Meanwhile, Alberto Wong,[14]
as liquidator of UCC, filed a motion for leave to intervene in Civil Case No.
90-1817 (the expropriation case), alleging UCC’s legal interest in the property[15]
as the prevailing party in the 1969 decision in Civil Case No. 9165. This was
granted by the RTC-Antipolo.
On September 27, 1991, the
RTC-Antipolo denied Rose Packing’s motion to dismiss the expropriation case.
On
June 16, 1992, the trial court issued an order directing the Municipality of
Cainta to deposit 10% of the provisional value of the property.[16]
On June 22, 1992, the RTC-Antipolo
issued a condemnation order declaring that the Municipality of Cainta had the
lawful right to expropriate the property. On the same date, the trial court
issued another order granting the municipality’s motion for a writ of
possession.[17]
UCC/Wong
subsequently filed a motion to exclude Rose Packing as party-defendant in the
expropriation proceedings on the ground that any interest of Rose Packing in
the property had already passed onto UCC.[18]
On June 26, 1992, the trial court granted the motion and ordered the exclusion
of Rose Packing.
Rose
Packing sought reconsideration of the June 26, 1992 order, claiming that UCC
had also been dissolved since 1973 but this was denied by the trial court in an
order dated February 21, 1994. Petitioner Knecht, Inc. (as
successor-in-interest of Rose Packing and trustee of Rose Packing’s
stockholders and creditors) filed a petition for certiorari and prohibition
with TRO in the CA[19]
to annul and restrain the enforcement of the orders of RTC-Antipolo dated June
16, 1992 (to deposit 10% of the provisional value of the property), June 22,
1992 (to issue the writ of possession), June 26, 1992 (to exclude Rose Packing
as party-defendant in the expropriation proceedings) and February 21, 1994 (to
deny reconsideration of the order of exclusion of Rose Packing). On October 25,
1994, the CA dismissed the petition.
This
setback failed to discourage petitioner, however, because it initiated another
case in the CA, this time styled as a “petition for annulment of judgment”
(CA-G.R. SP No. 48440) but questioning in reality the same (four) orders of
RTC-Antipolo (dated June 16, 1992, June 22, 1992, June 26, 1992 and February
21, 1994) in Civil Case No. 90-1817 (the expropriation case). The CA once more
upheld these orders in the September 27, 2000 decision under our review.
LRC Case
No. 96-1743
The condemnation order in favor of the
Municipality of Cainta dated June 22, 1992 was annotated in TCT No. 613113
(formerly TCT No. 73620 then TCT No. 286176) in the name of petitioner Knecht,
Inc.[20]
The September 27, 1991 order (denying Rose Packing’s motion to dismiss the
expropriation case) was also annotated later on.
Petitioner, unwilling to accept the
legal adversities building up against it, filed a petition for cancellation of
all these encumbrances in its title. The petition was raffled to RTC-Antipolo,
Branch 73 and docketed as LRC Case No. 96-1743.
On April 24, 1997, the petition was
dismissed for lack of merit.[21]
Petitioner appealed the dismissal to this Court on a pure question of law via a
petition for review on certiorari.[22]
This Court dismissed it on July 23, 1997 and thereafter denied reconsideration
with finality.
Petitioner stubbornly refused to
accept the Supreme Court decision, however.
This time, it went to the CA and again questioned the same April 24,
1997 order of RTC-Antipolo, Branch 73 (LRC Case No. 96-1743) in the same
petition for annulment of judgment docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 48440. The CA
affirmed the April 24, 1997 order.
In sum, the CA upheld all the
assailed orders of RTC-Pasig City in Civil Case No. 9165 and RTC-Antipolo in
Civil Case No. 90-1817 and LRC Case No. 96-1743. In so doing, the CA also upheld the
jurisdiction of the aforementioned trial courts over the cited cases.
Now
petitioner is back before us again questioning the jurisdiction of RTC-Pasig
City to issue the assailed order in Civil Case No. 9165 and RTC-Antipolo to
issue the assailed orders in Civil Case No. 90-1817 and LRC Case No. 96-1743.
Petitioner prays for the annulment of the orders of these courts.
We
deny the petition.
The
present petition, like all the others previously filed by petitioner and its
predecessor-in-interest (Rose Packing) before this Court, is intended to
achieve only one thing: to frustrate the execution of the July 15, 1969
decision (as directed in the March 24, 1994 order of RTC-Pasig City) of the
then CFI-Pasig in Civil Case No. 9165 awarding the property covered by TCT Nos.
73620/286176/613113 to UCC.
As a consequence of the legal
maneuvers against the implementation of that decision, even the orders of RTC-Antipolo
(in Civil Case No. 90-1817 and LRC Case No. 96-1743), being ultimately rooted in
the 1969 decision, became ineffective. But the 1969 decision has long become
final and executory. In fact, entry of judgment was made more than 29 years
ago, on March 23, 1977.
As
in all its previous cases,[23]
petitioner’s main argument rests on the very weak premise that a dissolved
corporation is, in all respects, a dead entity. UCC’s dissolution in 1973
allegedly divested RTC-Pasig City of the jurisdiction to enforce its July 15,
1969 judgment in Civil Case No. 9165 (through the March 24, 1994 order for the
issuance of an alias writ of execution); hence, RTC-Antipolo’s subsequent,
related orders (dated June 16, 1992, June 22, 1992, June 26, 1992 and February
21, 1994 in Civil Case No. 90-1817, and dated April 24, 1997 in LRC Case No.
96-1743) in favor of the dissolved UCC were also supposedly void. But this
issue was already addressed and settled completely in Knecht and Knecht,
Inc. v. United Cigarette Corporation.[24]
There is no doubt that the judgment in Civil Case No. 9165 became
final and executory on March 23, 1977. That this judgment is still enforceable
was decided with finality by this Court in G.R. No. 109385.
In Reburiano vs. Court of Appeals, a case with similar
facts, this Court held:
[T]he
trustee (of a dissolved corporation) may commence a suit which can proceed to
final judgment even beyond the three-year period (of liquidation) x x x,
no reason can be conceived why a suit already commenced by the corporation
itself during its existence, not by a mere trustee who, by fiction, merely
continues the legal personality of the dissolved corporation, should not be
accorded similar treatment – to proceed to final judgment and execution
thereof.
Indeed, the rights of a corporation (dissolved pending
litigation) are accorded protection by law. This is clear from Section 145 of
the Corporation Code, thus:
Section 145. Amendment or repeal. No right or remedy in
favor of or against any corporation, its stockholders, members, directors,
trustees, or officers, nor any liability incurred by any such corporation,
stockholders, members, directors, trustees, or officers, shall be removed or
impaired either by the subsequent dissolution of said corporation or by any
subsequent amendment or repeal of this Code or of any part thereof.
The dissolution of UCC itself, or the expiration of its three-year
liquidation period, should not be a bar to the enforcement of its rights as a
corporation. One of these rights, to be sure, includes the UCC’s right to seek
from the court the execution of a valid and final judgment in Civil Case No.
9165 – through its trustee/liquidator Encarnacion Gonzales Wong – for the
benefit of its stockholders, creditors and any other person who may have legal
claims against it. To hold otherwise would be to allow petitioners to unjustly
enrich themselves at the expense of UCC. This, in effect, renders nugatory all
the efforts and expenses of UCC in its quest to secure justice, not to mention
the undue delay in disposing of this case prejudicial to the administration of
justice.[25]
If only for this, the entire petition
loses its bearings. Annulment of judgment may be restored to only on two
grounds: lack of jurisdiction and extrinsic fraud.[26] Neither was present here. We
therefore hold that RTC-Pasig City and RTC-Antipolo had the competence and
jurisdiction to issue the assailed orders since the dissolution of UCC did not
deprive them of the authority to take cognizance of Civil Case No. 9165, Civil
Case No. 90-1817 and LRC Case No. 96-1743. Thus, the CA could not have annulled
the orders of the trial courts on the ground of lack of jurisdiction.
The orders could not be annulled
based on extrinsic fraud either. Extrinsic or collateral fraud means fraud
which prevents the aggrieved party from having a trial or presenting his case
to the court, or was used to procure the judgment without fair submission of
the controversy.[27]
This refers to acts intended to keep the unsuccessful party away from the
courts as when there is a false promise of compromise or when one is kept in
ignorance of the suit.[28]
Certainly, judging from the
nauseating number of petitions filed by Rose Packing and/or petitioner in the
RTC, the CA and this Court, it is clear that they were never prevented
from ventilating or defending their case nor was judgment rendered against them
without a fair and complete consideration of the issues.
Provisional Deposit of 10%
in Civil
Case No. 90-1817
We, however, have to correct the erroneous reliance of RTC-Antipolo on Presidential Decree (PD) 1533[29] in the expropriation case of the Municipality of Cainta. Its order dated June 16, 1992 in Civil Case No. 90-1817 mandated the deposit of 10% of the assessed value of the property.[30]
In Export Processing Zone Authority v. Dulay,[31] a 1987 case, we struck down PD 1533 as unconstitutional. Moreover, the exercise of the power of eminent domain by a local government unit is now governed by Section 19 of Republic Act 7160.[32] For properties under expropriation, the law now requires the deposit of an amount equivalent to fifteen percent (15%) of the fair market value of the property based on its current tax declaration.[33]
Final Disposition
In conclusion, we once and for all declare that UCC ought to reap the fruits of the 1969 decision in its favor. Its interest in the property sought to be expropriated having been clearly established, UCC is adjudged the proper party-defendant in Civil Case No. 90-1817 (the expropriation case). Knecht, Inc./Rose Packing was correctly excluded from the case since its interest in the subject property had already passed onto UCC.
UCC’s interest likewise prevails over that of PCIB since PCIB’s foreclosure sale of the same property was already invalidated with finality by this Court.[34]
Petitioner’s
Propensity to
Trifle
With Court Processes
This Court is not unmindful of petitioner’s dilatory tactics, spanning almost three decades, against the execution of the 1969 decision in Civil Case No. 9165 and the subsequent related orders in Civil Case No. 90-1817 and LRC Case No. 96-1743. Its clever schemes to delay the implementation of a final and executory decision manifest its utter disregard and disrespect for our justice system.
Petitioner is strongly reminded, as this Court admonished it in Knecht and Knecht, Inc. v. United Cigarette Corporation, [35] that:
Every litigation must come
to an end. While a litigant’s right to initiate an action in court is fully
respected, however, once his case has been adjudicated by a competent court in
a valid final judgment, he should not be permitted to initiate similar suits
hoping to secure a favorable ruling, for this will result to endless
litigations detrimental to the administration of justice, as in this case.
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby DENIED.
Treble costs anew against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
Associate Justice
Chairman
Associate Justice Associate
Justice
CANCIO C. GARCIA
Associate Justice
I attest that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.
Associate
Justice
Chairperson, Second
Division
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, and the Division Chairperson’s Attestation, I certify that the conclusions in the above decision had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.
Chief Justice
[1] Penned by Associate Justice Jose L. Sabio, Jr. and concurred in by Associate Justices Buenaventura J. Guerrero (now retired) and Eliezer R. de los Santos of the Seventh Division of the Court of Appeals; rollo, pp. 76-88.
[2] Now the Equitable-PCI Bank.
[3] The dispositive portion of the CFI decision read:
PREMISES CONSIDERED, this Court orders defendants [Rose Packing] and its
President, Rene Knecht to convey and deliver to [UCC], the three parcels of
land object of the complaint, together with all the buildings and improvements
thereon, with the exception of machines for canning factory, and to execute the
corresponding deed of sale with mortgage covering said properties for the
purchase price of P800,000.00 under the following terms and conditions: xxx (Knecht and Knecht, Inc. v. United
Cigarette Corporation, 433 Phil. 380, 384 [2002]).
[4] The CA affirmed this on June 22, 1976 (CA-G.R. No. 45525-R). This Court denied the petition for review on certiorari on January 5, 1977 (G.R. No. L-4977).
[5] Civil Case No. 11015 in CFI-Rizal, Branch II, presided by Judge Rodolfo Bonifacio.
[6] Docketed as CA-G.R. No. 43198-R.
[7] Rose Packing v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. L-33084, 14 November 1988, 167 SCRA 309.
[8] Alberto Wong, one of UCC’s major stockholders, was appointed trustee/liquidator of the dissolved corporation when UCC’s corporate life expired on March 30, 1973. (Knecht and Knecht, Inc. v. United Cigarette Corp., supra note 3, at 385) Private respondent Encarnacion Gonzales Wong substituted her husband, Alberto Wong, as liquidator of UCC by virtue of an order dated March 22, 1995 issued by RTC-Pasig.
[9] With the enactment of BP 129 (The Judiciary Reorganization Act of 1981), the CFIs were replaced by RTCs.
[10] Penned by Judge Deogracias O. Felizardo.
[11] Presided by Judge Juan O. Enriquez.
[12] Petition, rollo, pp. 16-17.
[13] Rose Packing was dissolved upon the expiration of its corporate charter on June 10, 1986.
[14] Upon his death, he was substituted by his wife, private respondent Encarnacion Gonzales-Wong (supra note 8).
[15] Supra note 3.
[16] The
dispositive portion of which read:
WHEREFORE,
pursuant to Sec. 2 of P.D. 1533 and Sec. 19 of the Local Government Code of
1991, in order for the [Municipality of Cainta] to take possession of the
subject property, the [Municipality of Cainta] is hereby ordered to deposit the
amount of P4,717,050 with the Philippine National Bank, Cainta Branch,
Felix Avenue, Cainta, Rizal, representing 10% of the provisional value of the
property sought to be condemned or expropriated. (Petition, rollo, p. 19.)
[17] Petition, rollo, p. 19.
[18] See Rose Packing Co., Inc. v. Hon. Bonifacio, CA-G.R. SP No. 26545. In its decision dated March 5, 1992, the CA nullified the CFI orders holding that UCC’s intervention in Civil Case No. 11015 was not warranted since the only purpose was to execute the judgment obtained by the UCC against Rose Packing in Civil Case No. 9165. The CA stressed that UCC’s right to execute the judgment in Civil Case No. 9165 had not yet prescribed insofar as the parcel of land covered by TCT No. 73620 was concerned. Pursuant to the decision in CA-G.R. SP No. 26545, RTC-Pasig issued an order granting UCC’s motion for the issuance of a writ of execution of the judgment in Civil Case No. 9165 with respect to the land covered by TCT No. 73620 (then still in the name of PCIB under TCT No. 286176). See also Knecht and Knecht Inc. v. United Cigarette Corp., supra note 3, at 387-388.
[19] CA-G.R. No. 33357.
[20] The title was formerly TCT No. 73620 in the name of Rose Packing, which later on became TCT No. 286176 in the name of PCIB. For unknown reasons, title over the subject realty then already under the name of PCIB (TCT No. 286176) was transferred in the name of Knecht, Inc. under TCT No. 613113. See Knecht and Knecht, Inc. v. United Cigarette Corporation, supra note 3, at 390.
[21] Penned by Judge Mauricio Rivera.
[22] G.R. No. 129027.
[23] These were enumerated in Knecht and Knecht, Inc. v. United Cigarette Corp., supra note 3, at 393-395, as follows:
1. CA-G.R. SP No. 28333 – petition for certiorari to annul the June 17, 1992 order of the RTC- Pasig, Branch 151 allowing the issuance of a writ of execution to enforce the decision in Civil Case No. 9165. This was dismissed;
2. G.R. No. 109385 – petition for review on certiorari filed with this Court questioning the CA decision in CA-G.R. SP No. 28333 where this Court found no reversible error on the part of the CA;
3. CA-G.R. SP No. 33852 – petition for certiorari to enjoin the enforcement of an alias writ of execution issued by the trial court on April 19, 1994. Petitioners interposed the argument that the judgment in Civil Case No. 9165 cannot be enforced due to the dissolution of UCC on March 30, 1973. The CA dismissed the petition;
4. G.R. Nos. 118183 and 118184 – petitions for review on certiorari filed with this Court questioning the CA Decision in CA-G.R. SP No. 33852. These were dismissed;
5. CA-G.R. SP No. 39003 – petition for certiorari and prohibition with prayer for TRO seeking, among others, the annulment of the second alias writ of execution issued by the trial court on November 8, 1995. Petitioners reiterated that the judgment in Civil Case No. 9165 cannot anymore be enforced for having been rendered moot and academic by the dissolution of UCC. This was dismissed;
6. G.R. No. 124983 – petition for review on certiorari filed with this Court questioning the CA decision in CA-G.R. SP No. 39003. This was denied;
7. CA-G.R. SP No. 47978 – petition for certiorari seeking to annul the June 27, 1997 order of the trial court directing sheriff Eduardo L. Bolima of Branch 151, RTC-Pasig to execute the corresponding deed of sale with mortgage in compliance with the judgment and the second alias writ of execution issued in Civil Case No. 9165. Petitioners persistently claimed that the decision in Civil Case No. 9165 is voided by the expiration of UCC’s three-year period of liquidation from its dissolution. Furthermore, they theorized that the second alias writ of execution is improper because it varied the terms of the judgment and also deprived Knecht, Inc. of its property without due process of law. The CA denied this petition and cited petitioners guilty of forum shopping;
8. G.R. No. 139370 – petition for review questioning the decision of the CA in CA-G.R. SP No. 47978. This was denied and the assailed decision was affirmed. Treble costs were adjudged against petitioner.
[24] Supra note 3.
[25] Id. at 395-396. Citations omitted.
[26] Rules of Court, Rule 47, Sec. 2.
[27] Regalado, Remedial Law Compendium (1999) (National Book Store, Inc., Manila, Philippines) at 557, 380.
[28] Id. at 380-381.
[29] An Act Establishing A Uniform Basis For Determining Just Compensation And The Amount Of Deposit For Immediate Possession Of The Property Involved In Eminent Domain Proceedings.
[30] Section 2 thereof reads:
SEC. 2. Upon the filing of the petition for expropriation and the deposit in the Philippine National Bank at its main office or any of its branches of an amount equivalent to ten per cent (10%) of the amount of compensation provided in Section 1 hereof, the government or its authorized instrumentality agency or entity shall be entitled to immediate possession, control and disposition of the real property and the improvements thereon, including the power of demolition if necessary, notwithstanding the pendency of the issues before the courts.
RTC-Antipolo similarly referred to Section 19 of RA 7160 (the Local Government Code) which requires, among others, a deposit with the proper court of at least fifteen percent (15%) of the fair market value of the property based on the current tax declaration of the property to be expropriated before the local government unit can take possession of the property to be expropriated.
[31] G.R. No. L-59603, 29 April 1987, 149 SCRA 305.
[32] The Local Government Code of 1991.
[33] See City of Iloilo v. Legaspi, G.R. No. 154614, 25 November 2004, 444 SCRA 269.
[34] Supra note 7.
[35] Supra note 3, at 397-398.