EN BANC
CONFEDERATION OF SUGAR G.R.
No. 169514
PRODUCERS
ASSOCIATION,
INC.,
(CONFED), NATIONAL Present:
FEDERATION OF
SUGARCANE
PLANTERS, INC.
(NFSP), UNITED PUNO, C.J.,
SUGAR
PRODUCERS FEDERATION QUISUMBING,
OF THE PHILS.,
INC. (UNIFED), YNARES-SANTIAGO,
CANE FARMERS,
INC. (PANAYFED), CARPIO,
FIRST FARMERS
HOLDING AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ,
CORPORATION,
NATIONAL
CONGRESS OF
UNIONS IN THE CARPIO MORALES,
SUGAR INDUSTRY
OF THE CALLEJO, SR.,
OF
MUNICIPALITIES OF THE TINGA,
PHILIPPINES – NEGROS CHICO-NAZARIO,
OCCIDENTAL CHAPTER. GARCIA,
Petitioners, VELASCO, JR. and
NACHURA, JJ.*
- versus -
DEPARTMENT OF AGRARIAN
REFORM (DAR), (Now also
known as
DEPARTMENT OF LAND REFORM),
LAND BANK OF THE
(LBP), LAND REGISTRATION
AUTHORITY (LRA).
Respondents.
x-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x
CALLEJO, SR., J.:
Before the Court is a petition for
prohibition and mandamus under Rule
65 of the Rules of Court with prayer for the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction or temporary
restraining order filed by the
___________
*
No part.
Confederation
of Sugar Producers Association, Inc., et
al. It seeks, inter alia, to enjoin the Department of Agrarian Reform, the Land
Bank of the Philippines, and the Land Registration Authority from “subjecting
the sugarcane farms of Petitioner Planters to eminent domain or compulsory
acquisition without filing the necessary expropriation proceedings pursuant to
the provisions of Rule 67 of the Rules of Court and/or without the application
or conformity of a majority of the regular farmworkers on said farms.”
The petition is filed by the
following: (1) the Confederation of Sugar Producers Association, Inc. (CONFED),
a national federation of sugar planters’ associations and cooperatives from
Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, which is purportedly joined by its individual
member organizations;[1]
(2) the National Federation of Sugarcane Planters, Inc. (NFSP), a duly
organized federation of sugar planters’ associations and cooperatives from
Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, which is also purportedly joined by its individual
member organizations;[2] (3) the United Sugar Producers Federation of
the Phil., Inc. (UNIFED), likewise a national federation of sugar planters’
associations and cooperatives from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, and is
purportedly joined by its individual member organizations;[3]
(4) the Panay Federation of Sugarcane Farmers, Inc.
(PANAYFED), a federation of sugarcane planters’ organizations and cooperatives
from Panay Island, also purportedly
joined by its individual member organizations;[4]
(5) the First Farmers Holding Co., a domestic corporation principally engaged
in operating a sugar mill for the milling and manufacture or processing of
sugarcane into sugar and the distribution of sugar and its by-products; (6) the
National Congress of Unions in the Sugar Industry of the Philippines (NACUSIP),
a labor organization; and (7) the League of Municipalities of the Philippines,
Negros Occidental Chapter.
For the purpose of the present
petition, CONFED, NFSP, UNIFED and PANAYFED are represented by their Chairman
or President, namely, Bernardo C. Trebol, Enrique D. Rojas, Manuel R. Lamata
and Francis P. Trenas, respectively.
On the other hand, named as
respondents are the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR), the Land Bank of the
Philippines (LBP) and the Land Registration Authority (LRA).
The Petitioners’ Case
Petitioners CONFED, NFSP, UNIFED and
PANAYFED claim that their members own or administer private agricultural lands
devoted to sugarcane. They and their
predecessors-in-interest have been planting sugarcane on their lands allegedly
since time immemorial. While their
petition is denominated as one for prohibition and mandamus, the petitioners likewise seek to nullify paragraphs (d),
(e) and (f) of Section 16[5]
of Republic Act No. (RA) 6657, otherwise known as the Comprehensive Agrarian
Reform Law. In other words, their arguments, which will be discussed shortly,
are anchored on the proposition that these provisions are unconstitutional.
It is the principal contention of the
petitioners that, in the exercise by the State of the power of eminent domain,
which in the case of RA 6657 is the acquisition of private lands for
distribution to farmer-beneficiaries, expropriation proceedings, as prescribed
in Rule 67 of the Rules of Court, must be strictly complied with. The petitioners rely on the case of Visayas Refining Company v. Camus and
Paredes[7] decided by the Court in 1919. In the said case, the Government of the Philippine
Islands, through the Governor-General, instructed the Attorney-General to
initiate condemnation proceedings for the purpose of expropriating a tract of
land containing an area of 1,100,463 square meters to be used for military and
aviation purposes. In compliance
therewith, the Attorney-General filed a complaint with the Court of First
Instance (CFI) and among the defendants impleaded was Visayan Refining Co.
which owned a portion of the property intended to be expropriated. The CFI provisionally fixed the total
value of the subject property at P600,000 and upon payment thereof as
deposit, the CFI authorized that the Government be placed in possession
thereof.
Visayan Refining Co. questioned the
validity of the proceedings on the ground that there was no law enacted by the
Philippine Legislature authorizing the exercise of the power of eminent domain
to acquire land for military or aviation purposes. The Court, speaking through
ART. 349. No one may be deprived of his property unless it be by competent authority for some purpose of proven public utility and after payment of the proper compensation.
Unless this requisite has been complied with, it shall be the duty of the court to protect the owner of such property in its possession or to restore its possession to him, as the case may be.
The Court stated that “[t]aken
together the laws mentioned supply a very complete scheme of judicial
expropriation, deducing the authority from its ultimate source in sovereignty,
providing in detail for the manner of its exercise, and making the right of the
expropriator finally dependent upon the payment of the amount awarded by the
court.”[10]
The petitioners also quote the
following disquisition in Visayan
Refining Co. on expropriation vis-à-vis due process of law:
Nevertheless it should be noted that the whole problem of expropriation is resolvable in its ultimate analysis into a constitutional question of due process of law. The specific provisions that just compensation shall be made is merely in the nature of a superadded requirement to be taken into account by the Legislature in prescribing the method of expropriation. Even were there no organic or constitutional provision in force requiring compensation to be paid, the seizure of one’s property without payment, even though intended for a public use, would undoubtedly be held to be a taking without due process of law and a denial of the equal protection of the laws.
This point is not merely an academic one, as might superficially seem. On the contrary it has a practical bearing on the problem before us, which may be expressed by saying that, if the Legislature has prescribed a method of expropriation which provides for the payment of just compensation, and such method is so conceived and adapted as to fulfill the constitutional requisite of due process of law, any proceeding conducted in conformity with that method must be valid.[11]
Citing Visayan Refining Co. as well as other cases[12]
and statutes,[13]
the petitioners thus contend that a landowner cannot be deprived of his
property until expropriation proceedings are instituted in court. They insist that the expropriation
proceedings to be followed are those prescribed under Rule 67 of the Revised
Rules of Court. In other words, for a
valid exercise of the power of eminent domain, the Government must institute
the necessary expropriation proceedings in the competent court in accordance
with the provisions of the Rules of Court.
In this connection, they cite Section
1 of Rule 67, which they stress is entitled EXPROPRIATION, thus:
SEC. 1. The complaint. - The right of eminent domain shall be
exercised by the filing of a verified complaint which shall state with
certainty the right and purpose of expropriation, describe the real or personal
property sought to be expropriated, and join as defendants all persons owning
or claiming to own, or occupying, any part thereof or interest therein,
showing, so far as practicable, the separate interest of each defendant. If the title to any property sought to be
expropriated appears to be in the Republic of the
The DAR, however, according to the
petitioners, particularly through the process of compulsory acquisition, has
managed to operate outside of the Constitution and the Rules of Court. They alleged that the compulsory
acquisition process adopted by the DAR is absolutely without any constitutional
or lawful basis whatsoever. It is
allegedly “utterly repugnant to the principle of eminent domain” or “expropriation”
and an “unmitigated and lawless usurpation of the constitutional power of the
Supreme Court to promulgate rules of procedure.” As such, the process of compulsory
acquisition is allegedly null and void.
The petitioners add that Section 22,
Article XVII (Transitory Provisions) of the Constitution states that “[a]t the
earliest possible time, the Government shall expropriate idle or abandoned
lands as may be defined by law, for distribution to the beneficiaries of the
agrarian reform program.” The use of the
word “expropriate” in this provision allegedly underscores the necessity of
expropriation proceedings pursuant to Rule 67 of the Rules of Court in the
acquisition of private agricultural lands.
It is the petitioners’ view that the
following provisions of RA 3844,[14]
as amended, remain effective:
SEC. 51. Powers and Functions. – It shall be the responsibility of the Department:
(1) to initiate and prosecute expropriation proceedings for the acquisition of private agricultural lands as defined in Section one hundred sixty-six of Chapter XI of this Code for the purpose of subdivision into economic family-size farm units and resale of said farm units to bona fide tenants, occupants and qualified farmers; Provided, That the powers herein granted shall apply only to private agricultural lands subject to the terms and conditions and order of priority hereinbelow specified.
x x x
SEC. 53. Compulsory Purchase of Agricultural Lands. – The Authority shall, upon petition in writing of at least one-third of the lessees and subject to the provisions of Chapter VII of this Code, institute and prosecute expropriation proceedings for the acquisition of private agricultural lands and home lots enumerated under Section fifty-one. In the event a landowner agrees to sell his property under the terms specified in this Chapter and the National Land Reform Council finds it suitable and necessary to acquire such property, a joint motion embodying the agreement, including the valuation of the property, shall be submitted by the Land Authority and the landowner to the court for approval; Provided, That in such case, any person qualified to be a beneficiary of such expropriation or purchase may object to the valuation as excessive, in which case the Court shall determine the just compensation in accordance with Section fifty-six of this Code.
According to the petitioners, the
foregoing provisions have not been repealed by RA 6657; hence, in consonance
therewith, the acquisition of private agricultural lands for purposes of
agrarian reform can only be exercised by the Government through expropriation
proceedings under Rule 67 of the Rules of Court. On the other hand, the process of compulsory
acquisition adopted by the DAR, as embodied in its administrative orders, is
allegedly violative of the landowners’ rights enshrined in the Constitution.
The petitioners specifically refer to
Section 16 of RA 6657, which reads:
SEC. 16. Procedure for Acquisition of Private Lands.
– For purposes of acquisition of private lands, the following procedures shall
be followed:
(a) After having identified the land,
the landowners and the beneficiaries, the DAR shall send its notice to acquire
the land to the owners thereof, by personal delivery or registered mail, and
post the same in a conspicuous place in the municipal building and barangay
hall of the place where the property is located. Said notice shall contain the offer of the
DAR to pay a corresponding value in accordance with the valuation set forth in
Sections 17, 18 and other pertinent provisions hereof.
(b)
Within thirty (30) days from the date of receipt of written notice by
personal delivery or registered mail, the landowners, his administrator or
representative shall inform the DAR of his acceptance or rejection of the
former.
(c)
If the landowner accepts the offer of the DAR, the LBP shall pay the
landowner the purchase price of the land within thirty (30) days after he
executes and delivers a deed of transfer in favor of the Government and
surrenders the Certificate of Title and other muniments of title.
(d) In case of rejection or failure to
reply, the DAR shall conduct summary administrative proceedings to determine
the compensation for the land by requiring the landowner, the LBP and other
interested parties to submit evidence as to the just compensation for the land,
within fifteen (15) days from the receipt of notice. After the expiration of the above period, the
matter is deemed submitted for decision.
The DAR shall decide the case within thirty (30) days after it is
submitted for decision.
(e) Upon receipt by the landowner of the
corresponding payment or in case of rejection or no response from the
landowner, upon the deposit with an accessible bank designated by the DAR of
the compensation in cash or in LBP bonds in accordance with this Act, the DAR
shall take immediate possession of the land and shall request the proper
Register of Deeds to issue a Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) in the name of
the Republic of the Philippines. The DAR
shall thereafter proceed with the redistribution of the land to the qualified
beneficiaries.
(f) Any party who disagrees with the decision may bring the matter to the court of proper jurisdiction for final determination of just compensation.
They clarify that while they concede
the validity of paragraphs (a), (b) and (c), they vigorously assail the
validity of paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) of the above-quoted provision. Under the assailed paragraphs, a landowner is
allegedly deprived of his right to question or challenge the legality or
necessity of the taking of his land by the DAR.
The “public purpose and necessity” of the taking is already assumed
without the predicate of a prior hearing where the landowner is given an
opportunity to be heard. He is allegedly
only allowed in paragraph (d) to question or reject the compensation offered by
the DAR. This procedure allegedly
violates the rights of the landowners under Sections 1 and 9 of Article III
(Bill of Rights) of the Constitution, to wit:
SEC. 1. No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor shall any person be denied the equal protection of the laws.
x x x
SEC. 9. Private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation.
Paragraph (e) is assailed by the
petitioners as it authorizes the DAR, by allegedly merely causing the deposit
with the Land Bank of the compensation, to immediately take possession of the
property and to direct the Register of Deeds to cancel the certificate of title
of the landowner without notice to and consent of the latter. The petitioners contend that, in contrast,
under the Civil Code, if the creditor or obligee refuses to accept the tender
of payment, it is the duty of the debtor or obligor to make consignation of the
thing or amount due. Under the Civil
Code, there is no effective payment without valid tender of payment and
consignation in court.[15] The petitioners theorize that, in the same
manner, the DAR cannot be allowed to take possession of the property of a
landowner, by mere deposit of the compensation that it has summarily fixed
under paragraph (e), without having to go to court.
Paragraph (f) is characterized by the
petitioners as meaningless and useless to the landowner. It allegedly compels him to file a case, and
in the process incur costs therefor, for the final determination of just
compensation when, in the meantime, he has already been deprived of possession
of his property and his certificate of title cancelled. The petitioners cite EPZA v. Dulay[16]
where the Court ruled that:
We, therefore, hold that P.D. 1533 which eliminates the court’s discretion to appoint commissioners pursuant to Rule 67 of the Rules of Court, is unconstitutional and void. To hold otherwise would be to undermine the very purpose why this Court exists in the first place.[17]
Relying on the above pronouncement, the petitioners submit
that paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) of Section 16 of RA 6657, as they similarly
eliminate the appointment by the court of commissioners to appraise the
valuation of the land, are unconstitutional, null and void.
The petitioners next assail the
Court’s Decision in Association of Small
Landowners in the Philippines, Inc. v. Secretary of Agrarian Reform[18]
which affirmed the constitutionality of RA 6657. They describe the Decision as a “riddle
wrapped in an enigma.” They refer to
pronouncements made therein that are allegedly inconsistent with its
conclusion, i.e., affirming the
validity of RA 6657, including paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) of Section 16. For example, while the Decision, citing EPZA, pronounced that “[t]o be sure, the
determination of just compensation is a function addressed to the courts of
justice and may not be usurped by any other branch or official of the
government”[19]
and that “the determination made by the DAR is only preliminary unless accepted by all parties concerned,”[20]
these pronouncements are allegedly irreconcilable with paragraphs (d) and (e)
which allow the DAR, through summary administrative proceeding, “to take
immediate possession of the land” and cause “the cancellation of the
certificate of title of the landowner.”
Further, the petitioners maintain that
paragraphs (d) and (e) contemplate a transfer of possession and ownership even
before full payment of compensation.
They thus wonder how these paragraphs were allowed to survive and remain
despite the avowals of the Court in the Decision that “[t]he recognized rule,
indeed, is that title to the property expropriated shall pass from the owner to
the expropriator only upon full payment of the just compensation”[21]
and its dispositive portion that “2. Title to all expropriated properties shall
be transferred to the State only upon full payment of compensation to their
respective owners.”[22]
The
petitioners opine that even as the Decision affirmed the validity of RA 6657,
the pronouncements made in the body, quoted earlier, actually support their
argument that paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) of Section 16 are invalid as they
dispense with the expropriation proceedings under Rule 67 of the Rules of Court
in the acquisition of private agricultural lands. The petitioners assert that the only
procedure for the exercise by the State of eminent domain in the implementation
of agrarian reform is through expropriation under Rule 67 of the Rules of
Court.
The DAR is also being accused by the
petitioners of usurping the powers and functions of the Presidential Agrarian
Reform Council (PARC),[23]
which is allegedly the body charged under RA 6657 with the task of promulgating
the rules for the schedule of acquisition and redistribution of agricultural
lands.[24] No law has allegedly been passed transferring
the powers of the PARC to DAR; consequently, the various administrative orders
that it has issued to implement RA 6657 are ultra
vires.
The petitioners also assail as undue
and unlawful delegation to the Municipal Agrarian Reform Officers (MAROs) the
authority to issue notices of coverage and compulsory acquisition. Section 16 (a), quoted earlier, provides that
“[a]fter having identified the land, the landowners and the beneficiaries, the
DAR shall send its notice to acquire the land to the owners thereof x x x.” According to the petitioners, this function
has been delegated to the DAR Secretary and it can and should only be exercised
by the said official. The DAR Secretary cannot allegedly delegate the same to a
subordinate official or employee.
Consequently, the delegation by the DAR Secretary to the MAROs of the
authority and discretion to send the notices of coverage and compulsory
acquisition involving sugar lands to be brought under RA 6657 allegedly
constituted grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction.
Citing Section 4, Article XIII (Social
Justice and Human Rights) which states in part that “[t]he State shall, by law,
undertake an agrarian reform program founded on the right of farmers and
regular farmworkers, who are landless, to own directly or collectively the lands
they till x x x,” the petitioners posit that only the regular farmworkers or
farmers are entitled to own the land they till.
Further, this entitlement or right may be waived or declined by the
regular farmworkers or farmers. As a corollary, they must first express their
willingness or conformity to own the lands they are tilling before the DAR may
allegedly send the notices of coverage and acquisition.
Allegedly in violation thereof, notices of coverage and
acquisition are being sent out by the DAR “indiscriminately” without first
identifying the land, the landowners and the beneficiaries. The petitioners emphasize that, with respect
to the regular farmworkers in sugar lands, a majority of the regular farmworkers
must first agree to exercise their right to own the land they till. In other words, the regular farmworkers in
sugar lands can exercise their right to own the land only collectively, not
individually. If they decide against the
exercise of the said right, the DAR cannot choose to replace them with
non-regular farmworkers or non-tillers thereon because they would not qualify
as beneficiaries.
What is actually implemented in the sugar lands of the
members of petitioners-federations is that the DAR, allegedly in collusion with
some non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and farmer organizations, ejects and
replaces the regular farmworkers with non-tillers, non-regular farmworkers or
outsiders who are falsely designated as “beneficiaries.” These “beneficiaries” are then installed on
the sugar lands with the assistance of members of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines (AFP) or the Philippine National Police (PNP). The petitioners claim that these incidents
have resulted in heightened tension and anxiety and even violent confrontations
in the sugar lands in the Visayas.
By these alleged
acts, the petitioners charge the DAR with “deliberate and unmitigated
distortion” of Section 22[25]
of RA 6657. In contravention of the
letter of the said provision, the DAR has allegedly included landless residents
who are non-tillers and who are outsiders as beneficiaries in the distribution
of private agricultural lands.
As an alternative mode of agrarian reform, the petitioners
aver that the system of Land Administration, as recognized in RA 3844, should
continue to be allowed particularly in sugar lands. Labor Administration,[26]
they explain, is a farming system that has been adopted and followed by sugar
planters in the operation of their farms.
Under this system, the planters employ or hire farmworkers who supply
the labor required for the entire farm operations. Aside from their salaries and wages, which
are covered by the minimum wage law, the farmworkers also receive other
benefits from the planters such as housing, medical services and education for
their children.
The petitioners contend that RA 6657 expressly recognizes
Land Administration as an alternative mode of agrarian reform as it defines
“agrarian reform” in this wise:
SEC. 3. Definitions. – For the purpose of this Act, unless the context indicates otherwise:
(a) Agrarian Reform means the redistribution of lands, regardless of crops or fruits produced, to farmer and regular farmworkers who are landless, irrespective of tenurial arrangement, to include the totality of factors and support services designed to lift the economic status of the beneficiaries and all other arrangements alternative to the physical redistribution of lands, such as production or profit-sharing, labor administration, and the distribution of shares of stock, which will allow beneficiaries to receive a just share of the fruits of the lands they work.
Another indication that Land
Administration is continued to be recognized in the operation of farms,
according to the petitioners, is the fact that after RA 6657, Congress amended
the minimum wage law several times to provide for the increase of the minimum
wage not only for non-agricultural workers but also for agricultural
laborers. Also, in 1991, Congress
enacted RA 6982[27]
which, according to the petitioners, granted wage and other benefits to workers
in the sugar industry. The said law
allegedly recognized that the work in the sugar industry is seasonal. Implicit in these policies of minimum wage
increases and amelioration of benefits for sugar farmworkers is allegedly the
recognition of the system of Land Administration as a legitimate mode of
agrarian reform.
Despite this recognition, the DAR has
allegedly outlawed Land Administration as it is bent on acquiring and
distributing thousands of hectares of private agricultural lands. In so doing, the DAR is allegedly not
bothering to find out whether the alternative mode of agrarian reform, i.e.,
Land Administration, is already in place and whether the regular
farmworkers entitled to own the land want to exercise their right.
The petitioners explain that there are
certain crops, and sugar is one of them, that are more economically and
efficiently produced by organized, mechanized and plantation-type agriculture
than by small, “parcelized” and owner-cultivated farms. This is allegedly especially true in the
sugar producing regions in the Visayas where planting and harvesting of
sugarcane have to be synchronized with the milling season of the sugar mill in
a particular district. The peculiar
nature of the sugar industry is allegedly the reason why RA 3844, RA 6982 and
other laws have recognized Labor Administration as an alternative mode of
agrarian reform.
The petitioners stress that the
mandate of the Constitution is not only to give the landless farmers and
regular farmworkers the right to own the land they till but also the right to
receive a just share of the fruits of the land.
If these farmers then choose not to exercise their right to own the land
they till, then it allegedly behooves the DAR to see to it that the other laws,
such as the minimum wage law and RA 6982, are implemented to afford the
farmworkers a “just share of the fruits of the land.” Instead, the DAR, by its stance of singularly
implementing RA 6657, is allegedly violating the rights of the sugar
farmworkers guaranteed by other applicable laws.[28] Specifically, the DAR is ousting regular
farmworkers and installing outsiders to take over the lands.
The DAR is further allegedly
committing grave abuse of discretion by assuming jurisdiction, through the
Department of Agrarian Reform Adjudication Board (DARAB), over cases and
controversies which, by virtue of Batas
Pambansa Blg. (BP) 129, known as “The Judiciary Reorganization Act,” are
properly cognizable by the Regional Trial Courts (RTCs). The petitioners note
that prior to BP 129, “cases involving expropriation of all kinds of land in
furtherance of the agrarian reform program” and “expropriation proceedings for
public purpose of all kinds of tenanted agricultural lands x x x”[29]
were exclusively within the jurisdiction of the Court of Agrarian Relations
(CAR). With the enactment of BP 129, the
CAR was abolished and cases under its jurisdiction were transferred to the
exclusive and original jurisdiction of RTCs.
The petitioners advance the view that RA 6657 did not repeal BP 129 such
that the RTCs are not divested of their exclusive and original jurisdiction
over cases formerly under the jurisdiction of the CAR. This is so, according to the petitioners,
because the jurisdiction of the CAR involved the exercise of judicial power
that could not be properly transferred to an administrative body like the
DAR. The latter’s jurisdiction is
allegedly limited only to matters involving the administrative implementation
of agrarian reform laws, e.g.,
disputes and controversies “relating to tenurial arrangements.”
With respect to the Land Bank, the
petitioners allege that in the light of the Court’s pronouncement in Association of Small Landowners that
“the determination made by the DAR is only preliminary
unless accepted by all parties concerned, [o]therwise, the courts of justice
will still have the right to review with
finality the said determination in the exercise of what is admittedly a
judicial function,” the Land Bank cannot effect the payment of compensation as
determined by the DAR which is considered as preliminary. The Land Bank
must allegedly wait until such compensation is determined with finality by the courts.
The Land Registration Authority is
similarly assailed as committing grave abuse of discretion since it, through
the various Registers of Deeds in the country and particularly in the sugar
producing regions in the Visayas, has been allegedly summarily canceling
certificates of title merely upon the directive or request of the DAR and
without the knowledge and consent of the registered owners. In violation of the pertinent provisions[30]
of the Land Registration Act (Act No. 496), the Registers of Deeds are
allegedly canceling certificates of title of landowners without asking them to
surrender their owners’ duplicate certificates of titles.
The petitioners thus pray, inter alia, for the issuance of a writ
to prohibit the DAR, the Land Bank and the Land Registration Authority from
subjecting the petitioners’ sugarcane farms to eminent domain or compulsory
acquisition without filing the necessary expropriation proceedings pursuant to
the provisions of Rule 67 of the Rules of Court and/or without the application
or conformity of a majority of the regular farmworkers on said farms. The petitioners likewise pray that paragraphs
(d), (e) and (f) of Section 16 of RA 6657 be declared unconstitutional.
The
Respondents’ Counter-Arguments
The Land Bank urges the Court to dismiss the petition since
the constitutionality of RA 6657 had already been categorically upheld by the
Court in Association of Small Landowners. Further, some of the grounds relied upon by
the petitioners allege matters that require factual determination. For example, the allegation that the DAR is
subjecting the sugar lands to the coverage of RA 6657 without first
ascertaining whether there are regular farmworkers therein and whether they are
interested to own, directly or collectively, the land they till, allegedly
requires factual determination.
Considering that the Court is not a trier of facts, the Land Bank argues
that these matters are better threshed out in a trial court.
Refuting the petitioners, the Land Bank asserts that taking
of private property for agrarian reform purposes can be effected even without full
payment of just compensation. It cites
the following commentary of Fr. Bernas:
x x x x
IS SUCH RIGHT OF IMMEDIATE ENTRY CONSTITUTIONAL? x x x Reviewing conflicting American authorities, the Court said that “ACCORDING TO THE WEIGHT OF AUTHORITY, IF THE CONSTITUTION OR STATUTES DO NOT EXPRESSLY REQUIRE IT, ACTUAL PAYMENT OR TENDER BEFORE TAKING IS UNNECESSARY, and it will be sufficient if a certain and adequate remedy is provided by which the owner can obtain compensation without any unreasonable delay.” THE COURT OPTED FOR THIS MORE LIBERAL VIEW and found that the statute in question with its provision for deposit of the money with the court satisfied constitutional requirements.[31]
The Land Bank is also of the view that
the framers of the Constitution did not intend to require full payment of just
compensation before taking of private lands for agrarian reform purposes could
be effected. It cites Fr. Bernas anew:
x x x
ANOTHER MATTER TAKEN UP BY THE COMMISSION WAS THE PROPOSAL TO REQUIRE ‘PRIOR PAYMENT OF JUST COMPENSATION’ IN LAND REFORM EXPROPRIATIONS. Commissioner Regalado proposed the amendment as a measure to protect the interest of landowners. Regalado’s explanation, however, revealed that ALL HE WANTED WAS WHAT ALREADY OBTAINS IN EXPROPRIATION LAWS WHICH REQUIRES A COURT DEPOSIT PRIOR TO ENTRY INTO THE CONDEMNED PROPERTY. BUT REGALADO WAS SATISFIED WHEN THIS MEANING WAS ACCEPTED BY THE COMMISSION and he did not insist on an explicit constitutional provision.[32]
By insisting that title should remain with the landowners
until the issue of just compensation is finally adjudicated by the courts, the
petitioners allegedly simply want to interminably delay the acquisition of
lands covered by RA 6657.
Debunking the petitioners’ argument that it may have been
“unwise” and “impractical” for Congress to include sugar lands within the
coverage of RA 6657 as certain crops, including sugar, are more efficiently and
more economically produced by organized, mechanized, plantation-type
agriculture than by small, “parcelized,” owner-cultivated farms, the Land Bank
opines that the wisdom, morality or practicability of acquiring sugar lands for
agrarian reform is beyond the ambit of judicial review. The remedy to address this issue, according
to the Land Bank, is legislative not judicial.
Absent any amendment to RA 6657 with respect to its coverage, there can
be no basis to prohibit the DAR and the Land Bank from acquiring all
agricultural lands, sugar lands included, for purposes of agrarian reform.
The Land Bank thus denies committing any grave abuse of
discretion in “making or causing the payment of the initial amount of valuation
regarding private lands acquired pursuant to RA 6657 notwithstanding the lack
of finality of the decision adjudging the amount of just compensation of
subject properties.”[33]
Through the Office of the Solicitor General, the DAR urges
the Court to dismiss the petition outright on the ground that it is
premature. It avers that when issues of
constitutionality are raised, as in this case, the Court can exercise its power
of judicial review only if the following requisites are present: (1) an actual
and appropriate case exists; (2) a personal and substantial interest of the
party raising the constitutional question; (3) the exercise of judicial review
is pleaded at the earliest possible opportunity; and (4) the constitutional
question is the lis mota of the case.[34]
In the present case, the DAR contends that the first
requisite, i.e., the existence of an
actual or appropriate case, is not attendant. There is allegedly no showing
that the petitioners’ sugar lands have been subjected to compulsory acquisition
by the DAR. Even the petition itself is allegedly devoid of such allegation.
Accordingly, there is no actual case or controversy to speak of and the instant
petition is, at best, premature.
In this connection, the DAR informs the Court that the
concerns of the petitioners are appropriately within the domain of the Task
Force Sugarlandia, created pursuant to Memorandum Order No. 199 dated
Section 2. Powers and Functions. Task Force Sugarlandia shall exercise the following powers and functions:
a. Conduct and complete a study identifying and addressing specific problems in the implementation of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program as provided under Republic Act 6657 directly affecting the development of the sugar industry and conduct consultations in areas to be identified by the Task Force;
b. Submit recommendations to the President on the formulation of policies, plans, programs and projects relative to the development of the sugar industry and implementation of the ethanol program;
c. Recommend modifications/amendments to existing laws, rules, regulations and procedures to remove impediments in the immediate, effective and efficient implementation of the programs and activities relative to the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program under Republic Act 6657;
d. Enlist the assistance of any branch, department, bureau, office, agency or instrumentality of the Government, including government-owned and controlled corporations, to carry out the provisions of this Memorandum Order;
e. Perform such other functions as may be directed by the President.
Anent the alleged
unconstitutionality of paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) of Section 16 of RA 6657,
the DAR invokes Association of Small
Landowners which affirmed the constitutionality of the said law.
For its part, the Land Registration Authority observes that
it was impleaded as a nominal party; nonetheless, it adopts the Comment of the
DAR as its own.
The Court’s
Rulings
The petition lacks merit.
The validity of Section 16, including paragraphs
(d), (e) and (f) thereof, of RA 6657 has already
been affirmed in Association of Small Landowners
In Association of Small Landowners, the
Court categorically passed upon and upheld the validity of Section 16 of RA
6657, including paragraphs (d), (e) and (f), which sets forth the manner of
acquisition of private agricultural lands and ascertainment of just
compensation, in this wise:
Where the State itself is the
expropriator, it is not necessary for it to make a deposit upon its taking
possession of the condemned property, as “the compensation is a public charge,
the good faith of the public is pledged for its payment, and all the resources
of taxation may be employed in raising the amount.” Nevertheless, Section 16(e)
of the CARP Law provides that:
Upon receipt by the
landowner of the corresponding payment, or in case of rejection or no response
from the landowner, upon the deposit with an accessible bank designated by the
DAR of the compensation in cash or in LBP bonds in accordance with this Act,
the DAR shall take immediate possession of the land and shall request the
proper Register of Deeds to issue a Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) in the
name of the Republic of the Philippines.
The DAR shall thereafter proceed with the redistribution of the land to
the qualified beneficiaries.
Objection is raised, however, to the
manner of fixing the just compensation, which it is claimed is entrusted to the
administrative authorities in violation of judicial prerogatives. Specific reference is made to Section 16(d),
which provides that in case of the rejection or disregard by the owner of the
offer of the government to buy his land -
x x x the DAR shall conduct summary
administrative proceedings to determine the compensation for the land by
requiring the landowner, the LBP and other interested parties to submit
evidence as to the just compensation for the land, within fifteen (15) days
from the receipt of the notice. After
the expiration of the above period, the matter is deemed submitted for
decision. The DAR shall decide the case
within thirty (30) days after it is submitted for decision.
To be sure, the determination of just
compensation is a function addressed to the courts of justice and may not be
usurped by any other branch or official of the government. EPZA v.
Dulay resolved a challenge to several decrees promulgated by President
Marcos providing that the just compensation for property under expropriation
should be either the assessment of the property by the government or the sworn
valuation thereof by the owner, whichever was lower. In declaring these decrees unconstitutional,
the Court held through Mr. Justice Hugo E. Gutierrez, Jr.:
The method of ascertaining just
compensation under the aforecited decrees constitutes impermissible
encroachment on judicial prerogatives.
It tends to render this Court inutile in a matter which under this
Constitution is reserved to it for final determination.
Thus, although in an expropriation
proceeding the court technically would still have the power to determine the
just compensation for the property, following the applicable decrees, its task
would be relegated to simply stating
the lower value of the property as declared either by the owner or the
assessor. As a necessary consequence, it
would be useless for the court to appoint commissioners under Rule 67 of the
Rules of Court. Moreover, the need to
satisfy the due process clause in the taking of private property is seemingly
fulfilled since it cannot be said that a judicial proceeding was not had before
the actual taking. However, the strict
application of the decrees during the proceedings would be nothing short of a
mere formality or charade as the court has only to choose between the valuation
of the owner and that of the assessor, and its choice is always limited to the
lower of the two. The court cannot
exercise its discretion or independence in determining what is just and
fair. Even a grade school pupil could
substitute for the judge insofar as the determination of constitutional just
compensation is concerned.
x x x
In the present petition, we are once
again confronted with the same question of whether the courts under P.D. No.
1533, which contains the same provision on just compensation as its predecessor
decrees, still have the power and authority to determine just compensation,
independent of what is stated by the decree and to this effect, to appoint
commissioners for such purpose.
This time we answer in the affirmative.
x x x
It is violative of due process to deny
the owner the opportunity to prove that the valuation in the tax documents is
unfair or wrong. And it is repulsive to
the basic concepts of justice and fairness to allow the haphazard work of a
minor bureaucrat or clerk to absolutely prevail over the judgment of a court
promulgated only after expert commissioners have actually viewed the property,
after evidence and arguments pro and con have been presented, and after all
factors and considerations essential to a fair and just determination have been
judiciously evaluated.
A reading of the aforecited Section
16(d) will readily show that it does not suffer from the arbitrariness that
rendered the challenged decrees constitutionally objectionable. Although the proceedings are described as
summary, the landowner and other interested parties are nevertheless allowed an
opportunity to submit evidence on the real value of the property. But more importantly, the determination of
the just compensation by the DAR is not by any means final and conclusive upon
the landowner or any other interested party, for Section(f) clearly provides:
(f) Any party who
disagrees with the decision may bring the matter to the court of proper
jurisdiction for final determination of just compensation.
The determination made by the DAR is
only preliminary unless accepted by
all parties concerned. Otherwise, the
courts of justice will still have the right to review with finality the said determination in the exercise of what is
admittedly a judicial function.[35]
On the matter of when transfer of possession and ownership of the land to the Government is reckoned, Association of Small Landowners instructs:
The CARP Law, for its part, conditions
the transfer of possession and ownership of the land to the government on
receipt by the landowner of the corresponding payment or the deposit by the DAR
of the compensation in cash or LBP bonds with an accessible bank. Until then,
title also remains with the landowner.
No outright change of ownership is contemplated either.[36]
The foregoing disquisition is binding and applicable to the present case following the salutary doctrine of stare decisis et non quieta movere which means “to adhere to precedents, and not to unsettle things which are established.”[37] Under the doctrine, when the Supreme Court has once laid down a principle of law as applicable to a certain state of facts, it will adhere to that principle, and apply it to all future cases, where facts are substantially the same; regardless of whether the parties and property are the same.[38] The doctrine of stare decisis is based upon the legal principle or rule involved and not upon the judgment which results therefrom. In this particular sense stare decisis differs from res judicata which is based upon the judgment.[39]
The doctrine of stare decisis is one of policy grounded on the necessity for securing certainty and stability of judicial decisions, thus:
Time and again, the Court has held that it is a very desirable and necessary judicial practice that when a court has laid down a principle of law as applicable to a certain state of facts, it will adhere to that principle and apply it to all future cases in which the facts are substantially the same. Stare decisis et non quieta movere. Stand by the decisions and disturb not what is settled. Stare decisis simply means that for the sake of certainty, a conclusion reached in one case should be applied to those that follow if the facts are substantially the same, even though the parties may be different. It proceeds from the first principle of justice that, absent any powerful countervailing considerations, like cases ought to be decided alike. Thus, where the same questions relating to the same event have been put forward by the parties similarly situated as in a previous case litigated and decided by a competent court, the rule of stare decisis is a bar to any attempt to relitigate the same.[40]
A careful reading of the petition shows that while it
purports to be one for prohibition and mandamus,
it practically seeks a reconsideration, albeit partial, of the Decision in Association of Small Landowners. It is
noted that in G.R. 79310, one of the consolidated cases therein, the
petitioners were landowners and sugar planters in Victorias, Negros Occidental
and Planters’ Committee, Inc., an organization composed of 1,400
planter-members. Also allowed to
intervene as petitioner therein was the National Federation of Sugarcane
Planters, presumably the same organization as one of the petitioners in this
case, which then claimed to represent its members of at least 20,000 individual
sugar planters all over the country. The
Decision in Association of Small
Landowners is thus final and conclusive on these parties not only on the
ground of stare decisis, but res judicata as well.
In any case, despite its lengthy discussion, the petition has
failed to present any cogent argument for the Court to re-examine Association of Small Landowners. As
correctly observed by the Solicitor General, the petition does not allege that
the farm lands of any of the petitioners have actually been subjected to compulsory acquisition or, at the least,
that the DAR, following Section 16 of RA 6657, has actually given any of the petitioners notice that it is acquiring their
respective properties for the purpose of agrarian reform. In other words, the allegations of the
petition have failed to present an actual case or controversy, or that it is
ripe for adjudication, which would warrant the Court’s re-examination of its
rulings in Association of Small
Landowners, including those pertaining to the validity of Section 16,
including paragraphs (d), (e) and (f), of RA 6657.
DAR’s compulsory acquisition procedure is
based on Section 16 of RA 6657. It does not,
in any way, preclude judicial determination
of just compensation
Contrary to the petitioners’
submission that the compulsory acquisition procedure adopted by the DAR is
without legal basis, it is actually based on Section 16 of RA 6657. Under the said law, there are two modes of
acquisition of private agricultural lands: compulsory and voluntary. The procedure for compulsory acquisition is
that prescribed under Section 16 of RA 6657.
In Roxas
& Co., Inc. v. Court of Appeals,[41]
the Court painstakingly outlined the procedure for compulsory acquisition,
including the administrative orders issued by the DAR in relation thereto, in
this manner:
In the
compulsory acquisition of private lands, the landholding, the landowners and
the farmer beneficiaries must first be identified. After identification, the DAR shall send a
Notice of Acquisition to the landowner, by personal delivery or registered
mail, and post it in a conspicuous place in the municipal building and barangay
hall of the place where the property is located. Within thirty days from receipt of the Notice
of Acquisition, the landowner, his administrator or representative shall inform
the DAR of his acceptance or rejection of the offer. If the landowner accepts, he executes and
delivers a deed of transfer in favor of the government and surrenders the
certificate of title. Within thirty days from the execution of the deed of
transfer, the Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) pays the owner the purchase
price. If the landowner rejects the
DAR’s offer or fails to make a reply, the DAR conducts summary administrative
proceedings to determine just compensation for the land. The landowner, the LBP representative and
other interested parties may submit evidence on just compensation within
fifteen days from notice. Within thirty
days from submission, the DAR shall decide the case and inform the owner of its
decision and the amount of just compensation.
Upon receipt by the owner of the corresponding payment, or, in case of
rejection or lack of response from the latter, the DAR shall deposit the
compensation in cash or in LBP bonds with an accessible bank. The DAR shall immediately take possession of
the land and cause the issuance of a transfer certificate of title in the name
of the Republic of the
The DAR has made compulsory acquisition
the priority mode of land acquisition to hasten the implementation of the
Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP). Under Section 16 of the CARL, the
first step in compulsory acquisition is the identification of the land, the
landowners and the beneficiaries. However, the law is silent on how the
identification process must be made. To
fill in this gap, the DAR issued on
A. The Municipal Agrarian Reform Officer,
with the assistance of the pertinent Barangay Agrarian Reform Committee (BARC),
shall:
1. Update the master list of all agricultural
lands covered under the CARP in his area of responsibility. The master list shall include such
information as required under the attached CARP Master List Form which shall
include the name of the landowner, landholding area, TCT/OCT number, and tax
declaration number.
2. Prepare a Compulsory Acquisition Case Folder
(CACF) for each title (OCT/TCT) or landholding covered under Phase I and II of
the CARP except those for which the landowners have already filed applications
to avail of other modes of land acquisition.
A case folder shall contain the following duly accomplished forms:
a) CARP CA Form 1—MARO Investigation Report
b) CARP CA Form 2-- Summary Investigation Report
of Findings and Evaluation
c) CARP CA Form 3—Applicant’s Information Sheet
d) CARP CA Form 4—Beneficiaries Undertaking
e) CARP CA Form 5—Transmittal Report to the PARO
The MARO/ BARC
shall certify that all information contained in the above-mentioned forms have
been examined and verified by him and that the same are true and correct.
3. Send a Notice
of Coverage and a letter of invitation
to a conference/ meeting to the
landowner covered by the Compulsory Case Acquisition Folder. Invitations to the said conference/ meeting
shall also be sent to the prospective farmer-beneficiaries, the BARC
representative(s), the Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) representative and
other interested parties to discuss the inputs to the valuation of the
property. He shall discuss the MARO/ BARC investigation report and solicit the
views, objection, agreements or suggestions of the participants thereon. The landowner shall also be asked to indicate
his retention area. The minutes of the
meeting shall be signed by all participants in the conference and shall form an
integral part of the CACF.
4. Submit all completed case folders to the
Provincial Agrarian Reform Officer (PARO).
B. The
PARO shall:
1. Ensure that the individual case folders are
forwarded to him by his MAROs.
2. Immediately upon receipt of a case folder,
compute the valuation of the land in accordance with A.O. No. 6, Series of
1988. The valuation worksheet and the related CACF valuation forms shall be
duly certified correct by the PARO and all the personnel who participated in
the accomplishment of these forms.
3. In all cases, the PARO may validate the report
of the MARO through ocular inspection and verification of the property. This ocular inspection and verification shall
be mandatory when the computed value exceeds
500,000 per estate.
4. Upon determination of the valuation, forward
the case folder, together with the duly accomplished valuation forms and his
recommendations, to the Central Office.
The LBP representative and the MARO concerned shall be furnished a copy
each of his report.
C. DAR
Central Office, specifically through the Bureau of Land Acquisition and
Distribution (BLAD), shall:
1. Within three days from receipt of the case
folder from the PARO, review, evaluate and determine the final land valuation
of the property covered by the case folder.
A summary review and evaluation report shall be prepared and duly
certified by the BLAD Director and the personnel directly participating in the
review and final valuation.
2. Prepare, for the signature of the Secretary or
her duly authorized representative, a Notice of Acquisition (CARP CA Form 8)
for the subject property. Serve the Notice
to the landowner personally or through registered mail within three days from
its approval. The Notice shall include,
among others, the area subject of compulsory acquisition, and the amount of
just compensation offered by DAR.
3. Should the landowner accept the DAR’s offered
value, the BLAD shall prepare and submit to the Secretary for approval the
Order of Acquisition. However, in case
of rejection or non-reply, the DAR Adjudication Board (DARAB) shall conduct a
summary administrative hearing to determine just compensation, in accordance
with the procedures provided under Administrative Order No. 13, Series of
1989. Immediately upon receipt of the
DARAB’s decision on just compensation, the BLAD shall prepare and submit to the
Secretary for approval the required Order of Acquisition.
4. Upon the landowner’s receipt of payment, in
case of acceptance, or upon deposit of payment in the designated bank, in case
of rejection or non-response, the Secretary shall immediately direct the
pertinent Register of Deeds to issue the corresponding Transfer Certificate of
Title (TCT) in the name of the Republic of the
Administrative Order No. 12, Series of
1989 requires that the Municipal Agrarian Reform Officer (MARO) keep an updated
master list of all agricultural lands under the CARP in his area of
responsibility containing all the required information. The MARO prepares a Compulsory Acquisition
Case Folder (CACF) for each title covered by CARP. The MARO then sends the
landowner a “Notice of Coverage” and a “letter of invitation” to a “conference/
meeting” over the land covered by the CACF.
He also sends invitations to the prospective farmer-beneficiaries, the
representatives of the Barangay
Agrarian Reform Committee (BARC), the Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) and
other interested parties to discuss the inputs to the valuation of the property
and solicit views, suggestions, objections or agreements of the parties. At the
meeting, the landowner is asked to
indicate his retention area.
The MARO shall make a report of the case
to the Provincial Agrarian Reform Officer (PARO) who shall complete the
valuation of the land. Ocular inspection and verification of the property by
the PARO shall be mandatory when the computed value of the estate exceeds P500,000.00. Upon determination of the valuation, the PARO
shall forward all papers together with his recommendation to the Central Office
of the DAR. The DAR Central Office,
specifically, the Bureau of Land Acquisition and Distribution (BLAD), shall
review, evaluate and determine the final land valuation of the property. The
BLAD shall prepare, on the signature of the Secretary or his duly authorized
representative, a Notice of Acquisition for the subject property. From this
point, the provisions of Section 16 of R.A. 6657 then apply.
For a valid implementation of the CAR
Program, two notices are required: (1) the Notice of Coverage and letter of
invitation to a preliminary conference sent to the landowner, the
representatives of the BARC, LBP, farmer beneficiaries and other interested
parties pursuant to DAR A. O. No. 12, Series of 1989; and (2) the Notice of Acquisition sent to the landowner under Section 16 of the
CARL.
The importance of the first notice, i.e., the Notice of Coverage and the
letter of invitation to the conference, and its actual conduct cannot be
understated. They are steps designed to
comply with the requirements of administrative due process. The implementation of the CARL is an exercise
of the State’s police power and the power of eminent domain. To the extent that the CARL prescribes
retention limits to the landowners, there is an exercise of police power for
the regulation of private property in accordance with the Constitution. But
where, to carry out such regulation, the owners are deprived of lands they own
in excess of the maximum area allowed, there is also a taking under the power
of eminent domain. The taking
contemplated is not a mere limitation of the use of the land. What is required is the surrender of the
title to and physical possession of the said excess and all beneficial rights
accruing to the owner in favor of the farmer beneficiary. The Bill of Rights
provides that “[n]o person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property
without due process of law.” The CARL was not intended to take away property
without due process of law. The exercise of the power of eminent domain
requires that due process be observed in the taking of private property.
DAR A. O. No. 12, Series of 1989, from
whence the Notice of Coverage first sprung, was amended in 1990 by DAR A.O. No.
9, Series of 1990 and in 1993 by DAR A.O. No. 1, Series of 1993. The
Notice of Coverage and letter of invitation to the conference meeting were
expanded and amplified in said amendments.
DAR A. O. No. 9, Series of 1990 entitled “Revised Rules Governing the Acquisition of Agricultural Lands Subject of Voluntary Offer to Sell and Compulsory Acquisition Pursuant to R. A. 6657,” requires that:
“B. MARO
1. Receives the duly accomplished CARP Form Nos.
1 & 1.1 including supporting documents.
2. Gathers basic ownership documents listed under
1.a or 1.b above and prepares corresponding VOCF/ CACF by landowner/
landholding.
3. Notifies/ invites the landowner and
representatives of the LBP, DENR, BARC and prospective beneficiaries of the
schedule of ocular inspection of the property at least one week in advance.
4. MARO/ LAND BANK FIELD OFFICE/ BARC
a) Identify the land and landowner, and
determine the suitability for agriculture and productivity of the land and
jointly prepare Field Investigation Report (CARP Form No. 2), including the
Land Use Map of the property.
b) Interview applicants and assist them in the
preparation of the Application For Potential CARP Beneficiary (CARP Form No.
3).
c) Screen prospective farmer-beneficiaries and
for those found qualified, cause the signing of the respective Application to
Purchase and Farmer’s Undertaking (CARP Form No. 4).
d) Complete the Field Investigation Report based
on the result of the ocular inspection/ investigation of the property and
documents submitted. See to it that Field Investigation Report is duly
accomplished and signed by all concerned.
5. MARO
a) Assists the DENR Survey Party in the conduct
of a boundary/ subdivision survey delineating areas covered by OLT, retention,
subject of VOS, CA (by phases, if possible), infrastructures, etc., whichever
is applicable.
b) Sends Notice of Coverage (CARP Form No. 5) to
landowner concerned or his duly authorized representative inviting him for a
conference.
c) Sends Invitation Letter (CARP Form No. 6) for
a conference/ public hearing to prospective farmer-beneficiaries, landowner,
representatives of BARC, LBP, DENR, DA, NGO’s, farmers’ organizations and other
interested parties to discuss the following matters:
Result of Field Investigation
Inputs to valuation
Issues raised
Comments/ recommendations by all parties concerned.
d) Prepares Summary of Minutes of the
conference/ public hearing to be guided by CARP Form No. 7.
e) Forwards the completed VOCF/CACF to the
Provincial Agrarian Reform Office (PARO) using CARP Form No. 8 (Transmittal
Memo to PARO).
x x x.”
DAR A. O. No. 9, Series of 1990 lays
down the rules on both Voluntary Offer to Sell (VOS) and Compulsory Acquisition
(CA) transactions involving lands enumerated under Section 7 of the CARL. In
both VOS and CA transactions, the MARO prepares the Voluntary Offer to Sell
Case Folder (VOCF) and the Compulsory Acquisition Case Folder (CACF), as the
case may be, over a particular landholding.
The MARO notifies the landowner as well as representatives of the LBP,
BARC and prospective beneficiaries of the date of the ocular inspection of the
property at least one week before the scheduled date and invites them to attend
the same. The MARO, LBP or BARC conducts
the ocular inspection and investigation by identifying the land and landowner,
determining the suitability of the land for agriculture and productivity,
interviewing and screening prospective farmer beneficiaries. Based on its investigation, the MARO, LBP or
BARC prepares the Field Investigation Report which shall be signed by all
parties concerned. In addition to the
field investigation, a boundary or subdivision survey of the land may also be
conducted by a Survey Party of the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources (DENR) to be assisted by the MARO. This survey shall delineate the areas
covered by Operation Land Transfer (OLT),
areas retained by the landowner, areas with infrastructure, and the
areas subject to VOS and CA. After the
survey and field investigation, the MARO sends a “Notice of Coverage” to the
landowner or his duly authorized representative inviting him to a conference or
public hearing with the farmer beneficiaries, representatives of the BARC, LBP,
DENR, Department of Agriculture (DA), non-government organizations, farmer’s
organizations and other interested parties.
At the public hearing, the parties shall discuss the results of the
field investigation, issues that may be raised in relation thereto, inputs to
the valuation of the subject landholding, and other comments and recommendations
by all parties concerned. The Minutes of
the conference/ public hearing shall form part of the VOCF or CACF which files
shall be forwarded by the MARO to the PARO.
The PARO reviews, evaluates and validates the Field Investigation Report
and other documents in the VOCF/ CACF.
He then forwards the records to the RARO for another review.
DAR A. O. No. 9, Series of 1990 was amended by DAR A. O. No. 1, Series of 1993. DAR A. O. No. 1, Series of 1993 provided, among others, that:
“IV. OPERATING PROCEDURES:
"Steps Responsible Activity Forms/
Agency/Unit Document
(Requirements)
A. Identification
and
Documentation
x x x
5 DARMO
Issues Notice of Coverage to LO Form No. 2
CARP by personal
delivery with
proof of service, or by registered
mail with return
card, informing
him that his property is now
under CARP
coverage and for
LO to select his retention area, if
he desires to
avail of his right of
retention; and at
the same time
invites him to join
the field
investigation to
be conducted
on his property
which should be
scheduled at
least two weeks in
advance of said
notice.
A copy of said Notice shall be CARP
posted for at
least one week on Form
bulletin board
of the municipal No. 17
and barangay halls where the
property is
located. LGU office
concerned
notifies DAR about
compliance with
posting requirement
thru return
indorsement on CARP
Form No. 17. Notify
prospective ARBs
of the schedule of
the field
6 DARMO
Sends notice to the LBP, BARC, Form No.3
CARP DENR representatives and
prospective ARBs of the schedule
of the field investigation to be conducted
on
the subject property.
7 DARMO With the participation of LO, CARP BARC representatives of the LBP Form
LBP, BARC, DENR and prospective No. 4
DENR ARBs, conducts the investiga- Land
Local tion on subject
Office property Use Map
Office to
identify the landholding, deter-
mines its suitability and product-
vity;
and jointly prepares
the
Field Investigation Report (FIR)
and
Land Use Map. However,
the field
investigation shall proceed
even
if the LO, the representatives
of the DENR and prospective ARBs
are not
available provided, they were
given
due notice of the time
and date
of the investigation to be conducted.
Similarly, if the LBP representative
is not available or court or could not
come on
the scheduled date, the field
investigation
shall
also be conducted,
after
which the duly accomplished
Part
I of CARP Form No. 4 shall
be forwarded
to the LBP representative
for validation. If he agrees to the
ocular
inspection report of DAR, he
signs
the FIR (Part I) and accomplishes
Part II thereof.
In
the event that there is a difference or variance between the findings of the DAR and
the LBP as to the propriety of covering the land under CARP,
whether in whole or in part, on the issue of suitability to agriculture, degree
of development or slope, and on issues affecting
idle lands, the conflict shall be resolved by a composite team of DAR,
LBP, DENR and DA
which shall jointly conduct further investigation thereon. The team shall
submit its report of
findings which shall
be
binding
to both DAR and LBP, pursuant to Joint Memorandum Circular of the DAR, LBP,
DENR and DA dated
8
DARMO Screens
prospective ARBS and CARP
BARC
causes
the signing of Application Form
of Purchase and Farmers' under-
No. 5
taking (APFU).
9 DARMO Furnishes a copy of the duly CARP
accomplished FIR to the Form
landowner by personal delivery
No. 4
with proof of service or regis-
tered mail with return card
and
posts a copy thereof for at least
one week on the bulletin board of
the municipal and
barangay
halls where the property is located.
LGU
office concerned notifies CARP
notifies
DAR about posting Form
requirement thru return No. 17
endorsement
on CARP Form
No.
17.
B. Land Survey
10 DARMO Conducts perimeter or Perimeter
and/or segregation survey or DENR delineating areas Segregation
Local covered by OLT , Survey
Office
"uncarpable areas Plan
such
as 18% slope and
above, unproductive/unsuit-
able to agriculture, retention,
infrastructure. In case of
segregation or subdivision
survey, the plan shall be
approved by DENR-LMS.
C.
Review and
Completion of Documents.
11 DARMO Forwards VOCF/CACF CARP
to DARPO. Form No 6
x x x."
DAR A. O. No. 1, Series of 1993,
modified the identification process and increased the number of government
agencies involved in the identification and delineation of the land subject to
acquisition. This time, the Notice of Coverage is sent to the landowner before
the conduct of the field investigation and the sending must comply with
specific
requirements. Representatives of the DAR
Municipal Office (DARMO) must send the Notice of Coverage to the landowner by
“personal delivery with proof of service, or by registered mail with return
card,” informing him that his property is under CARP coverage and that if he
desires to avail of his right of retention, he may choose which area he shall
retain. The Notice of Coverage shall
also invite the landowner to attend the field investigation to be scheduled at
least two weeks from notice. The field
investigation is for the purpose of identifying the landholding and determining
its suitability for agriculture and its productivity. A copy of the Notice of Coverage shall be
posted for at least one week on the bulletin board of the municipal and
barangay halls where the property is located.
The date of the field investigation shall also be sent by the DAR
Municipal Office to representatives of the LBP, BARC, DENR and prospective
farmer beneficiaries. The field
investigation shall be conducted on the date set with the participation of the
landowner and the various
representatives. If the landowner and
other representatives are absent, the field investigation shall proceed,
provided they were duly notified thereof.
Should there be a variance between the findings of the DAR and the LBP
as to whether the land be placed under agrarian reform, the land’s suitability
to agriculture, the degree or development of the slope, etc., the conflict
shall be resolved by a composite team of the DAR, LBP, DENR and DA which shall
jointly conduct further investigation.
The team’s findings shall be binding on both DAR and LBP. After the field investigation, the DAR
Municipal Office shall prepare the Field Investigation Report and Land Use Map,
a copy of which shall be furnished the landowner “by personal delivery with
proof of service or registered mail with return card.” Another copy of the
Report and Map shall likewise be posted for at least one week in the municipal
or barangay halls where the property is located.
Clearly then, the notice requirements
under the CARL are not confined to the Notice of Acquisition set forth in
Section 16 of the law. They also include
the Notice of Coverage first laid down in DAR A. O. No. 12, Series of 1989 and
subsequently amended in DAR A. O. No. 9, Series of 1990 and DAR A. O. No. 1,
Series of 1993. This Notice of Coverage
does not merely notify the landowner that his property shall be placed under
CARP and that he is entitled to exercise his retention right; it also notifies
him, pursuant to DAR A. O. No. 9, Series of 1990, that a public hearing shall
be conducted where he and representatives of the concerned sectors of society
may attend to discuss the results of the field investigation, the land
valuation and other pertinent matters.
Under DAR A. O. No. 1, Series of 1993, the Notice of Coverage also
informs the landowner that a field investigation of his landholding shall be
conducted where he and the other representatives may be present.[42]
The procedure prescribed in Section 16
of RA 6657 is a summary administrative proceeding. As outlined in Roxas, the said procedure, taken together with the pertinent
administrative issuances of the DAR, ensures compliance with the due process
requirements of the law. More
importantly, this summary administrative proceeding does not preclude judicial
determination
of just compensation. In fact, paragraph
(e) of Section 16 of RA 6657 is categorical on this point as it provides that
“[a]ny party who disagrees with the decision may bring the matter to the court
of proper jurisdiction for final determination of just compensation.”
In Land
Bank of the Philippines v. Court of Appeals,[43] the Court underscored
that the jurisdiction of the RTCs, sitting as Special Agrarian Courts, over
petitions for the determination of just compensation is original and exclusive as provided in Section 57[44] of RA 6657. As such, direct resort to the RTC, sitting as
a
x x x It is clear from Sec. 57 that the
RTC, sitting as a
In relation thereto, the Court in its
Administrative Circular No. 29-2002 dated
In view of the increasing number of
complaints on matters of jurisdiction over agrarian disputes, the concerned
trial court judges are reminded of the need for a careful and judicious
application of Republic Act No. 6657, otherwise known as the Comprehensive
Agrarian Reform Law of 1988, in order to avoid conflict of jurisdiction with
the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) or the Department of Environment and
Natural Resources (DENR). Conflict in
jurisdiction must be avoided to prevent delay in the resolution of agrarian
problems. In appropriate cases before it
the court concerned must not tolerate any delay.
For this purpose, pertinent provisions
of R.A. No. 6657 delineating jurisdiction over agrarian disputes are hereby
reproduced:
Section 50. Quasi-Judicial Powers of the DAR. – The
DAR is hereby vested with primary jurisdiction to determine and adjudicate
agrarian reform matters and shall have exclusive original jurisdiction over all
matters involving the implementing of agrarian reform, except those falling
under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Department of Agriculture (DA) and the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).
Section 55. No Restraining Order or Preliminary
Injunction. – No court in the Philippines shall have jurisdiction to issue
any restraining order or writ of preliminary injunction against PARC or any of
its duly authorized or designated agencies in any case, dispute or application,
implementation, enforcement, or interpretation of this Act and other pertinent
laws on agrarian reform.
Section 56. Special Agrarian Courts. -- The Supreme Court shall designate at least one
(1) branch of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) within each province to act as a
The Supreme Court may designate more branches to
constitute such additional Special Agrarian Courts as may be necessary to cope
with the number of agrarian cases in each province. In the designation, the Supreme Court shall
give preference to the Regional Trial Courts which have been assigned to handle
agrarian cases or whose presiding judges were former judges of the defunct
Court of Agrarian Relations.
The Regional Trial Court (RTC) judges assigned to said
courts shall exercise said special jurisdiction in addition to the regular
jurisdiction of their respective courts.
The Special Agrarian Courts shall have
the powers and prerogatives inherent in or belonging to the Regional Trial
Courts.
Section
57. Special
Jurisdiction. – The special Agrarian Courts shall have original and
exclusive jurisdiction over all petitions for the determination of just compensation
to land owners, and the prosecution of all criminal offenses under this
Act. The Rules of Court shall apply to
all proceedings before the Special Agrarian Courts, unless modified by this
Act.
The Special
Agrarian Courts shall decide all appropriate cases under their special
jurisdiction within thirty (30) days from submission of the case for decision.
Further, the
trial court judges concerned are directed to take note of the decisions of the
Supreme Court of
Strict compliance is hereby enjoined. The Office of the Court Administrator is directed to implement this Administrative Circular, which shall take effect upon its issuance.
Rule 67 of the Rules of Court is not entirely
disregarded in the implementation of RA 6657
The petitioners’ main objection to paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) of Section 16 of RA
6657 is that they are allegedly in complete disregard of the expropriation
proceedings prescribed under Rule 67 of the Rules of Court. The petitioners’ argument does not
persuade. As declared by the Court in Association of Small Landowners, we are
not dealing here with the traditional
exercise of the power of eminent domain, but a revolutionary kind of expropriation:
x x x However, we do not deal here with the traditional exercise of the power of
eminent domain. This is not an ordinary
expropriation where only a specific property of relatively limited area is
sought to be taken by the State from its
owner for a specific and perhaps local purpose.
What we deal with here is a revolutionary
kind of expropriation.
The expropriation before us affects all private agricultural lands whenever
found and of whatever kind as long as they are in excess of the maximum
retention limits allowed their owners.
This kind of expropriation is intended for the benefit not only of a
particular community or of a small segment of the population but of the entire
Filipino nation, from all levels of our society, from the impoverished farmer
to the land-glutted owner. Its purpose
does not cover only the whole territory of this country but goes beyond in time
to the foreseeable future, which it hopes to secure and edify with the vision
and the sacrifice of the present generation of Filipinos. Generations yet to come are as involved in
this program as we are today, although hopefully only as beneficiaries of a
richer and more fulfilling life we will guarantee to them tomorrow through our
thoughtfulness today. And, finally, let
it not be forgotten that it is no less than the Constitution itself that has
ordained this revolution in the farms, calling for “a just distribution” among
the farmers of lands that have heretofore been the prison of their dreams and
deliverance.[46]
Despite the revolutionary
or non-traditional character of RA 6657, however, the chief limitations on
the exercise of the power of eminent domain, namely: (1) public use; and (2)
payment of just compensation, are embodied therein as well as in the
Constitution.
With respect to “public use,” the Court in Association of Small Landowners declared
that the requirement of public use had already been settled by the Constitution
itself as it “calls for agrarian reform, which is the reason why private
agricultural lands are to be taken from their owners, subject to the prescribed
maximum retention limits. The purposes
specified in P.D. No. 27,[47] Proc. No. 131[48] and RA No. 6657 are only
an elaboration of the constitutional injunction that the State adopt the
necessary measures ‘to encourage and undertake the just distribution of all
agricultural lands to enable farmers who are landless to own directly or
collectively the lands they till.’ That
public use, as pronounced by the fundamental law itself, must be binding on
us.”[49]
On the other hand, judicial determination of just
compensation is expressly prescribed in Section 57 of RA 6657, quoted above, as
it vests on the Special Agrarian Courts original and exclusive jurisdiction
over all petitions for the determination of just compensation to landowners. It
bears stressing that the determination of just compensation during the
compulsory acquisition proceedings of Section 16 of RA 6657 is preliminary only.
Section 57 of RA 6657 authorizes not only direct
resort to the Special Agrarian Courts in cases involving petitions for the
determination of just compensation, it likewise mandates that the “Rules of
Court shall apply to all proceedings before the Special Agrarian Courts, unless
modified by this Act.” Hence, contrary
to the contention of the petitioners, the Rules of Court, including Rule 67
thereof, is not completely disregarded in the implementation of RA 6657 since
the Special Agrarian Courts, in resolving petitions for the determination of
just compensation, are enjoined to apply the pertinent provisions of the Rules
of Court. Moreover, Section 58 of RA
6657, like Rule 67 of the Rules of Court, provides for the appointment of
commissioners by the Special Agrarian Courts:
SEC. 58.
Appointment of Commissioners.
– The Special Agrarian Courts, upon their own initiative or at the instance of
any of the parties, may appoint one or more commissioners to examine,
investigate and ascertain facts relevant to the dispute, including the
valuation of properties, and to file a written report thereof to the court.
The petitioners’ contention that RA 6657
contradicts the dictum in EPZA by eliminating
the appointment by the court of commissioners to appraise the valuation of the
land is, therefore, erroneous.
The inclusion of sugar lands in the coverage of
RA 6657 delves into the wisdom of an act of
Congress, beyond the ambit of judicial review
The scope of lands subjected to
agrarian reform under RA 6657 has been characterized as overwhelming, even
broader in scope than that of PD 27.
While the latter (PD 27) applies to all private agricultural lands
primarily devoted to rice and corn with tenant farmers under a system of
sharecrop or lease tenancy, RA 6657 generally covers all public and private
agricultural lands regardless of tenurial arrangement and commodity produced.[50]
The petitioners insist that the system
of Land Administration should be maintained to govern the relations between the
sugar planters and the farmworkers because sugar is one of the crops that is
more suitably and efficiently produced by plantation-type agriculture rather
than by small and owner-cultivated farms.
In Association of Small Landowners,
however, the matter of the inclusion of sugar farms in the coverage of RA 6657
had
already been settled. The sugar planters
therein argued that there was no tenancy problem in the sugar areas that could
justify the application of RA 6657 and that they should not have been lumped in
the same legislation as the others because they (sugar planters) belong to a
particular class with particular interests of their own.
Rejecting this particular argument, the Court
held that the sugar planters failed to show that they belong to a different
class and are entitled to a different treatment. It thus upheld the classification made by RA
6657, insofar as it included the sugar farms, as conforming to the following
requirements: (1) it must be based on substantial distinctions; (2) it must be germane
to the purposes of the law; (3) it must not be limited to existing conditions
only; (4) it must apply equally to all the members of the class.[51]
Indeed, it is not within the power of
the Court to pass upon or look into the wisdom of the inclusion by Congress of
the sugar lands in the coverage of RA 6657.
It is basic in our form of government that the judiciary cannot inquire
into the wisdom or expediency of the acts of the executive or the legislative
department, for each department is supreme and independent of the others, and
each is devoid of authority not only to encroach upon the powers or field of
action assigned to any of the other departments, but also to inquire into or
pass upon the advisability or wisdom of the acts performed, measures taken or
decisions made by the other departments.[52]
The other issues raised by the petitioners require
factual determination which the Court cannot
properly undertake in the present case
The petitioners allege that the DAR, without
consulting the regular farmworkers on whether or not they want to exercise
their right to own the land they till, “indiscriminately sends notices of
coverage and acquisition to practically all the planters and leaves the matter
of identifying and convincing the prospective beneficiaries later.”[53] It is also alleged that “in ACTUAL PRACTICE
in the sugar lands of planter members of petitioners-federations, DAR, in
collusion with some NGOs and other ‘instant’ farmer organizations, designated
as ‘beneficiaries’, non-tillers, non-regular farmers, and outsiders of the land
and other unqualified groups to eject and replace the regular farmworkers and
later on installed these ‘beneficiaries’ on the sugar lands, with the
assistance of the AFP or the PNP.”[54]
The petitioners also made the statement that
“what is actually happening in the country today, particularly in the
sugar-producing regions, is that Certificates of Title of the landowners are
being canceled by LRA merely upon the directive or request by DAR, without
asking the landowner to surrender his owner’s duplicate of title or even
notifying him that, whether he likes it or not, the Register of Deeds will
cancel his certificate of title and issue a new certificate in the name of the
Republic of the Philippines.”[55]
These allegations of the petitioners,
however, remain as such – mere allegations, unsupported by any evidence to
prove their veracity or truthfulness.
Moreover, they require de novo
appreciation of factual questions. No
trial court has had the opportunity to ascertain the validity of these factual
claims, the appreciation of which is beyond the function of this Court since it
is not a trier of facts.[56]
WHEREFORE,
premises considered, the petition is DISMISSED
for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.
ROMEO
J. CALLEJO, SR.
Associate Justice
WE
CONCUR:
REYNATO S.
PUNO
Chief Justice
LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO
Associate Justice Associate Justice
ANGELINA SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
MA. ALICIA
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ
RENATO C. CORONA
Associate Justice Associate
Justice
CONCHITA
CARPIO MORALES
ADOLFO S. AZCUNA
Associate
Justice Associate
Justice
DANTE
O. TINGA
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIO
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
CANCIO
C. GARCIA
PRESBITERO
J. VELASCO, JR.
Associate Justice Associate Justice
No part
ANTONIO EDUARDO
B. NACHURA
Associate Justice
Pursuant to Section 13, Article
VIII of the Constitution, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in the
above Decision were reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the
writer of the opinion of the Court.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
[1] Luzon: Batangas Sugar Planters Cooperative Marketing Association, Inc.; Batangas Integrated Sugarcane Planters Cooperative Marketing Association, Inc.; Eastern Batangas Sugar Planters Cooperative Marketing Association, Inc.; SAMAKABA Producers Cooperative Marketing Association, Inc.; Asociacion de Agricultores de la Region Oeste de Batangas; Northern Philippines Planters Association, Inc; NorPhil Farmers Multi-Purpose Cooperative, Inc.; Unaffiliated Planters of Cagayan (Robina); Batangas Agricultural Producers Association, Inc.; Pasudeco Cooperative Marketing Association, Inc.; Del Carmen Sugar Producers Cooperative Marketing Association, Inc.; Bicol Sugar Planters Cooperative (BISUPLA); C.A.T. Planters Association, Inc.; Camarines Sugarcane Planters Association, Inc.; Porac Planters Association; Aniog Multi-Purpose Cooperative; Caroyroyan Multi-Purpose Cooperative; Hacienda Magdalena Farmers Cooperative; May-ogob Planters Cooperative; Ocampo Small Planters Cooperative; San Isidro Development Cooperative; and Tinangis Farmers Multi-Purpose Cooperative. Visayas: First Farmers Association, Inc.; Central Lopez Planters Association, Inc.; ISEPI Multi-Purpose Cooperative; Association of Negros Cooperatives, Inc.; Planters’ Association of Southern Negros, Inc. (PASON, Inc.); Associated Planters of Silay-Saravia, Inc.; Asociacion de Hacenderos de Silay-Saravia, Inc.; Victorias, Manapla, Cadiz farmers Association, Inc.; Prime Movers, Inc.; Negros Oriental Planters Association, Inc.; Tolong Multi-Purpose Cooperative (TOMPUCO); Asociacion de Agricultores de la Carlota y Pontevedra, Inc.; C-PRIME; CENEPA; MAPLA; TSPA; MSPA; NPAI; NASPA; Capiz First Federation of United Cooperatives, Inc. Mindanao: Sugarcane Growers Association of Bukidnon, Inc; Sugar Producers Association of Bukidnon, Inc.; Agila Farms & CMC Farms; Sugarcane Farmers of Bukidnon Multi-Purpose Cooperative (SFBMPC); Davao Non-Members; United Sugarcane Planters of Davao; Southern Bukidnon Cooperative Planters Association, Inc. (SOBUCPA); Associated Bukidnon Sugarcane Farmers, Inc.; Alliance. Petition, pp. 11-13; rollo, pp. 13-15.
[2] Luzon: Batangas Association of Free Planters, Inc.; Cagayan Sugarcane Planters Association, Inc.; Cagayan Sugar Growers Association, Inc.; Samahang Mag-aasukal sa Kanluran ng Batangas, Inc.; United Sugarcane Planters Association of Cagayan, Inc.; Samahang Sugarcane Planters, Inc. Visayas/Mindanao: Binalbagan-Isabela Planters Association, Inc.; Association of Productive Planters of Negros Occidental, Inc.; Independent Sagay-Escalante Planters Association, Inc.; Sagay-Escalante Planters Association, Inc.; United Sagay-Escalante-Toboso Planters Association, Inc.; Northern Negros Planters Association; United Cadiz Sugarcane Planters’ Association, Inc.; United South VMC Sugarcane Planters Association, Inc.; Association of Sugarcane Growers, Inc.; SETPG; Tolong United Planters Association; Bulgas Planters Multi-Purpose Cooperative; Barotac-Dumangas-Anilao Planters Association; Bogo-Medellin Sugarcane Planters Association; Bukidnon Planters Association, Inc.; Bukidnon Small Planters Multi-Purpose, Inc.; Samahang Sugarcane Planters Multi-Purpose Cooperative; Free Planters Producers Cooperative, Inc.; Mindanao Sugarcane Planters; Cebu Sugarcane Planters Association, Inc.; Boroc Agricultural Primary Multi-Purpose Cooperative, Inc.; Occidental Leyte Sugarcane Farmers Association, Inc.; Ormoc Northern District Irrigators Multi-Purpose Cooperative, Inc.; Ormoc Sugarcane Planters Association; Leyte United Farmers Assosicion, Inc.; Occidental Leyte Farmers’ Multi-Purpose Cooperative; and Unifarm Multi-Purpose Cooperative, Inc. Petition, pp. 14-15; rollo, pp. 16-17.
[3]
[4] Namely, Pilar Sugar Planters Association, Inc.; Lutod-Lutod Planters Association, Inc.; Capiz-Iloilo Sugarcane Planters Association, Inc.; Asturias Sugarcane Planters Association, Inc.; Panay Sugarcane Producers Association, Inc.; Jalasig Sugarcane Planters Association, Inc.; New Frontier Planters Association; New Frontier Sugarcane Planters Association; Panay Integrated Planters Association; MUSPA; CALAMPA; PISPA; SANEPA; Iloilo Planters Association, Inc.; Northern Iloilo Sugar Planters Association, inc.; PIARB; CLSM Multi-Sectoral Planters Association, Inc. Petition, pp. 16-17; rollo, pp. 18-19.
[5] Infra.
[6] Petition, pp. 37-39; rollo, pp. 39-41.
[7] 40 Phil. 550 (1919).
[8] The salient features of these provisions were discussed in Visayan Refining Co. in this wise:
x x x (1) If the court is of the opinion that the right of expropriation exists, three commissioners are appointed to hear the parties, view the premises, and assess the damages to be paid for the condemnation (sec. 243 Code Civ. Proc.); (2) after hearing the evidence submitted by the parties and assessing the damages in the manner prescribed by law (sec. 244), the commissioners make their report to the court, setting forth all their proceedings; and it is expressly declared that “none of their proceedings shall be effectual to bind the property or the parties until the court shall have accepted their report and rendered judgment in accordance with its recommendations” (sec. 245); (3) the court then acts upon the report, accepting the same in whole or in part, or rejecting, recommitting, or setting aside the same, as it sees fit (sec. 246).
It is further declared in section 246 that –
“The court x x x may make such final order and judgment as shall secure to the plaintiff the property essential to the exercise of his rights under the law, and to the defendant just compensation for the land so taken; and the judgment shall require payment of the sum awarded as provided in the next section (i.e., sec. 247) before the plaintiff can enter upon the ground and appropriate it to the public use.”
Sections 247 and 251 of the same Code are of sufficient importance in this connection to warrant quotation in their entirety. They are as follows:
“SEC. 247. Rights of Plaintiff After the Judgment. – Upon payment by the plaintiff to the defendant of compensation as fixed by the judgment, or after tender to him of the amount so fixed and payment of the costs, the plaintiff shall have the right to enter in and upon the land so condemned, to appropriate the same to the public use defined in the judgment. In case the defendant and his attorney absent themselves from the court or decline to receive the same, payment may be made to the clerk of the court for him, and such officer shall be responsible on his bond therefor and shall be compelled to receive it.”
“SEC. 251. Final Judgment, Its Record and Effect. – The record of final judgment in such action shall state definitely, by metes and bounds and adequate description, the particular land or interest in land condemned to the public use, and the nature of the public use. A certified copy of the record of the judgment shall be recorded in the office of the registrar of deeds for the province in which the estate is situated, and its effect shall be to vest in the plaintiff for the public use stated the land and estate so described.”
[9] The said provisions were quoted in Visayan Refining Co. as follows:
SEC. 2. When condemnation proceedings are instituted by or in favor of the Insular Government x x x in any competent court of the Philippines, the plaintiff shall be entitled to enter immediately upon the land covered by such proceedings, after depositing with the provincial treasurer the value of said land in cash, as previously and promptly determined and fixed by the competent court, which money the provincial treasurer shall retain subject to the order and final decision of the court: Provided, however, That the court may permit that in lieu of cash, there may be deposited with the provincial treasurer a certificate of deposit of any depository of the Government of the Philippine Islands, payable to the provincial treasurer on sight, for the sum ordered deposited by the court. The certificate and the sums represented by it shall be subject to the order and final decision of the court, and the court shall have authority to place said plaintiff in possession of the land, upon such deposit being made, by the proper orders and a mandate, if necessary.
SEC. 3. x x x Upon the payment by the plaintiff to the defendants of the compensation awarded by the sentence, or after the tender of said sum to the defendants, and the payment of the costs, or in case the court orders the price to be paid into court, the plaintiff shall be entitled to appropriate the land so condemned to the public use specified in the sentence. In case payment is made to the court, the clerk of the same shall be liable on his bond for the sum so paid and shall be obliged to receive the same.
[10] Visayan Refining Co. v. Camus and Paredes, supra note 7.
[11]
[12] Citing Republic
v. Baylosis, 96 Phil. 461 (1955); Province
of Rizal v. San Diego, 105 Phil. 33 (1959); Greater Balanga Development Corp. v. Municipality of Balanga, Bataan,
G.R. No. 83987, December 29, 1994, 239 SCRA 436.
[13] According to the petitioners, RA 1400 authorized the Land Tenure Administration to “initiate and prosecute expropriation proceedings to acquire landed estates over 300 hectares for distribution to tenants or occupants; RA 2616 provided for the expropriation of the Tatalon Estate in Quezon City in order that it could be subdivided and conveyed to its occupants; RA 3844 prescribed the filing of expropriation proceedings in the court by the DAR as the procedure for the acquisition of private agricultural lands for purposes of agrarian reform. Petition, p. 54; rollo, p. 56.
[14] Otherwise known as the Code of Agrarian
Reforms of the
[15] Citing, among others, Article 1258 of the Civil Code which reads:
ART. 1258. Consignation shall be made by depositing the things due at the disposal of the judicial authority before whom the tender of payment shall be proved in a proper case, and the announcement of the consignation in other cases.
The consignation having been made, the interested parties shall be notified thereof.
[16] No. L-59603,
[17]
[18] G.R. No. 78742,
[19]
[20]
[21]
[22]
[23] Section 41 of RA 6657 reads:
SEC. 41. The Presidential Agrarian Reform Council. - The Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC) shall be composed of the President of the Philippines as Chairman, the Secretary of Agrarian Reform as Vice-Chairman and the following as members: Secretaries of the Departments of Agriculture, Environment and Natural Resources; Budget and Management; Local Government; Public Works and Highways; Trade and Industry; Finance; Labor and Employment; Director-General of the National Economic and Development Authority; President, Land Bank of the Philippines; Administrator, National Irrigation Administration; and three (3) representatives of affected landowners to represent Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao, six (6) representatives of agrarian reform beneficiaries, two (2) each from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, provided that one of them shall be from the cultural minorities.
[24] Citing, among other provisions of RA 6657, Section 7 which reads in part:
SEC. 7. Priorities. - The DAR, in coordination with the PARC, shall plan and program the acquisition and distribution of all agricultural lands through a period of ten (10) years from the effectivity of this Act. Lands shall be acquired and distributed as follows:
x x x
The schedule of acquisition and redistribution of all agricultural lands shall be made in accordance with the above order of priority, which shall be provided in the implementing rules to be prepared by the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC), taking into consideration the following: the need to distribute lands to the tillers at the earliest practicable time; the need to enhance agricultural productivity; and the availability of funds and resources to implement and support the program.
x x x
[25] The provision reads:
SEC. 22. Qualified Beneficiaries. – The lands covered by the CARP shall be distributed as much as possible to landless residents of the same barangay, or in the absence thereof, landless resident of the same municipality in the following order of priority:
(a) agricultural lessees and share tenants;
(b) regular farmworkers;
(c) seasonal farmworkers;
(d) other farmworkers;
(e) actual tillers or occupants of public lands;
(f) collectives or cooperatives of the above beneficiaries; and
(g) others directly working on the land.
Provided, however, That the children of landowners who are qualified under Section 6 of this Act shall be given preference in the distribution of the land of their parents; And provided, further, That actual tenants-tillers in the landholding shall not be ejected or removed therefrom.
Beneficiaries under Presidential Decree No. 27 who have culpably sold, disposed of, or abandoned their land are disqualified to become beneficiaries under this Program.
A basic qualification of a beneficiary shall be his willingness, aptitude and ability to cultivate and make the land as productive as possible. The DAR shall adopt a system of monitoring the record or performance of each beneficiary, so that any beneficiary guilty of negligence or misuse of the land or any support extended to him shall forfeit his right to continue as such beneficiary. The DAR shall submit periodic reports on the performance of the beneficiaries to the PARC.
If, due to the landowner’s retention rights or to the number of tenants, lessees, or workers on the land, there is not enough land to accommodate any or some of them, they may be granted ownership of other lands available for distribution under this Act, at the option of the beneficiaries.
Farmers already in place and those not accommodated in the distribution of privately-owned lands will be given preferential rights in the distribution of lands from the public domain.
[26] Defined in Section 166 (24) of RA 3844 in this wise:
SEC. 166. Definition of Terms. – As used in Chapter I of this Code:
x x x
(24) “Labor Administration” means cases where farm workers are employed wholly in the agricultural production.
[27] Entitled An Act Strengthening the Social Amelioration Program in the Sugar Industry, Providing the Mechanics For its Implementation, and For Other Purposes.
[28] Citing, for example, Section 39 of RA 3844 which provides:
SEC. 39. Rights of Agricultural Labor. – To enable the farm workers to enjoy the same rights and opportunities in life as industrial workers, they shall enjoy the following:
(1) Right to self-organization;
(2) Right to engage in concerted activities as defined under [RA 875];
(3) Right to minimum wage;
(4) Right to work for not more than eight hours;
(5) Right to claim for damages for death or injuries sustained while at work;
(6) Right to compensation for personal injuries, death or illness; and
(7) Right against suspension or lay off. (As amended by RA 6389).
[29] Citing Section 12, paragraphs (m) and (n) of PD 946.
[30] Citing Sections 55 (voluntary transfers) and 111 (involuntary transfers) of Act No. 496 which provide in part:
SEC. 55. No new certificate of title shall be entered, no memorandum shall be made upon any certificate of title by the register of deeds, in pursuance of any deed or other voluntary instrument, unless the owner’s duplicate certificate is presented for such endorsement, except in cases expressly provided for in this Act, or upon the order of the court for cause shown; x x x
SEC. 111. In every case where the clerk or any register of deeds is requested to enter a new certificate in pursuance of an instrument purporting to be executed by the registered owner, or by reason of any instrument or proceedings which divest the title of the registered owner against his consent, if the outstanding owner’s duplicate certificate is not presented for cancellation when such request is made, the clerk or register of deeds shall not enter a new certificate, but the person claiming to be entitled thereto may apply by petition to the court. x x x
[31] Citing BERNAS, THE 1987 CONSTITUTION OF THE
REPUBLIC OF THE
[32]
[33] Comment, p. 17; rollo, p. 245.
[34] Philippine
Constitutional Association v. Enriquez, G.R. No. 113105,
[35] Supra note 18, pp. 379-382.
[36]
[37] Black’s Law Dictionary, Fifth Edition.
[38] Horne v. Moody, 146 S.W.2d 505 (1940).
[39]
[40] Ty v.
Banco Filipino Savings & Mortgage Bank, G.R. 144705,
[41] 378 Phil. 727 (1999).
[42]
[43] 376 Phil. 252 (1999).
[44] The provision reads:
SEC. 57. The Special Agrarian Courts shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction over all petitions for the determination of just compensation to landowners, and the prosecution of all criminal offenses under this Act. The Rules of Court shall apply to all proceedings before the Special Agrarian Courts, unless modified by this Act.
The Special Agrarian Courts shall decide all appropriate cases under their special jurisdiction within thirty (30) days from submission of the case for decision.
[45] Supra note 43 at 262-263.
[46] Supra note 18 at 385-386.
[47] Referring to Presidential Decree No. 27
entitled Decreeing the Emancipation of Tenants from the Bondage of the Soil
Transferring to Them the Ownership of the Land They Till and Providing the
Instruments and Mechanism Therefor.
Approved
[48] Referring to Proclamation No. 131 entitled
Instituting a Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program. Approved
[49] Supra note 18 at 378.
[50] Hospicio de San Jose de Barili, Cebu City v. Department of Agrarian Reform, G.R. No. 140847, September 23, 2005, 470 SCRA 609.
[51] Supra note 18 at 374 citing People v. Cayat, 68 Phil. 12 (1939).
[52] Department of Environment and Natural Resources v. DENR Region 12 Employees, 456 Phil. 635 (2003).
[53] Petition, p. 140; rollo, p. 142.
[54]
[55]
[56] Camid
v. Office of the President, G.R. No. 161414,