THIRD DIVISION
DEPARTMENT OF AGRARIAN REFORM (DAR), represented
by HON. NASSER C. PANGANDAMAN, in his
capacity as DAR OIC-Secretary, Petitioner,
- versus - CARMEN S. TONGSON, Respondent. |
G.R. No. 171674 Present:
Ynares-Santiago, J., Chairperson, CHICO-NAZARIO, velasco, jr., nachura, and PERALTA, JJ. Promulgated: August 4, 2009
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I O N PERALTA, J.: |
Before this Court is a Petition for
Review on Certiorari[1] under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court
seeking to set aside the August 30, 2005 Decision[2]
and February 10, 2006 Resolution[3] of
the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 64176.
The facts of
the case:
Respondent Carmen S. Tongson is the
owner of four parcels of agricultural land located in Davao City. Three of these properties are located in
Bayabas, Toril and the other located at Wangan, Calinan. Since the properties
were primarily devoted to rice and corn under a system of lease-tenancy agreement,
the same were brought under the coverage of Presidential Decree No. 27[4] (PD
27), otherwise known as Tenants Emancipation Decree.[5]
Sometime in 1988, the petitioner
Department of Agrarian Reform offered to pay respondent P9,000.00 per
hectare for her properties in Bayabas, Toril. Respondent, however, did not act
on the offer as she was then leaving for the
In 1989, upon her return to Davao,
respondent was surprised to learn that, except for the portions devoted to
orchards and planted with coconuts, all her properties in Wangan, Calinan and
in Bayabas, Toril were taken over by petitioner.[7]
Respondent alleged that petitioner
summarily took her properties without any notice and had fixed the acquisition
cost for the same at P1,500.00 per hectare for those located at Bayabas,
Toril and P800.00 per hectare for the one located at Wangan, Calinan.
Lastly, respondent alleged that petitioner subsequently issued Emancipation
Patents to the farmer-beneficiaries.[8]
Petitioner
denied the allegations and averred that the properties were placed under the
coverage of the agrarian reform program; hence, not summarily taken. Likewise,
petitioner claimed that respondent was notified of the proceedings when they
made the initial offer to her. Lastly, petitioner claimed that the acquisition
cost was arrived at based on PD 27 in relation to Executive Order No. 228[9]
(EO 228), and that the subsequent issuance of Emancipation Patents was part of
the implementation of the program.[10]
On October 25, 1993, respondent filed
a Petition[11] for the
determination of just compensation
before the Special Agrarian Court (SAC), Branch 15, of the Regional Trial Court
of Davao City. The same was docketed as
Civil Case No. 22,408-93.
During the trial, the SAC formed a Board
of Commissioners to appraise the value of the properties. Thereafter, the
commissioners using the market-date approach submitted their Report.[12]
Taking into consideration the value of the neighboring properties based on sale
offerings and sale transactions, the Commissioners fixed the Bayabas properties
at P75,000.00 per hectare and the Wangan property at P90,000.00
per hectare.[13]
On March 17, 1999, after due
deliberation and on the basis of the Commissioner’s Report, the SAC rendered a
Decision[14] the
dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered ordering the respondent [herein petitioner] to pay the petitioner [herein respondent] the following sums:
1. Twenty-five thousand pesos per hectare for the thirty hectares in Bayabas, Toril the respondent got and distributed to beneficiaries, plus legal interest to compute from June 1, 1989 until fully paid.
2. Forty thousand pesos per hectare for the twenty hectares in Wangan, Calinan that the respondent got and distributed to beneficiaries, plus legal interest to compute from June 1, 1989 until fully paid.
SO ORDERED.[15]
Petitioner then appealed to the CA via
Rule 41 of the Rules of Court arguing in the main that the SAC erred in not
applying the provisions of PD 27 and EO 228 in determining the value of the
properties in dispute.[16]
On August 30, 2005, the CA rendered a
Decision, the dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the appeal is hereby DISMISSED subject to modification regarding the commissioners’ fees, the assailed decision is hereby AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.[17]
The CA ruled that Republic Act No.
6657[18]
(RA 6657), or the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law of 1988, was applicable in
the determination of just compensation. It ruled that RA 6657 made all laws
pertaining to the agrarian reform program to have suppletory application only.[19] Furthermore,
the CA held that RA 6657 brought under its coverage all agricultural lands,
including those where the process of agrarian reform coverage was started under
PD 27 but was not completed under the decree.[20]
Petitioner filed a Motion for
Reconsideration,[21] which
was denied by the CA in the Resolution[22]
dated February 10, 2006.
Hence, herein appeal, with petitioner
raising a lone assignment of error, to wit:
THE
TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT CONSIDERED FACTORS NOT THEN EXISTING AT THE TIME OF
ITS TAKING, THUS, UNDULY AND TREMENDOUSLY INCREASED THE VALUATION AND,
RESULTANTLY, THE AMOUNT, AS FIXED BELOW, WAS EXORBITANT, AN OVERPRICE, WHEN
CONSIDERED IN THE LIGHT OF THE FACTS AND CIRCUMSTANCES THEN OCCURING ON OCTOBER
21, 1972.[23]
The petition is bereft of merit.
Petitioner is adamant that for
purposes of computation of just compensation the same should have been based on
PD 27 in relation to EO 228.
The pertinent portions of PD 27 read:
x x x x
For the purpose of determining
the cost of the land to be transferred to the tenant-farmer
pursuant to this Decree, the value of
the land shall be equivalent to two and one half (2-1/2)
times the average harvest of three normal crop years immediately preceding the
promulgation of this Decree.
The total cost of the land,
including interest at the rate of six (6) per centum per annum, shall be paid
by the tenant in fifteen (15) years of fifteen (15) equal annual
amortizations. (Emphasis supplied)
Implementing the formula under PD 27, EO 228
states:
x x x x
SECTION 2. Henceforth, the
valuation of rice and corn lands covered by P.D. No. 27 shall be based
on the average gross production determined by the Barangay Committee on Land
Production in accordance with Department Memorandum Circular No. 26, series of
1973 and related issuances and regulation of the Department of Agrarian
Reform. The average gross production per hectare shall be multiplied by two and
a half (2.5), the product of which shall be multiplied by Thirty-Five Pesos (P35.00),
the government support price for one cavan of 50 kilos of palay on October 21, 1972, or Thirty-One Pesos (P31.00),
the government support price for one cavan of 50 kilos of corn on October 21,
1972, and the amount arrived at shall be
the value of the rice and corn land, as the case may be, for the purpose of
determining its cost to the farmer and compensation to the landowner.
On the other hand, respondent
contends that RA 6657 should be the basis for the computation of just
compensation. Section 17 of which reads:
Sec. 17. Determination of Just Compensation. – In determining just compensation, the cost of acquisition of the land, the current value of the like properties, its nature, actual use and income, the sworn valuation by the owner, the tax declarations, and the assessment made by government assessors shall be considered. The social and economic benefits contributed by the farmers and the farm workers and by the Government to the property as well as the non-payment of taxes or loans secured from any government financing institution on the said land shall be considered as additional factors to determine its valuation.[24]
Clearly, PD 27 and RA 6657 provide
different factors for the computation of just compensation. The former uses
average crop harvest as a consideration, whereas, the latter uses the current
value of like properties, its nature, actual use and income, the sworn
valuation by the owner, the tax declarations, and the assessment made by
government assessors as factors for consideration in determining just
compensation.
In the case at bar, it is undisputed by
the parties that the lands were acquired under PD 27. Moreover, it is also
undisputed that just compensation has not yet been settled prior to the passage
of RA 6657. Thus, the issue to be determined is what law shall govern in the
determination of just compensation.
The issue, once the subject of a number
of cases, has finally been settled by this Court in recent years. It has been
ruled that, if just compensation was not settled prior to the passage of RA
6657, it should be computed in accordance with the said law, although the
property was acquired under PD 27.[25]
In Landbank of the Philippines v.
Carolina B. Vda. de Abello, et al.,[26]
this Court ruled:
Under
the factual circumstances of the case, the agrarian reform process is still
incomplete as the just compensation to be paid respondents has yet to be
settled. Considering the passage RA 6657 before the completion of this
process, the just compensation should be determined and the process concluded
under the said law. Indeed, this
Court has time and again upheld the applicability of RA 6657, with PD 27 and EO
228 having only suppletory effect, conformably with our ruling in
Likewise, in Land Bank of the
Philippines vs. Heirs of Angel T. Domingo,[27] this
Court ruled:
In Land Bank v. Natividad, the Court held that the determination
of just compensation “in accordance with RA 6657, and not PD 27 and EO 228, is
especially imperative considering that just compensation should be the full and
fair equivalent of the property taken from its owner by the expropriator, the
equivalent being real, substantial, full and ample.” In this same case,
this Court also had the occasion to discuss the just compensation for PD 27
lands, thus:
Land Bank’s contention that the property was
acquired for purposes of agrarian reform on October 21, 1972, the time of the
effectivity of PD 27, ergo just compensation should be based on the value of
the property as of that time and not at the time of possession in 1993, is
likewise erroneous. In Office of the President, Malacañang,
To be sure, the foregoing doctrine
can also be found in Landbank of the Philippines v. Josefina Dumlao et al[28]
and Meneses v. Secretary of Agrarian Reform.[29]
In sum, since the lands in dispute
were taken under PD 27 and just compensation has not yet been settled prior to
the passage of RA 6657, the latter law should be made applicable in conformity
with this Court’s ruling in the abovementioned cases.
The last issue to be resolved then is
when was their actual “taking”? The same has already been settled in Domingo
where this Court ruled:
LBP’s contention that the property was taken on 21 October 1972, the date of effectivity of PD 27, thus just compensation should be computed based on the GSP in 1972, is erroneous. The date of taking of the subject land for purposes of computing just compensation should be reckoned from the issuance dates of the emancipation patents. An emancipation patent constitutes the conclusive authority for the issuance of a Transfer Certificate of Title in the name of the grantee. It is from the issuance of an emancipation patent that the grantee can acquire the vested right of ownership in the landholding, subject to the payment of just compensation to the landowner.[30]
Hence, it is the date of the issuance
of emancipation patents that should serve as the reckoning point for purposes
of computation of just compensation. Copies of the emancipation patents issued
to the farmer-beneficiaries, however, have not been attached
to the records of the case.
Except in
certain portions[31] of the
RTC decision where one can infer that the emancipation patents were issued in
1989, this Court is not certain of the exact date thereof. Hence, this Court is
constrained to remand the case back to the SAC for receipt of evidence as to the
date of the grant of the emancipation patents, which date shall serve as the
reckoning point for the computation of just compensation due respondent.
WHEREFORE, premises considered,
the August 30, 2005 Decision and February 10, 2006 Resolution of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 64176 are hereby AFFIRMED. The records of the
case is ordered REMANDED to the Special Agrarian Court, Branch 15, of
the Regional Trial Court of Davao City, for further reception of evidence as to
the date of the grant of the emancipation patents which shall serve as the
basis for the computation of just compensation in accordance with the
market-data approach pursuant to Republic Act No. 6657.
SO ORDERED.
DIOSDADO
M. PERALTA
Associate
Justice
WE CONCUR:
CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO
Associate Justice
Chairperson
MINITA
V. CHICO-NAZARIO PRESBITERO
J. VELASCO, JR.
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
ANTONIO EDUARDO B. NACHURA
Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I attest that the
conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in consultation before the
case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.
CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO
Associate
Justice
Third
Division, Chairperson
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the
Constitution and the Division Chairperson’s Attestation, I certify 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’s Division.
REYNATO
S. PUNO
Chief Justice
[1] Rollo, pp. 8-18
[2] Penned by Associate Justice Rodrigo F. Lim, Jr., with Associate Justices Arturo G. Tayag and Normandie B. Pizarro concurring; id. at 20-32.
[3] Rollo, pp. 35-36.
[4] 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; October 21, 1972.
[5] Rollo, p. 21.
[6] Id. at 22.
[7] Id.
[8] Id.
[9] DECLARING FULL LAND OWNERSHIP TO QUALIFIED FARMER-BENEFICIARIES COVERED BY PRESIDENTIAL DECREE NO. 27; DETERMINING THE VALUE OF THE REMANING UNVLAUED RICE AND CORN LANDS SUBJECT OF P.D. 27; AND PROVIDING FOR THE MANNER OF PAYMENT BY THE FARMER-BENEFICIARY AND MODE OF COMPENSATION TO THE LAND OWNER.
[10] Rollo, pp. 23-24 .
[11] Records, pp. 1-4.
[12] Id. at 141-144.
[13] Rollo, p. 24.
[14] CA rollo, pp. 32-38.
[15] Id. at 38.
[16] Rollo, p. 24.
[17] Id. at 32.
[18] Effective June 15, 1988.
[19] Rollo, p. 26.
[20] Id. at 27.
[21] Id . at 41-45.
[22] Supra note 3.
[23] Rollo, p. 14.
[24] Emphasis supplied.
[25] Land
Bank of the Philippines v. Josefina Dumlao, et al., G.R. No. 167809,
[26] G.R. No. 168631,
[27] G.R. No. 168533, February 4, 2008, 543 SCRA 627, 640. (Emphasis supplied.)
[28] Supra note 25.
[29] G.R. No. 156304,
[30] Supra note 27, at 642. (Emphasis supplied.)
[31] 10. That from 1989 when the titles of the petitioners were cancelled and emancipation patents given to beneficiaries up to 1993 when this case was filed, respondent did not even try to confer with the petitioner regarding just compensation.
x x x x
15. That the unjust taking of the petitioner’s lands happened in 1989 hence the petitioner is entitled to legal interest from 1989 until respondent pays in full the purchase price. (CA rollo, pp. 35-36)