Republic
of the
Supreme
Court
SECOND DIVISION
RICARDO RIZAL, POTENCIANA RIZAL, SATURNINA RIZAL,
ELENA RIZAL, and BENJAMIN
RIZAL, Petitioners,
- versus - LEONCIA NAREDO, ANASTACIO LIRIO, EDILBERTO
CANTAVIEJA, GLORIA CANTAVIEJA, CELSO CANTAVIEJA, and the HEIRS of MELANIE
CANTAVIEJA, Respondents. |
G.R.
No. 151898
Present: CARPIO, J., Chairperson, BRION, PEREZ, SERENO,
and REYES, JJ. Promulgated: March 14, 2012 |
x------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
REYES, J.:
Before this Court is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Decision[1] of
the Court of Appeals (CA) dated July 13, 2001 in CA-G.R. CV No. 26109, affirming
the decision of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 36, Calamba, Laguna which
dismissed the Complaint,[2]
docketed as Civil Case No. 1153-87-C[3] for
partition, recovery of shares with damages of Lot No. 252 on res
judicata.
Factual Antecedents
Herein petitioners Ricardo, Potenciana, Elena, Saturnina and Benjamin, all surnamed Rizal, commenced Civil Case No. 7836 against Matias Naredo
(Matias), Valentin Naredo (Valentin) and Juana de Leon (Juana) before the then
Court of First Instance (CFI) of Laguna involving the accretion of two (2) hectares
of land to Lot No. 454 of the Calamba Estate.
In a decision rendered on May 22, 1947, the
CFI ruled in favor of the petitioners. The CFI awarded the ownership of the two-hectare
accretion to the petitioners and ordered the defendants therein to vacate the said
land and to pay P500.00 a year from 1943 as reasonable rent for their
occupancy thereof. Both the CA and the Supreme Court upheld the decision.
To satisfy the money judgment in Civil
Case No. 7836, the provincial sheriff of Laguna levied
upon Lots Nos. 252 and 269 of the Calamba Estate, together with the house
erected on Lot No. 252. This Lot No. 252,
which is the subject of the controversy, was registered under Transfer
Certificate of Title (TCT) No. RT-488 (RT-3377 No.
12206) in the name of the Legal Heirs of Gervacia
Cantillano, of Parian, Calamba, Laguna. Several third-party claims
were filed, to wit: (a) by Leoncia Naredo (Leoncia) and Marcela Naredo
(Marcela), who are also heirs of Gervacia Cantillano over Lot No. 252; (b) by
Pedro Cantavieja, husband of Marcela over Lot No. 269; and (c) by Teodoro
Armesto over the house of mixed materials standing on Lot No. 252. After the petitioners posted the required
bond, the provincial sheriff proceeded with the auction sale on April 7, 1951. The petitioners were declared the highest
bidders. A final deed of sale was issued
to them on April 15, 1952.
On May 9, 1955, Marcela, Leoncia, Matias, Valentin, and Juana
instituted Civil Case No. 9908 before the CFI Branch 1, Laguna, questioning the
validity of the execution sale of Lots Nos. 252 and 269 and the house of mixed
materials on Lot No. 252. They claimed
that these properties were exempt from execution.
On December 8, 1955, the CFI declared
valid the execution sale of Lots Nos. 252 and 269 of the Calamba Estate in
favor of the petitioners, with a qualification that the petitioners only
acquired whatever rights, title or interests Matias, Valentin and Juana had in
Lot No. 252. The sale of the house of
mixed materials in Lot No. 252 was set aside considering that a waiver was
executed by the petitioners in favor of Juana.
Although the CFI ordered that the petitioners be placed in possession of
Lots Nos. 252 and 269 and Matias and Valentin be ejected therefrom, it did not
evict Marcela and Leoncia from Lot No. 252 since they were not parties to Civil
Case No. 7836.[4]
After
the aforesaid judgment in Civil Case No. 9908, the petitioners filed Civil Case
No. 36-C against Marcela and Leoncia for partition, accounting and recovery of
possession of Lot No. 252. The parties then
entered into a Compromise Agreement whereby the parties acknowledged that they
owned Lot No. 252 in common, with 3/5 thereof as the interest of the
petitioners and the other 2/5 belonging to therein defendants Marcela and
Leoncia. Said Compromise Agreement was
approved by the CFI Branch VI, Laguna, in an Order dated December 1, 1971.[5] The pertinent portions of the agreement read
as follows:
5. That the plaintiffs (herein petitioners) and the
defendants (herein respondents) agree that said parcel of land (Lot 252)
embraced in Transfer Certificate of Title 12206, and registered in the names of
the Legal Heirs of Gervacia Cantillano, is now owned in common and in undivided
shares of TWO-FIFTHS (2/5) for the defendants and THREE-FIFTHS (3/5) for the
plaintiffs;
6. That the plaintiffs and the defendants agree that
the subject parcel of land be actually partitioned as they have so caused the
survey and partition of the same per the hereto attached copy of the pertinent
subdivision survey plan, marked as Annex A hereof and made integral part of
this compromise agreement;
7. That
the plaintiffs and the defendants do hereby express their unqualified conformity
to the said partition and they hereby accept to their full and entire
satisfaction their respective determined shares in the subject parcel of land,
and they agree to have their respective determined portions, Two-Fifths (2/5)
for defendants and Three-Fifths (3/5) for plaintiffs, to be covered by
independent and separate certificates of title in their respective names.
8. That the plaintiffs agree to shoulder all the
expenses incurred in the partition and to pay all expenses and fees which may
be entailed in the issuance of the independent certificates of title in favor
of the respective parties by the proper Registry of Deeds;[6]
Ten years after or on August 11,
1981, Marcela and
Leoncia, assisted by their husbands,
instituted Civil Case No. 299-83-C assailing the Compromise Agreement. They claimed that said agreement
was a forgery and that their lawyer was
not duly authorized for the purpose. In
an Order dated July 6, 1984, the trial court dismissed the case without
prejudice to the plaintiffs failure to prosecute.
Thereafter, on September 26, 1984, Marcela and Leoncia instituted
Civil Case No. 792-84-C, for enforcement of judgment, partition and segregation
of shares with damages over Lot No. 252.
On July 6, 1985, the trial court dismissed the complaint on the ground
of prescription. No appeal was taken
therefrom.
On September 21, 1987, the petitioners filed a Complaint before
the RTC for the immediate segregation, partition and recovery of shares and
ownership of Lot No. 252, with damages. This
was docketed as Civil Case No. 1153-87-C.
However, on April 3, 1990, on the basis of the pleadings and exhibits,
the court a quo dismissed the
complaint because of res judicata. The trial court stated thus:
A perusal of this instant case and
Civil Case No. 792-84-C, (Exh. 1) will readily show that between these causes
of actions, there are (a) identity of parties; (b) identity of subject matter;
and (c) identity of cause of action. As
admitted by the parties, the judgment in Civil Case No. 792-84-C is now final
and executory. While there may appear a
difference in the forms of action, the same is irrelevant for purposes of determining res judicata.
It is a firmly established rule that a different remedy sought or a
diverse form
of action does not prevent the estoppel of the former adjudication.
x x x.[7]
Aggrieved, the petitioners appealed to
the CA, docketed as CA-G.R. CV No. 26109.
Unfortunately, the original records of the case were misplaced. After earnest efforts were made for the
reconstitution of the records of the case, the parties agreed to have the case submitted
for decision based on the documents submitted.[8]
In the now assailed decision,[9]
the CA dismissed the appeal. The CA found
that the appellants brief neither contained the required page references to
the records, as provided in Section 13 of Rule 44 of the Rules of Court; nor
was it specified, both in the prayer and in the body of the complaint, the
specific amounts of the petitioners claim for actual, moral, exemplary and compensatory
damages, as enunciated in Manchester
Development Corporation v. Court of Appeals.[10]
As
to the substantive issues raised in the complaint, the
CA ruled that the action for partition has been barred by res
judicata. It also held that the petitioners
no longer had any cause of action for partition because the co-ownership of the
parties over Lot No. 252 had ceased to exist by the Order of the CFI Branch VI,
Laguna on December 1, 1971.
Issues
In the
case at bar, the petitioners submit the following issues for this Courts consideration,
to wit:
A.
THE CA ERRED IN
DISMISSING THE APPEAL ON THE GROUND THAT THE PETITIONERS' APPEAL BRIEF FAILED
TO MAKE PAGE REFERENCES TO THE RECORD.
B.
THE CA ERRED IN
APPLYING THE RULING IN THE
C.
THE CA ERRED IN
DISMISSING THE APPEAL ON THE GROUND OF PRESCRIPTION AND RES
JUDICATA.
D.
THE RTC ERRED IN
DISMISSING THE ENTIRE CASE.[11]
Ruling and Discussions
We find no merit in the petition.
Failure
to observe the requirements under Section 13(a), Rule 44 of the 1997 Rules of
Court and to pay the correct docket fees is fatal to the appeal.
The
petitioners argue that the CA erred in dismissing their appeal for their
failure to indicate the page references to the records of the case pursuant to
Section 13(a), Rule 44[12]
of the Rules of Court. They invoke Section
6, Rule 1 of the 1997 Rules of Civil
Procedure which states that technical rules shall be liberally
construed in order to promote a
just, speedy and inexpensive disposition of every action and proceeding. They cite the case of Pacific Life Assurance Corporation v. Sison,[13] where it was held that an appeal should not be
dismissed on mere technicality.
It is settled that technical rules of
procedure are mere tools designed to facilitate the attainment of justice. Their strict and rigid application should be
relaxed when they hinder rather than promote substantial justice. Cases should as much as possible be resolved
on the merits, and not on mere technicalities.
The failure of the petitioners' appeal brief to contain page references
to the records is a formal defect which may be considered as minor, if not
negligible.[14]
However,
while this Court may be lenient in some instances on formal defects of
pleadings filed with the court, it could not close its eyes when a litigant
continuously ignores technical rules, to the point of wanton disregard of the
rationale behind those rules. In fact,
this Court has consistently affirmed the importance of complying with the
requirements in Section 13(a), Rule 44[15]
of the Rules of Court in many of its decisions, particularly in Mendoza v. United Coconut Planters Bank,
Inc.,[16] where the Court explicitly stated that:
Rule 44 and 50 of the 1997 Rules of
Civil Procedure are designed for the proper and prompt disposition of cases
before the Court of Appeals Rules of Procedure exist for a noble purpose, and
to disregard such rules in the guise of liberal construction would be to defeat
such purpose. The Court of Appeals noted
in its Resolution denying petitioners motion for reconsideration that despite
ample opportunity, petitioners never attempted to file an amended appellants
brief correcting the deficiencies of their brief, but obstinately clung to
their argument that their Appellants Brief substantially complied with the
rules. Such obstinacy is incongruous with their plea for liberality in
construing the rules on appeal.
De
Liano v. Court of Appeals held:
Some may argue that adherence to
these formal requirements serves but a meaningless purpose, that these may be
ignored with little risk in the smug certainty that liberality in the
application of procedural rules can always be relied upon to remedy the
infirmities. This misses the point. We are not martinets; in appropriate
instances, we are prepared to listen to reason, and to give relief as the
circumstances may warrant. However, when
the error relates to something so elementary as to be inexcusable, our
discretion becomes nothing more than an exercise in frustration. It comes as an unpleasant shock to us that
the contents of an appellants brief should still be raised as an issue
now. There is nothing arcane or novel
about the provisions of Section 13, Rule 44.
The rule governing the contents of appellants briefs has existed since
the old Rules of Court, which took effect on July 1, 1940, as well as the Revised Rules of Court, which took
effect on January 1, 1964, until they
were superseded by the present 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure. The provisions were substantially preserved,
with few revisions.[17]
Moreover, the petitioners also failed
to pay the correct docket fees; in which case, jurisdiction did
not vest in the trial court. In Siapno v. Manalo,[18] this Court has made it
abundantly clear that any complaint, petition, answer and other similar
pleading, which does not specify both in its body and prayer the amount of
damages being claimed, should not be accepted or admitted, or should be
expunged from the records, as may be the case.[19]
The petitioners alleged in their
complaint in Civil Case No. 1153-87-C[20]
that they suffered actual loss from the time they had been deprived of their
share of 3/5 on Lot No. 252 by the respondents, as well as moral and exemplary
damages, attorney's fees and litigation expenses. However, the only claims they specified in
their prayer were for the attorney's fees in the amount of P30,000.00 and
P500.00 for every court appearance of the counsel.
In
Siapno,[21]
the complaint alleged in its body the aggregate sum of P4,500,000 in
moral and exemplary damages and attorney's fees, but the prayer portion did not
mention these claims, nor did it even pray for the payment of damages. This Court held that such a complaint should be
dismissed outright; or if already admitted, should be expunged from the
records. The Court explained that the
rule requiring the amount of damages claimed to be specified not only in the body of the pleading but also in its prayer
portion was intended to put an
end to the then prevailing practice of lawyers where the damages prayed for were
recited only in the body of the complaint, but not in the prayer, in order to
evade payment of the correct filing fees.
As held by the Court in
To put a stop to
this irregularity, henceforth all complaints, petitions, answers and other
similar pleadings should specify the amount of damages being prayed for not
only in the body of the pleading but also in the prayer, and said damages shall
be considered in the assessment of the filing fees in any case. Any pleading that fails to comply with this
requirement shall not be accepted nor admitted, or shall otherwise be expunged
from the record.[23]
In Sun
Insurance Office Ltd. v. Judge Asuncion,[24] the
Court laid down the following rules as regards the payment of filing fees:
1.
It
is not simply the filing of the complaint or appropriate initiatory pleading,
but the payment of the prescribed docket fee that vests a trial court with
jurisdiction over the subject matter or nature of the action. Where the filing of the initiatory pleading
is not accompanied by payment of the docket fee, the court may allow payment of
the fee within a reasonable time but in no case beyond the applicable
prescriptive or reglementary period.
2.
The same rule applies to permissive counterclaims,
third-party claims and similar pleadings, which shall not be considered filed
until and unless the filing fee prescribed therefor is paid. The court may also allow
payment of said fee within a reasonable time but also in no case beyond its applicable
prescriptive or reglementary period.
3.
Where
the trial court acquires jurisdiction over a claim by the filing of the
appropriate pleading and payment of the prescribed filing fee but,
subsequently, the judgment awards a claim not specified in the pleading, or if
specified the same has been left for determination by the court, the additional
filing fee therefor shall constitute a lien on the judgment. It shall be the
responsibility of the Clerk of Court or his duly authorized deputy to enforce
said lien and assess and collect the additional fee.[25]
It cannot be gainsaid from the above guidelines that, with
the exception of pauper litigants,[26]
without the payment of the correct docket or filing fees within the
reglementary period, jurisdiction over the subject-matter or nature of the
action will not vest in the trial court.
In fact, a pauper litigant may still have to pay the docket fees later, by
way of a lien on the monetary or property judgment that may
accrue to him. Clearly, the
flexibility or liberality of the rules sought by the petitioners cannot apply in
the instant case.
Action is dismissible for res
judicata and lack of cause of action.
The petitioners
vehemently deny that the partition of Lot No. 252 has already
been settled in Civil Case No. 36-C. They
insist that the mere determination of the proportionate shares of the parties,
as well as their respective portions of the aforesaid lot in the Compromise
Agreement is not enough. They allege that
Lot No. 252 is still covered by the old title, TCT No. 12206, in the name of the
heirs of Gervacia Cantillano. The finality
of the decision in Civil Case No. 36-C did not cause Lot No. 252 to divide
itself in accordance with the subdivision plan.
They assert that there must be an actual and exclusive possession of
their respective portions in the plan and titles issued to each of them
accordingly.[27]
The petitioners contentions are
untenable.
Article
484 of the New Civil Code
provides that there is co-ownership whenever the ownership of an undivided
thing or right belongs to different persons.
Thus, on the one hand, a co-owner of an undivided parcel of land is an
owner of the whole, and over the whole he exercises the right of dominion, but
he is at the same time the owner of a portion which is truly abstract. On the other hand, there is no co-ownership
when the different portions owned by different people are already concretely
determined and separately identifiable, even if not yet technically described.[28]
Pursuant
to Article 494 of the Civil Code, no co-owner is obliged to remain in the
co-ownership, and his proper remedy is
an action for partition under Rule 69
of the Rules of Court, which he may bring at anytime in so far as his share is
concerned. Article
1079 of the Civil Code defines partition as the separation,
division and assignment of a thing held in common among those to whom it may
belong. It has been held that the fact
that the agreement of partition lacks the technical description of the parties'
respective portions or that the subject property was then still embraced by the
same certificate of title could not legally prevent a partition,
where the different portions allotted to each were determined and became
separately identifiable.[29]
The partition of Lot No. 252 was the
result of the approved Compromise Agreement in Civil Case No. 36-C, which was immediately
final and executory. Absent any showing
that said Compromise Agreement was vitiated by fraud, mistake or duress, the court
cannot set aside a judgment based on compromise.[30] It is axiomatic that a
compromise agreement once approved by the court settles the rights of the
parties and has the force of res
judicata. It
cannot be disturbed except on the ground of vice of consent or forgery.[31]
Of
equal significance is the fact that the
compromise judgment in Civil Case No. 36-C settled as well the question of
which specific portions of Lot No. 252 accrued to the parties separately as
their proportionate shares therein. Through their subdivision survey plan, marked as Annex A[32] of the Compromise Agreement and made an integral part
thereof, the parties segregated and
separately assigned to themselves distinct portions of Lot No. 252. The partition was immediately executory,[33] having been accomplished and completed on December 1, 1971
when judgment was rendered approving the same.
The CA was correct when it stated
that no co-ownership exist when the different portions owned by different
people are already concretely determined and separately identifiable, even if
not yet technically described.[34]
It
bears to note that the parties even acknowledged in Paragraph 7 of the Compromise
Agreement that they had accepted their respective determined shares in the subject parcel of land,
and they agree to have
their respective determined portions, Two-Fifths (2/5) for defendants and
Three-Fifths (3/5) for plaintiffs, to be covered by independent and separate
certificates of title in their respective names.[35]
The petitioners slept on their rights under the partition
agreement.
To recall, the petitioners
obtained part ownership of Lot No. 252 as the highest bidders at the execution
sale of Lots Nos. 252 and 269 in Civil Case No. 7836, whereas respondents Marcela
and Leoncia as heirs of Gervacia Cantillano retained their 2/5 interest in Lot
No. 252 since they were not impleaded in the said case. As buyers of land, the petitioners had the
right to pursue their share therein all the way to the issuance of their
separate title and recovery of possession of their portion, beginning with the filing
of Civil Case No. 36-C.
Concerning the registration with
the Registry of Deeds of a judgment of partition of land, Section 81
of Presidential Decree (P.D.) No. 1529 provides that after the
entry of the final judgment of partition, a copy of such final judgment shall
be filed and registered. If the land is
set off to the owner in severalty, each owner shall be entitled to have his
certificate entered showing the share set off to him in severalty, and to
receive an owner's duplicate thereof.[36]
Accordingly, Paragraph
8 of the Compromise Agreement
provided that the petitioners shall shoulder all the expenses incurred in the
partition and to pay all expenses and fees which may be incurred in the issuance of the independent certificates of
title in favor of the respective parties by the proper Registry of Deeds.[37] Unfortunately,
the records do not disclose that the petitioners neither filed
and registered with the Register of Deeds a certified copy of the final
judgment of partition in Civil Case No.
36-C, nor did they perform
or cause to be performed all further acts requisite for the cancellation of TCT
No. 12206 and the issuance of the parties' separate titles over their assigned
portions in Lot No. 252. The only entry
in TCT No. 12206,[38]
prior to the recording on June 13, 1979
of the issuance to the petitioners of a
second duplicate copy of TCT No. 12206, is the annotation
in April 1952 of the execution sale of Lot No. 252 to the petitioners.
Section 6, Rule
39 of the Rules of Court provides:
Sec.
6. Execution by
motion or by independent action.
A final and executory judgment or order may be executed on motion within five
(5) years from the date of its entry. After
the lapse of such time, and before it is barred by the statute of limitations,
a judgment may be
enforced by action. The revived judgment
may also be enforced by motion within five (5) years from the date of its entry
and thereafter by action before it is barred by the statute of limitations.
A final and executory
judgment may be executed by the prevailing party as a matter of right by mere
motion within five (5) years from the entry of judgment,
failing which the judgment is reduced to a mere right of action which must be enforced by the institution of a complaint
in a regular court within ten (10) years from finality of the judgment.[39]
In the instant case, there is no
showing that after the judgment in Civil Case No. 36-C, the petitioners filed a
motion to execute the same during the first five
(5) years after its finality, or
within the succeeding five (5)
years, by a civil action to revive the
judgment, before it would have been barred by the statute of limitations.[40]
An action for revival of judgment
is governed by Articles 1144(3) and 1152 of the Civil Code, and Section 6, Rule
39 of the Rules of Court. Articles 1144(3)
and 1152 of the Code state:
Art. 1144. The following actions must be brought within ten years from the time the right of action accrues:
x
x x x
Art. 1152. The
period for prescription of actions to demand the fulfillment of obligations
declared by a judgment commences from the time the judgment became final.
When the petitioners filed Civil Case No.
1153-87-C on September 21, 1987, it was not purportedly to revive the judgment in
Civil Case No. 36-C. It was apparently an action for Partition, Recovery of Shares with Damages, but nonetheless citing as basis of the Compromise Agreement
in Civil Case No. 36-C. The petitioners wanted
to accomplish through an entirely new action what was already adjudicated in
Civil Case No. 36-C, rendered 17 years earlier, but which they inexplicably failed
to enforce. The petitioners do not allege that they tried to execute
the compromise judgment in Civil Case No. 36-C either by motion or by action to
revive judgment within the prescriptive period.
Absent any proof that the respondents resorted to dilatory schemes and
maneuvers to prevent the execution of the Compromise Agreement,[41] and contrary to the petitioners
gratuitous assertion in paragraph VIII of their complaint in Civil Case No.
1153-87-C, we fail to see how the mere filing by the respondents of Civil Case
No. 299-83-C on August 11, 1981 could have in any way prevented or impeded the petitioners from
executing the judgment in Civil Case No. 36-C.
We thus sustain
the respondents' affirmative defenses
of res judicata
and lack of cause of action, and uphold the appellate and trial courts'
rejection of the petitioners' ostensible attempt to
revive the already stale judgment in Civil
Case No. 36-C through an entirely new action for partition. The Court agrees with the CA
when it explained:
a. The judgment that effected res judicata is not so much the dismissal of the case due to prescription in Civil Case No. 792-84-C. What more appropriately leads to res judicata to this case is the final Compromise Judgment in Civil Case No. 36-C. All the elements of res judicata are present, a final decision on the merits, between the same parties, on the same subject matter and cause of action. x x x.
b. The present complaint states no cause of action. There is no doubt that appellants prayer for partition is anchored on their supposed co-ownership of Lot No. 252 plus the added fact that it is still covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 12206. However, appellants must have lost track of the fact that at the time the present action was commenced, partition was no longer an available remedy in their favor simply because their pretended co-ownership had already ceased to exist. Their 3/5 shares had already been segregated and determined in the subdivision plan mentioned in the Compromise Judgment and have, in fact, accepted their share to their satisfaction. In De la Cruz vs. Cruz, 32 SCRA 307 [1970], the Supreme Court, through Justice J.B.L. Reyes, said that co-ownership no longer exists over the whole parcel of land where the portions owned by the parties are already determined and identifiable. That said respective portions are not technically described, or that said portions are still embraced in one and the same certificate of title, does not make said portions less determinable, or identifiable, or distinguishable, one from the other, nor that dominion over its portions rest exclusively in their respective owners.[42]
Nonetheless, it must be made clear that nothing in this
decision shall be understood to mean that the petitioners have lost their title
or interest in the subject property. The
final (definite) deed of sale executed by the sheriff in favor of the
petitioners pursuant to the execution sale in Civil Case No. 7836, which was
duly registered in TCT No. 12206 on April 15, 1952, constituted an effective
conveyance to the petitioners of the property sold therein and entitled them to
possession thereof,[43] although in the subsequent decision
in 1955 in Civil Case No. 9908, the respondents 2/5 interest in the property
was recognized, thereby amending the extent of the petitioners title. The said judgment has not been registered,
and neither was the compromise judgment of partition in Civil Case No. 36-C
dated December 1, 1971, which established the parties respective specific
portions in Lot No. 252. Thus, as a
prerequisite to the issuance of a new title in the name of the petitioners over
their 3/5 allocated portion, we believe that Section 81[44] of P.D. No. 1529 does not bar
the belated registration of the compromise judgment in Civil Case No. 36-C.
WHEREFORE,
premises considered, the petition is DENIED. The Decision of the Court of Appeals dated July
13, 2001 in CA-G.R. CV No. 26109 is AFFIRMED.
SO
ORDERED.
BIENVENIDO L. REYES
Associate
Justice
WE CONCUR:
ANTONIO T.
CARPIO
Associate Justice
ARTURO D. BRION Associate Justice |
JOSE Associate Justice |
MARIA
Associate Justice
A T T E S T A
T I O N
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
Courts Division.
ANTONIO T.
CARPIO
Associate Justice
Chairperson, Second Division
C E R T I F I
C A T I O N
Pursuant
to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution and the Division Chairperson's
Attestation, I certify that the conclusions in the above Decision had been
reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the
opinion of the Courts Division.
RENATO C.
CORONA
Chief Justice
[1] Penned by Justice Conrado M. Vasquez, Jr., with Justices Martin S. Villarama (now a member of this Court) and Sergio L. Pestao, concurring; rollo, pp. 53-66.
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9] Supra
note 1.
[10] 233 Phil. 579 (1987).
[11] Rollo, p. 19.
[12] Rule 44, Section 13. Contents of appellants brief. The appellants brief shall contain, in the order herein indicated, the following:
(a) A subject index of the matter in
the brief with a digest of the arguments and page references, and a table of
cases alphabetically arranged, textbooks and statutes cited with references to
the pages where they are cited;
[13] 359
Phil. 332 (1998).
[14] Tan v. Planters Products, Inc., G.R. No. 172239, March 28,
2008, 550 SCRA 287, 301.
[15] Supra note 12.
[16] G.R.
No. 165575, February 2, 2011, 641 SCRA 333.
[17] Id.
at 348-349, citing Lumbre v. CA, G.R.
No. 160717, July 23, 2008, 559 SCRA 419, 431 and 434; Sps. Del Rosario v. CA, 311 Phil. 630 (1995; De Liano v. CA, 421 Phil. 1033, 1046-1047 (2001).
[18] 505
Phil. 430 (2005).
[19]
[20] Rollo, pp. 34-39.
[21] Supra
note 18.
[22] Supra note 10.
[23]
[24] 252
Phil. 280 (1989).
[25]
[26] Section
16, Rule 141 of the Rules of Court states that the legal fees shall be a lien
on the monetary or property judgment in favor of the pauper-litigant.
[27] Del Blanco v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 240 Phil. 55, 67 (1987). (Citation omitted)
[28] Spouses Si v. Court of Appeals, 396
Phil. 819, 828 (2000). (Citation omitted)
[29] De la Cruz v. Cruz, et al., 143 Phil.
230, 234 (1970).
[30] Republic of the Philippines v. Court of
Appeals, 357 Phil. 174, 184 (1998), citing De Guzman v. Court of Appeals, 222 Phil. 236, 242 (1985).
[31] CIVIL CODE OF THE
[32] Rollo, p. 82.
[33] Pamintuan, et al.
v.
Muoz, et al., 131 Phil. 213, 216 (1968); The
[34] Supra
note 29.
[35] Rollo, p. 82.
[36] Section
81. Judgment of partition. In proceedings for partition of registered land,
after the entry of the final judgment of partition, a copy of such final
judgment, certified by the clerk of court rendering the same, shall be filed
and registered; thereupon, if the land is set off to the owner in severalty,
each owner shall be entitled to have his certificate entered showing the share
set off to him in severalty, and to receive an owner's duplicate thereof.
[37]
[38] Rollo, pp. 85-87.
[39] Villeza v. German Management and Services, Inc.,
G.R. No. 182937, August 9, 2010, 627 SCRA 425, 431.
[40] Umali v. Judge Coquia, 244 Phil. 159, 164, citing Demetriou v. Lesaca, 63 Phil. 112
(1936); Republic v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. L-43179,
June 27, 1985, 137 SCRA 220, 227; Luzon Security Company v.
Intermediate Appellate Court, 157 SCRA 652 (1987).
[41] 221 Phil. 685, 695 (1985).
[42] Rollo, pp. 64-65.
[43] Gonzalez v. Calimbas and Poblete, 51
Phil. 355, 358 (1927).
[44] Supra
note 36.