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PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

EN BANC

[G.R. No. L-25314. February 10, 1968.]

THE MUNICIPALITY OF TACURONG, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. ROSARIO ABRAGAN, ET AL., Defendants-Appellees.

Estanislao V. Valdez, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Condrado S. Gonzales for Defendants-Appellees.


SYLLABUS


1. PLEADINGS AND PRACTICE; COMPLAINT; CAUSE OF ACTION; SUFFICIENCY THEREOF; MATTERS OF DEFENSE NEED NOT BE ALLEGED. — There is a sufficient allegation of a cause of action in a complaint for the recovery of a parcel of land by the Municipality of Tacurong, Cotabato so that the same may be devoted to the purpose reserved by Executive Proclamation No. 351 where the complaint sufficiently alleges that said Executive Proclamation had reserved the land in question for Municipal Park Site purposes. Though Executive Proclamation No. 351 provides for compensation and/or removal of improvements to occupants for their constructions on the lot in question, fulfillment of this right need not be alleged in the complaint for said right is a matter for the occupants to plead as a defense, in their answer and during the trial on the merits.

2. ID.; ID.; DISMISSAL ON GROUND THAT IT DOES NOT CONTAIN OFFER OF PAYMENT. — The lower court erred to have considered that the offer of payment is precedent to the enforceability of the proclamation. The cited position of the proclamation does not speak only of compensation but adds "and/or removal of improvements," thereby indicating that payment of compensation does not always have to take place. It is for the defendants, therefore, to show that they are entitled to compensation and recovery.

3. EVIDENCE; JUDICIAL NOTICE OF EXECUTIVE PROCLAMATIONS. — The lower court committed no error in taking judicial notice of Executive Proclamation No. 351 because Executive Proclamations are among the matters within judicial notice under Section 1, Rule 129 of the Rules of Court.


D E C I S I O N


BENGZON, J.P., J.:


On October 9, 1956, Lot No. 6001, PLS-73, situated in the Municipality of Tacurong, Cotabato and formerly part of the public domain, was declared by Executive Proclamation No. 351, as land reserved for Municipal Site Purposes and withdrawn from sale or resettlement. Portions of said land were then occupied by Rosario Abragan, Ramona Pirales, Teofilo Apilado, Ester Apilado, all for residential purposes, and by the Tacurong Evangelical Church, for religious purposes.

Years later, on August 29, 1961, the Municipality of Tacurong, through Atty. Estanislao Valdez, Secretary to the Mayor, filed before the Court of First Instance of Cotabato, a complaint for recovery of possession of the above-stated land against said occupants after the latter had allegedly refused repeated demands of the municipality for them to vacate the land so that the same may be devoted to the purpose reserved by the proclamation.

The defendants sought on September 18, 1961, to dismiss the complaint, alleging that it stated no cause of action because Executive Proclamation No. 351 provides for compensation to occupants for their constructions; and that there was no allegation of any offer or refusal of compensation prior to the filing of the action. Defendants also claimed that the complaint should have been filed by the Solicitor General or any attorney authorized by law.

The court, on February 28, 1962, ruled that the complaint had a sufficient cause of action and pointed out that the municipality could engage its own counsel to file the case on its behalf.

On April 5, 1962, however, defendants filed a motion for reconsideration citing a particular portion of the Proclamation which provides: "To protect and safeguard the interests of certain occupants who in good faith have introduced improvements in the reservation, the Municipality of Tacurong shall make proper arrangements for the compensation and/or removal of said improvements." These "arrangements for compensation" were advanced as conditions precedent to the filing of the complaint and, since no allegation of fulfillment of such conditions was made, defendants maintained that the complaint did not state a cause of action.

Acting thereon, the court of first instance dismissed the case on the ground that the complaint did not allege the conditions precedent to the enforcement of the Executive Proclamation. The same court denied the plaintiff’s urgent motion for reconsideration, rejecting plaintiff’s argument that the contents of the proclamation should not have been considered, with the observation that the Presidential Proclamation is a matter of which judicial notice may be taken.

The plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeals which in turn certified the case to Us on questions purely of law.

The purely legal questions are on the sufficiency of the cause of action alleged in the complaint and the propriety of the court’s having taken judicial notice of the Executive Proclamation.

As a ground for dismissal, lack of a cause of action must appear on the face of the complaint. And thus to determine whether a complaint states a cause of action, only facts alleged in the complaint, and no other, should be considered. 1 The complaint at bar after citing the Executive Proclamation, alleges among other things that:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"In view of the desire of the Municipality of Tacurong, Cotabato, to improve and utilize Lot No. 6001, Pls-73, for the purpose for which it was legally reserved, notices have been repeatedly served on the above-named defendants to vacate said premises, but said defendants repeatedly and obstinately refused to vacate said premises, the notices to that effect notwithstanding and they still continue to refuse to vacate said lot." 2

We consider this to be a sufficient allegation of a cause of action. Though not alleging that offers for compensation had been made by the municipality, paragraph two 3 of the complaint sufficiently alleges that executive Proclamation No. 351 had reserved the land in question for Municipal Park Site purposes. The defendants’ alleged right to compensation under the proclamation is a matter for them to plead as a defense in their answer and during the trial on the merits.

The judicial notice of the proclamation was not an error on the part of the court because Executive Proclamations are among the matters within judicial notice under Section 1, Rule 129 of the Rules of Court. 4 However, We find it an error for the lower court to have considered that the offer of payment was a condition precedent to the enforceability of the proclamation. The cited portion of the proclamation does not speak only of compensation but adds "and/or removal of said improvements," thereby indicating that payment of compensation does not always have to take place. It is for the defendants, therefore, to show that they are entitled to compensation and recovery.

WHEREFORE, the dismissal order appealed from is hereby reversed and the case is rendered to the lower court for further proceedings. No costs. So ordered.

Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, J.B.L., Dizon, Makalintal, Zaldivar, Sanchez, Ruiz Castro, Angeles and Fernando, JJ., concur.

Endnotes:



1. Remitere v. Montino Vda. de Yulo, L-19751, Feb. 28, 1966; Dalandan v. Julio, L-19101, Feb. 29, 1964.

2. Par. 4 of Complaint, p. 3 of Record on Appeal.

3. P. 2 of Record on Appeal.

4. Formerly, Sec. 5, Rule 123.

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