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PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. L-35718. November 19, 1982.]

REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, represented by the DIRECTOR OF LANDS, Petitioner, v. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS, MELITONA ALAGAD, spouses CARMEN ALAGAD and ESPIRIDION KOLIMLIM, JUSTO ALAGAD, CARLOS ALAGAD, spouses LIBRADA ALAGAD and EMERSON ABANO, DEMETRIO ALAGAD, ANTONIO ALAGAD, the REGISTER OF DEEDS OF LAGUNA, the MUNICIPAL JUDGE OF PILA, LAGUNA and the PROVINCIAL SHERIFF OF LAGUNA, Respondents.

The Solicitor General for Petitioner.

Alberto, Salazar & Associates for Private Respondent.

SYNOPSIS


From an adverse Decision of the Court of First Instance of Laguna, in a complaint for annulment of title and reversion, petitioner filed its Record on Appeal but failed to state therein the number of days granted by the Trial Court in extending for the second time the period within which to file its Record on Appeal. There being no objection thereto, the Trial Court approved the Record on Appeal. While petitioner’s appeal was pending in the Court of Appeals, private respondents, on the basis of said omission, filed a Motion to Dismiss the appeal, which Motion was granted over and above petitioner’s opposition. Hence, this petition.

The Supreme Court held that failure to show categorically on the Record on Appeal that the appeal was perfected on time is not fatal to the appeal if the Record on Appeal is approved by the Trial Court.

Petition granted. The Court of Appeals is ordered to reinstate and give due course to petitioner’s appeal.


SYLLABUS


REMEDIAL LAW; APPEALS; RECORD ON APPEAL; NON- COMPLIANCE THEREOF WITH THE MATERIAL DATA RULE (SECTION 6, RULE 41 OF THE RULES OF COURT) IS NOT FATAL TO THE APPEAL WHERE SAID RECORD HAS BEEN APPROVED BY THE TRIAL COURT; DOCTRINE IN BERKENKOTTER VS. COURT OF APPEALS (53 SCRA 228) APPLIED TO CASE AT BAR. — Since Berkenkotter v. Court of Appeals, promulgated on September 28, 1973, 53 SCRA 228, the Supreme Court has departed from its rigid interpretation of Section 6, Rule 41 of the Rules of Court dismissing appeals for sheer failure to show categorically on the Record on Appeal that the appeal was perfected on time. In that case it was held that non-compliance with the Material Data Rule is not fatal and can be cured by the Trial Court’s approval of the Record on Appeal. In the case at bar, the evidence discloses that no objection whatsoever to the approval of the Record on Appeal was raised in the lower Court and that petitioner’s Record on Appeal was approved by said Court in its Order dated January 10, 1972. A perusal of the records likewise convinces the Court that it would be more in keeping with the ends of substantial justice if petitioner’s appeal were to take its course.


D E C I S I O N


MELENCIO-HERRERA, J.:


We are here concerned with a Petition to review on Certiorari the Resolutions of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. No. 49778-R ordering the dismissal of petitioner’s appeal for failure to state in the Record on Appeal that the appeal was perfected on time, and denying petitioner’s Motion for Reconsideration.

The issue is whether or not the failure to state in the Record on Appeal data showing that the appeal was perfected on time is fatal to the appeal.

It is a fact that petitioner, as appellant from an adverse Decision of the Court of First Instance of Laguna, in Civil Case No. SC-1016, failed to state in the Record on Appeal the number of days granted by the Trial Court in extending for the second time the period within which to file its Record on Appeal. Based on this omission, and while petitioner’s appeal was pending in the Court of Appeals, private respondents filed a Motion to Dismiss the appeal, which Motion was granted over and above petitioner’s opposition.

The evidence discloses that no objection whatsoever to the approval of the Record on Appeal was raised in the lower Court and that petitioner’s Record on Appeal was approved by said Court in its Order dated January 10, 1972.

Since Berkenkotter v. Court of Appeals, promulgated on September 28, 1973, 53 SCRA 228, this Court has departed from its rigid interpretation of Section 6, Rule 41 of the Rules of Court 1 dismissing appeals for sheer failure to show categorically on the Record on Appeal that the appeal was perfected on time. In that case we held:chanrobles law library : red

"The mere absence of a formal order granting the motion for extension of time to file the record on appeal should not be fatal to the petitioner if the record on appeal filed within the requested extension period was approved by the Court a quo. As previously stated, the approval thereof carries with it the approval of the motion for extension and the mere failure of the record on appeal to show such approval should not defeat the right to appeal. No trial Judge in his right mind and who is aware of the serious responsibilities of his office, would approve a record on appeal that was not timely filed. There is every reason, therefore, to apply the principle of substantial justice to the instant case for the following considerations: first, the Court is given the discretion to extend the period for filing the record on appeal, notice of appeal and appeal bond, provided the notice for extension of time is filed within the 30-day reglementary period; second, there is every reason to assume that the record on appeal was ‘filed on time’ because it was approved after due hearing by the Court in its Order dated November 14, 1972; and last, but not the least, considering the merits of the case, to dismiss petitioners appeal would not serve the ends of justice."cralaw virtua1aw library

The above doctrine has been followed by the Court in Pimentel v. Court of Appeals, 64 SCRA 475 (1975); Morales v. Court of Appeals, 67 SCRA 304 (1975); Krueger v. Court of Appeals, 69 SCRA 50 (1976); San Pedro v. Court of Appeals, 72 SCRA 536 (1976); Aznar v. Court of Appeals, 85 SCRA 372 (1978), and a host of other cases.

Our perusal of the records likewise convinces us that it would be more in keeping with the ends of substantial justice if petitioner’s appeal were to take its course. Petitioner’s Complaint below (Civil Case No. SC-1016) was for annulment of title and reversion. The subject matter is a piece of land with an area of 1.42 hectares situated in Barrio Aplaya, Pila, Laguna. About 100 families live in the area and face eviction, as they had in fact been ordered evicted by the Municipal Court of Pila, Laguna, in Civil Case No. 48, but for the Writ of Preliminary Injunction issued by the Trial Court. It is foreshore land and the Government claims that it is outside the jurisdiction of the land Registration Court, which adjudicated the property in the names of private respondents, and that consequently the Decision and Orders of said Court are void ab initio.

WHEREFORE, granting the Petition, the Resolutions of respondent Court of Appeals dated August 12, 1972 and September 22, 1972 are hereby SET ASIDE, and said Court hereby ordered to reinstate and give due course to petitioner’s appeal in CA-G.R. No. 49978-R.chanrobles.com:cralaw:red

The Restraining Order, issued by this Tribunal on October 31, 1972, enjoining the Municipal Judge of Pila, Laguna, and the Provincial Sheriff of Laguna from enforcing the Writ of Execution issued in Civil Case No. 48 an/or any similar Orders of eviction against the present occupants of the land in question shall continue in full force and effect until petitioner’s appeal is resolved on the merits.

No costs.

SO ORDERED.

Teehankee (Chairman), Plana, Vasquez, Relova and Gutierrez, Jr., JJ., concur.

Endnotes:



1. "Sec. 6. Record on appeal; form and contents thereof. The full names of all the parties to the proceedings shall be stated in the caption of the record on appeal and it shall include the order or judgment from which the appeal is taken, and, in chronological order, copies of only such pleadings, petitions, motions and all interlocutory orders as are related to the appealed order or judgment and necessary for the proper understanding of the issue involved, together with such data as will show that the appeal was perfected on time. If an issue of fact is to be raised on appeal, the record on appeal shall include by reference all the evidence, oral and documentary, taken upon the issue involved. The reference shall specify the documentary evidence by the exhibit numbers or letters by which it was identified when admitted or offered at the hearing, and the oral evidence by the names of the corresponding witnesses. If the whole oral and documentary evidence in the case is to be included, a statement to that effect will be sufficient without mentioning the names of the witnesses or the numbers or letters of exhibits. Every record on appeal exceeding twenty (20) pages must contain a subject index.

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