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PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. L-27104. December 20, 1976.]

CELESTINA B. RAMOS and DE DIOS RAMOS, Petitioners, v. LAUREANO and ESPERANZA POTENCIANO, spouses; LAND TENURE ADMINISTRATION (now LAND AUTHORITY), represented by the Administrator, MANUEL CASTAÑEDA, JULLAN U. DE VERA, WALFRIDO DE LOS ANGELES, LEONARDO ESPAÑOLLA and EMILIO REGALA, Respondents.

Sergio P. Villareal, for Petitioners.

R.S. Licu & C.A. Tan for respondent Land Authority, etc., Et. Al.

Gonzales & Munsayac for respondents Potencianos.


D E C I S I O N


MAKASIAR, J.:


Appeal by certiorari from the order of the Court of First Instance of Manila dated December 7, 1964, dismissing petitioners’ complaint in Civil Case No. 43738 entitled "Celestina B. Ramos and De Dios Ramos v. Laureano and Esperanza Potenciano" (pp. 115-119, ROA; p. 9, rec.) Petitioners maintain that:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"The lower court erred in issuing the order of 7 December 1965 (should have been 1964) and dismissing the complaint on mere motion of defendants and in not trying the case on the merits" (p. 1, Appellants’ Brief; p. 40, rec.).

The dispute began when on January 28, 1957, plaintiff Celestina B. Ramos filed with the Land Tenure Administration a complaint against defendants Potenciano spouses alleging that the "Agreement to Sell" entered into between the Potenciano spouses and the Bureau of Lands (then the government entity in charge of the administration and disposition of the property in dispute — Lot 2-B, Block No. 1, Tuason Estate, Sta. Mesa, Manila, Psd-26869) was violative of the rules and regulations governing such encumbrance in that said agreement was hatched up: (a) without the benefit of a formal investigation; (b) without notifying complainant of said contract; and (c) without giving her an opportunity to present proofs of her being the preferred allocatee of the subject lot (p. 2, Brief for Land Authority; p. 50-A, rec.).

Plaintiff Ramos, thus, sought the nullification of the said "Agreement to Sell", and prayed for a formal investigation to determine who between her and the other party is rightfully entitled to the questioned lot.

After conducting a formal investigation, the Land Tenure Administration, on June 3, 1957, rendered a decision sustaining the validity of the disputed "Agreement to Sell", stating that defendants Potenciano spouses are legitimately entitled to the lot in point.

On January 20, 1959, Celestina B. Ramos appealed the decision of the Land Tenure Administration to the Office of the President.

Pending action by the Office of the President, the Potenciano spouses and the Land Tenure Administration filed Civil Case No. 32748, for the recovery of possession of the southern part of the lot in question, containing an area of 93.75 square meters which had been enclosed by Celestina B. Ramos with a fence (p. 3, Brief for Land Authority, p. 50-A, rec.).chanrobles lawlibrary : rednad

On June 18, 1960, the trial court rendered a decision in Civil Case No. 32748 directing Celestina B. Ramos to vacate the area abovementioned and to return its possession to the Potenciano spouses (p. 3, Brief for LTA; p. 50-A, rec.).

On July 22, 1960, plaintiffs-appellants filed with the Court of First Instance of Manila Civil Case No. 43738 against respondents, with 97 averments, but primarily praying:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"That the Agreement to Sell executed by defendant spouses Laureano and Esperanza Potenciano with Land Tenure Administration over the subject lot be declared null and void, it being entered into in violation of the rules and regulations governing the disposition of government-owned lots" (p. 44, ROA; p. 9, rec.),

alleging that she (Celestina B. Ramos) has long been a bona fide occupant of the lot in question even before the government acquired the same, for which she filed an application as early as January 4, 1954, and that the respondent Potencianos are mere squatters therein (pp. 3, 5, 8-10, ROA; p. 9, rec.).

Meanwhile, on July 19, 1961, the Office of the President ruled in favor of the Potencianos and the Land Tenure Administration (p. 30, rec.).

On October 4,1961, respondents filed a motion with the trial court to execute the decision in Civil Case No. 32748 dated June 18, 1960 on the ground that the same has already become final.

On December 8, 1961, the trial court granted the abovementioned motion.

On February 8, 1962, herein plaintiff-appellant Celestina B. Ramos, together with her brother Adolfo Benavides, filed a petition for certiorari and prohibition with preliminary injunction with the Supreme Court, docketed as G.R. No. L-19436.

This petition, in part, avers:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"23. That, in the midst of the foregoing proceedings in Civil Case No. 32748, there is another action pending before the same respondent Court between the principal parties herein involving the same subject matter;

"Thus, docketed before the Court of First Instance of Manila, Branch XVI, as Civil Case No. 43738. . . (T)he plaintiffs therein assail and dispute that agreement to sell numbered 13806 executed by the defendants on November 5, 1953 covering the property in issue for being in frontal contravention of the mandatory provisions of Commonwealth Act 539 and is, therefore, totally NULL and VOID. This agreement to sell is the SOLE basis of Civil Case No. 32748. Removed, respondents Laureano and Esperanza Potenciano would have ABSOLUTELY NO CAUSE OF ACTION for ejectment. Not even the Land Tenure Administration as registered owner is entitled to possession of the subject property in view of the vested right to possession and ultimate award and adjudication thereof in favor of the petitioners on the basis of their being BONA FIDE tenants of the Tuason Estate since time immemorial. But then, this is a question of fact and precisely pending determination on the merits before the respondent Court.

x       x       x


"WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, petitioners most respectfully pray for the immediate issuance ex parte of a writ of preliminary injunction restraining the respondents, their representatives or agents (from) effecting the issuance and implementation of the writ of execution, or in any manner enforce the decision of June 18, 1960, rendered by the respondent Court in Civil Case No. 32748; restraining the respondents Laureano and Esperanza Potenciano and the Land Tenure Administration, their attorneys, representatives or agents, from implementing or in any manner enforcing, that Agreement to Sell numbered 13806 executed by the said respondents on November 5, 1953 pending determination on the merits of Civil Case No. 43738; . . ." (pp. 10-12, Original Petition in G.R. No. L-19436; pp. 11-13, rec. in L-19436; Emphasis supplied).

On November 29, 1963, the Supreme Court, through Justice Bautista Angelo, denied the above-said petition for certiorari and prohibition, stating:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"With regard to the error imputed to the court a quo in denying petitioners’ motion to suspend the ejectment case to await the result of the administrative case pending before the Office of the President involving the ownership of the land in question, aside from the fact that the two cases involved different subject matter, it appears that the administrative case has ALREADY been decided by that office in favor of respondents on the ground of lack of merit (Ramos v. Potenciano, L-19436, Nov. 29, 1963, 9 SCRA 589, 593; emphasis and Emphasis supplied),

which in effect sustained the final decision in Civil Case No. 32748 evicting petitioners from the premises.

On July 11, 1964, the Ramos spouses and Adolfo Benavides filed another petition for certiorari and prohibition with preliminary injunction, this time with the Court of Appeals (docketed as CA G.R. No. 34271-R), similar to the petition in L-19436 which, as stated, was earlier dismissed by the Supreme Court (p. 50-A[5], rec.).chanrobles lawlibrary : rednad

On August 26, 1964, the Court of Appeals denied the abovesaid petition.

On September 9, 1964, petitioners appealed the Court of Appeal’s denial to the Supreme Court in a certiorari petition docketed as G.R. No. L-23500, which, on October 6, 1964, the Supreme Court dismissed thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"After a consideration of the allegations of the petition for review of the decision of the Court of Appeals in L-23500 (Adolfo Benavides, Et. Al. v. Court of Appeals, Et. Al.), and the motion to dismiss filed by the respondents, THE COURT RESOLVED to dismiss the petition for lack of merit" (pp. 109-110, ROA; p. 9, rec.).

Subsequently, a motion to dismiss Civil Case No. 43738 (now object of this appeal) for want of jurisdiction and/or sufficient cause of action was filed by newly-substituted defendant Land Authority (in lieu of the Land Tenure Administration) on October 22, 1964 on the ground that the above-quoted resolution of the Supreme Court in G.R. No. L-23500 dismissing the appeal by certiorari of herein plaintiffs-appellants IMPLIEDLY confirmed the decision of the Court of Appeals. This decision of the Court of Appeals includes a pronouncement that the decision rendered by the Court of First Instance in Civil Case No. 32748, where a counterclaim became in substance the basis of the complaint in Case No. 43738 (now on appeal), has the effect of prior judgment.

On December 7, 1964, the trial court issued the challenged order dismissing the complaint and stating that:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"This is a motion filed by the defendant Land Authority to dismiss the complaint (Case No. 43738).

"The original complaint in this case was filed against the spouses Laureano and Esperanza Potenciano, Land Tenure Administration and Manuel Castañeda, Julian U. de Vera, Walfrido de los Angeles, Leonardo Española and Emilio Regala. Subsequently, the Land Tenure Administration was substituted by the Land Authority as one of the parties defendant.

"It is alleged in the complaint that the plaintiffs are in possession of a parcel of land known as Lot No. 3, Block 1, of the subdivision plan, PSD-26869 of the Tuason Estate No. 2, containing an area of 93.75. It is likewise alleged that the said lot was awarded to be sold to the defendant spouses by the various government agencies. Contending that the award of the right to buy the property in question in favor of the spouses Laureano and Esperanza Potenciano is illegal, unjustified and made with connivance of (sic) other defendants, plaintiffs appealed the decision to sell the properties to the Potenciano spouses to the office of the President for final administrative decision. . . .

"It is likewise alleged in the complaint that prior to its filing, Laureano and Esperanza Potenciano and the Land Tenure Administration now known as "Land Authority", filed a complaint to recover possession of the property in question from the present plaintiffs. This action to recover possession of the same property from the present plaintiffs was decided favorably to the Potenciano spouses and the decision ordered the present plaintiffs to deliver possession of the property to the Potenciano spouses. The judgment became final and a writ for the demolition of the fence constructed by the present plaintiffs over the lot was issued.

"The present plaintiffs elevated the case to the Court of Appeals which dismissed the petition for certiorari. This order of dismissal was later on affirmed by the Supreme Court. The petition under consideration was filed seeking the dismissal of the complaint.

"The plaintiffs opposed the petition, maintaining that the action which was finally decided by this Court and originally docketed as Civil Case No. 32748 was merely an action to recover possession and therefore, did not involve the right to the ownership of the same property. It is contended by the plaintiffs that the decision of the Court in said case, which in effect was declared final and executory by the highest tribunal of the land, is not a bar to the continuation of the present case.

"The present case should have been dismissed on October 18, 1960, when the counsel for the defendant moved to dismiss this case on the ground that the plaintiffs have not yet exhausted their administrative remedies because as alleged in the complaint, their appeal against the decision of the Land Tenure Administration to sell the lot in question to the Potenciano spouses was still pending before the Office of the President and the appeal would be handed down before this case would be ready for trial. It was the belief of the Court that if the complaint was to be dismissed and later on the appeal (of) the present plaintiffs would have to file a similar complaint and would incur double expenses, not to mention the multiplicity of suits which would ensue (sic).

"In the meantime, however, Civil Case No. 32748 was decided by this Court declaring that the plaintiffs have no right to the possession of the land in question. The judgment is now final. While ordinarily, the contention of the plaintiffs in their opposition to the motion to dismiss the complaint in the present case is correct, because an action for possession involves mere possession and is distinct from an action involving ownership, the present case, however, is an exception. The right of the tenants to purchase lot from the Land Tenure Administration is precisely based on the right of possession. Since it is now definite that the plaintiffs have no right to possess the land, it follows that they cannot have a right to buy said land from the Land Authority. Therefore, the right of the Potencianos to purchase said property as recognized by the Land Tenure Administration should prevail.

"In view of the foregoing considerations, the Court hereby grants the motion to dismiss and dismisses the complaint without pronouncement as to costs" (pp. 115-119, ROA; p. 9, rec.),

from which herein petitioner appealed to the Court of Appeals, which, believing that the appeal involves a pure question of law, elevated the same to this Court by resolution of December 29, 1966 (pp. 52-53, rec.).

Respondents should be sustained.

Indeed, the decision of the trial court in Civil Case No. 32748 which has already become final and executory — constitutes a bar to another decision in Civil Case No. 43738 (now on appeal) for the reason that the question of possession in the dispute is not essentially distinct from the question of the validity of the award by the government of the Agreement to Sell the lot in question in favor of the Potencianos. The sole basis of the award mentioned above is legitimate possession of the lot in point. The right of the grantees to the possession of the lot in question determines the validity of the award to them. Hence, the issue of possession in Civil Case No. 32748 is the very same issue involved in Civil Case No. 43738. As defendants in Civil Case No. 32748, herein petitioners interpose as defense and counterclaim the claim that they have long been the bona fide occupant of the lot, which is their main cause of action as plaintiffs in Civil Case No. 43738 seeking the nullification of the award to private respondents of the lot and a declaration that they are the bona fide occupants with preferential right to the award.chanrobles virtualawlibrary chanrobles.com:chanrobles.com.ph

The award by the Land Tenure Administration of the questioned lot to the respondent spouses was affirmed by the Office of the President, which presidential affirmance is not questioned by herein petitioners and therefore should not be disturbed by US.

It also bears stressing that the present plaintiffs-appellants, as defendants in Civil Case No. 32748, invoked their alleged preferential right to the lot in issue in their answer and counterclaim therein. As elsewhere stated herein, the trial court in that case held for respondents Potenciano spouses — and the judgment therein has long become final and executory. This finality was further underscored, when on November 29, 1963, WE denied the petitioners’ petition for certiorari and prohibition in L-19436. Between the parties, therefore, the above final decision is the law of the case.

But petitioners still filed Civil Case No. 43738, invoking the same preferential right which they already invoked in vain in the previous Civil Case No. 32748.

After the decision in Civil Case No. 32748 became final, the principle of res judicata applies to Civil Case No. 43738.

The obstinacy of petitioners in saddling the courts with several suits alleging the same or substantial averments and cause of action, is further shown by their filing with the Court of Appeals an identical petition (CA G.R. No. 34291-R), which was dismissed by the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court (L-23500).

The situation in the case under review does not depart from Pua v. Lapitan (L-14148, Feb. 25, 1960, 107 Phil. 95, 98-99) wherein this Tribunal, also thru Mr. Justice Felix Bautista Angelo, held:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"If such counterclaim, which in substance is the basis of the present action of appellant, was already in issue in the former case, it is logical that the decision rendered therein has now the effect of a prior judgment in the present under the principle of res judicata. Such being the case, we cannot but hold that the trial court acted correctly in dismissing the complaint on that ground."cralaw virtua1aw library

In a long line of cases (Cruz v. Mossesgeld, L-20495, Aug. 31, 1968, 24 SCRA 1006; Abes v. Rodel, L-20996, July 30, 1966, 17 SCRA 822, 824; Phil. Farming Corp., Ltd. v. Llanos, L-21014, Aug. 14, 1965, 14 SCRA 949, 951; and Ipekdjian Merchandising Co., Inc. v. Court of Tax Appeals, L-15430, Sept. 30, 1963, 9 SCRA 72, 75), We laid down the following essential requisites for the existence of res judicata:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

(1) The former judgment must be final;

(2) It must have been rendered by a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter and parties;

(3) It must be a judgment on the merits; and

(4) There must be between the first and the second actions.

(a) identity of parties;

(b) identity of subject matter; and

(c) identity of cause of action.

WE find all these requisites obtaining in cases Nos. 32748 and 43738 (subject of this appeal).

WHEREFORE, THE PETITION IS HEREBY DENIED AND PETITIONERS AND THEIR COUNSELS ARE HEREBY DIRECTED TO PAY SOLIDARILY TREBLE COSTS.

SO ORDERED.

Teehankee (Chairman), Muñoz Palma, Concepcion, Jr. and Martin, JJ., concur.

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